5 Best New Movies to Stream This Weekend (March 14-15)

Movie night streaming setup with TV and popcorn

Your Weekend Streaming Picks: March 14-15

Another weekend, another batch of must-watch movies landing on streaming platforms. From animated sequels to action thrillers and haunting documentaries, here are the 5 best new movies worth your time this weekend.

1. Zootopia 2 (Disney+)

Disney's animated comedy sequel sees the ever-chipper bunny Judy Hopps (Ginnifer Goodwin) and sly fox Nick Wilde (Jason Bateman) back on the beat. Now officially partners on the force, the duo ends up on the run for a crime they didn't commit. To clear their names, they team up with a wacky beaver podcaster, Nibbles Maplestick (Fortune Feimster), and track down a viper (Ke Huy Quan) in the city's secret reptile underworld. A great family-friendly pick.

2. Now You See Me: Now You Don't (Starz)

Love it or hate it, the Now You See Me franchise delivers over-the-top heist-style magic hijinks. The Four Horsemen — Jesse Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson, Dave Franco, and Isla Fisher — return after being tricked into one last job that introduces them to a new generation of illusionists played by Justice Smith, Dominic Sessa, and Ariana Greenblatt. Pure popcorn entertainment.

3. Bodycam (Shudder)

Found footage horror fans, this one's for you. Bodycam captures a routine domestic disturbance call that goes horrifically wrong, all through police body camera footage. The claustrophobic framing delivers genuine tension in the first act, even if it loses steam in the second half. Think Paranormal Activity with a police procedural twist.

4. Nobody 2 (Netflix)

Bob Odenkirk returns as retired assassin Hutch Mansell in this lean 90-minute action thriller. With just the right dose of choreographed mayhem and crowd-pleasing violence, Nobody 2 doesn't overstay its welcome. Easy to follow even if you haven't seen the first film.

5. Fukushima: A Nuclear Nightmare (HBO Max)

HBO Max's haunting new documentary revisits the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster with newly available footage and survivor interviews. A sobering, well-crafted look at one of the worst nuclear accidents in history.

The Bottom Line

For families, Zootopia 2 is the obvious pick. Action fans should queue up Nobody 2. If you want something lighter, Now You See Me: Now You Don't delivers brainless fun. Horror buffs have Bodycam, and documentary fans should not miss Fukushima. Something for everyone this weekend.