#Film

21 items

Video thumbnail — Dumb & Dumber (1994) Official Trailer - Jim Carrey, Jeff Daniels Comedy HD

Dumb and Dumber

The Farrelly brothers' breakout comedy starred Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels as two hopelessly incompetent best friends on a cross-country road trip. Dumb and Dumber capped Carrey's historically unprecedented 1994—the year he also starred in Ace Ventura and The Mask—and grossed nearly $250 million worldwide on a modest budget.

Video thumbnail — Forrest Gump (1994) Trailer #1 | Movieclips Classic Trailers
Movies 1994–1995

Forrest Gump

Tom Hanks' Forrest Gump stumbles through history itself, unintentionally shaping 1960s and 70s America with innocent determination. Robert Zemeckis' 1994 phenomenon grossed $678 million worldwide, won 6 Oscars including Best Picture and Best Actor, and made 'Life is like a box of chocolates' part of the language.

Video thumbnail — Hackers Official Trailer #1 - Matthew Lillard Movie (1995) HD

Hackers

A young Angelina Jolie and Jonny Lee Miller rollerblade through a neon-drenched, absurdly rendered version of hacking where code is visualized as 3D graphics and 'Hack the planet!' became an unironic battle cry. Iain Softley's 1995 box-office flop became a beloved cult classic on the strength of its aesthetic audacity and a landmark electronic soundtrack.

Video thumbnail — Home Alone - Official® Trailer [HD]

Home Alone

Kevin McCallister is accidentally left behind when his family flies out for the holidays — and when two bumbling burglars invade, the eight-year-old's creative defenses (ice, tar, paint cans, and a very hot doorknob) turn the house into a gauntlet of booby traps. It became the defining Christmas movie of a generation, making Macaulay Culkin the most famous kid on the planet.

Video thumbnail — Jumanji (1995) Official Trailer

Jumanji

Robin Williams as an adult sprung from a magical jungle game — stampeding rhinos, vine-swinging chaos, and a board game that destroys your house from the inside out. Joe Johnston's December 1995 film combined state-of-the-art CGI and animatronics to bring a children's book to vivid, dangerous life, grossing over $260 million worldwide and proving games were no longer safe fantasy.

Video thumbnail — Jurassic Park Official Trailer #1 - Steven Spielberg Movie (1993) HD

Jurassic Park

Steven Spielberg's adaptation of Michael Crichton's novel brought dinosaurs to life using groundbreaking CGI and animatronics, forever changing what movies could show. The film made $914 million, unseated E.T. as the highest-grossing film ever, and launched a dinosaur obsession that sold lunchboxes, toys, and taught a generation how to pronounce 'velociraptor.'

Video thumbnail — Mean Girls (2004) Trailer #1 | Movieclips Classic Trailers

Mean Girls

The teen comedy that defined 2000s school social hierarchies — cliques, calculation, and the crushing realization that you might be the problem. Mean Girls premiered in April 2004, written by SNL's Tina Fey, and immediately became the movie every middle and high school student quoted obsessively for the next decade.

Video thumbnail — Patch Adams Official Trailer #1 - Robin Williams Movie (1998) HD

Patch Adams

Robin Williams as the real Dr. Hunter "Patch" Adams — a medical student who prescribes laughter, wears a clown nose on the children's ward, and dreams of a free hospital. Audiences packed theaters and cried; critics savaged it; the real Patch Adams hated it. A defining late-90s Robin Williams memory either way.

Video thumbnail — Powder (1995) Trailer | Mary Steenburgen | Sean Patrick Flanery

Powder

The strange outsider parable about a hairless, pale savant with electromagnetic powers — lightning-struck before birth, raised in a cellar, thrust into a small town that doesn't understand him. It split critics but became exactly the kind of weird 90s rental-store fixture that stays lodged in memory.

Video thumbnail — Pulp Fiction Official Trailer #1 - (1994) HD

Pulp Fiction

Quentin Tarantino's nonlinear crime epic rewrote the rules of what indie films could be. Released October 1994 with a Palme d'Or win at Cannes, a $200 million global gross, and career resurrections for John Travolta and a breakthrough for Samuel L. Jackson, Pulp Fiction became the defining film of a generation hungry for something different.

Video thumbnail — Rookie of the Year (1993) Theatrical Trailer [4K] [FTD-1393]

Rookie of the Year

Henry Rowengartner breaks his arm, it heals with the tendons a little too tight, and suddenly a 12-year-old is throwing 100 mph for the Chicago Cubs. Daniel Stern directs — and steals scenes as loopy pitching coach Phil Brickma. When the arm gives out mid-game, Henry wins with playground tricks. A cable staple of 90s childhoods.

