Showing posts with label What's New. Show all posts
Showing posts with label What's New. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Netflix Update: What's New in May and June 2015

In which I report on the upcoming changes to Netflix's streaming services.

Yeah, I know that I've been a bit negligent around here this last month or so (I personally blame all the great summer movies that are coming out), but I'm here to make up for it in spades.  So today we have a special double instalment of Netflix Update: in which I go over what I was excited for last month and what there is to look forward to this month!
Magical Girl Madoka (aka Puella Magi Madoka Magica, aka PMMM) has probably been my single favorite thing on Netflix since a friend of mine showed it to me last summer.  It's a 12 episode anime series that takes everything that you know about series like Sailor Moon and turns it completely on its head.  It starts off as some happy-go-lucky series about Magical Girls fighting witches, but then becomes a dark, soul-crushing series about friendship, betrayal and self-destruction.  Seriously, it's amazing.

As of last month, however, three Madoka movies have entered Netflix's streaming roster: Rebellion, Beginnings and Eternal.  While it's safe to say that non-fans of the show will probably not find much to enjoy out of them, it's a massive boon to those who have already seen the series.  Additionally, I've been assured by those who have seen it before that the movies - especially Eternal - are as exceptionally good as the series.
I've been looking for these movies for months to no avail (even through Netflix's DVD mailing services), so this is huge for me.  Expect to find a Revisited article sometime in the near future over the series and Date Nights for the three films.

Other than that, however, there was not much else that May brought to the table.  Sure, old favorites like The Blues Brothers, Legally Blonde, National Treasure, Big Trouble in Little China and Wes Craven's New Nightmare are always fun to have around.  And yes, Fruitvale Station classes the place up with a timely political piece while Zombeavers looks like a riotously good time, but it's nothing that most people haven't already seen, nor anything that we couldn't have done without.
June kicked off by bringing a few exceptional films into the fold as well.  The Aviator should have won DiCaprio an Oscar more than a decade ago for his portrayal of eccentric millionaire Howard Hughes.  Nightcrawler should have done the same for Jake Gyllenhaal earlier this year for his thoroughly unsettling portrayal of media sociopath Lou Bloom.

Rosewater was easily one of the better films that I saw last year and I've heard nothing but ovations for Cake, starring the purportedly underrated Jennifer Anniston.  And say what you will about the quality of the franchise that it belongs to, but Transformers: Age of Extinction was a genuinely good movie: which injected personality back into the Transformers and had a plot that was more involved than "get Shia Labeouf laid."  Throwing the Dinobots into the mix - however briefly - also didn't hurt things.
Other than those, however, the real draw for June is the second season of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., which is honestly just this side of being the best series on TV right now.  Seriously, I can't speak its praises highly enough.  If not for Orphan Black and Game of Thrones, I'd be hard-pressed to find a series to contest its spot on top of the hill.

Check out the full selection of June releases below:

June 1:
  • The Aviator (2004)
  • Employee of the Month (2006)
  • Hidden Kingdoms (2014)
  • The High and the Mighty (1954)
  • La Dictadura Perfecta (2014)
  • The Magdalene Sisters (2002)
  • R.L. Stine’s The Haunting Hour: Don’t Think About It (2007)
  • R.L. Stine’s Mostly Ghostly (2008)
  • Sex Ed (2014)
  • Shaquille O’Neal Presents: All Star Comedy Jam: Live from Atlanta (2013)
  • Shaquille O’Neal Presents: All Star Comedy Jam: Live from Las Vegas (2014)
  • Shaquille O’Neal Presents: All Star Comedy Jam: Live from Orlando (2012)
June 3:
  • The Best of Me (2014)
  • Hector and the Search for Happiness (2014)
June 5:
  • Sense8: Season One
June 6:
  • On the Road (2012)
  • Scandal: Season Four
June 7: 
  • Words and Pictures (2013)
June 8:
  • Grace of Monaco (2014)
June 9:
  • Free the Nipple (2014)
  • It’s Tough Being Loved by Jerks (2008)
June 10:
  • Nightcrawler (2014)
  • Pretty Little Liars: Season Five
  • Rosewater (2014)
June 11:
  • The Legend (1993)
  • The Legend 2 (1993)
  • Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.: Season Two
June 12:
  • Champs (2015)
  • The Cobbler (2014)
  • Life of Crime (2013)
  • Orange Is the New Black: Season Three
June 13:
  • Antarctica: A Year on Ice (2013)
  • Transformers: Age of Extinction (2014)
June 15:
  • Bindi’s Bootcamp: Season One
  • Danger Mouse: Season One-Ten
  • Pussy Riot: A Punk Prayer (2013)
  • Really Me: Season One-Two
  • Rodney Carrington: Laughter’s Good
  • Team Toon: Season One
  • Wizards vs. Aliens: Season One-Three
June 16:
  • Backstreet Boys: Show ‘Em What You’re Made Of (2015)
  • Curious George (2006)
  • Lee Daniels’ The Butler (2013)
  • Two Days, One Night (2014)
June 17:
  • Heartland: Season Six
  • Point and Shoot (2014)
June 19:
  • A Most Wanted Man (2014)
  • Some Assembly Required (2012)
June 20:
  • Cake (2014)
June 23:
  • Advantageous (2015)
June 24:
  • Beyond the Lights (2014)
June 25:
  • Ballet 422 (2014)
June 26:
  • Dragons: Race to the Edge: Season One
  • Katy Perry: The Prismatic World Tour (2015)
  • What Happened, Miss Simone? (2015)
  • Young & Hungry: Season Two
June 27: 
  • The Reluctant Fundamentalist (2012)

