Like the city we hail from, Chicagoans have grit, and a play-hard, work-hard attitude. We know ketchup has zero business on a hot dog, distance is always measured in minutes, our favorite football teams are da Bears and anyone who crushes the Packers, and we have deep-rooted, generational Cubs or White Sox allegiances. (Go Cubbies!) Smalltalk centers around weather, as we stubbornly grind our way through all four seasons, sometimes in the same day. We’re a proud people. So, it’s a logical leap to stamp our kid with a distinctly Chicago name derived from our streets, athletes, politicians, and landmarks.

Adler Planetarium

Addison

Many a wild time has been had on Addison Street as it's home to the popular Cubby Bear which sits across the street from the home of the Cubs, Wrigley Field, also on Addison Street. With no apparent connection to Chicago, it's a mystery as to why it was named after the brilliant British physician Thomas Addison, who discovered Addison's Disease.

Adler

Elgin native, Max Adler, was a concert violinist who gave up music to become VP of Sears Roebuck & Co. after marrying into the family that controlled the powerhouse company. After his retirement in 1928, he became a philanthropist who was key to the creation of the first planetarium in the Western Hemisphere, Adler Planetarium.

Al

Throwing a nod to our gangsta roots, how about a lil tot running around named Al, for the infamous, needs-no-intro Al Capone?

Anderson

Shout out to the northside's popular Andersonville, which hosts a massive shindig in honor of their Swedish immigrant roots, the annual Midsommarfest.

Chicago Bulls

Barack

No matter political alliances, you gotta admit, the 44th President of the United States, Barack Obama, is a guy you'd like to grab a beer, play b-ball and swap stories with. Not only was he the first African-American President in US history, he was also previously an Illinois State Senator who laid roots in the Hyde Park neighborhood.

Benny

Chicago Bulls mascot "Benny" the Bull is one of the longest-tenured and most recognized mascots in sports history, getting his name from Ben Bentley, the Bull's first Public Relations Manager and Stadium Announcer.

Betty

Guys, we get to stake a claim on one of the most universally well-liked celebrities of all time, Betty White. It's a small claim, she moved from her Oak Park home when she was just over a year old, but we'll take it. She, in many ways, paved the way for women in entertainment and had a love story with Allen Ludden that's worthy of fairytales.

Briggs

Lance Briggs played his entire 12-year career as a Chicago Bear linebacker, which is great and all, but mostly Briggs would be an adorable hipster baby name. Just picture baby Briggs in his flannel buttondown, skinny jeans, busted-up Chucks, messy-hair-don't-care style, and oversized glasses for his 20/20 vision.

Burnham

Daniel Hudson Burnham — use any one of those names for baby — was responsible for many of our skyscrapers and was the Director of Works for the World's Columbia Exposition, a.ka. The White City. He is credited for the essence-capturing quote, "Make no little plans. They have no magic to stir men's blood and probably will not themselves be realized."

Chance the Rapper at Great Wolf Lodge Gurnee

Caray

You aren't allowed to call yourself a Chicagoan if you don't know the name Harry Caray. This absolute legend, in his signature thick wide-rimmed glasses, was a sports announcer who spent 11 years with the White Sox and the last 16 years of his career with the Cubs, famously leading fans in a spirited rendition of Take Me Out to the Ball Game during the 7th-inning stretch.

Catherine

The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 destroyed over 17,000 buildings and 2,000 square feet and many locals like to hold on to the likely, utterly tall tale that it was caused by Catherine O'Leary's cow knocking over a lantern in her barn.

Chance

One of our most famous Chicagoans, Chance the Rapper, also happens to do a whole heck of a lot for Chicago kids with his charity SocialWorks. SocialWorks aims to empower youth through the arts, education, and civic engagement while fostering leadership, accessibility, and positivity within Chicago.

Chicago

Yep, totally a human name now, thanks to Kim and Kanye.

Clark

Not only is it the name of a highly-trafficked street that runs diagonally north-south for a solid 8 miles in Chicago, but Clark is the name of the Chicago Cubs beloved mascot. Clark Street is named for George Rogers Clark, an American War revolutionary who captured much of the Northwest Territory from the British. Cheerio, Clark!

things to do with kids in chicago dinosaur at field museum
Field Museum via Maria Chambers

Damen

You've likely found yourself on Damen Ave. one time or another. But how'd it come to be? It was renamed from its original Robey Street in honor of Father Arnold J. Damen, a Catholic priest who founded Holy Family Church and St. Ignatius High School and College, now known as Loyola University.

Elston

Daniel Elston was a British merchant who arrived in Chicago to make and sell soaps, candles and bricks — interesting combo, eh? He also served as an Alderman and Elston Avenue serves as an alternate route alongside the Kennedy Expressway, never straying too far from its path.

Ernie

Nicknamed Mr. Cub and Mr. Sunshine, some say former Cubs player Ernie Banks is the greatest player who ever picked up a bat and glove. He wasn't all brawn and no brains, however, as he was also the first black Ford Motor Company dealer in the United States.

Ferris

Bueller? Bueller? Bueller? Bueller may not have really been ill, but Ferris makes for a pretty sick name, after the iconic 80s movie filmed in Chicago, Ferris Bueller's Day Off.

Field

Marshall Field was the founder of Marshall Field and Company, renowned for its level of quality and customer service, and provided funding for the Field Museum of Natural History and land for University of Chicago. For some nostalgic Chicagoans, Macy's will forever and always be referred to as Fields.

Crown Fountain in Millennium Park

Grant

Grant Park, a.k.a. Chicago's front yard, is home to big-time notables Millennium Park, Buckingham Fountain, Art Institute of Chicago and the Museum Campus and plays hosts to some of our most-attended fests, like Taste of Chicago, Lollapalooza, Chicago Blues Fest and Pride in the Park. It was named after the 18th President of the United States, Ulysses S. Grant, who along with former President Lincoln, led the Union Army to a victory over the Confederates in the American Civil War.

Ida

Ida B. Wells was an African-American investigative journalist, educator, and early leader in the Civil Rights Movement, having been freed by the Emancipation Proclamation during the Civil War at the age of 16. She was arguably one of the most famous black women during her time, working to combat prejudice and fight for the equality of African-American women. We are obsessed with this Chicago name for obvious reasons. 

Jackson

The southside's Jackson Park, named in honor of 7th US President Andrew Jackson, was developed to host the Chicago World's Fair in 1893 and is potentially the future site of the Barack Obama Presidential Center.

views from 360 Chicago
Former John Hancock views via Maria Chambers

Jane

Born in the Lakeview neighborhood, absolute legend, Jane Bryne became the first female elected to the office of Mayor in the US in 1979, at a time when Chicago was the 2nd largest city in the country.

John

As the first signer of the Declaration of Independence, John Hancock wasn't a Chicagoan, but the skyscraper that up until 2018 bore his name was built as the second tallest in the world on Michigan Ave. in 1968. It was featured in Poltergeist III and was home to the late great Chris Farley, who passed away in his residence on the 60th floor.

Jordan

MJ. Good ole #23, Michael Jordan. Everybody knows him, he made basketball-lovers out of everyone with his out-of-this-world skill, infectious mode of play and raw talent. Arguably the best that ever played, depending on who you ask, producing some pretty sweet gear during his career to boot.

Lake Michigan and Chicago views
Lake Michigan views via Maria Chambers

Kingston

We all know Kingston Mines is a world-famous blues club that has hosted legends in the industry, with performances 7 nights a week that go into the wee morning hours. But, did you know it was home to the first-ever performance of the Grease musical in 1971? This fierce Chicago name is a favorite. 

Lake

Besides our stunning city skyline, pretty much the most visually stunning in the world, Lake Michigan and its beaches make Chicago a rather swell special place to live. It's one of the five Great Lakes of North America and the only one that sits wholly in the United States.

Lincoln Park Zoo via Maria Chambers

Lincoln

Lincoln Park, Lincoln Park Zoo, Lincoln Memorial, Lincoln Avenue, everywhere you look a Lincoln. Near Lake and Wacker sits a marker commemorating the location where Abraham Lincoln won the nomination for the presidency at the 1860 Republican Convention. Pay a visit to the Chicago History Museum if you're interested in diving more into Lincoln's history, Chicago and beyond.

Logan

Logan Square has quickly risen to be one of the favorite neighborhoods in Chicago, with restaurants that rival West Loop favorites. Its namesake, John A. Logan was an American soldier who served in the Mexican-American War, a Union General in the American Civil War and served the state as a Senator and a Congressman. And, you owe an annual three-day weekend partially to him, as he's regarded as the most important figure in the movement to recognize Memorial Day as a national holiday. We love this Chicago name for boys, girls, and even pets. 

Lou

Chicago is known for its pizza, and we all have a passionate favorite. And Lou Malnati's undoubtedly tops a whole lotta lists. Deep dish Lou's? Yes, please!

Morton Arboretum

Maggie

Maggie Daley was the wife of Chicago's longest-serving mayor, Mayor Richard M. Daley, who held the position for 22 years. Well known for dodging the spotlight, but staying highly involved, she started the successful After School Matters non-profit that provides high school teens with after-school and summer opportunities in the arts, leadership, sports and STEM fields. In her honor, Chicago also has one of the coolest urban parks in the country with both lake and city views, mini-golf, a climbing wall, skating ribbon, green space and climbing structures, Maggie Daley Park.

Macaulay

Instant holiday classic, Home Alone, starring Macauley Culkin was filmed in a Winnetka home, the Grace Episcopal Church in Oak Park and the famous airport scene was shot in Chicago O'Hare Airport.

Morton

"When it rains, it pours," Morton Salt's motto and accompanying Morton Salt Girl on their logo is one of the 10 most recognized symbols in the US. Joy Morton, the company's founder, also established Morton Arboretum, the 1,700-acre botanical garden situated in Lisle that sees hundreds of thousands of visitors and hikers a year. He's also the son of J. Sterling Morton, who founded Arbor Day.

Ogden

You can ride Ogden Avenue from the Near West Side all the way to Naperville. We wouldn't suggest it, but you could. Bonus points if you know where its name came from? Chicago's first mayor, William B. Ogden, served a one-year term beginning in 1837, was a founder of the Chicago Board of Trade, designed the first swing bridge over the Chicago River and donated the land for Rush Medical Center.

Oprah

How lucky are we that Oprah chose Chicago to host her now-iconic Oprah Winfrey show? She has amassed a beautifully positive legacy that will transcend generations, and any kid would be lucky to carry her name. But, boy, are those some big stilettos to fill. This Chicago name will definitely get you noticed. 

Oscar

My bologna has a first name, O-S-C-A-R, and your kid could, too! German immigrant, Oscar Mayer made his way to Chicago and laid the groundwork for one of the most well-known names in the food industry on the near-northside. And blessed the USA with the super dope Weinermobile and the longest-running tv commercial to date that starred a 4-year-old singing about bologna.

boat tour companies in chicago mercury cruises
Chicago River via Mercury River Cruises

Payton

Called the greatest football player he'd ever seen, and even greater human, by Mike Ditka, Walter Payton played all 13 of his career seasons with the Bears as a running back. His legacy includes the NFL's Walter Payton Man of the Year Award and the Walter Payton Award.

Rand

William Rand opened a printing shop in 1856 and two years later hired Irish Immigrant Andrew McNally to work for $9/week, focusing their efforts on printing tickets and timetables for Chicago's railroad industry. In 1868 they officially launched Rand, McNally & Co. and became the largest and most-reputable map publishers in history. They became the first major map publisher to adopt a system of numbered highways and erected many of the roadside highway signs still used today.

Randolph

Randolph Street runs through the West Loop and is home to some of Chicago's most well-known and loved restaurants, like Girl & the Goat, Little Goat Diner, Au Cheval and Bar Siena. It got its name from one of Chicago's first city planners, James Thompson, who may have named it after his home county, Randolph County, Illinois. But, your guess is as good as ours.

