Otherwise, if I am watching a movie more than once, it's wile I am doing something else. Working from home, I often have old science fiction B-movies -- both the MST3K versions and unriffed versions -- running in the background. Others I'll "watch" while doing something else are Animal House, Blues Brothers, the Lethal Weapon films, Patton, James Bond, and some others.
It came out at a time in my life when I was struggling to avoid the pull of consumerism and had a strong sense of isolation in the modern world. I used to watch this quite often.
When it came out I was also at a point in my life when I was interested in screenwriting and was watching sometimes as many as eight movies a week, in part to study screenplays and stories. I would sometimes watch this a couple times a month during that time.
It is very personal as looking through what other people mention ; many of those I couldn't sit through once, but if friends tell me to give it another go, I watch 2-10 times to see if it grows. Rarely it does, but there have been cases. Notably everyone likes Pulp Fiction; I saw it at least 15 times and find it unwatchable.
There are two series that I have watched 2/3 times- The Wire and Narcos first two seasons with Wagner Moura.
I have also watched 3 idiots quite a few times. I also remember watching Inception and Inglorious Bastards multiple times. I have also watched Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol, Casino Royale and Skyfall multiple times.
Ghost In The Shell (1998)
Ghost In The Shell 2: Innocence (2004)
Ghost In The Shell: Stand Alone Complex - Solid State Society (2006)
District 9 (2008)
Inception (2010)
Rouge One (2016)
Original Star Wars trilogy.
Lord of the Rings
American Psycho
Total Recall (1990)
Blade Runner
Love Actually
The Fifth Element
Unbreakable
Pulp Fiction
Four Weddings and a Funeral
Guardians of the Galaxy
X-Men
X-Men the Last Stand
Showing my age here, but I started to lose interest in movies after the 2000s. No I do not want to watch a remake of [Blade Runner, X-Men, etc...]. Also X-Men was great, but my interest didn't stretch to Captain America and Iron Man, so the MCU was a loss for me.
The Adjustment Bureau
Brazil
The Breakfast Club
Captain America: The Winter Soldier
CHAPPiE
Equilibrium
Heat
Inception
The Leopard
Margin Call
Ratatoutille
Smallfoot
1917. Great cinematography
Tenet. Makes much more sense than the first time. Better on surrounds
The Hateful Eight. The small cast feels very much like Margin Call. Great storytelling
Prey. Very good
World War Z. Pure action.
My own list, I re-watch movies the same way I re-listen to music, often to get in a particular mode of thinking, as they become familiar, I mostly daydream while appreciating some particular concept and whatever new minutiae, or ways of understanding, creeps into my mind.
Hackers - 30+ times, for dreaming about a world that never was and never will be, for reminding myself how cool computers used to seem.
The Crow - 20+ times, for thinking about the world
Koyaanisqatsi - 15+ times, for thinking about my life in the world
Alien - 10+ times, for thinking about the future that passed us by
Terminator 1 and 2 - 10+ times, for examining a time that never was, or passed me by, and because Arnold is awesome!
A Clockwork Orange, 10+ times, to reflect on violence and aesthetic
Event Horizon, 10+ times, mostly for the aesthetic, and who dosen't love spaceships from hell ?
1984 - 5+ times, for thinking about humanity and society
Requiem for a Dream - 5+ times, for thinking about the value of life, and what society is
Once upon a time in the west - 5+ times, for thinking about loss, revenge and justice
Genocyber - 5+ times, to think about what life is for anyway
Stalker - 5+ times, frankly, mostly to look at the pretty pictures.
Lots of other amazing movies, I probably forgot some (time to watch again?)
Bonus:
TV Shows I've watched more than 10 times:
Star Trek TNG
Neon Genesis Evangelion
I tend not to rewatch things anymore, maybe after 5 or 6 years if I really like something, usually with someone who hasn't seen it so I can share it with them.
Oddly enough I have absolutely no love for any further Ghostbusters sequels or the video games. As I said, I'm overly familiar with the first movie, I don't want to hear the same music I associate specifically with the Sedgewick Hotel playing during some other scene, or hear the same quotes or even see the same actors 50 years older. I want something new of the same quality and flavour of the era, which is pretty much impossible at this point in history. The themes, attitudes and imagery of the movie greatly influenced my interests and development as I grew up, even down to the clothes I wear today.
