We Are X, a documentary on the heavy metal band X Japan and its leader Yoshiki, was premiered in the World Documentary Competition at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival. Kijak remarked about the film "I might have to quit music films after this one. The story is so unreal, I don't know where else I could go after this."[7] The film was awarded the Special Jury Award for Editing. It then went on to play at SXSW where it won an Audience Award for Excellence in Title Design. It has continued to screen at festivals around the world, including Seattle International Film Festival, BEAT Festival in Moscow, and the Shanghai International Film Festival. It was released theatrically in the US by Drafthouse Films, a division of Alamo Drafthouse Cinema and has been released internationally.
On March 13, 2018, Kijak's documentary If I Leave Here Tomorrow: A Film About Lynyrd Skynyrd had its world premiere at the SXSW Film Festival, prior to its US broadcast debut on Showtime on August 18, 2018.[8] Another Showtime documentary followed in 2019: Sid & Judy, about the life of Judy Garland, framed by the story of her marriage to her third husband Sidney Luft.
Kijak's next project was acting as showrunner of the 4-part docu-drama series Equal (2020) for HBO Max. Produced by Scout Productions, Greg Berlanti, and Jim Parson's That's Wonderful Productions, Equal tells the stories of the LGBTQ rights movement in the years leading up to the 1969 Stonewall Uprising and the first Pride marches. He directed three of the series' four episodes, with filmmaker Kimberly Reed directing one.
His return to narrative filmmaking, Shoplifters of the World, based entirely around the music of The Smiths, was released in March 2021 by RLJ Entertainment and received its first major public screening[9] at the SeeYouSound Film Festival in Turin, Italy in February 2022 as part of a retrospective dedicated to Kijak's music films.