Netflix may be delivering a bounty of new films and TV shows come Sunday, but as always, the beginning of a month also signals the expiration of many popular titles on the streaming service. That's especially true in March, when a significant number of choice movies are set to disappear. Never fear, though—with six days left in February, you still have time to catch these great selections before they vanish, only to be seen again via rental or purchase. From comedies to dramas, these are the soon-to-disappear titles you should immediately prioritize in your Netflix list.

Ali

Michael Mann's 2001 biopic features a standout performance by Will Smith as the legendary boxer and an even better, more charismatic turn from Jamie Foxx as Ali's trainer/corner man, Drew Bundini Brown.

Anaconda

Jennifer Lopez, Ice Cube, and Owen Wilson take a ride down the Amazon in this hilarious monster movie, which features one of the all-time best over-the-top performances from Jon Voight as a big snake hunter.

Almost Famous

Cameron Crowe's semi-autobiographical journalism drama tracks a young reporter as he travels around the country with a 1970s arena-rock band in order to write a story about them for Rolling Stone.

Black Rain

Ridley Scott channels some of his Blade Runner stylishness for this 1989 Michael Douglas/Andy Garcia thriller, about two cops who find themselves knee-deep in Japan's criminal underworld.

The Blair Witch Project

The film that begat the found-footage subgenre, 1999's The Blair Witch Project remains a reasonably creepy ode to getting lost in the woods and incessantly filming everything.

Das Boot: Director's Cut

Wolfgang Peterson's superb 1981 submarine epic charts the harrowing exploits of a group of Nazi seamen aboard a German U-boat in the midst of WWII battle.

Desperado

Robert Rodriguez's 1995 action film about a mariachi on a revenge mission cemented Antonio Banderas's reputation as a suave badass, and turned Salma Hayek into an international sex symbol.

Dumb and Dumber

A pinnacle of cinematic stupidity, the Farrelly brothers' 1994 road-trip comedy features the perfectly paired Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels as two nitwits intent on returning a briefcase of money to its owner.

The Elephant Man

Though Bradley Cooper is currently receiving raves for his Broadway turn as the legendary "Elephant Man" Joseph Merrick, David Lynch's 1980 film The Elephant Man remains the definitive adaptation of Merrick's story, replete with phenomenal turns by Anthony Hopkins, Anne Bancroft, Sir John Gielgud, and John Hurt.

Fright Night

A classic example of how to properly balance horror and comedy, 1985's Fright Night concerns a suburban teen (William Ragsdale) who enlists the help of his late-night-horror-host idol (Roddy McDowall) to fight his new neighbor (Chris Sarandon), who he believes is a vampire.

Glengarry Glen Ross

David Mamet's blistering real-estate play gets a phenomenal cinematic adaptation courtesy of director James Foley, who elicits sterling performances from an illustrious cast that includes Al Pacino, Jack Lemmon, Ed Harris, Alan Arkin, Kevin Spacey, and – in perhaps his finest performance, which lasts all of one scene – Alec Baldwin.

The Graduate

Mike Nichols's 1967 The Graduate defined a generation, made Dustin Hoffman a mega-star, and turned Anne Bancroft—as Mrs. Robinson, the older woman who seduces Hoffman's college grad—into a legendary object of desire.

The Ice Storm

Ang Lee's critically acclaimed period piece is a chilly tale of familial dysfunction revolving around a 1973 Connecticut clan struggling with issues of adultery, drug abuse, and depression.

Jackass Number Two

The Jackass team's second big-screen outing is a riot of recklessness, featuring more of the insane, and insanely disgusting, stunts for which Johnny Knoxville and his band of merry pranksters are known—none more astounding than "The Butt Chug."

Leaving Las Vegas

Nicolas Cage justly won a Best Actor Oscar for his turn in Mike Figgis's forlorn romance as an alcoholic determined to end his life with one last, all-out bender in Las Vegas, where he meets—and falls for—Elisabeth Shue's hooker.

Saturday Night Fever

The suit. The soundtrack. The dance moves. John Travolta became an icon of '70s style in John Badham's disco classic.

Seven

Brad Pitt and Morgan Freeman hunt a serial killer whose crimes conform to the Bible's "Seven Deadly Sins" in David Fincher's highly influential Seven, whose don't-look-in-the-box finale remains one of cinema's all-time gut-punchers.

Thief

After years in TV, Michael Mann made his feature directorial debut with this still-riveting neo-noir about a professional thief (James Caan, never better) whose efforts to escape the criminal life—and run away with his girlfriend (Tuesday Weld)—prove far more complicated than he anticipated.

Nick Schager Nick Schager is a NYC-area film critic and culture writer with twenty years of professional experience writing about all the movies you love, and countless others that you don’t.

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