What Cartoons Will Be on Disney Plus

The Best Shows on Disney+ Right Now

Get ready to enjoy new original series and welcome familiar favorites.

Disney+ is a great place to watch nearly every Disney movie under the sun, but you can't forget the television. Disney+ has so much original television programming, both that's previously aired on Disney Channel and/or ABC, and shows that are original to the service. From new releases to nostalgic favorites to hidden gems, we've waded through the list of shows to pull out the ones that really deserve your time.

Below, you can peruse our list of the best tv shows on Disney Plus, which includes new original series, reality shows, kids-centric programming, and of course classics.

Editor's note: This list was last updated on December 10 to include "Hawkeye."

Hawkeye

Image Via Disney

Created by: Jonathan Igla

Cast: Jeremy Renner, Hailee Steinfeld, Tony Dalton, Fra Fee, Brian d'Arcy James, Linda Cardellini, Vera Farmiga, Alaqua Cox, Florence Pugh

In the realm of the MCU finally emerging on Disney+, it's been easy to spot the shows that hit the mark right away (WandaVision, Loki) and the ones that didn't quite live up to expectations. The irony is that audiences might not have expected a lot from Hawkeye, mostly because the Avenger himself tends to take more of a backseat to his teammates when it comes to, you know, big-time saving-the-world stuff. But it turns out all Clint Barton really needed was a promising young sidekick in Kate Bishop, as well as a Christmas-set adventure, to launch another success for Marvel on the small-screen. Steinfeld not only brings out the best in Renner whenever they're together, but it's easy to see how she could lead a series of her own, if this does in fact prove to be a passing of the torch (or the arrow) from one Hawkeye to the next. - Carly Lane

Once Upon a Time

Image via ABC

Created by: Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz

Cast: Ginnifer Goodwin, Jennifer Morrison, Lana Parrilla, Josh Dallas, Jared S. Gilmore,, Raphael Sbarge, Jamie Dornan, Robert Carlyle, Eion Bailey, Emilie de Ravin, Meghan Ory, Colin O'Donoghue

It's a concept that was first introduced back in 2011 to irresistible effect — what if fairy-tale characters were brought into our world, only they had no memory of their past or who they actually were? And what if the whole thing was the result of an evil queen's curse? Not only did Once Upon a Time spend episodes with such figures as Snow White, Prince Charming, Belle, Little Red Riding Hood and more in the present, but we also got to see flashbacks to their lives before, building out an even richer backstory for them in the process. When it comes to the show's later success, your mileage may differ in regards to those ending seasons, but you could do worse to celebrate the 10th anniversary than by watching all of Emma (Morrison) and Hook (O'Donoghue)'s steamiest scenes. - Carly Lane

Star Wars: Visions

Image via Disney

For as much magic as there is packed into the nine Star Wars films, there's no denying they're all primarily focused on a certain set of characters bearing a certain last name, which boxes in the vastness of the galaxy just a bit. Which is what makes Star Wars: Visions as refreshing as it is visually stunning. The anthology anime series is structured as nine 15-minute episodes telling an isolated story in a different pocket of the Star Wars universe, all animated in a different style by seven Japanese studios. From black-and-white Samurai-style showdowns to colorful romps about cybernetic boys who wish to be Jedis, Star Wars: Visions proves that the greatest part about this franchise is that it's filled an endless amount of stories to tell. --Vinnie Mancuso

The Muppet Show

Created by: Jim Henson

Cast: Jim Henson, Frank Oz, Jerry Nelson, Richard Hunt, Dave Goelz, Steve Whitmire, Louise Gold, Kathryn Mullen, Eren Ozker, John Lovelady

The way you know that the original Muppet Show is special is that when they tried a few years ago to recapture that magic, it was a pretty huge disappointment. Fortunately, we can now revisit five seasons of the iconic variety series, packed with wild guest stars like Vincent Price, Mark Hamill, Rita Moreno, Lena Horne, Ben Vereen, and more. Fast-paced and jammed with jokes, this iconic piece of television history deserves to be seen as wildly as possible. If only because "Pigs In Space" is a premise for the ages. - Liz Shannon Miller

Doogie Kameāloha, M.D.

