On Wednesday, January 10, Netflix added Solo: A Star Wars Story to its vast library. The most recent Star Wars flick was more or less a flop at the box office, bringing in a worldwide total of about $392.9 million, per Box Office Mojo . That may sound like an astounding figure, but in Star Wars land, that’s peanuts: previous films brought in anywhere from $620.2 million ( The Last Jedi ) to $936.7 million ( The Force Awakens ) in the United States alone. But box office failure aside, Solo “is perfectly fine,” as our Brett White put it, and it’s therefore an ideal low-stakes movie to stream on Netflix. If you can find it, that is.





The problem, you see, is that Netflix is making it ridiculously hard for users to find Solo: A Star Wars Story. A search for “Solo” brings up results for a Netflix Original movie called Solo, a Bollywood film also titled Solo, a few other Star Wars films, and Solomon Kane starring James Purefoy. Solo: A Star Wars Story doesn’t appear until the fourth line (on my Netflix, at least), and even then, it’s listed after the Spanish version — as well as totally unrelated films like A Christmas Chronicle and The Ballad of Buster Scruggs. Decider has reached out to Netflix about Solo‘s placement on the interface but did not hear back by the time of publication.