Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Coming in 2016 and Beyond

We normally operate a month at a time in NQB, but we also get dates of shows/movies sometimes months in advance.  So I will go ahead and post this information here.  Keep in mind that dates are in some cases tentative as it is months in advance (particularly when it comes to the films posted).  As the date moves closer and we get more confirmation, we'll adjust the date.

Many thanks to avid blog reader Wellesley72 for some of the information posted.  And without further ado:

TV Series (which should have some more certainty at least):

March 28:
Trailer Park Boys Season 10 

April 1:
Lost and Found Music Studios Season 1
The Ranch Season 1

April 9:
Look Who's Back

April 15:
Kong: King of the Apes Season 1
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt Season 2

April 22:
Patton Oswalt: Talking for Clapping

May 5:
Marseilles Season 1

May 6: 
Ali Wong: Baby Cobra
Grace and Frankie Season 2

May 11:
Chelsea (three times a week)

May 20:
Lady Dynamite

May 27:
Bloodline Season 2
Chef's Table Season 2

May 31:
Peaky Blinders Season 3

June 2:
Hibana (Spark)

June 3:
Bo Burnham: Make Happy

June 4:
30 for 30: Believeland

June 10:
Voltron: Legendary Defender

June 11:
Scandal Season 5

June 16:
Being Mary Jane Season 3
Marvel's Agents of SHIELD Season 3

June 17:
All Hail King Julien Season 3
Orange is the New Black Season 4

June 18:
Cedar Cove Season 3
Grey's Anatomy Season 12

June 24:
Dreamwork Dragons: Race to the Edge Season 3
Justin Time Go! (kids series)
Sofia Nino de Rivera: Expuestra

June 30:
Shameless (US) Seasons 1-4

July 1:
Between Season 2 (YA rebuilding the universe drama; first of six episodes)
Jim Jeffries: Freedumb
Marcella (Anna Friel crime drama)
Marco Polo Season 2
The Shannara Chronicles Season 1

July 3:
Blue Bloods Season 6
Crazy Ex-Girlfriend Season 1
Criminal Minds Season 11
The Dick Van Dyke Show Seasons 1-4
Happyish Season 1
Jane the Virgin Season 2
Limitless Season 1
Madam Secretary Season 2
Penny Dreadful Seasons 1-2

July 4:
Kuromukuro (anime series)

July 8:
Word Party

July 10:
The Last Kingdom Season 1 (British medieval series)

July 14:
Magi: The Adventures of Sinbad (anime series)
Todd Margaret Season 3

July 15:
The Adventures of Puss in Boots Season 3
Stranger Things Season 1

July 22:
Bojack Horseman Season 3
Degrassi: Next Class Season 2

July 24:
Popples Season 3

July 29:
Home: Adventures with Tip and Oh
Last Chance U

Sometime in July:
30 for 30: OJ: Made in America (ESPN miniseries)

August 1:
Funny or Die Presents: Donald Trump's The Art of the Deal (NEW; 7/25)

August 3:
Beat Bugs Season 1

August 5:
David Cross: Making America Great Again (NEW; 7/25)
Ever After High: Epic Winter (MOVED; 7/25)

August 9:
Real Husbands of Hollywood Season 4 (NEW; 7/25)

August 12:
Ask the Storybots Season 1 (kids series)
The Get Down
Project Mc2 Season 2

August 15:
Louis CK: Live at the Comedy Store (NEW; 7/25)

August 17:
Puffin Rock Season 2 (NEW; 7/25)

August 19:
Bottersnikes and Gumbles (kids series)
Fearless (bull riding documentary series)

August 21:
Maz Jabroni: I'm Not a Terrorist, But I've Played One on TV (NEW; 7/25)

August 22:
Law and Order SVU Season 16 (NEW: 7/25)

August 26:
Dawn of the Croods Season 2 (NEW: 7/25)
Glitter Force Season 2 (NEW; 7/25)
Jeff Foxworthy & Larry the Cable Guy: We've Been Thinking
Once Upon a Time Season 5 (NEW; 7/25)

