Looking for a great non-fiction story? We’ve got you covered.

While Hulu used to be better known for its television shows while Netflix was the go to for movie options, the streaming service has taken big leaps and strides to change that. Today, Hulu is home to an amazing selection of movies, especially documentaries. Providing options for customers of all interests, Hulu has found a way to become a one-stop destination for those seeking incredible non-fiction stories. With so many options now, we’ve determined the best documentaries on Hulu for you, ensuring you’ll be able to settle in and relax with ease.
Looking for more documentaries? Check out our list of the best ones on Netflix and Prime Video, or see our recommendations for the best movies on Hulu.
Editor’s note: This article was updated April 2023 to include All the Streets Are Silent.
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Summer of Soul (…Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised) (2021)

Run Time: 1 hr 58 min | Director: Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson
In the summer of 1969, Harlem held a 6-week-long music festival with some of the biggest names in soul music of the day. It was a massive success, hugely popular and recorded. And yet, no one has ever heard of it until now. Maybe because a few hours away there was another festival called Woodstock that would steal all the headlines. Questlove steps out from behind the drum set to direct and produce a fascinating look at this festival that was forgotten by history until the recent discovery of all the footage. He interviews concert attendees, performers, and people who were convinced it was all a dream in the fascinating Oscar nominee. – Jennifer McHugh
All the Streets Are Silent (2021)

Run Time: 1 hr 29 min | Director: Jeremy Elkin
Cast: Eli Morgan Gesner, Rosario Dawson, Darryl McDaniels, Moby
Narrated by Zoo York co-founder Eli Morgan Gesner, All the Streets Are Silent is a fascinating documentary that explores the unexpected convergence of two iconic subcultures. Through interviews with Rosario Dawson (Ahsoka), Run DMC’s Darryl McDaniels, and Moby, as well as professional skateboarders and other creatives, All the Streets Are Silent highlights the synergy built when hip-hop and skateboarding intersected, especially in New York City during the late 1980s and early 1990s. Through footage and memories of the people who lived it, director Jeremy Elkin uncovers the cultural collision and connectivity of these distinct creative styles and languages. – Yael Tygiel
The Donut King (2020)

Run Time: 1 hr 30 min | Director: Alice Gu
Cast: Chuong Pek Lee, Susan Lim, Ted Ngoy
Sink your sweet tooth into this in-depth journey through the life of Ted Ngoy, Los Angeles’s own Donut King. Director Alice Gu makes her feature film debut with this snappy and detailed recounting of the rise and fall of the man who built an empire of donut shops throughout Los Angeles County by giving Cambodian refugees a place to call home and make a buck. Gu, being an LA native, brings a wonderful perspective to the story and her use of interviews, archival footage, and animation feels like a love letter — not just to her hometown but to the triumph and pride of the American immigrant story. – Tauri Miller
The Last Tourist (2021)

Run Time: 1 hr 40 min | Director: Tyson Sadler
Cast: Alexander Ayling, Lem Baing, Elizabeth Becker
In The Last Tourist, filmmaker Tyson Sadler unabashedly explores the horrendous ways in which traditional tourism unintentionally negatively impacts the very thing it came to witness. The Last Tourist deliberately puts modern tourism on trial, visiting over 15 countries to expose the consequences of humanity’s destructive forces when venturing into remote villages, untouched beaches, and wildlife habitats. Guided by conservation experts, environmental visionaries, and leaders in sustainable tourism, The Last Tourism confronts the burdens magnified by unethical travel forces on vulnerable communities around the globe. – Yael Tygiel
Changing the Game (2019)

Run Time: 1 hr 28 min | Director: Michael Barnett
Cast: Mack Beggs, Sarah Rose Huckman, Terry Miller, Andraya Yearwood
Director Michael Barnett captures the realities of school sports and the discriminatory challenges for transgender athletes in the timely documentary Changing the Game. Centered on multiple young trans athletes, including Texas State wrestling champion Mack Beggs, Changing the Game allows for a variety of perspectives to be shared, as well as reveals the true range of experiences for these talented individuals. Featuring stories from a Connecticut-based track star who is openly transitioning (Andraya Yearwood) and Sarah Rose Huckman, a New Hampshire-based activist and skier, each path is unique. – Yael Tygiel
Ballet Now (2018)

Run Time: 1 hr 14 min | Director: Steven Cantor
Set within the famed program of the same name, Ballet Now reveals the true story of Tiler Peck, a Prima Ballerina for the New York City Ballet, chosen as the first woman to curate the program. Featuring a diverse group of top-tier global dancers, Peck’s vision for the high-profile event includes a cleverly crafted mix of talent, highlighting a variety of styles, like tap, hip-hop, and even clown artistry. Director Steven Cantor captures the raw and unfiltered realities as Peck prepares to execute her unique and groundbreaking objective. Ballet Now chronicles the week leading up to the performance, where Peck serves not only as director and producer but will also dance in multiple pieces. – Yael Tygiel
Leave No Trace (2022)

