The 20 best thriller movies on Netflix right now

Time for some Netflix and thrills: Check out these 20 must-watch movies from the platform’s deep catalog of spine-tingling thrillers.

Movies that provoke thrills and chills aren't just reserved for Halloween. The films on this list feature some of the best actors of this generation and beyond, and are designed to flirt with the senses and entice viewers' adrenal glands, regardless of the season. With scripts based on real stories and inventive flights of fancy, Netflix's deep catalog of thrillers includes the works of filmmakers who helped jumpstart the genre, those who advanced it, and those whose work serves as a pastiche to those who paved the way. With so many compelling titles and gripping narratives available to stream, the hardest part is selecting the right film for your mood — but what a thrill when you get it right.

01 of 20

A Simple Favor (2018)

Anna Kendrick and Blake Lively in A Simple Favor film 2018
Anna Kendrick and Blake Lively in 'A Simple Favor'.

Peter Lovino/Lionsgate/Everett Collection

There’s nothing simple about the plot to A Simple Favor, a thriller about a mommy blogger’s (Anna Kendrick) quest to find her friend Emily (Blake Lively) who disappears under mysterious circumstances. A romantic thriller with a fair amount of dark comedy thrown in courtesy of director Paul Feig, A Simple Favor benefits from excellent performances, Hitchcockian vibes, and a duplicitous tension that carries the audience through the film’s many zig and zags — even the ones that fail to pay off. As EW’s critic writes, the movie is “full of panache, from its sexy French score to its glistening gin martinis, and it weaponizes style, using it to keep audiences off balance as the mystery unfolds.” Enjoy A Simple Favor, and keep an eye out for the sequel, which was greenlit in March of 2024. —Ilana Gordon

Where to watch A Simple Favor: Netflix

EW grade: B+ (read the review)

Director: Paul Feig

Cast: Anna Kendrick, Blake Lively, Henry Golding, Andrew Rannells, Linda Cardellini, Rupert Friend, Jean Smart

Related content: Anna Kendrick to reunite with Blake Lively and her fabulous pantsuits in A Simple Favor sequel

02 of 20

Bird Box (2018)

Bird Box SEASON All PICTURED Julian Edwards, Sandra Bullock, Vivien Lyra Blair
Sandra Bullock in 'Bird Box'. Netflix

Sight becomes a handicap in Bird Box, a post-apocalyptic thriller where the enemy must go unseen, or else. Sandra Bullock stars as Malorie Hayes, a woman responsible for transporting two young children down a river while wearing blindfolds, a strategy intended to help the survivors avoid seeing the entities that attacked Earth five years earlier, and who cause those who look upon them to commit suicide. Jumping between their present journey and the past events that led Malorie and the children to this point, director Susanne Bier leans into the tension of the unknown and relies on her talented but eclectic cast to do the rest. Released the same year as A Quiet Place, and possessing a somewhat similar premise, Bird Box received less attention when it first premiered, but this sci-fi horror film is a great option for fans of both genres. —I.G.

Where to watch Bird Box: Netflix

EW grade: B (read the review)

Director: Susanne Bier

Cast: Sandra Bullock, Trevante Rhodes, John Malkovich, Danielle Macdonald, Sarah Paulson

Related content: Bird Box author Josh Malerman on publishing a sequel during the end times

03 of 20

The Devil All the Time (2020)

The Devil All The Time
Tom Holland in 'The Devil All the Time'. Glen Wilson/Netflix

A Netflix original and period thriller, The Devil All the Time explores several interconnected groups of people living in two small towns in Southern Ohio between the end of World War II and the mid-1960s. Linked by religious evangelism, war, corruption, suicide, abandonment, and serial murder, the cast — which includes a host of young Hollywood heavy hitters — makes the most of the story's melodrama and dark subject matter. Based on the 2011 novel and directed by Antonio Campos (The Staircase), The Devil All the Time takes the "all the time" portion of the film's title literally: the sins are multitudinous and the depths of human depravity on full display. Still, EW's critic writes that Campos' biggest accomplishment as the film's director is "toeing a tricky line between art-house atmosphere and Southern Gothic soap opera, and somehow still managing to land on the grim side of fascinating." —I.G.