Image via Disney+

Developed by: Kourtney Kang

Cast: Peyton Elizabeth Lee, Emma Meisel, Matthew Sato, Wes Tian, Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman, Mapuana Makia, Kathleen Rose Perkins, Jason Scott Lee

All ages, including adults, can appreciate how well Doogie Kameāloha, M.D. straddles a lot of different genres, from comedy to young adult drama to medical procedural. Set in Hawaii, in a universe where any over-achieving young doctor gets assigned the nickname Doogie in tribute to the Neil Patrick Harris original series, the show delivers a lot of great family entertainment with the support of a great cast. Shout-outs especially due to Jason Scott Lee really selling his role as a goofy, but loving dad and Peyton Elizabeth Lee bringing solid charm along with some very technical medical jargon to the screen. - Liz Shannon Miller

Marvel's What If?

For more than a decade, the Marvel Cinematic Universe has operated under the assumption that no matter how crowded or cosmic the franchise became, nothing could ever really change, because Feige and Co. have this thing planned out longer than most of us will even be alive. But the arrival of the Multiverse has finally allowed the MCU to get a little weird with canon, and the result is What If? , the animated anthology based on the comic series that first debuted in 1977. The title doubles as the concept, the series digging into alternate timelines within the MCU where the events we know are drastically altered by one, single moment. What if Peggy Carter (Hayley Atwell) took the Super Soldier Serum instead of Steve Rogers? What if T'Challa (Chadwick Boseman) was kidnapped by the Ravagers as a child instead of Peter Quill? What if all the Avengers just straight-up died? There's a playfulness to What If? that makes it unique to the franchise; the natural reaction to AU stories trends towards "well, so what?", but the simple answer is that it's a blast. The gigantic voice cast of returning MCU stars certainly helps—plus Jeffrey Wright as Uatu the Watcher, the show's narrator and multiverse tour guide—and if you don't get a little misty-eyed hearing Boseman play T'Challa just one last time, well, we have the answer to "what if a person didn't feel feelings." -- Vinnie Mancuso

Loki

The third original TV series from Marvel Studios is arguably the best one so far, as the six-episode first season of Loki is an inventive, emotional, and thrilling deep-dive into Tom Hiddleston's iconic sometimes-baddie. The show follows the version of Loki who escaped with the Tesseract just after the Battle of New York, as a result of the time-travel meddling the Avengers did in Avengers: Endgame , and finds him being arrested by the Time Variance Authority which is tasked with maintaining "the sacred timeline" and pruning variants like himself. But a killer Loki variant is on the loose, and this arrested version of Loki teams up with a TVA agent named Mobius (Owen Wilson) to help track the other variant down. The series is constantly surprising both in its plotting but also character work, as it works incredibly well as a moving story about whether people (in this case specifically Loki) have the capacity for change. – Adam Chitwood

The Falcon and the Winter Soldier

Image via Disney+

So far, the biggest benefit of the various Disney+ MCU series has been how varied in tone they are, which means there's almost definitely at least one for every kind of Marvel fan. In the case of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier , it's pretty simple: You'll love this show if you're a little tired of blasting off into space or traversing mystical alternate dimensions and miss the slightly-more-grounded takes like Captain America: The Winter Soldier . Although something clearly went wonky with the plot during reshoots—the Flag Smashers feel real under-explored as an antagonist—the show still has an absolute blast with the central love-hate partnership between Sam Wilson (Anthony Mackie) and Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan). It's not all light entertainment, though, as The Falcon and the Winter Soldier has some genuinely poignant things to say about what it would mean for a Black man to become Captain America in 2021, helped by Wyatt Rusell as blonde-hair-blue-eyed Stever Rogers replacement John Walker and a show-stealing performance from Carl Lumbly as Isaiah Bradley, Marvel's first Black Captain American. (Plus, you know, there's also Daniel Bruhl's Zemo doing this at a nightclub, so you've got layers here.) --Vinnie Mancuso

