This article is presented by Hulu.

Allegedly, it's somehow already June. Huge if true. Of course, the upside of a new month means there's a steady wave of new titles hitting your favorite streaming services, and this month, holy heck Hulu has a lot of good stuff on the lineup. Whether you're looking for some tentpole action, last year's horror hits, classic thrillers, or the feel-good movie we could all probably use right now, there's a pretty robust variety of new movies on Hulu this month.

If you've got a mine for something that's literally "new", there's a solid selection of movies from last year making their streaming debut on the service, including the Mr. Rogers biopic A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood, the creepy crew Crawl and Child's Play, and Sony's Charlie's Angels reboot. If you're craving something more in the way of old favorites, set your sights on titles like CasinoDirty Dancing, and Out of Sight.

You can check out the full list of all the new movies and TV shows arriving on Hulu this month here, but like I said, it's a lot. So we've hand-picked the best of the bunch to help you stop scrolling and start watching ASAP. Check out our picks below.

If you want to watch these movies (and a whole lot more) right now, sign up for Hulu here.

Casino

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Image via Universal Pictures

Available: June 1

Director: Martin Scorsese

Writers: Nicolas Pileggi and Martin Scorsese

Cast: Robert De Niro, Sharon Stone, Joe Pesci, Don Rickles, James Woods, Kevin Pollack

You won’t find many folks who’ll go to bat for Casino as Martin Scorsese’s best movie, but it’s a freakin Scorsese movie, so yeah, it’s good. A tapestry of vice and violence, the 1995 drama digs into the crime and corruption fueling a Las Vegas casino. Featuring an outstanding ensemble that includes Scorsese regulars Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci, Casino has all the hallmarks of the legendary filmmaker’s cinematic obsessions; cyclical violence, lonely tough-guys, operatic tragedy, challenging antiheroes, and humanity’s toxic nostalgia for the good ol’ days, all captured with Scorsese’s energy and devotion to mastering the language of cinema.

True Romance: Director's Cut

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Image via Warner Bros.

Available: May 1

Director: Tony Scott

Writer: Quentin Tarantino and Roger Avery

Cast: Patricia Arquette, Christian Slater, Gary Oldman, Dennis Hopper, Brad Pitt, Val Kilmer, Christopher Walken, Samuel L. Jackson, Michael Rapaport

Tony Scott may not be the brother best known for his director’s cut (Ridley Scott is the king of those,) but his director’s cut of True Romance has become the definitive version of the film. Running three minutes longer than the theatrical cut, the director’s cut is the only version that’s been released on DVD and now you can watch it on Amazon Prime Video. Christian Slater and Patricia Arquette star in the steamy, hyperviolent romance about two chaotic kids who fall in love and wind up in way over their heads when he kills her pimp and they run off with case full of cocaine. Working from a script by Quentin Tarantino, Scott infuses the hallmarks of both their celebrated filmographies in a flashy, fast and furious, swooning saga of crime and romance.

Constantine

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Image via Warner Bros.

Available: June 1

Director: Francis Lawrence

Writers: Kevin Brodbin and Frank Cappello

Cast: Keanu Reeves, Rachel Weisz, Shia LaBeouf, Tilda Swinton, Peter Stormare, Pruit Taylor Vince

15 years after Francis Lawrence’s much-maligned Constantine adaptation hit theaters, the collective Internet has correctly and justly redeemed the film as Good Actually. Because it rules. Keanu Reeves’ take on the beloved demon-hunting character may not have the blonde hair, British accent, and snarky ‘tude fans know and love from the comics, it’s Keanu Reeves (who’s had his own long-overdue cultural reappraisal in the years since Constantine hit theaters), which means you can’t help but like him. Plus, the movie just generally owns. Working with an absolute embarrassment of riches in his ensemble, including Rachel Weisz, Tilda Swinton, and a very high-energy pre-Transformers Shia LaBeouf, Lawrence made his feature debut with a stylish, moody, and gripping paranormal detective yarn.

