‘Jeffrey Epstein: Filthy Rich’: All the other Epstein documentaries
After finishing Jeffrey Epstein: Filthy Rich, the Netflix series that laid out the financier’s crimes, the island, and the jailhouse death ruled a suicide, many viewers want more context. The same names and networks keep surfacing across new releases and older specials that still stream today. Here are the strongest follow-ups worth queuing next.
Surviving Jeffrey Epstein
Lifetime’s four-hour series, now streaming on Hulu and the network’s own platform, centers the women who survived Epstein’s trafficking operation. Producers who shaped the earlier Surviving R. Kelly installments return to let survivors describe recruitment, daily control, and the long aftermath. The project spotlights the nonprofits Rise and RAINN with on-air public-service spots that direct viewers toward reporting hotlines and legal aid.
Ghislaine Maxwell: Filthy Rich
Netflix released this 2022 companion piece to its original Epstein series. The film traces Maxwell’s upbringing, her entry into Epstein’s circle, and her documented role in locating and grooming recruits. Courtroom footage from her 2021 trial sits beside survivor testimony that details how the pair operated as a unit. The title sits on the same Netflix menu as the first series, making it the easiest next step for viewers who want the accomplice story told in the same house style.
Truth & Lies: Jeffrey Epstein
ABC’s 2019 special remains available on Hulu. It intercuts victim interviews and expert analysis with a previously unaired 2003 sit-down in which Epstein discusses his wealth and social access. The contrast between that early self-portrait and later court records underscores how long the operation ran before any serious legal pushback.
Exposing Jeffrey Epstein: 60 Minutes Australia
The 45-minute report, still posted on the program’s YouTube channel, follows Virginia Giuffre from her first encounters with Epstein through her later legal claims. Because the segment originates outside the U.S. media market, it spends extra time on the involvement of Prince Andrew and other Commonwealth figures. Extended clips of Giuffre describing travel logs and payment structures give a granular view of the logistics behind the trafficking.
Prince Andrew & The Epstein Scandal, The Newsnight Interview
The 2019 BBC exchange, available on the network’s site and widely clipped elsewhere, captures Prince Andrew’s account of his friendship with Epstein and his denial of Giuffre’s allegations. Body-language breakdowns by criminologists and former intelligence officers continue to circulate, especially after the 2025–2026 document releases added fresh references to the Duke’s name. Watching the interview first, then sampling the newer commentary, shows how public scrutiny of the same footage has shifted.
Recent File Releases and New Investigations
The Epstein Files Transparency Act, signed in 2025, prompted the Department of Justice to publish more than three million pages in early 2026. Those unsealed records have already fed new series, most notably The Epstein Files, a multi-part project that tracks previously redacted flight logs and financial ledgers. The releases also revived questions about the original charging decisions and the breadth of the enabling network.
Jeffrey Epstein: The Unredacted Story
Director Macready Massey’s 2025 documentary, currently streaming on Journeyman Pictures platforms and rentable on major services, assembles survivor testimony alongside newly available emails and ledgers. The film maps how assistants, recruiters, and property managers sustained daily operations across Epstein’s properties. Its emphasis on internal communications distinguishes it from earlier victim-focused accounts.
Who Killed Jeffrey Epstein? and Conspiracy Explorations
Investigation Discovery’s special, also carried on Hulu and Discovery+, revisits the circumstances of Epstein’s 2019 death inside the Metropolitan Correctional Center. The program lays out the broken cameras, removed cellmate, and guard logs that fueled speculation, then weighs official findings against persistent alternate theories. For viewers still unsettled by the original series’ final minutes, the hour-long recap supplies the procedural detail that followed the body’s discovery.
Each of these titles adds a different piece—survivor perspective, accomplice history, financial paper trail, or unanswered questions around the jailhouse death—without repeating the ground already covered in Jeffrey Epstein: Filthy Rich. Streaming options range from the same Netflix queue to free YouTube uploads and cable-on-demand libraries, so the next chapter is never more than a few clicks away.

