Prime Video’s August lineup packs in buzzy originals, returning fan favorites, and a steady flow of licensed hits. Whether you’re in the mood for a high-stakes heist, a globe-trotting romance, or a weekend sports fix, there’s something here to anchor your watchlist all month long.

Headlining the month is The Pickup (Aug 6), a sharp crowd-pleaser fronted by Eddie Murphy alongside Pete Davidson and Keke Palmer. Fresh series drops include the espionage thriller Butterfly and the animated chaos of Sausage Party: Foodtopia Season 2, while Latin mega-hit Betty la Fea: La Historia Continúa returns to push its characters into deeper, messier decisions.

Big-screen energy lands at home with titles like The Map That Leads to You and The Siege at Thorn High , plus franchise comfort food from classics and modern favorites arriving throughout the month. Greg Daniels’ Upload also lines up a four-part series finale—one last ride to save Lakeview (and maybe the world).

Sports fans get live action in primetime with Yankees games, the NWSL Challenge Cup, WNBA doubleheaders, ONE Fight Night, and the kickoff of Thursday Night Football later in the month. Music lovers can catch festival streams from KCON LA and Outside Lands without leaving the couch.

New on Prime Video — August 2025

Prime Video’s August slate mixes big originals, global films, and live sports. Highlights include Eddie Murphy’s heist caper The Pickup , the return of Sausage Party: Foodtopia and Betty la Fea , Taylor Kitsch in The Terminal List: Dark Wolf , and Lasse Hallström’s romantic drama The Map That Leads to You . Schedules for Yankees, NWSL, WNBA, ONE Fight Night, and Thursday Night Football are below, followed by the full day-by-day list.

Spotlight: The Pickup (August 6)

The Pickup

Feature film • Heist • Eddie Murphy, Pete Davidson, Keke Palmer

A routine cash pickup explodes into chaos when two armored-truck drivers are ambushed by a ruthless crew led by a savvy mastermind.

Watch on Prime Video

Built in Birmingham: Brady & the Blues - 1

Built in Birmingham: Brady & the Blues

Docuseries • 5 episodes

Inside Birmingham City’s 150-year-old club as new minority owner Tom Brady pushes for a world-class future.

Taurasi - 2

Taurasi

Docuseries • 3 parts

WNBA legend Diana Taurasi’s relentless pursuit of greatness, from NCAA titles to six Olympic golds.

Butterfly - 3

Butterfly — Season 1

Series • Spy thriller

Ex-U.S. operative David Jung faces the fallout of an impossible decision amid global espionage and family secrets.

Sausage Party: Foodtopia - 4

Sausage Party: Foodtopia — Season 2

Animated series

Frank, Barry, and Sammy discover a dark secret beneath New Foodland’s glossy fridges and cheery smiles.

Abandoned: The Woman in the Decaying House - 5

Abandoned: The Woman in the Decaying House

Docuseries • 3 parts

Journalist Chico Felitti revisits a Brazilian case that shocked the nation, uncovering new layers and contradictions.

Betty la Fea: La Historia Continúa - 6

Betty la Fea: La Historia Continúa — Season 2

Series

Record-breaking Latin hit returns as Betty faces choices that could redefine her family’s future.

The Siege at Thorn High - 7

The Siege at Thorn High

MGM film • Dystopian thriller

A substitute teacher fights to survive when riots erupt at a juvenile detention center.

The Map That Leads to You - 8

The Map That Leads to You

Feature film • Romance

Heather’s European adventure takes a turn when she meets the magnetic Jack, changing her plans—and her heart.

Watch on Prime Video

007: Road to a Million - 9

007: Road to a Million — Season 2

Reality competition

Brian Cox sends eight teams across the globe for spy-worthy challenges to win £1 million.

Upload - 10

Upload — Series Finale

Sci-fi comedy

As sentient AI turns evil, Nathan and friends face one last mission to save Lakeview—and humanity.

The Terminal List: Dark Wolf - 11

The Terminal List: Dark Wolf

Series • Espionage thriller

Origin story of Ben Edwards from Navy SEAL to the shadows of CIA Special Operations. Chris Pratt returns as James Reece.

