Three Netflix Films That Deserved Hype — But Got Buried Under Popcorn Flicks

Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], November 1: Let’s not pretend it’s easy to stand out in the endless scroll of the streaming war. Ever since the golden age of “must-watch every Wednesday” died out, what remains is more like “must-scroll with hope until something actually grabs you.” In that dreary landscape, three films on Netflix quietly slipped under most radars: The Call (2020), God’s Crooked Lines (2022), and It’s What’s Inside (2024). Each one brims with ambition, supplies one hell of a premise—and yet somehow remains underrated. We’ll look at what works, what doesn’t, and why you should maybe stop ignoring them.

The Call – Time-twist Horror that does more than Jump-Scares

Netflix

Neither your usual K-thriller nor your standard time-travel flick, The Call pulls off a neat trick: two women separated by 20 years in the same house get connected through a telephone. One minute you’re in 2019, the next in 1999, and chaos ensues. Viewers on Reddit were both exhilarated and exasperated:

“A fantastic j-horror with a genre twist… literally my jaw dropped.”

What shines: The lead performances (especially Jeon Jong‑seo) get high praise for anchoring the thrilling premise. The atmosphere is oppressive in a good way, the throws of fate feel real, and the structural twist gives you something to chew on. Even Tom’s Guide counts it as one of the best psychological thrillers on Netflix.

Where it falters: The ending. Many reviewers say it unravels a little too messily and leaves more questions than satisfied chills.  Also, pacing at times dips into “setup-heavy” territory—so if you’re impatient, the ride might feel long.

Why underrated: Because while horror gets attention, horror that also demands thinking often doesn’t. In the flood of quick thrills, The Call asks you to slow down—and many don’t.

God’s Crooked Lines – A labyrinthine Spanish Thriller that plays with your Mind

Netflix

Step into the eerie halls of a psychiatric hospital: a detective with paranoia checks in to investigate a patient’s death—and then things spiral. That’s the hook of God’s Crooked Lines. Reviews call it “captivating” and “you’ll be trying to decipher long after it ends.”

What works: Intricate plotting, psychological gamesmanship, visual cues that challenge you to question what’s real. As one reviewer puts it: “tiny pointers… make viewers question everything they see.” Bárbara Lennie’s performance is another notch up in the “why you should watch this” column.

What doesn’t: It’s long (155 minutes), dense, and critics say the payoff doesn’t quite justify the buildup. Also, the dubbing in some versions reportedly weakens the immersion.

Why underrated: Because ambition is double-edged. A film that asks you to think and invest will always be less binge-friendly than the next loud, easily digestible action flick. In short: not snackable.

It’s What’s Inside – Party game Horror-sci-fi that got too much ahead of itself

Netflix

The newest of the trio, It’s What’s Inside (2024), hit Netflix after being bought at Sundance for $17 million—the biggest sale the festival had seen that year. The premise: a pre-wedding party, a mysterious game introduced by a weird friend, bizarre chaos ensues. Some folks loved the twisted ride. Others found the execution too slick for its own good.

What works: Original idea, audacious tone-mixing (“Talk to Me” meets “Bodies Bodies Bodies” meets “Agatha Christie”), and enough twists to keep even genre veterans watching.

What fails: The characterisation is thin. The tone is over-the-top. The atmosphere—which is crucial in horror/sci-fi—was criticised as lacking. The twist? It registers, but maybe doesn’t land with full force.

Why underrated: Because the loudest films aren’t always the best marketed. And in this case, the hype felt like it outpaced the emotional anchor. So it got overlooked by many, even as some enthusiasts discovered it.

The broader angle: Why “mind-bender” films on Netflix keep slipping

  • Complexity = risk. Films that demand you to think don’t get auto-algorithm boosts the same way “watch next” slices do.

  • With streaming budgets ballooning, the pressure to deliver mass appeal is immense—so niche or genre-heavy titles often don’t get the push they deserve.

  • Global releases get even less promotion unless they’re dubbed into 10 languages or have huge stars.

  • Lastly, twist films have a shelf-life: once the twist is spoiled, many skip them—and casual viewers assume each twist-heavy film is “the same as the last.”

More mind-bending Netflix Movies worth digging into

  • Don’t Move (2024) – A survival/psychological thriller with a high-concept twist.

  • Archive 81 – Found footage meets cosmic horror; short-lived but potent.

  • I Am Not Okay With This – Teen angst meets supernatural turn (technically a series, but mind-bender enough).

  • Maniac (2018) – Sci-fi weirdness with Emma Stone and Jonah Hill surfaces on Netflix.

  • The Platform – Spanish sci-fi/horror with a brutal social metaphor (also found on streaming).

Final word (with PR-speak and a wink)

In a time when every film is fighting for your two hours, consider giving these three the full attention they deserve. They’re not perfect—they each have bumps, pacing issues, endings that might leave you staring at the ceiling late at night. But they’re alive. They’re different. They’re the ones streaming quietly in the corner, waiting for someone curious enough to press “Play.”

So yes: let’s recycle the old marketing line—“Discover the unexpected.” Only this time, we mean it.

Your Move Now:

Which underrated movie or series on Netflix (or elsewhere!) do you swear by—one that you tell all your friends about, only to be met with blank stares? Drop it in the comments. Maybe together, we’ll resurrect the ones that slipped away.

PNN Entertainment