Where to watch The Devil All the Time: Netflix

EW grade: B+ (read the review)

Director: Antonio Campos

Cast: Tom Holland, Robert Pattinson, Sebastian Stan, Riley Keough, Eliza Scanlen, Haley Bennett, Bill Skarsgård, Mia Wasikowska, Jason Clarke

Related content: Tom Holland did not know Jake Gyllenhaal was a producer on his new movie

04 of 20

El Camino (2019)

El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie
Aaron Paul in 'El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie'. Ben Rothstein/Netflix

The best meth cook in Albuquerque is back, bitch. Breaking Bad's Walter White (Bryan Cranston) and Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul) return for El Camino, a film based on AMC's beloved show, with far more attention paid to Pinkman's character. Freewheeling through time and flashing back to events depicted in the series, El Camino picks up right where Breaking Bad left off, and includes a host of cameos from the show's five-season run. Jane, Skinny Pete, and Badger are all back in one form or another, but it's Nazi Todd (Jesse Plemons) who informs most of the film's plot. Breaking Bad fans will be gratified to see Jesse Pinkman finally get the time to mentally process the last couple years of his life — even if Paul looks markedly older than he did when the show wrapped in 2013. —I.G.

Where to watch El Camino: Netflix

EW grade: B+ (read the review)

Director: Vince Gilligan

Cast: Bryan Cranston, Aaron Paul, Jesse Plemons, Jonathan Banks, Matt Jones

Related content: Vince Gilligan pays tribute to Robert Forster and how he did big little things in El Camino

05 of 20

Emily the Criminal (2022)

Aubrey Plaza in 'Emily the Criminal'
Aubrey Plaza in 'Emily the Criminal'. Roadside Attractions/Vertical Entertainment

Drowning in debt and student loans, Emily is one of Los Angeles' many broke artists on the verge of financial ruin. With a former felony conviction preventing her from finding a job that might pay enough to survive, Emily finds purpose — and quick cash — by getting involved with a credit card fraud ring. What starts as a survival tactic soon balloons into much more, as Emily distances herself from the corporate world she can never quite crack and leans into the world of criminality. Aubrey Plaza is in her element here, her blunt practicality and signature deadpan delivery serving as the perfect stand-in for an audience whose dreams of hitting milestones like home ownership and retirement have been deadened by current economic realities. —I.G.

Where to watch Emily the Criminal: Netflix

EW grade: B+ (read the review)

Director: John Patton Ford

Cast: Aubrey Plaza, Theo Rossi, Bernardo Badillo, John Billingsley

Related content: Aubrey Plaza on why her new thriller Emily the Criminal felt like pulling off a scam

06 of 20

Fair Play (2023)

Phoebe Dynevor and Alden Ehrenreich appear in Fair Play by Chloe Domont, an official selection of the U.S. Dramatic Competition at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute
Alden Ehrenreich and Phoebe Dynevor in 'Fair Play'. Courtesy of Sundance Institute

For newly engaged couple Luke (Alden Ehrenreich) and Emily (Phoebe Dynevor), their sizzling, can't-keep-their-hands-off-each-other love must remain discreet within their workplace. However, when Emily secures a managerial position at their dog-eat-dog hedge fund, the power shift within the bullpen begins to splinter their romantic bliss. Praising its "lean, crackling script," EW's critic observes how Fair Play's final act is "so freighted with increasingly unhinged possibilities" yet "both leads hang on, throwing themselves headlong into the tar pits of contemporary workplace politics and gender roles without being drawn into clumsy, one-dimensional ideas of victimhood or villainy." —James Mercadante

Where to watch Fair Play: Netflix

EW grade: B+ (read the review)

Director: Chloe Domont

Cast: Phoebe Dynevor, Alden Ehrenreich, Eddie Marsan, Rich Sommer

Related content: Inside Fair Play's intense fallout from a financial deal gone wrong — and that cutting insult

07 of 20

The Gift (2015)

THE GIFT (2015) (L-R) REBECCA HALL, JASON BATEMAN and JOEL EDGERTON
Rebecca Hall, Jason Bateman, and Joel Edgerton in 'The Gift'. Matt Kennedy

