From ‘The Mandalorian’ to ‘The Comey Rule’ here’s your guide to 100+ films and TV shows to stream this fall – Yahoo Entertainment

After the coronavirus pandemic essentially cancelled the summer movie season, streaming services became Americas primary entertainment outlet during the warm weather months. And with COVID-19 cases still flaring up around the country, along with the arrival of flu season, audiences will once again be looking for new movies and TV shows to watch from the comfort of their couch. The entertainment industry has responded to the increased at-home demand with a plethora of bingeable viewing options that offer a little something for everyone.

Star Wars fans can look forward to the return of The Mandalorian (and, more importantly, Baby Yoda) and an all-new, all-animated Holiday Special on Disney+; political junkies can get their fix from Showtimes The Comey Rule and the real-life Presidential debates; teens can solve crimes alongside Sherlock Holmess younger sister, Enola, and get inspired by teen activist Greta Thunberg; horror lovers can tour Monsterland and say farewell to Supernatural; and movie lovers have new films from established auteurs like Sofia Coppola and David Fincher to look forward to. Heres Yahoo Entertainments curated guide to over 100 films and TV shows that youll want to stream this fall.

The Duchess (Sept. 11, Netflix)

What if the Gilmore Girls settled in England instead of Connecticut? Thats the jumping-off point for Katherine Ryans half-hour comedy about a single mother (Ryan) who moved across the pond to raise her daughter, Olive, in the vicinity of her ex a former boy band superstar who is a terrible life partner, but a pretty good dad.

Coastal Elites (Sept. 12, HBO and HBO Max)

Bette Midler, Sarah Paulson, Kaitlyn Dever, Dan Levy and Issa Rae deliver Paul Rudnick-penned pandemic monologues in Jay Roachs remotely-produced comedy. Despite the title, these coastal elites arent playing themselves: Instead, each adopts the identity of an ordinary American whose lives are upended in the age of COVID, from a New York City public schoolteacher to a prolific YouTuber.

Enslaved (Sept. 14, EPIX)

Samuel L. Jackson executive produced and appears in this six-part documentary that chronicles the horrific slave trade that forcibly transported millions of Africans to the Americas four centuries ago. In the present day, the veteran actor travels to Africa to meet the descendants of his own ancestral tribe, the Benga people in Gabon.

The Third Day (Sept. 14, HBO)

HBOs ambitious three-part miniseries made in conjunction with Englands Sky Studios stars Jude Law and Naomie Harris as visitors to a strange island where the local citizens are slow to welcome outsiders. Katherine Waterston, Paddy Considine and Emily Watson round out the rest of the cast.

We Are Who We Are (Sept. 14, HBO)

Call Me By Your Name maestro, Luca Guadagnino, orchestrates another tale of young love: Jack Dylan Grazer and Jordan Kristine Seamon play two 14-year-old American military brats who experience the first stirrings of romance on an Italian military base. Somewhere, Armie Hammer is cuing up Love My Way.

Wireless (Sept. 14, Quibi)

Sophie Turner survived her time in the Quibi wild now its her X-Men co-star Tye Sheridans turn. The actor headlines a bite-sized survival story about a college student who finds himself stuck in the wilds of Colorado with only a rapidly dying phone for company. Steven Soderbergh executive produced the series, and praised the marriage of story and format. The key here is that its not a compromise its the whole point. [Mobile] was the way it was designed to be seen. It was the farthest thing from a passive viewing experience you can imagine.

Dont Forget the Driver (Sept. 15, BritBox)

Toby Jones stars in this offbeat British comedy about a small-town bus driver whose routine life is in desperate need of a shake-up. That change arrives in the form of an asylum seeker who unexpectedly hitches a ride on his coach.

Archer (Sept. 16, FXX and FX on Hulu)

Season 11 of the animated favorite picks up with the titular James Bond wanna-be re-adjusting to the spy game after waking up from a three-year coma. Simon Pegg, Jamie Lee Curtis and Pamela Adlon will reportedly contribute vocal cameos to the cartoon shenanigans.

Challenger: The Final Flight (Sept. 16, Netflix)

The tragic story of the Space Shuttle Challenger is re-told in a new four-episode documentary series from J.J. Abramss Bad Robot production company. Archival footage from NASA and news reports are juxtaposed with new interviews from astronauts, engineers and the families that the doomed crew left behind.

