Movies

Channing Tatum's Roofman Locks In Digital Release Date: Here's When It Hits Your Screen

Channing Tatum's Roofman Locks In Digital Release Date: Here's When It Hits Your Screen
Image credit: Legion-Media

Channing Tatum’s crime comedy Roofman drops on digital November 11, 2025, as Paramount rolls out the at-home release with bonus content.

Channing Tatum's crime-comedy 'Roofman' is about to hit your couch. Paramount is rolling it out on digital with a pile of extras, because if you're going to watch the true story of a guy who hid out in a Toys "R" Us, you may as well go all in.

When you can watch it at home

'Roofman' lands on digital platforms on November 11, 2025. Paramount says the home release packs in almost an hour of bonus material.

What you get with the digital release

  • 'Based On Actual Events And Terrible Decisions' – A behind-the-scenes look at how the cast and crew tackled the real-life saga of Jeffrey Manchester.
  • 'Chasing The Ghosts: The Director's Method' – Director Derek Cianfrance digs into his documentary-style approach to building the movie, with a rare peek at his process.
  • 'A Good Place To Hide' – The team that rebuilt an actual Toys "R" Us walks through how they brought that very specific world back to life.
  • 'Driving Lesson' – Kirsten Dunst literally teaches her on-screen teen daughter, Lily Collias, how to drive.
  • 'Choir Practice' – Uzo Aduba leads a spirited church choir rehearsal.
  • Deleted and alternate scenes.

What it's about (and yes, it gets weird)

Tatum plays Jeffrey Manchester, a former Army Ranger and struggling dad who starts robbing McDonald's by cutting in through the roof. That stunt earns him the nickname 'Roofman.' After he busts out of prison, he hides inside a Toys "R" Us for six months, living completely under the radar while mapping out his next move. Then he meets Leigh, a divorced mom drawn in by his charm, and suddenly the double life stops being sustainable. From there, it turns into a tense, twisty cat-and-mouse as his past catches up. Stranger than fiction, but this one is pulled from the real case.

Who made it

The film is directed by Derek Cianfrance, who co-wrote the script with Kirt Gunn. Tatum leads the cast and also serves as an executive producer alongside Cianfrance.

Who is in it

Along with Tatum and Kirsten Dunst, the ensemble includes Ben Mendelsohn, LaKeith Stanfield, Juno Temple, Melonie Diaz, Uzo Aduba, Lily Collias, Jimmy O. Yang, and Peter Dinklage.

How it landed in theaters

When it opened, the movie drew a warm response, which tracks: the premise is wild, the cast is stacked, and Cianfrance going semi-doc mode on a caper is a compelling swing.