Enemigos - 12

Enemigos

Feature film

Two teens from the same neighborhood become locked in a spiral of revenge with life-changing consequences.

Live Sports in August

New York Yankees

  • Wed Aug 13, 7:05 p.m. ET: Minnesota Twins
  • Fri Aug 22, 7:05 p.m. ET: Boston Red Sox

NWSL — Challenge Cup

  • Fri Aug 1, 8 p.m. ET: Chicago Stars FC vs. Gotham FC
  • Fri Aug 8, 10 p.m. ET: Utah Royals vs. KC Current
  • Fri Aug 15, 8 p.m. ET: Washington Spirit vs. Racing Louisville FC
  • Fri Aug 22, 8 p.m. ET: Chicago Stars FC vs. NC Courage
  • Fri Aug 29, 8 p.m. ET: Orlando Pride vs. Gotham FC

ONE Fight Night

  • Fri Aug 1, 9 p.m. ET: Regian Eersel vs. George Jarvis (Lumpinee Stadium, Bangkok)

Thursday Night Football

  • Thu Aug 21, 7 p.m. ET: New England Patriots at New York Giants

WNBA

  • Thu Aug 7, 8 p.m. ET: Atlanta Dream at Chicago Sky
  • Thu Aug 7, 10 p.m. ET: Indiana Fever at Phoenix Mercury
  • Thu Aug 21, 7 p.m. ET: Chicago Sky at New York Liberty
  • Thu Aug 21, 10 p.m. ET: Phoenix Mercury at Las Vegas Aces
  • Thu Aug 28, 7 p.m. ET: Washington Mystics at New York Liberty
  • Thu Aug 28, 10 p.m. ET: Chicago Sky at Phoenix Mercury

Music Livestreams

  • August 1–3: KCON LA 2025 — on Prime Video & Amazon Music (Twitch)
  • August 8–10: Outside Lands — live from Golden Gate Park

New Episodes

  • Countdown
  • The Summer I Turned Pretty

Full list of what’s new on Prime Video in August 2025

August 1

  • 30 Rock Seasons 1–7 (2006)
  • A Guy Thing (2003)
  • Big Fat Liar (2002)
  • Blow Out (1981)
  • Built in Birmingham: Brady & the Blues (2025)
  • Cape Fear (1991)
  • Conan the Barbarian (1982)
  • Conan the Destroyer (1984)
  • Death Becomes Her (1992)
  • Death Race (2008)
  • Death Race (Unrated) (2008)
  • Duck, You Sucker! A Fistful of Dynamite (1972)
  • Hazlo como hombre (2017)
  • Hercules (2014)
  • Howard the Duck (1986)
  • King Solomon’s Mines (1985)
  • Lady Chatterley’s Lover (2022)
  • Lone Survivor (2013)
  • Love Actually (2003)
  • Maid in Manhattan (2002)
  • Mermaids (1990)
  • Miami Vice (2006)
  • Mr. Mom (1983)
  • Navy SEALS (1990)
  • Only the Brave (2017)
  • Out of Time (2003)
  • Over the Top (1987)
  • Overboard (2018)
  • Pulp Fiction (1994)
  • Raging Bull (1980)
  • Ranchlands Season 1 (2019)
  • Red Dragon (2002)
  • Sixteen Candles (1984)
  • Sleepover (2004)
  • Something New (2006)
  • Stigmata (1999)
  • The Alamo (2004)
  • The Battle of Britain (1969)
  • The Return of the Living Dead (1985)
  • The Strangers (2008)
  • Transformers (2007)
  • Transformers: Dark of the Moon (2011)
  • Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009)
  • Uptown Girls (2003)
  • Walking Tall (2004)
  • Walking Tall: The Payback (2007)
  • Wrath of Man (2021)
  • Yours, Mine & Ours (1968)

August 2

  • Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes (2024)

August 6

  • My Dead Boyfriend (2016)
  • The Pickup (2025)

