Friday Box Office Free Superhits (17 Oct 2025): 7-Language Lineup — Watch From Hindi To Kannada Free

Friday Box Office Free Superhits
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Friday again. Long week behind you, snacks within reach, friends arguing in the group chat about “what to watch.” Classic. This week’s Friday Box Office Free Superhits lineup makes it easy to settle the debate—seven films, seven languages, and a mood for everyone. Big, glossy action. A sweet-and-sour sequel. A Kolkata romance that lingers like humid air. A misty Tamil chiller. A tight Malayalam mystery. A warm parent-child drama. And a grand Kannada epic that thunders.

If you like a tidy runway before takeoff, start with the Movies hub, then detour through Hindi movies or browse by flavour—action movies, thriller movies, drama movies—and circle back to this week’s Friday Box Office Free Superhits row. Pick one. Or stack two. Your call.

Simmba (Hindi • Action / Comedy)

Boost the sound. Simmba strolls in with dark glasses, spins the chair, and leads the charge. Ranveer Singh takes on Sangram “Simmba” Bhalerao, a cop who grabs the benefits until one case knocks his swagger flat. His heart switches on, fight scenes pound, and one-liners make the room echo them loudly. Sara Ali Khan adds light joy; Sonu Sood, hard danger; Ashutosh Rana, that stern face you respect. It roars, it shines, it moves—classic masala with a fresh coat. Great opener if friends want energy, not quiet.

Timepass 2 (Marathi • Romantic Drama)

Older, maybe wiser, definitely complicated. Timepass 2 checks in on Aditya and Prajakta years after the teen chaos of the first film. Love grows up—or doesn’t. Some feelings calcify. Some sneak back. Priyadarshan Jadhav and Prathamesh Parab lean into the awkward truth that adulting is just a slow negotiation with your younger self. The humour is local, easy; the warmth, very Marathi—that gentle embrace even when people mess up. If your group wants something that nods at nostalgia without bathing in it, slide this into the middle slot.

Sohorer Ushnotomo Din E (Bengali • Romance / Drama)

This one feels like Calcutta in July. Thick air, slow trams, corners where old memories stay without paying. Ex-lovers Ritoban and Anindita meet by chance after years, and the city does what cities do—pushes them toward unfinished talks. No melodrama in Shohorer Ushnotomo Din E. Just two people walking, talking, circling the “what if” they never solved. Aparajita Adhya steadies every frame she’s in; Ritwick Chakraborty and Anusha Vishwanathan play it like real life—messy, specific, tender. Watch this Bengali movie with the lights low. Let it breathe. Some romances don’t ignite; they glow.

Ayothi (Tamil • Supernatural Thriller)

Fog. Footsteps. A hill town that looks pretty until the silence stretches a second too long. Ayothi is the “okay, who’s turning on the hallway light?” pick of the night. A plain man stumbles into a chain of odd events, and the picture keeps asking: does he carry grief, guilt, or something that will not be named? Actors stay grounded, the camera waits, and the film trusts dread more than jump scares. If you’ve got a friend who laughs at horror to hide the nerves—yes, this Tamil movie is for them.

Ini Utharam (Malayalam • Mystery / Thriller)

A confession is supposed to end the story. Not here. A woman walks into a police station and casually admits to murder; the film calmly replies, “Prove it.” Ini Utharam keeps its voice low and its grip firm—procedure, motive, trauma, the fault lines in memory. Aparna Balamurali is all steel and stillness; the supporting turns don’t grandstand, they accumulate. Pacing? Measured. Payoff? Clean. If your group likes puzzles without pyrotechnics, park this Malayalam story as the late-evening slot and lean forward.

Maa Nanna Super Hero (Telugu • Family / Drama)

Sometimes the hero doesn’t smash a car; he packs a tiffin. Maa Nanna Super Hero is built on small acts done every single day—sacrifices parents make, often wordlessly. A father who will bend rules (and budget) to keep his daughter’s dream intact. Performances stay unflashy on purpose; the sweetness isn’t syrup, it’s lived-in. Bring the soft snacks. And maybe tissues. We all have that one memory that this Telugu film pokes gently and, yeah, it stings a little. In a good way.

Kurukshetra (Kannada • Epic / Historical)

Scale. Armour. Dust in sunlight. Kurukshetra retells the Mahabharata through Duryodhana’s eyes—conviction against consensus, pride that refuses to bow. Darshan commands the centre like a general; the ensemble brings old-school weight to big-canvas staging. This is “turn the TV to cinema mode” material: marches, vows, and a battlefield that feels painted and pounded at once. End your night here if you want thunder for dessert. The credits roll, the room is quiet, and someone inevitably says, “Okay…wow.”

Why This Slate Works (And How to Use It)

Because it’s a proper thali. Start hot with Simmba. Cool down with Timepass 2. Let Sohorer Ushnotomo Din E slow your pulse. Spike it again with Yothi. Lock in with Ini Utharam. Warm the room with Maa Nanna Super Hero. Finish operatic with Kurukshetra. Or flip the order. The point isn’t rules; it’s range. Friday Box Office Free Superhits is designed to push you a little outside your default setting and still feel familiar. You’ll discover a new actor, a new song, a new corner of a city you haven’t visited yet.

How To Watch (India • 17 Oct 2025)

Short version: search, pick, play. That’s it.

On a browser (desktop or mobile)

  1. Go to zee5.com.

  2. In Search, type Friday Box Office Free Superhits.

  3. Open this week’s collection and pick your title — Simmba, Timepass 2, Sohorer Ushnotomo Din E, Yothi, Ini Utharam, Maa Nanna Super Hero, Kurukshetra.

  4. Click the poster, hit Play. If the free badge hasn’t flipped yet, refresh on Friday (India time).

On the app (phone or smart TV)

  1. Open the ZEE5 app and use Search (or voice search on TV) for Friday Box Office Free Superhits.

  2. Choose your movie card, tap Play. You can also search for any title directly and look for the “Free” badge on Friday.

Final Word

Seven films. Seven moods. Zero spend. That’s the whole pitch. Text the group, call dibs on the comfiest cushion, and let Friday Box Office Free Superhits do what it does best—turn a regular evening into a shared ritual. Start anywhere. End happy. And keep the snacks close; you’re not getting up till the credits stop rolling.

Bio of Author: Gayatri Tiwari is an experienced digital strategist and entertainment writer, bringing 20+ years of content expertise to one of India’s largest OTT platforms. She blends industry insight with a passion for cinema to deliver engaging, trustworthy perspectives on movies, TV shows and web series.