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	<title>May 2026 News - Cream</title>
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		<title>Your Best Horoscope Days: May 11, 2026 Breakdown</title>
		<link>https://www.creamglobal.com/704/best-horoscopes-zodiac-signs-may-11-2026/</link>
					<comments>https://www.creamglobal.com/704/best-horoscopes-zodiac-signs-may-11-2026/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Sloane Whitaker]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 11 May 2026 01:07:41 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Celebrity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[astrology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[horoscopes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jupiter in Cancer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[May 2026]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[zodiac signs]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.creamglobal.com/704/best-horoscopes-zodiac-signs-may-11-2026/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>From Taurus to Sagittarius, the stars are seriously aligned on May 11, 2026. Here's which zodiac signs are winning big — and why.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com/704/best-horoscopes-zodiac-signs-may-11-2026/">Your Best Horoscope Days: May 11, 2026 Breakdown</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com">Cream</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="key-points">
<ul>
<li>The Sun in Taurus forms a powerful alignment with Jupiter in Cancer on May 11, creating one of the luckiest astrological setups of the month.</li>
<li>Aries, Taurus, Libra, Leo, Cancer, Sagittarius, and Gemini are among the Western zodiac signs with standout energy on Monday.</li>
<li>Jupiter is considered &#8220;exalted&#8221; in Cancer, meaning its luck and abundance qualities are amplified — especially around money and home life.</li>
<li>In Chinese astrology, Monday is a Wood Rooster Stable Day during a Fire Horse year, rewarding detail-oriented signs like Rooster, Tiger, and Snake.</li>
<li>The week ahead also brings a Taurus New Moon and Mercury entering Gemini, setting up powerful new beginnings through May 17.</li>
</ul>
</div>
<p>If your week got off to a surprisingly good start, the stars might deserve some of the credit. Monday, May 11, 2026 is shaping up to be one of the more genuinely fortunate days in recent memory — at least according to the planets. The Sun in Taurus is forming a sweet alignment with Jupiter in Cancer, and that combination is delivering something rare: grounded optimism. The kind that actually produces results.</p>
<p>Jupiter is the planet astrologers associate with luck, expansion, and abundance. When it&#8217;s in Cancer, it&#8217;s considered <em>exalted</em> — meaning it&#8217;s operating at full power, doubling down on blessings related to home, family, and finances. Pair that with the steady, determined energy of Taurus season, and you&#8217;ve got a day that doesn&#8217;t just feel good. It <em>builds</em> something.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s a full breakdown of who&#8217;s benefiting most — and how.</p>
<h2>The Western Zodiac Signs With the Best Horoscopes on May 11</h2>
<p><strong>Aries</strong> is being invited to turn inward — literally. Jupiter sitting in your home sector means your personal space is where the magic happens today. This is the perfect moment to beautify your environment, clear out what no longer serves you, and replace it only with things you genuinely love. The warning: don&#8217;t let Jupiter&#8217;s expansive energy turn into a shopping spree. The goal is to create space, not fill it. Something financially positive is also in the cards — you might discover an item is worth more than you thought, or receive a hand-me-down that saves you real money. Good things come to those who wait, and Monday feels like your turn.</p>
<p><strong>Taurus</strong>, the Sun is literally in your sign, and Jupiter is working overtime for you. Monday brings a happy surprise — the kind that makes you wonder what you did to deserve it. Your natural instinct to doubt gets quieted today, and that&#8217;s a good thing. Abundance, as it turns out, doesn&#8217;t only come to those who wish for it. Sometimes it just arrives. On the financial front, Chiron&#8217;s influence encourages you to reflect on past missteps — not to dwell, but to make sure you don&#8217;t repeat them. You&#8217;re smart enough to find a way forward, and motivated enough to make it interesting.</p>
