We will be back in Birmingham this March Netflix with the arrival of Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man. That film, a follow-up to the six-season series, is one of several big titles dropping on Netflix this month. But if you can’t be bothered to watch Cillian Murphy reprise his role as the razor-sharp Tommy Shelby, there are plenty of other options out there for you.
March 6 marks the premiere of War Machine, a sci-fi action thriller starring Alan Ritchson and Dennis Quaid, and British documentarian Louis Theroux returns with a new feature-length doc, Louis Theroux: Inside the Manosphere. The doc follows Theroux as he enters the toxic world of men’s rights influencers. On top of these great original titles, you can also watch new additions to its movie library such as the Saw series, Jurassic World: Dominion, the Oscar-winning Anatomy of a Fall and Minions: The Rise of Gru.
These films and more are new to Netflix this March. Here’s a look at the things we can’t wait to see.
Alan Ritchson was born to play strong, brave and powerful warriors. The Jack Reacher star’s latest project, War Machine, stars Ritchson as a US Army Ranger battling an unimaginable, otherworldly threat that seeks out every member of his squad. Dennis Quaid, Stephan James, Jai Courtney, Esai Morales, Blake Richardson, Keiynan Lonsdale and Daniel Webber all co-star in this action-packed thriller arriving on March 6.
Louis Theroux: Inside the Manosphere (March 11)
Louis Theroux has spent his entire journalism career analyzing niche subcultures, criminals and celebrities. In his latest documentary, Louis Theroux: Inside the Manosphere, he explores one of the men’s rights influencers, aka the “Manosphere.” In the feature-length special, Theroux meets some prominent online figures whose views on masculinity and gender roles have caught the attention of young men and some women. The film arrives on March 11.
Shenba (Priyanka Mohan) is a young Indian girl whose youthful fascination with Korean culture inspires her to experience it for herself. After years of dreaming of traveling, she unexpectedly finds herself in Seoul, but the reality of being a stranger immersed in a foreign culture proves to be more challenging than she imagined.
In Nobody 2, Bob Odenkirk reprises his role as the killer Hutch Mansell, a man who is just trying to live a normal life but returns to the world of murder-for-hire to pay off a debt. The highly stylized action and fighting is inspired by John Wick, for good reason: The film was written by Wick scribe Derek Kolstad. Connie Nielsen, RZA and Christopher Lloyd also return for the sequel, and Sharon Stone, John Ortiz and Colin Hanks join the cast.
The first Saw film premiered in 2004, and in the years since, it’s become a global phenomenon and a franchise of 10 films, nine of which will all be available on Netflix starting March 19. (All but the spin-off film Spiral: From the Book of Saw are coming to the platform.)
Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man (March 20)
Cillian Murphy returns as Tommy Shelby in Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man. The film was shot a few years after the sixth season of the Peaky Blinders series, in 1940, which hit the middle of World War II. After a self-imposed exile, Tommy Shelby returns to Birmingham and, as you might expect, his past and family drama come back to haunt him. The film is directed by Tom Harper and written by Steven Knight, and features a stellar cast including Barry Keoghan, Rebecca Ferguson, Tim Roth and Stephen Graham.
The Rise of the Red Hot Chili Peppers: Our Brother Hillel (March 20)
The Red Hot Chili Peppers are one of the most enduring bands around, even if the lineup has changed quite a bit since its early days in the 1980s. The Rise of the Red Hot Chili Peppers: Our Brother Hillel is a story of the band’s evolution and homage to original guitarist, Hillel Slovak, who did a drug overdose in 1988. The film is out on March 20.
Anatomy of a Fall (March 23)
The 2023 film Anatomy of a Fall received the 2023 Oscar for best original screenplay and was nominated for four more Academy Awards. The gripping legal drama follows a French novelist, Sandra Voyter (Sandra Hüller), as a woman whose husband falls to his death from the high window of their home in the Alps. Was the fall accidental? Did Sandra push him? Or did he kill himself? The mystery and ambiguity of it all will keep you guessing and forming your own opinions, and you’ll never hear 50 Cent the same way again.
Red Line is a new Thai thriller about a group of women who take revenge. After a series of women fall victim to a call-center scam that wipes out their savings, the justice system fails them, and they are forced to avenge the injustice themselves. Working with a hacker, they vow to take down the leader of the gang running the scam and take back what’s theirs. The film arrives on Netflix on March 26.
The latest film by Spanish writer/director Cesc Gay, 53 Sundays, is the story of three brothers who must decide what to do with their elderly father, who has begun to show strange behavior. When they get together for a family meeting to decide what to do with her and whether to put her in a nursing home, things turn to chaos.
BTS: The Comeback (March 27)
This feature-length documentary chronicles the return of K-pop band BTS after spending the past few years out of the spotlight so that each of its members could complete mandatory military service in South Korea. Out of obligation, the seven members of BTS have reunited to make a new album and once again perform for their army of fans.
This month, you can also catch BTS: The Comeback Live | Arirang, the band’s first live concert in almost four years. Set in Seoul’s historic Gwanghwamun Square, it streams on Netflix on March 21 at 7 am ET/4 am PT.







