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OTT and Bollywood Picks: What to Watch June 4-7, 2026

Dhurandhar 2 hits JioHotstar, Gullak returns for a fifth season on SonyLIV, and TVF's pyramid-scheme drama lands on Prime Video - all June 4-7. Here's what's worth your time and what to skip.

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Jun 3, 2026

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OTT and Bollywood Picks: What to Watch June 4-7, 2026

Three releases land on Indian OTT this long-ish weekend, and the range is genuinely wide: a Rs 400-crore Bollywood spy spectacle, the fifth season of the most dependably human Hindi web series around, and a TVF social drama built on a subject that has wrecked families across tier-2 India. One of them is an easy must-watch; one is worth your time if you're in the mood; one is a promising unknown quantity. Here's the breakdown, caveats included.

Quick note on Toxic. Yash and Kiara Advani's Toxic: A Fairy Tale for Grown-Ups was originally pencilled in for June 4. After a presentation at CinemaCon generated global distributor interest, the makers pushed it back β€” it is now targeting the Independence Day weekend, August 13, 2026, where it will clash with Sunny Deol's Lahore 1947. It is not releasing this weekend. Don't let aggregator carousels mislead you.


Dhurandhar 2: The Revenge β€” JioHotstar's flagship drop

What it is and when

This is the sequel to Aditya Dhar's 2024 theatrical blockbuster Dhurandhar, which followed a RAW operative across a sprawling intelligence conspiracy. Dhurandhar: The Revenge had its theatrical run earlier in 2026 and arrives on JioHotstar in India with a tiered premiere: a 7 PM event screening on June 4 (with a 30-minute pre-show of cast conversations and behind-the-scenes footage), followed by a full wide release for all subscribers on June 5, 2026. Internationally, Netflix has been streaming it since mid-May under the title Raw & Undekha.

Cast and crew

  • Director / Writer: Aditya Dhar
  • Cast: Ranveer Singh (Hamza Ali Mazari / Jaskirat Singh Rangi), Sanjay Dutt (S.P. Choudhary Aslam), R. Madhavan (Ajit Sanyal), Akshaye Khanna, Arjun Rampal, Sara Arjun
  • Runtime: 229 minutes (theatrical India cut); overseas screens ran an extended 235-minute version
  • Languages: Hindi; also available in Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam, and Kannada

Why you'd watch it

Aditya Dhar earned serious credibility with Uri: The Surgical Strike and followed it with the original Dhurandhar. This sequel reportedly escalates the geopolitical stakes and leans harder into the spy-thriller aesthetic that Indian action cinema has largely avoided in favour of mass-masala. The ensemble β€” Ranveer Singh operating in a decidedly un-Ranveer register, Akshaye Khanna who has quietly been the most interesting presence in every room he enters, and Sanjay Dutt as a grey-zone police-intelligence operator β€” is on paper the best action cast assembled for an Indian OTT premiere in some time. The overseas runtime being three minutes longer than the Indian cut suggests cuts were made for certification; that the JioHotstar version is billed as "extended/uncut" is worth noting if you want the fuller picture.

The caveat

At nearly four hours, this is a commitment. The original Dhurandhar was divisive on pacing β€” Dhar's films are dense and procedural, and patience runs thin if you're not invested in the world. Ranveer Singh's disciplined turn in the first film surprised many; whether the sequel sustains that or drifts into his more theatrical tendencies is a fair question. Reviews from the theatrical run pointed to a strong second half and a somewhat overloaded first.


Gullak Season 5 β€” The Mishras are back, and someone is missing

What it is and when

TVF's Gullak has been the quiet achiever of Hindi streaming β€” five seasons of a middle-class Uttar Pradesh family, no thriller twist, no aspirational glamour, just the Mishras bickering, managing money, and growing up at inconsistent speeds. Season 5 premieres exclusively on SonyLIV on June 5, 2026.

Cast and crew

  • Platform: SonyLIV
  • Expected episodes: ~5 (the series has maintained this episode structure every season)
  • Returning cast: Jameel Khan (Santosh Mishra / Babuji), Geetanjali Kulkarni (Shanti Mishra), Harsh Mayar (Aman), Sunita Rajwar (Bittu Ki Mummy)
  • New addition: Anant V. Joshi replaces Vaibhav Raj Gupta as Annu Mishra (eldest son)
  • Language: Hindi
  • Creator: Durgesh Singh; produced by TVF

What changes this season

The most discussed development is that Vaibhav Raj Gupta, who played Annu through four seasons and became as much a fixture as the piggy-bank title, has left the show. Anant V. Joshi steps in. This is not a recast that can be quietly absorbed β€” Annu's particular brand of petty-ambitious elder-son energy was load-bearing for Gullak's emotional rhythms. Whether Joshi finds his footing quickly, or whether the transition creates an uncanny-valley effect in the first episode or two, is the season's central unknown.

