The School That Tried to End Racism Season 1 (Feb. 2)
Antebellum (Feb. 5)
2067 (Feb. 12)
Dragnificent! Season 1 (Feb. 15)
House Hunters International Seasons 139 & 140 (Feb. 15)
House Hunters Seasons 160-162, 164 & 165 (Feb. 15)
Lost Girls and Love Hotels (Feb. 15)
Property Brothers Season 14 (Feb. 15)
Southern Gothic Season 1 (Feb. 15)
Witches of Salem Season 1 (Feb. 15)
Bad Habits, Holy Orders Season 1 (Feb. 16)
Keeping Up with the Kardashians Season 19 (Feb. 16)
North Korea: Inside the Mind of a Dictator Season 1 (Feb. 16)
The Warrior Queen of Jhansi (Feb. 16)
Spring Baking Championship Season 7 (Feb. 23)
Season Premieres
Hip Hop Uncovered Series Premiere (Feb. 13)
Good Trouble Season 3 (Feb. 18)
Snowfall Season 4 (Feb. 25)
Netflix Is Adding 29 New Movies/TV Shows This Week
The first day of the month is always a big one for
Netflix subscribers, with a huge number of new film and television titles being dropped onto the platform, many of which almost instantly find themselves being added to millions of watch lists around the world. Of course, February is no different, and there are a slew of incoming arrivals over the next seven days that’ll scratch almost every genre itch.
The Bank Job is primed for a good showing among viewers, although it isn’t the sort of straightforward wham-bang action fare that’s come to define his career for the last two decades.
Everything Coming to Netflix in February
Malcolm & Marie starring Zendaya and John David Washington. A few weeks later, there’s
To All the Boys: Always and Forever and
I Care A Lot starring Rosamund Pike. There’s also a ton of new series as well, including
Crime Scene from documentarian Joe Berlinger and a NASCAR-set sitcom starring Kevin James called
The Crew. Admittedly, there are fewer new library titles coming in February than there used to be in a given month, but Netflix is still adding
My Best Friend’s Wedding,
Inception, and
Avail. 2/1/21 My Dead Ex: Season 1 National Lampoon s Christmas Vacation (1989)
30 Movie Sequels That Were Better Than the Original
By Jacob Osborn, Stacker News
On 1/31/21 at 10:00 AM EST
If there are two unwritten laws by which Hollywood (nearly) always abides they are the following: 1) When a movie makes a ton of money at the box office a sequel (or numerous sequels) must follow and 2) Each sequel must abide by the same formula as the original film. Naturally by sticking so closely to such risk-averse principles any given sequel rarely captures the magic of its predecessor typically offering up instead a passable or downright pathetic imitation.
Lucasfilm
However every now and then an anomaly slips through the cracks in the form of a sequel or later installment that surpasses the original in terms of quality. As one might expect this phenomenon occurs most often in franchises where numerous installments allow for bigger budgets upgraded special effects and a greater degree of creative breadth. Meanwhile because the story itself is being continued and