So what are you planning on watching this month on Netflix from these new selections?  Share your thoughts in the comment section below.

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Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Netflix Update: What's New in April 2015

In which I report on the upcoming changes to Netflix's streaming services.

April's a really sad month to be a Netflix subscriber.  We lost a lot of good movies this month, and what's coming in to replace them isn't all up to snuff.  Sure, there are some gems amidst the newcomers, but they're really few and far between.
Although small, Netflix's TV selection will get a noticeable bump this month.  Although I've never gotten into it, Wilfred is a wildly unique show with an excellent cast that certainly has a loyal following.  Sons of Anarchy's additional season will also go a long way to appeasing that series' fans.

The really exciting one, though, is Marvel's new Daredevil series that's produced directly through Netflix.  This is the first that anybody will have seen the character since its unfortunate 2003 movie.  This time, however, it's apparently styled more like a Marvel-branded Arrow than as a bloated, star-driven action movie.  This should have an extremely broad appeal, not only because Marvel Studios is involved in the project, but because it is the latest entry into the burgeoning Marvel Cinematic Universe, and the only new addition that we'll get to that until Age of Ultron comes out in May.
Horror fans in particular lost out in April.  Netflix pulled all of its Friday the 13th installments, as well as a fair selection of its horror movies.  And, take it from me, Leprechaun 3, 4 and 6 don't save that programming decision.  Underworld, despite its vampiric and lupine trappings, is an action movie, not a horror one.  And while an off-beat thriller like Suicide Kings does come closer than the aforementioned movies, it still doesn't scratch that particular itch.

The Babadook, however, does.  This psychological Australian horror film personifies depression as a literal boogieman attacking a widowed mother and her presumably abused child.  It's the second best horror movie to come out in 2014, behind Oculus, and should appeal to just about every horror fan subscribing to the streaming service.  If you haven't seen The Babadook yet, this is your opportunity.
It's sad to call Hot Fuzz, one of this century's funniest comedies, the worst of anything, but it is the worst of the "Cornetto Trilogy" (Shaun of the Dead, this and The World's End).  That being said, however, it's one of the most intelligent and side-splitting good times Netflix has to offer, and another movie that you'd be remiss to pass up on.  If you have a single funny bone in your body, Hot Fuzz should be a priority.

Other than that, National Treasure is a fun Da Vinci Code riff that's a perfectly fine way to pass an afternoon and Noah has been on my radar as something to see for some time now.  Underworld is better than is really should be, even if it's not all that exceptional and Suicide Kings is an underrated film with a fun Christopher Walken performance.  And you had better believe that the three new Leprechaun movies are as awesomely bad as they sound (especially In Space).  The full list of new titles is listed below.
April 1st
And Now ... Ladies and Gentlemen...(2002)
Bandolero (2000)
Barnyard (2006)
The Beautician and the Beast (1997)
Bound (1996)
Buffalo Soldiers (2001)
The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course (2002)
Down to Earth (2001)
Leprechaun 3 (1995)
Leprechaun 4: In Space (1997)
Leprechaun 6: Back 2 tha Hood (2003)
Suicide Kings (1997)
Sunset Strip (2000)
Underworld (2003)
Whiteboyz (1999)
Wrong Turn at Tahoe (2009)

