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20 Best Documentaries Streaming on Netflix Now [March 2021]

20 Best Documentaries Streaming on Netflix Now [March 2021]

Netflix is filled with every genre of film you imagine.  From laugh-a-minute comedies and heartfelt drama to action-adventure and, of course, the latest superhero films, Netflix has something for everyone no matter what mood you’re in. Of course, you don’t need to stick to fiction when you’re looking for something to watch on Netflix. Documentaries can provide the same emotional experience as any other film, all while challenging your worldview or teaching you about something you never knew.

Whether you like your documentaries about history, nature, entertainment, biography, or social issues, Netflix has you covered. Netflix has a broad selection of great documentaries for everyone. Here are some of the ones we like best, streaming on Netflix right now. We’ve limited this list to feature-length documentaries, but if you’re more interested in docuseries focused on crime, you may want to check out our separate list on that very topic here. 

Nobody Speak: Trials of the Free Press

Nobody Speak: Trials of the Free Press

By Brian Knappenberger

star 6.5/10

by IMDb Rating

In 2016, the popular gossip site Gawker shuttered, after years of being unable to maintain the financial costs of a lawsuit brought on by wrestler Hulk Hogan. The film follows the entire saga of this lawsuit, from the original sex tape publication by Gawker to the financial backing of Peter Thiel, all the way through the closure of Gawker Media after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Much of the narrative follows Thiel’s attempt to take down Gawker after they published an article nine years prior outing him as a gay man. The film then switches narratives, focusing on Sheldon Adelson’s purchase of the Las Vegas Review-Journal while keeping his identity under wraps, eventually being revealed by his own journalists who called their own contacts. The film is timely, if a bit scattershot between the two narratives, but well-worth a watch.

What Happened, Miss Simone?

What Happened, Miss Simone?

By Liz Garbus

star 7.6/10

by IMDb Rating

Nina Simone lived an incredible life, one you can find out about in the documentary What Happened, Miss Simone?The film chronicles her life after becoming a civil rights activist and moving to Liberia following the political unrest of the 1960s. The documentary combines previously unreleased archival footage and interviews with Simone’s daughter and friends. The title of the film was taken from a Maya Angelou quote, and the film was praised by critics following its release.

Get Me Roger Stone

Get Me Roger Stone

By

star 7.3/10

by IMDb Rating
Roger Stone, known as a master in the dark arts of politics, plants the seeds that allow businessmen and moguls such as Donald Trump to enter the political arena and upend the establishment.Bank, DiMauro and Pehme began filming with Roger Stone in late 2011 after Pehme had met Stone at a political function. Inspired by a New Yorker article by writer Jeffrey Toobin, the filmmakers embarked on a five-year journey to make a documentary about Stone in order to tell the story of his transformative effect on modern politics–which reaches its climax in 2016 with the election of Donald Trump to the Presidency of the United States of America.
Icarus

Icarus

By Bryan Fogel

star 7.9/10

by IMDb Rating

The first Netflix Original film to win an Oscar, Icarus is directed by filmmaker Bryan Fogel, following the director as he explores the option to compete in a cycling race while doping. While researching illegal doping, he becomes friends with the Russian doctor that is helping him take performance-enhancing drugs that will prevent him from being caught using them. The doctor, Dr. Rodchenkov, eventually grows to trust Fogel enough to let it slip that Russia is planning on using a state-sponsored Olympic doping program that will allow their athletes to compete at higher levels than other nations. When word slips out to the public about the program, Fogel realizes his friend is in danger, leading to Rodchenkov giving a testimony in the United States once he is flown outside of Russia. The film is thrilling and eye-opening at the world of doping, and is great for fans of documentaries and political thrillers alike.

The Life and Death of Marsha P. Johnson

The Life and Death of Marsha P. Johnson

By David France

star 7.2/10

by IMDb Rating

Marsha P. Johnson earned her place in the activism hall of rights. As an outspoken gay rights activist, Johnson—a self-identified drag queen well before transgender individuals were recognized for their identities, Johnson was a prominent figure in the Stonewall uprising in 1969, and never stopped fighting for the rights of LGBTQ people everywhere. The film, a Netflix original documentary, follows activist Victoria Cruz as she dives into the details and history surrounding the mysterious death of Johnson in 1992, when Johnson was found in the Hudson River after the 1992 Pride Parade. Initially closed as a suicide, the case was reopened by the NYPD in 2012 as a possible homicide following efforts by fellow activist Mariah Lopez. Though the film dedicates a good portion of its running time to identifying how important Johnson is to the movement, the film does a great job at highlighting the efforts of activism in the 1970s through today.

Abducted in Plain Sight

Abducted in Plain Sight

By Skye Borgman

star 6.8/10

by IMDb Rating

Though originally released in 2017 to little attention or fanfare, Abducted in Plain Sight gained notoriety in early 2019 when it was added to Netflix, exploding in popularity in just a few weeks. The film tells the story of the Broberg family, who experienced a tragedy when 12-year-old Jan was abducted in 1974 after the family was manipulated by a pedophile, Robert “B” Berchtold, who befriended the family. When Jan went missing, the family failed to alert the police for days, assuming that Robert was still a family friend. Making matters worse, when Jan was returned five weeks later, she lied to her parents, explaining nothing happened while she was missing. The film is a tough watch, but if you can stomach it, it’s a gripping documentary that will leave you haunted.

