What's Coming Out This Week In Theaters and On Streaming, VOD & TV: March 23 thru March 29, 2026
All the 🎥 films and 📺 shows hitting theaters and streaming this week!
March is closing out with a strong lineup of new releases. And with the box office showing signs of a rebound and TV ratings holding steady, there’s no shortage of movies and shows to choose from this week. So if staying in feels like the better option, there are plenty of new titles hitting VOD worth checking out. As always, we’ve rounded up what’s arriving over the next few days across both the big and small screens. Think of it as your quick weekly guide to what’s worth watching. So, take a look and see what catches your eye. We’re sure something will.
🎥 In Theaters This Week
🎥 They Will Kill You
(Fri, Mar 27th — wide release)
One bad job. One very bad building. Zazie Beetz stars in this grindhouse horror-action hybrid as a financially desperate woman who takes a housekeeping gig inside a towering New York high-rise, only to discover its wealthy tenants (Patricia Arquette, Tom Felton, and Heather Graham) are part of a satanic cult with a monthly human sacrifice on the schedule... and she’s next in line. But this would-be victim turns the tables, using her brutal cage-fighting skills to battle her way floor by floor through a night of blood-soaked survival. Sometimes evil does lurk in the shadows… and sometimes it lives right upstairs.
🎥 Forbidden Fruits
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release)
In this Diablo Cody-produced darkly comic horror satire, Lili Reinhart stars as a boutique-working mall employee who secretly leads a coven of fashionable witches (Victoria Pedretti and Alexandra Shipp), where after-hours rituals blend sisterhood with a taste for revenge. But when a rebellious new hire (Lola Tung) throws their perfectly curated dynamic off balance, everything begins to unravel in ways that threaten not just their bond, but the very power holding them together.
🎥 Our Hero, Balthazar
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release)
In this dark satirical thriller from the producer of Uncut Gems, Jaeden Martell plays an emotional New York teen whose online anti–school shooting activism spirals when a relentless troll draws his attention. Fearing real-world violence, he tracks down the supposed culprit—a gun-obsessed Texas teen (Asa Butterfield)—only to find something far more complicated. Their uneasy bond unfolds on a cross-country journey, where assumptions crack and reality proves messier than the internet suggests. Sometimes the person on the other side of the screen isn’t the enemy... but a reflection of a social crisis no one fully understands.
🎥 She Dances
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release)
This emotional family dramedy follows a divorced father (Steve Zahn) trying to reconnect with his teenage daughter (Audrey Zahn, his real-life daughter) during a road trip to a regional dance competition. What begins as a simple ride slowly turns into something more personal as unresolved grief and years of distance are finally brought to the surface. Directed by actor Rick Gomez from a script he co-wrote with Zahn, and co-starring Ethan Hawke, Mackenzie Ziegler, Sonequa Martin-Green, and Rosemarie DeWitt, the film suggests that family reconciliation is often found through quiet moments of vulnerability rather than dramatic confrontations.
🎥 You’re Dating a Narcissist!
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release)
Marisa Tomei stars as a sharp-minded psychologist who’s made a career out of spotting narcissists. But when her own daughter (Ciara Bravo) announces a sudden wedding, she becomes convinced the charming fiancé (Marco Pigossi) checks every box, setting her off to stop the marriage at any cost. Teaming up with her best friend (Sherry Cola), she launches a cross-country mission to expose him, only to create an even bigger mess in this indie comedy where diagnosing young, foolish love proves far messier than leaving it alone.
🎥 Alpha
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release)
Boundary-pushing horror French filmmaker Julia Ducournau (Titane, Raw) returns with yet another unsettling descent into psychological and physical unease, set amid a mysterious bloodborne outbreak. A troubled teenage girl (Mélissa Boros) becomes the center of suspicion after a strange marking appears on her arm, pushing her mother (Golshifteh Farahani) into a spiral as fear grips their community. As the illness spreads across the city, the girl’s family (including Tahar Rahim’s strung-out uncle) begins to fracture under the weight of the unknown, suggesting that some fears don’t just spread... they consume.
🎥 The Mummy Returns: 25th Anniversary
(Fri, Mar 27th — re-release)
Back in theaters for its 25th anniversary, this Stephen Sommers-directed sequel reunites Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz as Rick O’Connell and Evelyn, once again facing an ancient Egyptian priest with a deadly agenda. This fan-favorite follow-up amplifies the original’s pulpy charm with bigger spectacle, supernatural chaos, and monster-driven thrills, proving some curses (and some blockbusters) keep coming back no matter how many times you try to bury them.