But there's a lot more movies coming to mind that deserve a 2nd watching imo, just haven't done so yet. Eg. most Coen Bros ones come to mind.
Some of the ones that are on that list for me:
The Matrix
The Matrix Resurrections
The Social Network
Inception
Sneakers
Hackers
Antitrust
Rad
Tron: Legacy
Vision Quest
Rocky (really the entire Rocky franchise)
The Karate Kid
Kickboxer
Bloodsport
Hard To Kill
Above The Law
The Blues Brothers
Stripes
Ferris Bueller's Day Off
Footloose
Dirty Dancing
Amadeus
These days, everything comes and goes from streaming. I'll watch these when they pop up again The Expanse
Monty Python and the Holy Grail
The Ministry of Time
Groundhog Day
Dirty Harry
Apocalypse Now
About Time
Time Bandits
Wargames
Jurassic Park
Evolution
Unstoppable
Lord of the Rings
Die Hard 1, 2 and 3
Alien 1, 2 and 3
Back to the Future
Ghost in the Shell (basically all of it, mostly seasons 1 and 2)
The Martian
Tron 1 and 2
Anything by Miyazaki, but Howl's Moving Castle even more so
Real Genius
The Princess Bride
Ghostbusters 1 & 2
Back to the Future
Shawshank Redemption
The Fifth Element (coming to theaters again soon via Fathom Events, already have tickets for me and my kids!)
The Outpost
Master and Commander
The Martian
All four Matrix movies
The Godfather Trilogy, best in a single sitting (Connie’s arc is awesome, the cinematography of the third epic; the only problem is how much more of the outside world each of the sequels needs).
Greyhound
A Bridge Too Far (which has changed dramatically as I have learned over the last almost fifty years; I now see it as so subtlety tongue in cheek and cynical).
Draft Day. Possibly the best constructed movie.
BTW - a friend 'in the system' explains the twisting action necessary in today's subway cars would make "The Gimmick" worthless.
- Anything by Michael Mann, Miami Vice being one of my favorites (simply noted as it's typically not on many folks favored list).
- John Ford Cavalry trilogy.
- I've seen "13 Hours" several times. Not your typical Michael Bay movie.
- Bowfinger. So funny.
- The two best Star Trek Movies: Star Trek 2, and Galaxy Quest.
most of Schwarzenegger movies because he is cool
Back to the future trilogy
Fight club
Some of the best soviet ones (Kin-dza-dza, Garage, Mimino, Irony of fate etc.)
Rocky
Forrest gump
- Coffee and Cigarettes
- Before Sunrise (and to less extent - Before Sunset)
- Pulp Fiction
- Clerks, Chasing Amy
- Leon Professional
- Motorcycle Diaries
These are not as interesting since I assume they're on everyone's list, but I must admit I'm rewatching all movies in the series, even those which are considered weak:
- Lotr, Godfather, Indiana Jones, Star Wars, Matrix
One more - The Princess Bride.
Hardcore Henry I've probably watched the most. Such an absolutely wild action movie.
For visuals, I've watched What Dreams May Come(despite it being pretty heavy) and Tarsem Singh's "The Fall" probably five times each. The latter is hard to find, but definitely worth a watch if you come across it.
And almost anything with Brad Pitt. Lots of votes for Fight Club, but what about Legends of the Fall, A River Runs Through It, 12 Monkeys, or Cool World?
And now that I'm thinking about it, Dances With Wolves. Lonesome Dove TV miniseries. Braveheart. The Departed. Lots more, I'm sure.
I binge certain directors from time to time, but I've really got a thing for reading scripts, especially for films that never got made like the Pee-Wee Herman Story or Ghostbusters 3.
It's not about the movies themselves but for example with Bourne or the American, it's certain scenes that get me in a mood. A single professional or group doing his / its thing, it's kind of calming.
Feel free to suggest movies in a similar vain.
