The 10 best classic movies streaming on HBO Max
HBO Max is home to influential (and entertaining) classics from legends like Alfred Hitchcock, Fritz Lang, and Jacques Tourneur.
The 10 best classic movies streaming on HBO Max
HBO Max is home to influential (and entertaining) classics from legends like Alfred Hitchcock, Fritz Lang, and Jacques Tourneur.
By Jordan Hoffman
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Jordan Hoffman
Jordan Hoffman is a writer at **, mostly covering nostalgia. He has been writing about entertainment since 2007.
EW's editorial guidelines
April 24, 2026 5:00 p.m. ET
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'Singin' in the Rain,' 'Casablanca,' 'Out of the Past'. Credit:
FILE/AFP via Getty;Snap/Shutterstock
What makes a classic? If there were a precise formula, weâd have more of them. Itâs a mixture of story, performances, visual creativity, and, frequently, the good luck of timing.
The right movie comes out at the right time and resonates with people throughout the ages. (Though sometimes thereâs a delayed reaction. Most famously, *Itâs A Wonderful Life *was a box office dud and only modestly received by critics. Today, we couldnât imagine the Christmas season without it.)
Of all the streaming services out there, HBO Max is the surest bet for finding home-run Hollywood classics. (TCM Watch, the streaming arm of Turner Classic Movies, is still, frustratingly, not available as a solo product; you need to subscribe to some form of live television to access it, which is an outrage.)
We at ** have rolled up our sleeves, assessed HBO Maxâs current offerings, and discovered riches across all genres. After several long walks that involved chin scratching and sighing, weâve determined, conclusively, the 10 best classic movies on HBO Max. (Yes, we know there are some great ones we missed. Thatâs what makes it all so much fun.)
The 39 Steps (1935)
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Robert Donat silencing a woman in 'The 39 Steps' (just kidding, they're in danger).
Moviestore/Shutterstock
Already a decade into his directing career, Alfred Hitchcock secured his reputation as an all-time great with *The 39 Steps*, a stylish paranoid thriller with many of his hallmarks found in the masterpieces that would follow.
Robert Donat is an everyman who goes to the theater and ends up in the center of an assassination plot. He ends up on the run in Scotland, barely knowing anything about the grand conspiracy following him, other than that itâs deadly. The specifics are less important than the feelings of dread and the eerie sensation of discovering a dangerous reality that exists around us in plain sight.
Brief Encounter (1945)
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Celia Johnson and Trevor Howard suppress their feelings like good Britons in 'Brief Encounter'.
Screen Archives/Getty
One doesnât usually associate David Lean, director of epics like *Lawrence of Arabia *and *Doctor Zhivago*, with the word âbrief,â but one of his best works â indeed, one of the best British films ever made â is this 87-minute doomed romance starring Trevor Howard and Celia Johnson.
This salute to the âstiff upper lipâ concerns a man and a woman in preexisting marriages who meet at a train station, accidentally fall in love, then move on with their lives.
Itâs a simple film filled with insightful, precise moments and sparkling supporting characters, plus the grand sweep of emotion that can be found even in moments of inaction. Rachmaninoffâs second piano concerto makes a bold, lasting appearance as well.
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Casablanca (1941)
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Ingrid Bergman looks at Humphrey Bogart like he's a snack in 'Casablanca'.
Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty
âI bet theyâre asleep in New York. I bet theyâre asleep all over America.â âIâm shocked, *shocked *to find there is gambling going on in here!â âHereâs lookinâ at you, kid.â âRound up the usual suspects!â âThe Germans wore gray, you wore blue.â âI stick my neck out for nobody.â âYou played it for her, you can play it for me. If she can stand it, I can â play it!â âSweetness, heart, what watch?â âLouis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.â
Can you imagine this movie, which has more classic lines per capita than any other, was essentially written on the fly, with no one in the production sure how it would end? Hollywood magic!
Gone With the Wind (1939)
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'Frankly my dear, I think it's weird how much you love your cousin Ashley'.
Rightly viewed today through the veil of history, this problematic Best Picture winner is nevertheless an important American touchstone, with a dazzling story, big performances, and several iconic sequences. Adjusted for inflation, *Gone With the Wind *is still the all-time box-office champ.
British actress Vivien Leigh is forever linked with the American South thanks to her legendary Scarlett OâHara, a plantation ownerâs daughter whose affairs of the heart are interrupted by the Civil War. Clark Gable and his mustache made audiences swoon as Rhett Butler, though Scarlettâs heart always belonged to Leslie Howardâs Ashley Wilkes.