August 31:
Ku'damm 56 Season 1 (NEW: 7/25)

September 2:
Kazoops (kids series)
Kulipari: Army of Frogs (kids series)
Narcos Season 2

September 23:
Iliza Shlesinger: Confirmed Kills
Longmire Season 5

September 30:
Luke Cage Season 1

Sometime in September:
Extremis

October 7:
The 13th (Ava Duvarney documentary on mass incarceration) (NEW; 7/19)

October 14:
Haters Back Off (Angela Kinsey/Miranda Sings comedy)

October 21:
Midnight Diner (Japanese eatery drama)

November 4:
The Crown Season 1

Sometime in December:
Trollhunters (Del Toro animated series)

Definitely Sometime in 2016:
3 %
30 for 30: Doc and Darryl (August)
30 for 30: Phi Slama Jamma (November)
American Horror Story: Hotel (October)
Arrested Development Season 5
Arrow Season 4 (October?)
Battlefield Recovery (British archeology series looking for WW2 artifacts)
The Blacklist Season 3 (late summer-fall 2016)
Bones Season 11 (September)
Chef's Table Season 3 (apparently about French chefs)
David Brent: Life on the Road (spinoff of Ricky Gervais's Office)
Degrassi Reunion Show (faves from the past reunite, but supposedly not Drake) (MOVED; 7/24)
The Descendants of the Sun (Korean series) (Summer 2016)
Fuller House Season 2 (This fall; possibly November)
Gotham Season 2 (September?)
Murdoch Mysteries Season 8
La Nina (Colombian series)
One Day at a Time (Rita Moreno remake of 1970s sitcom)
Perfect Bones Season 1 (anime series)
Project Mc2 Season 3 (fall 2016)
Shadow Hunters: The Mortal Instruments Season 1
Skylanders Academy (fall 2016)
Sleepy Hollow Seasons 1-3
Top Gear (Chris Evans/Matt LeBlanc reboot)
True and the Rainbow Kingdom (fall 2016)
Wakfu Season 3 (anime series)

Possibly in 2016:
Alias Grace (Sarah Polley crime drama miniseries)
Crazy Face (Exorcism comedy series)
Death Note (Nat Wolff starring American remake of anime series)
Easy (Joe Swanberg series)
F for Family Season 2 (Bill Burr animated series)
A Handsome Mystery Movie: A Lil Dab'll Do Ya (Jeff Garlin detective comedy series)
Maniac Season 1
MST3K Reboot (NEW; 7/24)---Thanks Wellesley72!
The OA
Peaky Blinders Season 3
Pieles (aka Skins; Spanish drama about malformed people looking for a place in society)
Scrotal Recall Season 2
Sense8 Christmas Episode
A Series of Unfortunate Events (based on Daniel Handler YA book series)
Surviving Pablo Escobar (Colombian series)
Thirteen Reasons Why (Dylan Minnette YA drama)
Travelers (Eric McCormack time traveling series)
Ultimate Beastmaster (International Obstacle Course race ft Terry Crews)
Untitled Cameron Dallas reality series (Professional/personal life of the Vine star)
Untitled Nick Stoller ensemble comedy series
Versailles (controversial British royal drama)
Watership Down (animated miniseries of rabbit adventure novel)

