
On the departure list is everything from Ray, the 2004 biopic that snagged Jamie Foxx his Oscar, to Tim Burton's fantastical Big Fish (2003), to literally decades' worth of Doctor Who. Say goodbye to the original (and best) Terminator (1984). In fact, there are a bunch of '80s classics worth catching before they disappear, including Terms of Endearment, Rain Man, and The Naked Gun. Remember that you've got one extra day to dedicate to binging next month, as it's a leap year, so take advantage. (Though that's still one or two days fewer than every other month, so binge wisely.) One title that's not optional? The Kate Bosworth and Michelle Rodriguez nostalgia-fest that is 2002's surf drama Blue Crush.
And without further ado, here is everything leaving Netflix in February.
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Alvin and the Chipmunks Meet Frankenstein (1999)
The power of cute, times three, takes on the infamous monster in this animated feature. Their greatest weapon: those shrill singing voices.
Leaving February 1

Asylum (2005)
Natasha Richardson and Hugh Bonneville star as an unhappily married British couple in the 1950s. He works as a psychiatrist at a remote mental asylum; she takes up with one of his unstable patients.
Leaving February 1

Bad Santa (2003)
This not-so-family-friendly Christmas movie co-stars Lauren Graham and Bernie Mac, but the real tree-topper is Billy Bob Thornton, playing a St. Nick version of the seedy lowlife he always plays.
Leaving February 1

Benny & Joon (1993)
Johnny Depp was warming up to play Captain Jack way back in the ‘90s. He shows early signs of his knack for physical comedy in this offbeat rom-com about two eccentrics falling in love.
Leaving February 1

Big Fish (2003)
The least creepy of Tim Burton’s titles, this whimsical fantasy film follows a boy (Billy Crudup) trying to separate fact from fiction when it comes to the most mythologized man in his life, his dad (Ewan McGregor). Co-stars include Jessica Lange and Danny DeVito.
Leaving February 1

Blue Crush (2002)
Kate Bosworth and Michelle Rodriguez star as badass surfer babes riding waves both literal and metaphorical on the North Shore of Hawaii.
Leaving February 1

Classic Doctor Who: Collections 1—8 (1963-1981)
The special effects aren’t exactly awe-inspiring in the Doctor Who of the ‘60s, ‘70s, and ‘80s. But the interstellar story lines are just as imaginative, and every early incarnation of the Doctor — and his companions — has a charm of its own to offer.
Leaving February 1

Crocodile Dundee 2 (1988)
Paul Hogan reprises the role of Mick Dundee, a rough-around-the-edges Aussie from the Outback. His new life in New York with his love (Linda Kozlowski) is interrupted by a pesky Columbian drug cartel.
Leaving February 1

The Dancer Upstairs (2002)
John Malkovich’s directorial debut stars Javier Bardem as a detective dedicated to dismantling the brutal guerrilla campaign being waged by a dangerous rebel. But his daughter’s dance teacher proves to be a distraction.
Leaving February 1

Daylight (1996)
This ‘90s disaster flick, starring Sylvester Stallone, is the stuff of every tristate-area commuter’s nightmares: Trucks carrying toxic waste explode in the Holland Tunnel, sparking a deadly fireball that threatens New York City.
Leaving February 1

Doctor Who: Season 1—8 (2005-2014)
The Doctor Who reboot may be one of the most successful TV revivals in history. This new run’s Doctors include handsome fan favorites David Tennant and Matt Smith.
Leaving February 1

The Firm (1993)
This legal thriller, starring Tom Cruise as a Harvard Law grad movin’ on up, was adapted by Sydney Pollack from the John Grisham novel.
Leaving February 1

Fletch (1985)
In this spy comedy, Chevy Chase stars as a Los Angeles-based investigative journalist, who gets tangled up in criminal plot involving the very drug scandal he’s reporting on.
Leaving February 1

Gifted Hands (2009)
Cuba Gooding Jr. plays fledgling Republican presidential hopeful Ben Carson before he took a stab at politics — when he was just a regular old revolutionary neurosurgeon.
Leaving February 1

Gothika (2003)
Halle Berry is probably glad this crappy, creepy thriller is going away. She plays a psychiatrist who wakes up as a patient in the mental hospital where she works, with no memory of how she got there.
Leaving February 1

