What's Coming Out This Week In Theaters and On Streaming, VOD & TV: February 2 thru February 8, 2026
All the 🎥 films and 📺 shows hitting theaters and streaming this week!
February is here, and with it comes a new selection of movies and shows ready to stir up your watchlist. In theaters, a batch of horror titles is sliding into the spotlight, hoping to take a bite out of the box office this weekend, while the TV side of things is feeling a bit sparse thanks to the Big Game taking over Sunday night. Still, there’s no shortage of options. So if you need a quick refresher on what’s arriving over the next few days... well, here you go!
🎥 In Theaters This Week
🎥 Stray Kids: The dominATE Experience
(Wed, Feb 4th — IMAX release)
K-Pop sensation Stray Kids take over SoFi Stadium in this IMAX concert film that turns sold-out performances into an arena-sized theatrical rush, blending precision choreography, thunderous music, and the raw electricity of fandom. With exclusive behind-the-scenes access pulling fans even closer, this is proof that devotion doesn’t just fill seats... it shakes the whole building.
🎥 Dracula
(Fri, Feb 6th — wide release)
Caleb Landry Jones is a cursed 15th-century prince turned immortal vampire, drifting through centuries in search of his lost wife’s reincarnation (Matilda De Angelis), only to find tragic romance, religious fury, and blood-soaked inevitability waiting for him again in 1880s France in Luc Besson’s operatic reimagining of the Dracula myth.
🎥 The Strangers: Chapter 3
(Fri, Feb 6th — wide release)
Madelaine Petsch returns as lone survivor Maya, dragged into a blood-soaked final stand in a small town where every friendly smile masks a shared conspiracy, with Gabriel Basso, Ema Horvath, and Richard Brake circling the carnage. Once again directed by Renny Harlin, this final installment proves some nightmares don’t like to end quietly.
🎥 Solo Mio
(Fri, Feb 6th — wide release)
Comedian Kevin James stars as a jilted groom who refuses to cancel his Italian honeymoon, roaming solo through Rome and beyond as great food, scenic detours, and unexpected connections begin to mend a very public heartbreak. This sun-soaked rom-com suggests the fastest way past being left at the altar might be getting lost in Italy, and finding someone worth slowing down for.
🎥 Buffalo Kids
(Fri, Feb 6th — wide release)
Two orphaned Irish siblings arrive in New York City in 1886 and leap aboard a transcontinental train, embarking on a cross-country adventure where unexpected friendships, real danger, and sweeping landscapes reshape what family truly means in this uplifting animated journey. A reminder that home isn’t a place you reach... it’s something you build together.
🎥 Whistle
(Fri, Feb 6th — wide release)
Dafne Keen and Sophie Nélisse star as teens who unleash a deadly curse after blowing an ancient Aztec death whistle (oopsy!), summoning visions of death that turn one bad decision into a full-blown nightmare. With Nick Frost along for the ride as a high school school teacher and directed by horror helmer Corin Hardy (The Nun), once that whistle screams, silence is no longer an option.
🎥 The Moment
(Fri, Feb 6th — expanding nationwide)
Inspired by Charli XCX’s “brat summer” concert tour, this darkly satirical psychological music romp follows a pop star unraveling as the branding machine of fame erodes her sense of self and turns life into performance while gearing up for a world tour. With Charli XCX playing a heightened version of herself, the film weaponizes paranoia and dissociation to skewer celebrity culture and the cost of living as a nonstop public product where art and self-branding are indistinguishable.
🎥 Scarlet
(Fri, Feb 6th — IMAX release)
From visionary filmmaker Mamoru Hosoda comes a time-bending anime epic about a vengeance-driven medieval princess hurled into a modern Otherworld, where inherited hatred clashes with the possibility of healing as she confronts a life she no longer understands.
🎥 Pillion
(Fri, Feb 6th — limited release)
Alexander Skarsgård and Harry Melling star in a provocative gay BDSM rom-com where an unlikely romance between a dominant biker and a self-effacing loner turns control, surrender, and desire into something unexpectedly tender. Written and directed by first-time feature filmmaker Harry Lighton, this offbeat love story suggests intimacy isn’t about rewriting the rules, it’s about choosing which ones to break, no matter who’s watching.
