Everything That’s Streaming In June 2025

Season four of ‘The Bear,’ the end of ‘Squid Game,’ and much more!

Coming to your TV in June: Squid Game reaches its end, The Bear continues to cook up a season a year, Ironheart gets her time to shine on TV, Sydney Sweeney gets caught up in some shady goings-on, the Looney Tunes finally get a new movie released on streaming and we see what happened to Captain Nemo before the events of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. (I knew you were curious).

All that, plus another docuseries on the OceanGate submersible disaster.

Read on for Book & Film Globe’s definitive guide to the top titles this month.

Netflix

 Straw (June 6) — Tyler Perry Presents: John Q., but this time with Taraji P. Henson robbing a bank to get money for her daughter’s healthcare instead of Denzel Washington sticking up a hospital for his son’s new heart. Sherri Shepherd, Teyana Taylor, Sinbad and Glynn Turman co-star.

Titan: The OceanGate Disaster (June 11) — Get ready for a whole lot of streaming docuseries about the most-talked-about event of summer 2023. Nearly two years to the day of the OceanGate Titan implosion, Netflix premieres its documentary series on just what happened down there.

HBO Max’s doc Implosion: The Titanic Sub Disaster is also already streaming, and other news sites have already published their own documentaries as well.

KPop Demon Hunters (June 20) — Sony Pictures Animation (The Spider-Verse movies, Netflix’s The Mitchells Vs. The Machines) is back with another great, simple premise: A movie about a K-Pop girl group trip who fight demons in their spare time. When the demons disguise themselves as a rival K-Pop boy band, it’s a battle of the bands – and souls. The movie features a new, original song performed by Jeongyeon, Jihyo and Chaeyoung from TWICE.

Squid Game Season 3 (June 27) — The insanely popular show about wealth inequality and class disparity in South Korea comes to a close this month. The third and final season was filmed back-to-back with the second season. Expect Lee Jung-jae’s Seong Gi-hun and other players to fight for survival in ever-deadlier games with dire consequences.

Also playing:

Ginny & Georgia Season 3 (June 3)

Visit Netflix for a full list of releases.

Hulu

Predator: Killer of Killers (June 6) — This animated Predator film is one of two Predator movies coming out this year from Prey director Dan Trachtenberg. (The second, the live-action Predator: Badlands, is set for a November theatrical release.)

Killer of Killers is an anthology film following a Viking raider, a ninja in feudal Japan and a World War II pilot who all come across the ultimate killer: The Predator.

The Bear Season 4 (June 25) — Fun fact: Season 1 of The Bear premiered in June 2022, a month after Season 4 of Stranger Things debuted on Netflix. Fast forward three years, and here we are with a fourth season of The Bear in less time than it took Netflix to cook up another season of Stranger Things. (Season 5 is set for sometime later this year). Streaming schedules are wild.

Anyway.

Chef Carmy and the gang are back for another season of stressful cooking and trying to make sure they don’t lose their business. It will be nominated for an Emmy for Best Comedy, and much ink will be spilled about category fraud. Order up.

Also playing:

Call Her Alex: Complete Docuseries (Date TBA)

Visit Hulu for a full list of releases.

Disney+

Ironheart (June 24) — MIT genius Riri Williams finally makes her Disney+ series debut after a brief appearance in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. The show follows Williams’ efforts to improve and advance the Iron Man suit of armor. Anthony Ramos and Alden Erenrich co-star.

Phineas and Ferb Season 5 (June 5) — Those two crazy stepbrothers are back for another fun summer full of plotting espionage and annoying their older stepsister Candace. Perry the Platypus and Dr. Doofenshmirtz are also back, obviously.

Season 5 is the first of two new revival seasons for the popular kids’ show. The episodes airing this month will be the first new Phineas and Ferb episodes since 2015.

Frozen: The Broadway Musical (June 20) — Get ready to “Let It Go” in a whole new format with 12 new songs, as the pro-shot of one of Disney’s most lucrative animated films comes home.

This version of Frozen is a recording of the West End production at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane in London, with Samantha Barks as Elsa, Laura Dawkes as Anna and Jammy Kasongo as Kristoff.

Also playing:

Oceans with David Attenborough (June 8)

Visit Disney+ for a full list of releases.

