Friday Box Office Free Superhits (10 Oct 2025): Seven Free Picks, One Perfect Movie Night

Friday Box Office Free Superhits
Entertainment

Friday’s here, the group chat is chirping, and the snack stash is calling. This week’s Friday Box Office Free Superhits lineup is exactly the kind of spread you want when no one can agree on a single mood—romance, faith-versus-reason, family drama, a time-twist rom-com, Kerala-flavoured mischief, a sunny buddy entertainer, and a neat little Kannada mystery to close things out.

If you like tidy browsing before you press play, start at the Movies hub. From there, hop into Hindi movies or sort by vibe—Action movies, Thriller movies, Crime movies—then come back to this week’s Friday Box Office Free Superhits row and pick your first title.

Sanam Teri Kasam (Hindi • romantic drama)

Some romances tiptoe; this one arrives like the first monsoon shower. Saru—quiet, bookish, hemmed in by expectations—keeps running into Inder, the tattooed neighbour who looks like bad news until he isn’t. In the Sanam Teri Kasam movie, friction softens into care, then turns into something you’ll want to root for. The Himesh Reshammiya soundtrack does serious heavy lifting, and the leads—Harshvardhan Rane and Mawra Hocane—play it straight, no winks. Also in the mix: Manish Chaudhari, Murli Sharma. If you’re in the mood for big feelings done clean, start here.

Deool Band (Marathi • drama)

Head meets heart; lab meets temple. An acclaimed scientist returns home with zero patience for ritual and collides with a belief that simply won’t blink. Deool Band refuses to preach. They stage arguments as talks and let silence speak in gaps. Mohan Joshi gives Swami Samarth grace and heat, free of theatrics. Beside him stand Gashmeer Mahajani, Girija Joshi, Mohan Agashe, and Nivedita Saraf. It’s a Marathi movie that invites you to argue with it on the ride home.

Somesh Babur Sansar (Bengali • family drama)

Tea cups clink, voices drop, and old houses hold their breath. Somesh Babur Sansar (often spelt Somesh Babur Songshar) tracks an ageing patriarch who realises the warmth around him might be more about property than love. It stays low-key. It needs no volume. This Bengali film drifts like a late afternoon breeze through a Kolkata home, observant and warm, with small laughs that rise from everyday life. Dipankar Dey, Joydeep Kundu, Animesh Bhaduri, and Swagata Mukherjee shape performances that keep it honest, modest.

Oh My Kadavule (Tamil • romantic fantasy comedy)

What if you could rewind a relationship and try again—same people, smarter choices? Oh My Kadavule grabs that thought and keeps the ride light. Ashok Selvan with Ritika Singh shine, Vani Bhojan gives the film a gentle core, and a sly Vijay Sethupathi cameo feels like the universe throwing you a wink. It’s playful about fate but practical about love: the “second chance” only works if you actually do the work. Light, quick, very rewatchable Tamil movie.

Allu Ramendran (Malayalam • comedy-thriller)

Petty revenge is a full-time hobby. A police driver finds his tyres punctured again and again because someone’s sprinkling “allu” (nails) on his route. Joke? Feud? Something smaller and pettier? Allu Ramendran starts with a joke and leans into a small-town mystery with family notes. Kunchacko Boban brings company; Aparna Balamurali, Chandini Sreedharan, and Krishna Shankar round out an ensemble that captures daily life rhythms. Kerala humour, a cat-and-mouse beat, and a tidy landing satisfy fans in this Malayalam movie.

Devadas (Telugu • action-comedy, buddy film)

A don with spotless swagger meets a doctor who won’t bend, and suddenly you’ve got a two-hero entertainer that remembers why the format works. Devadas pairs Nagarjuna Akkineni and Nani—one old-school smooth, one delightfully exasperated. One-liners pop, knuckles meet, and a steady bond pulls both men toward smarter choices. Rashmika Mandanna and Aakanksha Singh light the heart, as Mani Sharma’s score binds rhythm and drive. It’s bright, easy, and perfect for a crowd watch.

Shivaji Surathkal: The Case of Ranagiri Rahasya (Kannada • mystery-thriller)

No noise, just clues. A suspicious death at a resort; a short suspect list; a lead who notices what others miss. Ramesh Aravind plays Shivaji in Shivaji Surathkal with economy—sharper eyes than words, no wasted motion. Radhika Narayan, Avinash, and Aarohi Narayan support a narrative that prefers click to bang. If you like your thrillers tidy and earned, keep this for the nightcap and let the deductions do the talking.

Why this Friday Box Office Free Superhits slate works

Because it’s a proper thali, you can start with a Hindi heartbreak, slide into a Tamil second-chance romance, dip into Malayalam mischief, detour into Telugu bromance, and finish with a Kannada mystery that scratches the Sudoku part of your brain. That’s the charm of Friday Box Office Free Superhits—it nudges you out of your default lane without turning movie night into homework. You pick up new actors, different rhythms, and a couple of songs you’ll be humming on Saturday.

How to Watch Friday Box Office Free Superhits in India

Short version: search, pick, play. Here’s the simple path.

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 row, pick your title—Sanam Teri Kasam, Deool Band, Somesh Babur Sansar, Oh My Kadavule, Allu Ramendran, Devadas, Shivaji Surathkal.

  4. Hit Play. If the free badge hasn’t flipped yet, refresh—the lineup updates on Fridays (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. Select the movie card and tap Play. You can also search the individual title and check for the free tag on Friday.

Final word

Seven languages, seven distinct moods, and a guilt-free price tag. If your watchlist has been stuck on repeat, this is your weekly reset button. The Friday Box Office Free Superhits ritual isn’t just programming; it’s a reason to text your people, argue happily about which song slapped harder, and stack two films back-to-back without glancing at the bill. Start anywhere, end happy—and if the group can’t decide, double-feature it.

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.