While a whole lot of us are very much deep into the world of streaming and many have moved past physical media overall, there’s still definitely a market there for it – and should be if you want to actually own a copy of something that doesn’t require being online to watch it – even more so if you have data caps in your area!
The folks at Media Play have updated the stats and changes for the week ending March 28th, 2026. Things are starting to pick up with a bit more variety this week as Killers of the Flower Moon gets a great Criterion release, dropping it at second, while Looney Tunes gets a new collectors edition. We also see Red Sonja with its classic film find a slot with a new edition..
Most of the week holds from last week, but also a lot of older films charting up with various new editions or just interest with Wonder resurfacing, for example, and other recent Oscar nominees holding spots.
On the anime side, Solo Leveling Season 2 charts at sixteenth, up from ninth the week before.
Rank
Previous Week
Title
Studio
Index^
1
4
Return to Silent Hill
Cineverse
100
2
New
Killers of the Flower Moon
Criterion
90.92
3
5
Zootopia 2
Disney
79.84
4
New
Looney Tunes Collector’s Vault Vol. 2
Warner Archive
71.95
5
1
The Housemaid
Lionsgate
65.43
6
2
Anaconda (2025)
Sony Pictures
63.96
7
13
The Running Man (2025)
Paramount
63.06
8
3
David
Angel Studios
56.26
9
8
Predator: Badlands
20th Century
55.41
10
6
Good Boy
Shudder
48.19
11
11
Nuremberg
Sony Pictures
38.21
12
New
Red Sonja
Arrow Video
35.77
13
15
Wicked: For Good
Universal
35.35
14
12
We Bury the Dead
Vertical
34.30
15
27
Wonder
Lionsgate
27.23
16
9
Solo Leveling: Season 2
Crunchyroll
26.42
17
16
Now You See Me: Now You Don’t
Lionsgate
26.17
18
New
Scott Pilgrim Takes Off: The Complete Limited Series
Universal
26.06
19
17
Five Nights at Freddy’s 2
Universal
25.41
20
10
One Battle After Another
Warner
23.18
Source: Circana VideoScan (based on unit sales from reporting retailers)
[Source: Media Play News]
Chris Beveridge
http://www.fandompost.com
Chris has been writing about anime, manga, movies and comics for well on twenty years now. He began AnimeOnDVD.com back in 1998 and has covered nearly every anime release that’s come out in the US ever since.
He likes to write a lot, as you can see.