Run Time: 1 hr 48 min | Director: Irene Taylor
Leave No Trace is a hard but important watch that explores the epidemic of sexual abuse in the Boy Scouts. Told through a combination of interviews with several of the brave survivors and archival footage, the documentary, which was directed by Peabody and Emmy-winning journalist Irene Taylor, meticulously investigates how the organization systematically covered up so much for so long. – Taylor Gates
Untouchable (2019)

Run Time: 1 hr 38 min | Director: Ursula Macfarlane
A difficult but important watch, Untouchable explores the rise and fall of Harvey Weinstein. The documentary features interviews with both former colleagues and some of the brave women who came forward about their sexual misconduct. Untouchable examines the culture that allowed this abuse to happen – and dives into the subsequent #MeToo movement when some of these horrific crimes became public. Director Ursula Macfarlane does a masterful job approaching the subject with empathy, tackling the difficult topic with care, complexity, and clarity. – Taylor Gates
Homeroom (2021)

Run Time: 1 hr 30 min | Director: Peter Nicks
Homeroom is a timely and touching documentary about the young people in an Oakland, California, high school who use their voices to speak for their community about police presence in schools. Following a group of graduating seniors, Homeroom dives into the issues that matter to the students in Oakland, revealing the inequalities and injustices they face, following the realities of budget cuts and ill-equipped facilities. Ultimately an uplifting story of hope, Homeroom does not shy away from sharing the dramatic tribulations facing young people in Oakland and across the United States. –Yael Tygiel
Dead Asleep (2021)

Run Time: 1 hr 26 min | Director: Skye Borgman
Looking for true crime with a twist? Boy, do we have the movie for you. Dead Asleep explores the case of Randy Herman Jr., who was convinced of murdering his childhood best friend and roommate Brooke Preston. Herman, however, claims that he was sleepwalking when he killed her and thus can’t be held accountable for her death. Spoiler alert: The documentary never answers the question either way, leading the audience to draw our own conclusions, but it does present some compelling – and shocking – evidence. – Taylor Gates
Kid 90 (2021)

Run Time: 1 hr 11 min | Director: Soleil Moon Frye
Soleil Moon Frye (Punky Brewster) directed and produced this never-before-seen intimate glimpse at Hollywood’s child stars of the 1990s, featuring exclusive clips pulled from Frye’s personal collections of over hundreds of hours of footage she shot growing up in the limelight. Frye unveils a behind-the-scenes look at herself and her friends in the industry through the lens of a camcorder that she carried around for years, capturing their secrets on film. Kid 90 is a fascinating documentary for any pop culture-loving Millennial, as it exposes the realities of childhood stardom, with stories directly from pinnacle 90s kids, like Mark-Paul Gosselaar (Saved By The Bell), as well as readings from Frye’s own private diaries. As both narrator and filmmaker, Frye’s interaction with her interview subjects allows for a comfort that eases into a voyeuristic examination of their childhoods. Other interviews include David Arquette (Scream), Stephen Dorff, and Brian Austin Green (90210), who examine their own journeys as rising stars. –Yael Tygiel
The Orange Years: A Nickelodeon Story (2018)

Run Time: 1 hr 42 min | Director: Scott Barber, Adam Sweeney
Nostalgia is king, and 90s kids can’t seem to get enough of it! The Orange Years: A Nickelodeon Story explores the beloved shows that launched a network from humble beginnings to the top of children, and even tween, programming, including Rocco’s Modern Life and the much-beloved duo Kenon & Kel. This documentary shares an illustrative behind-the-scenes look at the Nickelodeon Network during its iconic, slime-covered years, which to this day continues to hold a special place in so many hearts. The Orange Years dives deep with honest stories and candid memories from the household names the network was responsible for producing, including Kenon Thompson (SNL), Larisa Oleynik (Alex Mack), and Tom Kenny (SpongeBob SquarePants). – Yael Tygiel
MLK/FBI (2021)

Run Time: 1 hr 44 min | Director: Sam Pollard
A documentary that eschews the typical cinematic language of the form to create something far more reflective, director Sam Pollard’s remarkable MLK/FBI uncovers the prolonged surveillance campaign of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and reveals the lengths to which those at the FBI would go to destroy him. Avoiding the distractions of typical talking head cutaways, the documentary weaves their voices into a tapestry of archival footage that it uses to set the stage for what was going on just off-camera. It engages with history in a way no other film has, showing just how expansive the surveillance of the civil rights activist was and what impact that had on him leading up to his assassination. Whether you think you know everything about the man or feel as though you don’t know anything, this documentary serves as a necessary reexamination of the past that challenges our previously held notions in search of the truth. – Chase Hutchinson
The Beatles: Eight Days a Week – The Touring Years (2016)

