Everything Coming To Netflix, Disney Plus, HBO Max, Hulu And Prime This Week
As we head into the second week of February, let’s take a look at everything new that’s coming to the major streaming platforms over the next seven days. From the 8th to Valentine’s Day,
Netflix, Disney Plus, HBO Max, Hulu and Prime Video are adding a range of fresh movies and TV shows, both licensed and original, for subscribers to dive into. It’s not the most packed week for new releases, but there’s still a lot of stuff to enjoy all the same.
HBO Max Movies and TV Shows Streaming in February 2021
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HBO Max Movies and TV Shows Streaming in February 2021
HBO Max continues to be a streaming force to be reckoned with a February slate of classics and originals on the streamer.
February brings the release of two Warner Bros. theatricals premiering in theaters and on HBO Max on the same day. Debuting on February 12,
Judas and the Black Messiah tells the story of Bill O Neal (LaKeith Stanfield), who infiltrates the Black Panthers per FBI Agent Mitchell (Jesse Plemons) and J. Edgar Hoover (Martin Sheen). As Black Panther Chairman Fred Hampton (Daniel Kaluuya) ascends, falling for a fellow revolutionary (Dominique Fishback) en route, a battle wages for O Neal s soul.
The month of January brought a ton of content for HBO Max but this month will not be any different since the service has some really good stuff coming up. Here is everything that’s coming to the service this month (from Den of Geek):
February 1
The Amityville Horror, 1979 (HBO)
The Amityville Horror, 2005 (HBO)
American Style
It’s a Sin,
Max Original Limited Series Premiere: Set in 1981, Ritchie (Olly Alexander), Roscoe (Omari Douglas) and Colin (Callum Scott Howells) are young lads, strangers at first, leaving
home at 18 and heading off to London with hope and ambition and joy… and walking straight into a virus that most of the world ignores.
February 19
February 20
Jujutsu Kaisen, Season 1 Episodes 1-12 (Dubbed)
February 22
Beartown,
Series Premiere (HBO): A five-episode limited series from Sweden, explores the hopes that bring a small community together, the secrets that tear it apart, the courage it takes for an individual to go against the group and the consequences of how we raise our children.
In 2003’s
The Corporation, B.C. filmmakers Joel Bakan and Jennifer Abbott warned us that if the modern corporation was put through a psychological assessment, it’d be diagnosed a psychopath. In 2020, they returned with a sequel that admits an awful truth: the psychopaths won.
The New Corporation recaps the ensuing years of economic collapses and global decay, even incorporating COVID-19 into its narrative as both a technical obstacle to be worked through and the inevitable result of corporate disregard for public health. (And yes, this anti-corporate exposé counts Rogers and Bell among its production partners, which is perhaps the most 2020 thing about it.)