Notable films and Brooklyn Nine-Nine seasons leave Netflix U.S. in February
Netflix will remove several notable titles for U.S. subscribers in February, including 28 Days Later; Anaconda; Licorice Pizza; What Lies Beneath; Everybody's Fine; The Texas Chain Saw Massacre; Brooklyn Nine-Nine Seasons 3 and 4; and Bottoms. The 2003 zombie film 28 Days Later is listed for Feb.
1, a moment the Times suggests is timely as its latest sequel, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, hits theaters. The rundown describes Anaconda (also Feb. 1) as a savvy piece of B‑moviemaking with a large ensemble cast, and notes that Paul Thomas Anderson’s Licorice Pizza, which earned Oscar nominations for best picture, director and original screenplay, is among the titles leaving early in the month.
The Times highlights Robert Zemeckis’s Hitchcock‑style thriller What Lies Beneath and Kirk Jones’s Everybody’s Fine, in which Robert De Niro plays a retired widower checking on his adult children. It also lists Tobe Hooper’s 1974 Texas Chain Saw Massacre, Brooklyn Nine-Nine Seasons 3 and 4 (noting those middle seasons as particularly strong), and Bottoms, the 2023 comedy directed by Emma Seligman and co‑written with Rachel Sennott, among departures.
The outlet provides a longer list of additional films and dates, including Parasite and Groundhog Day on Feb. 1; Mean Girls on Feb. 5; Spencer on Feb. 8; Zodiac on Feb. 17; and Bones and All on Feb. 27.
Key Topics
Culture, Netflix, Licorice Pizza, Brooklyn Nine-nine, Anaconda, Bottoms