Tag Archives: 2026

Streaming Video News: April 2, 2026

I updated my list of Bollywood movies on Netflix with today’s additions of the Hindi sequel Vadh 2 (Vadh is also on Netflix) and the Telugu film Mrithyunjay. Earlier this week, Netflix added the Vir Das movie Happy Patel: Khatarnak Jasoos. The second season of Maamla Legal Hai debuts Friday. If you missed any of the Indian titles added to Netflix in March, check out my monthly roundup for What’s on Netflix.

I also updated my list of Bollywood movies on Amazon Prime with today’s premiere of the new Hindi series Maa Ka Sum, starring Mona Singh and Mihir Ahuja.

Today, ZEE5 added the Hindi movie Bhabiji Ghar Par Hain!: Fun on the Run, based on the long-running TV series Bhabiji Ghar Par Hain!.

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Movie Review: Ikkis (2026)

4 Stars (out of 4)

Watch Ikkis on Amazon Prime

Ikkis (“Twenty-one“) is the best demonstration of filmmaker Sriram Raghavan’s skills yet, despite it being quite different from the other movies in his oeuvre. Though it lacks the physical danger of his earlier thrillers like Johnny Gaddaar, Badlapur, and Andhadhun, Ikkis is still built around a main character’s central tension: am I going to break his heart?

The title refers to the age at which Indian Army 2nd Lieutenant Arun Khetarpal (Agastya Nanda) died in the waning days of the 1971 India-Pakistan War. Thirty years later, Arun’s framed photo hangs on the wall of a house in Lahore, Pakistan belonging to Brigadier Jaan Mohammad Nisar (Jaideep Ahlawat). The photo’s curious existence is made even more intriguing when Nisar hides it before his houseguest arrives.

That guest is Brigadier Madan Lal Khetarpal (Dharmendra), Arun’s father. The elder Khetarpal grew up and studied in Pakistan before Partition drove his family to move to India. He returns for a class reunion and a visit to his hometown, staying with Nisar, his wife Maryam (Ekavali Khanna), and their adult daughter Saba (Avani Rai).

The rapport between the family and their guest is immediate, and Khetarpal is glad to have their company at the reunion. He also speaks freely about his own family, including Arun. Through Khetarpal’s reminiscences, we get to know about his first-born son, and we see Arun’s life in flashbacks.

Though Ikkis is based on a true story, this isn’t a hagiography. During his officer training days, Arun is a capable leader, but he is just as bad at anticipating consequences as most 21-year-olds are. He struggles to balance his military duties with his new romantic relationship with medical student Kiran (Simar Bhatia). He follows rules to a fault.

That’s why Arun’s death in combat has always been a mystery to his father. The official report states that Arun — who was assigned to be a tank commander when sent to the front in 1971 — turned off his radio and disobeyed orders in his final moments. That doesn’t sound like the Arun his father knew.

Questions linger over Ikkis: Why does Nisar have a photo of Arun? Why is he hiding it from Khetarpal? What really happened to Arun on the battlefield? The answers are decades old and pose no immediate danger, but they create a tension that propels the story forward, building as Nisar’s fondness for the elderly Khetarpal grows.

That affection is what makes the film so special. This is Dharmendra’s last movie, and his tremendous talent shines through as a father searching for something to finally help him make sense of his son’s death. Ahlawat deftly portrays the internal conflict between Nisar’s respect for Khetarwal and his guilt at keeping secrets from him. The warmth between the two actors is a joy to watch.

After a forgettable debut in The Archies, Nanda shows much more promise playing Arun. He’s a competent guide through history, showing us a war that looks much like any other war. Young men raised on heroic stories are eager to make a name for themselves, even though many of them won’t survive to tell their own tales. One of Arun’s senior officers Risaldar Sagat Singh (Sikander Kher) warns Arun not to “go looking for death,” but Singh later repairs a tank tread with a fresh bullet wound to the shoulder. He makes heroism look easy, so of course it would appeal to Arun and his classmates.

That’s the trick with anti-war movies: they always end up showing the cool parts of war. Tanks are cool. Getting shot and acting like it’s no big deal is cool. Raghavan does his best not to glamorize war, but it’s ultimately up to the older characters like Khetarpal and Nisar to explain that war is bad for everyone.

