About One More Watch
One More Watch started with a simple idea:
some films stay with us.
Not because they’re the newest, or the most talked about, but because they remind us of who we were when we first watched them. A film you put on during a difficult time. One you watched on repeat. One that quietly changed how you saw the world.
In a time when films appear and disappear from streaming services without warning, physical media still does something important — it stays. A DVD is more than just a way to watch a film. It’s an object tied to memory, place, and feeling. Something you can return to, years later, and feel the same connection all over again.
One More Watch exists somewhere between a shop and a small museum — not a place to rush through, but a place to rediscover. Every DVD here has already lived a life before arriving on the shelf. Found in charity shops, passed on, donated, rediscovered. This isn’t about hoarding or hype. It’s about circulation. Films moving from one person to the next, carrying meaning with them.
Think of it as giving a film another chapter.
Not every DVD belongs here. Only the ones that feel worth owning. Worth revisiting. Worth having within reach when you don’t want to scroll endlessly and let an algorithm decide.
One More Watch is for people who still value ownership, who believe some stories deserve a permanent place, and who know that sometimes the most powerful viewing experience isn’t the first time — it’s coming back to it.
Because some films don’t fade.
They just ask for one more watch.