Netflix’s recommendations engine can make the platform feel endless, but this week’s entertainment headlines narrow things down to a simple pitch: a buzzy new movie that critics are unanimously praising, plus the return of a proven crowd-pleaser with a third season that’s being framed as its strongest yet.
A new Netflix movie is being sold as the “best film of 2025”
One of the loudest signals in the current news cycle is Netflix adding a film that’s being described as the “best film of 2025,” backed up by a 100% Rotten Tomatoes critical score at the time of reporting. That combination matters less as an objective crown and more as a discovery tool: it tells subscribers that this title has broad critical consensus and is likely to be a safe choice if you’re tired of scrolling.
How to read the 100% score: a perfect Rotten Tomatoes percentage doesn’t mean every review calls it a masterpiece; it means the published reviews counted were positive overall. Still, when a film holds a perfect score for any stretch of time, it tends to indicate strong craft, a clear point of view, and few major detractors—exactly the traits that often translate into “everyone in your group chat can agree on this.”
One of Netflix’s biggest hit shows is back—and Season 3 is getting the spotlight
On the TV side, coverage is emphasizing the return of a major Netflix hit with a third season that’s being positioned as the best installment so far. This kind of framing usually points to a series that has moved beyond setup and early-worldbuilding and is now cashing in on what viewers like most: fully defined characters, higher-stakes conflict, and a creative team confident enough to take bigger swings.
Why Season 3 often lands differently: by the third season, successful shows typically know their tone, have refined their pacing, and can deliver payoffs without spending as much time reintroducing the premise. For viewers, it can feel more propulsive—and for newcomers, it’s a reminder to check whether Seasons 1–2 are worth a quick catch-up before diving in.
The bigger streaming context: milestones, migrations, and competition
Even though the focus is Netflix, this week’s streaming news underlines how competitive the ecosystem has become:
- Franchises are still driving scale. Reports about a divisive Star Trek spin-off hitting a major streaming milestone show that long-running brands can thrive even when audiences argue about them.
- Libraries keep moving. Another headline highlights a Ridley Scott WWII sci-fi favorite shifting to a new streamer—an example of why something you meant to watch “later” can vanish from your usual service.
- Rivals are touting prestige too. Hulu’s promotion of a near-perfectly rated crime procedural is a reminder that Netflix’s best move is rarely to imitate competitors; it’s to keep pairing mass-appeal hits with buzzy, critic-friendly additions.
What to watch first (a practical pick)
If you want the lowest-risk choice for a single sitting, start with the newly added film with the perfect Rotten Tomatoes score: it’s designed for quick payoff and conversation. If you’re looking for multiple nights of viewing, the returning hit series’ Season 3 is the better commitment—especially if you already have history with the characters.
Either way, the takeaway from this week’s headlines is clear: Netflix is leaning on a familiar strategy that works—event TV to keep subscribers engaged, plus high-consensus movies to cut through decision fatigue.