🎥 My Father’s Shadow
(Fri, Feb 6th — limited release)
Set against Nigeria’s 1993 election crisis, two young brothers roam Lagos with their estranged father (played by Sope Dirisu), turning a simple journey home into a charged reckoning shaped by political unrest, fractured bonds, and the quiet ache of unfinished relationships. Directed by Akinola Davies Jr., this poetic family drama proves that when a nation is coming apart, growing up has a way of happening all at once.
🎥 Sirāt
(Fri, Feb 6th — limited release; expanding)
In this recent Oscar-nominated Best International Film from French-Galician filmmaker Oliver Laxe, Spanish star Sergi López plays a father scouring Morocco’s desert rave scene for his missing daughter, drifting through hypnotic nights of bass, belief, and endurance while clinging to the faint hope of a reunion months after she vanished.
🎥 Jimpa
(Fri, Feb 4th — limited release)
Olivia Colman stars as a woman traveling to Amsterdam with her non-binary teen in hopes of reconnecting with her estranged father (John Lithgow), only to find old wounds, clashing values, and unfinished love waiting at every turn. Written and directed by Sophie Hyde, this quietly piercing family drama suggests that reconciliation isn’t about fixing the past, but learning how to live with what remains.
🎥 The President’s Cake
(Fri, Feb 6th — limited release)
From writer-director Hasan Hadi, this powerful Iraqi drama distills a sweeping geopolitical crisis into one child’s impossible mission during the 1990s Iraq sanctions. Nine-year-old Lamia (Baneen Ahmed Nayyef) is ordered to bake a birthday cake for the President amid crushing food scarcity, forcing her to navigate a city of looming threats and impossible choices no child should ever face.
🎥 The Roaring Game
(Fri, Feb 6th — limited release; also on VOD)
Darin Brooks stars as a janitor whose quiet spiral turns into a last-ditch grab for relevance, romance, and redemption after he stumbles into the unlikely world of competitive curling alongside a team of equally bruised misfits. Written and directed by Tom DeNucci and co-starring Fivel Stewart, Eddie Kaye Thomas, William Forsythe, and Rob Gronkowski, this low-stakes sports comedy proves that there’s no limit to what a little self-belief (and a very slow-moving sport) can unlock.
🎦 Streaming This Week
🎦 Relationship Goals
(Wed, Feb 4th — premiering on Prime Video)
Love doesn’t respect office politics, but it does love to show up at the worst possible time. Kelly Rowland and Clifford “Method Man” Smith star as career-driven exes forced to compete for the same high-profile TV job, turning professional rivalry into a Valentine’s Day showdown loaded with unresolved feelings and spectacularly bad timing in this Amazon original rom-com.
🎦 The Investigation of Lucy Letby
(Wed, Feb 4th — premiering on Netflix)
This true-crime documentary revisits the divisive conviction of Lucy Letby, using unseen footage and insider testimony to reexamine the evidence, institutional failures, and lingering doubts that suggest the truth may be just as unsettling as the crime itself.
🎦 Ella McCay
(Thurs, Feb 5th — streaming on Hulu/Disney+)
Sex Education breakout Emma Mackey leads James L. Brooks’s first film in 15 years as a newly elected governor whose idealism crashes into political pressure and chaotic family drama. Joined by Woody Harrelson, Jamie Lee Curtis, and Albert Brooks, this witty dramedy channels the warm, character-driven studio comedies of decades past.
🎦 Queen of Chess
(Fri, Feb 6th — premiering on Netflix)
Checkmate to the boys’ club! This Sundance documentary charts the rise of Hungarian chess prodigy Judit Polgár from underestimated outsider to history-making legend, using archival footage and candid interviews to show how sheer intellect and will forced a cultural shift in a game that claimed to be pure merit.
🎦 The Moment
(Fri, Feb 6th — premiering on Tubi)
Women’s basketball didn’t just grow, it fought, endured, and kept showing up long before its current moment in the spotlight. This sports documentary traces five decades of progress through trailblazers, coaches, and cultural shifts, culminating with Dawn Staley and her championship South Carolina dynasty as proof that persistence eventually changes the game.