Run Time: 2 hr 17 min | Director: Ron Howard
Oscar-winning director Ron Howard brings the frenetic touring years of the Fab Four to the screen in The Beatles: Eight Days a Week – The Touring Years. This documentary is a celebration of The Beatles; Howard is less bothered with the in-fighting, the drug use, and the controversies that followed the band around. Instead, this documentary is about Beatlemania and how the band was worked to the bone during their peak years of touring. The film also brings a different perspective to the band’s touring years—race relations. Howard and writer Mark Monroe include interviews with Whoopi Goldberg and historian Kitty Oliver, who recount their experiences of being fans of the band. This segment in the documentary, particularly, sets The Beatles: Eight Days a Week – The Touring Years apart from the countless other documentaries that have been made about them. And, to capture a semblance of what it may have been like to see the band live on stage, the documentary ends with restored footage of the Shea Stadium concert. This is pure joy for any fan of The Beatles. – Monita Mohan
WeWork: Or the Making and Breaking of a $47 Billion Unicorn (2021)

Run Time: 1 hr 44 min | Director: Jed Rothstein
Before you watch WeCrashed, the Apple TV series starring Jared Leto and Anne Hathaway, tune into the documentary about the rise and fall of WeWork. This film explores the unprecedented growth of the co-working space company started by Adam Neumann and how his charisma and unorthodox ways of running a business both led to its massive success and ultimate demise. If you enjoy business-focused documentaries with a fascinating figure at the helm like Elizabeth Holmes in The Inventor: Out for Blood in Silicon Valley, this documentary will be right up your alley. – Taylor Gates
Jawline (2019)

Run Time: 1 hr 39 min | Director: Lisa Mandelup
With TikTok dominating pop culture right now, you’d be hard-pressed to find a more relevant documentary than Jawline, which examines influencer culture and the rise of the social media celebrity. Following the journey of 16-year-old Austyn Tester as he attempts to leave behind his life in small-town Tennessee to become a famous content creator, the film is a fascinating look at the realities of social media stardom. Mandelup’s direction combines unflinching rawness with refreshing compassion, painting a compelling portrait of Tester as well as the countless others out there with similar ambitions. – Taylor Gates
Spaceship Earth (2020)

Run Time: 1 hr 53 min | Director: Matt Wolf
This is the story of 1991 experiment about 8 people who lived inside “Biosphere 2.” It was an ecosystem mimicking Earth’s atmosphere and climate to see if Earth was replicable. The 8 people lived there for 2 years and things got a little crazy. There were environmental issues, many a conflict between residents, and even some dabblings in cult-like behaviors. The documentary uses archived footage and present day interviews to tell a story so wild that at some point you wonder if this is a spoof. And when it’s revealed who is one of the financiers behind the project, let’s just say you won’t be surprised. — Jennifer McHugh
Flee (2021)

Run Time: 1 hr 30 min | Director: Jonas Poher Rasmussen
A 2022 nominee for Best Documentary at the Academy Awards, this is the story of Amin who and his haunting escape from Afghanistan to Denmark. His story is animated into a narrative as Amin’s voice, much of the time very emotional, recounts this ordeal. Amin now lives happily in Denmark with his husband. But even many years later, he is fraught with trauma as he tells this the story of his escape through multiple countries and seeing many horrors along the way. Flee is a stunning piece of documentary cinema that is not to be missed. – Jennifer McHugh
Batman & Bill (2017)

Run Time: 1 hr 33 min | Director: Don Argott and Sheena M. Joyce
Batman & Bill is a must see documentary for fans of superheroes, comic books, and the titular caped crusader. This doc follows author Marc Tyler Nobleman and his quest to get Batman co-creator Bill Finger posthumous credit for his work alongside Bob Kane. Kane has long been seen as the sole creator of Batman and his comic book world, despite evidence of Finger’s early creative contributions to the character. Batman & Bill features reenactments that are animated to match comic-style artwork and interviews with well-known creators in the industry – offering a glimpse into the early days of comic creation through Finger’s life story and the impact his work had on others. It’s a fascinating journey that highlights the importance of giving writers, artists, and creators the credit they deserve for their work. – Brynna Arens
Framing Britney Spears (2021)

Run Time: 1 hr 14 min | Director: Samantha Stark
Framing Britney Spears isn’t a traditional feature-length documentary – it’s part of an ongoing series of TV documentaries presented by The New York Times — but it’s a must-watch nonetheless. Forget what you think you know about Britney Spears or her situation – through investigative reporting and interviews, Framing Britney Spears shines a light on the pop star’s fast rise to superstardom, but also the misogyny and prejudice with which the media covered Spears as she entered into adulthood. The documentary is ostensibly about the Free Britney movement, as it covers the ins and outs of how Spears first came under a conservatorship controlled by her father, and why the situation is unique and may very well be harmful to Spears and her well-being. It’s an eye-opening look at a celebrity who, until now, has been framed in our minds through paparazzi and gossip magazine/TV coverage, and the documentary does a tremendous job of forcing you to rethink the way the media presents celebrities and their “downfalls.” – Adam Chitwood