Not to be confused with Sam Raimi's 2000 fortune teller movie, Joel Edgerton's directorial debut (which he also wrote and starred in) starts out like a typical stalker thriller. Jason Bateman and Rebecca Hall play Simon and Robyn, a married couple who move from Chicago to California, where they run into Simon's old high school classmate Gordo (Edgerton). Gordo soon becomes clingy, with frequent unexpected drop-ins, and floods the couple with a series of unsettling gifts. When Simon tries to cut the relationship off, the trouble starts in earnest. As EW's critic colorfully describes, The Gift "effectively sees what other films in the genre do for their scares, shakes its head, and says, 'No, no, no. I'll show you messed up.'" But The Gift transcends the usual stalker movie tropes because it's not content to stack all the blame on the obvious heavy. Instead, it expands on the concepts of villain and victim, exploring how difficult it is sometimes to keep the past in the past. —I.G.

Where to watch The Gift: Netflix

EW grade: N/A (read the review)

Director: Joel Edgerton

Cast: Jason Bateman, Rebecca Hall, Joel Edgerton, Tim Griffin, Allison Tolman, Katie Aselton, Wendell Pierce, Beau Knapp, Adam Lazarre-White, David Denman, P.J. Byrne, Busy Philipps

Related content: Joel Edgerton on The Gift and making his feature directorial debut

08 of 20

The Good Nurse (2022)

Eddie Redmayne and Jessica Chastain in 'The Good Nurse'
Eddie Redmayne and Jessica Chastain in 'The Good Nurse'. Courtesy of TIFF

Nurses are angels with the power to do the work of demons. In the Netflix original psychological thriller The Good Nurse, Amy Loughren (Jessica Chastain) is a night nurse with a work husband: Charles Cullen (Eddie Redmayne). A single mom with a serious heart condition, Amy is shocked to learn that the recent death of one of their hospital's patients is thought to have occurred intentionally, and that Charles might be involved. And the more Amy digs, the more she realizes the co-worker she trusts is actually someone far more nefarious. Based on the true story of how the real life Amy Loughren helped authorities take down serial killer Charles Cullen, The Good Nurse is good old-fashioned, ripped-from-the-headlines cinema with a story made all the more terrifying because so little of it is exaggerated. Trust us — you've never seen Eddie Redmayne like this before. —I.G.

Where to watch The Good Nurse: Netflix

EW grade: B+ (read the review)

Director: Tobias Lindholm

Cast: Jessica Chastain, Eddie Redmayne

Related content: Eddie Redmayne's daughter wants him to be a wizard again after realizing he was 'the bad nurse' in The Good Nurse

09 of 20

I Care A Lot (2021)

I Care A Lot
Rosamund Pike in 'I Care a Lot'.

Seacia Pavao/Netflix

Rosamund Pike builds on her Gone Girl villainess status to portray Marla Grayson, a con artist who fronts as a professional "legal guardian" to fleece the elderly of their life savings. But Marla takes it a step too far when she meets Jennifer Peterson (Dianne Wiest), who seems infirm at first but actually has ties to important, dangerous people (like Peter Dinklage) who Marla would do well to stay clear of. Pike's duplicitous performance is a blast to witness, but seeing Marla meet her match is just as gratifying. As EW's writes in their review, "There's good fun in I Care a Lot's setup, and in Marla's ruthless M.O." —Gwen Ihnat

Where to watch I Care a Lot: Netflix

EW grade: B (read the review)

Director: J Blakeson

Cast: Rosamund Pike, Dianne Wiest, Peter Dinklage, Eiza González, Chris Messina, Isiah Whitlock Jr.

Related content: Rosamund Pike compares her cunning antiheroines in I Care a Lot and Gone Girl

10 of 20

I Don't Feel At Home In This World Anymore (2017)

I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore - Still 2
Elijah Wood and Melanie Lynskey in 'I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore'. Allyson Riggs

After Yellowjackets, Togetherness, and Mrs. America, we'd straight-up watch Melanie Lynskey in anything, but even we missed Macon Blair's 2017 sleeper. Lynskey plays Ruth, a down-on-her-luck nursing assistant who decides after her house gets broken into that she's fed up. She hooks up with her odd neighbor Tony (Elijah Wood) to go out on a quest to get her stuff back, leading to a quirky journey that's both suspenseful and inspiring for the downtrodden. Second only to Lynskey in luminescence in this movie is Wood, whose Tony named his dog Kevin and specializes in nunchucks and ninja stars. And Jane Levy is unrecognizable as one of the unsavory thieves. As EW's Clark Collis points out, the film won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival for its reconfiguration of "the buddy-cop film — at one point, Ruth even flashes a toy police badge." —G.I.

