3 Best Murder Mysteries On Netflix In Mid-February

By

Mystery films on Netflix are a dime a dozen, but if we had to boil it down these are the three best to watch in mid-February.

Under Suspicion

Under Suspicion, a remake of the 1981 French film Garde à Vue, is about a wealthy lawyer, Henry Hearst (Gene Hackman), who becomes the prime suspect in a series of child murders. As he’s interrogated by his friend, Detective Victor Benezet (Morgan Freeman), the tension escalates and crescendos in a way that makes it a classical murder mystery of the early 2000s.

Shutter Island

Perhaps the closest Martin Scorsese will ever come to directing a full-blown horror movie, Shutter Island acts as a spine-tingling love letter to ‘50s horror comics and classic noir films of the same era. Thrusting an everyman detective (Leonardo DiCaprio) into a mental health facility for notorious criminals, Shutter Island only seems to grow more and more chaotic with each passing moment, posing just as many questions as it does answers.

A Simple Favor

Not all mysteries need to be dark and brooding, and A Simple Favor brings a stylish, sharp-witted approach to the genre. Centered around an unlikely friendship between a reserved single mom (Anna Kendrick) and a glamorous, enigmatic woman (Blake Lively), the film takes a shocking turn when one of them suddenly disappears. What starts as a missing person case soon spirals into a web of secrets that makes for a great murder mystery filled with dark humor.


About the author

Richard Chachowski

Richard Chachowski is an entertainment and travel writer who has written for such publications as Fangoria, Wealth of Geeks, Looper, Screen Rant, Sportskeeda, and MDLinx, among many others. He received his BA from The College of New Jersey and has been a professional writer since 2020.

Daily Devotional

Devotionals

Thursday, August 21, 2025

You Don’t Need To Be Chosen To Be Worthy

Reflection Few wounds cut as deeply as the ache of being overlooked. When the one you hoped would stay slipped away without explanation. When the friend stopped showing up. When the love you gave was not met, not matched, not returned. And even if no one said the words aloud, the silence spoke for them. […]

    godandman.com