Project Hail Mary, the hit sci‑fi thriller starring Ryan Gosling as astronaut Ryland Grace, will stream on Prime Video in India from July 3, 2026, after a strong global box office run. Adapted from Andy Weir’s novel, the film blends high‑stakes science, emotional storytelling, humour and an unlikely friendship, making its OTT debut a major draw for fans and newcomers alike.
If you missed Project Hail Mary in theatres, or just want an excuse to watch it again, Amazon has you covered. The film starts streaming on Prime Video in India from July 3, 2026, closing out a theatrical run that turned into one of the year's genuine box office success stories. Check out everything you need to know about the OTT release, cast and story of Project Hail Mary.
Amazon MGM Studios has confirmed the film goes live on Prime Video worldwide, India included, on July 3. It's arriving on streaming off the back of a strong run in cinemas, having pulled in more than 683 million dollars globally, with around 90 crore rupees of that coming from Indian theatres alone. That kind of number made it one of the studio's bigger wins of the year, and it's part of why the streaming debut is getting so much attention now.
The film is based on Andy Weir's novel of the same name, and it follows Ryland Grace, played by Ryan Gosling, who wakes up on a spacecraft with no idea who he is or how he ended up millions of miles from Earth. As his memory slowly comes back in pieces, he realizes he's the one person tasked with figuring out what's threatening the Sun, and by extension, every living thing on Earth.
It sounds like a straightforward survival story on paper, but the film leans just as hard into the emotional side of things as it does the science. An unlikely friendship along the way ends up changing the whole tone of the film, turning what could have been a lonely, bleak setup into something warmer and more hopeful than you'd expect from a movie about the possible end of the world.
Gosling plays Ryland Grace and is joined by Sandra Huller, Lionel Boyce, Ken Leung and Milana Vayntrub. Phil Lord and Christopher Miller directed the film, working from a screenplay by Drew Goddard, who took on the job of adapting Weir's novel for the screen.
Science fiction has a habit of going big on spectacle and forgetting to make any of it feel personal. Project Hail Mary avoids that trap. It has the visuals and the scientific puzzle-solving you'd expect, but what people actually remember afterward is the humour and the friendship at the center of it. If you skipped it in theatres, or just want to revisit it, its arrival on Prime Video is as good a reason as any to spend a couple of hours with Ryland Grace again.