🎥 Stand by Me: 40th anniversary
(Fri, Mar 27th — re-release)
A timeless journey gets another trip back to the big screen. This 40th anniversary re-release celebrates Rob Reiner’s coming-of-age classic, following four young friends, Gordie, Chris, Teddy, and Vern as they venture into the woods in search of the dead body of a missing boy, only to confront the fears and truths shaping their path to adulthood. Starring Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix, Corey Feldman, and Jerry O’Connell, and adapted from Stephen King’s “The Body,” it remains one of cinema’s most enduring portraits of friendship.
🎥 The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release)
This documentary tracks filmmaker Daniel Roher, a father-to-be, as he tries to understand the rise of artificial intelligence and the uncertainty surrounding it. As the technology rapidly reshapes industries and society, he seeks insight from scientists, experts, and skeptics. What takes shape is a portrait of both promise and peril, as innovation races ahead of the systems meant to regulate it. Through interviews and real-world examples, the film becomes a personal journey and a broader reflection on what kind of future the next generation may inherit.
🎥 Marc by Sofia
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release; expands)
Sofia Coppola steps into nonfiction filmmaking for the first time, turning her lens toward longtime friend and fashion designer Marc Jacobs. This intimate documentary plays less like a biography and more like a candid, evolving conversation, as Jacobs reflects on creativity, identity, and the pressures of modern fashion. With Coppola placing herself inside the frame, their decades-long friendship unfolds into a thoughtful exchange about artistic instinct, where fashion and filmmaking mirror each other in mood, image, and personal expression.
🎥 Fantasy Life
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release; expands)
Love gets messy as boundaries begin to blur in this New York-set romantic comedy. Matthew Shear writes, directs, and stars as a spiraling law school dropout who takes a babysitting job and quickly falls for his employer (Amanda Peet), a married actress whose life isn’t as stable as it appears. When her rock-star husband (Alessandro Nivola) reenters the picture and the setting shifts to a crowded Martha’s Vineyard summer, desire becomes nearly impossible to ignore... or suppress.
🎥 Holy Days
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release)
This warm comedic road movie follows three unconventional nuns (played by Judy Davis, Miriam Margolyes, and Jacki Weaver) who set off across New Zealand in search of independence and personal closure. Leaving behind the constraints of convent life, they encounter a young Māori boy (Elijah Tamati) who joins their journey, bringing his own unresolved past along for the ride. But when a sudden snowstorm halts their progress, they’re forced to pause and confront grief, faith, and the choices that brought them here.
🎥 Home Delivery
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release)
A home birth turns into a full-blown family spectacle in this offbeat indie comedy about a plus-size supermodel (Melanie Field) and her husband (Donald Faison), who invite their eccentric relatives to witness the arrival of their first child. With Rainn Wilson, Joe Pantoliano, Lesley Ann Warren, Jimmi Simpson, Lindsay Sloane, and Peter MacNicol rounding out the ensemble, the gathering quickly spirals into something far less serene than planned, as tensions, personalities, and long-simmering issues take center stage.
🎥 John Lilly and the Earth Coincidence Control Office
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release)
The mind becomes uncharted territory in this documentary portrait of maverick scientist Dr. John C. Lilly. Driven to unlock the secrets of consciousness, he uses his own body as a laboratory, exploring dolphin communication, sensory deprivation, and psychedelics in search of something beyond human understanding. Narrated by Chloë Sevigny, the film follows a figure whose radical pursuits blurred the line between science and self-exploration, while inspiring films like Ken Russell’s Altered States and Mike Nichols’s The Day of the Dolphin. Free your mind... but be careful what you invite in.
🎥 Yes
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release)
Israeli filmmaker Nadav Lapid returns with a sharp political satire that takes aim at rising nationalism in the wake of national trauma. Ariel Bronz stars as a jazz musician who, alongside his dancer wife (Efrat Dor), offers his talent to a system he once resisted, even as doubts linger. Tasked with composing a unifying anthem, his work becomes entangled in propaganda, turning provocation into a study of artistic compromise. The film examines how easily dissent can be absorbed by the very systems it tries to challenge.
