The last weekend of May 2026 is upon us and the fifth month of the year is going out with a bang.
With 14 new movies and TV shows landing on the world’s top streaming services over the past few days, you’ll actually have plenty to wrap your eyes around before June arrives. As always, we’ve hand-picked the cream of this week’s new releases, so don’t hesitate: scroll on to see what’s worth watching between now and Sunday night. — Tom Power, senior entertainment reporter
Spider-Noir (Prime Video)
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Nic Cage fans, listen up! The hard-working, talented and eccentric A-lister is not only back on your screens, but also gets his Spider-Man back in this Prime Video live-action show, which is already out in full.
Stepping back into the shoes of this series’ eponymous hero Spider-Noir (NB: this is not the same iteration that Cage voiced in Sony’s Spider-Verse movie), the Amazon TV Original introduces us to superpowered private investigator Ben Reilly. Set during the Prohibition era, the aging and jaded detective must step back as his superhuman alter-ego to solve a case that threatens the people of New York and the city itself.
A noir crime thriller masquerading as a superhero project, Spider-Noir is available to stream in color as well as black and white. Personally, I will choose the latter option this weekend to fully immerse myself Spider-Noir‘s dirty, morally ambiguous world. — TP
Scream 7 (Paramount+)
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Ghostface is back – again. That’s right, the iconic masked killer returned for another round of slasher fare in the Scream 7which has finally dropped on Paramount Plus after its theatrical debut earlier this year.
This time, Neve Campbell’s Sidney comes face to face with a new Ghostface when the latter attacks Sidney’s daughter Tatum (Isabel May). Campbell isn’t the only one reprising their role from a previous one Scream movie, either, as she’s joined by the likes of David Arquette and Courteney Cox for more horror-based action and drama.
A film shrouded in controversy following the firing of Melissa Barrera, plus the departures of other new and popular additions to the franchise, including Jenna Ortega, Scream 7 doesn’t seem to live up to previous installments in the series. Yet I am certain of death Scream fans will get a kick out of what’s on offer. — TP
A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder Season 2 (Netflix)
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Don’t you just love it when a viral book series gets adapted into an equally viral TV show? That’s what happened to A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder whose first season debuted in 2024 and is now back for its second season on Netflix.
This time, the ever-curious Pip (Emma Myers) deals with the consequences of discovering who really killed Andie Bell (India Lillie Davies), including the release of a popular true crime podcast about the investigation. Think Only murder in the buildingonly without the comedy. Replace it with some serious armchair detective work and we’re good to go. – Jasmine Valentine, entertainment reporter
Star City (Apple TV)
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For all mankind has come to an end, but new Apple TV sci-fi show Star City is taking its place. Created by the same team, it is not a companion series, but instead follows the Soviet Union’s space race from a spy thriller perspective.
The Apple TV Original will take us back to the key moment in the “all-history retelling” of the space race, exploring the story behind the Iron Curtain. We’ll follow the lives of the cosmonauts, engineers and intelligence officers embedded among them… and of course, some espionage along the way. — JV
The Moment (HBO Max)
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I thought this movie was f*****g big in Germany? If you went absolutely crazy during Abrupt summer like me, Charli XCX’s mockumentary The moment which is out now on HBO Max, is the ideal way to keep reliving it.
Here, we follow a fictional pop star (played by Charli XCX) before her arena tour kicks off, and explore the cost of what it really takes to stay on top. Expect cameos from Rachel Sennott, Alexander Skarsgård and a quite brilliantly cast Rosanna Arquette to name just three. Can Abrupt summer really be an eternal thing? Probably… it’s just not going to look like that. — JV
Deli Boys Season 2 (Hulu/Disney+)
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Want a comedy series you can catch in under a day? Deli Boys season 2 has you covered. In Season 1, brothers Raj (Saagar Shaikh) and Mir Dar (Asif Ali) found out that their late father’s local convenience store was actually a front for an international drug ring that the couple had inherited.
In its follow-up, they make so much money that local casino owner-turned-money launderer Max Sugar (Fred Armisen) is hired to help “clean” the boys’ money, though Max instead falls in love with no-nonsense Aunt Lucky (Poorna Jagannathan).
With Andrew Rannells also in the cast as the unhinged politician Andrew Chadwater, season 2 is an even bigger, bolder and more absurd version of its debut. Check it out now on Hulu and Disney+. — JV
Propeller One-Way Night Coach (Apple TV)
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A family movie that’s just over an hour long? Count me in. Propel One-Way Night Coach is the Apple movie you’ve probably never heard of but need to stream.
Following young aviation enthusiast Jeff (Clark Shotwell) and his mother, we join them on a cross-country flight to Hollywood that turns into a life-changing journey full of unexpected moments.
In the most unexpected twist, the film is John Travolta’s directorial debut. Don’t be too shocked: it’s all based on a children’s book he published back in 1997. Still, I can see a lot Fat fans who get their kids to tune in. — JV
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