5 Movies You Won’t Get to See on Netflix Anymore After March
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These are some of the best films the streamer had before it announced their departure on February 28.
Netflix has been long having its movies come and go, and this month, sadly, isn’t an exception. Some exciting new arrivals are coming to the platform already in March, while Netflix’s previous hits will go forever, looking for another streaming home (if they haven’t found one yet).
However, there’s still a day left to finally give a watch or rewatch to those flicks that won’t be on the platform starting from tomorrow, and some of them are critically acclaimed dramas that will likely become a great option for you ahead of the upcoming Oscars ceremony on March 2.
Stand by Me (1986)
One of Stephen King ’s most heartwarming stories that don’t have to deal with evil clowns or eerie supernatural events, Stand by Me is coming-of-age drama that stars Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix, Corey Feldman and Jerry O'Connell, following four friends embarking on a search for the body of a long-missing boy.
King has repeatedly stated that the movie is a constant in his personal list of his most favorite adaptations, and we have nothing else to add — on Rotten Tomatoes Stand by Me still holds scores of 92% and 94% from critics and audiences.
Seven Years in Tibet (1997)
Based on Austrian mountaineer Heinrich Harrer’s memoir of the same name, Seven Years in Tibet stars Brad Pitt and David Thewlis as two friends Heinrich and Peter exploring the Indian mountains in the 1930s when World War II unfolds.
Having exposed their German citizenship, both are sent to a prisoner-of-war camp which, years later, they manage to escape by crossing the border into Tibet.
There Heinrich’s narcissistic nature will have to undergo major challenges as he will learn to understand a real purpose of life instead of the one he was following all this time.
Still Alice (2014)
The movie that finally brought Julianne Moore her long-overdue Oscar back in 2015, Still Alice is a heart-shattering drama about Moore’s Alice Howland, a famous linguistics professor at Columbia University whose life starts falling apart once she’s diagnosed with early-stage Alzheimer’s disease.
The film thoroughly accompanies Alice through all hardships of her rapid decline and sees both her and her family struggling to keep things together when it’s pretty clear that a big tragedy is imminent.
The Sisters Brothers (2018)
Despite the Joaquin Phoenix-led Western not being Oscar bait whatsoever, the movie received universal acclaim and remains one of the best recent flicks of the genre.
Directed by Emilia Pérez’s Jacques Audiard and also starring John C. Reilly, The Sisters Brothers follows Charlie and Eli Sisters, assassins tempted by the idea of dealing with any type of problems on their way to the gold rush land of California.
Despite being united by their common plan, the Sisters brothers see their relationships adapt to drastic changes once they embark on their mission. The movie was generally praised by both critics and viewers and currently holds scores of 87% and 69% respectively on Rotten Tomatoes.
The Other Guys (2010)
When Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg get to be in the same movie, you know it’s going to be a blast.
Also starring Eva Mendes, Michael Keaton and Dwayne Johnson, The Others Guys is a buddy cop comedy following NYPD detectives Gamble and Hoitz who struggle to make their names sound loudly in their work sphere.
However, when a seemingly trifling case turns out to be a big opportunity, both decide to do everything they can to prove themselves as heroes to the rest of NYPD cops.