🎥 A Magnificent Life
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release)
This animated biographical drama from acclaimed French animator Sylvain Chomet (Les Triplettes de Belleville) follows aging renowned French writer Marcel Pagnol as he faces a creative slump when a mysterious visitor (his younger self) enters his life. Their encounter sends him back through the moments that shaped his journey, challenging his doubts and reigniting his sense of purpose. Blending imaginative animation with reflective storytelling, the film explores whether an artist’s best work is ever truly behind them.
🎥 The Serpent’s Skin
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release)
In this supernatural lesbian romance from Australian horror filmmaker Alice Maio Mackay, a young woman escapes a hostile hometown and finds connection with a magnetic goth tattoo artist. But when a demonic force they unleash begins feeding on those around them, their passion takes a darker turn, forcing them to confront trauma and self-doubt before it pulls them apart.
🎥 13 Days 13 Nights
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release; also on VOD/Digital)
Time is running out as Kabul descends into utter chaos during the final days of the 2021 withdrawal. A small French security team (led by French-Moroccan actor Roschdy Zem) must evacuate hundreds of civilians from the last Western embassy. With danger at every turn, each move becomes a high-stakes gamble. Inspired by true events, this tense French thriller follows a two-week mission where survival hinges on timing, trust, and impossible choices in order to get everyone out alive before the city collapses.
🎥 Underland
(Fri, Mar 27th — limited release)
Based on Robert Macfarlane’s book, this documentary explores the hidden worlds beneath the Earth’s surface. Narrated by Sandra Hüller, it follows scientists and explorers into caves, glaciers, burial chambers, and the SNOLAB observatory. Through striking visuals and immersive sound, the film offers a poetic reflection on humanity’s connection to the planet, suggesting some of the most profound truths lie deep underground.
🎦 Streaming This Week
🎦 Sentimental Value
(Mon, Mar 23rd — streaming on Hulu/Disney+)
Oscar nominee Stellan Skarsgård delivers a stunning performance as a once-revered filmmaker whose deeply personal comeback project reopens old wounds with his estranged daughters (Oscar nominees Renate Reinsve and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas), turning art into an emotional minefield where forgiveness is anything but guaranteed. Directed by Oscar-winner Joachim Trier and co-starring Oscar nominee Elle Fanning, this Cannes Grand Prix winner transforms family baggage, creative ego, and the fallout of fame into intimate, quietly devastating cinematic poetry.
🎦 Pretty Lethal
(Wed, Mar 25th — premiering on Prime Video)
In this tongue-in-cheek action thriller, a group of elite young ballerinas, led by Maddie Ziegler, travel to Budapest for a competition only to find themselves trapped at a remote inn run by a sinister former prodigy (Uma Thurman). When it becomes clear they’ve been deliberately targeted, their years of discipline and precision transform into weapons. With Lana Condor, Iris Apatow, Avantika, and Millicent Simmonds rounding out the troupe, it proves that sometimes the most dangerous moves are the ones you’ve practiced your whole life.
🎦 Anaconda
(Wed, Mar 25th — streaming on Netflix)
Two lifelong friends, played by Jack Black and Paul Rudd, venture into the Amazon to remake their beloved ’90s creature feature, only for their underfunded passion project to spiral out of control. As the situation worsens, a panicked crew—including Steve Zahn, Thandiwe Newton, and Selton Mello—is pulled into genuine jungle peril when nostalgia collides with something very real and very dangerous.
🎦 Primate
(Wed, Mar 25th — streaming on Paramount+)
After being raised like one of the family, a pet chimp named Ben snaps and turns predator, hunting the humans who once loved and trusted him in this tense nature-vs-nurture horror thriller. Trapped on a remote Hawaiian property, friends and relatives (Johnny Sequoyah, Jessica Alexander, and Oscar-winner Troy Kotsur) are forced into a brutal fight for survival against an enemy who knows their habits, their weaknesses… and exactly how to use them.
🎦 Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice
(Fri, Mar 27th — premiering on Hulu)
Vince Vaughn shares the screen with... Vince Vaughn, playing a man forced to face a future version of himself, a time-traveling criminal determined to erase his past to fix a doomed timeline, in this sci-fi-tinged crime comedy. Teaming up with his clueless partner (James Marsden) and a sharp ally (Eiza González), he’s pulled into a chaotic web of paradoxes, shifting motives, and escalating danger. As the stakes rise and a cannibal assassin (Stephen Root) enters the mix, rewriting fate becomes a race against time. Turns out, your worst enemy might know you better than you know yourself.