The Devil All the Time (Sept. 16, Netflix)

What do you get when you feature Spider-Man, the Winter Soldier, Edward Cullen and Pennywise in the same movie? A devil of a good time. Tom Holland, Sebastian Stan, Robert Pattinson and Bill Skarsgrdall star in Antonio Camposs period thriller, based on the 2011 bestseller by Donald Ray Pollock.

Departure (Sept. 17, Peacock)

Peacock kicks off its fall season with this star-powered thriller starring The Good Wife Emmy winner Archie Panjabi and veteran character actor, Christopher Plummer. The duo play aerial investigators who explore the mystery of a missing aircraft.

Mo Willems and The Storytime All-Stars Present: Dont Let the Pigeon Do Storytime! (Sept. 17, HBO Max)

Parents, rejoice! The beloved childrens book author bring his signature characters including Elephant and Piggie, Knuffle Bunny and, of course, that rascally pigeon to life in a comedy special that was recorded in front of a live audience at the Kennedy Center. Celebrity guest stars like Anthony Anderson, Tony Hale and Natalie Morales join in the kid-friendly fun.

All In: The Fight for Democracy (Sept. 18, Amazon Prime)

With mere weeks to go until the 2020 Presidential election, Liz Garbuss new documentary spotlights the many hurdles facing large swaths of voters on their way to the ballot box. Georgia political rock star, Stacy Abrams, is prominently featured in the film, alongside the other men and women working overtime to turn out the vote.

Antebellum (Sept. 18, On Demand)

Superstar singer-turned-actress, Janelle Mone, has her highest-profile role yet as a present-day author who finds herself in a nightmarish alternate reality. Directing team Gerard Bush and Christopher Renz make their narrative feature debut, which also stars Jena Malone and Gabourey Sidibe.

Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous (Sept. 18, Netflix)

Welcome to a sleepaway camp thats a little wild. Unfolding concurrently with the events of the 2015 blockbuster, Jurassic World, this animated series deposits six intrepid kids on Isla Nublar just before the theme park erupts in dinosaur-on-human attacks. Hold onto your butts camp is in session.

Pen15 (Sept. 18, Hulu)

Season 2 of Hulus cult comedy returns viewers to the early aughts for another round of painfully awkward (and totally hilarious) middle school adventures based on the lives of creators/stars Maya Erskine and Anna Konkle. Cue up your Lit mixtapes and get ready for 7th grade!

Ratched (Sept. 18, Netflix)

Sarah Paulson portrays the younger version of One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nests Nurse Mildred Ratched played by Louise Fletcher in the 1975 classic in Ryan Murphys prequel series. Set in the 1940s, the show depicts Mildreds first job at a Northern California asylum and how it molds her into the formidable opponent that R.P. McMurphy meets decades later.

Wilmore (Sept. 18, Peacock)

Peacock is most definitely keeping it 100 by gifting the world with an all-new Larry Wilmore talk show. The former Nightly Show host will once again address the issues of the day, and talk with the movers and shakers from Hollywood, Washington D.C. and beyond.

Stuntwomen: The Untold Hollywood Story (Sept. 22, On Demand)

Renowned cinematic bad-ass, Michelle Rodriguez, narrates this action-packed documentary chronicling the unsung history of stuntwomen in the film industry. Spanning the silent era to present day blockbusters like Rodriguezs own Fast and the Furious franchise, Stuntwomen entertains and educates at the same time.

Enola Holmes (Sept. 23, Netflix)

Strangers Things superstar Millie Bobby Brown trades the American Midwest for merry old England in the inaugural adventure for Sherlock Holmess teen sister. Its a Holmes vs. Holmes mystery has Enola tries to out-sleuth Sherlock (Henry Cavill) to get to the center of a labyrinthine conspiracy.

The Masked Singer (Sept. 23, Fox)

Strike up the band and put on your masks as Foxs reality blockbuster returns for Season 4. Host Nick Cannon is returning as well, despite controversial comments he made over the summer.

The Artists Wife (Sept. 25, On Demand)

Lena Olin and Bruce Dern headline this intimate drama about a late-in-life married couple facing an uncertain future. While renowned artist Richard (Dern) confronts the onset of dementia, Claire (Olin) tries to preserve his legacy, while also finding her own artistic voice.

Ava (Sept. 25, On Demand)

Jessica Chastain locks and loads for an action-heavy thriller helmed by The Help director, Tate Taylor, and co-starring Geena Davis, Common and Colin Farrell. After a job goes badly, ace assassin Ava (Chastain) has to survive a gauntlet of adversaries and allies-turned-adversaries.

