8 Climate Change Movies to Watch on Earth Day

The eight best climate change movies to watch on Earth Day, including "Don't Look Up", "Before the Flood", and "Utama".

Liputan6.com, Jakarta - Earth Day 2026 is almost here, and it is a good time to think about our planet. Climate change is one of the biggest problems in the world today. The ice is melting, the weather is getting worse, and many living things are losing their homes. One great way to learn more is by watching climate change movies. These films help us understand what is happening to our Earth and why it matters.

If you want to do something meaningful this Earth Day, you are on the right place. Here, we will share some of the best climate change movies to watch on this important day. They are a great starting point for anyone who wants to care more about our planet.

1. Don't Look Up (2021)

Where to Watch: Netflix

The first on our list is this dark comedy from director Adam McKay. Two scientists, played by Leonardo DiCaprio and Jennifer Lawrence, discover a giant comet heading for Earth. They try to warn the world, but no one seems to care. The film is funny and frightening at the same time. The comet is a symbol for how people often ignore big dangers like climate change until it is too late.

2. Before the Flood (2016)

Where to Watch: Disney+, Fandango At Home, Amazon Video, Apple TV Store

Directed by Fisher Stevens, this documentary follows environmental activist Leonardo DiCaprio as he travels across five continents and the Arctic. As a United Nations Messenger of Peace, DiCaprio meets scientists, world leaders, and communities affected by climate change. He sees firsthand how rising temperatures are destroying forests, coral reefs, and entire ways of life. It is a personal and urgent journey that asks one important question: can we still fix this?

3. Princess Mononoke (1997)

Where to Watch: HBO Max, Amazon Video, Apple TV Store, Fandango At Home

In this beloved Studio Ghibli film, director Hayao Miyazaki tells the story of a young prince named Ashitaka who is cursed by a demon. His search for a cure leads him into a forest where a fierce young woman named San is fighting to protect her home. The people of Iron Town, led by Lady Eboshi, are cutting down the forest to mine for iron. Ashitaka finds himself caught between humans and nature, trying to find peace for both sides.

4. A Life on Our Planet (2020)

Where to Watch: Netflix

Sir David Attenborough, the world-famous nature broadcaster, reflects on over 90 years of his life in this powerful documentary. He has seen more of the natural world than almost anyone alive. He has also watched it slowly disappear. Attenborough shares what he has witnessed over decades and then offers a hopeful vision for how the world could recover. It is a farewell to what we have lost and a call to protect what we still have.

5. 2040 (2019)

Where to Watch: Tubi (Free), Kanopy (Free)Directed by and starring Australian filmmaker Damon Gameau, this documentary is structured as a letter to his four-year-old daughter, Velvet. Gameau travels the world to find climate solutions that already exist today. He looks at renewable energy, regenerative farming, and other technologies that could make our world cleaner. The film blends documentary footage with dramatized scenes to paint an optimistic picture of the future we could have.

6. The Day After Tomorrow (2004)

Where to Watch: Hulu, fuboTV, YouTube TV, Fandango At Home, Amazon Video, Apple TV Store

Starring Dennis Quaid and Jake Gyllenhaal, this Hollywood blockbuster takes global warming to a dramatic extreme. A climate scientist named Jack Hall tries to warn the government that rising temperatures will trigger a catastrophic Ice Age. When monster storms begin destroying cities, Jack races across a frozen New York City to rescue his son Sam. Directed by Roland Emmerich, the film is intense and action-packed. Its core message about ignoring climate warnings is still very relevant today.

7. An Inconvenient Truth (2006)

Where to Watch: fuboTV, Paramount Plu, Amazon Video, Apple TV Store, Fandango At Home, JustWatch TV

Directed by Davis Guggenheim, this Oscar-winning documentary captures former US Vice President Al Gore on stage. He delivers his famous slideshow presentation about global warming to audiences across the country. Gore uses graphs, photographs, and stories to explain how human activity is heating up the planet. It was one of the first major films to bring climate science to a wide audience. It helped start a global conversation that is still ongoing today.

8. Utama (2022)

Where to Watch: Kino Film Collection, Amazon Video, Apple TV Store, Fandango At Home, Kanopy, Hoopla

This quietly moving film follows an elderly Quechua couple, Virginio and Sisa, living in the Bolivian highlands. They have herded llamas on the same land for their entire lives. But when an unusually long drought arrives and their water runs dry, they face a hard choice. Should they stay and hold on to everything they know, or leave for the city? Directed by Alejandro Loayza Grisi, it is a gentle but deeply affecting portrait of climate change and loss. The film won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance and was Bolivia's official submission to the Academy Awards.