So, the next time you want to watch Meryl Streep tumble down a staircase, break her neck, and still demand a standing ovation, skip the paid rental. Head to , type in "Death Becomes Her," and pour yourself a magic potion from the internet’s last great library.
This "availability gap" is where the (archive.org) steps in. Unlike subscription services that remove titles monthly based on rotating licensing deals, the Internet Archive operates as a digital library. Its "Brewster’s Trunk" and user-uploaded movie collections aim to preserve cultural artifacts, especially those that major distributors treat as back-catalog filler.
For fans discovering it today, the film is a revelation. For those who grew up with it, archive.org offers comfort: knowing that no matter how many licensing deals expire or how many physical formats become obsolete, the digital library will keep the potion shelf stocked.
In the pantheon of 1990s dark comedies, few films have aged as remarkably well—or developed as cult a following—as Robert Zemeckis’s 1992 masterpiece, Death Becomes Her . Starring Meryl Streep, Goldie Hawn, and Bruce Willis at the peak of their powers, the film is a biting satire on vanity, immortality, and the gruesome consequences of drinking a magical potion. However, for a growing legion of Gen Z and millennial fans, the primary gateway to rediscovering this glittering, grotesque gem isn’t Netflix, Disney+, or a dusty Blu-ray. It is a single, invaluable digital repository: The Internet Archive .
Most versions on the Internet Archive are sourced from DVD or television broadcasts. Avid fans actually prefer this. The slight grain, the 4:3 or 16:9 framing, and the absence of modern digital noise reduction preserve the film’s tactile, pre-CGI texture. You see the latex on Streep’s twisted neck. You see the practical spark of the shotgun blast. It looks like a movie, not a wax museum.