From Jennifer Lopez in an Office Romance to the fifth and final season of The Bear hitting our screens, June is a TV and film feast – here is everything you need to watch and stream this month.
June 2
Not Suitable for Work, Disney+
Created by Mindy Kaling, Not Suitable for Work centres on five work-obsessed 20-somethings striving for professional success and, if they have time, personal happiness in Manhattan’s most glamorous neighbourhood, Murray Hill.
June 3
Michael Jackson: The Verdict, Netflix
Michael Jackson: The Verdict is a three-part Netflix docuseries that chronicles the singer’s highly publicised 2005 criminal trial for child molestation. Because cameras were banned from the courtroom at the time, the series uses archival footage, contemporaneous news reports, and firsthand interviews to provide a comprehensive historical reconstruction of the proceedings.
Clarkson’s Farm, Prime Video
Clarkson’s Farm is back, and amidst a government budget that sends the UK farming community into uproar, Jeremy decides some big changes are needed to make the farm run more smoothly.
June 5
Masters of the Universe, cinemas everywhere
Four decades on from the Dolph Lundgren-led Masters of the Universe, filmmaker Travis Knight is rebooting the franchise with a fresh story set on Earth. Nicholas Galitzine takes on the role of He-Man, while Idris Elba plays the honourable Man-At-Arms. Rounding out the cast is Jared Leto as Skeletor, Eternia’s iconic skeletal nemesis.
Scary Movie, cinemas everywhere
13 years since the last reboot of the franchise and 26 years after outrunning a suspiciously familiar masked killer, Shorty, Ray, Cindy and Brenda find themselves targeted by another mad slasher. This run sees the return of Anna Faris, Regina Hall, and the Wayans brothers.
Office Romance, Netflix
Jennifer Lopez is back in the realm of romantic comedy alongside Brett Goldstein in this saucy edition about a secret office romance and the chaos two workaholics get into following their hearts.
Cape Fear, Apple TV
First adapted for the screen in 1962 with Robert Mitchum and Gregory Peck, and later remade by Martin Scorsese in 1991 with Robert De Niro, Nick Nolte, Jessica Lange and Juliette Lewis, Cape Fear is returning once again but this time as a prestige TV thriller. Executive produced by Scorsese and Steven Spielberg, the series stars Javier Bardem as the vengeful Max Cady, newly released after 17 years behind bars and determined to settle old scores. Amy Adams and Patrick Wilson play married lawyers Anna and Tom Bowden, whose world begins to unravel when they discover that Anna’s former client is back on the outside. As Cady closes in, the family finds itself trapped in a nightmare where nowhere feels safe and every decision carries deadly consequences.
June 10
Every Summer After, Prime Video
Adapted from Carley Fortune’s bestselling novel Every Summer After, Prime Video’s Every Year After is a sweeping friends-to-lovers romance told across six transformative summers and one life-changing week. The series follows Persephone “Percy” Fraser and Sam Florek, whose deep connection is forged during idyllic summers at a lakeside cottage in Barry’s Bay — only to be shattered by a mistake neither can forget. The story unfolds across two timelines, moving between the present day, where Percy returns home for a funeral and unexpectedly reunites with Sam, and flashbacks that chart the evolution of their relationship over six pivotal summers.
June 12
Disclosure Day, cinemas everywhere
Directed by Stephen Spielberg and starring Emily Blunt, Josh O’Connor, Colin Firth, Colman Domingo and our own Eve Hewson, Disclosure Day asks if aliens have already made contact as a massive government conspiracy unravels and a targeted whistleblower races against time to bring about the extraordinary event that will change human history forever: the day of ultimate alien disclosure.
June 15
Toy Story 5, cinemas everywhere
In the fifth instalment of Disney and Pixar’s flagship saga, Woody, Buzz, and the rest of Bonnie’s toybox will take on the tech revolution, pitting them against a deceptively chirpy frog-shaped tablet called Lilypad, voiced by Greta Lee.
June 18
Harlan Coben’s I Will Find You, Netflix
Wrongly convicted of murdering his own son, David Burroughs has resigned himself to spending the rest of his life behind bars. Nobody believes his claims of innocence until a startling revelation suggests that his son may, in fact, still be alive. Determined to uncover the truth and clear his name, Burroughs embarks on a desperate mission that begins with a prison escape and leads into a labyrinth of lies, betrayal and long-buried secrets. Based on Harlan Coben’s bestselling thriller, the series promises the author’s trademark blend of suspense, shocking twists and high-stakes drama. Sam Worthington stars as Burroughs, alongside Britt Lower as his sister-in-law Rachel, Milo Ventimiglia as Rachel’s former boyfriend Hayden, and Madeleine Stowe as wealthy heiress Gertrude.
June 19
Sugar, Apple TV
Los Angeles private investigator John Sugar has always viewed the world through the lens of classic cinema, and his life continues to play out like a stylish neo-noir thriller. Colin Farrell returns for the second season as the film-loving detective, who remains haunted by the disappearance of his sister and increasingly uncertain that he’ll ever find her. Personal heartbreak, however, doesn’t stop the day job. When a boxer hires Sugar to locate his troubled older brother, what begins as a straightforward missing-person case soon spirals into something far more dangerous.
June 25
The Bear, Disney+

The fifth and final season of The Bear begins in the aftermath of Carmy’s shock decision to walk away from the restaurant business, leaving Sydney, Richie and Natalie to pick up the pieces. With mounting debts, the prospect of a sale hanging over them and a major storm bearing down on Chicago, the future of the restaurant has never looked more uncertain. As pressure mounts from every direction, the team must pull together for one last push: a make-or-break service that could finally earn them a coveted Michelin star. Packed with the high-stakes kitchen drama, razor-sharp dialogue and emotional intensity that made the series a phenomenon, The Bear looks set to serve up a fitting finale.
Supergirl, cinemas everywhere
After a scene-stealing introduction in last year’s Superman, Kara Zor-El finally takes centre stage in her own adventure. Rising star Milly Alcock dons the cape for Supergirl, and the film follows a very different kind of Kryptonian hero. To mark her 21st birthday, Kara embarks on an intergalactic road trip that quickly veers off course when she becomes entangled in a young woman’s quest to avenge her father’s murder. The result is a cosmic adventure that blends action, emotion and plenty of offbeat humour.