Second hand lions (2003)
Hidden Figures (2016)
Donnie Darko (2001)
This Beautiful Fantastic (2016)
Les émotifs anonymes (2010)
It's Kind of a Funny Story (2010)
The Lunchbox (2013)
Le fabuleux destin d'Amélie Poulain (2001)
Angel-A (2005)
Warrior (2011)
Welcome to the Rileys (2010)
Tigerland (2000)
October Sky (1999)
Arlen Faber (2009)
Joueuse (2009)
And some mainstream: The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
Edge of Tomorrow (2014)
The Thomas Crown Affair (1999)
Down Periscope (1996)
Spy Game (2001)
Drive (2011)
The Guard (2011)
V for Vendetta (2005)
Lost in Translation (2003)
Into the Wild (2007)
The Big Lebowski (1998)
And some animation: Megamind (2010)
How to Train Your Dragon (2010)
Up (2009)
WALL·E (2008)
Ratatouille (2007)
Have fun :-)
- MCU/Marvel: Iron Man 1-3, Cap Winter Soldier, The Amazing Spider-Man 1-2
- Scifi: Coherence, Volition, Primer, Predestination
- Mystery/Thriller: Shutter Island, Triangle
- Action: Commuter (+anything Liam Neeson), Wanted, Salt
- Comedy: Shaolin Soccer, Wolf of Wall St
- Horror: The Conjuring (+universe)
Eighth grade
Mother!
The Thing
Rosemary’s Baby
Hereditary
Dead Ringers
Happiness
Synecdoche, New York
The Triplets of Bellville
Lawrence of Arabia
The Maltese Falcon
Most Hitchcock films
Blade Runner
The Man From Snowy River
The Martian
Monty Python & the Holy Grail
The Princess Bride
Serenity
The Thin Man series
The Thing
Tombstone
Young Frankenstein
Monty Python and the Holy Grail
Clerks and most Kevin Smith movies
Baby Drive and most Edgar Wright movies
Fanboys
Spinal Tap
Kung Fu Hustle
Apollo 13
generally i only rewatch something if i want to share it with my family or friends. did that with avatar, and will probably do it with lord of the rings, star trek and some other classics. ghostbusters for example. since a new one just came out recently, i am not letting my kids watch that until they have at least seen the original.
* The Emperor’s New Groove. I have no idea why I find this movie so funny. It feels just so perfectly timed, quotable and something that I relate to. I still laugh at pretty much every joke. * Defending Your Life. Very similar to the above. Albert Brooks’ dry humor is just so perfect. This one gets funnier the more times you watch it. Underrated, IMO.
The Machine (if you like Ex Machina, try it)
Alien
Prometheus
Fight Club
Secretary
Casablanca
Kill Bill
The Emperor's New Groove
Star Wars Episode IV - The original goodness, not the CGI horror-show.
Star Wars: Rogue One
American Beauty
Dredd.
Hellboy (directors).
Blade Runner (theatrical).
Chocolat.
Noise (Australian film, 2007. Love that one).
I try not to watch films too many times in quick succession. The repetition dulls the experience for me.
Terminator 2 is also a nearly perfect movie.
- Amadeus - "Too many notes, Mozart!" A heavily romanticized retelling of the somewhat apocryphal rivalry between Antonio Salieri and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
- Disney's Robin Hood - Get the dope on your horoscope~
- The NeverEnding Story - Because who didn't want to soar through the air on a luck dragon?
- Iron Monkey (少年黃飛鴻之鐵馬騮) - A retelling of the Chinese folk hero Wong Fei-hung, with classic wire-fu and excellent fight choreography.
The Thing (1982)
Silence of the Lambs
Alien
Little Shop of Horrors (1986)
Young Frankenstein
Rocky Horror
Raising Arizona
O Brother, Where Art Thou?
Men in Black
Primer
But even those I've only seen a handful of times each. It takes a lot for me to want to watch/read/play something multiple times, as I'm the kind of person who always thinks, "but I could be trying something new, or getting something done".
So excluding those, from most to least (probably).
- elf
- the Bourne identity
- groundhog day
- ronin
- Willie Wonka (the original)
- the fifth element
- ghost dog (any Jim Jarmusch)
- the blues brothers
- singin' in the rain
- crouching tiger, hidden dragon
- my friend totoro
I am probably leaving out quite a few, but all these films I have seen enough times to reconstruct in my head, scene by scene.
1) Court scene from 'My Cousin Vinny' 2) Court scene from 'A Few Good Men' 3) Last 20 minutes from 'The Shining' 4) Escape sequence from 'Shawshank Redemption'
Contact: over 10 times
The Quiet Earth: over 10 times
I'm not much of a film buff, there's nothing I've watched over 20 times. Except Butt Babes in Bondage.
Michael Keaton at his best. Edward Norton's great too. Good visual style too - it's presented as one continuous shot.
+1 for Office Space that others mentioned.
