Here Are All the Movies Leaving Hulu This Week, Including ‘American Carnage’
Here are the titles exiting Hulu between Monday, November 10 and Sunday, November 16—plus quick primers with plots, key cast, and the creatives behind them, so you can decide what to watch before they go.
‘American Carnage’ (2022)

Leaving Tuesday, November 11. A group of young detainees is offered a chance at reduced sentences by volunteering at a suspicious elder-care facility, only to uncover a grotesque conspiracy. Jorge Lendeborg Jr. plays JP, with Jenna Ortega as Camila, Eric Dane as Eddie, and Brett Cullen as Governor Harper Finn. The film is directed by Diego Hallivis, from a script by Diego Hallivis and Julio Hallivis. Music is by Nima Fakhrara, with cinematography by Unax Mendía.
‘Wrong Place’ (2022)

Leaving Tuesday, November 11. A meth-cook targets a small-town former police chief to stop him from testifying, dragging the man’s adult daughter into the crosshairs. Bruce Willis stars as ex-chief Frank Richards, with Ashley Greene Khoury as his daughter, Chloe; the cast also includes Michael Sirow, Texas Battle, Stacey Danger, and Massi Furlan. Mike Burns directs from a screenplay by Bill Lawrence, with Peter Holland as cinematographer and Jake Buchheit as editor. Producers include Randall Emmett and George Furla.
‘Gone in the Night’ (2022)

Leaving Tuesday, November 11. After arriving at a remote cabin, Kath awakens to find her boyfriend gone and becomes entangled in a mystery with an enigmatic older man as she tries to uncover the truth. Winona Ryder leads as Kath, alongside Dermot Mulroney as Nicholas Barlow, John Gallagher Jr. as Max, Owen Teague as Al, and Brianne Tju as Greta. The thriller marks the feature directorial debut of Eli Horowitz, who co-wrote the screenplay with Matthew Derby. Key production companies include BoulderLight Pictures and SSS Entertainment.
‘My Old School’ (2022)

Leaving Sunday, November 16. This documentary revisits the 1990s scandal of “Brandon Lee,” a new student at a Scottish secondary school who was later revealed to be former pupil Brian MacKinnon, then 32, posing as a teenager. Director Jono McLeod—himself a former classmate—structures the story through interviews, animation, and archival footage. Alan Cumming appears on camera to perform MacKinnon’s interview statements, with contributions from classmates including Clare Grogan and Lulu. The film was released by Magnolia Pictures in the U.S. and Dogwoof in the U.K.
What will you catch before it leaves? Tell us which one you’re watching in the comments!