Behind the Attraction

Image via Disney+

If you love Disney World, Disneyland, and all things Disney Parks, then the docuseries Behind the Attraction will scratch a very specific itch. Each episode of the series is a comedic deep-dive into the history of a famous attraction, from Jungle Cruise to Haunted Mansion to Star Tours. Imagineers explain the origins of the attraction and take the audience behind the scenes of how it works, while also talking about how these attractions have evolved and changed over the years. Paget Brewster narrates the series with a quick-witted, fast-paced style that makes it a more madcap companion piece of sorts to the more serious, deeper-dive documentary series The Imagineering Story . - Adam Chitwood

WandaVision

Image via Disney+

The first-ever TV series from Marvel Studios, WandaVision is at once a love letter to classic family sitcoms, a twist-filled sci-fi story, and an emotionally devastating chronicle of grief and enduring love. The secret weapon of the series is Elizabeth Olsen and Paul Bettany as the two deliver spectacular performances week-to-week in a story that finds Olsen's Wanda Maxmioff and Bettany's Vision trapped in some kind of sitcom-fueld reality, in which each episode puts them inside worlds that homage sitcoms from the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, and 2000s. As the story goes on, the homages fade into the background and the truth of what's really going on is revealed, but boy is it a terrific ride to get there. At heart, this is a deeply moving story about one woman working through her trauma, all while delivering the MCU antics fans of Marvel expect. This is without question one of the most ambitious pieces of storytelling Marvel has ever done. – Adam Chitwood

Star Wars Rebels

Image via Disney XD, Lucasfilm

The Disney XD animated series Star Wars Rebels arrived in 2014 as the first piece of new canon from Lucasfilm, preceding even the release of Star Wars: The Force Awakens . It's also still one of the best. The show takes place five years before the events of A New Hope and follows the early days of a fledgling rebellion that stars to take form as the Galactic Empire is hunting down and killing the last of the Jedi. While the cast of characters is mostly made up of new faces—a ragtag crew venturing throughout the galaxy, helping the rebellion when they can—the new hero of Ezra is a welcome addition to the Star Wars universe. A teenage con artist at the beginning, Ezra spends the series training to become a Jedi. The show is smart and compelling, with just enough heart and humor to make it memorable. If you missed the four-season run on Disney XD, now's your chance to catch up on this Good, Actually Star Wars prequel. – Adam Chitwood

Into the Unknown: Making Frozen 2

Image via Disney+

One of the best nonfiction offerings on Disney+ is Into the Unknown: Making Frozen 2 , a first-hand account of the production of Disney's animated sequel (that wound up being the most successful animated feature of all time). With fly-on-the-wall intimacy, Into the Unknown takes you behind-the-scenes at the somewhat contentious, always spirited production of the film, exploring just how much these films change in the months and weeks ahead of release. (Tellingly, 8 months before the movie is set to debut in theaters, directors Jennifer Lee and Chris Buck admit that they're still not sure what the movie is even about.) It's this frantic race to the finish line that serves as the overall structure for the movie, as things are refined, storylines clarified, and nonessential elements scrubbed (including, sadly, a big musical number partially sung by Sterling K. Brown). Whether or not all of the issues involving the movie's narrative, mostly centered around the climactic "Show Yourself" musical number, are properly ironed are up for discussion. What Into the Unknown brilliantly does, though, is showcase just how hard the animators, technicians and story artists worked to get it into the best place it could be. No matter how you feel about Frozen 2, the documentary series will highlight just what a towering accomplishment it really was. And, yes, it'll get "Into the Unknown" stuck in your head for several more days. – Drew Taylor