Casablanca
The first Sean Connery James Bond films, Casino Royale with Daniel Craig
The Matrix
Django Unchained
The Wolf of Wall street
And all of Nolan's films.
- Back to the Future 1, 2 and 3
- Oblivion (Tom Cruise)
- Mission Impossible (all)
- The Hobbit (all)
- The Lord of the Rings (all)
I've always been interested in occultism, philosophy and history; this movie combined all three, and was just so good, in my opinion. I initially watched it twice by myself, and then watched it with a friend, and again with another friend.
Movies I watch over and over again are movies that I relate to in some way or find comforting. These are ones I’ve watched at least 5 times, and some I’d bet more than 30 times.
- Back to the Future
- Home Alone
- What About Bob?
- It Could Happen to You
- Matilda
- As Good as It Gets
- Office Space
- Cruel Intentions
- Boiler Room
- Finding Forrester
- Training Day
- Super Troopers
- 8 Mile
- The Transporter
- Elf
- Bad Santa
- Mean Girls
- Saved!
- Garden State
- V for Vendetta
- Thank You for Smoking
- Stick It
- Little Miss Sunshine
- Idiocracy
- Hot Rod
- Run Fatboy Run
- The Other Guys
- Wreck-It Ralph
To name a few.
Movies I've watched quite a few times and wouldn't mind watching again right now: The Matrix (1999), Akira, Breakfast Club
Fight Club
Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles
Raging Bull
Apocalypse Now
Cocaine Bear
* World War Z
* The Proposal
* The Dark Knight
* Assassination Nation
* Live Die Repeat
* Real Genius
* Back to the Future
* Top Secret!
* Alien Nation
* Star Wars (the first 2 made)
* American Ultra
* Deja Vue (Denzel)
* Mumford
* Groundhog Day
* State and Main
* Star Trek (Chris Pine)
I’m feeling really hopeful for Alien: Romulus.
All of ‘em, all ‘em sequels - a dozen times.
- Bladerunner
- Alien 3 (also Alien, Aliens, Alien Resurrection, Prometheus)
- Pretty in Pink
- Breakfast Club
- The Exorcist
- Silence of the Lambs
- Inception
- Akira
- Ghost in the Shell
- Buckaroo Banzai
- Ghostbusters
- The Lives of Others
- The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Back To The Future
Cinema Paradiso
Spaceballs
Up In Smoke (Cheech & Chong)
The Incredibles
Indiana Jones 1-3
Indiana Jones: Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull (Rifftrax only)
Falling Down
Office Space
Man Bites Dog
Nothing To Lose
Idiocracy
Space Mutiny (MST3k)
Goodfellas
Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home
Groundhog Day
Barbie
Full Metal Jacket
Mallrats
Flight Of The Navigator
The Founder
One Hour Photo
---
I'm pretty certain I've rewatched Sideways more than any other film.
Dogtown and Z Boys (Documentary)
Godzilla
Rollerball
Monty Python and The Holy Grail
Star Wars
The Hunger
Caddy Shack
Fear of a Black Hat
Straight Out of Compton
All the Chuck Norris movies
All the Schwarzenegger movies
Goonies
Flight of the Navigator
Revenge of the Nerds
Robin Hood (2010)
Gattaca
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (2015)
Wimbledon (2004)
Supernova (2000)
London Boulevard
Speed
Jurrassic Park
To kill a mocking bird
Hear
Terminator - Judgement day
Independance day
A Beautiful Mind
* Breakfast Club
* Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead
* Penn and Teller Get Killed
* Chungking Express
* Pink Floyd PULSE
* Black People Hate Me and They Hate My Glasses
* Pulp Fiction
* Fringe (not a movie)
You can probably identity my real identity from this list alone. YOLO.