🎦 Splitsville
(Fri, Feb 6th — streaming on Hulu/Disney+)
From the comedic minds behind The Climb, Kyle Marvin stars as a freshly dumped romantic who finds refuge with married friends Paul (Michael Angelo Covino) and Julie (Dakota Johnson), until he learns their marital secret is an open relationship. When curiosity turns into catastrophe and boundaries collapse, this offbeat rom-com argues that love can be flexible, but friendships tend to snap a lot faster than anyone’s prepared for.
🎦 Boys Go to Jupiter
(Fri, Feb 6th — streaming on HBO MAX)
First-time filmmaker Julian Glander delivers a wildly colorful animated coming-of-age romp about slacker Billy 5000 hustling to make five grand before New Year’s, only for a botched delivery and a cosmic stowaway to turn Florida into an absurd obstacle course of love, capitalism, and citrus-fueled chaos. Featuring voices from Elsie Fisher, Janeane Garofalo, Julio Torres, and Sarah Sherman, it’s proof that growing up is hard, especially during an intergalactic juice war.
✅ On VOD This Week
✅ Hamnet
(Tues, Feb 3rd — on VOD/Digital)
Oscar-winning filmmaker Chloé Zhao returns with a sweeping 16th-century drama adapted from Maggie O’Farrell’s acclaimed novel, imagining the personal loss that may have shaped Shakespeare’s magnum opus Hamlet through the lives of the young playwright (Paul Mescal) and his wife, Agnes (Oscar-nominee Jesse Buckley), as they mourn their son, Hamnet. It’s a hushed, soul-deep portrait of love, memory, and devastation... and a reminder that genius doesn’t arrive fully formed, sometimes it’s carved out of pain.
✅ The Secret Agent
(Tues, Feb 3rd — on VOD/Digital)
Recent Oscar nominee Wagner Moura stars as a widowed researcher hunted by Brazil’s 1977 military dictatorship, forced into a desperate alliance with the enigmatic Elza (Maria Fernanda Cândido) and her resistance fighters to protect his son and stay one step ahead of the regime. Directed by Kleber Mendonça Filho, this paranoid political thriller proves that under authoritarian rule, the first thing to go is the security of one’s self... and the last is your ability to trust anyone.
✅ The Housemaid
(Tues, Feb 3rd — on VOD/Digital)
Perfect homes don’t stay perfect for long. Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried star in this sleek psychological thriller where a woman on the run accepts a dream live-in job, only to discover that spotless surfaces hide ruthless power games and carefully managed lies.
✅ The Plague
(Tues, Feb 3rd — on VOD/Digital)
Set at a summer water polo camp for boys, this psychological thriller follows a shy newcomer (Everett Blunck) who’s pulled into a ritualized form of bullying that feels less like hazing and more like a warning, where fitting in quickly becomes a matter of survival. With Joel Edgerton co-starring and producing, writer-director Charlie Polinger’s unsettling debut suggests the real horror isn’t cruelty, it’s how easily everyone learns to live with it.
✅ We Bury the Dead
(Tues, Feb 3rd — on VOD/Digital)
During a pandemic-ravaged collapse, a woman joins a grim body-retrieval unit in Australia while searching for her missing husband, only to learn the dead aren’t staying dead. As Ava (Daisy Ridley) pushes deeper into the wasteland, a botched military experiment turns her quest for closure into a relentless fight for survival against a full-blown zombie outbreak.
✅ The Dutchman
(Tues, Feb 3rd — on VOD/Digital)
André Holland stars as a businessman whose routine subway commute spirals into a dangerous psychological and sexual power game with a mysterious stranger (Kate Mara). What begins as flirtation in the claustrophobic tunnels turns into obsession and violence, pushing both toward a shocking, destabilizing breaking point.
✅ The Morrigan
(Tues, Feb 3rd — on VOD/Digital)
From writer-director Colum Eastwood comes an Irish folk horror in which an archaeologist (played by Saffron Burrows) travels to Ireland and accidentally awakens something ancient and furious: a pagan war goddess fixated on her teenage daughter. With Toby Stephens and James Cosmo in the mix, this supernatural nightmare proves some myths are better left buried, because history has a tendency to come back angry.