The Hurt Locker (2008)
If you’ve never seen 2008’s Best Picture Oscar-winner, now’s your chance. Regarded by many as the greatest dramatization of the Iraq War, Kathryn Bigelow’s raw action-drama stars Jeremy Renner, Anthony Mackie, and Brian Geraghty as a three-man bomb-disposal squad.
Leaving February 1

The Naked Gun (1988)
If you’d like to see O.J. Simpson in a sillier light before American Crime Story premieres, watch this hilarious classic, which stars Leslie Nielsen as a bumbling detective charged with stopping a plot to assassinate the Queen.
Leaving February 1

The Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult (1994)
Lt. Frank Drebin comes out of retirement to foil a plan to bomb the Oscars. Good timing on this one, Netflix.
Leaving February 1

Rain Man (1988)
This touching drama, co-starring Tom Cruise, swept the Academy Awards in 1989, scoring Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Actor for Dustin Hoffman’s role as an autistic savant.
Leaving February 1

Secrets and Lies: Season 1
Family man Ben finds the dead body of a neighborhood boy in the woods, but the town’s view of him quickly sours from local hero to murder suspect.
Leaving February 1

Ray (2004)
Jamie Foxx proved his acting chops in this excellent biopic, a textured look at the life of blues legend and American icon Ray Charles.
Leaving February 1

Sorority Row (2009)
This comically bad sorority-set slasher flick is worth watching for the cheap laughs alone — and for the chance to see Audrina Patridge give the big screen her best shot.
Leaving February 1

The Terminator (1984)
The original Terminator is an ‘80s sci-fi masterpiece. Arnold delivers some of his most iconic lines here (“I’ll be back”), and Linda Hamilton kicks bad-robot ass.
Leaving February 1

Terms of Endearment (1983)
This seminal mother-daughter drama boasts an all-star cast, including Shirley MacLaine, Jack Nicholson, Danny DeVito, Jeff Daniels, John Lithgow, and Debra Winger. No wonder it won five Oscars, including Best Picture.
Leaving February 1

Pokémon the Movie: Black: Victini and Reshiram (2011)
Pokémon the Movie: White: Victini and Zekrom (2011)
Pokémon the Movie: Kyurem vs. The Sword of Justice(2012)
Pokémon the Movie: Black & White: BW Adventures in Unova and Beyond (2013)
Pokémon the Movie: Genesect and the Legend Awakened(2013)
The 2010s reincarnation of the Pokémon franchise features these five animated features, dubbed from Japanese and following the good-vs.-evil plotlines driven by Ash, Iris, and Cilan.
Leaving February 2

Pokemon: Black & White: Seasons 1-2 (2010-2011)
In case you didn’t quite get your fill from that Pokémon the Movie marathon.
Leaving February 2

Pokémon: Indigo League: Season 2 (1998)
And finally, here’s a nostalgia-worthy iteration of the classic franchise.
Leaving February 2

Bottle Shock (2008)
In 1976, Napa Valley winemakers beat out French vintners in a blind taste test in Paris (oh mon dieu, l’horreur!). For the record, this mediocre dramedy fictionalizing the real-life wine-world scandal is better with a glass of cheap (California) Chardonnay in hand.
Leaving February 3

Compliance (2012)
This insidious thriller, about a fast-food employee manipulated into violating a coworker by a sick prank caller posing as a cop, examines just how far an authority figure can stretch an underling’s moral boundaries. The scariest part is that it’s based on a real incident.
Leaving February 7

Jack & Diane (2012)
Two teenage girls meet in New York, make out, discover their sexuality, and then fall in love right before one of them has to leave the country. Oh, and one of the gals has werewolf-like visions.
Leaving February 7

Bridezillas: Season 10 (2013)
This docuseries might make anyone poised to propose to their S.O. on Valentine’s Day seriously question that life choice.
Leaving February 11

Stephen King's Bag of Bones (2011)
Pierce Brosnan plays a famous novelist who retreats to a lake house after his wife dies and he is stricken by grief and writer’s block. Obviously, said lake house is haunted. Based on King’s supernatural best seller.
Leaving February 11

United 93 (2006)
It was still too soon for many to relive the events of September 11, even five years after the attacks. If you’ve never seen it, do so now before it’s gone. It’s not a pleasant watch, but it’s an important one.
Leaving February 11

Were the World Mine (2008)
A gay teenager turns his homophobic hometown gay using a love elixir. No doubt there are ultra-conservative bigots out there who are pretty sure this is a documentary.
Leaving February 11

