HBO Max: best new shows & films streaming February 2026

Discover the best new shows & films to stream in February 2026 on HBO Max with this guide.
YOLO. Image: HBO Max.

Quiet in Class â€“ February 3

Quiet In Class. Image: Hbo Max.
Quiet In Class. Image: HBO Max.

Docuseries. This three-part docuseries tells the chilling story of a scandal at a school in Sweden, where a paedophile – despite warnings from students – was able to continue working for eight years.

More than 150 schoolchildren were abused by their own youth leader. The paedophile scandal at the Internationella Engelska Skolan (International English School) in Karlstad is the largest of its kind in Sweden to date, and shocked the entire country when it came to light.

Smiling Friends Season 3 – February 4

Smiling Friends Season 3. Image: Hbo Max.
Smiling Friends Season 3. Image: HBO Max.

Series. Created by Australian Michael Cusack and Zach Hadel, this animated series follows the employees of a small company dedicated to bringing happiness to a bizarre yet colourful world.

The company consists of cynical Charlie and star employee Pim, each tasked with out-calls to cheer people up. There’s also meticulous Allan who keeps things in order, along with mysterious Glep and the unpredictable billionaire Boss who founded the company.

YOLO Season 3 – February 4

Yolo. Image: Hbo Max.
YOLO. Image: HBO Max.

Series. Created by Australian Michael Cusack, the series follows Australian party girls Sarah and Rachel, who are looking for fun times, new experiences, positive vibes and hopeful horoscopes in the bizarre town of Wollongong.

Neighbors – February 14

Neighbors. Image: Hbo Max.
Neighbors. Image: HBO Max.

Series. This funny documentary series from the producers of Marty Supreme takes a close look at complicated and chaotic disputes among neighbours across the US. Each episode features a different set of neighbours in the heat of their grievances, uncovering spirited disputes about property lines, animal ownership and even a pair of yellow Speedos.

Like Water for Chocolate Season 2 – February 15

Like Water For Chocolate. Image: Hbo Max.
Like Water for Chocolate. Image: HBO Max.

Series. In the second and final season of Like Water For Chocolate, Tita glimpses the possibility of a new future with Dr Brown â€“ one where gentleness offers refuge and reinvention. But Pedro’s return rekindles a forbidden passion that challenges every rule and tradition she has been bound to.

Set against a Mexico undergoing violence and profound social change, each character is driven to confront past traumas, long-buried secrets and the true cost of love and freedom. Amid the magic of the kitchen â€“ where traditional Mexican dishes and ancestral alchemy shape their world â€“ Tita and Pedro learn that some loves are destined to burn bright, no matter the obstacles.

Blending magical realism with rich cultural heritage, the series delivers a visually captivating story of family, emotion and enduring desire.

Murder in Glitterball City – February 20

Docuseries. Based on the true-crime novel by David Dominé, this two-part documentary follows the story of a murder in a crumbling Louisville mansion, and the decades of secrets and corruption that live within the old house’s walls.

In 2010, a body was found in a plastic storage bin in a Victorian mansion’s wine cellar, leading to a sensational trial involving homeowners Jeffrey Mundt and Joseph Banis, dubbed the ‘Pink Triangle Murder’.

Splitsville – February 24

Splitsville. Image: Madman Entertainment.
Splitsville. Image: Madman Entertainment.

Film (2025). This new film gives the sex-comedy treatment to the politics of modern marriage. The story begins with Ashley (Adria Arjona) asking Carey (Kyle Marvin) for a divorce, sending the good-natured Carey straight to his close friends Julie (Dakota Johnson) and Paul (Michael Covino) for support. But he’s stunned to learn that the secret to their seemingly perfect relationship is an open marriage – a revelation that takes a disastrous turn when Carey oversteps, throwing all of their lives into turmoil. Read ScreenHub‘s review.

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Alannah Sue is a writer, editor, theatre critic and content creator with a passion for arts and culture and all that glitters. She relocated to Melbourne in 2025 after spending over a decade embedded in the Sydney arts landscape and finishing up her tenure as Arts & Culture Editor at Time Out. In addition to contributing to ArtsHub and ScreenHub, her freelance portfolio also expands to editorial and copywriting for lifestyle and arts publications such as Limelight and Urban List, cultural institutions like the Sydney Opera House, and marketing and publicity services for independent artists. She is always keen to take a chance on weird performance art, theatre of all kinds, out-of-the-box exhibitions, queer venues, and cheap Prosecco. Give her half a chance, and she will get on a soapbox when it comes to topics like the magic of musical theatre, the importance of rigorous arts criticism, and the global cultural implications of the RuPaul’s Drag Race franchise. Connect with Alannah on Instagram: @alannurgh.