April 2nd
Life Partners (2014)
Sinbad: The Fifth Voyage (2014)

April 3rd
All Hail King Julien: Season 1
Starry Eyes (2014)
The Quiet Ones (2014)

April 4th
Delta Farce (2007)

April 7th
Preservation (2014)
Wilfred: Season 4

April 8th
Halt and Catch Fire: Season 1 (2014)

April 9th
Crank (2006)
Pioneer (2013)

April 10th
The Awakening (2013)
Broken (2013)
Burning Bridges (2014)
Confusion Na Wa (2013)
Finding Mercy (2012)
Finding Mercy 2 (2014)
Flower Girl (2013)
Forgetting June (2013)
Knocking on Heaven's Door (2014)
Lagos Cougars (2013)
Lies Men Tell (2013)
Mad Couple (2014)
Mad Couple 2 (2014)
Marvel's Daredevil: Season 1
Matters Arising (2014)
October 1* (2014)
Onye Ozi (2013)
Ties That Bind (2011)

April 12th
The Identical (2014)

April 13th
Video Game High School: Season 3

April 14th
The Babadook (2014)
Goodbye to Language (2014)
Kink (2013)

April 16th
Hot Fuzz (2007)

April 17th
Baby Daddy: Season 4 Chris D'Elia: Incorrigible They Came Together (2014)

April 18th
Noah (2014)

April 21st
A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night (2014)

April 25th
Sons of Anarchy: Season 7

April 26th
The Nutty Professor 2: Facing the Fear (2008)

April 27th
National Treasure (2004)

So what new title coming to Netflix are you most excited for?  Share your thoughts in the comment section below.

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Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Home Video Update: What's New in March 2015

In which I report on what movies and TV shows are being released on BluRay and DVD this month.

At the beginning of every month, I stop off at my local Family Video and pick up their flier of new releases for the next month.  Becky and I then sit down and mark off which we've already seen and which we want to check out.  The more I thought about it, the more that I realized that this is pretty much exactly what I do with Netflix each month already, and it would probably be in everybody's best interest to keep you all up to date on what's new to watch on home video (especially those of you not fortunate enough to live across the street from a Family Video).  So without further ado, here are the best, best looking and biggest movies that are coming out this month on BluRay and DVD this month:
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 1 - Say what you will about money-grubbing studios whose sole interest is milking this broken franchise for all it's worth by splitting the last book into two films, but it was actually in the best interests of this film.  Mockingjay was a surprisingly plot-dense book that crammed far too much material into far too small a space, then told its story from the least interesting perspective possible.  The film, for all of its conceptual faults, Mockingjay - Part 1 gave the story room to breathe, opted to not tear down its iconic protagonist until she's unrecognizably shell-shocked and showed the other half of the propaganda war it was waging - allowing us to see the effect that Katniss' involvement was having on the rebellion.  It solved my every issue with the book (or at least its first half) and was a far better film than it ever was a book.

Release Date:  March 3
Foxcatcher - Despite failing to win over the Academy, Foxcatcher was #9 on my list of ten movies to see before Oscar night.  It's a wonderfully subtle character study that shows off the very best work of its three principle leads.  Fans of Tatum, Rufallo and an against-type Carell would be loathe to miss this tragic, almost fatalistic biopic of John du Pont and the two men whose lives he destroyed.

Release Date:  March 3
Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb - While I've never been a fan of either of the previous Night at the Museum Movies - both of which were ultimately average and forgettable - I am a fan of Robin Williams.  And as one of the last films he appeared in before his untimely death, it acts as a sort of time-delayed goodbye: one last chance to see him in action.  Secret of the Tomb had the misfortune of coming out at a time when theaters were weighed down by prestige films and superior winter blockbusters, so I didn't get a chance to see it then.  Now that the theaters are showing mostly disappointing fare, however, it's high time to give this one a chance.

Release Date:  March 10
Wolf Cop - I can't say that this film looks good, but I can say that it looks like great B-grade fun.  I mean, with a title like Wolf Cop and a tag line like "Half man, half wolf, all cop," how can you lose?