Hindi films about cross-border relationships used to be far more common, which makes Ikkis not just unique but important. There’s truth in the film’s central idea that India and Pakistan are more alike than they are different. The first thing Arun and his tank crew remake upon when they roll across the border is that it looks the same as the land on the other side. Frequent reminders about our shared humanity are vital.

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Streaming Video News: March 27, 2026

I updated my list of Bollywood movies on Netflix with the streaming debuts of Mardaani 3 (Hindi) and the sci-fi flick Masthishka Maranam: A Frankenbiting of Simon’s Memories (Malayalam). The next few weeks at Netflix look great for comedy lovers. Here’s what’s coming up:

I also updated my list of Bollywood movies on Hulu with two new series: the Tamil show Muthu Alias Kaattaan (also in Bengali, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, & Telugu) and the Hindi series Chiraiya (also in Bengali, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu — and Odia!).

Finally, I updated my list of Bollywood movies on Amazon Prime earlier this week with the debut of Riz Ahmed’s new English-language series Bait. Amazon also announced an April 3 premiere date for its new Hindi series Maa Ka Sum, starring Mona Singh and Mihir Ahuja.

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Movie Review: Jab Khuli Kitaab (2024)

1.5 Stars (out of 4)

Watch Jab Khuli Kitaab on ZEE5

There’s something off about the structure of Jab Khuli Kitaab (“When the Book Opened‘). Actor and filmmaker Saurabh Shukla directs this movie version of his own play of the same name, but it doesn’t translate from stage to screen.

Gopal Nautiyal (Pankaj Kapur) has spent the last two years caring for his comatose wife Anusuya (Dimple Kapadia) in their house in picturesque Raniket, Uttarakhand. (Gorgeous scenery is the film’s best attribute). Their daughter and oldest son have returned home with their own families to say final goodbyes to Anusuya, who looks to be in her last days.

When the couple’s youngest son Dholu (Abuli Mamaji) — who has Down syndrome and lives with them — touches his mother’s face, she suddenly wakes. The family’s celebration is short-lived. Anusuya privately confesses to Gopal that their eldest son Param (Samir Soni) is the product of an affair. Gopal keeps the secret, but his bad mood rubs off on everyone.

Secretly, Gopal drives into town to find a lawyer. He’s waylaid by eager attorney RK Negi (Aparshakti Khurana), who is flummoxed by his new client. He can’t believe that Gopal wants to divorce his recently comatose wife for an affair she had fifty years ago.

I normally dislike when movies begin with a flashforward, but Gopal’s meeting with the lawyer is where Jab Khuli Kitaab should have started. The divorce is the film’s hook, so it makes sense to lead with it. Plus, Negi’s presence in the story would be more impactful as a framing device rather than just a guy who starts hanging around the family. His subplot about being in love with an unhappily married judge goes nowhere.

That’s the main issue with Jab Khuli Kitaab: it doesn’t have a destination in mind. Plotlines are unresolved, relationships are in flux, and the characters don’t seem to change or grow much through the course of the story.

It’s not to say that everything needs to be tidily wrapped up by the end, but the story just kind of floats there, directionless. The mix of tension and levity between and even within scenes is unbalanced. The film’s ending is abrupt and unsatisfying.

Given their experience and talent, Kapur and Kapadia create some compelling scenes together. Khurana’s comic relief character feels out of place, but that has more to do with story organization than his performance.

If the moral of the story is supposed to be “People are complicated,” well, yeah. That doesn’t make them interesting.

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Streaming Video News: March 20, 2026

I updated my list of Bollywood movies on Netflix with the streaming debut of Sunny Deol’s war drama Border 2.

I also updated my list of Bollywood movies on Amazon Prime with the addition of the Telugu film Vishnu Vinyasam. Yesterday, Amazon revealed it’s 2026 slate of Indian Original movies and series. I included all the of titles that were announced with “first look” videos in the “Coming Soon” section on my Amazon Prime page, but Variety India has details on all of the newly announced titles and returning series.

As of right now, only episodes 3 & 6 of the new Hindi series Chiraiya are available on Hulu. I’ll update my list of Bollywood movies on Hulu with links to every language version when they finish uploading all of the episodes.

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Movie Review: Made in Korea (2026)

1 Star (out of 4)

Watch Made in Korea on Netflix

The Netflix Original Tamil movie Made in Korea is data-driven filmmaking at its worst. This fish-out-of-water story is an assemblage of scenes lacking a soul.

