Netflix has made some big moves into original programming with series such as House of Cards, Orange is the New Black and, of course, Arrested Development "Season 4." (I put that in quotes as creator Mitch Hurwitz has said that the Netflix episodes were meant to function as the first act of the oft-discussed Arrested Development movie, rather than a season of the show.)

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In any event, it comes as no real surprise that the company is now looking to back movies. During their quarterly conference call with analysts today, Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos said that they are "actively looking at documentaries," but that he is keeping his mind "wide open" to other genres, Deadline reports.Of course the plan would be to implement a more aggressive timetable between theatrical, home video, and streaming releases of films.Given the company's connection to Arrested Development, which has had a feature film in development limbo for years, it seems logical that the long-awaited AD movie may be one of the projects they are discussing. In fact, Lucille Bluth herself, Jessica Walter, indicated that Netflix was in fact in active discussions to produce an Arrested movie which would go directly to their site, forgoing a theatrical release, during our recent Comic-Con interview with the actress.Take a look at our NYCC interview with Arrested's Judy Greer and Walter below, in which they discuss a possible Netflix-produced movie.One unfortunate piece of news that the call yielded was that Breaking Bad's final 8 episodes won't be available to stream until 2014. Alas.