Release Date:  March 10
Exodus: Gods and Kings - Although the reviews that came out about this movie were less than positive - my personal favorite compared it to a Funimation cartoon - there's no denying the visual spectacle of seeing the plagues of Egypt rendered in staggeringly good, modern special effects.  Like Jupiter Ascending, everything good about this movie is visual: the production design, prop design, costume design and, yes, the CG.  That doesn't make it a good movie, but it does make it easy enough to sit through.  And for those of an especially religious bent, the subject matter will be a satisfying one.

Release Date:  March 17
Annie - While Annie did top a lot of critics worst of the year lists (at least the ones that I follow), there's little way to get around that this is a crowd pleaser.  Starring a pair of Oscar-nominated actors in a hip-hop update to a beloved musical classic, there was little chance that this would fail to find an audience.  The songs were well enough and there's no denying that they assembled a good cast (albeit a largely misused one), so it's a reasonable choice for a family movie when the adults get tired of cartoons.  Speaking of which...

Release Date:  March 17
Penguins of Madagascar - This is the umpteenth sequel to a movie that I didn't really care all that much for in the first place (a lot like my recent discussion of the Despicable Me series).  It's loud, dizzyingly frenetic and the definition of simplistic.  And yet, there is a certain appeal there for children, especially for those who grew up on fast-paced animation like Spongebob.  I wouldn't recommend that any adults seek this out themselves, but families could do worse that showing this to their kids for an evening.

Release Date:  March 17
Top Five - This is another end-of-year release that I might have gotten around to seeing if it wasn't squaring off against a far better-looking set of movies.  And at this point I actually regret that, seeing how many critics I follow called it one of the best movies of 2014.  Now, I'm not especially fond of Chris Rock and I couldn't possibly list of five rappers that I liked, but there still seems to be something there for my kind of admittedly white-bread crowd.  I look forward to checking this out and seeing what all of the fuss has been about.

Release Date:  March 17
Song of the Sea - At first, I resented this movie for taking The Lego Movie's Best Animated Feature slot at the Oscars (given the sad truth that The Box Trolls was already guaranteed a spot).  But when I finally got over that admittedly petty grievance, it actually looks to be one of the most visually stunning films of the year (a year, remember that also included the stunningly animated Tale of the Princess Kaguya).  The story, likewise, seems to be as ambitious as it is inspired.  Of all of the movies coming out on the 17th, this is easily my highest priority to see.

Release Date:  March 17
Unbroken - This was not a good movie.  It was an insipidly by-the-numbers historical drama that is like everything else that you've already seen, only without whatever charm or heart made them unique.  That's not to say that it's a bad movie, just that there are innumerably better movies out there - even WWII prisoner of war movies - for you to check out.  That being said, it's an inoffensively decent-made film that you could do worse than seeing.  It all comes down to how much you value your time.

Release Date:  March 24
The Hobbit: The Battle of Five Armies - Peter Jackson's bloated, over-long, cash-grabbing Hobbit trilogy is finally over and done with, begging the question of how long it'll be before he starts pre-production on The Silmarillian.  And although it was needlessly extended from a single book, the trilogy does include some of the best footage from any of Jackson's Tolkien adaptations, particularly the Riddles in the Dark segment from An Unexpected Journey.  So while bloated, it's fun; while inflated, it is exciting; and while flawed, it is never the less an admirable rendition of Tolkien's introduction to Middle Earth.

Release Date:  March 24
Into the Woods - I've already gone off on this infectiously, toe-tappingly fun musical.  It has a remarkable cast, exquisite musical numbers and one of the most heart-rending stories you could hope to find in theaters this winter.  And while it does lose some of the satirical edge of its theatrical forebear, it's a wonderfully revisionist take on classic fairy tales that seems to be Disney's live action bread and butter these days.  I know that a lot of people skipped out of this during its theatrical run, and that's really a shame.  Don't continue to pass it up on home video!

Release Date:  March 24
Interstellar - Don't let its appearance in purely technical categories at this year's Oscars fool you, Interstellar is one of the best movies of 2014.  It's ambitiously conceived, breathtakingly shot and mind-blowingly realized.  And let's not also forget it's phenomenal cast, who bring the story to life through their unquestionably excellent performances.  This is the 2001 for a new generation of cinephiles, and one that will be loved and studied for decades after its Academy snubs have been forgotten.