🎦 BTS: The Return
(Fri, Mar 27th — premiering on Netflix)
This documentary follows BTS as they prepare for a major comeback, returning to the studio while navigating creative pressure and global expectations. Through candid moments of doubt, collaboration, and reflection, each member looks back on their journey and the bond that holds them together. As anticipation builds, the film offers an intimate glimpse into a pivotal chapter defined by growth and renewed purpose.
🎦 53 Sundays
(Fri, Mar 27th — premiering on Netflix)
Three siblings (Carmen Machi, Javier Gutiérrez, Alexandra Jiménez) reunite to decide how to handle their increasingly unpredictable father (Javier Cámara), but the meeting quickly unravels into emotional confrontation. Old grudges and buried secrets rise to the surface as they clash over responsibility and loyalty. Blending humor with sharp dialogue, writer-director Cesc Gay’s Spanish dramedy reveals the fragile bonds that hold families together.
🎦 The Mortuary Assistant
(Fri, Mar 27th — streaming on Shudder)
A routine overnight shift turns into a waking nightmare when a young, inexperienced mortician (Willa Holland, of CW’s Arrow) realizes something inside the building is paying attention. Directed by Jeremiah Kipp and co-starring Paul Sparks and John Adams, this supernatural chiller suggests that in a place built for the dead, survival depends on noticing who — or what — is watching back.
🎦 Pompei: Below the Clouds
(Fri, Mar 27th — streaming on MUBI)
This observational documentary explores life in Naples under the shadow of Mount Vesuvius. Through quiet, intimate moments, it follows residents as they go about daily routines while living with the constant possibility of disaster. Blending history, culture, and modern life, the film reflects on how communities adapt to risk, revealing how people continue to live, love, and endure beneath a looming natural threat.
🎦 Bambi: The Reckoning
(Fri, Mar 27th — streaming on Peacock)
In the latest blood-soaked chapter of the Poohniverse, a grief-stricken fawn grows into a monstrous, mutated deer with one thing on his mind: vengeance. When hunters return to the forest, Bambi unleashes a savage reckoning for the death of his mother... hoof by horrifying hoof.
✅ On VOD This Week
✅ Send Help
(Tues, Mar 24th — on VOD/Digital)
Rachel McAdams and Dylan O’Brien are stranded on a tropical island after a plane crash, trapping an injured narcissistic boss and his long-ignored assistant in a vicious struggle for control. Under Sam Raimi’s direction, survival turns sharp, ironic, and darkly funny as buried resentment proves just as deadly as the island itself.
✅ The Thing Expanded
(Tues, Mar 24th — on VOD/Digital)
This feature-length documentary revisits John Carpenter’s 1982 sci-fi horror classic through exclusive interviews with Carpenter, Kurt Russell, Keith David, and other collaborators, exploring the arduous production and its groundbreaking practical effects. Produced by CREATORVC, it serves as a deep companion piece that reexamines the film’s legacy and enduring themes of mistrust, paranoia, and isolation, while tracing how a once-perceived box office bomb has, over the years, become widely regarded as one of the greatest horror films ever made.
✅ Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie
(Tues, Mar 24th — on VOD/Digital)
Bigger plans mean worse consequences in this time-hopping mockumentary comedy, as struggling musicians Matt Johnson and Jay McCarrol escalate their latest scheme into a reality-bending chase for fame that spirals from desperate self-promotion into reckless stunts, alternate timelines, and a very real parachute jump off Toronto’s CN Tower. It’s a feature-length extension of Matt and Jay’s cult Canadian mockumentary series, where obsession and ego keep smashing the reset button, proving some bad ideas only get worse with a second try.
✅ How to Make a Killing
(Tues, Mar 24th — on VOD/Digital)
Blood is thicker than water… until there’s money involved. In this darkly comic satirical thriller from Emily the Criminal director John Patton Ford, Glen Powell stars as a disowned heir who plots to eliminate his obscenely wealthy relatives and fast-track his inheritance, with Margaret Qualley, Ed Harris, and Topher Grace fueling a razor-sharp spiral of greed, entitlement, and family dysfunction. Because some family trees deserve to be trimmed... just maybe not this mercilessly.
✅ GOAT
(Tues, Mar 24th — on VOD/Digital)
Produced by NBA star Stephen Curry, this high-energy animated basketball fantasy follows a scrappy young goat named Will (voiced by Stranger Things’ Caleb McLaughlin) who gets his long-shot crack at a brutal, animal-dominated pro league where predators rule the court and underdogs don’t survive for long.
