The 20th Monthly Review of February 2026

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.

3 thoughts on “The 20th Monthly Review of February 2026

  1. Pingback: February’s Failures | 100Films.co.uk

  2. I want to watch The Naked Gun; the trailer was great. I’ve recorded it onto the Tivo but just need to convince Claire to watch it. I think she’s seen just too many bad Liam Neeson movies.

    I’ve loved the Naked Gun stuff ever since the Police Squad TV show days, so I’m really looking forward to it. Even if its really bad I think it’ll be good. In some ways, that’s the whole point of them, relishing their own crapness, but its a tough sell with Claire. That’ll be her Neeson Radar flashing red. They should have cast Tom Hanks, I’d have had no problem at all, had that been the case…

    Liked by 1 person

    • Honestly, Neeson’s perfect for it precisely because of all those bad action movies. They don’t parody any of his films outright (at least, not any that I’ve seen), but he plays it completely straight, which I think is a big part of what makes the Naked Gun films work. I was worried it wouldn’t live up to the trailer, and undoubtedly that used some of the very best gags, but the rest hit a surprisingly-consistent high standard for me.

      Like

Leave a reply to ghostof82 Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.