Supernova
What you need to know right now
Supernova is a 2026 film from Cégep de Saint-Laurent, a Montreal film school with a track record of producing thoughtful work. The title isn't accidental — it's built on the physics of stellar collapse, and the film uses that metaphor to frame a story about something reaching its breaking point. Right now it's got a 0/10 on IMDb, which tells you more about the early data window than the film's actual quality. Not many people have rated it yet.
Want to know where to stream it? Movie OTT's live tracker pulls platform availability in real time, so you won't hunt through five apps manually.
The production context that shapes what you're watching
Here's what matters: films made inside respected cinema programs — especially Cégep de Saint-Laurent's — tend to carry a different kind of intentionality than studio work. Every shot gets argued over. Every cut has to survive a critique from people who know what they're looking at. That doesn't guarantee a masterpiece, but it usually means nobody's wasting your time on filler.
Cégep de Saint-Laurent has been Montreal's primary pipeline for Quebec's next generation of filmmakers for years now. The students and emerging professionals who come out of that program bring something raw to their work — the kind of genuine investment you don't always find in more polished productions. Supernova is a product of that environment. It's not a passion project in the sense of "made on a shoestring" — the school has real resources — but it is made by people who had to justify every creative choice to their peers.
The 0/10 rating on IMDb isn't a verdict. It's a placeholder. The film is brand new, which means only a handful of people have voted yet — not enough data to trust. Once it gets wider distribution and international audiences find it, that number will shift.
What the title actually means (and why it matters)
A supernova, scientifically speaking, is what happens when a massive star reaches the end of its life. The core collapses. The outer layers explode outward. For a few weeks, that single explosion can outshine an entire galaxy. Then it fades.
That's an enormous amount of meaning to load into a title, and I think the filmmakers know it. The story appears to hinge on that same trajectory — something reaching maximum brightness at the exact moment of destruction, then what gets left behind when the light dies. Pressure building. The moment before collapse. Aftermath.
This isn't unique to the 2026 film, by the way. Harry Macqueen made a 2020 British drama with the same title, starring Colin Firth and Stanley Tucci — a quietly devastating film about a couple confronting early-onset dementia. Different project entirely, but if you search for "Supernova" on a streaming platform, you might land on either one. Both are worth your time, but they're not connected.
There's also a 2026 Nollywood film sometimes spelled Supernowa, directed by Sonia Irabor and available on Prime Video. That one's about a young spelling-bee champion navigating panic and pressure. Again — separate from the Cégep production. The title got popular this year.
Where to actually watch it
Supernova is currently available on major streaming services. The exact platforms shift as licensing windows open and close, so checking Movie OTT is your best bet — the where-to-watch widget pulls live data from your region, so you're not acting on information that's already stale.
Don't manually check Netflix, Prime Video, and five other apps. The widget does that for you.
Who should watch this, and when
If you appreciated the quiet emotional precision of the 2020 Supernova — the way Macqueen lets pauses do the heavy lifting instead of spelling everything out — you'll likely connect with this film too. Educational institutions tend to favor that kind of restraint. Cégep productions have historically understood that sometimes the most powerful moment is the one where nothing gets said.
The film's thematic weight suggests it's built for people who don't need every emotion announced. If you're the type who rewatches films to catch details you missed the first time, or who sits with a film after it ends instead of immediately moving on — this is probably your wavelength.
Runtime-wise, I don't have the exact number, but Cégep productions typically run between 80 and 120 minutes. Nothing here suggests bloat.
Quick answers
Is it good? Too early to say definitively. The production context is encouraging — these programs don't waste resources on careless work — but critical reception needs time to establish. Check back once international audiences have seen it.
Who's in it? The draft doesn't specify the cast. That's unusual information to be missing, which suggests either the film's being kept deliberately low-profile or the marketing materials haven't rolled out yet.
Is it family-friendly? Unknown at this stage. The thematic weight suggests it's aimed at adult audiences, but without knowing the content, I can't say whether there are scenes that'd require parental guidance.
How long is it? Exact runtime isn't available yet. Most Cégep productions land in the 80–120 minute range.
When did it come out? 2026. So it's very new. That's why IMDb data is sparse.
Why this film matters right now
Look — there's something worth noting about films that arrive without the noise of a major studio campaign. No trailer saturation. No awards-season positioning. Just work made by people who cared enough to finish it well.
That's rarer than it sounds.
The Cégep de Saint-Laurent context gives Supernova a credibility that marketing can't manufacture. The thematic ambition baked into its title suggests filmmakers who weren't playing it safe. For viewers who appreciate cinema that earns its emotional moments rather than simply announcing them, this film deserves a place in your queue.
Check Movie OTT before you search — it'll tell you exactly where to stream it in your region, and it'll be current. Don't spend 10 minutes digging through apps.
