9 Dystopian Movies Like Don't Worry Darling and Where to Watch Them

dont worry darling

dont worry darling
  • Primary Subject: A list for fans of dystopian thrillers like Don't Worry Darling
  • Key UpdateDon't Worry Darling is one for psychological thriller fans in 2026, currently available to stream on HBO Max and Netflix in various regions
  • Status: Recommendations & Streaming Guide
  • Last Verified: January 30, 2026
  • Quick Answer: To watch Don't Worry Darling, head to HBO Max or Netflix; for similar thrills, check out our 9 recommended films

Imagine living a seemingly perfect, utopian life in a town called Victory, where being a 1950s housewife means staying happy and satisfied all day long while your husband goes to work to who knows where. But what happens when the missus discovers disturbing secrets and a sinister reality that could wreck the balance of their world?

If dystopian realities like Don't Worry Darling intrigued you, here are 9 dystopian movies like Don't Worry Darling and where to watch them.

The Truman Show (1998)

The Truman Show is essentially one of the most classic dystopian stories out there, and it stars a man, Truman Burbank (played by Jim Carrey), who discovers his entire, idyllic life is not what it seems.

The only catch here is that Truman never had anyone help him escape or find out the truth about his life.

Purchase or Rent: Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV

Pleasantville (1998)

Pleasantville follows siblings David and Jennifer, who get transported into the world of a 1950s sitcom where the town is all about conformity and being colorless.

The black-and-white 1950s sitcom challenges the siblings by introducing them to color (emotion and change) that bends the utopian illusion.

Purchase or Rent: Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)

Joel and Clementine's chance encounter may have been a signal of fate bringing them together, but Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind bends reality further than that.

When Joel and Clementine get trapped within their dissolving memories to forget their relationship in a simulated suburbia, Joel does something about it, realizing that the uncomfortable truths are better than maintaining a "perfect" forced reality.

Purchase or Rent: Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV

The Girl On the Train (2016)

The Girl on the Train is not exactly a dystopian or idyllic reality, but rather challenges the psychological well-being of Rachel Watson (Emily Blunt), a depressed alcoholic divorcee who becomes "obsessed" with the perfect couple she watches from the train window she takes every day to work.

If you're into unreliable narrators and gaslighting psychological thrillers, The Girl on the Train is the place to wait for the big twist to unfold.

Purchase or Rent: Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV

I'm Thinking of Ending Things (2020)

Speaking of psychological thrillers, I'm Thinking of Ending Things warps its own reality through the lens of the subjective nature of memory.

Apart from the stylistic cinematography, the surrealism of the film lies in the seemingly perfect structure of Lucy and her boyfriend, Jake, which is exactly what reels viewers in, enough to question whether they're watching the same movie or a hypnosis of some sort.

Streaming Platform: Netflix

Shutter Island (2010)

Inception and Don't Worry Darling fans would appreciate Shutter Island the most in this list.

US Marshal Teddy Daniels investigates the disappearance of a patient from a secure mental institution on a remote island in 1954, unbeknownst to him that this trip would lead to uncovering the darkest secrets the institution kept from the public a long time ago.

Streaming Platforms: MGM+, Amazon Prime Video

Gone Girl (2014)

Gone Girl is its own level of gaslighting, that's for sure.

The film explores an investigation of Nick Dunne, who becomes the prime suspect when his wife, Amy, goes missing.

Gone Girl may be a psychological thriller for modern marriages and romance, but it's also a media-induced reality, where reporters and the public are led (and limited) to believe the truth based on hearsay and physical evidence.

Purchase or Rent: Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV

Get Out (2017)

Get Out crafted its own genre when the social thriller is not only a fantastic depiction of horror, but in its own, a political commentary on systemic racism, as well.

Get Out follows a black man named Chris, who discovers that his white girlfriend's seemingly perfect and idyllic family isn't as perfect as it seems. In fact, they're quite the opposite.

Streaming Platforms: HBO Max, Hulu, Amazon Prime Video

Mother! (2017)

Similar to Get Out and Don't Worry Darling, the story of Mother! has its own social commentary. A young woman (played by Jennifer Lawrence, "Mother") and her poet husband (Javier Bardem, "Him") live in a remote, beautiful home where their life is ruined by uninvited strangers who end up overstaying their welcome.

As another stylized psychological horror-thriller, Mother! also depicts an intense allegory about environmental awareness, religious symbols, and the destructive nature of fame and ruined boundaries.

Streaming Platforms: Netflix, Paramount+

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