Shenba (Priyanka Mohan) lives in a small village in Tamil Nadu so remote that she has to stand on the back of an elephant to get a cell signal. She grew up fascinated with tales of an Indian woman who traveled to South Korea and became a queen (based on the legend of Heo Hwang-ok). Despite her love for all things Korean, visiting the country of her dreams seems impossible.

Other people have their own dreams for Shenba. Her father wants her to take over the small family restaurant. Her secret boyfriend Mani (Rishikanth) wants to marry her, but only after he sorts out his financial problems. When Shenba’s family finds a groom for her, she and Mani flee to the city.

Miraculously, Mani secures a job for Shenba at a hotel in Seoul, promising to find work there himself. When Mani fails to board the plane to Korea with her, Shenba learns a horrible truth: Mani bought Shenba’s plane ticket with money her father dropped off for her, and he headed to Mumbai alone with the rest of the cash.

Freshly heartbroken in a city where she knows no one, Shenba discovers her hotel job was a scam. A handsome stranger named Heo Jun-jae (Si-hun Baek) takes pity on her and finds her a job as a caretaker for a sick, elderly woman, Yeon-ok (Park Hye-jin).

Up to this point, sophomore writer-director Ra Karthik is pretty thorough about establishing Shenba’s relationships with the people in her life — particularly those back home, and even her connection with Jun-jae makes sense. But from this point forward, every relationship is speed-run in order to check scenes off a Korean travelogue shot list (perhaps mandated by Netflix itself). Why things happen the way they do with the people they do makes no sense.

Shenba quickly discovers that Yeon-ok is faking her illness as a way to punish her son and daughter-in-law, with whom she lives. Yeon-ok threatens to accuse Shenba of stealing if she reveals her secret, but then immediately decides the young woman is her best friend. She drags Shenba to touristy spots around the city with Jun-jae in tow to document everything. ‘Cause, sure.

Then the woman open a restaurant together, and Shenba organizes a “K-pop” band out of the only other people she’s spoken to in Korea. I’ve never seen an idol group with a violinist, but okay.

There are all kinds of tropey K-drama moments, like the women hiring a part-timer to help with the restaurant, or the band shooting a K-pop-style music video. All we’re missing is a kimchi slap.

The whole thing feels hollow. Made in Korea was clearly designed by Netflix to fulfill two missions: capitalize on the popularity of Korean content in India and fill out the streamer’s thin South Indian Originals catalogue. The movie does so, but in a perfunctory way.

This movie isn’t born out of an Indian filmmaker’s own love for Korean pop culture. Ra Karthik said, “Personally, I had never watched a K-drama or listened to K-pop until I began working on Made In Korea.” It shows. If you’re familiar with K-dramas, there are a ton of ways to tell a fish-out-of-water story that leans into Korean TV-narrative styles, while showing character growth and exploring shared cultural traditions.

Made in Korea doesn’t do that. It hits a couple of K-culture tropes, shows some Instagram-worthy tourist spots, and calls it a day. Characters become friends, fight, and make up because the plot demands it, not because they have any reason to do so. It just feels empty.

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Streaming Video News: March 12, 2026

I updated my list of Bollywood movies on Netflix with a few new additions today: the 2026 theatrical releases Funky (Telugu) and Pennum Porattum (Malayalam), plus the Netflix Original Tamil film Made in Korea. Note that Shah Rukh Khan’s Raees (which I thought was fine) expires from Netflix on March 15.

I also updated my list of Bollywood movies on Amazon Prime with the new Tamil series Local Times, Season 3 of the Hindi series Aspirants, and the 2026 Telugu film Couple Friendly (also available dubbed in Tamil).

Finally, I updated my list of Bollywood movies on Hulu with the new Tamil series Resort (also available in Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, and Telugu).

If none of these new titles interest you, check out my Best Bollywood Movies of 2025 post. All ten films on the list are great and are currently available for streaming in the United States.

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Movie Review: Subedaar (2026)

3 Stars (out of 4)

Watch Subedaar on Amazon Prime

Filmmaker Suresh Triveni’s latest movie Subedaar is so tense it’s almost unbearable at times. In terms of achieving the intended tone, it’s an undeniable success. However, that single tone makes it hard to maintain the story momentum.