Where to watch I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore: Netflix

EW grade: B+ (read the review)

Director: Macon Blair

Cast: Melanie Lynskey, Elijah Wood, Jane Levy

Related content: I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore wins top Sundance prize

11 of 20

Lou (2022)

Lou
Allison Janney in 'Lou'.

Liane Hentscher/Netflix

Allison Janney knows how to deliver a line, and thanks to stunt training for her new Netflix film, Lou, she also knows how to deliver a punch. Janney stars as the film's titular character, a misandrist landlord who rents a home to a single mother named Hannah (Jurnee Smollett) and her young daughter, Vee. After Vee is kidnapped, Lou agrees to help Hannah bring her back, but saving Vee's future will require Lou to confront her own messy past. Director Anna Foerster asked a lot of her cast during production, as evidenced by the fact that both Smollett and Janney spend much of the film covered in mud. (Smollett tells EW, "The mud is a character in itself!") As for Janney, she hopes this role will showcase her rarely-seen physical abilities — and maybe land her a role in the next John Wick movie. —I.G.

Where to watch Lou: Netflix

Director: Anna Foerster

Cast: Allison Janney, Jurnee Smollett, Logan Marshall-Green

Related content: Jurnee Smollett and Allison Janney team up to rescue an abducted child in Lou trailer

12 of 20

Missing (2023)

Storm Reid in Screen Gems MISSING
Storm Reid in 'Missing'. Temma Hankin/Screen Gems

One might have suspected that the novelty of "screenlife" thrillers had run its course after Searching (2018), but Will Merrick and Nick Johnson exalted the genre with its standalone sequel, Missing: a story about a teenager (Storm Reid) investigating her mother's (Nia Long) disappearance in Colombia via all her digital resources. While the film's logic sometimes flirts with absurdity, the infinite pathways of the internet prove to be an imaginative tool for peeling back the mystery's myriad layers. Glowing with a sharp and witty portrayal of 2023's techno-centric culture, Missing grounds itself with a heartfelt journey of repairing a strained mother-daughter relationship. (And when the credits roll, you might want to reconsider using the same password for everything!) —J.M. 

Where to watch Missing: Netflix

EW grade: B+ (read the review)

Directors: Will Merrick, Nick Johnson

Cast: Storm Reid, Joaquim de Almeida, Ken Leung, Amy Landecker, Daniel Henney, Nia Long

Related content: 'Screenlife' thrillers like Searching are here to stay; here are 9 on the horizon

13 of 20

The Novice (2021)

THE NOVICE, Isabelle Fuhrman (center), 2021. © IFC Films / Courtesy Everett Collection
Isabelle Fuhrman in 'The Novice'.

IFC Films/Courtesy Everett Collection

The obsession with perfection crosses the line from competitive to dangerous in Lauren Hadaway’s directorial debut, The Novice. Orphan’s Isabelle Fuhrman stars as a compulsive college student who is determined to make her school’s varsity rowing team at all costs. Fuhrman gives a virtuoso performance as Alex, a queer first-year student whose addiction to being the best torpedoes her mental and physical health, her academic performance, and her social and romantic life. Anyone who has ever met a self-destructive, Type A teenager will recognize the anxious thrill that comes with watching someone who can’t relax work themselves into a terrifying state, and The Novice transforms that feeling into a thriller with aplomb. —I.G.

Where to watch The Novice: Netflix

Director: Lauren Hadaway

Cast: Isabelle Fuhrman, Amy Forsyth, Dilone, Charlotte Ubben, Jonathan Cherry, Kate Drummond

Related content: How 'KISS boots' and a 'butt dolly' allowed Isabelle Fuhrman to play Esther again in Orphan: First Kill

14 of 20

Oldboy (2003)

OLDBOY S KOR 2003 MIN-SIK CHOI as Dae-su Oh HYE-JEONG KANG
Choi Min-sik and Kang Hye-jung in 'Oldboy'.

