Netflix is continuing its 2026 winning streak by sticking to its successful formula of adding interesting new and older movies to its already impressive library.
At the top of Watch With Us’ March 2026 binge list is Nuremberg, a compelling World War II drama starring Russell Crowe.
If you’re still in Game of Thrones withdrawal, stream the epic fantasy The Green Knight.
And if you crave Oscar-worthy drama with a dash of sex, violence and polyester, you’ll hit the jackpot with Martin Scorsese’s gangster classic, Casino.
‘Nuremberg’ (2025)After World War II ends and the Nazis surrender, the Allies ponder what to do with their German enemy’s captured leaders. Instead of executing them outright, they decide to hold several well-publicized trials where the world could bear witness to all the crimes they committed. U.S. Army psychiatrist Douglas Kelley (Rami Malek) is tasked with evaluating the mental health of all 22 prisoners facing criminal prosecution for their war crimes, including Hitler’s former second-in-command, Hermann Göring (Russell Crowe).
The two men forge a mutually beneficial relationship — Göring helps Kelley evaluate the other prisoners while Kelley assists Göring’s family. But when Kelley is confronted with Göring’s wartime atrocities, he begins to question his own professional ethics and personal morality.
Nuremberg takes a big, weighty subject — World War II and the Holocaust — and makes it personal and topical. This is a war movie that focuses on the aftermath of war, not the battles waged during it, but it’s just as gripping as Saving Private Ryan or The Thin Red Line. Crowe is fantastic as Göring, who thinks he’s a good man because he loves his family and is loyal to his country. As Nuremberg shows, loyalty means nothing if it’s placed in the service of a regime intent on exterminating millions of people. The film reveals how such evil existed then and still thrives today — by blind obedience, supreme arrogance and implausible deniability.
Nuremberg is streaming on Netflix.
‘The Green Knight’ (2021)During a somber Christmas feast at King Arthur’s Round Table, the imposing and magical Green Knight appears and challenges young Gawain (Dev Patel) to a duel. Gawain wins by decapitating the creature, but to claim the prize of the Knight’s green axe, he’ll have to travel to the Knight’s home one year later and receive the same injury, which will surely kill him. Still, he is bound by his word, but his journey to the Knight’s Green Chapel is filled with dangerous and sometimes bizarre encounters involving thieves, headless ghosts and anthropomorphic foxes. Lost and alone, will Gawain ever reach his destination? And does he even want to if it means certain death?
Released when COVID-19 was still keeping a large portion of moviegoers away from theaters, The Green Knight didn’t get the love it should have. Seen today, its amazing visuals, medieval setting and episodic storytelling make it an ideal film for fans of House of the Dragon and A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms. Gaiwan’s journey is filled with memorable quests that are sometimes scary and other times romantic. The somber tone, however, remains the same. The Green Knight is a fantasy somehow still rooted in reality, a fable designed to address our fears about honor, marriage and death. It’s an epic film made on a shoestring budget (a reported $15 million), but the images it conjures are priceless.
The Green Knight is streaming on Netflix.
‘Casino’ (1995)In the early 1970s, Chicago mob associate Sam Rothstein (Robert De Niro) is sent to Las Vegas to oversee the Tangiers Casino. He’s immediately successful, which makes him a target, so the mob sends Sam’s childhood friend, the ruthless Nicky Santoro (Joe Pesci), to protect him. Together, the two men rule Vegas, but it all comes crashing down when Sam falls in love with and marries Ginger McKenna (Sharon Stone), a showgirl who can’t quite kick her cocaine habit — and seeing her former pimp. Crime is a messy business, but for Sam, Nicky and Ginger, it’s love and lust that tears them apart.
When it was released in 1995, many critics dismissed Casino as Goodfellas lite. Time has proved them wrong, however, and the film is now rightly regarded as one of Scorsese’s best. De Niro, Pesci and Stone are all good, of course, but the real star of the film is Scorsese himself. The way he captures a bygone era of Vegas that was still populated by pimps, prostitutes and the mob is endlessly entertaining, and the film is packed with so many signature tunes from the ‘60s and ‘70s, you’d think you just attended a boomer concert. Casino pulls off the neat hat trick of being a successful crime tale, love story and epic about the downfall of Sin City before it was taken over by something far worse — souless corporations and annoying families.
Casino is streaming on Netflix.