Hattie McDanielâs Oscar win as âMammyâ remains bittersweet. She was forced to sit at a far table and barred from attending an afterparty due to her race.
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Peter Lorre comes face to face with some very angry people in 'M'.
THA/Shutterstock
Legendary German director Fritz Langâs first sound film, *M, *kinda-sorta invented the serial killer thriller. Before *M*, crime films were about heists and gangsters. Lang put the audience uncomfortably inside the hunt for a child murderer, and while it doesnât exactly make the killer a good guy, he is still recognizable as a human being.
Peter Lorre is creepy as hell as the tormented villain who claims he is powerless against his antisocial urges, but the real star is Langâs expressionistic use of lighting and framing. Youâll never hear the famous melody from âIn the Hall of the Mountain Kingâ the same way again.
Out of the Past (1947)
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Look at Kirk Douglas' face, you know he's cookin' up a scheme.
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Ask 10 cinephiles to name the greatest film noir ever made and I bet three say this. (Another three will say *Double Indemnity*.)
Starring Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer, and Kirk Douglas, Jacques Tourneurâs classic has it all: a memorable femme fatale, deep shadows, hot desert landscapes, a jazzy score, brilliant dialogue, and an almost celebratory attitude toward fatalism.
Movies like this reflect a grim (and perhaps more honest) side of postwar America that was about to suit up for a decade of Eisenhower conformity.
The Seventh Seal (1957)
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"How about Checkers? It's less existential." / "No." Death and Max von Sydow in 'The Seventh Seal'.
The image of a cloaked figure holding a scythe pronouncing âI am Death!â is pretty hard to take seriously considering how frequently itâs been parodied, but Ingmar Bergmanâs philosophical examination of mortality is still surprisingly watchable once you get into it.
Max von Sydow stars as a knight returned from the Crusades to find his homeland ravaged by plague. He postpones his own demise with gamesmanship (literally playing chess against Death) as he searches inward and outward for deeper meaning. Itâs heavy stuff, but has intermittent moments of grace and beauty. Thereâs a reason itâs been used as a punchline for decades.
Singinâ in the Rain (1952)
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Gene Kelly catches a cold in 'Singin' in the Rain'. Mary Evans/Ronald Grant/Everett Collection
One of the greatest movies about movies, this legendary collab between Gene Kelly, Stanley Donen, Adolph Green, and Betty Comden is a hilarious look at how talkies âruinedâ Hollywood. Kelly stars with Debbie Reynolds and Donald OâConnor in a great many legendary musical numbers, some involving water, some involving jumping off the walls.
Many donât realize this was something of a jukebox musical, collecting older songs composed by Arthur Freed. Reynolds was only 19 during production and had no prior dance training. The filmâs wildest sequence is an 18-minute Technicolor ballet break featuring Cyd Charisse, almost a mini-movie within the movie.
Summertime (1955)
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Katharine Hepburn goes to Italy and takes a lover in 'Summertime'.
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Katharine Hepburn takes a vacation to Venice and weâre all invited.
In this lush, romantic classic, Hepburn is a proudly single woman of a certain age, slowly coming to realize that she could, perhaps, do with a new outlook on life. The rhythms of the magical, aquatic city swallow her up â at one moment literally, when she falls into the Canal. Hepburn did the stunt herself and found herself infected with a rare eye condition that never quite healed. Yikes!
OSHA issues aside, *Summertime *is a marvelously romantic picture that, like *Brief Encounter*, proves that older films were far more nuanced than we sometimes give them credit for.
The Wizard of Oz (1939)
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Billie Burke as Glinda (Galinda?) and Judy Garland as Dorothy in 'The Wizard of Oz'.
You could shell out over a hundred clams to see it at the Las Vegas Sphere or you could watch it in the comfort of your own home for nuthinâ!
Surely youâve already taken the trip with Dorothy Gale from Kansas to Oz and back again, but itâs always good to revisit: the Scarecrow, the Tin Man, the Cowardly Lion, the apple trees, the flying monkeys, the chanting guards, the ruby slippers, the yellow brick road, and the green city.
If you want to bore yourself, you can read up on why itâs actually about William Jennings Bryan and gold-backed currency. Better yet, you can queue it up with *Dark Side of the Moon *and freak out at all the synchronicity. Both interpretations are valid!
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