Probably in 2017:
Altered Carbon (Joel Kinnaman sci-fi series)
American Crime Story: The People vs. OJ Simpson (NEW; 7/25)---Thanks to Wellesley72!
Archer Season 7
Better Call Saul Season 2 (Early 2017)
Big Mouth (Nick Kroll/John Mulaney animated teen comedy)
Bloodline Season 3
BoJack Horseman Season 4 (NEW: 7/22)
Captive (Doug Liman produced hostage documentary series)
Chef's Table Season 4
Cuckoo Season 4
Daredevil Season 3 (NEW: 7/21)
Dark
Dear White People (series based on the movie)
The Defenders Season 1
Disjointed (Kathy Bates pot comedy produced by Chuck Lorre)
Edha (Argentinian romantic revenge/fashion drama)
El Chapo (Netflix/Univision crime series)
Flaked Season 2
Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life (miniseries based on the popular WB series)
Girlboss (Britt Robertson series about an unlikely fashion mogul)
GLOW (Comedy about woman joining wrestling group)
Godless (Jack O'Connell western)
The Greenhouse (boarding school suspense drama)
Gypsy (Naomi Watts thriller series)
Iron Fist
Jessica Jones Season 2
Jet Wash (Brazil corruption scandal drama)
Julie's Greenroom (Julie Andrews performing arts kids series with puppets)
Kiss Me First (British YA series)
Kong: King of the Apes Season 2
The Last Kingdom Season 2 (British medieval series)
Little Witch Academia Season 1 (anime about ordinary girl joining witch academy)
Llama Llama (animated series about a llama and his family)
Making a Murderer Season 2 (fallout from the case continues) (NEW: 7/19)
Marseilles Season 2
Master of None Season 2 (Aziz Ansari series)
Ozark (Jason Bateman drama series)
The Punisher (based on the Marvel character)
Queen of the South Season 1 (woman runs drug empire) (NEW; 7/25)---Thanks to Wellesley72!
The Ranch Season 2
Sacred Games (First Indian series based on best selling novel)
Santa Clarita Diet (Drew Barrymore/Timothy Olyphant comedy)
Seven Deadly Sins Season 2 (mid-late 2017)
Sense8 Season 2
Sherlock Season 4
Spirit Riding Free (based on Spirit movie)
Untitled Jimmy Onishi Drama Series
Untitled Spanish Telephone Operator Series
Voltron Legendary Defender Season 2 (NEW; 7/24)---Thanks to Wellesley72!
Wet Hot American Summer: 10 Years Later

Probably in 2018:
American Crime Story: Hurricane Katrina (NEW; 7/25)---Thanks to Wellesley72!
Cuckoo Season 5
Hilda Season 1 (animated adventure series)
Lost in Space reboot
Spy Kids: Mission Critical (based on the Spy Kids franchise)

Movies (more or less a crapshoot because they are months away for the most part):

Sometime in 2016:
CodeGirl (April 1)
Hush (2016; April 8)
Minions (April 24)
Begin Again (April 27)
Hotel Transylvania 2 (April 27)
Special Correspondents (April 29)
Team Foxcatcher (April 29)
The Admiral (2016; May 1)
Always (May 1)
Beautiful Losers (May 1)
Bring It On (May 1)
Film Critic (May 1)
Paradox (May 1)
Shark Lake (May 1)
Welcome to Leith (May 1)
Shanghai Knights (May 4)
Goosebumps (May 11)
We Are Still Here (May 15)
The Letters (May 22)
The Do Over (May 27)
Cold in July (June 1)
Janis: Little Girl Blue (June 1)
Jurassic Park 1-3 (June 1)
Rock the Kasbah (June 1)
Tab Hunter Confidential (June 1)
What Our Fathers Did (June 1)
Every Thing Will Be Fine (June 7)
The Giver (June 15)
Poverty, Inc. (June 15)
Underdogs (June 15)
I Am Thor (June 19)
Theeb (June 19)
Sin City: A Dame to Kill For (June 22)
Spotlight (June 22)
The Fundamentals of Caring (June 24)
Cronies (June 27)
Life (2015) (June 29)
Fastball (June 30)
Back to the Future Trilogy (July 1)
Lethal Weapons 1-4 (July 1)
A War (July 1)
The Big Short (July 6)
Brahman Nahman (July 7)
The Invitation (July 8)
Mono (high school comedy) (July 8)
Mustang (July 9)
Colonia (July 14)
Rebirth (cult psychological thriller) (July 15)
Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru (July 15)
The Wave (July 22)
Tallulah (July 29)
Kelly & Cal (July 30)
An Inconvenient Truth (August 1) (NEW: 7/25)
The Fast and the Furious (2001) (August 1)
Holding the Man (August 1) (NEW; 7/25)
The Verdict (August 1) (NEW; 7/25)
The Wedding Planner (August 1)
Young @ Heart (August 1) (NEW; 7/25)
The Confirmation (August 5) (NEW: 7/25)
The Little Prince (August 5)
T-Rex (August 9) (NEW: 7/25)
St. Vincent (August 10)
No Country for Old Men (August 11) (NEW: 7/25)
Our Last Tango (August 16) (NEW; 7/25)
I'll Sleep When I'm Dead (August 19) (NEW; 7/25)
Septembers of Shiraz (August 23) (NEW: 7/25)
The Road (2009) (August 25) (NEW: 7/25)
Blue is the Warmest Color (August 26) (NEW; 7/25)
XOXO (August 26)
Rams (August 27) (NEW; 7/25)
The State of Marriage (August 29) (NEW: 7/25)