Apple TV+

Stick (June 4) — Apple TV+ looks to the success of Ted Lasso to guide this sports dramedy, starring Owen Wilson as a recently divorced, washed-up golf pro who finds a new joy for golf and life when he starts coaching a teen golf prodigy (Peter Dager). But will the kid’s success take over Wilson’s life? Marc Maron stars as Wilson’s best friend and former caddy, and Judy Greer stars as Wilson’s ex-wife.

Echo Valley (June 13) — Julianne Moore is Sydney Sweeney’s mom in this Apple TV+ Original movie about how far a parent would go to protect their child, from Mare of Easttown creator/writer Brad Inglesby.

Smoke (June 27) — Dennis Lehane continues his move away from novels into TV series with Smoke, his second crime miniseries for Apple TV+ in three years, following 2022’s Black Bird.

Lehane created, wrote and executive produced Smoke, which sees him reunite with Black Bird’s Taron Egerton. In this one, Egerton stars as an enigmatic arson investigator who’s tracking a serial arsonist. Jurnee Smollett stars as the troubled detective assigned to the case. It’s Lehane, so expect a lot of brutally accurate dialogue and some morally grey endings.

Also playing:

Not A Box (June 13)

The Buccaneers Season 2 (June 18)

Visit Apple TV+ for a full list of releases.

Prime Video

Deep Cover (June 12) — No, not a remake of the 1992 crime thriller starring Laurence Fishburne and Jeff Goldblum. This Deep Cover is about an American improv teacher in London (Bryce Dallas Howard) who gets recruited by a detective (Sean Bean) for his new police program that uses improv comics to take down criminals. (Yes, and really).

Howard grabs two of her students (Orlando Bloom and Ted Lasso’s Nate the Great himself, Nick Mohammed) to round out her crew. Hijinks ensue. I’m assuming Bean either dies, is secretly the bad guy, or both. Paddy Considine and Ian McShane co-star.

We Were Liars (June 18) — E. Lockhart’s YA psychological horror novel gets the streaming series treatment, with Amazon looking to replicate its Summer I Turned Pretty success. The plot centers on 17-year-old Cady Sinclair, who survived a horrible accident at her wealthy family’s summer home two years ago that she cannot remember. When she returns to the scene of her accident, she discovers shocking truths about herself and her family.

Countdown (June 25) — Jensen Ackles returns to his first main role in a TV series since The Boys in this crime drama, where the actor looks like he’s going full Jack Reacher mode. Ackles stars as LAPD detective Mark Meachum, who is brought on to a secret task force to track down the murderer of a Homeland Security officer. A vast conspiracy is uncovered, naturally.

Also playing:

American Thunder: NASCAR to Le Mans (June 12)

ROMCON: Who the F*** Is Jason Porter? (June 13)

The Chosen: Last Supper (Starting June 15)

Visit Amazon Prime for a full list of releases.

HBO Max

The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie (June 27) — Any time a Looney Tunes movie actually gets made and promoted on an HBO platform these days is cause for celebration. The Day the Earth Blew Up is now available on physical media if you so choose, but if you have HBO Max (now with HBO branding!), you should check out this madcap version of Invasion of the Body Snatchers for kids, starring Porky Pig and Daffy Duck.

 The Mortician (June 1) — In 1989, Los Angeles-area funeral director David Sconce was sentenced to five years in prison for mutilating corpses, holding mass cremations at $55 a body and hiring strongmen to assault three rival morticians.

He has since been released from prison. This new three-part docuseries tells the whole story, featuring interviews wth Sconce, journalists who broke the case, family members of Lamb Funeral Home victims and more.

Also playing:

The first four Hunger Games movies (Get ready for the film adaptation of Sunrise on the Reaping) (June 1)

The Gilded Age Season 3 (June 22)

Enigma (June 24)

My Mom Jayne (June 27)

Visit HBO Max for a full list of releases.

Peacock

Nelly & Ashanti: We Belong Together (Date TBA) — Musicians Nelly and Ashanti star in and executive produce this new reality show about their rekindled relationship.

The “fun-filled exploration of love’s second chances” will look at how the couple “reignite their love, navigate the ups and downs of newlywed life and [balance] the challenges of parenthood while juggling their thriving careers,” according to a news release.