Release Date:  March 31
The Imitation Game - This was Becky's favorite of the Best Picture nominees, and I can certainly understand why.  This historical drama about Alan Turing - the man who broke the Nazi Enigma Code during World War II only to be persecuted by his own government for being a homosexual in its aftermath - is one of the most coldly moving films of the last year.  Benedict Cumberbatch is utterly resplendent in the lead and is surrounded by nearly as talented a cast to help flesh out the story.  Be sure to check this one out while its Oscar success keeps it in theaters for another week or two.

Release Date:  March 31
Wild - This was the other non-Best Picture nominee on my list of movies to see before last month's Oscar ceremony.  Even though it wasn't nominated for much, it was a strong contender in two of the acting races, directed by the man who helped Matthew McConaughey and Jared Leto win Oscars for their performances in Dallas Buyers Club.  Wild also marks a return to form of Reese Witherspoon, who has been largely absent from good movies since her win for Best Actress for Walk the Line.  Fans of Witherspoon or female lead dramas should be sure to check this one out when it hits shelves at the end of the month.

Release Date:  March 31
So what movie coming out this month are you most interested in seeing?

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Ask questions or share your thoughts in the comments section below.

Netflix Update: What's New in March 2015

In which I report on the upcoming changes to Netflix.

So are Netflix's newest additions to their streaming services enough to counterbalance what's leaving?  Well, yes and no (but mostly no).  There are a few choice shows and films coming on, but not in the numbers needed to stem the shift in quality from March's outgoing fare.
Netflix's biggest addition this month is the complete fifth season of the exceptionally hilarious spy spoof Archer.  It's the kind of show that relies heavily on references to previous jokes and episodes to generate humor - a lot like How I Met Your Mother - so the most recently completed season is a strong addition to its television lineup.

Although I haven't gotten into it yet, Mad Men's seventh season joins Netflix as well, adding to the popular show's already impressive roster of episodes.  And say what you will about the quality of Glee, but it's certainly popular enough to have gotten through as many seasons as Archer has.  Its fifth season will also be added at the beginning of the month.  The band Garfunkel and Oats will also see the first season of their show joining Netflix's tv series lineup, where it will hopefully find a wider audience.  Special mention must also be made for the first season of Turn and the complete series of Third Rock from the Sun.
Newly added movies are a bit sketchier in quality, however.  One of the only real gems among the new crop is Finding Neverland: a historical drama in which Johnny Depp plays the author who penned Peter Pan.  How to Train Your Dragon 2 will also be joining Netflix, although I think that the target audience for that film already has a well-worn copy of that film already.  Still, good movies are good movies, and I'm not one to complain about an expanding repertoire of must-see viewing.

Other than those two, horror fans will certainly enjoy The ABCs of Death 2 and fans of the late Robin Williams won't complain as yet another one of his vehicles is made available for repeated viewings.  Documentarians will appreciate the inclusion of Life Itself - which details the life and career of the late Roger Ebert.  Religiously-inclined subscribers will also find God's Not Dead a pleasing addition, even as the rest of us quietly scroll past it for something that's actually good.
Available March 1
Evelyn (2002)
Finding Neverland (2004)
Mercy Rule (2014)
Monster High 13 Wishes (2013)
Monster High: Ghouls Rule (2012)
30 for 30: Of Miracles and Men
Patch Adams (1998)
Rules of Engagement (2000)
Teen Witch (1989)
The Brothers Grimm (2005)

Available March 5
Food Chains (2014)
The ABCs of Death 2 (2014)

Available March 6
Aziz Ansari Live at Madison Square Garden (2015)
My Own Man (2014)
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt

Available March 7
Archer: Season 5
Glee: Season 5

Available March 9
After the Fall (2014)
Cesar Chavez (2014)
The Angriest Man in Brooklyn (2014)
Tyler Perry’s The Single Moms Club (2014)

Available March 10
Monster High: Haunted (2015)

Available March 11
How to Train Your Dragon 2 (2014)

Available March 15
3rd Rock From the Sun: Complete Series
A Different World: Complete Series
Marvel & ESPN Films Present: 1 of 1: Genesis (2014)

Available March 17
You’re Not You (2014)
Dummy (2002)

Available March 19
Life Itself (2014)

Available March 20
Bloodline: Season 1
God’s Not Dead (2014)

Available March 22
Mad Men: Season 7

Available March 23
November Man (2014)

Available March 25
Garfunkel and Oates: Season 1
Turn: Season 1

Available March 27
Trailer Park Boys: Season 9
Frankie & Alice (2010)

Available March 31
Ask Me Anything (2014)
The Man with the Iron Fists (2012)

So what newly added movie or series are you most looking forward to seeing in March?