August 7

  • Taurasi (2025)

August 11

  • Father Stu (2022)

August 13

  • Butterfly Season 1 (2025)
  • Run the Tide (2016)
  • Sausage Party: Foodtopia Season 2 (2025)

August 15

  • Betty la Fea: La Historia Continúa Season 2 (2025)
  • The Siege at Thorn High (2025)

August 16

  • Creed (2015)

August 18

  • Homefront (2013)

August 20

  • Pocket Listing (2016)
  • The Map That Leads to You (2025)

August 21

  • Thursday Night Football (2025)

August 22

  • The Intern (2015)
  • Wolf Man (2025)

August 29

  • Last Breath (2025)

August 30

  • Hannibal Seasons 1–3 (2013)

That’s a wrap for August

From heists and heartbeats to finals and face-offs, August on Prime Video is stacked. Whether you’re cueing up The Pickup , diving into Butterfly , or chasing live sports, you’ve got plenty to fill the watchlist.

Quick note: release plans and game times can shift, and availability may vary by region. All times listed are ET unless noted.

Enjoy the binge, enjoy the games, and see you in September for the next wave of premieres.

The Happening, directed by M. Night Shyamalan, is a tense thriller about an unexpected and terrifying disaster that sweeps across the northeastern United States. The central danger is invisible and undetectable, an airborne neurotoxin that compels people to take their own lives the moment they are exposed.

The plot follows Elliot Moore, his wife Alma, and a small group of survivors as they desperately search for safety while struggling to understand what is happening.

The ending has baffled many viewers because it arrives abruptly, without a clear scientific resolution. But beneath the uncertainty lies a layered message about humanity’s relationship with nature, the fragility of control, and the quiet power of human connection during times of collapse.

Let’s walk through the narrative build-up and unpack the important details that make the final moments of the film so meaningful.

The Growing Threat: From Cities to Countryside

The film begins with an ordinary day in New York City that turns into chaos almost immediately. People in Central Park stop mid-activity, begin speaking nonsensically, and then end their lives in disturbing ways.

Soon, similar incidents occur in Philadelphia where Elliot, a high school science teacher, is working. Authorities initially fear it’s a terrorist attack using nerve agents, prompting mass evacuations.

Elliot and Alma join his colleague Julian and Julian’s young daughter, Jess, on a train heading into rural Pennsylvania, believing that getting away from large cities might reduce the risk.

The assumption is that the mysterious airborne agent is concentrated in dense urban areas. But the horror quickly follows them beyond city limits.

When the train stops due to communication breakdowns, the group continues on foot and later in cars with strangers they meet along the way.

Soon, the toxin begins affecting even small rural communities and isolated groups, debunking the theory that only large gatherings trigger the phenomenon. This shift in danger intensifies fear there is no obvious safe pattern, and the invisible threat could strike anywhere.

Character Tensions and Emotional Distance

Alongside the survival narrative runs a more intimate story between Elliot and Alma. There is tension in their marriage, hinted at through Alma’s secret coffee meeting with a male friend named Joey.

Elliot feels uneasy about her emotional distance, but the crisis forces them into constant, life-or-death proximity.

Julian’s tragic fate underscores the fragility of survival. When he entrusts Jess to Elliot and Alma to search for his missing wife, he falls victim to the toxin on his journey, leaving the girl orphaned and deepening the couple’s sense of responsibility. Through Jess, Elliot and Alma are forced to set aside their personal grievances and act as unified caretakers.

One poignant recurring image is the scene where the couple speaks to each other through a ventilation pipe between two separate safe rooms in a remote farmhouse.

This physical separation mirrors their emotional disconnection. Yet the danger outside reminds them of what truly matters: shared protection, forgiveness, and love.

The Climactic Choice: Facing the Unknown

In the final act, Elliot, Alma, and Jess take shelter in two adjoining farmhouses occupied by an elderly, reclusive woman named Mrs. Jones. Her mistrust of outsiders creates additional strain. At some point, she ventures outside and is quickly exposed to the toxin, dying disturbingly and suddenly.

