Matt Damon slams Netflix for dumbed-down movies
Digest more
That’s why Watch With Us is throwing the spotlight on the four underrated Netflix movies you need to watch in January 2026. Our picks include a cyberpunk action film, an emotionally moving tale, a thriller and a zombie movie.
Dig into all the new Netflix TV shows and movies heading to Netflix this week, including "Finding Her Edge," "Star Search" and more.
With a screenplay by Tory Kamen, the film stars June Squibb, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Jessica Hecht, and Erin Kellyman, with the plot focusing on Eleanor Morgenstein, a ” 90-year-old woman trying to rebuild her life after the death of her best friend. As a result, she moves back to New York City after living in Florida for decades.”
Need something to watch this week? Figuring out what's streaming where has never been more convoluted as streamers merge, license their originals to competitors, and kind-of-sort-of-sometimes give their films a theatrical window first.
The star-studded action-thriller The Rip is out now on Netflix, and the Cold War spy drama Ponies dropped on Peacock, too. If you’re looking for something out of this world, Paramount+ just launched Star Trek: Starfleet Academy,
What's on Netflix on MSN
How to Watch the James Bond Movies in Order on Netflix
Netflix has picked up the complete James Bond collection. All 25 movies in the legendary British spy-action franchise are in the streamer’s library from January 21, 2026 (pushed back a little from January 16). Where should you start? And how long have you got to watch them? Here’s our guide!
A complete list of all the new Netflix movies coming in 2026, including Enola Holmes 3, Ben Affleck and Matt Damon's The Rip and more.
On Jan. 7, the streaming giant announced more than 100 new television shows and movies slated for release in 2026, along with new seasons of several well-known series. The slate of movies includes "The Rip," a new cop flick starring Boston's own Matt Damon and Ben Affleck.
Many impressive 2025 projects will likely have flown under your radar, as they succumbed to a drop in theatrical attendance. One such movie is Darren Aronofsky ’s Caught Stealing, the tale of Austin Butler ’s ex-baseball player Hank Thompson as he accidentally becomes caught up in the criminal world of '90s New York City.
Named one of EW’s scariest movies of all time, Romero’s slow-burn, documentary-like approach to the apocalypse is as mundane as it is violent; the end comes not with an explosion, but the slow encroachment of our dead loved ones. —I.G.