‘My Hero Academia: Two Heroes’ and Every Other Movie Leaving Netflix This Week
Here’s a heads-up for the week of Monday, 9/22 through Sunday, 9/28: six titles are scheduled to rotate out, spanning an Afghanistan-to-Montana healing drama, a high-concept sci-fi chase, a Hindi coming-of-age story, a hit superhero anime feature, a 1960s-set Irish pilgrimage, and a colorful comedy-horror prequel. Below you’ll find quick rundowns of each title—what they’re about and who made them—plus the exact day they’re leaving so you can plan a last-minute watch.
Each entry includes key creative credits—directors, writers, principal cast, and essential plot points—so you can quickly decide what fits your mood before it disappears. Scan for the dates inside each section to catch them in time this week.
‘Mending the Line’ (2022)

A wounded U.S. Marine named Colter returns home and struggles with trauma until a grizzled Vietnam veteran introduces him to fly-fishing as a path toward recovery; the story follows their mentorship alongside a librarian who’s working through loss of her own. The film is directed by Joshua Caldwell and written by Stephen Camelio, with Sinqua Walls as Colter, Brian Cox as Ike, and Perry Mattfeld as Lucy; supporting roles include Wes Studi and Patricia Heaton. It leaves on Wednesday, 9/24.
Shot largely in and around Livingston, Montana, the production leans on location photography and a character-focused approach to post-deployment healing. Key department heads include Eve M. Cohen (cinematography), Bill Brown (music), and Will Torbett (editing), and the U.S. distributor was Blue Fox Entertainment; queue it up before Wednesday, 9/24.
‘The Island’ (2005)

Set in a tightly controlled facility, residents Lincoln Six Echo and Jordan Two Delta uncover that they’re clones raised for organ harvesting and stage an escape into the outside world. Directed by Michael Bay from a screenplay by Caspian Tredwell-Owen, Alex Kurtzman, and Roberto Orci, the film stars Ewan McGregor in a dual role and Scarlett Johansson, with Sean Bean, Djimon Hounsou, Steve Buscemi, and Michael Clarke Duncan among the ensemble; it leaves on Wednesday, 9/24.
The production features large-scale practical stunts, second-unit freeway chases, and a score by Steve Jablonsky; principal photography was led by Mauro Fiore with editing by Paul Rubell and others. DreamWorks handled domestic distribution with Warner Bros. internationally; catch it before Wednesday, 9/24.
‘Time Out’ (2015)

This Hindi-language coming-of-age film follows schoolboy Gaurav as he navigates shifting family dynamics and friendships after learning a life-changing truth about his older brother Mihir, a star athlete. Written and directed by Rikhil Bahadur, the drama features Chirag Malhotra as Gaurav and Pranay Pachauri as Mihir, with Kaamya Sharma, Vedabrata Rao, and Aditya Jain in supporting roles; it departs on Friday, 9/26.
The story is framed by basketball practices, classroom scenes, and home life, with music contributions from Sandesh Shandilya and Sanchit Balhara and cinematography by Ravinder Kumar. Produced by Aexor Entertainment and distributed by Viacom18 Motion Pictures, the film runs approximately 98 minutes—watch before Friday, 9/26.
‘My Hero Academia: Two Heroes’ (2018)

Set between arcs of the anime, the feature sends Izuku Midoriya and mentor All Might to I-Island, a floating research city hosting a hero-tech exposition that’s seized by a villainous crew during a high-stakes hostage takeover. Directed by Kenji Nagasaki with a screenplay by Yōsuke Kuroda based on Kōhei Horikoshi’s characters, the film features franchise regulars (Daiki Yamashita as Izuku and Kenta Miyake as All Might in Japanese) and introduces Melissa Shield and the antagonist Wolfram; it exits on Friday, 9/26.
Studio Bones handled animation with Toho involved on the production and distribution side, and character designs were led by Yoshihiko Umakoshi to match the series look. The plot emphasizes inventive Quirk matchups and gadget-driven set pieces on the island setting, making it accessible to newcomers while rewarding series followers—cue it up by Friday, 9/26.
‘The Miracle Club’ (2023)

Set in 1967 Dublin, the story follows a group of working-class women—including friends from a local community and a returning acquaintance—as they embark on a pilgrimage to Lourdes, each seeking healing while confronting old grievances. Directed by Thaddeus O’Sullivan from a screenplay by Joshua D. Maurer, Timothy Prager, and Jimmy Smallhorne (from a story by Smallhorne), the film stars Laura Linney, Kathy Bates, Maggie Smith, and Stephen Rea; it leaves on Sunday, 9/28.
Key creative credits include John Conroy (cinematography), Edmund Butt (music), and Alex Mackie (editing), with Zephyr Films and City Films Entertainment among the production companies. The feature runs about 90 minutes and plays as a blend of humor and reflection against Irish and French backdrops—watch before Sunday, 9/28.
‘The Munsters’ (2022)

This family-friendly origin story charts how Lily and Herman meet and fall for each other in Transylvania before their eventual move to Mockingbird Heights, reimagining characters from the 1960s sitcom. Written and directed by Rob Zombie, the cast includes Sheri Moon Zombie as Lily, Jeff Daniel Phillips as Herman, and Daniel Roebuck as The Count, with appearances by Richard Brake, Jorge Garcia, Sylvester McCoy, Catherine Schell, and Cassandra Peterson; it departs on Sunday, 9/28.
The production was mounted through Universal 1440 Entertainment with cinematography by Zoran Popovic, editing by Vanick Moradian, and music by Zeuss; veteran ‘Munsters’ actor Butch Patrick also appears in a cameo nod to the original series. Principal photography took place in Hungary, and the film embraces vivid, hyper-saturated color as a stylistic choice—catch it before Sunday, 9/28.
Tell us which one you’re squeezing in before it goes—and what you think others shouldn’t miss—in the comments.


