What movies can you watch all the time and never get tired of watching?

In no particular order:
Free Guy
Deadpool 2
Big Hero 6
Real Steel
Night at the Museum

I really like both Deadpool movies and yup, if either one is on, we watch them. Big Hero 6 is another one I forgot about. Love that movie!

Yes just watched Free Guy again last night. And I love Ready Player One and Demolition Man.

Ready Player One is solid movie and also one that we really enjoy!
 
I’m going to go with some genres and directors rather than titles because I don’t think I could watch any movie more than a couple times a year…

Film noir.
Tarantino.
Powell/Pressberger.
Kubrick.
David Lynch.
Jean-Pierre Melville.
Jean-Luc Godard.
Robert Rodriguez.
Paweł Pawlikowski.

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ETA: RIP Godard! Now off to watch Le Petit Soldat and Il Nuovo Mondo.
 
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I’m going to go with some genres and directors rather than titles because I don’t think I could watch any movie more than a couple times a year…

Film noir.
Tarantino.
Powell/Pressberger.
Kubrick.
David Lynch.
Jean-Pierre Melville.
Jean-Luc Godard.
Robert Rodriguez.
Paweł Pawlikowski.

The only Tarantino movie I don't like and have only seen it once, was DJango. I didn't like that movie and there are two scenes in particular that make that movie tough to watch.

David Lynch... dude is twisted and I like it!
 
I never tire of...
the Bill & Ted franchise
Detroit Rock City
Tales From The Crypt presents: Demon Knight
Joe's Apartment
Private Parts
Terminator 2: Judgement Day
 
The Terminator
Aliens
Predator 2
The Big Lebowski
Fear & Loathing in Las Vegas
Rocky IV
Day of the Dead
In The Mouth of Madness
Natural Born Killers
Kalifornia
Fight Club
 
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love all historical movies from the 21st century:
Kingdom of Heaven
alexander
gladiator
troy

also watched all the Lord of the Rings and Star Wars installments 100 times.
 
The Guardians of the Galaxy trilogy
Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back
Rogue One
Men in Black
The Dark Knight
Deadpool I and II

And of course: Spaceballs!

"Ludicrous speed!"

"Smoke em if ya got em."

"May the Schwartz be with you!'
 
It seems I’d already made a list a couple of years ago before posting the below but maybe I’ve got a little more selective over the years… anyway I’ll let this stand.

Spirited Away
Howls Moving Castle
Akira
Bladerunner
A Good Year
Kingdom of Heaven
The Hobbit
The Lord of the Rings
The Big Lebowski
 
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Terminator 2
Predator
Robocop 1 and 2
Indiana Jones 1 & 3
Full Metal Jacket
The Shining
Eyes Wide Shut
2001 Space Odyssey
Gladiator
Alien 1 and 2
Sin City
Lord Of The Rings
The Long Good Friday
The Godfather 1 and 2 maybe 3.
Get Carter
Blade Runner (80's version)
 
In alphabetical order:

Absence Of Malice
Ace In The Hole
Dead Reckoning
Die Hard
Gran Torino
Green Book
He Said, She Said
Its A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
La Story
Midnight Run
Modern Romance
My Cousin Vinny
Once Upon A Time In America
Once Upon A Time In The West
Out Of The Past
Out To Sea
Road To Perdition
Singing In The Rain
The Departed
The Lady From Shanghai
The Shop Around The Corner
The Treasure Of The Sierra Madre
The Untouchables
When Harry Met Sally


And probably a few more....
 
In alphabetical order:

Absence Of Malice
Ace In The Hole
Dead Reckoning
Die Hard
Gran Torino
Green Book
He Said, She Said
Its A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
La Story
Midnight Run
My Cousin Vinny
Once Upon A Time In America
Once Upon A Time In The West
Out Of The Past
Out To Sea
Road To Perdition
Singing In The Rain
The Departed
The Lady From Shanghai
The Shop Around The Corner
The Treasure Of The Sierra Madre
The Untouchables
When Harry Met Sally


And probably a few more....
My Cousin Vinny is hilarious. I would add Matrix 4 to the list.
 
Five of my favourites, in no particular order:

Au Revoir Les Enfants (a superb French film/movie set in a Catholic boarding school during WW2);

The Third Man (a timeless classic, the story, the setting, the music, the cast, the cinematography, the characters, the script, that wonderful ending with the courage of its convictions, an example of the bittersweet integrity of art....);

Jesus of Montreal (an outstanding French-Canadian film/movie, an extraordinary and ferociously intelligent take on - interpretation of - the life of Christ);

Lone Star (an exceedingly good, complex, layered, thoughtful - and intelligent - US movie from the 1990s, John Sayles at his best);

Kind Hearts and Coronets (Ealing Comedies at their satirical best - I never tire of this movie; while the movie is possibly best known for the many roles played (hilariously) by Alec Guinness, for me, Dennis Price - with his dry, sardonic delivery, - is what makes this movie).
 
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I was driving a large truck the last-half of a 220mi journey, yester, and had the vision of watching Shawshank . . . never made it to this; but may: today :)
Actually, it is an excellent - and quite powerful - movie, one that I would recommend as well worth watching, and one of a surprisingly small number of movies that I have been willing to watch more than once.

Years ago, a very good friend of mine (who had been a student of mine, and later became a very good friend) told me that her mother - this was the 1990s, when people used to rent movie videos, rather than streaming - who worked in a video store in a small, impoverished, rural, town, told me that the shop's, or store's, video copy of The Shawshank Redemption had almost worn out, so popular was it, and so great, or high, was the demand for it.
 
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