Prime Video: best new shows streaming this week

Discover the best new shows to stream from 29 June to 5 July 2026 on Prime Video with this guide.
Elle. Image: Prime Video.

Prime Video: new this week

Elle – 1 July

Elle. Image: Prime Video.
Elle. Image: Prime Video.

Series. Season 1 of Elle follows Elle Woods before she was a fish-out-of-water at Harvard. We meet her in 1995 as a fish in the tumultuous waters of high school where she encounters tricky friendships, forbidden romance, and questionable fashion choices.

Through it all, Elle uses her family as a touchstone, and forms an even tighter bond to her mother, proving that they can get through anything life throws their way as long as they have each other. With each challenge she faces, Elle grows closer to the Elle Woods we know and love today.

Starring Lexi Minetree June Diane Raphael, Tom Everett Scott, Jacob Moskovitz and Gabrielle Policano.

ICC Women’s World Cup 2026 Finals – until 5 July

Sport. The tournament is currently taking place in Wales and England with the final being played at the iconic Lord’s Cricket Ground in London on Sunday 5 July.

Prime Video: recent highlights

See You At Work Tomorrow! – 22 June

See You At Work Tomorrow! Image: Prime Video.
See You At Work Tomorrow! Image: Prime Video.

Series. Cha Ji-yoon, a seventh-year product planner, has sworn off dating after a painful breakup. Burned out from corporate life, she lives for efficiency, deadlines and one small joy: fried chicken and beer after the perfect on-the-dot clock out. Calm, polite and unflappable on the surface, her heart has long been closed – until Kang Si-woo, the company’s most avoided team leader, enters her life.

Starring Seo In-guk, Park Ji-hyun and Kang Mi-na.

Your Fault: London – 17 June

Film (2025). Noah and Nick return – stronger, closer, and more in love than ever. But as life begins to pull them in different directions, their relationship faces its toughest challenge yet. Noah heads to Oxford to pursue her studies, while Nick finds himself consumed by the growing demands of work. When new people enter their lives, stirring unexpected emotions and lingering jealousy, cracks begin to form.

Starring Asha Banks, Matthew Broome and Eve Macklin.

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple – 14 June

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple. Image: Sony Pictures. Streaming On Prime Video.
28 Years Later: The Bone Temple. Image: Sony Pictures. Streaming on Prime Video.

Film (2026). Dr. Kelson finds himself in a shocking new relationship – with consequences that could change the world as they know it – and Spike’s encounter with Jimmy Crystal becomes a nightmare he can’t escape. In the world of The Bone Temple, the infected are no longer the greatest threat to survival – the inhumanity of the survivors can be stranger and more terrifying.

Starring Ralph Fiennes, Jack O’Connell, Alfie Williams and Cillian Murphy.

ScreenHub: 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple review: beguilingly wild and tender

Every Year After – 10 June

Every Year After. Image: Prime Video.
Every Year After. Image: Prime Video.

Series. Told over the course of six years and one week in Barry’s Bay – the quintessential lake town – Every Year After is a romantic, nostalgic story of first loves and the people and choices that mark us forever.

Starring Sadie Soverall and Matt Cornett.

Over Your Dead Body – 10 June

Film (2026). When miserable couple Dan and Lisa retreat to a remote cabin for a romantic reset, each arrives with a secret plan to kill the other. However, their carefully plotted traps and counterplots quickly unravel when strangers crash the weekend with plans of their own. As the toxic getaway spirals into chaotic carnage, Dan and Lisa must soon figure out if they want to save their marriage or survive it.

Starring Samara Weaving and Jason Segel.

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Paul Dalgarno is author of the novels A Country of Eternal Light (2023) and Poly (2020); the memoir And You May Find Yourself (2015); and the creative non-fiction book Prudish Nation (2023). He is Head of Content at ArtsHub & ScreenHub. Insta: @dalgarnowrites