<p><strong>Libra</strong> is having a genuinely great day on two fronts. At work, you&#8217;re being seen — really seen. People are talking about you in the best possible way, and your excellence isn&#8217;t getting lost in the noise. In your personal life, the emotional intimacy you share with a close friend feels especially precious today. The Taurus Sun creates what astrologers describe as a kind of positive secrecy — a space where trust runs deep and no one violates it. That&#8217;s rare, and you know it.</p>
<p><strong>Leo</strong> is being called to create. All those ideas you&#8217;ve been mentally replaying? Monday is the day to get them out of your head and onto paper — or canvas, or wherever your medium lives. Creativity feels like play right now, not pressure. You&#8217;re not worried about the finished product. You&#8217;re just enjoying the process, which is exactly how the best work gets made. Separately, the Moon-Mercury alignment is also nudging Leo to stop overworking. The present moment is where your peace lives — not in the future you&#8217;re anxious about or the past you can&#8217;t change.</p>
<p><strong>Gemini</strong> gets a moment of real courage on Monday. A decision has been sitting in front of you, and even though you&#8217;re not 100% certain, you take the leap anyway. It proves to be the right call. Fate, it seems, is smiling. You&#8217;re not someone who waits for handouts — you know luck is something you participate in creating — and today that philosophy pays off in a tangible way.</p>
<p><strong>Cancer</strong> is in a particularly powerful position right now, given that Jupiter is literally in your sign. Monday brings a sense of being fully seen by someone you trust, and that feeling of connection propels you into action. This isn&#8217;t a day for wishful thinking — it&#8217;s a day to move. You spot an opportunity clearly because you&#8217;ve been working toward it, not just waiting for it to appear. Fast results are possible, especially around research and trying new approaches.</p>
<p><strong>Sagittarius</strong> is ruled by Jupiter, which makes Monday&#8217;s energy feel almost custom-made for you. You&#8217;ve been hesitant to ask for something — maybe out of fear of vulnerability — but Monday is the day you try anyway. And the result surprises you. What you need shows up at exactly the right time, and the experience reminds you that vulnerability isn&#8217;t actually as hard as it looked from the outside. The universe is also signaling that now is the moment to act on dreams you&#8217;ve been putting off. Real healing begins when your attention shifts to the present.</p>
<p><strong>Virgo, Leo, and Capricorn</strong> also have meaningful energy to work with on May 11, though the path is slightly different. For Virgo, the Moon-Mercury alignment offers a powerful invitation to stop dwelling in negativity — to consciously redirect thought patterns toward something lighter. It&#8217;s hard at first, but the payoff is real. For Capricorn, the same transit delivers a clarifying realization: the present moment is the only one that offers genuine happiness. And for Scorpio, Monday brings a financial turning point rooted in self-belief — a deep recognition that you are worthy of success, and capable of making money grow.</p>
<p><strong>Aquarius</strong> gets a pleasant financial surprise — discovering you have more money than you thought you did. It doesn&#8217;t necessarily change the numbers, but it shifts your mindset entirely. And that mindset shift, astrologers say, is where the real abundance begins. Security feels possible today, and you honor what you have with a sense of gratitude that makes everything feel balanced.</p>
<h2>What the Chinese Zodiac Has to Say About May 11</h2>
<p>In Chinese astrology, Monday is a <a href="https://thehiddensun.com/2023/06/16/stable-day/">Wood Rooster Stable Day</a> during a Fire Horse year and Water Snake month — and Stable Days carry a very specific kind of energy. Things start feeling dependable again. The wins that show up aren&#8217;t flashy, but they&#8217;re the kind that make your future feel more secure.</p>
<p><strong>Rooster</strong> gets the gift of someone actually following through — no chasing, no wondering, no checking your phone every 20 minutes. That reliability hits differently than expected, and it immediately raises your standards for what you&#8217;re willing to accept from people going forward.</p>
<p><strong>Tiger</strong> experiences a mindset shift around money that changes the entire trajectory of the day. One new perspective on a financial situation leads to a smarter move — and by the end of the week, you&#8217;re in a noticeably stronger position.</p>