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Ask questions or share your thoughts in the comments section below.

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Extra, Extra!: The Interview Coming to Netflix (And Sooner Than You Might Think)

In which I report on the latest in entertainment news.

Netflix announced on Tuesday that the highly controversial film The Interview will be available to stream as of January 24th.  Come Saturday, you can be sitting down to the Seth Rogen / James Franco comedy from the comfort of your own living room.
With the unprecedented uproar that the film caused, it's easy to forget exactly why that it.  And no, it's not just because Kim Jong-un is an unstable dictator who takes extreme offense to being made an international laughing stock (although that is certainly the case).  While cinematic satire often does take aim at the sitting rulers of unfriendly countries - such as Charlie Chaplin's The Great Dictator, which lampooned Hitler before the United States entered World War II - I am at a loss to think of any that revolve around his assassination, especially when turned into a farce by two of Hollywood's biggest clowns.

Months before its release, North Korea threatened to go to war against America if the film was allowed to run in theaters.  Other than a nebulous sense of unease among those who actually paid attention, these threats went unnoticed.  When North Korean hackers broke into Sony's data bases and threatened immediate and catastrophic acts of terror against theaters that chose to run the film immediately before its release, people took notice.  A number of theater chains (including AMC) refused to distribute the film at all, prompting Sony to pull distribution of the film altogether (a decision that was almost as quickly reversed).
Later this week(end), I will retrace 2014's craziest entertainment story in greater depth, but suffice it to say that North Korea balked at being so brazenly lampooned by two popular American satirists and threatened varying degrees of violence before theater chains, and eventually Sony, caved in to their demands.  Sony, realizing that the film had somehow galvanized the free-speech crowd, patched together a Frankenstein's monster of distribution in order to cover as much of the film's $44 million production costs as it could, including a hodgepodge theatrical release (mostly by smaller, independently run theaters), digital download and now Netflix streaming.

While it will doubtlessly not rank among the best films of the year, it will invariably be among the most interesting, if only for the stranger-than-fiction, geopolitical ruckus that it inadvertently caused.  It went from something that I would begrudgingly see because other people wanted to see it to something that I simply have to see just to make sense of the absolute cluster-fuck that surrounded its release.
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Thursday, January 8, 2015

Netflix Update: What's New to Netflix in January 2015

In which I report on the upcoming changes to Netflix.

Every month has its ups and downs on Netflix.  Sometimes you lose a lot and only gain a little.  Sometimes you lose a little and gain a lot in return.  This month really does seem like a pretty mixed bag: losing just as much as you get back from it.
The French Connection is something that I've wanted to see for an incredibly long time.  Directed by the notoriously difficult to work with William Friedkin (most famous for directing The Exorcist) and starring the singularly talented Gene Hackman, it follows a pair of New York cops attempting to break up a drug smuggling ring.

Its reputation of being one of the 70's best films, certainly precedes it.  And keep in mind that this is the same decade that produced the two good Godfathers, Star Wars, Apocalypse Now, The Omen, The Wicker Man and of course The Exorcist.  Given Friedkin's unfortunate career trajectory, it will be interesting to see his one other "great" film.
Like The French Connection, my interest in The Quiet Man is largely fueled by its immaculate reputation.  It was nominated for seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture and winning for Best Director and Best Cinematography.  It's one that is often name-dropped as being a one of the best-ever films (although not quiet so often as a lot of the higher-profile competition - the 2001's and Citizen Kanes of the world).

This is an interesting counterpoint to another John Ford film that left Netflix last month: The Grapes of Wrath.  Whereas The Grapes of Wrath was a somber piece about the trials and tribulations of dust bowel workers, The Quiet Man is a light-hearted romantic comedy starring John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara.  This might be a tough sell for Becky, who's suspicious of any centrally romantic films at even the best of times, but I'm sure I can find the opportune moment to slip this into our normally scheduled viewing.
Described at the time as "Hollywood at its worst told by Hollywood at its best," Sunset Blvd should appeal to the Netflix's film buff demographic.  It was nominated for 11 Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director, taking home, among others, Best Writing.  In the AFI's 1998 list, the film was named the 12th best American film of all time, slipping to 16th in their revised 2007 list.  On top of that, it has placed on the AFI's lists for best Quotes (#7 and # 24) and best Score (#16), and was nominated for best Villain.