Terminator 2
The Matrix
Heat
Die Hard 1 & 2
Lord of the Rings
Usual Suspects
Star Wars Trilogy (originals only)
Unforgiven
The Predator
X-Men (2000)
Jurassic Park
Total Recall
Bourne Identity
Coming to America
Home Alone
Back to the Future
Snatch
Donnie Darko
Halloween (1979)
Anything by Tarantino
Blue Velvet
Scream
- Idiocracy
Redline (2009)
Interstellar
| Movie | Number of Mentions | |-------------------------------------------|---------------------| | The Matrix | 9 | | Lord of the Rings Trilogy | 8 | | Pulp Fiction | 8 | | Alien | 7 | | Fight Club | 7 | | Ghostbusters | 6 | | Die Hard | 5 | | Back to the Future | 5 | | Inception | 5 | | Star Wars Trilogy (original) | 5 | | Groundhog Day | 5 | | Terminator 1 & 2 | 5 | | Jurassic Park | 4 | | The Thing | 4 | | The Fifth Element | 4 | | Monty Python and the Holy Grail | 4 | | Ghost in the Shell | 4 | | Interstellar | 4 | | Casablanca | 3 | | Office Space | 3 | | Shawshank Redemption | 3 | | The Godfather Trilogy | 3 | | The Blues Brothers | 3 | | Blade Runner | 3 | | Mad Max: Fury Road | 3 | | Unforgiven | 3 | | Total Recall (1990) | 3 | | The Crow | 3 | | The Princess Bride | 3 | | Akira | 3 | | The Big Lebowski | 3 | | Guardians of the Galaxy | 3 | | American Psycho | 3 | | Indiana Jones Trilogy | 3 | | Kiki’s Delivery Service | 2 | | Ratatouille | 2 | | A Clockwork Orange | 2 | | Mission Impossible (various) | 2 | | Casino Royale | 2 | | Skyfall | 2 | | Ferris Bueller's Day Off | 2 | | Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan | 2 | | Apocalypse Now | 2 | | The Shining | 2 | | Groundhog Day | 2 | | Donnie Darko | 2 | | Dune (2021) | 2 | | Gladiator | 2 | | Predator | 2 | | Seven/Se7en | 2 | | The Dark Knight | 2 | | Snatch | 2 | | Prometheus | 2 | | Schindler’s List | 2 | | The Wolf of Wall Street | 2 | | Dr. Strangelove | 2 | | Silence of the Lambs | 2 | | Kill Bill | 2 | | Real Genius | 2 | | Top Secret! | 2 | | Tenet | 2 | | Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy | 2 | | The Adjustment Bureau | 2 | | The Expanse | 2 | | Pulp Fiction | 2 |
Moonstruck
Sense and Sensibility
Enemy At The Gates
Das Boot
Sink The Bismark
The Cruel Sea
Frozen
Lego movie
Mulan
101 Dalmatians
Super Mario Bros
——
Having kids does that to you.
Fight Club
The Matrix
Seven/Se7en
Krzysztof Kieślowski's Three Colours trilogy (French: Trois couleurs, Polish: Trzy kolory)
- Three Colours: Blue (1993)
- Three Colours: White (1994)
- Three Colours: Red (1994)
. . .
Rewatching the Three Colours trilogy rewards with an ever deeper appreciation — Kieślowski's nuanced storytelling, interconnected narratives, and recurring symbols become more apparent and meaningful, with each viewing revealing new layers of meaning in the films' themes of liberty, equality, and fraternity, explored through irony and ambiguity.
Rewatching allows for a greater appreciation of how music, color, and composition work together to evoke specific emotions and convey complex ideas, enabling a richer understanding of their cultural context and how Kieślowski subtly critiques and plays with the political ideals of the French Republic.
Kieślowski's work is rich with subtle connections between characters and storylines across the trilogy. For instance, the brief appearances of characters from other films, like Karol's courtroom scene in Blue, create a cohesive narrative universe that rewards attentive viewers. These cross-film connections highlight the director's meticulous planning and the philosophical underpinnings that run through the trilogy.
Each film’s unique perspective on its respective theme – Blue as an anti-tragedy, White as an anti-comedy, and Red as an anti-romance – allows for various interpretations, making the trilogy an ideal subject for repeated viewings. Several rewatchings let viewers see beyond the surface narrative and explore the deeper existential questions Kieślowski poses about human connections, fate, and the meaning of freedom, equality, and fraternity.
In my experience, few film series reward multiple viewings as richly as Kieślowski's Three Colours trilogy. It's so layered that every rewatch feels like a new conversation with a brilliant, nuanced filmmaker -- a cultural inception.
. . .
If you enjoy the director, see also La double vie de Véronique (English: The Double Life of Veronique, Polish: Podwójne życie Weroniki) exploring themes of identity, love, and human intuition, through the lives of a Polish singer and French music teacher who are "doubles".
Of course, the connection Kieślowski explores is not just about the modern relationship between these countries, steeped in centuries of shared history and cultural exchange, but even more how European nations, despite their "alternate timelines" through history, share common human experiences and values today.