River

The Chicago River runs right through the city and is one of the reasons Chicago is of geographic importance, as it is a link between the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River Basin, and ultimately the Gulf of Mexico. It has a place of honor on the Flag of Chicago represented by two horizontal blue stripes. It's also a feat of civil engineering, as the direction of its flow was reversed in 1900 in an attempt to protect the city's water supply.

Maria Chambers

Rizzo

Since being traded to the Cubs in 2012, Anthony Rizzo has made a big impact on Chicago. Not only is he a three-time All-Star first basemen and Hodgkin's Lymphoma survivor, through his non-profit Anthony Rizzo Family Foundation, but he has also donated over $4M to Lurie's Children's Hospital.

Robey

What is now Damen Avenue, was once Robey Avenue, named after James Robey, who operated a roadhouse near Madison and present-day Damen. Don't worry though, the name is still alive, with The Robey Hotel sitting at the intersections of Damen, Milwaukee and North Avenues, serving up sick city views.

Robin

There will never be another quite like the late, great Robin Williams. His eyes twinkled with a beautiful mischievousness and his wit lightning quick. Robin attended elementary and junior high in Lake Forest before his Ford Motor Co. exec dad got transferred to Detroit. You can see a mural dedicated to Williams at Bucktown's Concord Music Hall.

Roscoe

Tis a mystery how Roscoe Village and Roscoe Street received their names, but Roscoe Village is often referred to as a village within a city because of its small-town feel and huge love the residents have for their little slice of a big city.

Rose

D. Rose is no longer a Bulls player, but this Chicago native was a prominent fixture on the team when he wore the jersey. When he called the United Center home, he was named Rookie of the Year and, at the age of 22, was the youngest player to ever win the NBA Most Valuable Player Award.

Shedd Aquarium

Sammy

Dominican American Sammy Sosa spent much of his baseball career with the Chicago Cubs, reaching his 400th run milestone faster than any other player in the National League, securing his place as one of the game's best all-time hitters. 

Shedd

Sitting right next to Lake Michigan within Museum Campus, Shedd Aquarium was the first inland aquarium with a permanent saltwater fish collection and was a gift from John Graves Shedd, President and Chairman of the Board for Marshall Field & Company.

Sheridan

A drive along Sheridan Road and Lake Michigan through the northern suburbs when the leaves are boasting fall colors is extra special, add it to your Chicago bucket list if you have yet to do. Philip Henry Sheridan was a general in the Civil War who coordinated military relief efforts following the Great Chicago Fire.

Thompson

The James R. Thompson Center serves as a secondary capital for the state and was named after the 37th, and longest-running at 14 years, governor of the State of Illinois.

Walt

The pioneer of American animation who holds the record for most Academy Awards won by an individual at 22, Walt Disney, was born in the Hermosa neighborhood. 

Willis

Perhaps it's different strokes for different folks, but "Wha'choo talkin' 'bout, Willis?" is EXACTLY right. To die harders, it will always be the Sears Tower, but Willis Tower is technically the official name of the 2nd tallest building in the United States. 

Wrigley

This one's pretty obvi, with our Cubbies flying the 'W' at one of the most iconic ballfields in the country, Wrigley Field. Even if you don't like baseball, a game watched at Wrigley is pretty darn special.

Make sure to capture all the adventures with your little Chicagoan—and share them with your family and friends near and far—with the Tinybeans app. The secure platform puts parents in total control of who sees and interacts with photos and videos of their kids.

Poor Things: 141 minutes. Beau Is Afraid: 179 minutes. Oppenheimer: 180 minutes. Killers of the Flower Moon: a whopping 206 minutes. Guys, Hollywood is out of control. What parent has time to sloth out in front of a glowing rectangle for three hours in the name of film buffing?

Obviously, shredding a desert wave with Zendaya and Timothee Chalamet in the planet-hopping saga that is Dune sounds like 321 minutes well spent. And, yes, the aforementioned films are all mesmerizing, well done, and worth every inch of their lengthy reels. But let’s get serious here: You want really good movies under 90 minutes you can watch while the kids are down.

Short movies may be relics of the past, but their versatility can’t be understated. Perfect for consuming when you have time to yourself, when you’d rather watch a movie instead of the last three episodes of Curb Your Enthusiasm you’re saving to watch with your partner, or when you’d like to get through a whole movie without a hundred bathroom breaks, these quickies are a godsend. Ahead, 15 of our favorite movies under 90 minutes that should win an editing award.

Once

movie poster of Once, a movie under 90 minutes
Buena Vista

John Carney’s musical about the brief but life-changing connection between an Irish street busker and a Czech pianist who make beautiful music together hits all the right notes. The soundtrack is brilliantly constructed, the love story is gut-wrenchingly believable, and the indie’s brief runtime is deftly reflective of the protagonists’ relationship. 

86 minutes

Watch it on Prime Video 

Enemy

production still of Enemy, a movie under 90 minutes
Entertainment One

Dune’s Denis Villeneuve is The Director of the moment, but before he was world-building with big-studio bucks, he was crafting an impressive resume with stylish indies. One of them is this thrilling puzzler starring The Character Actor of our times, Jake Gyllenhaal. He plays a professor who spots his exact look-alike in a movie. Curious, he searches for the man, and things get dark. 

90 minutes

Watch it on Hulu/Cinemax 

Rye Lane 

Fox Searchlight Pictures

Unlike every romantic comedy you’ve ever seen—in a good way—Rye Lane follows a guy and a girl who meet in the most unromantic way: He’s crying in a public bathroom stall; she spots his pink tennies from under the stall door. Meeting officially in a museum shortly after, the two embark on a colorful, joyous, and eye-opening trek across South London you won’t want to end.

82 minutes

Watch it on Hulu

Palm Springs 

Hulu

What do you get when you combine a Lonely Island star, a time-loop narrative, and a wedding? This bonkers comedy starring Andy Samberg, Cristin Milioti, and J.K. Simmons made a killing at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival when it set the record for the biggest deal ever made in Park City. The rest of the plot is better left in the dark if you haven’t seen the movie already. Trust us.

90 minutes

Watch it on Hulu 

Love at First Sight

a production still of Love at First Sight, one of the best movies under 90 minutes
Netflix

Haley Lu Richardson and Ben Hardy star in this Netflix Original about two strangers who spark up a romance while waiting for their flight to London at JFK International Airport. Once aboard, they get closer. Once they land, they lose track of each other. A charming adaptation of Jennifer E. Smith’s novel, The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight, this one is short, sweet, and swoon-worthy.  

90 minutes

Watch it on Netflix

My Octopus Teacher

Netflix

You never know where your next life-changing lesson will come from. For Craig Foster, a cold-water free diver who has spent eons under the ocean surface, this comes in a kelp forest off the coast of Cape Town. The teacher? A curious octopus who after nearly a month of Foster slowly earning her trust invited him into her world. The tender bond they form will touch your soul.

85 minutes

Watch it on Netflix 

Fruitvale Station

movie poster of Fruitvale Station
Significant Productions

Ryan Coogler, the director of Black Panther, made his directorial debut with a raw and unflinching indie film that tells the story of Oscar Grant, the 22-year-old Black man who was shot and killed in a subway station in Oakland on New Year’s Eve 2009 by a police officer. Rather than approach the film with a wider lens, Coogler keeps his focus narrow, painting a picture of who Oscar was—a son, a father, a boyfriend, a human being—on the day he died.

85 minutes

Watch it on Max

Brief Encounter

Universal Pictures

Just as its title suggests, this David Lean classic charts the ever-so-brief romance between two married commuters who meet at a railway station and fall in love. Every Thursday, their affection deepens as they spend time together at the nearby cafe, knowing a future together is impossible. One of Greta Gerwig’s favorite films, it also had a profound impact on Sofia Coppola‘s Lost in Translation

86 minutes

Watch it on Prime Video Freevee

Frances Ha 

production still of Frances Ha, a good movie under 90 minutes
IFC films

Greta Gerwig and Mickey Sumner (whose father is Sting, BTW) star in this black-and-white comedy helmed by Noah Baumbach. Like Barbie, Baumbach and Gerwig co-wrote the script, so the pair’s humor quirks are on glorious display throughout. This movie under 90 minutes is about a dreamer (Gerwig) who lives in New York and won’t allow the reality of life to sour her delusional optimism. 

86 minutes

Watch it on Netflix

Shiva Baby

Utopia

Emma Seligman, whose most recent campus comedy, Bottoms, was an instant hit, made her directorial debut with Shiva Baby, a funeral riot that also stars Rachel Sennott. She plays Danielle, a student who attends a shiva with her family and while there, runs into her ex-girlfriend, as well as the cheating husband she’s having an affair with. It all makes for a hilarious hot mess.

77 minutes

Watch it on Hulu

Gravity

production still of Gravity
Warner Bros.

More a movie you experience, Gravity is a gorgeous and thrilling action ride with Sandra Bullock at the helm. She plays an engineer cosmonaut who fights to survive in space after a debris storm sends her flailing off into the black abyss. Battling not only extreme tangible elements, she’s forced to confront her inner demons if she wants any chance of putting her foot on the ground again.

90 minutes

Watch it on Prime Video

Zola

A24

One of the best movies of 2020, Zola is the cinematic retelling of a string of tweets that went viral in 2015. They were posted by a professional dancer named Aziah “Zola” King and included profane details of a gonzo road trip she took to the seedy underbelly of Tampa. Stripping, suicide, bad actors: She was lucky to make it out alive. Colman Domingo, Taylour Paige, and Riley Keough star.  

86 minutes

Watch it on Tubi

Before Sunset

a production still of Before Sunset, a great movie under 90 minutes
Warner Bros.

In Richard Linklater’s Before trilogy, Before Sunset falls in the middle; it picks up nine years after Jesse and Celine meet in Vienna (Before Sunrise) and nine years before their trip to Greece (Before Midnight). Watch the entire series at some point, but if pressed for time, the 2004 film, which sees the pair charm the pants off each other in Paris, is the concise watch you’re after.

80 minutes

Watch it on Prime Video

Marcel the Shell With Shoes On

A24

Unless you’ve been living under your pet rock, then you know about this adorable little shell. He goes by Marcel and is the subject of a pseudo-documentary that includes an effort to find his family, a chat with Lesley Stahl of 60 Minutes, and a whirlwind brush with fame. Experienced through the single eye of our mini marvel, it’s so charming that your heartstrings don’t stand a chance. They will be tugged.

90 minutes

Watch it on Netflix

The Fantastic Mr. Fox

a movie poster of Fantastic Mr. Fox
Fox Searchlight Pictures

Don’t let the animation fool you; this Roald Dahl classic brought to stop-motion life by Wes Anderson, the maestro of quirk, is a grown-up’s witty playground. About a sly fox whose food raids have farmers on his tail, Anderson’s rendition is brimming with dialogue so clever and crafty, that it can only land with adults. Watching it without the intermittent, “Why’s that funny?” makes this movie under 90 minutes a real treat.

87 minutes

Watch it on Max

If it were up to Hollywood, high school would be a place where popular kids never get zits, every student is a professional dancer, and geeks are one makeover away from becoming prom queen. Yeah, not so much. IRL, the halls of high school harbor angst, absurdities, and awkwardness. Oh, and hormones. Gobs of hormones. Luckily, there are those films that do get the experience right. Ahead are 21 high school movies you’ll want to watch with your tweens and teens. And who knows? Maybe they’ll open up about a thing or two.

Looking for other movies to watch with kids? Check out our favorite movies with a father-daughter bond, our favorite movies about friendship, and the best coming-of-age movies that should be required viewing.

Booksmart

Olivia Wilde’s directorial debut perfectly portrays the experience of overcoming misconceptions. Seniors Molly and Amy are closing out high school with Ivy Leagues on the horizon. When they learn the social crowd is also headed to equally esteemed schools, they decide to indulge in a little teenage debauchery the night before graduation. A familiar narrative, maybe, but Wilde’s injection of female friendship and a cast that flies the rainbow flag freely make this high school movie so very special.

