South Indian OTT platforms line up a varied Friday slate on July 10, 2026, with Malayalam and Tamil viewers spoilt for choice. ZEE5’s Parimala & Co blends dark comedy with a murder mystery, JioHotstar’s Land of Football explores Kerala’s deep-rooted passion for the sport, and SonyLIV’s Balti delivers kabaddi-fuelled action, betrayal and redemption for a packed weekend watch.
Friday, July 10 2026 brings a small but nicely varied set of releases across South Indian streaming platforms, the sort of weekend where you could genuinely go in three different directions depending on your mood. There's a murder mystery dressed up as a family comedy, a documentary that treats football as a way of life rather than a scoreline, and an action drama built around kabaddi, betrayal and second chances. The list of these new Friday South Indian OTT releases on July 10 includes Parimala & Co, Land of Football, and more. Leading actors like Jayaram, Urvashi, Mysskin, Yogi Babu, Shane Nigam, Shanthnu Bhagyaraj, Preethi Asrani, and others have received praise for their performances. Between ZEE5, JioHotstar and SonyLIV, Malayalam and Tamil audiences have a fairly full weekend ahead of them.
Some casting choices do half the work before a single scene airs, and Jayaram and Urvashi appearing together again after more than twenty years is exactly that kind of moment. Directed by Pandiraaj, Parimala & Co takes that old chemistry and builds something sharper around it, a dark comedy that hides a proper murder mystery underneath the laughs.
The setup is deceptively simple. In a middle-class Chennai household, a man accused of harassing the family's youngest daughter turns up dead, and suspicion begins working its way through the relatives one by one. Old grudges resurface, secrets that everyone thought were buried come loose, and the comedy never quite lets you forget that someone in the room is lying. Mysskin, Yogi Babu and Santosh Sobhan round out the cast, and by most accounts the film manages the trickier part of this genre well, staying funny without letting the mystery become an afterthought.
Most football documentaries chase the players. Land of Football goes the other way and puts the state of Kerala itself in front of the camera. Across seven decades, it follows how deeply the sport has embedded itself into everyday life there, not through star power but through village tournaments, fierce neighbourhood rivalries and grounds packed with people who have no professional stake in the result but show up anyway.
It's a film more interested in memory than medals, the kind of documentary that tries to explain why, every four years, entire towns in Kerala seem to reorganise themselves around the World Cup. Flags go up, murals appear, and football stops being a sport and becomes something closer to a shared language. For anyone who thinks of the game purely in terms of trophies and transfer fees, this looks like a useful corrective.
Balti is the week's more physical offering, an action drama that uses kabaddi as its backdrop but has considerably more on its mind than sport alone. Shane Nigam plays Udhayan, a talented kabaddi player whose life takes a sharp turn after he crosses an influential financier, and from there the story moves into darker territory: violence, betrayal, and the kind of personal loss that tends to define these narratives.
What keeps it from tipping into pure melodrama is the way director Unni Sivalingam roots the story back in the kabaddi court itself, using it as both the site of Udhayan's downfall and, eventually, something closer to redemption. The supporting cast is a strong one, with Shanthnu Bhagyaraj, Preethi Asrani, Selvaraghavan and Poornima Indrajith all featuring, and together they give the film the kind of grounded, character-first feel that action dramas don't always manage.