Why Do We Rewatch Comfort Movies and Shows?
And why they mean more than we realize
There’s a moment, after a quietly difficult day, when the last thing I want is something new. I don’t want a new story or a new challenge, not even a “must-watch” TV series everyone is talking about.
I want something I already know.
Something I’ve been through before. A comfort rewatch that will unfold exactly as it did the last time, because right now, unpredictability is the last thing I need.
And there are many I could choose from — like the K-dramas She Was Pretty, It’s Okay to Not Be Okay, and countless Bollywood films.
But if I had to pick just one childhood nostalgic movie that gives me ultimate comfort, it would be Andaz Apna Apna.
A loud, ridiculous 90s Bollywood comedy. If you’ve seen it, you know it makes no sense. It’s not deep. It’s not sad. It’s chaotic humor, over-the-top characters, and absurd situations. And yet, there were months in my life when every time I was truly sad, I would go back to it.
I would laugh until I couldn’t stop, and then I would cry. Not because the film was sad, but because I finally felt safe enough to cry.
That’s when I realized that a comfort rewatch isn’t about avoiding emotion. It’s about making space for it.
Fun fact: If you ever find me searching for scenes from these movies, know that I’m in no mood to talk!
Why We Rewatch Old Movies and Shows When We’re Sad
Psychologists call this selective re-exposure revisiting familiar media to regulate our emotions. It’s the opposite of seeking novelty. It’s about seeking safety.
When life feels overwhelming, a brand-new show or film asks of us: attention, emotional investment, and openness to surprise. A nostalgic rewatch, on the other hand, gives instead of takes.
Some reasons why comfort rewatches help:
- Familiarity calms the nervous system — The brain thrives on patterns. When we already know a plot, our minds don’t work as hard, lowering anxiety.
- Predictability creates control — We know when the conflict will resolve, when the music will swell, when the ending will come. That emotional certainty is rare in real life.
- Emotional associations build over time — Each rewatch layers new memories onto old ones, turning the story into an emotional landmark.
Neuroscientists say this reduces cognitive load, freeing up mental bandwidth because we’re not processing anything new. Instead, we’re resting in the familiar, allowing the body to shift out of stress mode.
When Comedy Unlocks Sadness
I think about those Andaz Apna Apna rewatches often and how strange it felt to giggle at absurd one-liners only to feel my eyes well up.
Comedy isn’t the opposite of sadness. Laughter lowers our emotional defenses, slows our breathing, and makes it easier to access feelings we’ve been holding back.
That’s why a silly film can be the perfect place to cry. It doesn’t force sadness on us like a tragic drama might. Instead, it gently unlocks what’s already there.
Comfort rewatches hold space for complex emotions without judgment, allowing laughter, grief, and nostalgia to exist side by side.
Nostalgia and Mental Health
Every comfort rewatch carries nostalgia. It’s not just about the story; it’s about you in the moment you first experienced it.
Sometimes I’ll rewatch something because it takes me back to an easier time. Other times, it’s the opposite; it reminds me of a hard chapter I survived.
Researchers have found nostalgia to be a psychological resource. It increases feelings of social connection, self-continuity, and optimism. When we return to an old favorite, we’re reconnecting with the person we were back then and reminding ourselves: I’ve been here before, and I’m still here now.
The Story Grows With You
The most beautiful thing about comfort rewatches is that the story doesn’t stay frozen in time; it grows as you do.
The first time you watch The Notebook, maybe you’re swept up in the romance. Ten years later, you see the quiet pain of its ending in a way you couldn’t before.
The first time you watch a K-drama, you might root for the main couple’s reunion. On rewatch, you might notice how the side characters carry their own quiet heartbreaks.
We bring our changing selves into every rewatch, and the story meets us there.
So, What’s Yours?
I have mine: Andaz Apna Apna, Crash Landing on You, The Notebook, and many more. Others return to a childhood cartoon, an old sports documentary, or a thriller they’ve memorized.
It doesn’t matter if it’s high art or a guilty pleasure; it matters that it steadies you. That it knows you well enough to carry you through another night.
So the next time you catch yourself pressing play on the same thing again, don’t dismiss it. You’re not wasting time; you’re giving yourself emotional rest.
And if someone asks why you’re watching it again, you can say what I say now:
“Because it knows me. And right now, I need to be known.”
What’s your comfort re-read or rewatch?
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