- Month Python and the Holy Grail
- Young Frankenstein
- Seven Samurai
- LOTR Trilogy
I see a lot of LOTR fans here. Good crowd.
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I see a lot of LOTR fans here. Good crowd.
I had a holy grail vhs which i watched more or less every day after school. I used to be able to recite it from start to finish.
Also had both terminator movies on a double vhs so I've seen my fair share of them as well.
In steam of consciousness order:
Probably a number of others
I second most of these, especially The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly.
I would add most Kubrick films including Dr. Strangelove and 2001.
Also, Being John Malkovich, The Man From U.N.C.L.E., Dawn of the Dead remake 2004
The most recent film I can't stop watching is Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Theives.
I haven't seen it listed here in a quick scan, so:
Office Space
You don't need a million dollars to do nothing. Look at my cousin. He's broke as hell, don't do shit.
I revisit Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind every few years when I wanna get my guts all twisted into knots.
I think when Kaufman is left on his own he's too much of a bummer and Gondry on his own is just too far out. But somehow they come together in a perfect balance with Jim Carey in perhaps his best serious role, IMHO. The soundtrack really takes it the extra mile.
I appreciate it because Joel and Clementine come off as just two kinda fucked up people having a kinda fucked up relationship; very relatable. Neither is perfect or completely at fault and the film very much leaves it up to your interpretation if they can or should work together. I don't think it has a happy ending, do you? Compare that to something like 500 Days of Summer where you're really supposed to sympathize with Joseph Gordon-Levitt's character but mostly I end up wanting to push him into the mud. Hard.
The subplot between the doctor and his secretary is maybe a little unnecessary? But Kirsten Dunst is amazing so whatever.
Probably several others, but those are the first to come to mind.
I lost count:




'The Warriors' and 'The Blues Brothers' would be one of the best grindhouse double features of all times.
Probably a bunch more
I'm so glad they stopped at T2 and didn't ruin it by making a bunch of increasingly ridiculous sequels and TV shows.
The Marvel Cinematic Universe movies. I know it's popular to hate on them and point out flaws, but most of them are perfect "junk food" comfort food flicks. And some of them are really good!
I don't re-watch movies very often, and more than three times is rare as hens' teeth. Sometimes it's because it's an absolute classic, or sometimes it's because I'm weirdly fascinated by it. Let's see if I can remember those rare exceptions.
Iβve probably seen Hot Fuzz more times than any other movie. It was a comfort movie for a while.
Princess Bride
All LOTR and Harry Potter movies
These are just movies I've probably seen more than 3 times in no particular order, they aren't all necessarily masterpieces (though some are):
Everything, Everywhere, All at Once
Princess Bride
Blade Runner / Bladerunner 2049
Idiocracy
Interstellar
Spaceballs
Clue
The Other Guys
Dr Strangelove
Airplane! / Airplane 2!
Terminator 2
Kung Pow: Enter the Fist
Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure
Home Alone
12 Monkeys
Inception
The Iron Giant
Trading Places
Star War: Backstroke of the West, The Third Gathering
Primer
Napoleon Dynamite
oh my god Primer was so good. That's intense.
A ton, but the one I'm most inclined to talk about is The Thing (1982). We rewatch it almost weekly since I introduced my spouse to it which is amazing because each time we spend about an hour afterwards dissecting the things motives, the order of replacements, different theories, etc. It's truely one of the best movies ever made. The practical effects get a ton of praise, but for me it's just gotta efficiently the movie is at what it does. You know every character within minutes of their appearance, you feel the alienation and paranoia, and the thing itself is so inexplicable that even after hundreds of watches in my life time I genuinely can't rationalize why it does what it does.
The 2011 one would have been better if they left in the pilot alien and had better set and custome guys. It doesn't feel like a pequal, it feels like a remake set in 2011.
Off the top of my head / all-time popular:
To satisfy my inner little boy:
Animation:
The 3rd dark knight is so weird. Not as bad as other problematic outliers but one and two is enough for me
Jurassic Park. (1,2 and 3)
Tremors (1 and 2)
Lake Placid (RIP Betty)
And Then There Were None
The Thing
Robin Hood (Disney animated version)
Star Wars (Original trilogy + Episode 1)
Addams Family Values
Django Unchained
Inglorious Basterds
Pulp Fiction (not a Tarantino stan, I swear)
Who Framed Roger Rabbit
Aliens
Raiders of the Lost Ark
Ironman (first one)
Pacific Rim
Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
The Big Short
Probably more than that TBH. I rewatch a lot.
My no-doubt incomplete list (I enjoy watching old favourites over):
Lots.
The OG Star Wars (4, 5, 6)
Shawshank Redemption
Edge Of Tomorrow
Top Gun
Princess Bride (top 5 sword fight!)
Most all of Pixarβs stuff, and Dreamworkβs kids movies. My kids grew up with them.
Sleepy Hollow (Depp/Ricci version)
The Departed
Rob Roy (another top 5 sword fight)
Dune (original β80s version)
Alien/Aliens/Alien 3
Tron
Goonies
Rat Race
Lost Boys
Robin Hood: Men in Tights
The Breakfast Club
Ferris Buellers Day Off
Deadpool
The LOTR trilogy
Blade Runner - both films
Heist (a lesson in writing a script consisting of one-liners)
Oceanβs 11
The Name Of The Rose
The Last Mohican
Master And Commander
5th Element
Any of the Monty Python films, but especially Quest for the Holy Grail
Thatβs a start.