Stream it on Tubi

Bottoms

Ayo Edebiri (The Bear) and Rachel Sennott (Bodies Bodies Bodies) team up for a queer comedy about two best friends who start an after-school fight club to attract the attention of their dream girls and lose their virginity before graduation. Warped and exaggerated, yet authentic and relatable, Emma Seligman’s satirical take on the awkward high school experience is grade-A hilarity and exactly the knockout crowd-pleaser we are coming to expect from the darkly comedic director on the rise.

Stream it on Prime Video

CODA

Ruby has a lot on her plate. The only hearing person in her family, she helps run her father’s fishing boat, acts as her family’s interpreter, and haggles with fish buyers—and that’s before she even gets to school. But Ruby, a senior, has a secret: She loves to sing and wants to attend the Berklee College of Music. Cue the clash with her parents. A three-time Oscar winner, Sian Heder’s tearjerker isn’t without its stereotypes, but above all, it’s a genuine, relatable, and thoughtful representation of deaf culture.

Stream it on Apple TV+

The Half of It

Set in the Pacific Northwest, The Half of It unfolds through Ellie Chu, a 17-year-old wordsmith recruited by an athlete to help him write a love letter to the girl they are both crushing on. Sound familiar? That’s because Alice Wu’s near-perfect rom-com is a modern take on Cyrano de Bergerac. Here, Wu subverts teen movie tropes and instead focuses on connections made outside of messy hormonal drama. But where the film really gets it right is right there in its tagline: “Not every love story is a romance.”

Stream it on Netflix

10 Things I Hate About You

We could list 10 things we love about this 1999 rom-com, but to save time and space, we’ll just say Karen McCullah and Kirsten Smith’s screenplay is a feminist take on Shakespeare’s Taming of the Shrew, and that’s reason enough to hit play. If you need more, this high school movie about two sisters and the boys trying to court them is also bolstered by strong performances from its core cast (Heath Ledger, Julia Stiles), while offering fresh takes on themes of sibling rivalry, ruined reputations, and self-identity.

Stream it on Disney+

Lady Bird

Lady Bird is a great high school movie
A24 Films

Greta Gerwig takes a drive down her own memory lane (or nightmare alley, depending on how you look at it) for the narrative in Lady Bird. Written and directed by the Sacramento native, the film was inspired by her own coming-of-age, capturing teenage angst like no other. Beyond accurately representing the all-encompassing, overly dramatic flirtatious moments with boys and the spirited bond between two best friends, Gerwig’s depiction of the nuances of the mother/teen-daughter relationship gets an A+.

Stream it on Prime Video

Moxie

Amy Poehler steps behind the lens to direct the film adaptation of Jennifer Mathieu’s same-name novel. Though a work of fiction, Moxie pulls from the author’s own experiences with the Riot Grrrl movement of the ’90s to tell a coming-of-age story about a shy 16-year-old who fights the patriarchy in her school by publishing a feminist zine. Sexism, antiquated traditions, toxic masculinity: Poehler takes care to highlight today’s seemingly benign behaviors and offers a master class on how to dispel them.

Stream it on Netflix

Dope

Shameik Moore will steal your heart as Malcolm, a straight-A student navigating street crime, peer ridicule, and, of course, the SATs. He and his best friends live in a neighborhood of Inglewood called the Bottoms, but if Malcolm and his Harvard aspirations are any indication, he’s headed straight for the top. That is until a run-in with a drug dealer threatens to derail everything. Blending hood drama with teen comedy, Dope is a highly entertaining take on being young, Black, and othered in today’s America.

Stream it on Netflix

To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before

Author Jenny Han’s beloved To All the Boys trilogy got the Netflix treatment, with the streamer adapting each book for the screen over three years. But, it’s the first installment, introducing Lara Jean and Peter, that deserves all the X’s and O’s. A reinvented rom-com that revamps tired tropes, celebrates diversity, and speaks to anyone who’s ever had a crush, TATBILB begins with Lara Jean’s love letters being mysteriously mailed to their recipients and ends by giving rise to one of the best YA couples of all time.

Stream it on Netflix

Prom Pact

Two tropes that often mosey their way into high school comedies? Proms and pacts. Usually, both intertwined with another coming-of-age trope: S-E-X. But director Anya Adams breaks the formulaic mold with Prom Pact, a rom-com about a feminist firebrand in the making, her plucky best friend, and their agreement to go to prom as long there’s no slow dancing. A sleeper hit of 2023, this send-up of seminal ’80s classics like Pretty in Pink subverts expectations, offering instead a thoughtful charmer full of surprises.

Stream it on Disney+

Related: 15 Movies Your Tweens Will Watch without Rolling Their Eyes

The Hate U Give

The Hate U Give
20th Century Fox

Starr Carter is living a double life. During the week, she attends a predominantly white prep school. But on the weekends, she lets loose in Garden Heights, the lower-income neighborhood where she grew up. It’s only after one fateful night, when her best friend is killed by a police officer, that her two paths converge and she finds her singular voice. An important film, George Tillman Jr.’s hefty crime drama might be the conversation starter you need to talk with your kids about race and police brutality.

Stream it on Prime Video

Remember the Titans

Based on the real-life events surrounding Coach Herman Boone and the integration of his high school football team, Remember the Titans is a Disney classic that delivers all the chill bumps. Not only does it offer a glorious sports story, but the film’s depiction of a divided Southern town that eventually unites is inspiration gold. Of course, this is the House of Mouse, where saccharine flourishes always win out, but, hey, when a film recruits Ryan Gosling, Marvin Gaye, and Denzel Washington, it simply can’t lose.

Stream it on Disney+

The Edge of Seventeen

You know those movies that are so easy to watch you don’t want them to end? This is one of those movies. Set during the fall season, this gem from writer/director Kelly Fremon Craig stars Hailee Steinfeld as Nadine, a 17-year-old tortured by her own emotions and hormones. When her best friend, Krista, starts dating her older brother, well, life gets worse. A candid coming-of-age tale told with refreshing wit and charming zing, Seventeen is a welcome addition to the teen drama canon.

Stream it on TBS

Mean Girls

High school: where kids can recite the quadratic equation and evaluate limits, but get stumped when it comes to figuring out girl rules. This is why we can’t forget about Mean Girls, a fun romp about a naive teen (Lindsay Lohan) who upends the social hierarchy at her new school. Though it might be a bit exaggerated, thanks to the hilarious contributions of writer Tina Fey, this Mark Waters classic high school movie tackles the harsh reality of bullying and the consequences of trying to fit in with the wrong crowd.

Stream it on Paramount+

Do Revenge

Sure, Do Revenge takes up residence in the privileged lives of high schoolers who go to tennis camp, throw lavish parties, and frequent ritzy country clubs, but there are elements of this Gen Z prize that ring true. Namely navigating bullies, female friendships, and the consequences of digital living. A contemporary watch, Do Revenge is also an homage to the teen-coms that defined yesteryear (Heathers, Clueless, Easy A). Not to mention, it has a truly stellar soundtrack both parents and their teens will enjoy.

Stream it on Netflix

Related: 14 Coming-of-Age Movies That Should Be Required Viewing

Love & Basketball

Love & Basketball is a great high school movie
40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks

Sex happens. So, thank goodness there are filmmakers like Gina Prince-Bythewood who pay special attention when depicting the act on the screen. Starring Sanaa Lathan and Omar Epps, Love & Basketball tracks one couple’s relationship over the decades, with most of their narrative set during high school. Beyond authentically portraying the aforementioned “first time” (with a particularly memorable needle drop, we might add), the movie explores gender equality in sports, celebrating women’s basketball with the shout-out it deserves.

Stream it on Hulu

Chang Can Dunk

It’s the beginning of his sophomore year and Chang, a 16-year-old NBA buff whose other interests include band and the new girl named Christy, has only one goal: Prove to the entire school he can slam dunk. His aspiration to fly through the air like a swag god is the result of some alpha-male rivalry, part of what first-time director Jingyi Shao gets right about the hormone headquarters also called high school. Beyond the courtside machismo, Shao weaves in the immigrant experience and delivers a winning coming-of-ager the whole family will love.

Stream it on Disney+

The Breakfast Club

The quintessential scribe of ’80s teen angst, John Hughes is responsible for several iconic films. Perhaps the most heralded? The Breakfast Club. Capturing the essence of cliques and the pressure to conform, the film spends a Saturday in detention bonding with a group of archetyped students. Although some scenes don’t hold up today (an observation made by Molly Ringwald herself), this cult classic reminds us that no matter how different we may seem on the surface, we are all the same insecure youths on the inside.

Stream it on Prime Video

Superbad

Directed by Greg Mottola and written by real-life best friends Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, Superbad turns the raunch dial way up for an essential high school movie comedy that really nails the teen experience, the idea of the bromance, and the awkwardness that infiltrates the halls of every high school. About two social outcasts who throw a house party to impress some girls, the 2007 film also changed the genre at the time, openly hurling penis jokes and packing its reel with as much coital chatter as its R rating would allow.

Stream it on Prime Video

Dazed and Confused

Richard Linklater always gets slice-of-life filmmaking right. From Boyhood to Everybody Wants Some to this retro delight, the Texas director is a master of nostalgia, essentially making the viewer feel like a tourist in a series of Polaroids snapped during personal milestones. Set in 1976 on the last day of school, Dazed and Confused does just that as it tags along with a group of teens maneuvering spilled beers, bong clouds, and unruly upperclassmen. Familiar faces include Matthew McConaughey and Ben Affleck.

Stream it on Prime Video

 

 

If you’ve ever been lucky in love, you’ve likely experienced first-hand the butterfly flutters in your stomach when you meet your perfect match. While that first rush of physical attraction may fade, relationships that ultimately stand the test of time often share similar qualities that outlast the initial spark. We asked several leading experts to weigh in on the most powerful predictors behind long-term relationship success, and boy, did they deliver.

1. You lead with laughter.

Let’s face it: Life is messy, and laughter is often the glue that keeps things from completely falling apart. If you can laugh so hard that you chuckle-snort and your partner still finds you irresistibly adorable, then your relationship likely is on solid ground. According to Dr. Sara Algoe, professor of psychology and neuroscience at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and director of The Love Consortium, shared laughter is critical in a successful, lasting relationship. “It signals that you see the world in the same way. We found that people who shared laughter felt more connected than those who did not share laughter,” she says.

2. You fight fair.

Think respectful disagreements, not WWE smackdowns. Dr. John Gottman, world-renowned researcher on marital stability and divorce prediction and co-founder of The Gottman Institute, says a couple’s ability to resolve conflict—or their repairing skills—is often the single greatest sign of a healthy relationship. “Our partners don’t always have to think like we think. That’s what makes life interesting—it would be boring to be married to yourself,” says Gottman. Bonus points if you can apologize without making it sound like you’re reciting the alphabet backward. Find out more about Gottman’s work on the 4 Horsemen of Relationships here.

3. You operate as a team.

The over-used aphorism “teamwork makes the dream work” has become something of a corporate cliché, but when it comes to tackling life’s curveballs, couples that operate as a unified team have a higher chance at success than those who only fend for themselves. Andreas Narum, certified psychologist, couples therapist, and founder of Remainly explains, “Good teamwork acknowledges that there are two separate sets of thoughts and feelings.” Whether co-navigating parenting duties or making shared decisions about finances, facing challenges side-by-side and high-fiving each other’s victories along the way make the relationship work.

4. You have fun together.

If everything feels like a chore with your partner, it’s probably a glaring red flag the relationship won’t work out in the long term. According to a study conducted by researchers at Utah State University, “Having fun together can help couples feel positive emotions, which can increase relationship satisfaction, help couples to unite to overcome differences, and give hope when working through difficult challenges.” At the most basic level, a relationship should be fun, and being together should spark joy, not anger or anxiety.