<p><strong>Snake</strong> earns trust on Monday in a very specific way: someone stops speaking vaguely and brings you into the real conversation. You stay calm, ask the right questions, and that trust deepens in real time. A door opens — financially or professionally — that you&#8217;ve been waiting on for a while.</p>
<p><strong>Monkey</strong> gets a relief moment. Something you&#8217;ve been hovering over anxiously has been quietly working itself out. You check on it expecting another delay, and instead find it&#8217;s already moving. With that mental energy freed up, you notice a nearby opportunity you would have completely missed otherwise.</p>
<p><strong>Ox</strong> has a surprisingly mature, productive conversation on Monday — no games, no ego battles, just resolution. Something that could have become emotionally exhausting gets handled cleanly. The relief that follows makes it easier to focus on your own goals instead of managing everyone else&#8217;s chaos.</p>
<p><strong>Rabbit</strong> notices something becoming consistent — whether it&#8217;s income flowing more steadily or motivation returning after a rough patch. Whatever it is, it feels reliable enough to actually plan around. May 11 is the day you stop treating every good thing like it&#8217;s temporary.</p>
<h2>The Bigger Picture: What the Rest of the Week Looks Like</h2>
<p>Monday is just the opening act. The week of May 11 to 17 carries significant astrological weight, anchored by a <a href="https://astrostyle.com/taurus-new-moon-astrology-and-horoscopes/">Taurus New Moon</a> that brings powerful new beginnings and opportunities for abundance. Mercury also enters Gemini this week and conjuncts Uranus — a combination that rewards flexible thinking and fresh perspectives. If you&#8217;ve been holding plans too tightly, this is the week to loosen your grip a little.</p>
<p>Astrologer Leslie Hale notes that the week is &#8220;mixed but mainly positive&#8221; — some signs will need to manage their tempers and resist impulsive reactions, particularly around finances and shared resources. Pluto&#8217;s recent retrograde may also bring unresolved issues back to the surface for some. The advice is consistent across the board: listen more, react less, and treat whatever comes up as information rather than a threat.</p>
<p>Astrologer Joshua Pingley described May as &#8220;a major turning point&#8221; and &#8220;the month where we begin to truly start processing and dissecting everything we&#8217;ve learned and observed over the course of the year so far.&#8221; Astrologer Elizabeth Brobeck echoed that sentiment, noting that signs like Aries — who&#8217;ve been dealing with intensity since around 2023 — are finally starting to feel a genuine burst of energy and renewed confidence. For Sagittarius, she said, the upgrades in romance and social life continue building all the way through 2027.</p>
<p>The Taurus New Moon on Saturday caps the week with a breath of fresh air. New connections feel thrilling. Existing relationships deepen. And for earth signs especially, it lands like a spotlight — romance, reconciliation, and a real sense of momentum all wrapped up in one lunation.</p>
<p>Monday is just the beginning of all of it.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com/704/best-horoscopes-zodiac-signs-may-11-2026/">Your Best Horoscope Days: May 11, 2026 Breakdown</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com">Cream</a>.</p>
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		<title>Best Movies on Netflix to Watch Right Now (May 2026)</title>
		<link>https://www.creamglobal.com/471/best-movies-on-netflix-may-2026/</link>
					<comments>https://www.creamglobal.com/471/best-movies-on-netflix-may-2026/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Park]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 08 May 2026 21:31:03 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[TV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Best Movies on Netflix]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[May 2026]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Netflix]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Remarkably Bright Creatures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Streaming Guide]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.creamglobal.com/471/best-movies-on-netflix-may-2026/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>From Schindler's List to Remarkably Bright Creatures, here are the best movies streaming on Netflix in May 2026 — including Mother's Day picks.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com/471/best-movies-on-netflix-may-2026/">Best Movies on Netflix to Watch Right Now (May 2026)</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com">Cream</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="key-points">
<ul>