Also playing:

All six Jurassic Park movies (get ready for Jurassic World: Rebirth) (June 1)

Love Island, Season 7 (June 3)

All four Jaws movies, in celebration of Jaws’ 50th anniversary (June 15)

Visit Peacock for a full list of releases.

Shudder

 Hell Motel (June 17) — A group of 10 true crime obsessives and influencers get invited to the opening weekend of a newly-renovated motel that was once the site of an unsolved Satanic mass murder. Wouldn’t you know it, the guests (hosted by Will & Grace’s Eric McCormack) get stranded. Someone starts killing all of the guests one by one. Is it a copycat killer, or is the original murderer back for more?

The trailer name-checks its “isolated location” horror forerunners, including The Shining, Evil Dead and Cabin in the Woods. McCormack seems like he’s having a ball, too. Looks like they may be able to check out, but they can never leave…

Ash (June 20) — Record producer, DJ, filmmaker, and rapper Flying Lotus’ (V/H/S/99) space station horror film makes its streaming debut. Starring Eiza González and Aaron Paul, it focuses on a woman (González) who wakes up on a distant planet with no memories and finds that all of her space station crew has been viciously killed. She investigates along with another astronaut (Paul), who says they were sent to this planet from Earth to find other hospitable planets to live on. But this planet has aliens, and that’s never good.

Also playing:

Another season of The Last Drive-In With Joe Bob Briggs (June 6 live; streaming starting June 8)

 Visit Shudder for a full list of releases.

Criterion Channel

The Criterion Channel announces its streaming film programming in blocks, usually around a theme (think pre-Hays Code horror, Argentinian noir, LGBTQ+ films, etc.) Its big announcement for June revolves mostly around water.

The Coastal Thrillers programming, available now, includes films like Key Largo, The Fog, Body Heat, Wild Things and Shutter Island.

All of the following are available starting June 1:

In The Deep End highlights some of cinema’s most memorable swimming pools. Obviously, there’s The Swimmer, but this package also features Sexy Beast, La piscine and The Graduate.

Ripley Films is all about that talented Tom Ripley and all of his film appearances in adaptations of Patricia Highsmith’s works. Films include Purple Noon, The American Friend, The Talented Mr. Ripley and Ripley’s Game.

The Celebrating Gene Hackman collection highlights the actor’s New Hollywood era films as well as his contribution to Wes Anderson’s The Royal Tenenbaums. Hackman, who died in his New Mexico home in February, “brought a moody intensity to defining films of the 1970s,” Criterion’s website notes. Films in this collection include The French Connection, Scarecrow, The Conversation, Night Moves, Eureka, No Way Out and The Royal Tenenbaums.

Visit the Criterion Channel for a full list of releases.

Paramount+

Love Me (June 16) — Steven Yeun and Kristen Stewart star as a buoy and a satellite that meet online, long after humanity has gone extinct. They learn what life was like on Earth and then learn what it’s like to be in love, in a Sundance-award-winning, romantic drama that spans 13.7 billion years.

78th Tony Awards (June 8)  — Broadway’s biggest night will air live on CBS starting at 5 p.m. EST and will be simulcast live and on demand on Paramount+ for Paramount+ with SHOWTIME subscribers. Cynthia Erivo will host.

Musicals Buena Vista Social Club, Death Becomes Her and Maybe Happy Ending lead the nominations pack with 10 noms each. Just don’t expect Patti LupPone and Audra McDonald to share the stage at any point. (Or maybe they will? Popping my popcorn now.)

Visit Paramount+ for a full list of releases.

AMC+

Nautilus (June 29) — This British series about the origin story of how Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea’s Captain Nemo commandeered the Nautilus submarine makes its American streaming service debut on AMC+ this month. (Say it with me: You get an origin story! And YOU get an origin story!)

The trailer promises lots of Pirates of the Caribbean-style action and piracy. And honestly, a show all about the sea and underwater adventures will be welcome as we enter the dog days of summer.

Visit AMC+ for a full list of releases.                                                 

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Jake Harris

Jake Harris is a Texas-based journalist whose writing about pop culture and entertainment has appeared in the Austin American-Statesman, the Chattanooga Times Free Press, the Nashville Scene and more. You can find more of his writings at jakeharrisbog.com or through his pop culture newsletter, Jacob's Letter.

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