✅ I Can Only Imagine 2
(Tues, Mar 24th — on VOD/Digital)
In this uplifting faith-based biopic sequel, John Michael Finley returns as MercyMe frontman Bart Millard, balancing sold-out arenas with growing family strain as rising Chirsitan musician Tim Timmons (Milo Ventimiglia) joins the tour and offers a humbling new perspective on faith and gratitude. Together, they navigate reconciliation, pressure, and belief under the spotlight.
✅ Operation Taco Gary’s
(Tues, Mar 24th — on VOD/Digital)
This offbeat road-trip comedy stars Simon Rex and Dustin Milligan as two estranged brothers whose attempt to reconnect quickly spirals into a bizarre, conspiracy-laced journey. As paranoia builds and strange encounters pile up, they’re pulled into a mystery that may or may not be real. With questionable allies and mounting confusion, the trip forces them to confront their fractured bond while navigating a situation that grows more absurd with every mile.
✅ Youngblood
(Tues, Mar 24th — on VOD/Digital)
Talent without control can end a career before it begins in this Canadian ice hockey drama about a gifted player skating on thin ice. Ashton James stars as Dean Youngblood, shipped from Detroit to Canada’s Hamilton Mustangs after burning bridges at home, with Blair Underwood as his stern father and Shawn Doyle as the coach trying to rein him in. On and off the rink, discipline becomes his last shot at respect.
✅ Sirāt
(Tues, Mar 24th — on VOD/Digital)
In this recent Oscar-nominated Best International Film from French-Galician filmmaker Oliver Laxe, Spanish star Sergi López plays a father scouring Morocco’s desert rave scene for his missing daughter, drifting through hypnotic nights of bass, belief, and endurance while clinging to the faint hope of a reunion months after she vanished.
✅ Resurrection
(Tues, Mar 24th — on VOD/Digital)
In a future where humanity has sacrificed dreams for immortality, a woman (Shu Qi) finds one man (Jackson Yee) who can still experience them—and ventures into his fractured mind. What follows is a hypnotic journey through illusion, memory, and Chinese history in visionary filmmaker Bi Gan’s six-chapter, sensory-driven meditation on what remains human when dreams have vanished.
✅ A Poet
(Tues, Mar 24th — on VOD/Digital)
This scruffy character study follows a washed-up writer (Ubeimar Rios) drifting through Medellín until a wide-eyed student (Rebeca Andrade) offers him one last chance at relevance, only to expose how fragile his talent and ego really are. Under the darkly comic eye of Colombian writer-director Simón Mesa Soto, mentorship turns into chaos in a raw, unsparing farce.
✅ Wardriver
(Fri, Mar 27th — on VOD/Digital)
Easy money is never as simple as it seems. Dane DeHaan stars as a small-time hacker who skims digital cash by “wardriving,” believing he’s untouchable and his crimes are untraceable. But when a mysterious woman (Sasha Calle) pulls him into a much bigger score tied to a mob-connected lawyer (Jeffrey Donovan), he’s dragged into a world far beyond his control. Also starring Mamoudou Athie, this neo-noir thriller suggests the second you think you’ve executed the perfect crime is when everything starts to fall apart.
✅ Refuge
(Fri, Mar 27th — on VOD/Digital)
Four former friends (Adam Sinclair, Donald Paul, Adam Dorsey, and Christopher Dietrick) reunite for a fishing trip that spirals into paranoia when a father accuses one of them of involvement in his daughter’s disappearance. As tensions rise, their fragile bond fractures, turning suspicion into a dangerous game of who might be capable of something far worse in this psychological thriller from writer-director Anton Sigurdsson.
📺 On TV This Week
📺 Daredevil: Born Again: Season 2
(Tues, Mar 24th — on Disney+)
Hell’s Kitchen isn’t getting quieter, nor is it getting safer. Charlie Cox’s battered vigilante Daredevil is forced into hiding while Vincent D’Onofrio’s Kingpin tightens his grip as mayor, turning the city into hostile territory for masked heroes. As Murdock rebuilds in the shadows and Krysten Ritter’s Jessica Jones storms back into the mix, it becomes clear justice may only come with broken bones. This next chapter suggests playing by the rules is no longer an option for the Man Without Fear... just more pain.
📺 Hannah Montana: 20th Anniversary Special
(Tues, Mar 24th — on Disney+)
Two decades later, the pop-star double life still hits every nostalgic note. This anniversary special revisits the Disney Channel phenomenon that launched Miley Cyrus into superstardom, mixing reflection with legacy as it looks back on a series that shaped a generation. With Cyrus revisiting the role that defined her, it highlights a cultural impact that never really disappeared... just grew up alongside its audience.
