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Demi Moore’s Groundswell (2026): Where to Watch the Climate Doc Making Waves

Demi Moore’s Groundswell (2026): Where to Watch the Climate Doc Making Waves
Image credit: Google Veo 3

Groundswell, the gripping finale to an acclaimed environmental documentary trilogy, is now streaming on digital—don’t miss the final chapter.

If you love the jaw-drop nature stuff in 'Planet Earth' and 'Our Planet' but want a doc that actually talks about people fixing things, there is a new one to queue up. 'Groundswell' takes a human-first swing at conservation and the future of farming, with Demi Moore pushing it forward. And yes, you can stream it right now.

Where to watch

'Groundswell' runs 94 minutes and is currently streaming in the United States on Amazon Prime Video. If you have Prime, you can hit play tonight.

What it is (and why it is the capstone)

This is the final chapter in the environmental doc trilogy that started with 'Kiss the Ground' (2020) and continued with 'Common Ground' (2023). Directors Joshua Tickell and Rebecca Harrell Tickell are back to close it out, sticking with their solutions-forward approach instead of just cataloging disasters. The angle this time leans even more into people: farmers, communities, and the choices that could actually shift how we grow food and, by extension, how we live on this planet. The film wants to leave you with a plan, not just pretty pictures.

It is not just a feel-good exercise

'Groundswell' picked up a nomination for the Golden Eye documentary prize at the Cannes Film Festival, which is a real nod from the film world. It has been drawing strong notices since, partly because it suggests a practical, hopeful path for global agriculture instead of the usual doom loop.

  • Title and runtime: 'Groundswell' — 94 minutes
  • Streaming now: Amazon Prime Video (US)
  • Filmmakers: Directed by Joshua Tickell and Rebecca Harrell Tickell
  • Trilogy finale: Follows 'Kiss the Ground' (2020) and 'Common Ground' (2023)
  • Recognition: Nominated for the Golden Eye documentary prize at Cannes
  • Demi Moore factor: She is the one championing this project publicly
  • What sets it apart: Less wildlife spectacle, more human-centered fixes for agriculture and climate — the optimistic blueprint version of a climate doc

Bottom line: if you want a conservation doc that is more about what we can do than slow-mo shots of ice melting, this is the one to try.