Out of Thin Air

Out of Thin Air

By Dylan Howitt

star 6.3/10

by IMDb Rating

In 1974, two unrelated men disappeared ten months apart from each other in Iceland. One, an 18-year-old man named Guðmundur Einarsson, first disappeared in January, last seen by a motorist. The second, Geirfinnur Einarsson, disappeared in November of the same year after receiving a phone call and driving to a cafe, where he parked his car and wasn’t seen again. Their bodies were never found, but with the police force in Iceland under intense public pressure to solve the case, a group of six young men confessed to the crimes of murder. Despite having no memory of the crimes, the men were arrested, kept in isolation, tortured, denied food and water, and kept from their lawyers. Out of Thin Air follows what happens when the police are desperate enough to find the culprits for crimes that they use techniques to make those crimes come true. It’s shocking, terrifying, and will leave you breathless.

Audrie and Daisy

Audrie and Daisy

By

star 7.2/10

by IMDb Rating

It’s a story you’ve likely seen dramatized before, but told through the light of a Netflix original documentary, becomes far more bone chilling. Taking place in two separate cities in California and Missouri, the film follows Audrie Pott and Daisy Coleman, two teenage girls who were sexually assaulted by people they considered friends after becoming intoxicated at a party. The film follows the aftermath, as both girls endure online harassment in the age of social media, along with bullying from nearly everyone in their towns. The harassment becomes too much for both girls to handle; when they both try to attempt suicide, one of them tragically dies. The film explores sexual assault and the use of social media in bullying and cyberbullying, and what can be done to combat this issues moving forward. It’s a tough watch, but essential in the age of #MeToo.

Fyre: The Greatest Party That Never Happened

Fyre: The Greatest Party That Never Happened

By Chris Smith

star 7.2/10

by IMDb Rating

Most true crime documentaries revolve around murder or other similarly-grim crimes. In the truest sense of that definition of the genre, Fyre: The Greatest Party That Never Happened is not a true crime documentary. There’s no murder to solve, no kidnapping involved in the film. Yet from a certain sense, Fyre tells the story of a white collar crime often not shown in true crime documentaries. Following a scam-filled music festival that preyed on rich millennials on Instagram, the film follows the building of the Fyre Festival, from its induction to the nightmare of its downfall. It’s gained a ton of popularity on social media, and as a Netflix Original, you can catch it anytime streaming on Netflix.

Casting JonBenet

Casting JonBenet

By Kitty Green

star 6.1/10

by IMDb Rating

A Netflix original film released in 2017, Casting JonBenet is one of the more unique documentaries featured on this list. While the film does feature and tell the story behind the murder of JonBenet Ramsey, a child beauty queen who was found dead in the basement of her parents’ home eight hours after she was reported missing on Christmas 1996, the film presents the story while featuring the casting of a fictional JonBenet Ramsey film, testing various Colorado-based actors to fill the roles of John and Patsy Ramsey, brother Burke Ramsey, John Mark Karr, a teacher who falsely confessed to the murder, several Boulder police officers and officials and JonBenet herself. Throughout the audition process, the actors reveal their own emotion about the case, offering speculation around who killed JonBenet.

The Pixar Story

The Pixar Story

By Leslie Iwerks

star 7.7/10

by IMDb Rating
Amanda Knox

Amanda Knox

By

star 6.9/10

by IMDb Rating

The story of Amanda Knox and the murder of Meredith Kercher is known around the world, and for good reason. The saga, which began when Knox was studying abroad in 2007 as a 20 year old student, took eight years of Knox’s life and irreparably changed her reputation around the world. After being arrested and jailed in Italy for the murder of her roommate, Knox and her boyfriend faced trial against the Italian court system in 2009, convicted for murder and sentenced to twenty-six years in prison. The film follows Knox and her parents’ fight against not just the Italian courts, but the Italian police who are convinced of her guilt from moment one based on assumptions about her behavior and nationality, and the tabloid journalism that adds fuel to the fire of public opinion. Amanda Knox is a haunting documentary on what happens when the entire system turns against you; it’s a must-watch, but will leave you shaken.

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By Ava DuVernay

star 8.2/10

by IMDb Rating

This documentary from filmmaker Ava DuVernay promises to explore “the intersection of race, justice and mass incarceration in the United States,” and it sticks the landing. Taking its name from the 13th amendment, which freed the slaves in the United States and prohibited slavery unless as punishment for a crime, the film takes a long, hard look at how the prison system in the United States was built to continue the idea of slavery through the enablement of white police officers to more easily arrest black persons in the USA to force them to work under convict leasing. The result is a chilling documentary that covers Jim Crow laws, the suppression of African Americans by disenfranchisement, and the war on drugs created to target minority communities. The film won an Emmy, and was nominated for an Oscar for Best Documentary.

