5 Best Netflix Movies With Perfect (or Nearly Perfect) Rotten Tomatoes Scores

The streamer hides plenty of highly acclaimed gems you never thought you’d find there — the list even includes a major Oscar winner.
Despite being an undeniable leader when it comes to choosing a streaming platform, Netflix has had a turbulent history, causing several controversies in regard to its preference of quantity over quality.
It didn’t cause any trouble for the streamer’s popularity though, and, apart from a bunch of new arrivals heading to Netflix’s platform every month, some old movies and shows are also there to fill in the place of those that the audiences have already had time to check out.
Still, with all the diversity in its content’s reviews, Netflix has several high-rated and universally acclaimed films in store, which might be a reason to keep that subscription even if you’re not that fond of the streamer’s original projects.
Daughters (2024) — 100% RT Score
A heart-wrenching documentary about kids separated from their parents, Daughters might become a life-changing experience for some viewers, showing how much imprisoned men want to be a part of the life they left behind.
The movie mostly centres on four young girls preparing for a special daddy-daughter dance with their fathers; there’s nothing said about the latter’s crimes that put them behind the prison’s bars, yet it doesn’t even need to be said after all.
Daughters’ one and only idea lies in the child and the parent’s connection that simply can’t be erased by a long-time separation.
Schindler’s List (1993) — 98% RT Score
One of the most acclaimed movies about horrors of the Holocaust, Schindler’s List is likely Steven Spielberg ’s finest work that was deservingly named Best Picture at the 1994 Oscars ceremony.
The movie stars Liam Neeson as Oskar Schindler, a German industrialist who first just gives employment to numerous Jews, but then, witnessing all the horrifying deeds they have to experience, embarks on a mission to save as many as he can from the most certain death.
Schindler’s List was a massive hit that grossed more than $300 million in the box office and eventually won seven Oscar statuettes.
How to Have Sex (2023) — 97% RT Score
Molly Manning Walker ’s astoundingly profound and honest feature debut, How to Have Sex has its events unfolding at a Mediterranean party resort where three British teenagers, with one of them being Mia McKenna-Bruce’s Tara, are set to spent several days drinking, having fun and, for Tara, finding a relationship she has been waiting for all along.
However, what started out as the time of her life she wasn’t going to forget turns into Tara’s worst nightmare, leading her to finally draw the line between expectations and reality.
His Three Daughters (2023) — 98% RT Score
Featuring the star of the ongoing third season of The White Lotus Carrie Coon, the movie also sees Natasha Lyonne and Elizabeth Olsen joining in, portraying three estranged sisters reuniting when their father’s health starts rapidly declining.
The time they are obliged to spend together makes some of their past issues resurface, setting the sisters against each other once again ahead of a much bigger tragedy that awaits them.
Despite having the father figure as the one that pushed the entire storyline forward, His Three Daughters remains loyal to its title, exploring complex relationships between sisters with their parent’s imminent death serving as a catalyst and background.
Official Competition (2022) — 96% RT Score
A spicy Spanish comedy that should have received way more acclaim from Netflix’s audiences by now, Official Competition stars Antonio Banderas and Penélope Cruz among others, following a billionaire who wants his name to be remembered by a high-class movie with the most renowned ensemble.
Things don’t go according to plan, however, and each rehearsal promises to become the last one for the long-suffering movie that might suffer even more from its leads’ absurdist actions.
Directed by Gastón Duprat and Mariano Cohn, Official Competition is a witty satire about the art creation process, the whole madness of which is often left behind closed doors.