The Fourth Kind (2009)
People have been mysteriously disappearing from Nome, AK, since the 1960s. This sci-fi horror thriller, starring Milla Jovovich, runs wild with the conspiracy theory that those unsolved cases are really alien abductions.
Leaving February 13

Kitten Party (2010)
But where will we get our fill of fancy-free felines without Kitten Party?! It’s not like the internet is 50% cat videos or anything.
Leaving February 15

The Pitch: Season 2 (2013)
AMC tries to build off its Mad Men cred with this reality series that follows modern ad firms trying to win new business. Unfortunately, none of the execs are as sexy as Don Draper or as pioneering as Peggy Olson.
Leaving February 16

Violet & Daisy (2011)
Geoffrey S. Fletcher, who won Best Adapted Screenplay for Precious, decided to try his hand at directing. Bad move. Even James Gandolfini, Saoirse Ronan, and Alexis Bledel can’t save this mess of a crime dramedy about a pair of teenage assassins.
Leaving February 17

North Sea Texas(2011)
Set in a rural Belgian town in the 1970s, this beautiful and unusual coming-of-age story tells the tender tale of two teenage boys who are thrown off when they develop strong feelings of love for each other.
Leaving February 19

Problem Child: Leslie Jones(2009)
The SNL star’s stand-up debut is everything great about a solid comedy routine: hysterical, confident, mired in pop culture, and very dirty.
Leaving February 19

Side by Side (2012)
Keanu Reeves produced this documentary about the digital revolution in filmmaking. Asking what we gain and what we lose from this technological revolution, it’s a fascinating watch for any cinephile.
Leaving February 19

Jesus Camp (2006)
This eye-opening documentary is the story of Kids on Fire, a Christian summer camp in North Dakota that mires young minds in devotion to their faith. How explosive are the revelations? The doc sparked controversies that helped lead to the camp’s eventual closure.
Leaving February 21

Marriage Boot Camp: Bridezillas: Season 1 (2013)
What should you do when your marriage is in trouble? Sign onto a reality TV show that puts you and your S.O. through the emotional wringer for two weeks, and see if you can make it through without killing each other. Works like a charm!
Leaving February 21

Nobody Walks(2012)
This moody dramedy stars John Krasinski, Olivia Thirlby, and Rosemarie DeWitt in a tired love triangle — the trope in which the sexy young houseguest threatens a marriage, and everybody loses. Fun fact: It’s co-written by Lena Dunham.
Leaving February 21

Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning (2012)
This sci-fi action flick is jam-packed with excessive and brutal violence, genetically enhanced super-warriors, male egos, and terrible dialogue.
Leaving February 21

Chicagoland: Season 1 (2014)
CNN’s eight-part docuseries takes a look at the political, social, economic, and racial strifes that define the Windy City.
Leaving February 24

Death Row Stories: Season 1 (2014)
As Americans increasingly question the morality of capital punishment, this docuseries offers food for thought by examining complicated individual cases that point out the flaws in the system.
Leaving February 24

The Guild: Season 1 (2007)
Felicia Day created this hilarious web series, which premiered on YouTube before its popularity gained it wider streaming distribution. The show follows geeky gamers who make up an online guild dedicated to a fantasy video game.
Leaving February 25

Crooked Arrows (2012)
Caucasian actor Brandon Routh — you know, SUPERMAN — plays a mixed-race Native American. And that’s all you need to know to be sure you’re not missing anything by skipping this awful lacrosse drama.
Leaving February 27

Halloween: Resurrection (2002)
Remember when they brought Halloween back from the dead for this 2002 clunker, the eighth installment in the franchise? Jamie Lee Curtis, Busta Rhymes, and Tyra Banks would sure be glad if ya didn’t.
Leaving February 27

Sabrina, The Animated Series: Season 1-2 (1999-2000)
This charming animated precursor to the live-action series is wicked cute.
Leaving February 28

The Sea Inside (2004)
Javier Bardem will blow you away with his performance as a Ramón Sampedro, a real-life quadriplegic who fought a 30-year legal battle for the right to end his own life. Depressing, but stunning.
Leaving February 28

Sonic the Hedgehog: The Complete Series (1993-1994)
The electric-blue hedgehog has to defend his home planet from the evil Dr. Ivo Robotnik.
Leaving February 28
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