Here Are the Best TV Shows to Stream this Weekend on Amazon Prime, Including ‘Tell Me Your Name’
If you’re scrolling through Prime Video and want fresh series to add to your queue, here’s a concise guide to new and notable shows landing right now—complete with quick plot primers, key cast, and who’s behind them—so you can pick what fits your mood fast.
‘Hazbin Hotel’ (2024– )

This adult animated musical follows Charlie Morningstar, the optimistic Princess of Hell who opens a rehabilitation hotel for demons, blending dark comedy with Broadway-style numbers. Created and directed by Vivienne “VivziePop” Medrano, the show features music by Sam Haft and Andrew Underberg. The cast includes Erika Henningsen, Stephanie Beatriz, Blake Roman, Alex Brightman, Keith David, Kimiko Glenn, and Amir Talai. Season updates continue the world introduced by the viral 2019 pilot and connected web projects.
‘Tell Me Your Name’ (2025)

Set in Spain in 1997, this six-episode thriller unfolds in the strawberry-growing town of Río Blanco as the arrival of Moroccan seasonal workers in nearby Fuensanta exposes simmering social and religious tensions. Created by Hugo Stuven with Alejandro Hernández and César de Nicolás, and directed by Stuven, it stars Michelle Jenner, Darío Grandinetti, and Younes Bouab. Production partners include Espotlight Media and Skybound Entertainment. The series balances grounded drama with supernatural chills.
‘Tremembé’ (2025)

This five-episode Brazilian true-crime drama explores São Paulo’s Tremembé Penitentiary Complex, dramatizing power struggles, alliances, and the emotional toll on inmates and staff. It’s directed by Vera Egito and Daniel Lieff, with scripts by Egito, Ullisses Campbell, Juliana Rosenthal, Thays Berbe, and Maria Isabel Iorio. The ensemble features Marina Ruy Barbosa, Carol Garcia, Bianca Comparato, Felipe Simas, Kelner Macêdo, and Anselmo Vasconcelos. It emphasizes character-driven storytelling over simple retellings of headline crimes.
‘King & Conqueror’ (2025)

A historical drama charting the volatile relationship between Harold Godwinson and William, Duke of Normandy, as rival claims to England’s throne mount toward the 1066 showdown. Created by Michael Robert Johnson, with episodes directed in part by Baltasar Kormákur, it stars James Norton as Harold and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau as William, alongside Emily Beecham and Clémence Poésy. Backed by BBC Studios and CBS Studios, it focuses on palace intrigue, strategy, and character-centric retelling of the Norman Conquest lead-up.
‘Bat-Fam’ (2025)

This animated action-comedy follows Bruce Wayne, young Damian Wayne, and Alfred as they juggle everyday family chaos with protecting Gotham under one roof. Episodes run around 22 minutes and spotlight the dynamic between the crime-fighting clan and their misfit allies. The project is developed by DC/Warner Bros. Animation and Amazon MGM Studios. It’s positioned as a family-friendly Gotham adventure with a light, comedic tone.
‘Malice’ (2025)

A British psychological thriller about Adam, a charming tutor who insinuates himself into the wealthy Tanner family during a holiday, triggering a sequence of unsettling events. Jack Whitehall leads the cast as Adam, with David Duchovny and Carice van Houten as Jamie and Nat Tanner. Created and written by BAFTA winner James Wood, the series is produced with Amazon MGM Studios, Expectation Entertainment, and Tailspin Films. Season one comprises six episodes.
‘Maxton Hall – The World Between Us’ (2024– )

Adapted from Mona Kasten’s bestselling ‘Save Me’ novel, this German-language teen drama centers on scholarship student Ruby Bell and privileged heir James Beaufort at an elite private school. Starring Harriet Herbig-Matten and Damian Hardung, it weaves class divides, ambition, and family pressure into a slow-burn relationship story. Produced with UFA Fiction, the series blends romance and rivalry with a modern, social-media-aware edge. It’s an easy pick if you like glossy school-set dramas with high stakes.
Tell us your favorite Prime pick from this list—and what we should add next—in the comments!