<li>Netflix&#8217;s May 2026 lineup mixes major new originals like <em>Remarkably Bright Creatures</em> with deep-catalogue classics</li>
<li>Coen brothers, Scorsese, Spielberg, and Yorgos Lanthimos all have films streaming now</li>
<li>Award-winners including <em>Green Book</em>, <em>Hacksaw Ridge</em>, and <em>Schindler&#8217;s List</em> are all available this month</li>
<li>Mother&#8217;s Day weekend has some genuinely great options — from <em>Dumplin&#8217;</em> to <em>Bird Box</em> to <em>Steel Magnolias</em></li>
<li><em>Apex</em> is currently topping Netflix&#8217;s own charts, but the real gems are buried deeper in the library</li>
</ul>
</div>
<p>Spring on Netflix is a quieter awards season — the platform saves its big prestige swings for fall and winter — but May 2026 has quietly become one of the richer months for movie lovers in a while. Between a brand-new Sally Field drama, a Yorgos Lanthimos original, and a deep bench of genuine classics, there&#8217;s something here for every kind of viewer. Here&#8217;s everything worth your time right now.</p>
<h2>The Big New Addition: Remarkably Bright Creatures</h2>
<p><a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/81911351">Remarkably Bright Creatures</a> is the one to start with. Based on Shelby Van Pelt&#8217;s bestselling novel, director Olivia Newman&#8217;s film follows Tova Sullivan (Sally Field, doing what Sally Field does), a widow who takes a night-cleaning job at a small-town aquarium. Her unlikely companion is Marcellus, a giant Pacific octopus voiced with warmth and dry wit by Alfred Molina. The story expands to include Lewis Pullman as a young man named Cameron who rolls into town searching for his father — and the three storylines weave together in ways that are quietly devastating.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s tender, it&#8217;s smart, and Field is transcendent. This one&#8217;s already generating real word-of-mouth.</p>
<h2>The Lanthimos You Might Have Missed</h2>
<p>Yorgos Lanthimos reunited with Emma Stone — his <em>Poor Things</em> Oscar winner — for <a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/81967897">Bugonia</a>, a darkly comic remake of the South Korean cult film <em>Save the Green Planet!</em> Stone plays opposite Jesse Plemons as part of a troubled pair of cousins who become convinced that a powerful CEO is actually an alien — and decide to kidnap her. It doesn&#8217;t entirely cohere, but Stone and Plemons are electric together, and early takes that were lukewarm are already being revisited by viewers who caught something on a second watch. At 1 hour 58 minutes, it&#8217;s worth the gamble.</p>
<h2>The Classics Worth (Re)Discovering</h2>
<p>Netflix has quietly loaded up on heavy hitters this month, and the catalogue section is genuinely impressive right now.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/60036359">Schindler&#8217;s List</a> is streaming, which should never be taken for granted. Steven Spielberg&#8217;s personal masterpiece — the story of Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson) and the hundreds of Jewish refugees he saved during the Holocaust — remains one of the most powerful films ever made. Three hours and fifteen minutes that will stay with you.</p>
<p>Martin Scorsese&#8217;s <a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/70019012">Casino</a> (1995) often gets overshadowed by <em>Goodfellas</em>, but time has been genuinely kind to it. Robert De Niro, Sharon Stone in arguably the best work of her career, and Joe Pesci doing what Joe Pesci does — all wrapped in Scorsese&#8217;s most ambitious visual storytelling. It&#8217;s two hours and fifty minutes of Las Vegas mob history that flies.</p>
<p>The Coen brothers followed their Best Picture winner <em>No Country for Old Men</em> with <a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/70098606">Burn After Reading</a>, one of their most underrated movies. Brad Pitt, Frances McDormand, George Clooney, John Malkovich, Richard Jenkins, and J.K. Simmons all playing, essentially, idiots who stumble onto a CIA analyst&#8217;s memoirs and make every wrong decision imaginable. It&#8217;s hysterical and mean in the best possible way.</p>
<p>And then there&#8217;s <a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/70293812">Under the Skin</a>, Jonathan Glazer&#8217;s 2014 sci-fi masterpiece with Scarlett Johansson as an alien quietly moving through Scotland, doing unspeakable things to the men she encounters. It&#8217;s less a plot than a mood — closer to <em>Twin Peaks</em> than anything you&#8217;d call conventional sci-fi — and it&#8217;s one of the best films of the entire decade. Unforgettable is not an overstatement.</p>
