Despite increasing competition, Netflix continues to cement its place as one of the best streaming services, from 2025 with a blow by bringing a multitude of titles that Rotten Tomatoes nicknamed Perfect, granting a 100%score.
The latest Netflix offers include Oscar-Nominee Wallace & Gromit: revenge most poultryThe last of the long race Dragon Ballon Saga and new doc crime sensation American Manhunt: OJ Simpson. From the real crime to the true love, from prison penguins to prison drama, there is something for everyone – and we are only at the end of February.
I can’t wait to be binging on these films and shows, and you can read the full list of new titles with 100% on Rotten Tomatoes below.
Wallace and Gromit: revenge Most Fowl (film)
To watch
After a long absence, the most famous creations of animation Ardman returned with a brand new feature film. The film contained all the heart and the humor we expect from Nick Park and Co. And Ben Whitehead slipped in his beginnings as Wallace – after the death of Peter Sallis – like a pair of old slippers.
And the criticisms agreed, Filmweek calling him “the most entertaining film I saw this year”.
Cunk on life (special TV)

To watch
Diane Morgan’s sardonic host returned to an episode of functionality length of the spin-off by Charlie Brooker (the Black mirror Creator) shows, as Philomena Cunk has decided to venture into the universe to provide answers to big questions and a lot of laughter.
Deciding called the special “Laught Out Loud Funny” while the Guardian praised the host, commenting that “Morgan is unequaled”.
Dragon Ball Dima (Season 1)

To watch
Comics called the last episode of the long -standing franchise “the best Dragon Ballon Fans have eaten for years ” Dragon Ball Z and followed Dragon Ball Super) Tell the story of Goku and the gang transformed into children before exploring the kingdom of the unknown demon. While the Db The saga can sometimes be struck, Diama is an often hilarious nostalgic treat.
Offline love (season 1)

To watch
The series of Japanese meetings sees a group of young singles spending 10 days in Nice, France, stripped of smartphones and other connected devices and left to find love in the old way – through fortuitous meetings and meetings.
Decision maker Called the show a “fun return” in pre-internet days, and it is not difficult to see why nature that is easy to live with relations maintained against the amazing framework of the French city has become such a success.
Cassandra (season 1)

To watch
“The elements of science fiction, horror, psychological thriller and family dramas focused on women” according to Collider, Cassandra The Prill family follows as they move into an unoccupied house for decades.
Their arrival awakens the domestic assistant from AI based there, who has greater intentions than household chores. Reverse said the show could be Netflix’s “next international success”, while Collider called it an “elegant and ambitious limited series”.
American Manhunt: OJ Simpson (season 1)

To watch
Although the Simpson affair may seem well covered, this new doc of the real crime was called “convincing, captivating and sometimes breathtaking” by Fandomwire, and it is difficult not to agree, with the former prosecutor of the mini-series Christopher Darden.
Asura (season 1)

To watch
This Japanese drama, located in Tokyo in 1979, follows four sisters which, by discovering the affair of their aging father, find their lives by starting to untangle as the hidden truths are revealed and that the facades fall.
The criticisms praised the narration and the fascinating characters focused on the character, as well as the skillful touch of the writer / director Hirokazu Kore-Eda (director of Monster (2023) and Broker) with the New York Times To say that the Helmer offers “elegance to make it sing”.
Black mandate (season 1)

To watch
Based on the book by Sunil Gupta & Suntra Choudhury on the time of Gupta as a jailer in an Indian prison, this thriller in Hindi covers the author’s experiences in Tihar’s prisons in the early 80s.
A “piercing look at Tihar, an absorbing story of a baptism by fire and a insightful snapshot of an era in the life of a nation” (NDTV), the drama gives an uncompromising look at the hardened men on both sides of the bars, and a system designed to punish rather than to rehabilitate.