Foster Boy (Sept. 25, On Demand)

Matthew Modine headlines this legal drama as a corporate lawyer who revives his passion for the law when a young man trapped in the foster care system requires his help. Legendary actor Louis Gosset Jr. presides over this particular cinematic courtroom as the judge assigned to the case.

Magic of Disneys Animal Kingdom (Sept. 25, Disney+)

Explore the magic and majesty of Walt Disney Worlds beloved animal attractions, Animal Kingdom and EPCOTs The Seas with Nemo & Friends. Josh Gad narrates the behind-the-scenes docuseries, which features extensive interviews with animal experts and lots of wild wildlife footage.

Misbehaviour (Sept. 25, On Demand)

Gugu Mbatha-Raw plays pioneering Black beauty queen, Jennifer Hosten who took home the Miss World crown to her native Grenada in 1970 in Philippa Lowthropes fact-based comedy. The movie also stars Keira Knightley as feminist activist Sally Alexander and Greg Kinnear as Bob Hope, who hosted that years ceremony.

Secret Society of Second-Born Royals (Sept. 25, Disney+)

Cross The Princess Diaries with The Avengers and youve got Disney+s latest original movie, which follows a group of second-in-line royal heirs who also happen to have superpowers. Disney Channel star Peyton Elizabeth Lee heads up a diverse cast that includes Skyler Astin, lodie Yungand Niles Fitch.

Tehran (Sept. 25, Apple TV+)

Prolific Israeli TV scribe, Moseh Zonder, is the creative force behind a new Apple TV+ espionage series set in the Iranian capital where a Mossad agent (Niv Sultan) is embedded on a dangerous undercover mission.

The Comey Rule (Sept. 27, Showtime)

Real life becomes reel life in Showtimes dramatization of former FBI Director James Comeys dramatic downfall. Jeff Daniels plays Comey, while Brendan Gleeson portrays President Donald Trump in a performance thats already attracting Emmy buzz.

Fargo (Sept. 27, FX and FX on Hulu)

Noah Hawleys celebrated anthology series returns for its fourth season, and hands Chris Rock his most dramatic role to date. The funnyman plays a 50s era Kansas City crime boss whose crew has an epic rumble with a local mafia family.

The Simpsons (Sept. 27, Fox)

Springfields first family is back for their 32nd season, which features vocal cameos from the likes of David Harbour, Olivia Colman and Michael Palin. But the bigger story is that the shows main voice cast will also be changing, as producers recently decided that white actors will no longer voice non-white characters in the wake of the summers Black Lives Matter protests inspired by the death of George Floyd.

The Expecting (Sept. 28, Quibi)

AnnaSophia Robb headlines this Michael Bay-executive produced Quibi series as a pregnant waitress who discovers shes part of an elaborate conspiracy. Rory Culkin, Mira Sorvino and Hannah Murray also star.

2020 Presidential Debates (Sept. 29, all networks)

Joe Biden and Donald Trump square off in the first of three presidential debates, with the next two scheduled for Oct. 15 and Oct. 22. (A Vice Presidential debate between Kamala Harris and Mike Pence will be held Oct. 7.) Sorry Hollywood content creators, but when it comes to dramatic television and social media engagement, nothing is going to match this particular reality show.

American Murder: The Family Next Door (Sept. 30, Netflix)

Netflixs latest true crime documentary explores the horrific Watts Family Murders that shocked Colorado and the world in 2018. Home movies, text messages and police reports recreate the days leading up to the crime and its aftermath.

The Boys in the Band (Sept. 30, Netflix)

Joe Mantello directs the film version of his Tony-winning Broadway revival of Matt Crowleys groundbreaking 1968 play, and reunites the entire cast of that production, including Zachary Quinto, Matt Bomer, Jim Parsons and Andrew Rannells. Set in the late 60s, the story unfolds at a Manhattan birthday party where the festivities are served with a side helping of secrets and lies.

The Glorias (Sept. 30, Amazon Prime)

Four different actresses including Lulu Wilson, Alicia Vikander and Julianne Moore play feminist icon, Gloria Steinem, at different points in her life in Julie Taymors time-hopping biopic. Debuting to strong reviews at the Sundance Film Festival, the movie also stars Bette Midler, Timothy Hutton and Janelle Mone.

Gangs of London (Oct. 1, AMC+)

Gareth Evanss wildly successful British series arrives stateside courtesy of AMC and its new premium subscription bundle, AMC+. Following the death of Londons No. 1 kingpin (Colm Meaney), the citys various criminal factions square off for a battle over territory and cold hard cash. If youve seen Evanss Raid movies, you can expect the bullets to fly and the body count to explode.

