Before he returns to It Follows , you can check out the under-appreciated (IMO) Under the Silver Lake, which is coming to MUBI in November, alongside some other collections and films, which include the Academy Award-winning Another Round, and Nicolas Winding Refn’s fantastic and intense trilogy of Pusher films.
Check out the list of movies, series and specials coming to MUBI in November 2025 below. In the comments section, let me know which ones you are the most excited to watch.
NOVEMBER 7
Under the Silver Lake
David Robert Mitchell’s Under the Silver Lake is a black comedy thriller that effortlessly blends neo-noir, surrealism, and pop-culture paranoia into a puzzle-box for obsessive film viewers. Featuring Andrew Garfield as a slacker drifting through Los Angeles, the film follows young and disenchanted Sam who meets a mysterious woman swimming in his building’s pool one night. When she suddenly vanishes the next morning, Sam embarks on a surreal quest across Los Angeles to decode the secret behind her disappearance.
The film spirals into conspiracies, codes, and secret societies hidden beneath the city’s surface, satirizing millennial aimlessness and Los Angeles’s glossy facades while critiquing Hollywood’s fantasies and the objectification they sustain. Rich with hidden codes, backwards messages, and Easter eggs, the film has garnered a devoted cult following. It premiered at Cannes to divisive but passionate responses.
To the Limit: The Pusher Trilogy (Spotlight)
Nicolas Winding Refn’s raw handheld intensity drags viewers into Copenhagen’s underworld through three films overflowing with testosterone, drugs, and violence that evolve into existential studies of self-destruction and survival.
Fabricated Worlds: Films by Yorgos Lanthimos (Spotlight)
From Kinetta to Dogtooth to Alps, this collection spotlights the Greek master’s beginnings in the absurd and uncanny, presented to mark the theatrical release of his latest film, BUGONIA.
NOVEMBER 14
Magic Farm
Amalia Ulman’s sharp comedy Magic Farm examines the fraught relationship between American media and Latin American subjects through a lens of absurdist satire. This playful yet pointed critique follows a misguided American documentary crew working for an edgy media company who travel to rural Argentina to profile a local musician but end up in the wrong small town entirely. As they collaborate with locals to fabricate a viral trend, unexpected connections blossom while a pervasive environmental crisis looms unacknowledged in the background.
Beneath the absurdity, the film carries a serious environmental and public health critique about herbicide contamination, illness, and water toxicity in the farming region. With a jagged, energetic tone that combines performances, mini-setups, visual experiments, and improvisation, the film employs fisheye lenses and dog-mounted GoPro shots with sharp colour saturation. Amalia Ulman plays Elena, the translator stuck between cultures, with Chloë Sevigny adding sharp star power as the crew’s driven director. The film premiered at Sundance and screened at Berlin.
NOVEMBER 21
Another Round
Thomas Vinterberg’s Academy Award-winning Another Round follows four stagnant high school teachers who decide to test out a theory that maintaining a constant level of intoxication will improve their overall lives. Anchored by Mads Mikkelsen’s remarkable performance that shifts from muted despair to flashes of joy, the film culminates in one of the most celebrated dance sequences in recent cinema.
Balancing humor and heartbreak, Vinterberg refuses easy moral lessons about alcohol or control. As the experiment spirals out of control and the characters are forced to confront the limits of escape, the film offers a meditation on control versus release in a society obsessed with order and measurement. The film won the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film and played at TIFF and San Sebastian.
François Ozon: Intimate Summers (Spotlight)
Summer is never just sun-soaked leisure for François Ozon. From Swimming Pool‘s simmering intrigue to Summer of 85‘s tender foreboding and 5×2‘s bittersweet unraveling, these films brim with passion, peril, and impermanence.
NOVEMBER 27
Let’s Eat!: Food and Film (Spotlight)
A deliciously cinematic spread turning cooking and eating into stories of love, ambition, and connection, featuring new arrivals The Lunchbox, The Gleaners and I, Ramen Shop, and Soul Kitchen.
Check out our ‘Now Streaming‘ page to discover what else is available to stream on Binge, Netflix, HBO Max, and more in Australia.
[Descriptions provided by MUBI]