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What's new to streaming this weekend? Here are the five must-watch films
Streaming ain’t easy. Sure, if you’re a cinephile, practically every movie you could ever want to watch is at your fingertips. But therein lies the problem: knowing what’s out there, and where to find it, can become overwhelming. Here, we’re doing the hard work for you, by cutting through the clutter and getting straight to the best new movies available to watch right now. Here are the four must-watch movies hitting streaming services this weekend.
Recommended:
🏆 The best movies of 2026 (so far)
🆕 What’s new on Netflix in June 2026
📺 The best TV and streaming shows of 2026 (so far)
Who wouldn’t want to spend two and a half hours more or less alone with Ryan Gosling? Here’s the catch, though: he’s on a suicide mission in deep space to help save Earth’s dying sun. Some accused Phil Lord and Christopher Miller’s sci-fi blockbuster of being too cutesy and quippy, but there isn’t anyone in Hollywood who can deliver a dad joke with Gosling’s charm – nor form a legitimate buddy-comedy duo with an alien rock creature. Read Time Out’s review.
Watch Project Hail Mary now on MGM+
Emerging after nearly a decade in the cinematic wilderness, Gore Verbinski is back to prove he can make weird, wild movies not tied to Disney theme park rides. In this comic sci-fi thriller, Sam Rockwell is a man claiming to be from the future who storms into a Los Angeles diner looking for volunteers to assist in fighting against a coming AI uprising. Is he crazy, or the only sane person in the room? Read Time Out’s review.
Watch Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die now on Hulu
Andre Ricciardi is an eccentric San Francisco ad exec, and the reason he’s an idiot is because he skipped getting a colonoscopy at age 50 and later turned out to have colon cancer. Whoops! If that sounds flippant, don’t worry – it’s hard to imagine Ricchiardi being too offended, even if he isn’t around to say. (He died in 2023.) In this affecting doc, Ricciardi confronts death with gleeful gallows humour, while mourning the family and friends he’ll leave behind.
Watch Andre Is An Idiot now on Netflix
Glen Powell continues to be everywhere, although the notion of him becoming the next Tom Cruise seems to dwindle with each project. Case in point: this tepid remake of the classic Ealing Studios dark comedy Kind Hearts and Coronets, in which Powell, disowned by his wealthy New York family, conspires to knock off his relatives to gain access to a hefty inheritance. Despite the presence of several talented costars, including Margaret Qualley, Zach Woods and Ed Harris, and John Patton Ford, who last directed ace indie crime thriller Emily the Criminal, it’s all a bit toothless, though Powell does what he can to lift it to watchability. Read Time Out’s review.
Watch How to Make a Killing now on HBO Max
Think all documentaries about famous musicians are ultimately the same? Think again. And again. And again, multiplied by 52 quintillion. That’s literally how many different permutations of this ‘generative doc’ about the life and work of inimitable sound-sculptor Brian Eno can create. Using proprietary software – not powered by AI, thank you very much – the film, directed by Gary Hustwit, can remix itself over and over again, via a repository of hundreds of hours of live footage and interviews. Now housed on the Criterion Channel, a new version will be presented each month. Honestly, it’s the film a true visionary like Eno deserves.
Watch Eno now on Criterion Channel
Been there, done that? Think again, my friend.
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