Scare Me (Oct. 1, Shudder)

The premiere horror streaming service kicks off October with a new Halloween-ready anthology in the (bloody) vein of Creepshow, Tales From the Darkside and Trick r Treat. Josh Ruben (who also wrote and directed the film) and Aya Cash play two strangers who find themselves sharing the same remote cabin during a power outage, and swap scary stories to pass the time. Naturally, it isnt long before those imaginary ghosts and goblins become real

2067 (Oct. 2, On Demand)

Welcome to Earth four decades from now, where the air has been replaced by artificial oxygen thanks to climate change, and a mysterious illness is sweeping the globe. Kodi Smit-McPhee who endured another post-apocalypse in the film version of The Road plays humanitys last hope at survival provided he can stay alive himself.

Dick Johnson Is Dead (Oct. 2, Netflix)

Acclaimed documentary filmmaker Kristen Johnson imagines a future without her elderly father who is still very much alive in this funny, and moving, non-fiction portrait of how we wrestle with grief and loss.

Emily in Paris (Oct. 2, Netflix)

Sex and the City mastermind, Darren Star, trades New York for Paris in his new Netflix comedy that follows a young marketing executive (Lily Collins) from the Windy City to the City of Lights. Once in Paris, she has to contend with snooty co-workers, a lack of friends and the inability to understand French. But she also discovers the simple pleasures of an authentic pan au chocolat so its a win-win.

Monsterland (Oct. 2, Hulu)

Adapted from Nathan Ballingruds celebrated North American Lake Monsters short story collection, Hulus new horror anthology series features a cast of human actors that includes Nicole Beharie, Mike Colter and Bill Camp meeting a cast of otherworldly monsters that includes mermaids, ex-angels and monsters that go bump in the night.

Saturday Night Live (Oct. 3, NBC)

The Not Ready For Primetime Players are leaving their homes at last. SNL returns to Studio 8H for its 46th season, just in time for the final sprint of the presidential election. And while Alec Baldwin may have retired his Trump impression (we think, anyway), you can bet that Jason Sudeikis and Maya Rudolph will be be stopping by as the Biden/Harris team.

The Comedy Store (Oct. 4, Showtime)

Comedian-turned-director Mike Binder offers the definitive documentary about the legendary L.A. comedy club that launched a thousand superstars. Marc Maron, Bob Saget, Judd Apatow and Martin Lawrence are among the alumni who will share the highlights (and lowlights) of their time at The Comedy Store.

The Walking Dead: World Beyond (Oct. 4, AMC)

The Walking Dead universe gets a little bit bigger with the latest spinoff series, World Beyond. Set a decade after the zombie apocalypse, the show follows two sisters, Hope and Iris (Alexa Mansour and Aliyah Royale), as they leave their safe haven and venture out into the big, bad world. World Beyond will air alongside Season 6 of Fear the Walking Dead, which kicks off on Oct. 11.

Soulmates (Oct. 5, AMC)

Charlie Heaton, Betsy Brandt and Sarah Snook are among the big-name stars of AMCs new anthology series, which explores the various meanings and implications behind the word soulmate. With Black Mirror veteran Will Bridges onboard as one of the co-creators, you can bet these portraits of modern romance will have plenty of twists.

American Pie Presents: Girls Rule (Oct. 6, On Demand)

After an 11-year layoff, the American Pie franchise bakes up another installment this time with a side helping of girl power. Madison Pettis, Piper Curda, Natasha Behnam and Lizze Broadway play a quartet of East Great Falls seniors who make a pact to lose their virginity before graduation. Eugene Levy wont be returning this time, but you can bet the Stifler clan will still be in the picture.

Chasing the Present (Oct. 6, On Demand)

Mark Waterss new globetrotting documentary follows an anxiety-ridden man on a globetrotting self-help quest. Along the way, he acquires advice from such thinkers as Sri Prem Baba, Zelda Hall and Russell Brand. Yes, that Russell Brand.

The Phenomenon (Oct. 6, Digital)

John Podesta, Harry Reid and Bill Clinton are among the elder statesmen who go on the record in James Foxs exploration of the story behind the Pentagons recently-revealed UFO program. Fox Mulder always said that the truth is out there.

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From 'The Mandalorian' to 'The Comey Rule' here's your guide to 100+ films and TV shows to stream this fall - Yahoo Entertainment

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Reviewed and Recommended by Erik Baquero
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