The first few moments of Subedaar are light-hearted misdirection. Elementary school boys Bablu and Mannu ponder how people in airplanes go to the bathroom and come up with a funny answer. But as the cheerful boys start to run between the heavy machinery dredging sand from the local river, the music becomes ominous. The boys jump in the water. Mannu doesn’t resurface.

He’s not the first kid to drown in the river as a result of industrial mismanagement. The dredgers are controlled by gangster Babli Didi (Mona Singh). She’s currently imprisoned awaiting trial for murder, but her shadow hangs over the town. Mannu’s uncle demands justice, so Babli Didi’s reckless half-brother, Prince (Aditya Rawal), kills him.

Arjun Maurya (Anil Kapoor) is new to this city governed by fear. He recently retired from the military, where he achieved the rank of Subedaar (a junior commissioned officer). His beloved wife just died, and he’s trying to form a relationship with his college-aged daughter Shyama (Radhika Madan). He hardly knows her because his career kept him away from home for most of her life.

The transition from highly organized military life to civilian chaos is unnerving for Arjun. He looks like he’s barely holding it together even while trying to do something ordinary, like close his wife’s bank account. The frazzled bank clerk is so self-focused that he doesn’t register Arjun’s taut expression and the danger that lurks behind it.

The bank offers an early lesson in how the town operates. No one within the structures of power will help. They only protect themselves, particularly when Babli Didi and Prince are concerned. The mantra of the police chief is: “See very little, and forget everything.”

Prince is dangerous because he insists on controlling every interaction, enjoys humiliating people, and resorts to violence fast — and he never faces negative consequences for his brutal behavior. When Arjun refuses to be belittled by Prince and his cronies, it makes the former soldier a target. Arjun’s best friend Prabhakar (Saurabh Shukla) urges him to apologize and move on, but Arjun’s pride won’t allow him to do so.

At the same time, Shyama exposes one of her fellow students for his lewd behavior and is threatened with retaliation. She doesn’t tell her father about this, and he doesn’t tell her about Prince. When goons lurk outside the house at night or throw things at their home in the morning, father and daughter both assume they are the intended target. They’re both right, just at different times of day.

Though not always the main focus of the story, the relationship between Arjun and Shyama is the film’s most compelling. She has every reason to be angry with him, and he feels plenty of guilt mixed with his grief over his wife’s death (Khushbu Sundar plays Arjun’s wife Sudha in some sweet flashbacks). He’s doing the best he can to act like a parent to Shyama, but there’s no quick fix.

Troubled relationships between parents and children featured in Triveni’s two previous directorials as well: 2017’s Tumhari Sulu and 2022’s Jalsa. What makes the storylines work in each film is tremendous acting. Subedaar might be Triveni’s best yet, in that regard.

Kapoor is in top form as Arjun, trying to hold back the sea of emotions inside him. Madan shows us that Shyama’s hostility comes from a place of great pain. Both Kapoor and Madan are both very good in their action scenes. Shukla’s Prabhakar says volumes with a single look, and Singh steals every scene she’s in.

Rawal is utterly loathsome as Prince, which is just what the role calls for. He’s particularly good at invading people’s personal space, because in his mind, it’s all his space. His presence is oppressive because we know there are no good guys coming to the rescue.

That said, a little goes a long way with Prince, especially since he doesn’t change or evolve. The only subplot to offset Prince’s lopsided feud with Arjun is Shyama’s own struggle against stronger opponents, so the experience of watching Subedaar becomes emotionally fatiguing over time. It’s a classic case where chopping twenty minutes from the runtime would actually make things more impactful.

Triveni is improving as a director with each movie. Subedaar is another step in the right direction, with clearer character motivations than in previous films. I’m happy to see it.

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Streaming Video News: March 5, 2026

I updated my list of Bollywood movies on Amazon Prime with the premiere of Anil Kapoor’s new Original thriller film Subedaar. Also new on Prime this week are Anupam Kher’s directorial Tanvi the Great and Annagaru Vostaru, the Telugu-dubbed version of the Tamil film Vaa Vaathiyaar.

I also updated my list of Bollywood movies on Netflix with the streaming debut of the 2026 Tamil film With Love. Over the weekend, the Hindi movies Raazi (which I loved) and Gippi were added to Netflix. I don’t think Gippi has ever been available for streaming the US before.

