Streaming providers like Netflix not only offer their originals, but also licensed titles that expire over time and are replaced by new movies and series. At the end of March 2023, a particularly large number of films will disappear. The whole list is beyond the scope of this article, but we want to present you at least a few titles that you should stream soon if you have them on your watchlist. All of the following titles are only available on Netflix through March 31, 2023.
“Bohemian Rhapsody“ (3.5 out of 5 stars): Four Oscars (including Rami Malek for Best Actor) and worldwide box office earnings of a whopping $911 million – Bryan Singer’s Queen biopic was a huge hit. You can only stream the movie on Netflix for a few more days.
“Jupiter ascends“ (3 out of 5 stars): Matrix directors Lilly and Lana Wachowski ventured into a fearless and groundbreaking space opera in 2015, but failed with a roar at the box office. But the $175 million Sci-F epic is definitely worth checking out.
“To live“ (3.5 out of 5 stars): More science fiction, but a completely different subgenre. Based on “Alien,” director Daniel Espinosa stages a thrilling monster hunt aboard a space station starring superstars Rebecca Ferguson, Jake Gyllenhaal and Ryan Reynolds.
“My Girl – My first love“ (3.5 out of 5 stars): A successful tightrope walk between sympathetic family fun and dramatic childhood romance with ‘Home Alone’ star Macaulay Culkin. Funny, endearing and incredibly sad.
“The prisoners on death row“ (2.5 out of 5 stars): The action hit about a group of prisoners who fight each other on a remote island in a fight to the death was on the index for years, but is now released in its entirety from the age of 18. Genre fans should go for it despite some weaknesses, if only because of Vinnie Jones, who really takes things to a head here as a psychopathic ex-elite soldier.
“What’s left of the day“ (5 out of 5 stars): “What’s Left of the Day” was nominated for eight Oscars in 1994, but failed to win a single Academy Award. Never mind, we still have an unqualified recommendation for director James Ivory’s masterpiece.