OTT Round-Up: Netflix, Prime Video, JioHotstar and ZEE5 Drop Courtroom Thrillers, Superhero Noir and Family Dramas from May 25–31
मुख्य बातें
- •Netflix releases *Jolly LLB 3* (May 25), *Dead Man’s Wire* (May 28), *Kara* (May 28), and *A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder* Season 2 (May 27)
- •Prime Video premieres *Spider-Noir* on May 27, starring Nicolas Cage in a noir-style superhero series set in 1930s New York
- •JioHotstar drops Tamil family drama *Brothers and Sisters* and Telugu comedy-thriller *Jetlee* on May 27 and May 25 respectively
- •Cousins & Kalyanams, a dramedy about family weddings, streams on JioHotstar on May 29
- •All titles are available across major Indian OTT platforms including Netflix, Prime Video, JioHotstar, and ZEE5 during May 25–31
From May 25 to May 31, audiences across India have a packed week of fresh OTT content across four major platforms—Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, JioHotstar, and ZEE5. The lineup spans courtroom drama, crime thrillers, superhero noir, family dramedies, and regional comedies, ensuring something for varied tastes.
Netflix leads with two high-profile titles. First, *Jolly LLB 3* drops on May 25, reuniting Akshay Kumar and Arshad Warsi in a courtroom saga brimming with sharp legal arguments, social commentary, and trademark comic timing. The film follows two lawyers locked in conflict before escalating into a larger fight for justice, with Saurabh Shukla returning as the presiding judge. Later in the week, on May 28, Netflix premieres *Dead Man’s Wire*, a tense crime thriller inspired by the real-life 1977 hostage crisis. Directed by Gus Van Sant, the film stars Bill Skarsgård as a desperate man who takes a mortgage executive hostage during a financial dispute. The cast includes Dacre Montgomery, Colman Domingo, and Al Pacino, and the movie blends crime, dark humor, and social anger. Also on May 28, Netflix brings *Kara*, a rural action drama starring Dhanush. Set in a gritty village backdrop, the film explores themes of conflict, survival, and dignity as a man is pushed to his breaking point by family pressure and systemic injustice.