Toy Story That Time Forgot

Image via Disney

This half-hour long Christmas special is one of the best things in the Toy Story universe, a hilarious, richly detailed, and action-packed holiday offering that stands as the kind of classic every family should watch every year. Written and directed by the great Steve Purcell, who co-directed Pixar's Brave , Toy Story That Time Forgot centers on nervous triceratops Trixie (Kristen Schaal), who Bonnie takes over to a friend's house after Christmas. That friend has gotten a set of Battlesaurs, quasi-futuristic gladiatorial dinosaur action figures, one of whom (Kevin McKidd) takes a liking to Trixie. She helps him realize that there's more to life than vanquishing your enemies; he goes on a similar arc as Buzz did in the first film, realizing that he is, in fact, a toy. (The fact that this character wasn't in Toy Story 4 , save for a brief Easter egg, borders on criminal.) With A+ animation, energetic action sequences and a killer, old school score by Michael Giacchino (utilizing some of the same instruments used in the original Planet of the Apes ), plus appearances from Tim Allen and Tom Hanks (really!), Toy Story That Time Forgot is really, really special. – Drew Taylor

Doug

Image via Disney

Doug is the perfect animated show if you're a child growing up with anxiety. The show follows the daily travails of Doug Funnie, a sweet kid given to day dreaming who has a crush on his classmate Patty Mayonaise and tries to avoid the bully Roger Klotz. Yes, these are the broad archetypes of a kids' cartoon show, butDougmakes them work by letting us see how Doug's mind frequently runs away from him, whether he's fantasizing about him and his friend Skeeter becoming pop stars or worrying that everyone in his life will hate him. Of course, by the end of the episode, Doug has learned that both his fears and his hopes are outsized, and that the reality is never as overwhelming as it seems. –Matt Goldberg

DuckTales (1987)

Image via Disney

The first animated series Disney produced for modern television is arguably still the best (its theme song is undeniably the best). DuckTales follows the globetrotting adventures of Huey, Dewey, and Louie, and their grotesquely wealthy uncle Scrooge McDuck. After Donald Duck dumps his nephews on Scrooge so he can go to war (not a joke), Scrooge takes the boys to exotic locales around the planet on quests to find valuable treasures to increase his status as the richest duck in the world (yes, that is his sole motivation). It's a fun show in the style of old adventure serials, and the animation, which was leaps and bounds better than anything else on TV at the time, still holds up. – Tom Reimann

Agent Carter

Image via ABC

Alas, Agent Carter , we only knew ye for a pair of all-too-short seasons. The series, created by Avengers: Endgame writers Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely, is a truly unique and endlessly charming pocket of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, led by Hayley Atwell's consistently dynamite performance as Peggy Carter. Set in the 1940s after Captain America crashed into the Arctic ice, the series saw Carter emerge as one of the brightest live-action characters in Marvel's catalog while also filling in fascinating layers of the modern-day MCU. Way more of an espionage show than your classic superhero fare, Atwell's Peggy Carter was a force as she balanced personal life with top-secret missions for Howard Stark (Dominic Cooper), usually accompanied by Edwin Jarvis (James D'Arcy, always a delight). Definitely make some time in your Disney+ scrolling schedule for a few more dances with Agent Carter. —Vinnie Mancuso

The Mandalorian

Image via Disney

The Mandalorian was one of the most heavily promoted new series at this year's D23 Expo and it's not surprising why. Creator Jon Favreau compared it to both a "space opera" and an old-time Western with its story of a lone gunfighter (played by Pedro Pascal) traveling through the outer reaches of the galaxy. The series takes place five years after the events of Return of the Jedi and showcases how the galaxy is doing in a period of relative lawlessness. The show is a mix of John Ford Western and Star Wars futurism. Add to that a cast that includes Ming-Na Wen, Giancarlo Esposito, and Werner Herzog and you have the makings of a series that not only Star Wars fans will gravitate to, but also those looking for engaging drama.-Kristen Lopez