5. You celebrate each other’s wins—big or small.

While jealousy is undoubtedly a relationship red flag, authentic, caring support and encouragement are the love languages of many lasting relationships. “The quality of positive support—reassurance that a partner is loved and esteemed and is capable of taking control of his or her life—is the most crucial factor in the health of any relationship,” says Dr. Sue Johnson, clinical psychologist and founder of The International Centre for Excellence in Emotionally Focused Therapy.

6. You make time for each other, even when life gets crazy.

It’s easy for many couples to fall into a rut, especially for those in long-term relationships. In a recently published study, Dr. Samantha Joel, relationship researcher and assistant professor at Western University in London, Ontario, found partners who regularly checked in with each other sustained better relationships in the long term. Think quality date nights, not just Netflix binges on the couch. “When it comes to a satisfying relationship, the partnership you build is more important than the partner you pick,” she says.

7. Honesty and trust are your relationship anthems.

“Trust is the first and perhaps most important predictor of long-term relational success,” says Preston Ni, communications coach and author of How to Communicate Effectively and Handle Difficult People. “Ask yourself the following questions: In general, is your partner reliable? Can you count on your partner as the ‘rock’ in your life? What about you for your partner?” The key is to be truthful, even when it’s tough. Trust is the bedrock of any lasting love story, and if you’ve got a partnership that’s founded on honesty, it’s a definite sign of a healthy relationship.

8. You forgive each other.

We all make mistakes, and the ability to forgive can turn a potentially toxic situation into a learning opportunity. “Admitting wrongdoing is a form of vulnerability, and vulnerability is an essential part of building a close relationship,” says Cindy Frantz, professor of psychology at Oberlin College. Instead of holding a grudge (I will never forget what you did in 2012!), let go and move forward.

9. You respect each other’s boundaries.

Instead of thinking of “me” time as selfishness, understand that healthy relationships respect (and even encourage) autonomy, giving each partner the space to breathe and be individuals. “Love rests on two pillars: surrender and autonomy,” says Esther Perel, clinical psychologist, and expert on human relationships. “Our need for togetherness exists alongside our need for separateness.”

10. You’re both willing to grow and change.

Much like relationship ruts, comfort zones are easy to fall into and get stuck. A sign of a healthy relationship is when couples understand that learning and evolving are essential components of their relationship journey together. Embracing personal growth and change—both individually and as a couple—ensures that one partner isn’t running far ahead while the other is left behind.

11. You share similar values.

While having different perspectives and opinions is natural in any relationship, sharing core values is essential to the success of a healthy long-term relationship. To navigate decisions big and small—from family planning to what’s for dinner and everything in between—coming to a consensus about what matters is fundamental to all successful relationships.

12. You appreciate the little things.

Whether making coffee in the morning or saying “I love you” more often, recognizing and appreciating small acts of kindness will keep the love tank full. “Successful long-term relationships are created through small words, small gestures, and small acts,” says The Gottman Institute’s Dr. John Gottman.

13. You can always be yourself.

Putting your best self forward early in a relationship may mean smoothing out some of the rough patches of your character. But partners in lasting, loving relationships accept each other as is, flaws and all. “If you’re true to yourself, it is easier to act in ways that build intimacy in relationships, and that’s going to make your relationship more fulfilling,” says Amy Brunell, professor of psychology at Ohio State University. Embrace your weird and wonderful self—as well as your partner’s unique quirks!

14. You dream about the future together.

Setting future goals and plans and working toward fulfilling them in the future is a powerful, connecting exercise for couples and a sign of a healthy relationship. According to research conducted by Utah State University, dreaming together as a couple can provide extra meaning and bring depth, closeness, and connection between partners. Shared goals and aspirations create a sense of purpose and excitement for what’s to come.

15. You feel safe, loved, and supported.

Research shows people in healthy long-term relationships are 50% less likely to die prematurely than those without them. In terms of life expectancy, living without strong, meaningful relationships is as unhealthy as smoking. Brené Brown, research professor at the University of Houston and author of Dare to Lead, explains, “A deep sense of love and belonging is an irreducible need of all men, women, and children. We are biologically, cognitively, physically, and spiritually wired to love, to be loved, and to belong.” Ultimately, a lasting relationship is a haven where you can be your true self and know you’re always loved unconditionally.

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These indoor games for kids include things to do to play with friends and family, perfect for both solo and group play

Is the weather keeping you inside? No problem. The good news is that we’ve got a ton of indoor activities for kids that go beyond your normal play routine. From crafting your own robots to writing stories, here are more than 100 activities and inside games for kids that’ll keep everyone busy.

indoor activities for kids
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1. Introduce your kids to yoga with this beginner series.

2. From balloon sports to indoor hopscotch, we’re obsessed with these indoor activities that will get your kids moving.

3. Make music on your phone! Here are the best music-making apps for kids.

4. Create a stained-glass art window.

5. Learn about snowflakes in a whole new way with snowflake experiments. Bonus: you don’t need actual snow to pull them off.

6. Make a time capsule.

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7. Download a new kids’ album and host a dance party.

8. Forget the paintbrush. Use a comb instead to create your next masterpiece!

9. Upcycle your own newspaper into a crazy awesome dome.

10. You don’t need a ton of supplies to keep your kids entertained. Check out our ideas for fun kid games with three supplies or less.

11. Get your kids excited about learning words with these awesome dictionary games.

12. Sharpen those memory skills by playing a brain-boosting learning game.

indoor activities for kids
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13. Create a rad rhino mask.

14. Sometimes you need indoor fun that lasts more than an hour. For fabulous long-term play projects click here.

15. Is your kid still learning how to tell time? We have five games that’ll help them get there.

16. Channel Ariel and make your own mermaid tail.

17. If they’re more into Ursula, try out one of these fun octopus crafts.

18. For a quiet afternoon, print out one of these awesome winter-themed activity sheets.

19. Intro. your kids to Scrabble with our version of the game that features two-letter words.

indoor activities for kids
Pink Stripey Socks

20. Show your kids how epic dragons really are with easy dragon crafts that’ll keep ‘em entertained all day long.

21. Send a hug to a family member or loved one far away with a DIY hug card.

22. Bend water with a comb.

23. Only have 10 minutes to spare? We've got 15 play ideas that'll do the trick.

24. Transform all your old and broken crayons into a stunning work of art.

25. Teach your kids how germs really work with a science experiment high on the fun (and gross) factor.

26. If you’re feeling less than energetic, try a low-key activity. We have 13 ideas to get you started.

indoor activities for kids
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27. Let your kids be their favorite Sesame Street character for the day.

28. Whip up a batch of glow-in-the-dark ice cubes.

29. Make your own harmonica with only four supplies.

30. Try your hand at creating a confetti balloon ball.

31. Use old toilet paper rolls to make binoculars.

32. Fashion jewelry out of food.

indoor activities for kids
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33. All you need is 30 minutes to make your own dolphin.

34. Teach your kids a little more about yourself. Here are 10 questions they can ask you today.

35. Put pen to paper (or finger to keyboard) with three simple ideas to turn your kids into an author for the day.

36. Make poop (yep, you read that right).

37. Carving out quality family time doesn’t have to be challenging. Simply look at our guide for easy ideas.

38. Download a cool crop of apps geared toward kids who love to invent.

indoor activities for kids
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39. Make an easy color wheel.

40. Learn about the importance of spit with this great experiment.

41. Never lose your place in your book again thanks to this DIY bowtie bookmark project.

42. Read a book or 100.

43. Let snowmen inspire snacktime. Take a peek at our favorite snowmen-inspired treats.

44. Use up those leftover gingerbread house gumdrops with a science experiment or two.

45. Did you know that Ziploc finger painting requires only two supplies? Get the scoop here.

indoor activities for kids
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46. You can never have too many books about construction. Book it to the library to check out one of our favorite books they’ll really dig.

47. Paint with popsicles.

48. Make Star Wars crafts with your force of nature.

49. Go beyond Monopoly with new family games.

50. Transform your toilet paper rolls. Here’s how!

51. Don’t throw out those popped balloons. We have the perfect craft to use those rubber pieces up.

creating a comic is a good indoor activity for kids
Melissa Hecksher

60. Write your own comic book.

61. Prep for spring and all the birds by making an egg carton bird feeder.

62. For easy sensory play, explore the temperature and texture of ice.

63. Skip that ship in a bottle. Try out a cork boat instead.

64. Shake up free time with a subscription box.

65. If saying the word “poop” is a surefire giggle-maker, you’ll want to check out these yucky (and so fun) games for the whole family.

66. Did you know you can make a lunchbox out of a plastic water jug? Get the tutorial here.

67. Play a game that helps with hand-eye coordination. Bonus: there’s a barnyard twist.

Annie Spratt on Unsplash

68. Before there were smartphones, there were maps. Pass the paper reading map skills down a generation by showing your kids how to read a map, old-school style.

69. Paint like Van Gogh.

70. Make edible art that the kids can eat.

71. Transform empty bottles into a scuba tank.

72. Take some time to teach your kids about a historic icon: Frederick Douglass.

73. It may be gloomy outside but you can still spot a rainbow thanks to these four clever ways of making your own.

74. Lounge in style with a homemade hammock.

75. Use air (hey, it’s cheap!) for your next science experiment.

indoor activities for kids
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76. Make your own bubbles.

77. Make a terrarium for your kid's favorite prehistoric pal.

78. Cast a spell with a pretend potion.

79. Play a game of sniff-and-seek.

80. Learn a new magic trick (or seven!).

81. Paint rocks to hide outside on a sunny day.

82. Craft your very own shooting star.

83. Score a new set of wheels. Here are 10 cool trains you can make at home.

indoor activities for kids
Aditya Chinchuren via Unsplash

84. Break out the deck of cards to learn these easy card games and tricks.

85. Even if you can’t run around outside you can still play football. Paper football that is.

86. It’s Girl Scout cookie season (YES!). To celebrate, learn two Girl Scout songs today.

87. Write your own fairy tale. Use our fill-in-the-blank story to get started.

88. Fold an origami teddy bear.

89. Check out our ideas for pretend play you can set up (and enjoy!) in one afternoon.

90. Create your own puppet theater.

indoor activities for kids
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91. Make the kids LOL with 300+ hilarious jokes.

92. Practice counting with these clever hacks.

93. Check out nine sand play ideas. No beach required!

94. Create your own family laws just for today. Use these five ideas to get you started.

95. Learn how to make shadow puppets.

96. Make a no-batteries-required robot. We've got three awesome projects.

97. It’s time for a geography lesson. Get started with our Name That State printable.

 

indoor activities for kids
Gabby Cullen

98. Embrace the mess with these confetti poppers fun for any time of year.

99. Make your own I Spy Jar.

100. Changing the world is easier than you may think. Check out our handy guide for kids here.

101. Make your own tic-tac-toe board.

102. Keep kids busy with a new activity book or two.

103. Take craft time to the next, out-of-this-world level with a fun alien craft.

104. Make a bird feeder out of an empty soup can.

105. Finally, for the mom and dad who have crafted, created, entertained, and danced, you deserve a pat on the back ... and maybe even a glass of wine. Make things interesting with our wine bingo printable you can download. Cheers!

Looking for a TV show that’ll let you zone out? This list is for you.

Life is hectic. And sometimes, flipping the internal off-switch is more difficult than not hitting the snooze button in the a.m. That’s where we come in. Ahead, we’ve gathered a list of calming TV shows that quiet the chaos and tap into the Zen. From moving art featuring Planet Earth’s most wonderous and soothing sights to heartwarming sitcoms that will be waiting for you when you wake up, the following collection of TV shows is your ticket to relaxation station.

Nostalgic Soothers

The Joy of Painting

The Joy of Painting is a calming TV show
PBS

A few soothing strokes of Bob Ross’s hog-bristle brush and those eyelids will start to droop. Not because the canvas whisperer is a bore, but because his tranquil instruction and gentle technique are more calming than the pretty little streams and happy fluffy clouds he paints.

Available on Pluto or PBS.com

Gilmore Girls

Some might say the rapid-fire banter volleyed back and forth in this comedic drama from Mrs. Maisel’s Amy Sherman-Palladino is dizzying, but for us, it’s a linguistic symphony that numbs the mind and soothes the soul. Sleep always comes easy knowing Rory, Lorelai, and their amusing dilemmas will still be there in the morning.