<p>Nicolas Cage gives one of the performances of his career in <a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/81405021">Pig</a> (2021), directed by Michael Sarnoski (who went on to make <em>A Quiet Place: Day One</em> and has <em>The Death of Robin Hood</em> coming this June). A reclusive chef living off-grid with his truffle pig. The pig gets stolen. What follows is not the revenge thriller the premise implies — it&#8217;s something much quieter and more moving about grief, value, and what we build our lives around.</p>
<p>Paul Verhoeven&#8217;s <a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/1181616">Starship Troopers</a> (1997) remains one of the most misunderstood blockbusters ever made. On the surface: giant alien bugs, young soldiers, absurd action. Underneath: a razor-sharp satire of fascism and the military-industrial complex that gets more relevant every few years. The director of <em>RoboCop</em> doing what only he can do.</p>
<p>The Farrelly brothers&#8217; <a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/60026860">There&#8217;s Something About Mary</a> (1998) holds up better than it has any right to. Ben Stiller and Cameron Diaz are genuinely charming, and the film commits so completely to its comedy that it earns most of its laughs even now. Matt Dillon and Chris Elliott are fantastic in the margins.</p>
<p>Doug Liman&#8217;s <a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/18958014">Go</a> (1999) is one of the best post-<em>Pulp Fiction</em> ensemble films of its era — and one that keeps finding new audiences. Taye Diggs, Sarah Polley, and Timothy Olyphant in a fractured, kinetic one-night story that still absolutely rips.</p>
<p>Mike Flanagan — the horror mastermind behind <em>The Haunting of Hill House</em> — directed <a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/80106763">Ouija: Origin of Evil</a> (2016), and it&#8217;s one of those rare sequels that makes you forget the original entirely. More style and tension than a studio horror sequel has any right to have.</p>
<p>Gerard Butler has made a lot of movies, but <a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/80196448">Den of Thieves</a> (2018) might genuinely be his best. A heist thriller about corrupt L.A. cops, with Butler, 50 Cent, Pablo Schreiber, and a breakout turn from O&#8217;Shea Jackson Jr. Dark, propulsive, and underrated. The sequel is also on Netflix if you get hooked.</p>
<p>And Jason Segel does some of the best work of his career as David Foster Wallace in <a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/80037478">The End of the Tour</a> (2015), opposite Jesse Eisenberg as Rolling Stone writer David Lipsky. Five days, two men, a lot of driving through the Midwest — and a quietly devastating portrait of creativity, depression, and what it costs to be brilliant.</p>
<h2>The Best Mother&#8217;s Day Picks on Netflix Right Now</h2>
<p>If you&#8217;re planning a Mother&#8217;s Day weekend watch, Netflix has you covered across a few different moods.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.netflix.com/watch/80201490">Dumplin&#8217;</a> (2018) is the warmest option — Jennifer Aniston as a former beauty queen learning to actually see her teenage daughter, with a Dolly Parton soundtrack that makes everything feel like a hug. <a href="https://www.netflix.com/watch/80196789">Bird Box</a> goes darker: Sandra Bullock in one of Netflix&#8217;s first genuine breakout hits, fighting mysterious entities to keep her children alive. Still tense, still worth it.</p>
<p>For something more classic, <em>Steel Magnolias</em> is streaming — Sally Field, Dolly Parton, Julia Roberts (in the role that earned her first Oscar nomination and her Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actress), and some of the best ensemble work of the late &#8217;80s. Set in a Louisiana beauty salon, it&#8217;s funny and gutting in equal measure.</p>
<p><em>Pretty Woman</em> is also available — one of Julia Roberts&#8217; most iconic performances, and a film with surprising rewatch value decades later. Roberts won the Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Musical or Comedy for the role.</p>
<p>And if you want something genuinely strange: <a href="https://www.netflix.com/title/81708174">Con Mum</a>, a documentary about British chef Graham Hornigold, who is contacted by a globetrotting socialite claiming to be his long-lost mother — and who eventually swindles him out of £300,000. The third-act twist is wild. Not a traditional Mother&#8217;s Day pick, but it&#8217;s unforgettable.</p>
<p>For a sci-fi spin on the theme, <a href="https://www.netflix.com/watch/80227090">I Am Mother</a> is a smart Australian cyberpunk film about a post-apocalyptic bunker where a robot raises a human child from embryo. When the teenage Daughter lets an outside woman in, everything unravels. Rose Byrne voices the robot. It&#8217;ll make you think about what motherhood actually means.</p>