Presumably in 2016:
Kung Fu Panda 3 (July to October 2016?)
The Finest Hours (September 2016?)
Zootopia (September to December 2016?)
The Jungle Book (2016) (October 2016 to January 2017?)
Captain America: Civil War (November 2016 to February 2017?)
Alice: Through the Looking Glass (November 2016 to February 2017?)
Finding Dory (December 2016 to March 2017?)
Divines (Palm d'Or winner at Cannes 2016)
Jadotville
Mascots (second half of 2016)
True Memoirs of an International Assassin
War Machine (second half of 2016)
It Follows
Where to Invade Next

Acquisitions (presumably most of these stream in 2016):
Amateur (drama)
Aquarius (2016 Cannes acquisition)
ARQ (Robbie Amell sci-fi thriller)
Asperger's Are Us (documentary)
Audrie & Daisy (documentary; 2016)
Clinical (Vinessa Shaw thriller)
The Discovery (Rooney Mara/Jason Segal sci-fi drama)
A Futile and Stupid Gesture (Will Forte/Domhnall Gleeson comedy)
Game Over, Man (Adam Devine action comedy)
Girlfriend's Day (Bob Odenkirk dramedy)
I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House (Ruth Wilson horror)
Little Boxes (Melanie Lynskey/Janeane Garofalo dramedy)
Mercenary (2016 Cannes acquisition)
Mercy (James Wolk thriller)
Most Hated Woman in America (Melissa Leo drama)
Norman Lear: Just Another Version of You (documentary)
The Other Side of the Wind (uncompleted Orson Welles drama)
The Outlaw Ocean (Leonardo DiCaprio produced environmental thriller)
Our Souls at Night (Robert Redford/Jane Fonda adaption of novel)
Riphagen (Dutch World War 2 thriller)
Under the Shadow (Iranian horror film)
Underground (thriller, horror)
Wheelman (Frank Grillo thriller)
Where the Road Runs Out (Equatorial Guinea drama)
White Girl (Morgan Saylor drama)