Dirty Dancing

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Image via Vestron Pictures

Available: June 1

Director: Emile Ardolino

Writer: Eleanor Bergstein

Cast: Patrick Swayze, Jennifer Gray, Jerry Orbach, Cynthia Rhodes

Dirty Dancing is such an iconic romance movie, other films and TV shows just can’t stop referencing it. From that iconic dance maneuver to “nobody puts Baby in a corner,” from How I Met Your Mother to Crazy, Stupid, Love, Dirty Dancing is a touchstone of cinematic love stories. Jennifer Gray stars as Baby, a young woman who falls in love with a sexy, hip-swaying dance instructor while spending the summer at a resort with her family. Patrick Swayze is magnetic as the leading man and the duo has dynamite chemistry (though legend has it they weren’t particularly fond of working together), making for one of Hollywood’s most beloved romances and one of the great comfort movies. It also holds up as a surprisingly forward-thinking and deeply human drama that might pack a bit more of an edge than you remember if it’s been a while since you last saw it.

Robin Hood: Men in Tights

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Image via 20th Century Fox

Available: May 1

Director: Mel Brooks

Writers: Mel Brooks, Evan Chandler, J. David Shapiro

Cast: Cary Elwes, Amy Yasbeck, Richard Lewis, Dave Chappelle, Tracey Ullman, Isaac Hayes, Roger Rees, Patrick Stewart

As one of America’s greatest lampooners, Mel Brooks’ resume is packed with top-tier spoofs, parodies, and farces, and while Robin Hood: Men in Tights doesn’t quite hit the impossibly high bar set by his 1974 double-whammys Blazing Saddles and Young Frankenstein, it’s one of his most purely, gleefully silly films and remains an absolute hoot. Cary Elwes stars as a doofy but radiant spin on the legendary literary character, with an ensemble of comedic killers including Tracey Ullman, Roger Rees, and Dave Chappelle in his feature debut. Brooks so thoroughly deconstructed and defiled the Robin Hood mythos, he seemingly left Hollywood no ground to go to, with remake after reimaging after readaptation fizzling out at the box office in the years since.

A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood

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Image via TriStar Pictures

Available: June 2

Director: Marielle Heller

Writers: Micah Fitzermen-Blue and Noah Harpster

Cast:  Tom Hanks, Matthew Rhys, Susan Kelechi Watson, Chris Cooper, Enrico Colantoni

America’s dad plays America’s other dad in this acclaimed biopic from Can You Ever Forgive Me? director Marielle Heller. Tom Hanks stars as beloved children’s TV host Fred Rogers in a feel-good drama about the friendship between the unfailingly inspiring and optimistic Mr. Rogers and the jaded journalist (Matthew Rhys) sent to profile him. Hanks earned an Oscar nomination for his role, and while the film never quite taps into the emotional richness of 2018’s documentary Won’t You Be My Neighbor?, it’s a lovely, touching tribute to the man who helped raise generations of children to be kinder, more compassionate people.

Child's Play

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Photo by Eric Milner/Orion Pictures

Available: June 12

Director: Lars Klevberg

Writer: Tyler Burton Smith

Cast: Aubrey Plaza, Mark Hamill, Brian Tyree Henry, Gabriel Bateman, Tim Matheson

This one probably would have fared better in public opinion if it was packaged as an original horror movie rather than taking on the Child’s Play brand (and derailing the fascinating, decades-long Chucky franchise from creator Don Mancini in the process,) but Lars Klevberg’s Child’s Play update is a pretty solid piece of technophobic horror, even if the poor little Good Guy doll – actually, that’s a Buddi doll now – got a redesign that makes him look like he needs to lay off the facial fillers. The great Mark Hamill voices the new spin on the iconic killer doll, who gets reimagined here as an A.I. toy that becomes self-aware and develops a taste for killin’. Child’s Play is never as rambunctious or, well, playful as the original, but with Aubrey Plaza and Brian Tyree Henry leading up the cast, there’s plenty of charisma to keep you locked in and some genuinely unnerving set-pieces to keep it creepy.