If I had to whittle it down to absolute favorites: Princess Bride, Monty Python, and OG Star Wars.
A subset ...
Hot Shots! Both, btw
I think in general comedies are just way easier to rewatch for what ever reason.
Also I think just because I rewatch a movie a lot does not mean it is the best movie. I think some movies just give a certain vibe that is enjoyable.
I probably also watched some Christmas movies a ton of time just because they played on TV a lot when I was a kid like Home Alone.
Unusual or less known movies I've watched a quite a few times:
Leaves of Grass
A Scanner Darkly
Red Lights
Where the Buffalo Roam
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
-2010: The Year We Make Contract
My mind is blanking on the others
Most of mine have already been mentioned, but the biggie that hasn't is: the Back to the Future trilogy.
Not only are there lots of little details you probably don't catch on the first viewing, I'm surprised they don't make more millennial-and-older users' lists just from them being often the best thing on TV, in the ancient times before streaming.
Snatch
There are plenty (nearing my 60s, I've had plenty time to watch movies ;). So allow me to name just a few I always enjoy watching. They are in no order save the two first ones:
There are so, so many more! Ozu is one of the directors I can endlessly watch and have a blast, I'm also a fan of Kurosawa. I have not even considered Italian (like, they were among the best) or the Russian cinema! Or even my own French movies: back in the days, French used to make a lot of great movies but that was before we too, like Hollywood, became so afraid of our own shadow that we started self-censoring... Sad times we're living in, bu that will pass.
District b13, the transporter, fast and the furious 1, 2, and Tokyo drift, nation Lampoon's Christmas vacation, the big Lebowski, 28 days later, resident evil, probably others.
Hundreds of Beavers! It's an absolute delight showing it to someone who has never seen it before.
Pretty much any studio Ghibli movie. Have watched spirited away, Totoro, howls moving castle, valley of the wind, and many more more than 3x. Don't often rewatch stuff but have a soft spot for ghibli!
The Departed
Godfather 1 & 2
Rogue One
The Fifth Element
Dune 1 & 2
The Princess Bride
Star Wars 1-6
Anchorman
Big Fish
Big Trouble in Little China
Princess Bride
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen
Tank Girl
Romancing the Stone
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
Where the Buffalo Roam
Everything by Monty Python
Edit: everything by Mel Brooks
Les Liaisons Dangereuses with Glen Close and John Malcovich. I used to be able to quote the entire script by heart.
Idiocracy, numerous times.
As time passes, it gets worse (aka reality does. The movie is perfect)
Princess Bride
Strictly Ballroom
Paul
Close Encounters of the Third Kind
Star Wars 4,5,6
LOTR all of them
Operation Petticoat
Dr Strangelove
The Great Race
Pacific Rim
The Abyss
True Lies
Alien
Aliens
Clue
The Cutting Edge
Forbidden Planet
Harry Potter series
Kelly's Heroes
The Last Starfighter
Young Frankenstein
Raiders of the Lost Ark
The Rocky Horror Picture Show
Star Trek movies: Wrath of Khan, First Contact
Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines
Gumball Rally
Far too many to name, so here's the first 10 that come to mind:
Dumb and Dumber
I can't believe I didn't see anyone else post it. Mostly I've rewatched it because it was replayed on cable so much but I certainly love it.
Young Frankenstein
Pulp Fiction
Big Lebowski
Airplane! with Zero Hour! (1957) immediately after
Fifth Element
The Death of Stalin
Tremors 1, 2 or 3. Don't bother with 4+ its all straight to DVD nonsense.
Redline (2009) probably the best animated movie of all time (studio ghibli people i will fite u)
Idiocracy is very funny in a not very funny kind of way
Elemental was a fantastic Pixar IP that looks like its going to get some fascinating world building in a sequel
I watch Groundhog Day at least twice a year.
the three lotr, its a wonderful life, miracle on 34th street all versions, the orginal star wars trilogy, star trek one and two and four, ladyhawke, up, princess bride, close encounters of the third kind, alien, aliens, forbidden planet, raiders of the lost ark, rocky horror picture show, charlie brown specials, grinch who stole chrismass cartoons, frosty cartoons, the blues brothers, original dune movie, all the monty pythons I know of (grail, brian, yellowbeard, meaning of life), time bandits, spaceballs, terminator 1 and 2, yellow submarine, airplane1+2, top secret. Maybe it should be limited to post 2000. Thing is when you go back there are things broadcast every year or when they were broadcast you made it a point to catch it then in the age of video cassetes if you did not find anything you felt like that week for the weekend you maybe picked up something you liked or you had a friend who had not seen it or something. Not as much came out every year and in addition as more comes out the total pool is way larger. so it is harder to rewatch things. Like I think I have only watch the harry potters twice but drop them into the 90's and im sure they would have been a regular pickup or i would have owned them. That being said there are some older movies that are just classics to and there is a reason you went out of your way to catch it broadcast.