Available on Netflix.

The West Wing

Another gem known for its accelerated dialogue, The West Wing has Aaron Sorkin to thank for its convo cadence. But with this one, the calming qualities come from its somewhat optimistic take on the political roller coaster that runs through Washington, D.C. Facing crises ranging from biohazard lockdowns to missing First Daughters, the series gets serious but always keeps the mood upbeat.

Available on Max.

Felicity

When your brain’s turned to mush, get lost in this will-they/won’t-they romantic saga from 1998. Keri Russell stars as a college student navigating dating and adulting, and if you’re familiar with the actress, then you know her soft, muted tone. Couple that with an intimate and subdued lighting style, and the cozy atmosphere is set.

Available on Hulu.

Tranquil Earthy Delights

Planet Earth

Sir David Attenborough is counting sheep in human form. And we mean this with the most complimentary respect. The longtime nature series narrator traverses the globe, exploring the planet’s most wondrous treasures, from the frigid poles and arid deserts to the deepest oceans and all the fascinating wildlife in between. It’s just the escape to paint the backdrop for the best dreams.

Available on Prime Video.

A World of Calm

A World of Calm is a calming TV show
Warner Bros.

Not that we want you to stop reading this roundup, but pause. For just 15 seconds. Do nothing. We’ll wait. … That’s the idea of Calm, an anxiety-reducing app that’s a Nervous Nancy’s savior with quickie meditations. Expanding its reach, Calm now has a TV series featuring stunning imagery with balmy narration–like, Idris Elba telling you a stellar bedtime story.

Available on Max.

The Blue Planet

If you’re the type to hit “ocean life” on the old sound machine before catching some zzz’s, then The Blue Planet is on the same wavelength. A huge undertaking that took five years to make, the series goes deep-sea diving with the oceans’ most majestic creatures and aquatic wildlife, giving new–and better–meaning to the waterbed.

Available on Discovery+.

Baby Animals in the Wild

Cute baby animals: It doesn’t get more adorable than that. From fuzzy tiger cubs and tiny sea turtles to goofy owl chicks and grizzly baby bison, this series treads through every habitat under the sun and surface. Move over, Teddy Lasso, there’s a new cuddle bear in town.

Available on Prime Video.

Night on Earth

Narrator Samira Wiley introduces you to Mother Nature’s finest in their natural habitats, at night. A Netflix Original, this limited series offers viewers a first-class ticket to every corner of the world, capturing flora and fauna, as well as every hour of and star of the night. This one will get you to the state of calm you’re after.

Available on Netflix.

Relaxing Reality

Making It

Nick Offerman is at your service for a tuck-in. But if you’d rather Amy Poehler do the job, she’s here, too. The pair host this lovely competition show that recruits crafters and makers to show off their handmade talents. The episodes are like little pockets of joy that culminate in a craft-off by the end of the season.

Available on Prime Video.

The Great British Baking Show

The Great British Baking Show is a calming tv show
Netflix

Ready to drift off to dream as candy-colored macarons and flaky fruit tarts dance in your head? Then, queue up this wonderfully British reality baking show. The judges are delightful, the hosts are cheery, and the contestants and their stories are as warm and inviting as the sponges they pull from the oven. Hopefully, you slip off to dream before those tummy grumbles set in.

Available on Netflix.

Queer Eye: More Than a Makeover

Winding down with the Fab Five is always an A+ idea. More than just a reality series about before-and-afters, Queer Eye comes with all the feels. The guys hit up the nation’s biggest cities, transforming individuals and bringing out their inner superstars. So don’t be surprised if the pillowcase under your head needs turning after soaking up all those love tears.

Available on Netflix.

Feel-Good Sitcoms

Never Have I Ever

Never Have I Ever is a show on Netflix
Netflix

A coming-of-age comedy with Mindy Kaling’s influence all over it, Never Have I Ever follows protagonist Davie through high school, juggling dreams of going to Princeton with equally vital urges to lose her virginity. The episodes are short, the relationships are relatable, and the familial experiences will make you feel like you were back at home in your childhood bedroom.

Available on Netflix.

Parks and Recreation

The great city of Pawnee might not inspire any wanderlust, but it will certainly make you wish you worked with such a great team. Amy Poehler leads a cast of comedy greats, all playing staffers in the Parks and Recreation department. It all unfolds in an Office-like exterior, but the pro-feminist subtext is what really puts this workplace sitcom above all others.

Available on Peacock.

Starstruck

Starstruck is a TV show on Max
Max

When bedtime calls for a little romance with a side of Kiwi comedy, go with Starstruck. An under-watched and way-underappreciated rom-com, the show meanders through the love story of Jessie and Tom. She’s a millennial trying to adult in East London. He’s an uber-famous movie star. And together, they just magically work.

Available on Max.

Mellow Mysteries

Only Murders in the Building

Only Murders in the Building is a calming TV show on Hulu
Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu

Gifting viewers with a hilarious troupe trio they never knew they needed, Only Murders in the Building stars Selena Gomez, Martin Short, and Steve Martin as armchair detectives solving their building’s crimes and gathering fodder for their true-crime podcast. Silly, absurd, and outfitted in fall’s coziest hues, the show is like the softest, chunkiest Merino wool sweater in your closet–but in screen form.

Available on Hulu.

Black Snow

Allow the melodic sounds of Aussie accents to lull you into a state of relaxation with this psychological crime drama about a small Sea Island community devastated by buried secrets, truths, and murder. Isabel Baker, a 17-year-old who was killed on her way home from school in 1995, is brought back into the forefront when detective James Cormack warms up to her cold case.

Available on AMC+.

Poker Face

A wonderful hidden gem nestled in the digital library of Peacock, Poker Face stars a brilliant Natasha Lyonne as Charlie Cale, a casino worker on the lamb who uses her innate ability to solve whodunits. Each hour-long episode includes a different mystery to unravel; think of it like Murder, She Wrote for the modern age.

Available on Peacock.

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Dive into these must-read books perfect for vacation or anytime

Spring is here, the weather is getting warmer, and the dream of long beach days is on the horizon. Even if long beach days aren’t on your horizon, there is still the possibility of some long, wistful days spent with… a book. We’ve all heard the term “beach read,” and although its origin has never been pinpointed, there is a by-name association that beach read books are light, fluffy, and vacation-themed. We’d like to think they’re moving beyond that; to anything you can dive into and get lost in.

If your to-be-read list isn’t growing as quickly as usual, we’re here to help. Here are a bunch of books to dive into—from social commentaries that manage to be fun to good, old-fashioned love stories.


Penguin Books

Self Care: A Novel by Leigh Stein

$11 BUY NOW

If you've ever scrolled through Instagram and wondered if wellness influencers really exist the way they do on screen in real life, Self Care by Leigh Stein is for you—because let's face it; we all know they don't. It's about two female cofounders of a wellness start-up. Maren Gelb is on a forced digital detox, thanks to a viral tweet that is not being very well received. Her partner, Devin Avery, is the outward projection of insufferable perfection, but inwardly—a mess. It's a quick, readable romp about reckoning with yourself when your "brand" is all about... self care.


happy place is one of the best beach reads for 2023
Penguin Books

Happy Place by Emily Henry

$18 BUY NOW

If your love language is stories about smart moody men and even smarter, moodier women finding each other in this loveless world—Emily Henry is the author for you. Henry is a "beach read" master who delivers intelligent, fun dialogue and main characters you want to hang out with (or sleep with). It's the perfect recipe for a day in the sun with your head buried in a book. A Happy Place finds newly-broken-up couple Harriet and Wyn struggling to keep their game faces intact while they spend a week with their friends in a cottage in Maine—a getaway that's been a yearly tradition in their friends group for the last decade. They haven't told their friends about their breakup yet, and faking it for the week is turning out to be a little harder than they thought it would. Witty banter? Check! Sexual tension? Check! Totally relatable end-of-relationship crap? Check!


Sunshine Nails is one of the best beach reads for summer 2023
Atria Books

Sunshine Nails: A Novel by Mai Nguyen

$27 BUY NOW

Vietnamese refugees Debbie and Phil Tran have carved out a comfortable life for themselves in Toronto thanks to their family nail salon. But when a flashy nail salon chain opens across the street, their world turns upside down. Their landlord is threatening to jack up the rent and they are daily reminded that the garish competition is winning. When their daughter returns home after a messy breakup, the family comes together to dream of ways to take their rivals down. So much thought went into crafting these characters and telling a more and more common gentrification story—you'll truly be hanging on every word to see how everything unfolds for this family. Pre-order your copy today (releases on July 4th, 2023).


Romantic Comedy is one of the best beach reads of 2023
Random House

Romantic Comedy: A Novel by Curtis Sittenfeld

$12 BUY NOW

Sally Milz is a sketch comedy writer for a show that airs every Saturday night. Sally's happy with her career and totally satisfied with the occasional random hook-up—let's just say she's kinda given up on her search for love. When one of her co-writers starts dating a glamorous actress who guest hosts the show, Sally wonders why random, totally mediocre men are constantly landing incredibly hot women way out of their league—and why the same doesn't seem to hold true for women. That is, until super-hot popstar Noah Brewster is the musical guest one week, and he and Sally immediately hit it off. Romantic Comedy is as much a relevant social commentary as it is a blast to read—and that's hard to pull off.


Random House

Once More With Feeling: A Novel by Elissa Sussman

$15 BUY NOW

From the novelist who brought us Funny You Should Ask (which you should also totally read), comes the sophomore love story Once More, With Feeling. Katee Rose thinks she's living the dream as a famous pop star dating another wildly famous pop star, but her whole world implodes when she hooks up with someone who has always been her friend—and also happens to be her boyfriend's bandmate. Now she's living her life as plain old Kathleen Rosenberg and she's fine with it, that is, until an opportunity arises to thrust her back into the spotlight. An opportunity brought to her by Cal Kirby, the "friend" that derailed her entire life. This manages to be a relatable story about being human, the choices we make, and the feelings we can't deny. Pre-order your copy today (releases on May 30th, 2023).


Atria

You Could Make This Place Beautiful: A Memoir by Maggie Smith

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"This place could be beautiful, right? You could make this place beautiful..." ends Maggie Smith's wildly well-known poem about the state of the world and raising children in it. The stunning words now represent the title of her new memoir, You Could Make This Place Beautiful, widely regarded as one of the most anticipated books of 2023. This is not a light book. It's heartbreaking and eye opening, and underline-worthy. It's about life and marriage and family—and expertly manages the most difficult lesson; that life is never what you expect and harder than you imagine. It's an instant New York Times bestseller, and worth all the hype.


The Charm Offensive is a best beach read for 2023
Atria

The Charm Offensive by Alison Cochrun

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If you love a certain bachelor-based reality TV show and you love a good love story, The Charm Offensive is for you. Dev is a man who's always believed in fairy tales, so it makes sense that he produces the biggest fairy tale of all; a long-running TV show that brings people together. When disgraced tech wunderkind Charlie becomes the show's bachelor, Dev wonders if he'll be able to get the quiet, stiff, anxious man in front of him camera ready—and ready to find a woman. Turns out Dev and Charlie have more fireworks than any of the contestants on the show, and what develops is a super cute love story all about who makes you feel safe and how to find what you truly need.


Atria

You Made a Fool of Death With Your Beauty: A Novel by Akwaeke Emezi

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Feyi lost the love of her life five years ago in a tragic car accident and is desperately ready to learn how to enjoy something again. She's putting the pieces of her life back together; she's a successful artist, she has a ride-or-die best friend, and she's dipping her toes in the world of casual hook-ups. She's not ready to move on in any real way, until she meets someone who whisks her away for a whirlwind summer luxury trip. But the trip takes a dangerous turn when she falls deeply for someone who isn't who she came with—and might be the most complicated person she could have fallen in love with. No one writes like Emezi, and this book is stunning and satisfying. Pre-order a copy today (releases on June 8th, 2023).