The Netflix Original series Hello Bachhon premieres on Friday. Netflix also announced an April 3 premiere date for Maamla Legal Hai Season 2.

I did not update my list of Bollywood movies on Hulu because there’s no sign of the new Hotstar Specials Telugu series Vikram on Duty yet. These delays seem to be the norm right now. I had an interesting exchange with @disneyplusnews about the future of Indian content on Hulu, and the days may be numbered. There’s a chance we could get a separate JioHotstar app in the US instead at some point, but I could see their parent company Disney passing on that in order to save money on streaming rights. I don’t have any inside information, it just seems like something is afoot since Hotstar titles are taking even longer to shop up on Hulu. We’ll see.

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Movie Review: Accused (2026)

2.5 Stars (out of 4)

Watch Accused on Netflix

Netflix’s latest Indian Original movie features a lesbian couple in crisis, and its LGBTQ theme makes Accused stand out among other Indian Originals. Unfortunately, a formulaic story treatment makes the film more novel than innovative.

Comparisons between Accused and Todd Field’s 2022 movie Tár are inevitable. Both focus on a queer woman in a position of power whose career and marriage are threatened by sexual harassment allegations. Accused shifts things by making the allegations more of a mystery than a sure thing and by devoting more time to the main character’s wife’s experience.

Dr. Geetika Sen (Konkona Sen Sharma), an ace surgeon and gynecologist at London’s Chapelstone General Hospital, is known as much for her her gruff manner as for her medical talents. She’s about to leave for a big promotion at another hospital in England. On top of that, she and her wife Meera (Pratibha Ranta) are adopting a baby.

While the couple seems happy together, there are a few signs of trouble early in the story. Geetika is routinely late to events, giving the excuse that she was in surgery and out of reach — and sometimes that’s true. Their move away puts Meera’s own pediatrics career on hold, which is important, given that there’s an age gap of at least 10 years between the couple (Sen Sharma is 21 years older than Ranta in real life). Geetika feels like her more established career takes precedence, even if it prevents Meera from making similar progress in hers.

Then there’s the fact that Meera’s family back in Meerut don’t even know she’s in love with a woman, let alone married to one. An attempt to introduce Geetika to Meera’s brother while he’s in town is scuttled when Geetika fails to show up for lunch.

In the midst of everything, Chapelstone Hospital receives an anonymous complaint from a patient alleging inappropriate sexual conduct by Geetika during an exam. Geetika insists she didn’t do anything wrong, but the hospital’s head of Human Resources, Simran (Monica Mahendru), is obligated to investigate, despite their friendship.

Rumors circulate, and soon there are more anonymous complaints, including one on a social media site. Racists and homophobes are happy to pile on the insults until the hospital can’t ignore it. Geetika is put on leave. Things only get worse from there.

The social media segment is one of the worst examples of Accused falling into contemporary Hindi filmmaking tropes. Images of social media comments float on the screen around Geetika, including one that reads, “Someone tag Netflix, the pilot episode just dropped.” The visual gimmick is tired enough even without the tacky self-referentialism.

Geetika becomes convinced that someone is framing her, and her paranoia only ramps up her tendencies toward secrecy. But that prompts Meera to wonder what else her wife is hiding. Add to that all the people who are happy to see Geetika brought down a peg — aggrieved colleagues, Meera’s infatuated co-worker Angad (Aditya Nanda) — and the doubt becomes more than the relationship can bear.

The lead actors do a really wonderful job. Sen Sharma is the ideal choice to play a character who can wither with a look while still being sympathetic. Ranta plays off her in a way that highlights the power imbalance and Meera’s growing discomfort with it.

Yet the film is so straightforward and surface level that it feels less substantial than it could have. Issues around queer identity in Indian culture are mentioned but not examined. Much of the dialogue around sexual harassment is taken from workplace conduct handbooks and feels divorced from lived experience. These big issues are convenient plot setups, but that’s it.

Accused even wraps with characters monologuing about the lessons they learned throughout — as if we, the audience, didn’t just watch them learning those lessons. It would’ve been nice if director Anubhuti Kashyap and writers Sima Agarwal & Yash Keshwani had more faith that an audience that would seek out such a story could handle a more robust examination of the issues it presents.

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