Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair Streaming Date Set for Quentin Tarantino Movie
Quentin Tarantino’s ultimate cut of his martial arts epic officially has a streaming home, bringing every bloody minute of The Bride’s quest for vengeance directly to the fans. Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair release date announced amid theatre comeback.
Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair gets streaming premiere date on Peacock
NBCUniversal confirmed that Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair will stream exclusively on Peacock starting May 22, 2026. This release follows a carefully orchestrated rollout that saw the nearly five-hour film mount a successful return to cinemas before hitting streaming platforms.
The combined cut clocks in at roughly 275 minutes, fusing 2003’s Kill Bill: Volume 1 and 2004’s Kill Bill: Volume 2 into one uninterrupted experience. Audiences finally get to witness the complete vision, including the animated The Lost Chapter: Yuki’s Revenge sequence that plays after the closing credits.
Tarantino first screened The Whole Bloody Affair at Cannes in 2004, but shelved plans for a wide theatrical release. He revived the project two decades later, launching it in limited theaters in June 2025 before expanding nationwide that December. The film collected over $7.5 million domestically during its theatrical window. A digital rental release followed in February 2026, and the Peacock premiere in May caps that rollout (via Box Office Mojo).
Uma Thurman leads the cast as The Bride, a former assassin who targets her ex-colleagues after they leave her for dead. The cast includes Lucy Liu, Vivica A. Fox, Michael Madsen, Daryl Hannah, David Carradine, and Samuel L. Jackson. The combined films grossed more than $330 million worldwide against reported $30 million budgets for each volume.
The Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair streaming release date also comes as Tarantino’s next directorial project remains undefined. He reportedly abandoned The Movie Critic in 2024, leaving his oft-stated plan for a tenth and final film unfulfilled. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood remains his most recent original release, while the Kill Bill duology counts as a single entry in his self-imposed filmography limit.
Source: Comingsoon.net
