Jennifer Lopez Leads Netflix June 2026 Lineup — Movies Coming Out In 2026

Jennifer Lopez Leads Netflix June 2026 Lineup — Movies Coming Out In 2026

Netflix has mapped out movies coming out in 2026 for June, and Jennifer Lopez leads the slate with Office Romance arriving June 5. The month also gives viewers dated launches for Michael Jackson: The Verdict on June 3 and Color Book on June 19, turning a broad release list into a simple watch calendar.

June 3 to June 19

June 3 brings Michael Jackson: The Verdict, a three-part documentary that revisits Michael Jackson’s 2005 criminal trial, the allegations, the courtroom proceedings and the public response. That makes it the clearest documentary play in the month’s lineup, especially for viewers who want a title built around a defined legal record rather than a general retrospective.

June 5 belongs to Office Romance, a romantic comedy with Lopez as airline CEO Jackie Cruz and Brett Goldstein as her new lawyer. For Netflix, a title with two recognizable leads and a workplace premise is a straightforward mid-month draw; for viewers, it is the first scripted film in the June rollout with a firm date attached.

Office Romance and Little Brother

Office Romance is one of the month’s more marketable entries because it pairs Lopez with Goldstein in a format that travels easily on streaming. Little Brother adds a different lane: it is an absurdist comedy starring Eric André as John Cena’s brother from another mother, giving the June slate a second comic feature built on a specific high-concept hook.

Those titles sit inside a broader release list that also includes Avatar Aang continuing his quest to stop Fire Lord Ozai, with Aang, Katara and Sokka heading to the Earth Kingdom to persuade the King to aid their fight against the Fire Nation. That places Netflix’s June plan somewhere between franchise TV, documentary, and standalone comedy — a useful spread for a service trying to keep different audience segments on the schedule at once.

Color Book on June 19

June 19 closes the run with Color Book, which had been one of the author’s favorite indie films from last year’s Atlanta Film Festival. That gives the slate a festival-to-streaming bridge that should matter to viewers who follow smaller releases and want to catch a title after its festival life instead of waiting for word-of-mouth alone.

For subscribers, the practical upside is simple: three dates now anchor the month, and the titles are spread out enough to keep Netflix in the conversation through early, mid, and late June. If you are choosing what to queue first, Michael Jackson: The Verdict is the documentary of record, Office Romance is the widest commercial play, and Color Book is the festival title most likely to reward the patient viewer.

Next