Berkeley

Killers of a Certain Age: A Novel by Deanna Raybourn

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Described as "James Bond meets the Golden Girls," this fun story does not disappoint. Four women have spent their lives as the deadliest group of assassins out there, but when they reach retirement age, they soon figure out that the organization that's been employing them has some very permanent plans for their future. They have to rely on experience and each other to get themselves out of this kill-or-be-killed situation. You'll devour this book for the action and appreciate it for the social commentary regarding just when exactly it is that women become disposable.

Related: 10 Books So Good You’ll Cry When They’re Finished

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Dive into a new world for a while

Parenthood is amazing, but early parenthood can be really… boring. There. I said it. There’s a lot of time spent waiting: waiting for your child to fall asleep, waiting for them to finish their bottle, waiting for them to finish breastfeeding… just, waiting. You may find you need a distraction—something, anything to fill your time. This is when a great fantasy show comes in handy.

Even when your tiny human gets bigger, that desire to break from the monotony of daily parenting tasks will likely remain (sorry!). Thankfully, there are fantasy shows out there so good that they allow you to immerse yourself in a totally different life for a while. You can finally be the person who’s not changing diapers or begging an infant to just effing sleep or surviving toddler tantrums or getting the cold shoulder from your tween. Dive in and enter a new world for a spell. (Note: this list features fantasy series with a notable magical element as opposed to those that lean more toward sci-fi or historical fiction. I’ve also skipped some of the classics you already know and love—e.g., Buffy, Charmed, and True Blood—to bring you some newer binge-worthy options.)

A Discovery of Witches

Discovery of Witches is a fantasy show
Amazon Prime

 

The magic starts in a library, and who doesn’t love that premise? Diana Bishop is a witch who isn’t necessarily too comfortable with her powers. She discovers a bewitched manuscript in Oxford’s library that forces her back into the world of magic. Matthew Clairmont (a vampire!) agrees to help her unravel what the manuscript means and let’s just say we didn’t know we needed a love affair between a vampire and a witch so badly. The magical elements and danger will keep you glued to your screen—and the unlikely relationship between the witch and vampire (who apparently don’t normally trust each other, who knew?) will keep you pressing play.

Stream it on Amazon Prime.

Shadow and Bone

Shadow and Bone is a fantasy show on Netflix
Netflix

 

In a world cleaved in two by a massive barrier of perpetual darkness, where unnatural creatures feast on human flesh, a young soldier uncovers a power that might finally unite her country. But as she struggles to hone her power, dangerous forces plot against her. Thugs, thieves, assassins, and saints are at war now, and it will take more than magic to survive… This is a Netflix adaptation of the Shadow and Bone Trilogy, and it is good. Grisha are magic users, and the main heroine of the story is one. But only a very special Grisha has the ability to summon light—and hence destroy the “barrier of perpetual darkness.” There’s also an ill-fated love story thrown in for good measure. You’ll be hooked.

Stream it on Netflix.

The Mayfair Witches

AMC

 

AMC brought Anne Rice’s Mayfair Witches to life this year, 33 years after it was originally published—and it was worth the wait. Alexandra Daddario (White Lotus) plays Rowan Fielding, a neurosurgeon who learns she’s the heiress to a dynasty of powerful witches—and the rightful owner of their New Orleans estate. She’s always suspected she had some “power” but had no idea about her origin story, as her mother’s stern aunt Carlotta robbed Rowan from her from birth and gave her to be raised by an acquaintance outside the family. The Mayfair Witches is the story of Rowan finding and reckoning with her power. And AMC’s dark (and at times pretty hot) reimagining is worth the watch.

Russian Doll

Russian Doll on Netflix
Netflix

 

For those of you who’ll watch anything Natasha Lyonne does (and if this describes you, you’re smart), Russian Doll will be an extra special treat. Nadia is doomed to celebrate her 36th birthday over and over and over again—because in every episode she dies and wakes up at the exact same place and time, in front of a bathroom mirror, at her party. She needs to figure out how to right her wrongs to stop this very repetitive and deadly cycle. There’s also time travel. Natasha Lyonne and time travel! What more could anyone want?

Stream it on Netflix

The Witcher

Netflix

 

Henry Cavil plays “Giralt of Rivia,” who is basically a super magical monster hunter known as—you guessed it—the Witcher. The Witcher and a Crown Princess (Ciri) are linked by destiny, and for most of the first season, they don’t even exist in the same timeline. Before Ciri was born, The Witcher unknowingly demanded her as a reward for his services by invoking “the Law of Surprise”—which is somehow less creepy than it sounds. When they finally meet, he becomes her protector so no one evil can take advantage of her powerful magic—and so he can keep the world safe (of course).

Stream it on Netflix. 

Interview with the Vampire

AMC

It may be hard to believe anything can upstage Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt, but Sam Reid (as Lestat) and Jacob Anderson (as Louis) do not disappoint. This version embraces the love between Louis and Lestat—leaning into their romantic relationship. The “interview” is updated—this series essentially takes place 40-something years after the first interview. Daniel (Christian Slater’s character in the original film) is no longer a novice journalist, but an aging famous one, struggling with a Parkinson’s diagnosis. He agrees to let Louis tell his story again, but only if Louis agrees to be less contrived and more open with the interview. It’s getting a second season, so jump on.

Stream it on Amazon Prime.

His Dark Materials

His Dark Materials is a fantasy show on Max
Max

 

His Dark Materials won’t just take you to one fantastic setting, it will take you to several. The series bounces between different worlds and realities but keeps you anchored with a main character you’ll love. Lyra is an orphan, who in her search for a missing friend, uncovers a kidnapping plot with a magical twist. She also happens to be the subject of a witches’ prophecy that not only brings her to other magical realms but gives her a connection to a teenager from a conventional one, too. If you like magic and witches and otherworldly settings—this gripping series is for you.

Stream it on Max

Once Upon a Time

Once Upon a Time is a Fantasy Show
ABC

 

Disney, but make it dark. This series alternates between a fairy tale world and the fictional seaside town of Storybrooke, Maine. The residents of the town are actually characters from fairy tales who have been transported to the “real world” and robbed of their memories by the Evil Queen, Regina. Regina is the mayor of the town, and even though all the fairy tale characters have lived a pretty much stagnant life for 28 years where they don’t even age, they are completely unaware of their magical background. Only the daughter of Snow White (played by Ginnifer Goodwin) can save them. This is fun and dark and based on fairy tales. Check, check, and check.

Stream it on Disney+

Locke & Key

Netflix

 

After their father is murdered by a former student, three siblings—Tyler, Kinsey, and Bode—move with their mother from Seattle to Massachusetts into their father’s family home. The siblings start to discover a bunch of mysterious keys around the house (it’s actually called Keyhouse) and find that they can be used not only to unlock doors but might actually lead to some information about their father’s death. But surprise! A demonic entity is also looking for the keys. Fans of horror and family drama will love this fantasy show.

Stream it on Netflix.

Stranger Things

Still shot from Netflix's Stranger Things, a fantasy show, season 4
Netflix

 

If you somehow have made it seven years without watching this very beloved show, here’s your reminder to get on with it. The series is set in the ’80s and tells the story of a group of middle school friends who live in a town that happens to be in proximity to Hawkins National Laboratory—a lab that performs scientific research for the US Department of Energy. It just so happens that the lab is secretly experimenting with the paranormal and supernatural, and whoops! They’ve created a portal to an alternate dimension called The Upside Down, where everything is creepy and terrible. When one of the friends gets abducted, his mom (Wynona Ryder), his friends, the town’s sheriff (David Harbour), and a young telekinetic girl who escaped from the lab (Millie Bobby Brown) form an unlikely search crew.

Stream it on Netflix.

Carnival Row

In Carnival Row, mythical creatures have fled their own countries and gathered in the city, causing a bunch of human residents to become uneasy and angry. The jargon can get a little complex, but once you get past the difficult names and many mythological creatures you’ll need to remember, you’ll be hooked on this deeply compelling series. A love affair between a human detective and a fairy (Orlando Bloom and Cara Delevingne) will keep you hooked. This fantasy series doubles as social commentary—so if you’re looking for something light and fluffy, this probably isn’t it. But if you’re someone who loves to pay attention and craves a good investigation-steeped-in-fantasy, have at it.

Stream it on Amazon Prime.

Wednesday

Netflix

Throwing this one in for good measure, just in case you thought this YA mystery was not for you. It is! Wednesday is Netflix’s spinoff on the beloved Addams Family—and it’s the best reimagining of the characters of the show yet. Wednesday Addams is played by Jenna Ortega, who shines as our disinterested and dark titular heroine. Throw in a murder mystery and the beautifully creepy setting of Nevermore Academy (a school for outcasts), and you’ll be watching this series on repeat.

Stream it on Netflix.

Our list includes classics and some you might not have seen

Summer is just around the corner, and while you’ll have plenty of ways to enjoy the sunny days, watching a movie is a great way to spend those hot and balmy nights. Whether you curl up with your kids on the couch, hit up a movie night in the park, or plan your own outdoor movie night right at home, watching a summer family movie promises a night of action, adventure, or romance. So whether a Disney film or a classic coming-of-age film, we’ve got you covered. Prep your movie snacks and bring your sense of adventure and wonder for a night of fantasy.

Best Summer Family Movies for Young Kids

Finding Nemo

Young clownfish Nemo gets caught by humans in Australia’s Great Barrier Reef and finds himself trapped in a fish tank at a dentist’s office. While he plots his escape with some newfound friends, Nemo’s father, Marlin, goes on an undersea journey accompanied by forgetful fish Dory to find Nemo.

Know Your Crowd
While kids will enjoy the undersea world’s bright colors and the journey’s excitement, very young viewers may find the predator fish frightening. The film also features some important lessons about friendship and family and is a true classic.

A Bug’s Life

Circus performer bugs are the only help Flik can find to help when grasshoppers take charge of his ant colony. Flik must prove that he is more than just the colony screw-up and save the day.

Know Your Crowd
Kids will enjoy the antics of the adorable insects, while parents will appreciate positive messages surrounding nature, teamwork, and forging ahead, despite hardship. Some of the bugs are a bit scary and there is some mild language. This may also provide kids with a more positive outlook on bugs, which may prove helpful to parents during the summer months.

Little Mermaid

This classic animated Disney film, based on the fairy tale by Danish author Hans Christian Andersen, focuses on the young mermaid princess, Ariel. When she journeys to the sea’s surface, she falls in love with the very handsome (and very human) Prince Eric. To be with him, Ariel strikes a deal with the horrid sea witch, Ursula, but she finds it may cost her more than she imagined.

Know Your Crowd
Young viewers will fall in love with the funny and loyal crab, Sebastian, and the anxious and adorable fish, Flounder. Some dark moments may scare sensitive viewers. The themes of love and friendship will hit a universal cord with viewers young and old.

Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation

Hotel Transylvania 3 is a great summer family movie
Sony Pictures

 

This funny animated film features Adam Sandler, Andy Samberg, and Selena Gomez. In the third installment in the series, Count Dracula and his peeps go on a cruise, unaware that the Van Helsings, who hate monsters, have taken control of the ship.

Know Your Crowd
Nothing says summer more than a monster cruise, and the comedically talented cast is top-notch. This fun threequel is worth the watch. There are a few scary scenes, but kids ages 5 and up should appreciate the humor more than fear the scares.

Surf’s Up

An annual surf contest featuring a group of penguins seems like the perfect summer flick. Newcomer Cody Maverick sets out to prove he can hang ten with the best of them in this 2007 Oscar-nominated film.

Know Your Crowd
With an outstanding A-list cast including Jeff Bridges, Zooey Deschanel, Shia LaBeouf, and surf star Kelly Slater, Surf’s Up promises laughs and adventure for even the more discerning viewer. A few images may be disturbing for very young viewers, so this film is best for kids 5 and up.

