February’s Failures

Welcome to my monthly “Failures” column, where I look back at some of the films I could, would, maybe even should have watched last month… but failed to.

It may be the shortest month of the year, and not exactly a time known for its hot box office release dates either, but my list of things I skipped on the big screen is surprisingly long this month. That said, a lot of them feel like smaller titles rather than headline grabbers. Exceptions include Emerald Fennel’s take on Wuthering Heights and the controversy-soaked Scream 7, plus awards season contenders like The Secret Agent and If I Had Legs I’d Kick You making their way to UK screens. Others that stood out to me for one reason or another included Sam Raimi’s Send Help, heist thriller Crime 101, and Gore Verbinski’s Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die. Look for them again as “films I failed to watch on streaming services” later this year, I guess.

A weak theatrical slate can be counterbalanced by streaming originals, especially at times of year with stay-at-home weather, but either I missed whatever the streamers were attempting to push this month or cared so little I didn’t even note it down. The only brand-new release I have listed is Prime Video’s piratical actioner The Bluff, which I may well watch because, well, pirates. The slack is barely taken up by former theatrical releases making their subscription streaming debuts, although I suppose Sky Cinema’s offering of the live-action How to Train Your Dragon and Jurassic World Rebirth is not insignificant. Nonetheless, I only have one apiece noted down from Disney+ (Ella McCay), Apple TV+ (Eternity), and Prime Video (Together), and nothing from Netflix but stuff shuffling around from one streamer to another (Abigail, The French Dispatch, Kung Fu Panda 4, The Last Voyage of the Demeter, etc).

Travelling further back in film history yields nothing from Netflix, as is typical, though it is something Amazon are always surprisingly good for, this month ranging from 8 Mile to Bob Hope comedy The Princess and the Pirate, via Neil “brother of Sean” Connery-starring Bond spoof Operation Kid Brother, and three titans of horror (Vincent Price, Christopher Lee, and Peter Cushing) co-starring in House of the Long Shadows. iPlayer is better in this regard, too, though they tend to cycle through the same set of films. Coming back into view this month were the likes of Bones and All, The Colditz Story, Malcolm X, Odette, Past Lives, and Women Talking.

Befitting their own paragraph were the many, many reminders of films I’ve bought on disc but not yet watched — David Cronenberg’s Crimes of the Future, Marcel the Shell with Shoes On, Roger Corman’s The Pit and the Pendulum, Sailor Suit and Machine Gun, in addition to a couple already mentioned for other reasons. I’m not sure it’s better or worse that there are also plenty I bought to rewatch but have not got round to either, like The Fountain, The Grand Budapest Hotel, Miami Vice, and Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man trilogy, which I haven’t seen since they were only on DVD, despite owning Blu-ray and 4K box sets (and the latter, especially, wasn’t cheap).

I guess I write these posts somewhat with the intention of shaming me into watching more stuff like that, but it obviously doesn’t work, does it? Nor does it stop me buying more, although this month it’s a short list by my standards. Sticking with rewatches, I insta-bought Criterion’s release of Birth. I normally try to wait out for sales with their titles (though their UK sales aren’t a patch on their US ones, and their US ones aren’t very accessible in the UK, so I actually haven’t bought much in them for a few years now), but Birth is a pretty great film, highly underrated, and long overdue a revisit. Also high on my want-to-rewatch list for some time now is Excalibur, which this month got a lavish 4K release from Arrow. It’s a film I feel I should adore, but haven’t quite on the couple of occasions I’ve seen it so far. I’m hoping one day it will click for me.

Those two labels also dominated by blind buys this month, with Errol Flynn swashbuckler Captain Blood from Criterion (I always feel like I should’ve seen more of those, but I’ve always found them surprisingly unavailable) and American Yakuza, Save the Green Planet, and (most excitingly, in my opinion) Peking Opera Blues from Arrow. Ever-reliable Eureka also got a look in with their Masters of Cinema box set Zen & Sword: The Miyamoto Musashi Saga at Toei, containing a five-film samurai sequence from the ’60s that they claim is the equal of my beloved Zatoichi. We’ll see. And finally, my one studio buy of the month: Predator: Badlands. That seemed a safe bet given how much I liked Dan Trachtenberg’s previous two films in that universe, both of which made it into one of my annual top tens (in 2022 and last year). No pressure, Badlands.

The 200th Monthly Review of February 2026

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In my review of the generally disappointing start to 2026 that was January, I commented that “I suspect February won’t hit eight Challenge films either.” Well, spoiler alert for the rest of this post: it didn’t. But it did improve on last month (marginally), so that’s something.

There have been external factors limiting my film viewing thus far this year, but things are taking a turn for the normal now, so hopefully March will mark an improvement. Until then, here’s the little February had to offer.



This month’s viewing towards my yearly challenge

#4 Solo for Sparrow (1962) — Series Progression #1
#5 Playback (1962) — Series Progression #2
#6 Dead Souls (2025) — New Film #1
#7 The Naked Gun (2025) — Failure #2


  • I watched four feature films I’d never seen before in February — double the number I watched in January.
  • All of them counted towards my 100 Films in a Year Challenge, but no rewatches this month.
  • That does make this the best month of the year for new films, beating January’s two. Not much to boast about, but it’s better than going the other direction.
  • You’d have to go back almost seven years to find a pair of months that were comparably as bad: four and five new films respectively in June and July 2019.
  • In fact, with a grand total of six new films between them, the only other pairs of consecutive months that are equally as bad were almost 17 years ago, when July 2009 was my only ever zero-film month, and June and August either side of it only had six films apiece.
  • From last month’s “failures” I watched The Naked Gun.
  • But still no Blindspot or WDYMYHS films yet this year.



The 129th Monthly Arbitrary Awards

Favourite Film of the Month
Slim pickings again, but the reboot of The Naked Gun was good enough that it would’ve been a contender even in a typical month. It recaptures the spirit of the original trilogy perfectly but dodges the bullet of being slavishly self-referential, as so many other legacy sequels are. It’s unquestionably the same formula, but done in a way that fits the modern era. Sublime silliness.

Least Favourite Film of the Month
I watched a couple of films from the Edgar Wallace Mysteries series of B-movies this month. As I’ve found typical of that run of films, they’re perfectly adequate crime filler but rarely exceed that remit. Of this pair, Playback has an edge of originality (even if it’s still fundamentally a do-over of Double Indemnity), so Solo for Sparrow is the loser.


As I said at the start, I hold hope that next month will begin to see things turn around. “93 Films in 10 Months” isn’t quite as catchy a title, but it’s what I’m aiming for now.