Mary Evans/Egg Films/Show East/Ronald Grant/Everett Collection

South Korea’s Oldboy — not to be confused with the American version directed by Spike Lee — is considered one of the greatest films ever made, and since its release more than two decades ago, the movie’s fight sequences have challenged action directors and stunt coordinators to up their game. Oh Dae-su (Choi Min-sik) is a businessman who has spent 15 years in captivity with no idea of who his kidnapper is or what they want with him. After his release, he wants vengeance — but he only has five days to hunt down his captor. Beloved for its memorable plot twist, hallway fight scene, and terrifying use of a living octopus, the film is beyond memorable. At the time of its release in 2003, EW’s critic writes,Oldboy caused a love-it-or-hate-it stir at Cannes last year, and how could it not: It’s an onslaught made to cause a sensation.” —I.G.  

Where to watch Oldboy: Netflix

EW grade: N/A (read the review)

Director: Park Chan-wook

Cast: Choi Min-sik, Yoo Ji-tae, Kang Hye-jung

Related content: How the iconic Oldboy hallway fight influenced a generation of Hollywood action

15 of 20

Oxygen (2021)

OXYGEN
Mélanie Laurent in 'Oxygen'. Netflix

A nightmare come to life for claustrophobics everywhere, Oxygen is a French language sci-fi film that thinks outside the box in terms of action. At the genesis, an unidentified woman (Mélanie Laurent) awakens in an airtight medical unit, unsure of who or where she is. Interactions with the system's AI — dubbed M.I.L.O. (Medical Interface Liaison Officer) — provide some clarity as to her identity, but no matter what she tries, she cannot escape her prison. As she seeks to understand who placed her in the box and why, truths about her personal life and the current state of the world come into focus — but her search for context is actually a race to outwit the slowly depleting oxygen levels. Laurent is excellent, and despite being forced to perform on her back, she manages to imbue the film with a strong sense of determination and humanity. —I.G.

Where to watch Oxygen: Netflix

EW grade: B (read the review)

Director: Alexandre Aja

Cast: Mélanie Laurent, Mathieu Amalric, Malik Zidi

Related content: The best sci-fi movies on Max

16 of 20

Society of the Snow (2023)

Society of the Snow
'The Society of the Snow'.

Netflix

In 1972, the Andes Mountains became a crucible of survival when a Uruguayan flight crashed en route to Santiago, Chile. Sixteen remaining passengers found themselves stranded in one of Mother Nature's most life-threatening terrains, pushing them to take ineffable means to find their way back. While Hollywood attempted to soften this tragedy with a more glossy depiction in Alive (1993), Society of the Snow delivers a far more raw and emotive experience — enriched by the director's conversations with the real-life survivors — that sinks viewers into the gut-wrenching terror of the situation without being overly insensitive. "A story that is based on humanism," J.A. Bayona (the director who also helmed another intense disaster film, 2012's The Impossible) describes the story as "more about emotional survival. It's not only physical survival. It's to understand that there's something bigger than yourself." —J.M.

Where to watch Society of the Snow: Netflix

Director: J.A. Bayona

Cast: Enzo Vogrincic, Matías Recalt, Agustín Pardella, Felipe González Otaño, Luciano Chatton, Valentino Alonso, Francisco Romero, Agustín Berruti, Andy Pruss, Simón Hempe, Juan Caruso, Esteban Bigliardi, Rocco Posca, Esteban Kukuriczka, Rafael Federman, Manuela Olivera, Agustín Della Corte, Tomas Wolf

Related content: Take cover: 27 of our favorite disaster movies

17 of 20

They Cloned Tyrone (2023)

They Cloned Tyrone
John Boyega, Teynah Parris, and Jamie Foxx in 'They Cloned Tyrone'.

Parrish Lewis/Netflix

A single genre isn't enough to contain one of Netflix's 2023 releases, They Cloned TyroneA sci-fi comedy that combines '70s Blaxploitation with mystery and social satire, the film has similar vibes to movies like Get Out (2017) or Sorry to Bother You (2018) while employing a far more absurd premise. Fontaine (John Boyega) is a drug dealer living in an impoverished area called the Glen. While trying to collect funds owed to him by a local pimp named Slick Charles (Jamie Foxx), Fontaine is shot and killed — but that doesn't stop him from showing up on Slick's doorstep the next day to collect his money. Joined by a sex worker named YoYo (Teyonah Parris), the trio attempts to get to the bottom of what appears to be a massive government conspiracy aimed at exploiting their disenfranchised community as medical subjects. A satirical romp that has as much to say about class and racial injustices as it does about mystery movie tropes, They Cloned Tyrone is smart, silly, and uniformly well-acted. —I.G.

