Table of Contents
Mubi has announced its June 2026 lineup, including movies and documentaries arriving on the streaming service this month. We’ve compiled the full list of titles along with their premiere dates below.
Looking for more monthly streaming lineups? Browse FilmBook’s Streaming Release Calendar.
JUNE PROGRAMMING ON MUBI
Featuring India Donaldson’s Good One and Lisa Barros D’Sa and Glenn Leyburn’s Saipan
Plus, the world of football on screen, a celebration of queer artistry, a Ulrike Ottinger trilogy, and more!
Friday, June 5
Saipan, directed by Lisa Barros D’Sa, Glenn Leyburn
Launching on platform to coincide with the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Saipan sees comedy legend Steve Coogan and BAFTA-nominated actor Éanna Hardwicke reenact the infamous altercation between extraordinarily talented Irish football captain Roy Keane and stubborn, old-school manager Mick McCarthy in the leadup to the 2002 series. Featuring a heavy-hitting soundtrack including bops from Oasis, Fontaines D.C., The Pogues, and U2, the latest from Irish directing duo Lisa Barros D’Sa and Glenn Leyburn is TIFF 2025 festival-favorite tale of loyalty, integrity, and identity that resonates far beyond the world of sports. Exclusive Streaming Premiere
Friday, June 26
Good One, directed by India Donaldson
India Donaldson’s keenly observed character study marks an outstanding directorial debut– the talk of the 2024 festival and awards circuit, premiering at Sundance, playing at Cannes Directors’ Fortnight, and earning an Independent Spirit Award nomination.. Lily Collias gives a breakout performance as a graciously overburdened daughter, pushing back against the tribalism and dated gender dynamics that surface on a camping trip with her father and his divorcé buddy. Exclusive Streaming Premiere
We’ve Always Been Here!: Queer Cinema Looks Back
To celebrate Pride month, we’re unearthing buried LGBTQIA+ histories with a collection dedicated to directors who reconceive days gone by from a queer perspective. From dazzling costume dramas to sweeping intergenerational narratives, their films celebrate queer experiences that might otherwise have been lost to time. Shaking up the staid period film with freewheeling invention, these time-traveling works bring a dormant past to vital, mischievous life.
June 1
BPM, directed by Robin Campillo
Now Streaming
1985, directed by Yên Tân
Bendetta, directed by Paul Verhoeven
Black Narcissus (Passion of the Swamp), directed by Peter Strickland
Great Freedom, directed by Sebastian Meise
The History of Sound, directed by Oliver Hermanus
The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo, directed by Diego Céspedes
Plainclothes, directed by Carmen Emmi
Việt and Nam, directed by Minh Qúy Trương
Another Dimension: The Reveries Trilogy
How do the nameless drifters who travel through Reveries (2018), Reveries: Going Deeper (2020), and Reveries: The Mind Prison (2025) arrive at such stoner extremes of thought? Written with Matt Barats and Anthony Oberbeck, the comedian-actors who star as the spaced-out navigators of these films, each installment of the “Reveries” trilogy is directed by Graham Mason with visual eccentricity. Imagery is made to glitch and double, warping into fluorescent abstraction as the protagonists lose themselves in the trifold definitions of “reverie”: pleasantly arbitrary daydreams, instrumental pieces of music that suggest musing states of mind, and ludicrously far-fetched ideas.
June 1
Reveries, directed by Graham Mason
Reveries: Going Deeper, directed by Graham Mason
Reveries: The Mind Prison, directed by Graham Mason
The World’s Game: Football on Screen
When it comes to drama, football always delivers. Few other sports can compete with its pulse-pounding kineticism, and the virtuosity of its players has earned it the name, the beautiful game. Approaching the sport from unexpected angles, the films in this collection strike at the human side of the game. In Saipan (2025), comedy legend Steve Coogan and BAFTA-nominated actor Éanna Hardwicke brilliantly reimagine one of the sport’s most notorious behind-the-scenes feuds. In the poignant On the Seventh Day (2017) and Mario (2018), the white lines on the football pitch bring to mind the social boundaries that curb and confine outside; while the ball moves to the rhythms of the heart in Gregory’s Girl (1980). Alexander Koberidze’s mysterious What Do We See When We Look at the Sky? (2021), meanwhile, finds strange resonances between the World Cup and a cursed romance. The world’s game belongs to everyone—and so does its cinema.