✅ Twisted
(Fri, Feb 6th — on VOD/Digital)
The con becomes a cage when a young scam artist targets a sadistic New York surgeon and discovers she’s been lured into a meticulously designed trap behind a locked brownstone door. From Saw II director Darren Lynn Bousman, this sadistic survival nightmare pits Terrifier standout Lauren LaVera against Djimon Hounsou, turning greed into captivity and power into a brutal fight for survival where escape is no longer guaranteed.
✅ F Valentine’s Day
(Fri, Feb 6th — on VOD/Digital)
Love hates calendars, but it really hates control freaks. In this sun-splashed rom-com, Virginia Gardner plays a Valentine’s Day–dodging cynic who escapes to Greece to derail her well-meaning boyfriend’s (Skylar Astin) perfectly timed proposal, only to find her careful avoidance nudged into chaos by meddling vacation companions and inconvenient self-reflection. Turns out you can sometimes delay love, but you can’t reschedule the moment when love decides it’s had enough of your plans.
✅ OBEX
(Fri, Feb 6th — on VOD/Digital)
Set in 1987, this black-and-white fever dream follows a reclusive gamer (Albert Birney) whose new computer obsession traps him inside a glitchy analog nightmare where reality pixelates and paranoia takes over. In this haunting ode to early tech and late-night horror, this lo-fi indie rewires ‘80s nostalgia into a haunting reflection on isolation in the digital age.
⇯ See Above: ✅The Roaring Game (Fri, Feb 6; VOD/Digital)
📺 On TV This Week
📺 The Muppet Show
(Wed, February 4th — on ABC/Hulu/Disney+)
Kermit and the Muppets return for a one-night musical variety blowout, joined by pop star Sabrina Carpenter, Seth Rogen and a parade of celebrity guests, where big numbers, bigger egos, and backstage chaos compete for the spotlight. It’s loud, loose, and lovingly off the rails, because when the Muppets are in charge, the mess is the main event.
📺 The Lincoln Lawyer: Season 4
(Thurs, February 5th — on Netflix)
The law looks a lot colder from the wrong side of the bars. Defense attorney Mickey Haller (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) becomes the prime suspect when a former client turns up dead in his car, forcing him to mount the most personal defense of his life from inside a jail cell. Framed by evidence he knows how to dismantle but can’t outrun, this case proves that knowing the system doesn’t mean it will ever be on your side.
📺 Unfamiliar
(Thurs, February 5th — on Netflix)
Created by Paul Coates, this Berlin-set spy thriller follows two former intelligence agents (Felix Kramer and Susanne Wolff) as they juggle parenthood while their buried pasts start snapping back into place, turning trust into a daily risk assessment. Because in this line of work, you can outrun enemies, but lying to the people you love is what really gets you killed.
📺 Field Generals: History of the Black Quarterback
(Thurs, February 5th — on Peacock)
This documentary series revisits the history of the NFL through the Black quarterbacks who were asked to win games without ever being fully trusted to lead them, tracing how talent, race, politics, and perception collided on football’s most scrutinized stage.
📺 Salvador
(Fri, February 6th — on Netflix)
In this gritty Spanish thriller series, Luis Tosar stars as an ambulance driver who infiltrates a violent extremist group after discovering his daughter has been pulled into their orbit, trading sirens for secrecy in a desperate bid to bring her home. But as protection turns into obsession, the real question isn’t how far he’ll go, it’s whether he’ll recognize himself once he gets there.
📺 The ’Burbs
(Sun, February 8th — on Peacock)
In the suburbs, curiosity isn’t just dangerous... it’s contagious! When a well-meaning couple (played by Keke Palmer and Jack Whitehall) start snooping around a supposedly creepy house, their quiet cul-de-sac spirals into utter paranoia, pulling increasingly unhinged neighbors (Julia Duffy, Paula Pell, Mark Proksch) into the mess. Inspired by Joe Dante and Tom Hanks’ cult ‘80s movie, it’s a darkly comic reminder that the real threat isn’t next door, it’s what happens once everyone decides to get involved.