Despite its resounding acclaim, Sunset Blvd is a film that I simply couldn't get into.  It was too "Old Hollywood" for me - too stagy and melodramatic.  It is certainly an unnerving portrayal of the price of fame, and features an incredibly intelligent screenplay, but I could never really connect with it the way that many others have.  Still, if you're looking for a spellbinding classic, and can stomach a hefty serving of melodrama, Sunset Blvd could very well be the film for you.
Chinatown is one of those love it or hate it kind of movies.  Roman Polanski's neo-noir film takes Nicholson at his absolute best and sets his hard-boiled detective against a twisting conspiracy that he just can't win against.  I have guardedly loved the film since first seeing it: between a beautifully pessimistic ending, an uncomfortable plot twist and one of Nicholson's best performances, I could hardly fault it if its central mystery was a touch duller than I had hoped for.  Becky, on the other hand, hated it.

And she isn't the only one either.  I think a lot of that has to do with the kind of noirs people are interested in these days, when they're interested in noirs at all.  It's less about a terse mystery smartly told as much as it is about an overly-stylized shoot-em-up with pulpy voice overs: Sin City when it's done well, A Dame to Kill For when it's not.  But those in the mood for a more old-fashioned mystery with greed and power at its core, this is the film for you.
Unlike most of my friends, I did not grow up enamored with - nor even watching - the Robocoop franchise.  It wasn't until earlier this year that I even saw the first film, and that was only on TV because of the pending remake.  What it lacked for in terms of satisfying action (and yes, I just said that), Robocop more than made up for with an intelligent mix of satire and humanity (the opposite is true for the remake).  It was definitely better than I had assumed it to be, and was disappointed that it took me so long to see it in the first place.

Not only is Robocop streamable now, but so is Robocop 2.  I'm excited not only to revisit that darkly satirical first film, but to see where the rest of the series goes when divorced from having a mechanized policeman solve his own murder.  While I'm sure that the series will eventually become what I always assumed the first one to be - a mindless, 90s-styled action film whose sole worth is measured in explosions - I have no problem sitting through the sequels until I get to that point.
So what are you looking forward to seeing on Netflix in January?  Do the new streaming options make up for what was thrown out at the end of December?  Share your thoughts in the comment section below.

January 1
101 Dalmatians (1996)
Bad Boys II 
(2003)
Batman & Robin 
(1997)
Bruce Almighty
 (2003)
Cast Away 
(2000)
Get Low 
(2009)
Election 
(1999)
Fear & Loathing in Las Vegas
 (1998)
Fort Bliss (2014)
Jeepers Creepers 2 
(2003)
Mean Girls 
(2004)
Shall We Dance? 
(2004)
To Be Takei 
(2014)
The French Connection 
(1971)
The Quiet Man 
(1952)
The War of the Worlds 
(1953)
Wayne
s World 2 (1993) 
Dallas (Season 3
January 2
Big Fish
Bowling for Columbine 
(2002)
Bright Lights, Big City 
(1988)
Chinatown 
(1974)
Deep Impact 
(1998)
Dirty Dancing 
(1987)
Footloose 
(1984)
Four Weddings and a Funeral 
(1994)
Fried Green Tomatoes 
(1991)
Ghost 
(1990)
Insomnia 
(2002)
Marathon Man 
(1976)
Marty 
(1955)
Moonstruck 
(1987)
Mr. Mom 
(1983)
Mystic Pizza (1988)
Mystic River 
(2003)
Notting Hill 
(1999)
Patriot Game 
(1992)
Pee-Wee's Big Adventure 
(1985)
The Ref 
(1994)
Robocop 
(1987)
Robocop 2 
(1990)
The Running Man 
(1987)
Sabrina 
(1995)
Snatch 
(2000)
Sunset Boulevard 
(1950)
Swingers 
(1996)
January 3 
Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit (2014) 
White Collar (Season 5)
January 7
Brick Mansions (2014) 
January 8
Frank (2014) 
Psych (Season 8)
January 9
Z Nation (Season 1)
January 13
Being Human (Season 4)
January 15
Wolfblood (Season 3)
January 16 
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (2011) 
The Adventures of Puss in Boots (Season 1)
The Fall (Season 2)
January 28 
Chef (2014) 
Beauty & the Beast (Season 2)
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