In March, MUBI is the home for streaming No Other Choice in Australia, shortly after its limited cinema run. There are new additions to get excited about, too, including Anatomy of a Fall and Spielberg’s semi-autobiographical film, The Fabelmans.

Check out the list of movies, series and specials coming to MUBI in March 2026 below. In the comments section, let me know which ones you are the most excited to watch.


March 1

Selma (2014)

Ava DuVernay’s Academy Award-nominated historical drama chronicles Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s campaign to secure equal voting rights, culminating in the 1965 Selma to Montgomery marches. Anchored by David Oyelowo’s commanding performance, Selma remains a stirring portrait of collective resistance and moral courage.

March 6

Persepolis (2007)

This Oscar-nominated animated memoir traces a young girl’s coming of age during and after the Iranian Revolution, blending stark black-and-white imagery with personal and political reflection.

Toni Erdmann (2016)

Maren Ade’s bittersweet masterpiece about a mischievous father and his tightly wound corporate daughter unfolds as both cringe comedy and deeply felt emotional reckoning. A modern classic of European cinema.

March 13

No Other Choice (2025)

Park Chan-wook returns with No Other Choice, Golden Globe-nominated and premiered at Venice Film Festival, a razor-sharp thriller that blends moral ambiguity, dark wit, and escalating tension in the director’s signature style. Known for masterfully balancing operatic violence with psychological nuance, Park once again crafts a narrative driven by impossible decisions and the corrosive effects of obsession.

With meticulous visual composition and tonal precision, the film unfolds as a tightly coiled study of consequence—where every choice narrows the path forward. Both intimate and expansive, the film reinforces Park’s status as one of contemporary cinema’s most daring stylists.

Anatomy of a Fall (2023)

A Palme d’Or-winning courtroom drama that dissects marriage, authorship, and perception, as a woman stands trial for her husband’s mysterious death. Razor-sharp and morally complex.

The Fabelmans (2022)

Steven Spielberg’s deeply personal coming-of-age story follows a young filmmaker as they discover the transformative power—and emotional cost—of storytelling.

Honeyland (2019)

An Academy Award-nominated documentary following a solitary beekeeper whose delicate balance with nature is disrupted by new neighbours, unfolding as a profound parable about sustainability and coexistence.

March 20

Ran (1985)

Akira Kurosawa’s monumental late-period epic reimagines King Lear as a sweeping samurai tragedy. Vast in scale and breathtaking in colour, Ran remains one of cinema’s most staggering achievements.

March 27

Pompei: Below the Clouds (2025)


From Golden Lion-winning documentarian Gianfranco Rosi comes Pompei: Below the Clouds, a meditative exploration of the ancient city suspended between preservation and disappearance. Blending archaeology, daily life, and atmospheric portraiture, the film contemplates time not as spectacle but as accumulation. As volcanic memory hangs in the air, Rosi crafts a work that is both an elegy and a testimony—an immersion in a place where past and present remain in constant dialogue.

Special Collections

Frederick Wiseman’s America

Spotlight: March 20
A sweeping tribute to Frederick Wiseman’s landmark body of work, capturing American institutions and civic life with patient, immersive observation.
Includes: High School, Law and Order, The Store, Model, Aspen, City Hall, At Berkeley, In Jackson Heights.

Women at Oscars

Spotlight: Throughout March
A showcase of Oscar-recognised films directed by women, highlighting both celebrated achievements and the ongoing rarity of female recognition within the Academy.
Includes: Selma, Persepolis, Toni Erdmann, Anatomy of a Fall, Honeyland, Aftersun.

And The Oscar Goes To…

Spotlight: March 13 & 20
A selection of past Oscar winners and nominees—perfect for awards-season revisiting or catching up on modern classics.
Includes: The Fabelmans, Ran, Aftersun, The Worst Person in the World, Basic Instinct, Apocalypse Now and more.

Always Playing: Agnès Varda

Spotlight: March 6
A tribute to Agnès Varda’s playful, political, and deeply human cinema. From early New Wave innovation to documentary reflection, the collection honours a filmmaker who made art a space for justice, curiosity, and radical tenderness.
Includes: Vagabond, Black Panthers, Women Reply: Our Bodies, Our Sex, One Sings, the Other Doesn’t, Cléo from 5 to 7, Le Bonheur, The Gleaners and I.

Women Misbehaving

Spotlight: March 6
Launching for International Women’s History Month, this collection celebrates feminist films with a mischievous edge—stories of women who refuse to conform, challenge authority, and delight in disruption.
Includes: Toni Erdmann, Sibyl, Die My Love, Do Not Expect Too Much From the End of the World, 27, Lick the Star.


Check out ourNow Streamingpage to discover what else is available to stream on Prime Video, Netflix, Disney+, and more in Australia.

[Descriptions provided by MUBI]