Toy Story 4

Believed to be the final installment in the Pixar franchise, this summer family movie finds Buzz, Woody, and the gang going on a road trip with Bonnie and her parents. They reunite with old friends and have fantastic summertime adventures as they learn more about themselves and each other.

Know Your Crowd
Antique doll Gabby Gabby and the ventriloquist dummies may be scary for very young viewers. This touching film reunites all our favorite Toy Story characters, and for that alone, it should be added to your family’s summer watch list.

Moana

Based on Polynesian myths, Moana, a young girl goes on a journey to convince the demigod Maui to return the heart of a goddess. She believes this will help the people on her island to return to a time of prosperity.

Know Your Crowd
This beautifully animated film was nominated for two Oscars. One for Best Animated Feature Film of the Year and the other for Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures (The original song How Far I’ll Go was written by Hamilton creator Lin-Manuel Miranda). The film received a PG rating for some scary situations and peril but is appropriate for kids 5+.

Related: New, Original Family Movies You’ll Only Find on Netflix, Disney+ & Apple TV in 2023

Best Sumer Family Movies for Grade-School Kids

E.T.the Extra-Terrestrial

E.T. is a great summer family movie
Universal Pictures

 

During a tumultuous time, Elliott must deal with his parent’s divorce and a visit from an out-of-this-world friend he names E.T. When their bond becomes so strong it creates a connection that allows them to feel what the other is feeling, Elliott realizes just how special his new friend is and will stop at nothing to help him find his way home.

Know Your Crowd
This ’80s classic coming-of-age film from director Steven Spielberg explores friendship and loyalty and is a summer list must. The friendship between E.T. and Elliott strengthens Elliott’s bond with his mother and siblings. Due to some language and thematic elements like drinking and divorce, this movie is best for kids 7 and up.

The Goonies

This beloved 1985 coming-of-age film features a group of friends who get caught up in an adventure after discovering a long-lost treasure map. They must face off against a family of criminals, booby traps, and a long-dead pirate to find the fortune to save one of their homes.

Know Your Crowd
Directed by Richard Donner and written by Chris Columbus and Steven Spielberg, the film promises a nostalgic journey for GenX parents who can share a return to their adolescents with their kids. With some perilous situations and crude humor and language, this classic is best viewed with kids 10+.

The Sandlot

Another classic coming-of-age movie that’s perfect for summer family movie night, The Sandlot is the tale of a new boy who finds his place with a group of kids playing baseball on an old lot. They spend one adventurous and unforgettable summer battling a little league team and a dog named Beast.

Know Your Crowd
This film is a summer must-see, with a treehouse, sleepovers, and a gang of kids. It will remind parents and kids what summer is meant for, fun and friendship. Though the film is light-hearted and features themes of teamwork and friendship, some adult language makes this one best for kids 9 and over.

Dora and the Lost City of Gold

Dora and the Lost City of Gold is a great summer family movie

Based on the Nickelodeon television series, the film focuses on a teenage Dora. Dora and her gang of friends, including her cousin Diego and best friend, the monkey Boots, go on a journey to solve a mystery about a lost civilization and help Dora’s parents.

Know Your Crowd
This live-action film is filled with adventure and a positive, diverse female character. Parents should know that the film also features some moments of peril, including a kidnapping. However, the message surrounding perseverance and teamwork makes it a great summer family movie for kids 8+.

Judy Moody and the Not Bummer Summer

Based on the Judy Moody book series by author Megan McDonald, the film focuses on one summer in the life of a spirited third grader, Judy Moody. While her parents are away, Judy and her brother, Stink, stay home with their fun and adventurous aunt Opal. Judy uses the summer to earn the most thrill points in a “best summer” contest with her friends.

Know Your Crowd
The film has some potty humor, but it is mild, so kids 6 and over are an appropriate audience. There are some valuable lessons to be learned about home and family. Judy Moody and the Not Bummer Summer promotes the joy of a good old-fashioned summer at home.

Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days

The film, based on the fourth book in the best-selling children’s book series by author Jeff Kinney, follows the title character Greg Heffley and his best friend, Rowley Jefferson, who do their best to make it through the summer. Greg’s dad dislikes him playing video games, and his mother wants him to get involved in some activities, including a boring book club. Will he survive the dog days of summer?

Know Your Crowd
With important summer-themed positive messages about the importance of getting outside and family bonding, this fun film will appeal to parents and kids alike. Parents should be aware that there is some potty humor, so the film is best suited for kids over the age of 9.

Related: 15 Movies That Show What Real Friendship Looks Like

Best Summer Family Movies for Older Kids

Moonrise Kingdom

Moonrise Kingdom is a good summer family movie
Focus Features

 

This Oscar-nominated Wes Anderson film is a quirky romantic comedy. When two kids run away together, the town where they live gets involved in the effort to find them. Set in 1960s New England, the film explores young love.

Know Your Crowd
This unconventional love story is a heartfelt look at first love. With Bill Murray, Bruce Willis, and Frances McDormand all lending their talent, there is no lack of star power. With some adult content, and smoking and drinking, this film is best for teens 14 and older.

Dirty Dancing

Travel back to 1963 with teenager Baby Houseman and her family as they head off on vacation at an upscale summer resort in the Catskills. Dance instructor Johnny Castle teaches Baby about bias, love, and class in this 1980s gem.

Know Your Crowd
Parents will love seeing 1980s stars Jennifer Grey and the late great Patrick Swayze in their star-making roles. Teens will love the timeless romance between Baby and Johnny and the fun summer vibe. With some mature themes like abortion and sex, this film is best for kids 13 and over.

The Last Song

Based on the 2009 Nicholas Sparks novel, this romantic film stars former flames Miley Cyrus and Liam Hemsworth. When a young woman is sent to live with her father for the summer, she finds they share a love for music. She also strikes up a relationship with a handsome local.

Know Your Crowd
The Last Song is more than a simple love story; it is the story of a father and daughter finding their way back to each other. Romance novelist Nicholas Sparks writes the perfect summer romance, which translates to the perfect summer film. With adult themes, including death and divorce, this film is best for older tweens and teens.

Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants

Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants is a great summer family movie
Warner Bros.

 

When four best friends go separate ways for summer, a pair of jeans that magically conforms to their differing body sizes and shapes keep them connected. The film is based on the Anne Brashares novel of the same name and stars Alexis Bledel, Blake Lively, America Ferrera, and Amber Tamblyn.

Know Your Crowd
An adventure set in summer with four besties is perfect for a warm summer night of sitting on the couch with the windows open with your favorite tween. With language and some mature themes like suicide and sex, this is best for kids 12+.

Soul Surfer

This biographical film was released in 2011 and is based on surfer Bethany Hamilton’s autobiography. Hamilton lost her arm in a shark attack and the film focuses on her recovery and return to surfing.

Know Your Crowd
With an all-star cast including Dennis Quaid, Craig T. Nelson, and Helen Hunt and beautiful locations including Hawaii and Tahiti, this film may become a family favorite. One note to parents, Soul Surfer has a positive female role model who overcomes a horrible tragedy to do what she loves, but the shark attack, while quick, is gory.

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3

With a theatrical release date of May 5, we’re betting this will be available for creating the perfect summer family movie night. The latest film in the franchise focuses on the Guardians moving on after losing Gamora. Peter Quill and the rest of the guardian gang must do their best to (once again) save the universe.

Know Your Crowd
An action-adventure film is perfect for summer. Nothing offers more action or out-of-this-world adventure than the Guardians of the Galaxy. By far the darkest in the series, the film features animal torture and content surrounding trauma. With adult language and a large body count, this film is best for teens 13+.

The Way, Way Back

For shy teenager Duncan, a summer vacation with his mother, her boyfriend, and his daughter is less than ideal. It’s awkward and anything but fun until he befriends the manager of a water park.

Know Your Crowd
Starring Steve Carell, Toni Collette, Maya Rudolph, and Sam Rockwell, this coming-of-age is a sweet reminder of the awkwardness of family vacations. The film received a PG-13 rating for language, sexual content, and thematic elements.

 

Here are all the Pixar movies ranked from “Not tonight, kids,” to “Let’s fire it up!”

From its very first release—Toy Story, way back in 1995—Pixar has been an animation powerhouse. The studio has been reliably pumping out hits on an almost yearly basis ever since, and so many of them have become timeless classics. As with most kids’ movies, however, there’s a chance that if your little one falls in love with a Pixar flick, you’re going to get stuck watching it approximately 703,128 times in a row. So before you press play, you’re going to want to make sure your next family movie night includes one of the Pixar movies ranked at the top of our parental enjoyment list—but let’s be real: even the ones a little lower on this list are still going to be pretty darn good.

After all, the animation studio has a knack for creating kid-friendly fare that also appeals to adults. Whether it’s the nostalgia of Toy Story or the beautiful love story in Up, Pixar makes adults want to sit down and watch right alongside their kids. Filled with pop culture references and witty humor, Pixar films prove they can draw an adult audience with ease. 

21. Cars, Cars 2, Cars 3

'Cars' is one of the Pixar movies ranked by parents
©Disney/Pixar

Race car superstar Lightning McQueen is on his way to the big race when he gets sidelined in Radiator Springs, a small town in the first installment of the series. Cars 2 finds Lightning and his friend Mater headed to an overseas race. Cars 3 finds an older Lightning set up against a sleeker and faster generation of race cars.

Parent Ranking: Sorry, racing fans! When it comes to ranking Pixar movies parents will want to watch, with no disrespect to Lightning McQueen, the Cars franchise isn’t likely to get mom or dad revved up about movie night—even if the kiddos are eager to speed through the whole trilogy. Mater’s voice alone is enough to make parents wish they could hit an eternal pause button, and the film’s childish plotline appeals more to kids than parents.

20. The Good Dinosaur 

Our list of Pixar movies ranked for parents includes 'The Good Dinosaur'
©Disney/Pixar

What if dinosaurs hadn’t been wiped out by a cataclysmic event? The Good Dinosaur answers that question and pairs a cute dinosaur with a human boy. The two head out on an epic journey filled with themes of friendship and loss.

Parent Ranking: This dino tale is often dubbed Pixar’s first-ever box-office bomb. But with a string of absolutely beloved films under its belt, the studio had to miss the mark sometime, right? While the film does feature beautiful scenery, the tale lacks the normal adventure, humor, and joy that have become cornerstones of Pixar films.

19. A Bug’s Life

A list of Pixar movies ranked for parents includes 'A Bugs Life'
©Disney/Pixar

Flik, the proverbial black sheep of his ant colony must do his best to be the hero after a group of grasshoppers take over. He goes on a mission to find a group of bugs to help him, but the bugs are circus performers.

Parent Ranking: Pixar’s second animated feature holds a special place in the hearts of many and has an Oscar nomination for Best Music, Original Musical, or Comedy Score, but it hasn’t quite had the staying power of some of the studio’s other hits. Nature-loving little ones might enjoy seeing adorable insects on screen, but grown-ups may prefer the more advanced comedic offering of Pixar’s rival Dreamworks film Antz, which was also released in 1998.

18. Finding Dory

A list of Pixar movies ranked includes 'Finding Dory'
©Disney/Pixar

Clownfish Nemo’s forgetful friend Dory gets her very own film. Dory goes in search of her parents while she brings a few friends along for the ride. Featuring the voices of Bill Hader, Kate McKinnon, Albert Brooks, and Ellen DeGeneres, the animated film was nominated for a 2017 BAFTA for Best Animated Feature Film.

Parent Ranking: While Dory’s appearance in Finding Nemo was memorable, some fans felt her solo movie wasn’t necessary. Many found the film a bit dark and drawn out. Though the sequel was fine, parents will likely prefer the original flick.

17. Toy Story 4

The list of Pixar movie ranked for parents included 'Toy Story 4'
©Disney/Pixar

Buzz and Woody are back with their friends as they head out on an epic road trip alongside Bonnie and her parents. The gang gets caught up in a misadventure, and Woody is reunited with an old friend. The fourth film in the series won an Oscar for Best Animated Feature Film.

