Your movie watchlist is a graveyard of good intentions because a simple list is a bucket, not a tool. It's time to stop passively collecting titles and start actively building a habit of watching them.
Your Notes app is a graveyard of good intentions.
Go ahead, open it. Scroll past the grocery lists and the weird measurements for a bookshelf you'll never build. There it is. The list titled "Movies." It’s a jumble of titles from friends, half-remembered podcast suggestions, and that one obscure Finnish film your cousin swore would change your life. You’ve seen maybe three of them. The rest are just digital clutter.
This isn't working. A simple list is a bucket, not a tool.
A good movie tracker has to do more than just list titles. It needs to be your film diary and your discovery engine. The best ones get a few key things right.
First, you need an easy way to manage your watchlist. You should be able to add a movie in seconds, see where it's streaming, and maybe get a ping when a film on your list lands on a service you actually pay for. Good sorting and filtering are essential. Let me see only the 80s action movies on my list, or just the comedies under 90 minutes.
It also needs to be your personal film diary. And I mean more than a five-star rating. It’s about logging the date you watched something and adding a few notes. Over time, this becomes a real record of what you’ve seen. You can look back and see how your tastes have changed, or what you were watching during different times in your life. It's your history.
And it needs to help you find your next favorite movie. A great tracker gives you personalized recommendations, shows you what’s popular, and lets you browse lists from people with similar tastes.
When people look for a movie tracker, two names always come up: IMDb and Letterboxd.
IMDb is a database. A massive, powerful, and completely soulless database. It’s great if you need to know who the third assistant director on Jaws 2 was, but for personal tracking, it feels like using a city census to manage your friend group. It's cluttered and clinical.
Letterboxd is the opposite. It’s a social network for movie lovers. You can follow friends, read witty one-line reviews, and build beautiful lists. But for some, it can feel like a performance. The pressure to have a clever take can turn a hobby into a chore. Sometimes you just want to log a movie without writing a review for an audience.
Maybe the best app for tracking movies isn't a movie app.
The thought hit me at 4:17 PM on a Tuesday while I was waiting for a tow truck for my Honda Civic. I was trying to organize a huge movie watchlist in a spreadsheet, and it was a mess. The problem wasn't the data; it was my behavior. I didn't just want to list movies. I wanted to build a habit of actually watching them.
That’s where a flexible habit tracker comes in. Instead of tracking titles, you track the process. You can set a goal to "watch two classic films per month" and watch your streak build. You can set a reminder every Friday night to "pick a movie from the watchlist," which turns a vague idea into an actual plan. You could even block out two hours of distraction-free time for a movie.
It’s about switching from passively listing movies to actively building a habit. You're not just collecting titles you might watch one day. You're building a system that makes sure you do.
This doesn't mean you have to abandon other tools. Just use them for what they’re good at. Use JustWatch to see where something is streaming. Browse Letterboxd for ideas. But bring the movie you pick back to a simple system that pushes you to act, not just collect.
A "dopamine detox" can boost your ADHD medication’s effectiveness by cutting out high-stimulation distractions like social media. Creating a calmer environment allows the medicine to help you focus on what truly matters.
The ADHD brain is wired for instant rewards, making long-term goals feel impossible. Ditch willpower and build a system of small, immediate rewards to hack your motivation and build habits that stick.
ADHD burnout isn't a willpower problem, and a "dopamine detox" is the wrong solution. To escape the creative burnout cycle, your brain needs a strategic reset that swaps passive scrolling for active, high-quality stimulation.
An ADHD brain is a race car engine that needs guardrails; a habit tracker provides that structure. By starting small, you can build routines that work *with* your brain's need for visual rewards and dopamine instead of fighting it.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
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