Elliot realizes the wind carrying the plants’ deadly emissions is approaching. Alma and Jess are locked inside one building, while he is stuck in the other. From their separate rooms, Elliot calls out through the pipe, and they share what may be their last conversation.

He chooses to let go of his rational calculations. Instead of hiding, he decides to be with Alma and Jess no matter the risk. His choice is rooted in love rather than logic a direct contradiction to the scientific reasoning he has clung to throughout most of the film.

Elliot walks into the open air, expecting the toxin to hit at any moment. Alma, holding Jess, also emerges to meet him. The three embrace, standing together in what should have been certain death.

The Sudden End of the Event

Unexpectedly, the wind calms. The invisible threat dissipates as quickly as it had appeared. News reports later describe the phenomenon as having ceased everywhere at roughly the same time, lasting only a matter of hours in each affected location.

Experts speculate, but no definitive answer emerges. Theories range from an environmental defense response by plants to a random ecological anomaly.

The movie leaves it deliberately ambiguous whether the plants consciously decided to end their counterattack or if a change in conditions simply turned off this defensive chemical release. The ending does not give scientific closure only the knowledge that humanity barely survived this strike.

What the Ending Suggests

The moment when Elliot and Alma step outside into the toxin-filled air and survive can be read on multiple levels. One interpretation is thematic: their survival is tied to their emotional surrender and reconnection.

Elliot’s willingness to abandon calculation in favor of love parallels the idea that enduring an existential threat may require humility rather than mastery.

On a broader scale, the sudden cessation of the toxin suggests that nature’s warning was temporary. It was not an eradication attempt but a reminder of human vulnerability.

As the title implies, “The Happening” is an event, not a permanent state, but it carries the possibility of recurrence. The final scenes hint that what just transpired could happen again if environmental triggers return.

Nature as Both Source and Judge

At the film’s core is the concept that the neurotoxin is a botanical reaction triggered by ecological imbalance, possibly caused by human encroachment, pollution, and climate stress. The plants’ response bypasses the slower pace of natural selection and serves as an immediate check on humanity’s dominance.

The Happening - 13

The Happening (Credit: UTV Motion Pictures)

By personifying nature as a silent force capable of coordinated action, the film reframes the relationship between humans and the environment. This portrayal becomes especially unsettling because the “attacker” has no malice or human motives. It simply acts as a survival mechanism for a larger ecological system.

Aftermath and Unanswered Questions

After the event ends, life resumes cautiously. Elliot and Alma take Jess into their home, filling the parental void she was left with. News outlets globally debate the origin and implications of the incident. Government scientists warn that since the cause is not fully understood, there is no guarantee it won’t happen again.

The movie closes with an ominous hint: a similar phenomenon begins in Paris, suggesting that this might be the start of a recurring or even escalating cycle. This final beat reframes the “ending” as potentially just one chapter in an ongoing environmental countermeasure by a planet under stress.

Why the Ending Divides Audiences

The Happening’s ambiguous conclusion frustrates viewers accustomed to tidy resolutions, but its open nature is intentional. Shyamalan’s choice mirrors the heart of the film’s message: humans do not have control over or complete understanding of the world’s natural systems.

While Elliot survives, his experience is not a victory over nature, but more like a reprieve granted without explanation.

Critics often point to the abruptness of the calm as anticlimactic, but from a thematic standpoint, it reinforces nature’s unpredictability. The invisible threat, arriving and leaving without warning, reminds us that our security is shakier than we imagine.

By the end of The Happening, the audience is left with three intertwined ideas: love has survival value, scientific knowledge alone may not save us, and nature’s power routinely exceeds human comprehension.

The bond between Elliot, Alma, and Jess becomes the central victory of the story. Even in the face of unstoppable forces, finding connection can make survival meaningful.

The ending’s quietness no explosions, no antidote, no clear explanation, is exactly what sets it apart from many disaster films. It suggests that sometimes, the most profound endings are the ones that resist definitive closure, leaving a lingering sense of vulnerability and reflection.