Further on down the Line:
Boyhood (2016-2017?)---2014 Best Picture nominee
45 Years (2016-7?)---2015 Best Actress Nominee
The Tribe (2016-7?)
Roar! (2016-7?)
Clouds of Sils Maria (2016-7?)
The Hateful Eight (Sometime in 2017?)
Imitation Game (Sometime in 2017?)
Big Eyes (Sometime in 2017?)
Woman in Gold (Sometime in 2017?)
Southpaw (Sometime in 2017?)
Paddington (2017?)
Masterminds (2017)
Blame! (anime original film) (2017) (NEW: 7/25)---Thanks to Wellesley72!
Panama Papers (John Wells produced film on how wealthy avoid taxes through offshore accounts) (NEW; 7/26)
Sandy Wexler (Adam Sandler/Jennifer Hudson romcom) (2017) (NEW; 7/21) 
The Disappointments Room (2017)
Bright (Will Smith action film; 2017)
Okja (Jake Gyllenhaal science fiction; 2017)
The BFG (January to March 2017?)
Pete's Dragon (2016) (February to May 2017?)
The Light Between Oceans (March to June 2017?)
Dr. Strange (April to July 2017?)
Moana (May to August 2017?)
Trolls (May to August 2017?)
Star Wars: Rogue One (June to September 2017?)
Beauty and the Beast (2017) (September to December 2017?)
Boss Baby (September to December 2017?)
Citizenfour (2017?)---2014 Best Documentary Winner
Guardians of the Galaxy 2 (November 2017 to February 2018?)
Cars 3 (December 2017 to March 2018?)
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (January to April 2018?)
Thor: Ragnarok (May to August 2018?)
Coco (May to August 2018?)
The Croods 2 (June to September 2018?)
Star Wars Episode 8 (June to September 2018?)
Black Panther (August to November 2018?)
Larrikans (August to November 2018?)
Gigantic (September to December 2018?)
Avengers: Infinity War (November 2018 to February 2019?)
Star Wars: Han Solo (November 2018 to February 2019?)
How to Train Your Dragon 2 (December 2018 to March 2019?)
Toy Story 4 (December 2018 to March 2019?)
Captain Marvel (January to April 2019?)
Avengers: Infinity War Part 2 (November 2019 to February 2020?)
Indiana Jones 5 (Late 2019-Sometime in 2020?)

8 comments:

  1. I remember reading something back Sept/Oct before the movie "The Martian" would be on Netflix 6 months after its theatre release. That puts it mid April IF my memory is somewhat correct.

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  2. Sometime in 2017:
    Santa Clarita Diet, a Netflix original series with Drew Barrymore and Timothy Oliphant (Justified). No other details known.

    ABC and Warner Bros. TV have announced a "stacking" arrangement where ABC can stream any Warner Brothers series in 2016-17 and 2017-18 on any streaming platform, as opposed to just five episodes, with the streaming rights reverting to Warner Bros. at the end of the season. It is likely that Warner Bros. will then "warehouse" the season for one or two years thereafter, denying Netflix or any other streaming service the ability to stream seasons of series one year after they are released on TV. This has been a long-standing goal of Time Warner and may explain why Netflix appears to be accelerating its move to more original content.

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    1. I think until that announcement, nobody including some of those in Time Warner knew what strategy they were going to do. Shows I presume are affected include The Middle and the Bachelor/Bachelorette (correct me if there's others) and presumably the streaming platform would either be Hulu or perhaps an ABC created platform (much like CBS all Access).

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    2. According to Variety, the "stacking" arrangement involves only new WB series appearing on ABC over the next two years so it does not affect the current arrangement for any existing programming. It covers both streaming on ABC platforms (right now, the only platform is Watch ABC Now). No mention was made of Hulu. It also covers VOD on cable systems, which is generally limited to the last five episodes. The deal for all episodes in a season ends at the end of a season. I don't know whether that means shortly after the last episode is aired on TV or until the next episode airs. At the end of the season, the rights revert back to WB, which can sell them to one or more streaming services or can warehouse them. Netflix has stated that it will pay less for a season where all episodes can be streamed during the season although I expect that depends on how popular the show is. (Both the ABC and the Fox apps and deals with cable systems already provide for streaming or VOD broadcasting of entire current seasons of some programming owned by them.). Apparently, there are only two pilots of potential series that WB is preparing for ABC for next year so the impact is minimal. However, I think this is a precursor of how WB may want to handle shows on the CW (of which it is a 50% owner, together with CBS.) Imagine a scenario where WB allows CBS All Access to stream all episodes of post-2015 series shown on the CW, then takes back the rights after a year. That would probably kill a renewal of the Netflix-CW contract right there. My guess is that we are at the "who blinks first" stage right now. With Netflix announcing a new show about every two weeks plus it's move into buying exclusive streaming rights to films (or producing them itself, as in the case of "Bright"), I don't have a lot of confidence that the Netflix-CW renewal will occur, and I think Netflix realizes this.