Miss Americana

Miss Americana

By Lana Wilson

star 7.4/10

by IMDb Rating

Documentaries following and surrounding singers and bands can often feel a bit forced, and that’s exactly what sets Miss Americana apart from the pack. Following Taylor Swift over the making of two very different albums, Reputation and Lover, it sees Swift tackling a number of issues in her life, including a past struggle with both body dysmorphia and an eating disorder, the health of her family and specifically her mother’s battle with cancer, her decision to quit being quiet about political issues in the United States, and her sexual assault trial. It’s an especially interesting look at Taylor Swift after an extremely busy 2020, where she released two twin albums with an all-new sound, and a more personal approach.

Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond

Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond

By Chris Smith

star 7.6/10

by IMDb Rating

Jim & Andy follows actor Jim Carrey as he remains in character as Andy Kaufman during the production of the 1999 film Man on the Moon, directed by Miloš Forman. The film alternates between contemporary interviews with Carrey and firsthand footage of the making of Man on the Moon almost 20 years earlier. Jim Carrey was notoriously a disaster on set, choosing to become a method actor during the production of the film. Paired best as a partner film to Man on the MoonJim & Andy is affecting as it is alienating. Definitely check this one out.

Homecoming: A Film by Beyoncé

Homecoming: A Film by Beyoncé

By

star 7.5/10

by IMDb Rating

In 2018, Beyoncé took the stage at Coachella for a historic set over two weekends. Her performance marked the first time an African-American woman headlined the festival, and with the performance streamed online, she received critical praise for the set’s use of honoring black history while performing music from across her entire career. In the Netflix original documentary, Homecoming follows both the concert itself and the behind-the-scenes work put in by Beyoncé and her team to make one of the most legendary concerts in history. Homecoming has already been praised as one of the best concert films ever made, and whether you’re a fan of Beyoncé or not, it’s well worth watching.

Knock Down the House

Knock Down the House

By Rachel Lears

star 7.3/10

by IMDb Rating

In 2018, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez made national news while running for Congress in the 14th District in New York, challenging incumbent Democrat Joe Crowley for the seat in the primary season. Knock Down the House follows her campaign, along with the campaigns of Cori Bush in Missouri, Amy Vilela in Nevada, and Paula Jean Swearengin of West Virginia, as all four women attempt to run for Congress during primaries. Being the only women of the four who won her primary, Ocasio-Cortez takes center stage in this documentary, following her fantastic run into Congress, as well as becoming one of the most popular representatives in the current meeting of Congress.

Blackfish

Blackfish

By Gabriela Cowperthwaite

star 8.1/10

by IMDb Rating

This now-infamous documentary concerns the captivity of Tilikum, an orca involved in the deaths of three individuals, and the consequences of keeping orcas in captivity. The coverage of Tilikum includes Blackfish includes a testimonial from Lori Marino, director of science with the Nonhuman Rights Project. Cowperthwaite also focuses on SeaWorld’s claims that lifespans of orcas in captivity are comparable to those in the wild, typically 30 years for males and 50 years for females, a claim the film argues is false. Other people interviewed include former SeaWorld trainers, such as John Hargrove, who describe their experiences with Tilikum and other captive whales. The film features footage of attacks on trainers by Tilikum and other captive whales as well as interviews with witnesses.

The Last Dance

The Last Dance

By

star 9.1/10

by IMDb Rating

While The Last Dance is more of a miniseries than a documentary, this co-production between Netflix, ESPN, and the NBA is well worth a look, regardless of your feelings on basketball. The Last Dance tells the story of Michael Jordan, arguably the greatest basketball player to ever take the court, throughout two timelines of his life: one as he works his way up through the league, leading the Chicago Bulls to their first championship successes, and the other as he takes the court for his last season with the 97-98 Bulls, attempting to win a sixth ring to finish out his legacy. It’s a fascinating look at the man himself and the pressure he put on himself to become the greatest of all time.

Dick Johnson is Dead

Dick Johnson is Dead

By Kirsten Johnson

star 7.4/10

by IMDb Rating

tomato 100%

by RottenTomatoes

Filmmaker Kirsten Johnson made a huge splash in the world of filmmaking with her 2016 autobiographical documentary Cameraperson, and finally, you can watch her hotly-anticipated follow-up film on Netflix. For Dick Johnson is Dead, the director once again turned her attention towards her own life—more specifically, her father, who suffers from dementia and is slowly losing his memory. With the help of his daughter and her filmmaking crew, the film follows Dick Johnson as his impending death is demonstrated on film again and again and again, with hilarious results from violent “accidents.” The film is truly bittersweet, showing the close relationship between father and daughter while also demonstrating what’s coming in due time.

William Sattelberg

Mar 1, 2021

William has been with TechJunkie since 2017, writing about smartphones, games, streaming media, and anything else that technology touches in our current age. He also works as a video producer, writing and recording scripts for our video team and editing videos for TechJunkie's YouTube channel. William graduated from SUNY Fredonia in 2016 with a degree in Video Production, and lives in Buffalo, NY.

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