Where to Watch 'Blue Heron'? Find Out Where You Can Witness the Semi-Autobiographical Drama

4th Nouvelles Vagues International Biarritz Film Festival Day Two FC Sophy Romvari attends a photocall during Day Two Of the 4th Nouvelles Vagues International Biarritz Film Festival on June 24, 2026 in Biarritz, France. Photo by Franck Castel ABACAPRESS.COM Biarritz France Copyright: xCastelxFranck ABACAx
4th Nouvelles Vagues International Biarritz Film Festival Day Two FC Sophy Romvari attends a photocall during Day Two Of the 4th Nouvelles Vagues International Biarritz Film Festival on June 24, 2026 in Biarritz, France. Photo by Franck Castel ABACAPRESS.COM Biarritz France Copyright: xCastelxFranck ABACAx
Blue Heron did not merely flap onto the film festival circuit; it soared straight into critical acclaim. Sophy Romvari’s intimate, auto-fictional drama blends home-movie aesthetics, two colliding timelines, and a hazy 1990s Vancouver Island setting to explore childhood trauma and mental illness within a Hungarian immigrant family. With TIFF recognition, Locarno praise, and a deeply intriguing visual style, the film is impossible to ignore.
After its theatrical release on April 17, 2026, audiences naturally wanted to know where they could watch Blue Heron next.
How to watch Blue Heron?
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Blue Heron has officially found its next roost on The Criterion Channel, where the acclaimed drama will make its United States subscription streaming debut on July 21, 2026. Until then, viewers can rent or buy Sophy Romvari’s intimate film digitally through Amazon Prime Video, the Apple TV Store, or Fandango at Home.
The Criterion Channel release is bringing more than the film itself to the table. Subscribers will also receive exclusive bonus material, including a Meet the Filmmaker interview with Sophy Romvari. For a movie built around memory, family, and the lingering messiness of the past, a little extra time with the filmmaker feels particularly fitting.

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Distributed by Janus Films, Blue Heron originally arrived in select United States theaters on April 17, 2026, before completing its theatrical journey through early July. The film earned nearly $600,000 domestically and continued playing at independent venues such as the Art Theatre Long Beach. Now, its next chapter is decidedly more couch-friendly.
At a time when audiences are increasingly curious about documentaries like The Librarians and where to watch it, this semi-documentary offers plenty of intriguing twists of its own, making it a must-watch.
What makes Blue Heron a must-watch
Blue Heron does not turn childhood trauma into a melodramatic spectacle, and that restraint is precisely what makes it so unsettling. Sophy Romvari filters a troubled older brother’s increasingly dangerous behavior through Sasha’s limited childhood perspective, allowing everyday moments to become quietly devastating. The result feels less like a conventional family drama and more like an excavation of memory.
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That approach makes Blue Heron particularly fascinating to watch. Real photographs and footage from Sophy Romvari’s father helped recreate the family environment, while the film’s documentary-like visual language captures parental helplessness and unpredictable behavior with remarkable intimacy. By refusing easy answers or a neatly packaged resolution, Blue Heron becomes a must-watch for anyone drawn to films that linger long after the credits.
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Are you excited to watch Blue Heron? Let us know in the comments!
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Edited By: Itti Mahajan
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