Image via Disney+

When Disney announced that there would be a companion documentary series to go along with its blockbuster live-actionStar Warsseries The Mandalorian , it was easy to roll your eyes and assume that it would be little more than an overstretched collection of DVD bonus features. But it wasn't! Weactually learned things! Disney Gallery comprehensively traces the production of The Mandalorian – from the exciting directors enlisted to bringJon Favreau's vision of a lawlessStar Warsunderbelly to life to the next-generation technology responsible for the show's otherworldly vistas (and everything in between). Using a combination of behind-the-scenes footage, finished sequences, and roundtable discussions led by Favreau (that manreally lovesroundtable discussions), even the in-camera, computer-rendered effects seem easy to comprehend. And if you weren't initially a fan ofThe Mandalorian, it might make you at least appreciate the series know when you see what an ungodly pain-in-the-ass the whole thing was. (Yes, Baby Yoda was adorable but he was also a technical marvel – as was assassin-turned-babysitter droid IG-11.) Season 2 ofThe Mandalorianstill feels like a galaxy far, far away. Shorten the time by watching this engaging, frequently illuminating documentary series. – Drew Taylor

Mickey Mouse (2013)

Image via Disney

While these are technically short films, paid for by Disney's Consumer Products division to enliven the Mickey Mouse character and aired in-between programming on the Disney Channel and on Disney-owned YouTube channels, they're listed in the "series" section of Disney+ so we're putting it here. Simply put, these revitalized Mickey Mouse shorts are truly essentially. Developed by Paul Rudish, a longtime artistic partner of Genndy Tartakovsky, these shorts are overflowing with devilish energy, attention to detail, and genuinely jaw-dropping animation (plus they're so short). There are also more Easter eggs – to other Disney properties, theme park attractions and movies – than you could possibly count. The characterization of Mickey Mouse himself, completed by stellar voicework by Christopher Diamantopoulos (yes, Russ Hanneman from Silicon Valley and Mickey Mouse are the same man), is vital. Rudish, Diamantopoulos and the unbelievable creative team injects much-needed personality and psychological depth into a character that has, in decades past, become a bland corporate symbol. Look no further than Walt Disney World, where Mickey and Minnie's Runaway Railway, using this version of the characters, recently opened to rapturous reviews (it'll be coming to Disneyland in a few years, gloved fingers crossed). If you think these Mickey Mouse shorts are just for kids, think again – this is sophisticated, deeply funny animation. – Drew Taylor

Disney Parks Sunrise Series

Image via Disney+

These are basically hour-long screensavers, as you watch the various Disney Parks spring to life at the start of each new day. You don't see throngs of tourists or cast members; just the parks themselves, accompanied by some soft, easily ignorable music. This might sound silly, but its subtly profound; it allows you to drink in the majesty of these parks, the awesomeness of their design and the true limitlessness of their imagination. There are few things as impressive as seeing the icons of these locations – the Tree of Life at Disney's Animal Kingdom (which, per the name, at one point had much stronger biblical implications, mercifully removed during development), say, or the geodesic wonder of EPCOT's Spaceship Earth, as the light first hits them. (The Animal Kingdom one is even better because you can hear all the animals rustling awake, including the gaggle of parrots that fly at the base of the Tree of Life.) Obviously mileage may vary according to your need to Zen-out while watching static footage of empty theme parks, but it's subtly meditative and allows you glimpses of the Disney Parks that few will ever get to experience. So far Disney Parks Sunrise Series is limited to three of the four Walt Disney World parks; hopefully it'll continue with the water parks, west coast parks and international parks. Who doesn't want to see the sun rise over Tokyo DisneySea? – Drew Taylor

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What Cartoons Will Be on Disney Plus

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