December closes the year with a focused but diverse lineup of new films — and if you’re deciding what to watch this month on OSN+, here’s a mix of documentary storytelling, high-concept sci-fi, atmospheric horror, and a major family title timed for the holiday break. While the list is short, each release offers something distinct for different viewing moods.
Louvre Heist: Minute by Minute
Let’s begins with a documentary built around a minute-by-minute reconstruction of an audacious Paris art theft. Instead of relying on retrospective commentary, the film unfolds in real time, tracing the events as they happened. This approach places attention on the operation itself and the ripple effect it had on the global art world, avoiding the dramatized tone that often accompanies high-profile crime stories.
Mickey 17
Mickey 17, the latest project from Bong Joon Ho. Known for genre-blending narratives that mix social commentary with striking visual ideas, Bong returns to science fiction here. Though plot details remain intentionally limited, the film is positioned as one of the biggest releases, promising a more layered and unconventional approach than standard sci-fi fare.
Sinners
And then comes a new horror feature about twin brothers returning to their hometown in search of a fresh start, only to face a threatening force tied to the place they left behind. The premise leans on classic horror elements like buried secrets and unresolved trauma, but early framing suggests a more character-driven form of tension rather than an overreliance on scare tactics. As a late-month release, it offers a darker counterbalance to holiday programming.
A Minecraft Movie
For closing the month on December, we recommend the first-ever live-action adaptation of Minecraft. As one of the most recognizable games worldwide, Minecraft’s move into film carries expectations that extend beyond typical kids-and-family audiences. The adaptation aims for broad appeal, using the late-December slot to attract families and longtime fans curious to see how the game’s blocky aesthetic translates to live action.
These releases shape December into a compact but varied viewing month, offering documentary precision, ambitious genre filmmaking, grounded horror, and a large-scale family adaptation — all landing in time for end-of-year streaming habits.