Crawl

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Image via Paramount Pictures

Available: June 18

Director: Alexandre Aja

Writers: Michael Rassmussen and Shawn Rassmussen

Cast: Kaya Scoldelario, Barry Pepper

Against all odds, Alexandra Aja’s little killer gator movie that could ended up being one of my Top 10 movies of 2019. Lean, relentless, and masterfully composed, Crawl stars a powerhouse Kaya Scodelario as a woman (and hell of a swimmer) who get traps in the crawlspace of her childhood home with her estranged father… during a category 5 hurricane… with a bunch of hangry alligators on the loose. Now, I know, I know. If you’re from a gator-populated area, you’re probably gonna want to scream “That’s not how any of this works!” at the screen, but let’s let that go. If it helps, imagine their space gators or something. Monsters. Because Aja makes a forceful return to the ferocity of his earlier works here, delivering a creature feature of impeccable precision, refusing to leave a spare second on the table, ratcheting up the tension with each new sequence, and grounding it all in a familiar but effective character drama about two people who love each other deeply but struggle to connect because they’re too damn alike. Turn up the sound, turn off the lights, and tuck into a 90-minute thrill ride that had my theatrical audience yelping at the screen.

Out of Sight

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Image via Universal Pictures

Available: June 19

Director: Steven Soderbergh

Writer: Scott Frank

Cast: George Clooney, Jennifer Lopez, Ving Rhames, Don Cheadle, Steve Zahn, Dennis Farina, Albert Brooks

Movies just don’t get sexier than Steven Soderbergh’s 1998 Elmore Leonard adaptation Out of Sight. George Clooney has never been more commanding, Jennifer Lopez has never been more luminous, and both of them are at the heights of their legendary charismatic powers in the steamy saga of an escaped bank robber (Clooney) and a Federal Marshall (Lopez), who strike up an unexpected spark when they get trapped in a car trunk together during his jailbreak. Soderbergh has always made inspired, unconventional casting choices, and fresh off her breakout role in Selena, before “Jenny from the Block” launched her to superstardom, Soderbergh gave her the role that remains one of the best works of her extraordinary career. And man, this one holds up. If you’re only gonna watch one new throwback movie on Hulu this month, make it Out of Sight.

Charlie's Angels

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Image via Sony

Available: June 25

Writer/Director: Elizabeth Banks

Cast: Kristen Stewart, Elizabeth Banks, Naomi Scott, Ella Balinska, Djimon Hounsou, Sam Claflin, Noah Centineo, Patrick Stewart

Charlie’s Angels is not an IP that inspires passionate fandom these days, so it wasn’t exactly a surprise when Elizabeth Banks’ 2019 reboot bombed at the box office, but the breezy action movie doesn’t quite deserve the scorn with which it was met for one very delightful reason: Kristen Stewart. Straight up, it’s not a great movie. The action can be clumsy, the story is thin and really, nobody was asking for a Charlie’s Angels reboot, but every time Stewart is on-screen, the movie positively lights up. Stewart has had a slow climb back into the good graces of “respectability” after a decade of movie fans dunking on the Twilight Saga, but she’s deservedly become one of the most celebrated actors of her generation after a series of bold films and nuanced performances. But nobody ever lets her have any dang fun. Stewart is having fun in Charlie’s Angels, kicking ass in neon tracksuits, and dancing up a storm in sequined stiletto boots. She’s obviously delighted at the opportunity to get playful with it, and it’s a whole lot of fun to watch, you just wish the rest of the movie would join her party.

Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol

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Image via Paramount Pictures

Available: June 30

Director: Brad Bird

Writers: Josh Appelbaum and André Nemec

Cast: Tom Cruise, Simon Pegg, Ving Rhames, Jeremy Renner, Paula Patton,

Mission: Impossible is one of the greatest action franchises of all time, with only one true dud in the mix (and sorry, I still enjoy M:I 2, it is a John Woo movie, after all.) The films are so consistent in quality, it’s almost impossible to pick a favorite. But for many, that honor goes to Brad Bird’s Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol, the 2011 sequel (the fourth in the franchise) that saw the Iron Giant and Incredibles filmmaker make his live-action directing debut. He, uh, nailed it. Ghost Protocol is precision action-filmmaking, incorporating Bird’s affection for Rube Goldberg Machine-like set-pieces that throw obstacle after obstacle at Tom Cruise’s now veteran super-spy, who’s eternally had just about enough of this shit but also never, ever gives up. Much like Cruise itself when it comes to performing his own stunts, no matter how insane, including the now-iconic set-piece that saw him dangling off the Burj Khalifa like an absolute madman. Ghost Protocol also helped shift the franchise in a more ensemble-driven a direction, a choice that only made it stronger, and you can feel future helmer Christopher McQuarrie’s (who has pretty much perfected the M:I franchise formula) fingerprints all over the script he re-wrote.