Your movies, revisited

Track when you rewatch films and how your feelings shift over time. A private notebook for the movies that keep pulling you back.

Log a rewatch

Your journal

No entries yet

Log your first rewatch above to start building your journal.

Timeline

Select a movie from your journal to see how your feelings have changed across rewatches.

Add at least two entries for the same movie to see a timeline.

Making the most of your journal

Write notes that future-you will thank you for

Vague notes like "still good" don't help much six months later. Try being specific: "The scene where she walks through the airport felt slower this time, almost sad instead of triumphant." Small details stick.

Common rewatch triggers

People tend to revisit films during holidays, after breakups, on rainy weekends, or when they want to share a favorite with someone new. Tagging the reason helps you spot patterns in your own habits.

What the feeling score means

There is no right answer. A 3 might mean "exactly as I remembered" for one person and "kind of flat" for another. The number matters less than the trend over time. A movie that drops from 5 to 3 across rewatches tells a story.

Export your data

Your journal lives in this browser. If you switch devices or clear your data, entries disappear. Use the Export button to save a backup file. You can import it later on any device.

Good notes vs. vague notes

Vague

"Still a classic."

"Loved it again."

"Pretty good."

Specific

"Caught three visual gags in the background I missed as a kid. The pacing feels slower now but in a good way."

"Watched this with my partner. They pointed out how quiet the second half is. I never noticed that before."

"First rewatch since my dad passed. The father-son scenes hit completely different. Still a great film but it lives in a new place for me now."