A prominent action comedy movie featuring Cameron Diaz is bidding farewell to Netflix incredibly soon, thus giving subscribers only a short window to catch it. Charlie’s Angels is one of many films scheduled to depart the streamer next month. Originally released in 2000, the film garnered mixed reviews from critics.
Charlie’s Angels is leaving Netflix next month
Charlie’s Angels, featuring Cameron Diaz as one of the three main protagonists alongside Drew Barrymore and Lucy Liu, is leaving Netflix on February 1, 2026, as per What’s on Netflix. Accordingly, fans have 12 days to catch the film before it leaves the platform. Other prominent titles expected to bid adieu to the platform on the same day include 28 Days Later, Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, Groundhog Day, and Parasite.
Following its release in November 2000, the film reportedly grossed around $264 million globally against a modest budget of $93 million (via Box Office Mojo). Meanwhile, the film grossed $125.3 million domestically.
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 68% critical score and a comparatively lower 45% audience score. Meanwhile, on Metacritic, the spy action comedy has a Metascore of 52, indicating “Mixed or Average” perception, and a user score of 6.1, denoting “Generally Favorable” perception.
The film, which is a continuation of Ivan Goff and Ben Roberts’ 1976-81 TV series, spawned a sequel, Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle, released in 2003, and a standalone sequel, Charlie’s Angels, a 2019 film featuring Kristen Stewart, Naomi Scott, and Ella Balinska as the main characters.
The 2000 movie’s story follows three women — Natalie, Dylan, and Alex — who work as private investigators for millionaire Charlie Townsend. Townsend directly communicates with the trio via his office speakers, while his assistant Bosley assists the trio when needed. In the film, the three track down an abducted software engineer, soon realizing that their case is a lot more complicated than expected.
McG directed the film from Ryan Rowe, Ed Solomon, and John August’s screenplay. In addition to Diaz, Barrymore, and Liu, the film stars Sam Rockwell, Tim Curry, Bill Murray, Crispin Glover, Matt LeBlanc, Luke Wilson, Tom Green, and Kelly Lynch.
Originally reported by Abdul Azim Naushad on ComingSoon.
