Amazon Prime Video is one of the best streaming platforms out there, and its catalogue of acclaimed films is to die for. This November, Watch With Us wants to highlight three films on the streamer that we feel are masterpieces - two are recent additions and American classics, and the other is a fantastic Italian "giallo" film you may not have heard of before. Our first pick is Rear Window, a legendary Alfred Hitchcock crime thriller starring James Stewart. Also on the list is Hannah and Her Sisters, a moving comedy-drama starring Mia Farrow. Read on for the full list below. 3 Underrated Prime Video Movies I Can't Wait to Watch This Weekend (September 12-14) 'Rear Window' (1954) While temporarily relegated to a wheelchair following an accident sustained while on assignment, photojournalist L.B. "Jeff" Jeffries (Stewart) takes to watching his neighbors from his apartment window that faces a shared courtyard. While acquainting himself with the particularities of people's daily lives, he believes that he witnesses a murder. Confined to his home, Jeff races to prove the crime happened and catch the killer. This Alfred Hitchcock crime thriller is a classic and one of the best American films ever made. Don't let the fact that it came out in 1954 scare you away - the film is more thrilling and engrossing than many films of our modern era. With Hitchcock's usual flair for stylish direction, compounding tension and a razor-sharp script, Rear Window is a diverting slice of morbid voyeurism. 'Hannah and Her Sisters' (1986) Beginning and ending with a Thanksgiving dinner, Hannah and Her Sisters chronicle three intertwined stories of a family across two years. We follow Hanna (Mia Farrow) and her husband Elliot (Michael Caine), and her sisters Lee (Barbara Hershey) and Holly (Dianne Wiest). Lee is having an affair with Elliot while trying to end her own relationship, while Holly flounders in her career and dates a hypochondriac (Woody Allen). Hilarious and tender in equal measure, Hannah and Her Sisters is an incredibly sharp film about family and human desire. The film manages to balance warmth, humor and insight without overdoing it in any measure, creating a kaleidoscopic work about people and relationships that is both realistic and deeply profound. 'Inferno' (1980) After a young poet (Irene Miracle) is murdered in New York City, her brother leaves his studies in Rome to investigate. Just before she died, she was reading a story about the Three Mothers. The Mothers are ancient, evil witches who rule the world through tears, sorrow and darkness, and each lives in a separate home. When Mark (Leigh McCloskey) arrives, he begins to realize that the apartment building his sister lived in may be the home to the Mother of Darkness. This spiritual sequel to Italian horror maestro Dario Argento's Suspiria (which was remade in 2017 with Dakota Johnson) is gorgeous, lurid and rich in atmospheric delights. While the story may have a lack of logic and a slipshod script, the narrative is less of the point. Inferno excels in its colorful visuals, creeping sense of dread and wonderfully spooky mood - like stepping into a beautiful nightmare.