Here’s what’s coming to Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, Max, Prime Video, Peacock, Paramount+ and other streaming services in April.

Notable shows

A murdered bounty hunter (Kevin Bacon) is resurrected by the devil to retrieve demons that have escaped Hades in “The Bondsman” (Prime Video, April 3) from Blumhouse Television.

A third-year medical resident (Willa Fitzgerald) is thrust into leadership at her Miami emergency room just as a hurricane comes barreling inland in the medical drama “Pulse” (Netflix, April 3).

Based on a true story, “Dying for Sex” (Hulu, April 4) follows the journey of Molly Kochan (Michelle Williams) as she explores the breadth and complexity of her sexual desires after learning she has Stage 4 breast cancer. Jenny Slate and Jay Duplass co-star.

Jon Hamm plays a disgraced hedge fund manager who starts robbing his neighbors’ homes and uncovers affairs and deadly secrets in “Your Friends and Neighbors” (Apple TV+, April 11) from “Warrior” creator Jonathan Tropper. Amanda Peet, Olivia Munn and Hoon Lee co-star.

Étoile” (Prime Video, April 24), from “Gilmore Girls” creators Amy Sherman-Palladino and Daniel Palladino, follows dancers and artistic staff from world-renowned ballet companies in New York and Paris trying to save their institutions. It stars Luke Kirby, Charlotte Gainsbourg and Lou de Laâge.

Advertising

Tom Hardy, Pierce Brosnan and Helen Mirren headline Guy Ritchie’s “MobLand” (Paramount+, March 30), about an organized crime family battling for power in a global crime syndicate.

Concluding: “The Handmaid’s Tale” (Hulu, April 8) begins its sixth and final season. Also launching final seasons are “Andor” (Disney+, April 22) with Diego Luna and “You” (Netflix, April 24) with Penn Badgley.

Anticipated movies

Timothée Chalamet is Bob Dylan in the Oscar-nominated “A Complete Unknown” (Hulu, now streaming).

Viola Davis plays the American president who picks up arms when an international political meeting comes under siege in “G20” (Prime Video, April 10), co-starring Anthony Anderson and Antony Starr.

Based on a true story, “The Order” (Hulu, April 18) stars Jude Law as an FBI agent on the trail of a violent white supremacist ring in the Pacific Northwest in the 1980s.

A bruised and battered detective (Tom Hardy) battles his way through the underworld to rescue a politician’s son in the action thriller “Havoc” (Netflix, April 25) from director Gareth Evans. Forest Whitaker and Timothy Olyphant co-star.

Advertising

Nicole Kidman is a corporate executive who finds relief from the pressure in a submissive relationship with a younger intern in “Babygirl” (Max, April 26).

Also arriving from theaters are:

  • Oddity” (Hulu, April 1), a mix of ghost story and revenge thriller.
  • Y2K” (Max, April 4) with Jaeden Martell and Rachel Zegler.
  • Irish drama “Small Things Like These” (Hulu, April 8) with Cillian Murphy.

Netflix

A washed-up disc jockey (Vincent Cassel) is recruited by a French intelligence agency to take down a trendy rival in the French action comedy “Banger” (April 2).

Six new episodes of the anthology series “Black Mirror” (April 10) feature such stars as Paul Giamatti, Cristin Milioti, Issa Ray, Awkwafina and Peter Capaldi.

The documentary “Bad Influence: The Dark Side of Kidfluencing” (April 9) digs into the exploitation behind a popular social star.

Max

The fourth season of “Hacks” (April 10) and the long-awaited second season of “The Last of Us” (April 13) debut.

Advertising

Hulu

Simu Liu hosts the competition series “Got to Get Out” (April 11).

The documentary “Ernest Cole: Lost and Found” (April 29) profiles the acclaimed photographer who revealed Black life in South Africa under apartheid in the 1960s.

Prime Video

The docuseries “Spy High” (April 8) looks at surveillance and digital privacy at a prestigious American public school.

The adult animated comedy “#1 Happy Family USA” (April 17) from Ramy Youssef follows a manically upbeat Muslim family navigating life in post-9/11 America.

Disney+

The documentaries “Pets” (April 11) and “Sea Lions of the Galapagos” (April 22) come from National Geographic.

SC+” (now streaming) is a new daily “SportsCenter” show.

Apple TV+

The two-part documentary “Number One on the Call Sheet” (now streaming) looks at the journeys of some of Hollywood’s top leading Black men and women.

Sponsored

David Oyelowo stars in the surrealist family comedy “Government Cheese” (April 16) set in 1969 San Fernando Valley.

Paramount+

The documentary “The Carters: Hurts to Love You” (April 15) looks at the troubled lives of teen pop stars Nick and Aaron Carter as told by their sister, Angel Carter Conrad.

Peacock

“Girl You Know It’s True” (April 4) dramatizes the scandal around 1980s pop duo Milli Vanilli, who never sang a word of their own songs.

Other services

Swedish pop star Lena Philipsson stars in the family drama “The Street Where I Live” (Viaplay, April 3).

When a wife and mother goes missing, the family discovers she is not who they thought she was, in the crime thriller “Off Track” (MHz, April 15).

The limited series “Agatha Christie’s Towards Zero” (BritBox, April 16), a murder mystery set in 1930s England, stars Anjelica Huston and Matthew Rhys.

The limited series crime thriller “The One That Got Away” (Acorn TV, April 28) follows a murder investigation that upends a small New Zealand town.