Parent Ranking: It’s always great to see Woody, Buzz, and the rest of the gang, but some fans felt the franchise should have ended as a trilogy. The fourth film felt like an attempt to eke out an unnecessary installment in the beloved series. While kids adore Forky, many parents find him annoying. They may also feel like Pixar sold out and tarnished one of their best film franchises.

16. Lightyear

Lightyear is not a favorite according to our list of Pixar movies ranked by parents
©Disney/Pixar

Pixar returned to the Toy Story franchise with Buzz Lightyear’s origin story. Buzz and a band of merry misfits attempt to defeat aliens as they go on an intergalactic mission. The film features a new voice for the stellar space ranger, with Chris Evans stepping in for Tim Allen, who voiced Buzz in the first four installments of the series.

Parent Ranking: The adventure features a cool new sidekick, a robot cat named Sox, who provides some genuinely funny moments. While the idea of finding out where Buzz came from is interesting, the film felt a bit forced and parents may be disappointed with just how little it offers. It, like the fourth Toy Story, feels like an add-on.

15. Monsters University

Our list of Pixar movies ranked for parents includes 'Monsters University'
©Disney/Pixar

This prequel to Monsters, Inc. focuses on the origin of the friendship between monsters Sulley and Mike. They meet while attending Monsters University and don’t exactly hit it off as they navigate typical college experiences including joining a fraternity.

Parent Ranking: There’s much to enjoy about this flick, but adults might find it merely imitates—while never exactly duplicating—the magic of the original. They may also feel disappointed that the original characters do not appear in this film and may notice a hiccup between the two Monster films. In Monsters, Inc., Mike and Sulley were said to have met in fourth grade, while Monsters University contradicts this by making their first meeting in college

14. Luca

our list of Pixar movies ranked includes 'Luca'
©Disney/Pixar

This Oscar-nominated, coming-of-age film features two sea monsters who become friends when they disguise themselves as humans to experience the world outside the water. They befriend a human girl and do their best not to have their true identities revealed.

Parent Ranking: The downside to watching Luca is that you’ll want to book a vacation to the Italian Riviera ASAP. The sea monster movie takes place in the fictional town of Portorosso, and even though it’s animated, the scenery is stunning. While beautiful to look at, Luca is a bit of a bore and offers less wit and originality than many of the other Pixar films.

Related: The Surprising Thing a Pixar Movie Taught Me about Raising a Teenager

13. Onward

a list of Pixar movies ranked for parents includes 'Onward'
©Disney/Pixar

Two teen brothers, who also happen to be elves, go on a quest to spend one last day with their father, who died before they got to know him. After she realizes her sons are missing, their mother, Laurel, goes after them with the help of a warrior sidekick.

Parent Ranking: Despite voice work from Chris Pratt and Tom Holland, Onward is one Pixar film that doesn’t seem to get as much love. Bad timing might be to blame; the movie hit theaters in February 2020— weeks before the world was upended by the coronavirus pandemic. The film also feels uneven, with the second-half offering more of a reward than the first.

12. Soul

a list of Pixar movies ranked for parents that includes 'Soul'
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When Joe, a music teacher, and musician, dies just as he is about to get what appears to be his big break, he gets caught in the Great Before. With the help of a friend he meets there, he must find a way to get back to the life he took for granted. The film won an Oscar for Best Animated Feature Film.

Parent Ranking: Soul made history as the first Pixar feature to debut on Disney+, likely thanks to its pandemic-year release. It was a holiday gift for both kids and parents in 2020, dropping on Christmas Day. While not the best Pixar has to offer, adults will enjoy performances by Tina Fey and Jamie Foxx as they voice this fun and thought-provoking film that isn’t afraid to challenge both young and old to face life’s greatest questions.

11. Coco

our list of Pixar movies ranked for parents includes 'Coco'
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Young Miguel loves music, though his family has banned it. When he gets caught in the land of the Dead, he buddies up with skeleton Hector, and Miguel finally discovers the true history of his family and their ties to music. Coco won an Oscar for Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures (Original Song) and another for Best Animated Feature Film.

Parent Ranking: The film features an amazing soundtrack and a moving message about love and loss, which makes Coco a hit for all ages. The voice cast is also impressive and includes Gael García Bernal, Edward James Olmos, and Cheech Marin, and is a loving tribute to Latin culture. While parents will enjoy all these things, they may also find it a gentle and non-threatening way to discuss loss with their kids.

10. Turning Red

A list of Pixar movies ranked for parents includes 'Turning Red'
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Tween Meilin turns into a giant red panda when she gets excited, which makes her entry into adolescence even more frightening. She discovers that she isn’t the only one this has happened to. Her helicopter mom also went through the change, thanks to an ability passed down through generations of women in her family and their strong connection to the red panda.

Parent Ranking: The words “Pixar” and “controversy” don’t usually belong in the same sentence, but this 2022 film certainly stirred up a bit. Some parents didn’t love Turning Red’s depiction of tween-age rebellion and mentions of menstruation, but plenty of others found it full of heart and humor. Parents will enjoy a nostalgic return to their tween days and just how awkward and awe-filled they were, while also commiserating with Meilin’s parents about exactly what it means to parent an adolescent.

9. Brave

'Brave' is an underrated Pixar movie
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A rebellious spirit and a love of archery make Princess Merida, unlike other princesses. While doing her best to remain true to herself, Merida unleashes a curse that turns her mother, the Queen, into a bear. Merida must figure out how to fix things and restore order to the kingdom.

Parent Ranking: Don’t call her a damsel in distress. Brave‘s Merida breaks the mold of the typical Disney princess, and parents might appreciate the respite from all that chasing after Prince Charming. Not only will modern parents enjoy the film’s twist on the princess trope, but they will also relish the film’s historical accuracy, which encompassed everything from the chess set to the tartan patterns and colors the characters wear. Mothers in particular may be pleased to see the film explore a complicated and realistic mother/daughter relationship.

8. Ratatouille

a list of Pixar movies ranked for parents includes 'ratatouille'
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When food-loving rat Remy gets caught up in the Parisian culinary scene, his dreams of becoming a world-renowned chef may be within reach. Of course, convincing people that a rat belongs in the kitchen won’t be easy.

Parent Ranking: The only time you want rats in the kitchen is when you’re watching this adorable movie. Adult viewers will enjoy the humor that comedians Brad Garrett, Will Arnett, Janeane Garofalo, and Patton Oswalt, as Remy the Rat, bring to the film. The rat shows us the beauty of following your dreams—no matter how many people try to stand in your way. The scenery is also eye-catching and makes this film worth a watch.

7. The Incredibles, The Incredibles 2

Our list of Pixar movies ranked for parents includes both Incredibles movies
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Former superhero couple, Bob and Helen Parr have settled into life in the ‘burbs with their three children. When an opportunity to return to crime fighting presents itself, Bob will need the help of his superhero wife and kids to save the world. In The Incredibles 2, the family goes on another mission. This time Helen is out in the field while Bob stays home with the kids.

Parent Ranking: The franchise that launched a million matching family Halloween costumes is worthy of a watch. The first film came out in 2004, and a sequel arrived with much fanfare in 2018. The joy of this film is that parents will identify with the suburban malaise that settles over parents Bob and Helen Parr, who once lived exciting lives as superheroes, and how good it feels to reclaim their youthful dreams in middle age, even if it’s alongside their children. Parents will also see their own lives reflected in the Parr’s with moments pulled straight from their own homes, like the moment when Bob tries to help his son with math homework and he shouts in frustration, “I don’t know that way. Why would they change math? Math is math.”

Related: All the New Family Movies Hitting Theaters in 2023

6. WALL-E

No list of Pixar movies ranked for parents can omit WALL-E
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This futuristic adventure follows Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-class (WALL-E) as he cleans up an abandoned Earth. When a new robot named Eve joins him, WALL-E falls in love and follows her back to a dystopian ship where humanity is a shell of its former self. Once there, he must find a way to save mankind.

Parent Ranking: Some have called the movie Pixar’s most adult offering ever, with almost no dialogue and a strong environmental message. It’s a testament to powerful storytelling that kids love this movie too. Adults may also enjoy how the film pays homage to many science fiction film classics like Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner and Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. The robot’s cockroach companion is named Hal, after the antagonist in the 1968 Kubrick film.

5. Monsters, Inc.

A group of Monsters stride confidently through the Monsters Inc factory
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In a city filled with monsters, the screams of children provide electricity to keep the lights on. Best friends Sulley and Mike scare children, whom they believe are toxic. When a child manages to sneak into their world, they realize things aren’t exactly what the corporation they work for, Monsters, Inc., led them to believe.

Parent Ranking: Mike Wazowski and Sulley (voiced by Billy Crystal and John Goodman, respectively) are one of the most dynamic duos ever dreamt up by Pixar. The sweet film scares up laughs for the whole family. Parents, especially those plagued by nightmares as a kid, will enjoy the humor behind the monsters that go bump in the night. The movie may also serve as a way to help parents deal with the monsters their kids may be dealing with in their own rooms.

4. Finding Nemo

'finding Nemo' is in the top five of our list of Pixar movies ranked for parents
©Disney/Pixar

Clownfish and father, Marlin warns his young son Nemo not to wander out into the open ocean from their safe home in the Great Barrier Reef. When Nemo does, he gets captured and confined to a fish tank in a dentist’s office. Nemo does his best to get free, while Marlin works with forgetful fish Dory to find Nemo.

Parent Ranking: If there’s one thing Pixar knows how to do well, it’s a tug at the heartstrings. This underwater tale does that in a big way, but thankfully, there are lots more laughs than tears. Adults will enjoy witty writing and sharp humor. Moms and Dads may appreciate seeing a variety of parenting styles represented in the film as well.

3. Inside Out

When it comes to ranking Pixar movies for parents, 'Inside Out' shines
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This Oscar-winning film features a young Riley whose family’s move throws her life, and emotions into chaos. As Riley does her best to navigate her new home, her emotions do as well—from headquarters, located just inside Riley’s mind. A sequel to the film is expected to hit theaters in 2024.

Parent Ranking: The stacked voice cast, including Amy Poehler, Mindy Kaling, and Lewis Black makes Inside Out just as fun for the adults as it is for the kids. The film will remind adults what it was like to be a kid struggling with emotions, and parents may also discover a renewed understanding of how overwhelming youth can feel.

2. Up

©Disney/Pixar.

Carl Fredricksen is an elderly gentleman who always wanted to explore South America. He finally gets the chance when his house travels to Paradise Falls with the help of a ridiculous amount of balloons. His companion on the journey is a young Wilderness Explorer named Russell.

Parent Ranking: When it comes to ranking Pixar movies, is there a more heartbreakingly beautiful love story in all of movie-dom than Carl and Ellie’s? Both the love story and the loss when it ends, will appeal to adults. After the opening scene shatters your heart, the rest of this lovely movie will put it back together again. Adults will also enjoy the intergenerational bromance that develops between Carl and Russell, which proves there are no age limits when it comes to friendship.

1. Toy Story, Toy Story 2, Toy Story 3

The Toy Story franchise is #1 in our list of Pixar movies ranked for parents
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Toy Story and its follow-ups focus on the relationships between toys and their humans. The first Toy Story introduces a shiny new toy, space ranger Buzz Lightyear to Andy on his birthday and features the reaction of his favorite old toy, cowboy Woody. Toy Story 2 finds the gang going on a mission to save Woody from a thieving toy collector. The third installment, Toy Story 3, finds the toys inadvertently sent to a daycare instead of being stored in the attic as Andy gets ready to leave home for college.

Parent Ranking: While Toy Story 4 may not have quite lived up to its predecessors, the original three films remain the best of the best among Pixar’s offerings. The three movies have it all—plenty of action, lots of laughs, and, of course, all the feels. Keep the tissues handy, especially during Toy Story 3, which is an epic nostalgic return to the times when we needed to navigate the thin thread that separates childhood from what lies just beyond. The film also offers some unforgettable pop culture references from parents’ own childhood.