Most of us move through life operating on a pretty narrow slice of reality — our timeline, our country, our problems. Documentaries, at their best, blow that open. The six films below don’t just inform; they reorient.
Whether you’re watching a war photographer run toward the thing everyone else runs from, or a grandson make a 560-mile bus trip every month for two decades or the literal 165-million-year story of Earth’s dominant species — something shifts. Here are the docs worth clearing your schedule for.
The Dinosaurs
From executive producer Steven Spielberg and the team behind Life on Our Planet, The Dinosaurs is four episodes and 165 million years of Earth history — narrated by Morgan Freeman, rendered by Industrial Light & Magic, and somehow more emotionally gripping than most fiction. Rather than a stuffy history lesson, it plants you in the daily life of individual creatures — a tiny proto-dinosaur trying to survive its first day, an apex predator dragging a kill back to its nest. The scale of it is humbling in a way that’s hard to shake: an entire empire rose, evolved, and was erased long before humans showed up. Whatever you think your problems are, this helps.
Where to watch: Netflix
The Economics of Happiness
The Economics of Happiness tracks the tension between globalization and localization — and makes a quiet case that communities are finding more sustainable ways to live, not by waiting on governments or corporations, but by building local economies from the ground up. It’s a reframe on what progress actually looks like and who gets to define it.
Where to watch: YouTube
Love + War
Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin, the Oscar-winning team behind Free Solo, turn their lens on Pulitzer-winning war photographer Lynsey Addario in Love+War. The film follows Addario on the front lines in Ukraine while tracing a career spent documenting conflict in Afghanistan, the Middle East and beyond. The tension isn’t just in the shells exploding around her — it’s in what that life costs her family and what she believes photographs can actually change.
Where to watch: HBO Max
The Mission
National Geographic’s portrait of missionary John Chau is one of the most complicated documents of faith released in years. It resists easy narratives — no hero worship, no villain — and sits instead in the tension between calling, zeal, colonial history, and the weight of conviction. For anyone wrestling with missions or cross-cultural ethics, it’s essential.
Where to watch: HBO Max
Unknown: Cosmic Time Machine
This doc follows the launch of the James Webb Space Telescope and the scientists who bet years of their lives on it. It’s visually stunning and quietly worshipful — the kind of film that makes the universe feel both impossibly vast and strangely intimate, nudging you toward awe whether or not you have a word for what that awe is pointed at.
Where to Watch: Netflix
What We Leave Behind
For nearly 20 years, Julián Moreno took a bus 560 miles every month from his home in Mexico to visit his daughters and grandchildren in El Paso. Filmmaker Iliana Sosa spent that time with him, and the result is a quiet, devastating meditation on family, sacrifice and what immigration actually looks like from the inside — not as a political issue, but as a life.
Where to watch: Netflix
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