Sing Street Is Getting a VHS Release Alongside Its New 4K Collector's Set
(Photo Credit: Lionsgate)

Sing Street Is Getting a VHS Release Alongside Its New 4K Collector’s Set

Sing Street is officially making a comeback nearly a decade after its theatrical release. To celebrate the beloved coming-of-age film, a new 4K collector’s set and a VHS edition will be released. Soon, fans and audiences will have a new way to enjoy the 2016 musical.

When is Sing Street getting released on VHS?

Sing Street’s 4K + Blu-ray + digital collector’s set and VHS will be available for purchase on August 11, 2026, exclusively at Lionsgate Limited. This release will also include special features.

The upcoming 4K UHD + Blu-ray + Digital release will include a new Lionsgate-exclusive featurette. Titled The Risk of Rock & Roll: Going Back to Sing Street, the featurette will revisit the musical and explore its lasting impact.

The release also includes several legacy special features. These include Making Sing Street, Cast Auditions, Theatrical Trailer, TV Spots, and B-Roll. It will also include conversations on Sing Street between the writer-director John Carney and Maroon 5’s Adam Levine. The Drive It Like You Stole It music video will also be a feature in the collector’s set.

Sing Street remains one of the films with an ambiguous ending. In an interview with Collider earlier this year, Carney shared his views on the ending. When asked whether Cosmo and Raphina truly set out to conquer the world, he stated that “they got somewhere else” and called the entire movie an ultimate pop video.

He said, “When you’re that age, you’re constantly living in a fantasy world, aren’t you? And reality is a pain in the ass. Reality is the gravity, or the waves, that are messing your dreams up. So I think ultimately, really, what he’s in there is the ultimate pop video.”

The film is a story about escape, imagination, and young love. It stars Lucy Boynton, Maria Doyle Kennedy, Jack Reynor, Kelly Thornton, Ferdia Walsh-Peelo, and Aidan Gillen.

Set in 1980s Dublin, this story is told through the eyes of 14-year-old Conor, who seeks refuge from family tension as he struggles to fit in at a tough public school. Completely smitten by the aspiring model Raphina, Conor aims to win her heart by inviting her to star in his band’s music video — with one small problem: there is no band.

After forming a band with a group of classmates, the group pours themselves into writing songs and shooting videos, along the way discovering the power of music to uplift, empower, and create community.

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