MUBI: best new films streaming this week

Discover the best new films to stream from 29 June to 5 July 2026 on MUBI with this guide.
Phantoms of July. Image: Grandfilm. Streaming on MUBI.

MUBI: new this week

The Deer Hunter – 1 July

Film (1978). Michael Cimino’s monumental Vietnam epic follows three steelworkers from a Pennsylvania town whose lives are shattered by war. Anchored by extraordinary performances from Robert De Niro, Christopher Walken, and Meryl Streep, and winner of five Academy Awards including Best Picture.

The Third Man – 1 July

Film (1949). Carol Reed’s masterwork of postwar noir, written by Graham Greene, follows a pulp novelist who arrives in shadowy, occupied Vienna to find his friend has been killed under mysterious circumstances. Joseph Cotten and Orson Welles at their most magnetic.

Goodbye Berlin – 1 July

Film (2016). Fatih Akin’s tender coming-of-age road movie, adapted from the beloved German novel, follows two misfit teenagers on an unlikely adventure across the German countryside — funny, warm, and quietly moving.

Not A Pretty Picture – 1 July

Film (1976). Martha Coolidge’s courageous and formally ingenious debut feature, in which the director recreates the circumstances of her own high school sexual assault through dramatic reenactment — blending fiction and documentary in a pioneering examination of date rape and its aftermath. Restored in 4K by the Academy Archive and The Film Foundation. Céline Sciamma’s pick for Berlinale 2023.

Phantoms Of July – 3 July

Film (2025). Julian Radlmaier’s fourth film is a bittersweet and whimsical story that spans centuries in the German town of Sangerhausen. Ursula, a heartbroken waitress from East Germany, and Neda, a lonely Iranian YouTuber recovering from a broken arm, meet by chance and mistaken identity. Their encounter leads to an unexpected ghost hunt in the mountains, where the ghosts of history have a playful conversation with the dissatisfied people of modern Germany.

Marxism At Play: Three By Julian Radlmaier – 3 July

Collection. To mark the release of Phantoms of July, this collection highlights the German director’s two earlier films, showing off his unique style. He blends Marxist ideas and political allegory with humour and a light touch.

Includes Phantoms of July, Self-Criticism of a Bourgeois Dog, Bloodsuckers.

MUBI: recent highlights

Theatre of The World – 26 June

Freak Orlando. Image: Ulrike Ottinger. Streaming This Week On Mubi.
Freak Orlando. Image: Ulrike Ottinger. Streaming this week on MUBI.

Spotlight collection. Queer, feminist, and defiantly avant-garde, Ulrike Ottinger’s ‘Berlin’ trilogy transforms Cold War-era West Berlin into a dazzling landscape of theatricality, excess, and radical imagination. Blurring fantasy, satire, and political provocation, Ottinger’s cinema revels in collisions between the grotesque and the beautiful.

Includes Ticket of No ReturnFreak OrlandoDorian Gray in the Mirror of the Yellow Press.

Crimes of the Future – 19 June

Film (2022). David Cronenberg’s provocative return to body horror imagines a near future where surgery, performance art, and human evolution merge into disturbing new forms of expression. Starring Viggo Mortensen, Léa Seydoux, and Kristen Stewart.

God Is Shy – 19 June

God Is Shy. Streaming This Month On Mubi.
God is Shy. Streaming this month on MUBI.

Film (2025). Jocelyn Charles’ poised and formally inventive debut short film, God Is Shy, opens with an apparently innocent game in which two young passengers sketch their fears during a train journey. However, the dynamic shifts when a mysterious woman intervenes, transforming the encounter into increasingly unsettling, ambiguous territory.

By blending animation with psychological horror, the film transitions seamlessly between ordinary reality and the uncanny. It employs distorted perspectives, shifting textures, and expressive sound design to externalise emotional unease. Both humorous and unsettling, God Is Shy exhibits a notable mastery of tone and atmosphere within its concise runtime. 

Hot to the Touch: Female Desire on Screen – 12 June

Portrait Of A Lady On Fire. Image: Pyramide Films. Streaming On Mubi.
Portrait of a Lady on Fire. Image: Pyramide Films. Streaming on MUBI.

Spotlight collection. This collection foregrounds women reclaiming desire, intimacy, and agency on screen—challenging decades of objectifying cinematic conventions. From tender romances to boundary-pushing dramas, these films explore sexuality through female subjectivity, emotional complexity, and unapologetic passion.

Includes The HandmaidenPortrait of a Lady on Fire.

Sirāt – 12 June

Sirât. Photo: Quim Vives. Mubi.
Sirât. Photo: Quim Vives / Madman Films. Streaming on MUBI.

Film (2025). Oliver Laxe’s Sirât presents a hypnotic and immersive narrative set in the deserts of North Africa, chronicling a father and son’s search for their missing daughter following her disappearance at an underground rave in Morocco. As the protagonists move from one remote gathering to the next, their quest evolves into an exploration of spiritual, existential, and ultimately unknowable dimensions.

From ScreenHub’s five-star review:

Sirât, the immaculately staged near-apocalypse from Oscar-nominated French-Galician filmmaker Óliver Laxe, has no interest in easing you in. Or out.

Instead, as the film opens, we’re thrust headlong into a juddering blast of bone-crunching bass that annihilates our senses. A fortress-like barricade of towering speakers is arrayed at the foot of a cliff, somewhere in the southern Morrocco end of the Sahara. A light show dances on this foreboding canvas as a drugged-up throng surrender themselves to the beat. Read more …

Jacques Tati – 5 June

Spotlight collection. A celebration of Jacques Tati’s timeless comic genius, where modern life becomes a choreography of visual gags, architectural absurdities, and quietly anarchic observation. Through meticulous staging and gentle satire, Tati transformed everyday behaviour into one of cinema’s great comic languages.

Includes PlaytimeMon OncleM. Hulot’s HolidayTraficParade.

Gloria – 5 June

Film (2013). Sebastián Lelio’s bittersweet character study follows a divorced woman embracing romance, freedom, and reinvention within Santiago’s nightlife scene, elevated by Paulina García’s radiant, award-winning performance.

Fish Tank – 5 June

Andrea Arnold’s breakthrough feature follows a volatile teenager navigating isolation, desire, and fractured family life on a British housing estate. Restless, compassionate, and anchored by Katie Jarvis’ remarkable debut performance. 

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Paul Dalgarno is author of the novels A Country of Eternal Light (2023) and Poly (2020); the memoir And You May Find Yourself (2015); and the creative non-fiction book Prudish Nation (2023). He is Head of Content at ArtsHub & ScreenHub. Insta: @dalgarnowrites