📺 Jeff Ross: Take a Banana for the Ride
(Tues, Mar 24th — on Netflix)
Nothing’s off-limits when the Roastmaster turns the jokes inward. This one-man comedy special finds Jeff Ross swapping brutal roasts for raw reflection, unpacking family, grief, and resilience through sharp punchlines and personal stories. Filmed during his Broadway debut, the set blends biting humor with candid confession, including his recent cancer diagnosis and treatment... because sometimes the only way through the pain is to laugh at it.
📺 Bait
(Wed, Mar 25th — on Prime Video)
Landing a dream role can change everything, especially when it comes with a license to kill. Riz Ahmed stars as a struggling British-Pakistani actor thrust into the spotlight when he lands on the shortlist for the next James Bond, turning a career breakthrough into four days of spiraling turmoil fueled by family, fame, and nonstop opinions. Co-starring Guz Khan, Ritu Arya, and Rafe Spall, this sharp satire (created and written by Ahmed) suggests that sometimes the biggest breaks come with the most pressure.
📺 Homicide: New York: Season 2
(Wed, Mar 25th — on Netflix)
This gritty true-crime docuseries revisits New York City’s most haunting murder cases, from high-rise killings to crimes echoing in the shadow of 9/11. Produced by Dick Wolf and featuring voices like forensic expert Barbara Butcher, the series retraces investigations step by step, examining evidence, doubt, and the human toll behind each case.
📺 MLB Opening Night: Yankees vs. Giants
(Wed, Mar 25th — on Netflix; Live Event)
Netflix steps deeper into live sports with a primetime opener marking baseball’s return. The New York Yankees and San Francisco Giants face off at Oracle Park to launch the 2026 MLB season before a packed crowd. Streaming live, this Opening Night matchup signals winter’s end and baseball’s arrival!
📺 Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen
(Thurs, Mar 26th — on Netflix)
I now pronounce you… dead! This atmospheric horror series follows a bride (Camila Morrone) and groom (Adam DiMarco) heading toward their wedding day as unease slowly builds into dread and the celebration starts to feel like a deadly curse... mainly because it is. With Jennifer Jason Leigh, Ted Levine, and more rounding out the guest list, and creator Haley Z. Boston alongside executive producers the Duffer Brothers behind it, this eerie descent suggests not every couple makes it to “happily ever after”... and some don’t even make it to the altar.
📺 Jo Nesbø’s Detective Hole
(Thurs, Mar 26th — on Netflix)
Scandinavian crime gets another dark entry as author Jo Nesbø brings his troubled detective Harry Hole to television. Tobias Santelmann stars as the brilliant but unraveling investigator pulled into a serial killer case tearing through Oslo. As the hunt intensifies, suspicion turns toward his corrupt colleague (Joel Kinnaman), transforming the investigation into a dangerous psychological duel between two men who know each other’s weaknesses all too well.
📺 For All Mankind: Season 5
(Fri, Mar 27th — on Apple TV)
What began as an alternate-history spin on the space race has grown into full-fledged science fiction. Ronald D. Moore’s acclaimed series now explores life on a fully realized Mars, where Happy Valley has evolved into a thriving colony unwilling to answer to Earth. Years after the Goldilocks asteroid heist, tensions erupt as control over the Red Planet sparks a power struggle. Led by Joel Kinnaman, this sweeping saga turns survival into a fight over who defines freedom on a new world.
📺 House of David: Season 2
(Fri, Mar 27th — on Prime Video)
In this sweeping biblical epic, Michael Iskander returns as a former shepherd rising ever closer to the throne, while Ali Suliman’s increasingly unstable king clings tighter to power and suspicion. Palace intrigue gives way to open conflict as loyalties splinter, prophecy hangs in the air, and every alliance feels ready to break.
📺 Color Theories by Julio Torres
(Fri, Mar 27th — on HBO MAX)
Known for his whimsical style and sharp visual imagination, Salvadoran comedian, SNL writer, and filmmaker Julio Torres (Problemista, Los Espookys) returns with a surreal comedy special that uses color as both concept and punchline. Blending stand-up with theatrical design and dreamlike storytelling, the Peabody-winning Fantasmas creator turns the performance into something closer to a living art installation than a traditional comedy set.





