Emma Myers Movies and Tv Shows.
Emma Myers is a powerhouse, and even with a quick-start filmography, her glow is unmistakable. Sure, she began with tiny roles when she was only eight, but 2020 was when she decided, “it’s my time” and the camera hasn’t looked away since.
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Myers went straight from stealing scenes in one of Netflix’s all-time giants to headlining a mega video-game adaptation that insiders say will be one of the biggest hits of 2025. Spoiler: she’s only getting started. From her upcoming gig as a bird in “Angry Birds 3,” landing in theaters on January 29, 2027, to a string of amazing characters in shorter projects, there’s plenty of Emma material already worthy of a binge.
With her next big-screen exploits already teasing more leadership and charm, let’s dive into the five must-see Emma Myers projects so far, ranked from awesome to “no excuses for not watching.”
1:’A Minecraft Movie’ (2025).
One of the top-grossing video game movies ever, A Minecraft Movie surprised Hollywood box-office pros who thought the film would bomb hard when it launched earlier this year. Instead, it blazed past $1 billion within weeks. Swapping blocks for adventure, the story sends a mismatched group of four leap-frogging through a wild, pixelated portal into the shopping-list-themed Bloxland. Stuck thousands of blocks from home, the team battles hostile mobs, builds last-second escape bridges, and races against the ticking reset clock.
Since dropping in theaters, the film has rocked after-school snack chats and TikTok dance challenges alike, thanks in part to the meme-magnets in the famous “Chicken Jockey” bit. Its wild pacing, goofy crafting-score puns, and a soundtrack that swaps emerald-storming rituals for pop anthems could have and may still throw it out of classic kid flick territory, yet it nails the boy-and-girl-on-the-couch tone.
Lasting issues? Sure, real fandoms probably wish more ores of lore were mined. Luckily, that bit of chaos works thanks to a surprisingly big dose of kid-crowd-permitted sincere moments. Also, the film marks comedian *Mike Myers’ *official biggest role ever, an upgrade that could lead to groanier craft hints and an action-lava-sassy sequel.
2:’A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder’ (2024 — Present).
Based on Holly Jackson’s bestselling novel, A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder is the best season of the Myers series yet and the one where the actress takes the lead role. She plays Pip Fitz-Amobi, the sharp student who is convinced the schoolgirl murder case from a few years back was mishandled and unjust. Rather than let the truth slide, Pip decides to re-open the file as her final school project, carrying the investigation into her own hands.
Set against the storybook charm of a sleepy British village, the show weaves a murder mystery as clever and twisted as any episode of Wednesday. It deserves every bit of the acclaim it’s gotten, including a glowing 83% rating from critics.
Watching Myers move from the quirky Enid in the Wednesday universe to the determined Pip here, it’s clear she’s more than a one-note performer. This season hints at a career full of wildly different characters—and hopefully many more awards and accolades to come.
3:’Family Switch’ (2023).
If you caught Freaky Friday recently, you probably noticed how well the body-swap idea can mix big laughs with true heart. In the same season, Netflix dropped Family Switch, its own take on the formula, but it doesn’t quite land with either a hearty thud.
The story follows the bickering Walker clan—parents, teenage kids, a toddler, and, yes, the family dog—whose family drama gets turned upside down after a run-in with a sketchy astrologer. The catch? Everyone swaps bodies. Location? Hot mess alert. Results? A soggy nightmare of a comedy.
Like, how can a concept so inherently ripe for fun flop? The heart of the film was supposed to be the idea of walking a mile in each other’s shoes, and if you have Netflix, you know Mindy Kaling can nail that kind of emotional connective tissue.
Yet Kaling’s involvement in a writing credit only delivers Kaling-sized blush. Kinda puzzling, considering the cast lists heavy hitters—Jennifer Garner, Ed Helms, and, sigh, the also-microdosing-kidding-mystical astrologer on screen played by the lampount and vibe-carving Myers.
Everyone steps onto the same trampoline, but the bounce is an awkward one. The dialogue all sounds like a dictionary of recycled one-liners crashed into a genie lamp whose wishes were hammered, literally, into the wrong copy of a dictionary. I just pray Myers gets that therapy… and the Netflix bean. No one leaves this one with their comedic reputations fully intact.
4:’Wednesday’ (2022 — Present).
Enid Sinclair is easily Jenna Ortega’s most-loved co-star on Wednesday, and for good reason. She’s a bubbly rainbow in a monochrome world, perfect for lighting up Wednesday Addams’ dark corner. The story plops Wednesday, being expelled from every school she ever stepped into, into the colorful halls of Nevermore Academy, a place for every misfit imaginable. Enid, her perky werewolf roommate, quickly goes from background buddy to central ally in the show’s tense race to crack a campuswide murder spree before the killer moves beyond the gates.
In a season draped in goth rays, Myers’ Enid zooms in like a sunflower on a thunderstorm, and season two doubles her screen time—with only the first half of the new season available to binge as I post. Sweetly strong and unapologetically sparkly, she’s the werewolf best friend you’d always want to bring to a midnight haunted house.
Already a shining chapter in Netflix’s crazy, true story of streaming behemoths, Wednesday sometimes gets pushed into the “overrated” box. Yet, the show still spins catchy plot springs, crams the screen with stunning tasteful Tim Burtonisms, and sees Ortega and Burton rain coolness like a black sequined hurricane over every stylish skull.
5:’Southern Gospel’ (2021).
Faith-based films have really picked up steam lately, and young Ayla Myers makes an early impression as Angie Blackburn in Jeffrey A. Smith’s Southern Gospel. The story centers on Max Ehrich’s Samuel Allen, a washed-up rock star watching both his career and personal life fall apart. Looking for a fresh start, Samuel decides to finally pursue what he’s always dreamed of and become a pastor.
Though Myers’ part is very small in this project, she still manages to stand out. The film offers a lot for its core fans, and interestingly, it’s the only one in Myers’ resume that’s scored a full 100% on Rotten Tomatoes, though that’s from only six reviews—much fewer than her blockbuster gigs tend to attract.