June 5
Saipan, directed by Lisa Barros D’Sa, Glenn Leyburn
June 12
Gregory’s Girl, directed by Bill Forsyth
Infinite Football, directed by Corneliu Porumboiu
Mario, directed by Marcel Gisler
On the Seventh Day, directed by Jim McKay
Now Streaming
The Second Game, directed by Corneliu Porumboiu
What Do We See When We Look at the Sky?, directed by Alexandre Koberidze
Pride Unprejudiced
Stepping out of the celluloid closet, LGBTQ+ representations in cinema have become increasingly robust, diverse, and multidimensional. From intimate character studies to boldly experimental features, the eclecticism of queer cinema not only illuminates the richness of our collective human experience but also daringly subverts filmmaking conventions. Just like the delightfully broad spectrum of genders and sexualities, cinematic renderings of queer experiences are cultural mosaics that rise above attempts at classification and categorization. Reflecting this formal dynamism, our electric offering of LGBTQ+ cinema is a celebration of queer artistry and history, spotlighting urgent social issues and the sheer pleasure of unapologetic queer joy.
June 1
4 Days in France, directed by Jerome Reybaud
End of the Century, directed by Jerome Reybaud
Solo, directed by Sophie Dupuis
Thelma, directed by Joachim Trier
Now Streaming
Crossing, directed by Levan Akin
Passages, directed by Ira Sachs
Rafiki, directed by Wanuri Kahiu
Rotting in the Sun, directed by Sebastían Silva
Taxi zum Klo, directed by Frank Ripploh
& more!
Theater of the World: Ulrike Ottinger’s “Berlin” Trilogy
Imagining utopia while reveling in scandal, Ulrike Ottinger’s “Berlin” trilogy is an ecstatic procession of provocations. With these riotous films, Ottinger parades through the postmodern 1970s and ’80s, dancing amid surreal new collisions of classical and modern, ugly and beautiful, high and low.It’s an adulterated playground, a carnivalesque performance, the most decadent party—and everyone is invited. Ticket of No Return (1979) picks up outcasts and dipsomaniacs as it wanders with sozzled style through West Berlin. Freak Orlando (1981) travels giddily through time and differently gendered getups (and celebrates what the Nazis, by contrast, wanted gone from the world), while Dorian Gray in the Mirror of the Yellow Press (1984) updates gossipy high society to the ominous new-media age.
June 19
Dorian Gray in the Mirror of the Yellow Press, directed by Ulrike Ottinger
Freak Orlando, directed by Ulrike Ottinger
Ticket of No Return, directed by Ulrike Ottinger
Complete list of films coming to MUBI in June
June 1
Bull Durham, directed by Ron Shelton
4 Days in France, directed by Jerome Reybaud
End of the Century, directed by Jerome Reybaud
Solo, directed by Sophie Dupuis
Thelma, directed by Joachim Trier
BPM, directed by Robin Campillo
Reveries, directed by Graham Mason
Reveries: Going Deep, directed by Graham Mason
Reveries: The Mind Prison, directed by Graham Mason
June 5
Saipan, directed by Lisa Barros D’Sa, Glenn Leyburn
June 12
Gregory’s Girl, directed by Bill Forsyth
On the Seventh Day, directed by Jim McKay
Infinite Football, directed by Corneliu Porumboiu
Mario, directed by Marcel Gisler
June 19
God is Shy, directed by Jocelyn Charles
Inspector Ike, directed by Graham Mason
Dorian Gray in the Mirror of the Yellow Press, directed by Ulrike Ottinger
Freak Orlando, directed by Ulrike Ottinger
Ticket of No Return, directed by Ulrike Ottinger
June 26
Good One, directed by India Donaldson
Mubi is a British streaming platform, production company and film distributor. Mubi produces and theatrically distributes films by emerging and established filmmakers, which are exclusively available on its platform. The catalogue consists of world cinema films, such as arthouse, documentary and independent films.
Leave your thoughts on the Mubi news below in the comments section.
Readers seeking to support this type of content can visit our Patreon Page and become one of FilmBook’s patrons.
Readers seeking more streaming schedules can visit our Streaming Schedule Page.
Readers seeking more Mubi articles can visit our Mubi Page.
Want up-to-the-minute notifications? FilmBook staff members publish articles by Email, Mobile App, Google News, Apple News, Feedly, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Tumblr, Pinterest, Reddit, Telegram, Mastodon, Flipboard, Bluesky, and Threads. This news was brought to our attention by The Future of the Force.
Delivered to Your Inbox
Site Map | Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy | Jobs | Patreon | Amazon Prime 30-day Free Trial | Paramount+ Free for a Month | Movies & TV Shows: Hot New Releases | Superhit Best-sellers Copyright © 2008-2026 Polyperchon LLC. All rights reserved.


Leave a Reply