Remember, streaming services are rental stores, not personal libraries.
That's more of a note to myself than anything, as one streaming service (Max, most notably) after another removes movies and shows from their service. (Here's a good explainer by CNBC.) For subscribers, it feels like one broken promise after another.
Personally, I know that I harbored the illusion that the movies and shows I signed up to watch whenever I wanted would always be available on those streaming services, which have proliferated like bed bugs in the past few years. In part, that's because I thought streaming services were the new Blockbuster Video, and would always be stocked with what I wanted to watch -- as long as someone else hadn't checked it out first.
Now I have come to appreciate that streaming services are the new Blockbuster Video, only the employees keep removing videos from the store. And you don't really own the digital movies you buy, as The Wirecutter nicely explained.) Which makes physical media the best option for building a personal library.
Nearly all surviving physical media companies know that there is a clear market for upgrading their library titles to 4K along with additional features, for example, so they have an incentive to do so, even for titles of only limited interest. This is good for physical media companies, collectors, and filmmakers, too: their films will not be forgotten.
Of course, buying physical media is dependent upon your budget. I would love to have physical media for everything I desire, but my budget only allows for the occasional splurge. Thus, I started exploring streaming services beyond Netflix several years ago, and still find various services to be an excellent source for sampling movies and shows I might otherwise ignore.
Here's the best of what I watched in 2023, listed in the reverse order that I completed watching them. All links to my reviews here on Screen Anarchy, save for a couple. And all opinions are my own. Look for the combined might of our contributors' Top 10 lists Real Soon Now.
The only one I barely had time to watch, much less write about, was also (probably) the most surprising, in that I've read (and loved) Bryan Lee O'Malley's books and watched (and loved) Edgar Wright's film version, so I was in no way prepared for what O'Malley and BenDavid Grabinski cooked up. And if you have not watched it yet: stop reading and do that. [Netflix]
Kurt Russell. Monsters. Wyatt Russell. Monsters. [Apple TV+]
Abe Forsyth is a genius. [Peacock TV]
Don't tell my mother I watched this. She's dead, but you get the point. [Netflix]
Even better than the first season. [Hulu]
Gremlins: Secrets of the Mogwai
A consistent, inventive delight. [Reviewed at my personal site.] [Max]
Elegant and all-consuming. Beautiful and perceptive about human nature. And I don't even drink wine. [Apple TV+]
Rachel Weisz is scary good. [Prime Video]
Words cannot describe. Steven Yuen, Ali Wong. [Netflix]
Rian Johnson is a genius. Natasha Lyonne is a goddess. [Peacock TV]