Avatar: Fire and Ashes it’s now available to watch at home, finally.
Photo: Disney
It was a little quiet outside of video-on-demand in March, with the few remaining 2025 movies still out at home uploaded to services like Prime Video, Apple TV, and Fandango at Home, while the first few 2026 hits tried to spoil the party. This little collection of new movies on PVOD includes one of the funniest movies you’ll see all year, a great Canadian comedy, and an Oscar winner.
Luc Besson, 129 minutes
People can’t get enough of the classic monsters lately with the upcoming Lee Cronin Motherof last year The Wolf Manand many vampire stories, incl Nosferatu and a variation of Radu Jude’s play on Dracula. Perhaps the most shocking thing is this offering from the canceled Luc Besson, who was a director who once liked films like. Point Five and An expert. This one stars the brilliant Caleb Landry Jones as the title character, working alongside two-time Oscar winner Christoph Waltz. It also has a great score by Danny Elfman. Available on VOD.
Gore Verbinski, 134 minutes
A visionary manager Range and Health Remedy He finally returned in 2026 with this sci-fi comedy about a time traveler (picture perfect Sam Rockwell) who returns to save the world Terminator-esque future where the machines won. Crashing into a diner in LA, he gathers a group of ragtag rescuers, ordinary people whose lives have been ruined by 2020s technology. It’s funny, smart, and unlike anything you can watch this weekend. Available on VOD.
Matt Johnson, 100 minutes
One of the funniest movies of its time, this is a remake of the 2000s web series. Nirvana the Band the Show and the next version of 2017 TV. Using footage from the original series, Matt Johnson and Jay McCarrol play loose versions of themselves that end up back in time as they try to get a gig at Toronto’s famous Rivoli. A commentary on art, friendship and ageing, this is a stunning, fearless piece of filmmaking. Available on VOD.
Sam Raimi, 113 minutes
Rachel McAdams stars in this survival drama as an ordinary woman who ends up on a desert island with her boss’ ass, played by Dylan O’Brien. It’s great to see the director of Evil Dead and Write me to Hell is back in fine form, defying traditional expectations of January blockbuster flicks. It’s also nice to know that this was a great song, which exceeded its standard. Don’t wait so long for another, Sam. Available on VOD.
Olivier Laxe, 114 minutes
One of the best foreign films of 2025, this thriller tells the story of a father (Sergi Lopez) who searches for a lover in Southern Morocco for his missing daughter. With his son along for the ride, Luis shows strangers photos of the missing girl, joining a few of them in the procession to the next party. When an unimaginable tragedy strikes, the tone of Laxe’s film turns into an existential horror film, one of the most memorable of the past year. It’s far from a simple watch, but don’t miss this one. Available on VOD.
James Cameron, 197 minutes
Oscar winner for Best Visual Effects, this third chapter in the Avatar the franchise was the most lightly received (it was the first one not nominated for Best Picture), but it still made about $1.5 billion. Despite the criticism about the lack of cultural tradition for this series, people go to see these films in large numbers, and some of those people may want to watch it again on PVOD before its inevitable Disney +. Now is the time to do that. Available on VOD.
#movies #watch #home