Video thumbnail — Shrek (2001) Trailer #1 | Movieclips Classic Trailers
Movies 2001–2004

Shrek

The grumpy ogre who just wanted to be left alone, dragged into a quest to rescue a princess and discover his own capacity for love. Shrek arrived in May 2001 as a subversive fairy-tale comedy from DreamWorks, won the first Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, and spawned a franchise that defined early-2000s family cinema.

Video thumbnail — Spider-Man (2002) Official Trailer 1 - Tobey Maguire Movie
Movies 2002–2004

Spider-Man

Sam Raimi's 2002 Spider-Man was the superhero film that launched a thousand blockbusters — a scarlet-and-blue origin story with real stunts, genuine emotion, and Tobey Maguire's earnest Peter Parker. The upside-down rain kiss, Willem Dafoe's scenery-chewing Green Goblin, and 'with great power comes great responsibility' became templates for how to do superhero cinema.

Video thumbnail — The Craft (1996) - Official Trailer (HD)

The Craft

Andrew Fleming's cult sleeper hit about four Catholic-school outcasts who form a coven and discover real magic. Featuring Robin Tunney, Fairuza Balk, Neve Campbell, and Rachel True, The Craft codified the 90s goth aesthetic, kicked off the teen-witch wave, and made "We are the weirdos, mister" a quotable rallying cry.

Video thumbnail — The Matrix (1999) Official Trailer #1 - Sci-Fi Action Movie

The Matrix

The Wachowskis' sci-fi thriller rewired action cinema with bullet-time, philosophical depth, and Keanu Reeves as an accidental messiah in a simulation. Released March 1999, The Matrix became an instant cultural landmark, launching a franchise and spawning endless "red pill" debates in college dorms.

Video thumbnail — The Rugrats Movie (1998) Trailer #1 | Movieclips Classic Trailers

The Rugrats Movie

The babies hit the big screen: newborn brother Dil arrives, the Reptar wagon careens into the woods, and the Pickles crew has to find its way home. Nickelodeon's first feature-length animated film, released November 1998, became the first non-Disney animated feature to cross $100 million at the US box office.

Video thumbnail — The Sandlot (1993) Trailer #1 | Movieclips Classic Trailers

The Sandlot

David Mickey Evans' 1993 film about a group of kids playing baseball on a sandlot in the 1960s became the quintessential summer movie for 90s childhoods. The Sandlot captured the wonder and terror of childhood adventure — forbidden crushes, a monstrous dog, and a lost ball signed by Babe Ruth — with perfect comedic timing and genuine heart.

Video thumbnail — The Sixth Sense (1999) Trailer #1 | Movieclips Classic Trailers

The Sixth Sense

M. Night Shyamalan's breakout thriller about a child psychologist (Bruce Willis) treating a boy (Haley Joel Osment) who whispers the film's immortal line: 'I see dead people.' A cultural phenomenon that made the twist ending a permanent fixture of cinema and grossed over $670 million worldwide.

Video thumbnail — Titanic (1997) | Official Trailer
Movies 1997–1998

Titanic

James Cameron's three-hour epic about the Titanic sinking became the movie phenomenon of 1997, driven by the chemistry of Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet and an unforgettable Celine Dion ballad. It became the highest-grossing film ever and captured 11 Oscars at the 1998 ceremony, making "I'm flying" a phrase heard in every theater lobby and school cafeteria.

Video thumbnail — Toy Story (1995) Official Trailer
Movies 1995–1996

Toy Story

Pixar's Toy Story was the first fully computer-animated feature film, directed by John Lasseter and starring Tom Hanks and Tim Allen as mismatched toys Woody and Buzz. Released November 1995, it reinvented animation and launched a franchise that still dominates 30 years later.

Video thumbnail — Twilight (2008) Official Trailer
Movies 2005–2012

Twilight

The vampire-romance phenomenon that began with Stephenie Meyer's 2005 novel and exploded with the 2008 film starring Kristen Stewart as Bella, Robert Pattinson as vampire Edward, and Taylor Lautner as werewolf Jacob. The love triangle split fans into 'Team Edward' and 'Team Jacob'—complete with merchandise and fierce debate. The five-film saga ran through 2012, defining a generation's romance fantasy.