      My biggest regret is that Netflix let the AMC output deal go to Hulu. Between AMC, BBC America, and IFC, there is a lot of new programming (particularly BBC programming that is being funded in part by AMC) that Netflix viewers will be missing. I don't think Cuckoo is going to fill that hole. I'm also not sure why Netflix hasn't tried to co-produce shows with the BBC. That would seem like a perfect fit, even if Netflix had to hold back on showing some shows in the UK for some time after they were shown on the BBC. if Netflix really had money invested in BBC shows, you would think it would be easier to get global rights. In fact, Netflix could do its viewers a service by financing new episodes of Doctor Who for the BBC in return for getting past seasons back. Amazon has already released its list of new April content, and the good doctor isn't on the list.

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    3. In the first paragraph, the question is whether the streaming/VOD goes on until the next season (not the next episode) begins.

      I also forgot to mention that AMC also owns Sundance TV, so new programming on Sundance will go to Hulu. Presumably, Rectify and The Red Road stays with Netflix, although the next season will be the last for Rectify and I'm not sure there is another season of The Red Road.

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  3. Are you sure that Citizenfour will be coming to Netflix? While it is a Radius film and Netflix at one time had an output deal with Radius, Citizenfour has been on HBO for a while. Netflix has picked up some documentaries that were first shown on HBO (like Gideon's Army) but only after they have been off HBO for quite a while.

    I am really looking forward to It Follows, another Radius film which is finally being shown on Showtime in April. Usually, Radius films on Showtime also appear on Netflix within one to two months.

    The Weinstein Company (TWC) films released in 2016 should show up exclusively on Netflix. The first one up may be Jane Got her Gun, with Natalie Portman. Jane was originally developed at Relativity Films (which has an output deal with Netflix) and went through a host of lead actor and director changes. It was supposed to be released in 2014 but was moved to 2015 and then got caught up in the Relativity bankruptcy, and the rights were moved to TWC. I have seen the trailer on IMDb which isn't bad, but IMDb is also showing a tiny gross (not as bad as the $50K for Beasts of No Nation, but close). I don't think the movie has even been shown in the Boston area, which either means the film is a real bomb or Harvey Weinstein got it so cheap that he isn't bothering to promote it. At least he didn't try to sell it to Netflix which (with the Natalie Portman name) would have bought it for a gazillion dollars.

    Incidentally, Netflix tried without success to get out of its output deal with Relativity Films when the company filed for bankruptcy. I don't think Relativity released any films in 2015 and most of their 2016 releases moved to different producers when they filed for bankruptcy. I assume Netflix is not currently paying anything, but I don't know how long the output agreement runs for, and Netflix may be worried that there will be some output in the future that they will have to pay for and therefore can't apply the money to purchasing other content in the future. The output deal was entered into shortly after Starz pulled out of its deal with Netflix so Netflix may have overpaid for streaming rights (what else is new?).

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    1. The HBO mention does give me pause, if for a little bit. But Citizenfour is released by the same company that did Before We Go, Adult Beginners, and The Hunting Ground, and all three of those titles made it here last month. Best case scenario is that it shows up maybe in time for the summer. Worst case is probably that we might have to wait until HBO and its family are done before it comes here. That's similar to the Weinstein films that are slowly trickling its way here at the 'Flix.

      I wouldn't call Jane Got a Gun a disaster. It did make 1.5 million all in all, but despite its over 1,000 screens for two weeks, I don't think I heard hide or hair of it until it landed in Box Office Mojo. More people would be talking about its disastrous second week drop if it weren't for the face planting gymnastics comedy The Bronze. Gun's release was of the "Let's get this over quick so we can bury it" variety.

      Also a brief note on the Weinsteins. There's several films that have debuted elsewhere (read Amazon Prime) like Macbeth and Shanghai. I doubt those will be switching over.

      The reason that Netflix tried to get out of Relativity's deal was due to the lack of films that was released in 2015 (their deal had a bunch of films that were supposed to come out as part of the partnership). But bankruptcy and Relativity's chutzpah to results scale complicated things. I'm not sure if the deal was for years or number of films, but Netflix may perhaps regret the deal. I bet they wished that they still had a partnership with Starz at this point.

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