<p>Also worth noting for award completists: <em>Hacksaw Ridge</em> (Andrew Garfield&#8217;s Oscar-nominated performance as WWII medic Desmond Doss, plus two Academy Award wins for editing and sound mixing) and <em>Green Book</em> (Best Picture winner, Best Supporting Actor for Mahershala Ali, Best Original Screenplay) are both streaming right now.</p>
<p><em>Remarkably Bright Creatures</em> is the one to start with if you haven&#8217;t yet. Sally Field narrated by an octopus is a sentence that somehow delivers on every promise it makes.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com/471/best-movies-on-netflix-may-2026/">Best Movies on Netflix to Watch Right Now (May 2026)</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com">Cream</a>.</p>
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		<title>5 Prime Video Movies in May 2026 With 90%+ on Rotten Tomatoes</title>
		<link>https://www.creamglobal.com/115/prime-video-movies-may-2026-rotten-tomatoes-90-percent/</link>
					<comments>https://www.creamglobal.com/115/prime-video-movies-may-2026-rotten-tomatoes-90-percent/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Park]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 May 2026 08:40:09 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[TV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[May 2026]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Movies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Prime Video]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rotten Tomatoes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Streaming]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.creamglobal.com/115/prime-video-movies-may-2026-rotten-tomatoes-90-percent/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>From Woody Allen's Annie Hall to Edgar Wright's Hot Fuzz, these five newly added Prime Video films are certified fresh — and worth your weekend.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com/115/prime-video-movies-may-2026-rotten-tomatoes-90-percent/">5 Prime Video Movies in May 2026 With 90%+ on Rotten Tomatoes</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com">Cream</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="key-points">
<ul>
<li>Five critically acclaimed films landed on Prime Video on May 1, 2026, all scoring 90% or higher on Rotten Tomatoes.</li>
<li>The lineup spans six decades — from Woody Allen&#8217;s 1977 Best Picture winner to Jim Cummings&#8217; 2020 horror-comedy.</li>
<li>Hot Fuzz and Babe lead the pack on pure fun, while Dallas Buyers Club brings the prestige drama.</li>
<li>Prime Video&#8217;s May 1 drop also included Goodfellas, Scarface, and Do the Right Thing — one of the biggest single-day library additions in recent memory.</li>
<li>All five films are available to stream now with a Prime membership.</li>
</ul>
</div>
<p>Prime Video quietly dropped one of its biggest single-day movie hauls of the year on May 1, adding dozens of titles to its library. But if you&#8217;re looking for a place to start — specifically, films that critics have already done the hard work of vetting — five of those new arrivals carry a <a href="https://www.rottentomatoes.com">Rotten Tomatoes</a> score of 90% or higher. That&#8217;s a pretty reliable shortcut to a good night in.</p>
<p>The range here is genuinely impressive. You&#8217;ve got a four-time Oscar winner from 1977, a beloved talking-pig movie from 1995, a McConaughey career-defining drama, Edgar Wright&#8217;s action-comedy masterpiece, and a scrappy 2020 genre-blender that flew under most people&#8217;s radar. Something for every mood.</p>
<h2>Annie Hall (1977) — 97% on Rotten Tomatoes</h2>
<p>Before Woody Allen&#8217;s <em>Annie Hall</em>, romantic comedies were largely slapstick or polished fantasies. This film essentially rewired how cinema approaches relationships, memory, and the fourth wall. It won four Academy Awards at the 1978 ceremony — including Best Picture and Best Director — and it still holds up as one of the sharpest, most charming films ever made about why love falls apart.</p>
<p>Allen stars as Alvy Singer, a New York comedian looking back on his relationship with Annie Hall (Diane Keaton), an aspiring nightclub singer. The story moves freely between flashbacks, arguments, family visits, and trips, with Alvy trying — and mostly failing — to understand how things changed. Co-written with Marshall Brickman, it&#8217;s relaxed and free-flowing in a way that still feels slightly ahead of its time.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/annie_hall">Stream Annie Hall on Prime Video now.</a></p>