Where to watch They Cloned Tyrone: Netflix

Director: Juel Taylor

Cast: John Boyega, Teyonah Parris, Jamie Foxx

Related content: John Boyega calls They Cloned Tyrone with Teyonah Parris and Jamie Foxx 'a new vibe entirely'

18 of 20

Traffic (2000)

Michael Douglas in 'Traffic'
Michael Douglas in 'Traffic'. Bob Marshak/USA films

Almost three decades after America first declared its War on Drugs, Steven Soderbergh premiered his epic crime thriller Traffic, a powerful drama encompassing all parts of the drug trafficking process. Set in Mexico, Ohio, and San Diego, and weaving together three separate storylines told from the perspectives of the politicians who legislate the drug trade, the DEA agents who enforce it, and the traffickers who challenge the system, the film is high-stakes, compelling, and politically charged. Featuring an impressive ensemble cast directed and filmed by Soderbergh — who won an Oscar for his troubles, competing against himself for Erin Brockovich — the film questions the fruitfulness of the drug war and examines the ways that substances and the way we legislate them tear families apart. Thoughtful, tense, and provocative, Traffic is a turn-of-the-century thriller that stands the test of time. —I.G.

Where to watch Traffic: Netflix

EW grade: N/A (read the review)

Director: Steven Soderbergh

Cast: Michael Douglas, Don Cheadle, Benicio Del Toro, Dennis Quaid, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Luis Guzmán

Related content: Dope and glory: Soderbergh talks about directing Traffic

19 of 20

The Weekend Away (2022)

THE WEEKEND AWAY, from left: Ziad Bakri, Leighton Meester
Ziad Bakri and Leighton Meester in 'The Weekend Away'. Everett Collection

Leighton Meester stars in this murky mystery as Beth, a married new mom who goes off to visit her more glamorous friend Kate (Christina Wolfe) in a palatial apartment in Croatia. But when Kate disappears, Beth runs into one dead end after another trying to find her, until she eventually becomes a suspect in her friend's disappearance herself. The gripping whodunnit is only augmented by the idyllic seaside backdrop, which may make you long for a (less-eventful) weekend in the Balkan region yourself. —G.I.

Where to watch The Weekend Away: Netflix

Director: Kim Farrant

Cast: Leighton Meester, Christina Wolfe, Ziad Bakri

Related content: The best thriller movies on Hulu

20 of 20

Wild Things (1998)

Kevin Bacon, Denise Richards, Neve Campbell and Matt Dillon in Wild Things 1998
From left: Kevin Bacon, Denise Richards, Neve Campbell, and Matt Dillon in 'Wild Things'.

Columbia Pictures/Getty

A late-‘90s mystery thriller with more twists and turns than a NASCAR racetrack, it’s easy to see where Wild Things starts and much harder to predict where the film is headed. Set in an upscale, fictional South Florida town, the film focuses on two high school girls (Neve Campbell and Denise Richards) who accuse their guidance counselor (Matt Dillon) of rape. As the trial and police investigation — led by Kevin Bacon — unfold, the question of who is working together and who is sleeping together becomes much harder to answer. Scandalous, violent, and sexually progressive for its time, Wild Things pairs all the high school drama of Beverly Hills, 90210 with the duplicitousness of Gone Girl, and comes out with a pulpy, daring thriller. Full of beautiful people, luxurious shots, and lurid, murderous moments, Wild Things is like a car crash: You might not love every moment, but you certainly can’t look away. —I.G.          

Where to watch Wild Things: Netflix

EW grade: B (read the review)

Director: John McNaughton

Cast: Kevin Bacon, Matt Dillon, Neve Campbell, Theresa Russell, Denise Richards, Daphne Rubin-Vega, Robert Wagner, Bill Murray

Related content: Wild Things homoerotic shower scene between Matt Dillon and Kevin Bacon was cut from movie, director says

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