Bugonia Movie is now available to stream on Netflix in the United States with a subscription, giving viewers a way to catch Yorgos Lanthimos’ 2025 film without waiting for a broader rollout. The movie, which mixes science fiction, thriller and dark comedy, is also available to rent or buy in the U.S. through Amazon Video, Apple TV Store and Fandango At Home.
That matters because Bugonia follows two conspiracy-obsessed young men who abduct a powerful CEO after deciding she is an alien planning to destroy Earth. Directed by Lanthimos and written by Will Tracy, the R-rated remake of the South Korean film Save the Green Planet! has drawn attention not just for its premise but for the way it folds a high-concept idea into a mainstream viewing guide.
Availability changes by country. In Canada, the film is streaming on Prime Video as part of the library, and it can also be rented or purchased on Apple TV Store, Amazon Video and CosmoGo. In the UK, viewers can rent or buy it on Amazon Video, Apple TV Store, Sky Store or Rakuten TV. In Australia, it is streaming on Foxtel Now with a subscription and is also available to rent or purchase through Apple TV Store and Amazon Video.
The timing is straightforward: on April 28, 2026, a viewing guide explained how to watch Bugonia on Netflix from anywhere, while confirming its U.S. Netflix availability. For anyone trying to track down the film now, the practical answer is that there is no major platform offering it completely free, though Netflix and Prime Video both allow legal downloads for offline viewing through their official apps.
Behind the distribution map is a film with a clear identity. Bugonia was filmed in High Wycombe in England, Atlanta in the United States and Milos in Greece, and it arrives as a remake rather than an original premise. That source material, along with its R rating, helps explain why the movie is being positioned for mature audiences even as it travels across major streaming and rental platforms.
So the answer to the question is simple: Bugonia Movie is easiest to stream in the U.S. on Netflix, but viewers in Canada, the UK and Australia have different platform options depending on whether they want a subscription, rental or purchase. The one thing they will not find is a free full-length release on a major service.