<h2>Babe (1995) — 98% on Rotten Tomatoes</h2>
<p>The highest-rated film on this list, and honestly, it&#8217;s not hard to see why. <em>Babe</em> looks like a simple children&#8217;s movie on the surface, but it earned seven Academy Award nominations and was one of the first films to use digital mouth-replacement technology — meaning real animals appear to speak without looking like a cartoon. It&#8217;s a technical achievement wrapped in something genuinely sweet.</p>
<p>The story follows a young piglet won at a county fair by farmer Arthur Hoggett (James Cromwell), who gets taken in by a Border Collie named Fly (voiced by Miriam Margolyes) and slowly discovers he has an unexpected gift for herding sheep. Hugo Weaving voices Fly&#8217;s no-nonsense partner Rex. If you&#8217;ve been curious about the upcoming talking-animal film <em>The Sheep Detectives</em>, consider this essential homework.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1065598-babe">Stream Babe on Prime Video now.</a></p>
<h2>Dallas Buyers Club (2013) — 92% on Rotten Tomatoes</h2>
<p>This is the film that completed Matthew McConaughey&#8217;s pivot from rom-com lead to serious dramatic actor — and it&#8217;s remembered as much for its production backstory as for the film itself. McConaughey underwent a dramatic physical transformation for the role, losing significant weight to play Ron Woodroof, a Texas electrician and rodeo rider diagnosed with HIV in the mid-1980s.</p>
<p>Told he has limited time to live, Woodroof begins researching treatments after struggling to access legal medication in the US. He travels internationally to obtain alternative drugs and eventually forms an underground distribution network — the Dallas Buyers Club — to get them to other patients. It&#8217;s a biographical drama that deals in heavy themes of mortality and systemic failure, but it never loses sight of the human being at its center. Jared Leto won a Supporting Actor Oscar alongside McConaughey&#8217;s lead win at the 2014 ceremony.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/dallas_buyers_club">Stream Dallas Buyers Club on Prime Video now.</a></p>
<h2>Hot Fuzz (2007) — 91% on Rotten Tomatoes</h2>
<p>The second installment in Edgar Wright&#8217;s Three Flavours Cornetto Trilogy — sandwiched between <em>Shaun of the Dead</em> and <em>The World&#8217;s End</em> — <em>Hot Fuzz</em> is technically a parody of action cinema, but it functions more as a high-octane love letter to the genre. It&#8217;s one of the tightest, funniest comedies of the 21st century, and a lot of that comes down to the genuine chemistry between Simon Pegg and Nick Frost.</p>
<p>Pegg plays Nicholas Angel, a hyper-competent London police officer reassigned to a sleepy rural village after making his colleagues look bad. He&#8217;s partnered with Danny Butterman (Frost), an enthusiastic local cop whose entire understanding of police work comes from action movies. When a series of deaths in the village get ruled as accidents, Angel starts pulling at threads. What unravels is genuinely surprising, extremely violent, and very, very funny.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/hot_fuzz">Stream Hot Fuzz on Prime Video now.</a></p>
<h2>The Wolf of Snow Hollow (2020) — 90% on Rotten Tomatoes</h2>
<p>The most under-the-radar film on this list, and maybe the most rewatchable. Written, directed by, and starring Jim Cummings, <em>The Wolf of Snow Hollow</em> is a genuine genre-blender — part small-town procedural, part creature feature, part character study — set in a Utah mountain town where brutal killings are occurring during full moons.</p>
<p>Cummings plays John, the local sheriff already buckling under personal and professional pressure, who leads the investigation while desperately trying to convince himself there&#8217;s no supernatural explanation for what&#8217;s happening. As the body count rises, the community fractures and the case spirals. A lot of the film&#8217;s comedy comes from the awkward, exhausted human interactions happening around a genuinely disturbing mystery. It arrived in 2020 without much fanfare, which means most people still haven&#8217;t seen it.</p>
<p>Now&#8217;s a good time to fix that.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_wolf_of_snow_hollow">Stream The Wolf of Snow Hollow on Prime Video now.</a></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com/115/prime-video-movies-may-2026-rotten-tomatoes-90-percent/">5 Prime Video Movies in May 2026 With 90%+ on Rotten Tomatoes</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com">Cream</a>.</p>
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