20 Best Movies on Crackle Right Now

20 Best Movies on Crackle Right Now

November 25, 2024

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Like Tubi or IMDb TV, Crackle allows you to watch movies for free if you can tolerate a few ads. Below we gathered the very best movies we could spot on Crackle. 

While we have only found these 20 movies for Crackle, we have gathered over a 100 on Tubi. You can find our list of the 100 best free movies to watch on Tubi here. Please note that we are not affiliated with either streaming platform, it’s just that Tubi is really good. 

11. Hoop Dreams (1994)

7.9

Country

United States of America

Director

Steve James

Actors

Arthur Agee, Bobby Knight, Dick Vitale, Gene Pingatore

Don’t be fooled—despite being a three-hour documentary, Hoop Dreams is just as thrilling, heartbreaking, and cinematic as any sports film out there. Unlike them, however, Hoop Dreams is less of an uplifting feel-good story than it is an honest and sobering look at how the education system has failed Black communities. It’s not a complete downer, though, since we follow two hardworking and inspiring boys committed to lifting their families from poverty. While more privileged players can afford to treat basketball as a hobby, to Arthur and William, basketball is a lifeline, a rare chance to enjoy better opportunities and give their families a better life. Imagine carrying that on your shoulders while training, studying, looking for colleges, and surviving teenhood. It’s a lot, but director Steve James weaves it all beautifully. James divides the chapter into freshman, sophomore, junior, and senior years, following Arthur and William as they start on the same footing, diverge and live parallel lives (one in private school, the other in public), and eventually meet again during their final years in school. Their journeys are riveting, not least because we also get to know their families, friends, hopes, and dreams. This is riveting cinema, as socially conscious as it is competitively thrilling.

12. My Name Is Emily (2017)

7.8

Country

Ireland

Director

Simon Fitzmaurice

Actors

Ali White, Ally Ni Chiarain, Barry McGovern, Catherine Walsh

Moods

Easy, Feel-Good, No-brainer

Emily (Evanna Lynch), a strange, unique girl does not receive the long awaited letter from her father on her birthday. Sick of worrying, she decides to break away from home to visit him in the psychiatric institution where he stays. The plan requires the help of Arden (George Webster), a boy from school who is ready to drop everything and accompany her on a journey that quickly becomes as adventurous as it is heartfelt. In this film, director Simon Fitzmaurice take will take you on a trip through the beautiful Irish landscape to find nothing else but simple and true love.

13. Monsieur Lazhar (2012)

7.4

Country

Canada

Director

Philippe Falardeau

Actors

André Robitaille, Brigitte Poupart, Daniel Gadouas, Danielle Proulx

Moods

Depressing, Dramatic

After the sudden death of a teacher, 55-year-old Algerian immigrant Bachir Lazhar is hired at an elementary school in Montreal. Struggling with a cultural gap between himself and his students at first, he helps them to deal with the situation, revealing his own tragic past. A strong portrait without any weird sentimentality. 11-year-old actress Sophie Nélisse makes her brilliant debut.

14. Take this Waltz (2012)

7.2

Country

Canada, Japan, Spain

Director

Female director, Sarah Polley

Actors

Aaron Abrams, Albert Howell, Cheryl MacInnis, Ciaran MacGillivray

Moods

Dramatic, Slice-of-Life, Slow

Take this Waltz is a movie that wants you to have a problem with it. It’s about a woman (Michelle Williams, Blue Valentine) torn between her husband (played by Seth Rogan) and a new man who entered her life. It’s an emotional and honest account as well as a mature slice-of-life film that you will appreciate either if you are familiar with a similar situation in real life, or if you give the film a chance, which I recommend you do.

15. A Coffee in Berlin (2012)

7.2

Country

Germany

Director

Jan-Ole Gerster

Actors

Alexander Altomirianos, Andreas Schroders, Annika Ernst, Arnd Klawitter

Moods

Grown-up Comedy, Quirky, Slow

A black and white movie, A Coffee in Berlin is an early Woody Allen reminiscent film with a great emphasis on the emotions it handles.  It flows naturally, telling the story of Niko, a young college dropout in a period of his life where he has to face loneliness and lack of money and success. He goes from observing the people of Berlin to first realizing he is becoming a stranger to them and then lastly deciding to do something about his life. It’s a whimsical German film with a lot of heart, as much of a tribute to youth as it is a tribute to the city of Berlin.

16. Timecrimes (2007)

7.1

Country

Spain

Director

J.T. Petty, Nacho Vigalondo

Actors

Bárbara Goenaga, Candela Fernández, Juan Inciarte, Karra Elejalde

Moods

Thought-provoking, Thrilling

A man accidentally gets into a time travel machine and travels one hour back in time. He finds himself stuck in a series of disasters of unforeseeable consequences, with unusual and thrilling moments at every corner. Similarly to Primer, this movie goes to prove that with intelligence and attention to detail, you don’t need a big budget to create an unforgettable story. Great acting, great story-line, and a great thriller.

17. Blood Tea and Red String (2006)

7.0

Country

United States of America

Director

Christiane Cegavske, Female director

Actors

Christiane Cegavske

Moods

Challenging, Discussion-sparking, Quirky

Blood Tea and Red String is cryptic as hell. There’s no dialogue, the film was in production for around 13 years, and the stop-motion animated rats and bat-crow creatures fight over a stuffed human-like doll and her bird-bodied child, spilling some tea and sewing her together with help from frog priests and a spider woman that keeps spinning her web. Whether the film is an allegory for class struggle and the inherent destructiveness of art, or is a straightforward Alice-in-Wonderland-esque fairytale with goth and medieval motifs is up to the viewer, but either way, the symbolism of Blood Tea and Red String is interesting enough to watch and try to make your own conclusions.

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