The Mishras' storyline this year involves the house getting Wi-Fi, Shanti (Geetanjali Kulkarni) being unexpectedly pushed into a social-media spotlight via the viral fame of neighbour Bittu Ki Mummy, and Aman returning home more withdrawn. That last thread β€” a young man who seems to have gone quiet β€” could be the most interesting thing Gullak has attempted.

Why it's still worth your time

If you have watched any previous season, you already know. Gullak operates at a frequency that feels almost archival: this is what a certain generation of Indian middle-class household actually sounds like, in the kitchen, over electricity bills, during Diwali. It does not over-explain or over-sentimentalise. It earns its emotional moments through accumulation rather than contrivance. The Annu recast is a legitimate concern, but the bedrock β€” Jameel Khan's Babuji, the writing, the specificity of detail β€” has not changed.

The caveat

If you've never watched Gullak before, starting at Season 5 is possible but sub-optimal. The emotional payoff is proportional to investment. Also: ~5 episodes means this is a two-hour sitting, not a full weekend binge.


The Pyramid Scheme (TVF) β€” A harder, more uncomfortable subject

What it is and when

The Pyramid Scheme is a new TVF drama that premieres on Prime Video on June 5, 2026. It is set in Haridwar and follows Goldy (Paramvir Singh Cheema), a young man with ordinary ambitions who gets pulled into the world of pyramid marketing. The series has 7 episodes and is directed by Ashish R. Shukla and Shreyansh Pandey, created and written by Shreyansh Pandey and Akshendra Mishra.

Cast and crew

  • Platform: Prime Video
  • Episodes: 7
  • Cast: Paramvir Singh Cheema (Goldy), Ranvir Shorey (Manoj Srivastava), Shekhar Suman, Aanjjan Srivastav, Alfia Jafry, Ashish Raghava, Akhilendra Mishra, Smita Bansal, Sushant Singh
  • Language: Hindi
  • Directors: Ashish R. Shukla, Shreyansh Pandey

Why it matters as a subject

Pyramid marketing has been one of the more corrosive financial traps operating across rural and semi-urban India for decades β€” from the chit-fund collapses of the 1990s to the network marketing companies that still aggressively target aspirational young men in smaller towns. Haridwar as a setting is a deliberate choice: a city of spiritual credibility and economic precarity, where the promise of a "system" that rewards loyalty and effort resonates with a population trained to believe in both. TVF's track record with socially grounded drama β€” Panchayat, Aspirants, Kota Factory β€” suggests they have earned the benefit of the doubt on execution.

Ranvir Shorey in particular has become the actor you want in the role of "person who is not quite a villain but is absolutely pulling someone down with him." The trailer implies the series doesn't offer the easy out of a single bad actor; the system itself is the trap.

The caveat

The Pyramid Scheme is an unknown quantity. The subject is compelling, but TVF's record is not perfect β€” it has occasionally over-extended series beyond their natural runtime. Seven episodes for this premise is not alarming, but whether the writing earns the full run is not yet verifiable. Paramvir Singh Cheema is newer to streaming drama (best known for The Railway Men); how he carries a protagonist role across seven episodes is a genuine open question. This one warrants a three-episode check-in before committing.


Platform and timing at a glance

Title Platform Premiere Date Runtime / Episodes Language Rating context
Dhurandhar: The Revenge JioHotstar June 4 (7 PM event); June 5 (all subscribers) 229 min (India cut); 235 min extended Hindi + 4 dubbed languages Theatrical action-thriller; mature themes
Gullak Season 5 SonyLIV June 5, 2026 ~5 episodes Hindi Family drama; all ages
The Pyramid Scheme Prime Video June 5, 2026 7 episodes Hindi Social drama; mature themes

What to watch and skip

Must-watch this weekend:

  • Gullak Season 5 (SonyLIV) β€” It has not put out a bad season yet. The Annu recast is the one variable; every other element is reliable. Watch it in one sitting on a Saturday evening and see how the new Annu lands. If you haven't seen previous seasons and want the OTT equivalent of a warm home-cooked meal, start with Season 1 (also on SonyLIV) and work forward.

Watch if you have the stamina:

  • Dhurandhar: The Revenge (JioHotstar) β€” Four hours is four hours. If you liked the first film and want Bollywood finally playing in the serious-spy-thriller lane with a proper ensemble, this is the most ambitious release of the weekend by budget and scale. Set aside a Sunday afternoon. Skip the premiere event on June 4 unless you want the pre-show packaging; the content is the same on June 5.

Three-episode trial:

  • The Pyramid Scheme (Prime Video) β€” Strong subject, credible production house, respectable cast. But it is unreviewed at time of writing and carries the risk that any new TVF drama carries: it might stretch its premise thin across seven episodes. Watch the first three and decide. If it hasn't hooked you by episode three, it probably won't.

Skip (this weekend, at least):

  • Toxic: A Fairy Tale for Grown-Ups β€” It is not releasing June 4. The new date is August 13. Don't wait up.
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