We all have our favorite relaxing movies that help us unwind. After a bad day, week, month (try year), we call upon that one movie, or Netflix binge, that brings us some peace and quiet. There are movies we love, and then there are certain movies we need. Perhaps a Coen Brothers comedy or Steven Soderbergh classics are the chill movies of choice for you. There are always characters and filmmakers that can flip a switch in our minds and brighten up our day. Feel-good movies check that box, and in the same vein, so do “chill movies.” By chill movies, we mean relaxing or lighthearted stories told about laid-back characters or movies clearly made by laid-back people. More often than not, these soothing movies are heavy on goodness and kindness.
Before reading this list, imagine going to a concert of one of your favorite bands later on in their careers. There are probably a lot of songs we all want to hear, right? Just like with a list, you can’t always get what you want. We all have our own ideas of what’s chill about a person, a character, or movie. Below, in many of the movies listed, we’re talking about characters who spread kindness or are genuinely pleasant and peaceful to observe.
30
‘Amélie’ (2001)
Directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet
A warm, colorful blanket of a movie about enjoying the little pleasures in life and being good to your community and yourself. The shy but animated Amélie (Audrey Tautou) works in a café and lives a little more in her imagination than the great big world outside her mind. She’s hesitant to step outside of her comfort zone, but once she does, she starts doing the chillest act of all: helping others. Amelie’s kindness lights up almost everyone she crosses paths with and, based on director Jean-Pierre Jeanuet’s vision of Paris, the city itself.
Amélie is achingly heartfelt and nutritious eye candy about a lovely character without a mean or cynical bone in her body simply spreading happiness. She’s a superhero in Paris, lighting up every shop, street corner, and subway stop she graces with her iconic presence.
![amelie](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/04/amelie.jpg)
Amélie
- Release Date
-
August 16, 2001
- Director
-
Jean-Pierre Jeunet
- Cast
-
Audrey Tautou
, Mathieu Kassovitz - Runtime
-
123 Minutes
29
‘Lars and the Real Girl’ (2007)
Directed by Craig Gillespie
While its premise makes it seem as though it would be a lowbrow raunchy comedy film that was more than prevalent during the era, Lars and the Real Girl is in reality a calming and heartwarming story of connection and community. The film sees Ryan Gosling as the incredibly shy Lars, who finds it impossible to socialize or make friends and has as a result lived a very isolated lifestyle. While his family members are worried about them, Lars ends up surprising them by revealing that he has a girlfriend, yet it soon dawns upon them that Lars’ new girlfriend is a life-size plastic doll.
Despite all odds and preconceived notions, Lars and the Real Girl is not a mean-spirited comedy that makes Lars the butt of every joke but instead paints a wholesome portrait of an entire community coming together to help Lars in his time of need. While his solution is far from ordinary, the depression and loneliness that Lars faces throughout the film is deeply relatable and impactful for many audiences, so seeing him overcome these fears and difficulties makes for an uplifting and cathartic experience.
28
‘Before Sunset’ (2004)
Directed by Richard Linklater
Many, many Richard Linklater movies could go on this list. The filmmaker creates such lived-in, relaxed but tightly constructed stories that drop in on characters we wish or maybe we even do know in real life. Before Sunset is Linklater’s peak relaxation film in his romantic trilogy not without its highs and lows. The reunion between Celine (Julie Delpy) and Jesse (Ethan Hawke) is a movie full of light that radiates off the screen every single second, though.
It’s a serene walk-and-talk with Celine and Jessie at their most relaxed with one another. There are awkward moments, complications, and some unhealed wounds, but for the most part, Before Sunset is a triumphant reunion between two iconic characters at their most comfortable with themselves and one and another. The honeymoon phase isn’t quite over in Before Sunset. Not that perfection matters, but it is Linklater’s closest shot to perfection.
![before-sunset-film-poster.jpg](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/06/before-sunset-film-poster.jpg)
- Release Date
-
July 30, 2004
- Director
-
Richard Linklater
- Runtime
-
80 minutes
27
‘Being There’ (1979)
Directed by Hal Ashby
Hal Ashby’s classic is gentle. The story still has Ashby’s and star Peter Sellers’ biting wit, as well as their more tragic qualities as storytellers. The satire resonates strongly today, watching Chauncey Gardiner (Sellers) become the popular kid among political royalty as he says nothing of substance. He’s just a man who enjoys gardening and watching television, but then again, maybe he’s more than that. The iconic final shot suggests so. Like everyone Chauncy meets, we always gravitate towards him and hang on to his every word.
Maybe it’s pointless to search for meaning in Being There, but what isn’t pointless, is exactly what the title says. Sometimes being there is enough, even to get ahead in the world of politics. Satire, politics, and the buzzing but possibly inconsequential questions aside, Being There is also a movie that’s as delicate as Chauncey Gardiner. “Life is a state of mind,” is one of the many doses of wisdom that Being There leaves its audience with.
26
‘Robot Dreams’ (2023)
Directed by Pablo Burger
A beautiful tale of connection and friendship that accomplishes its themes without a single word of dialogue, Robot Dreams has proven itself to be easily one of the best animated movies of the 2020s. The film follows a lonesome dog living in 1980s New York, who, in an attempt to tackle his uneventful lifestyle, purchases a robot companion to act as his new best friend. Dog and Robot immediately hit it off and have an array of adventures across the city, yet when an accident causes them to be separated, Dog and Robot will have to face the isolation head-on in their own ways.
Sporting beautiful 2D animation and an overwhelming joy and passion for life in all of its ups and downs, it’s difficult not to have a wide smile on one’s face while experiencing the majesty of Robot Dreams. From an array of creative and colorful dream sequences to perfect usage of Earth Wind and Fire’s “September”, the aura of Robot Dreams is one that is largely defined by joy and whimsy for the world.
![Robot Dreams 2023 Movie Poster](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/04/robot-dreams-2023-movie-poster.jpg)
- Release Date
-
December 6, 2024
- Director
-
Pablo Berger
- Runtime
-
102 Minutes
25
‘Car Wash’ (1976)
Directed by Michael Schultz
The comedy classic keeps things loose. Wonderful characters pop in and out of the story, the laughs never cease, and director Michael Schultz lands an unexpectedly poignant ending. Every character is an MVP and could be the star of their own movie. All of screenwriter Joel Schumacher’s characters entertain.
Car Wash is a great ensemble movie with loads of energy and personality to spare. It’s Schultz’s near-perfect hangout movie, although shout out to Krush Groove and Cooley High. For a movie set almost entirely in one location, the filmmaker created a movie so high-spirited and easy on the eyes. The camera is unrestricted and free to follow different characters, tangents, and even a neighborhood kid on a skateboard (which is a strange, almost unexplainable highlight in the movie). Schultz’s best movies go with the flow, just like his sparkling characters.
![car-wash-1976-poster.jpg](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/08/car-wash-1976-poster.jpg)
- Release Date
-
October 22, 1976
- Director
-
Michael Schultz
- Cast
-
Ivan Dixon
, DeWayne Jessie
, Bill Duke
, Franklyn Ajaye
, Sully Boyar
, Melanie Mayron
, June Pointer
, Bonnie Pointer
, Anita Pointer
, Ruth Pointer - Runtime
-
97 Minutes
- Main Genre
-
Comedy
24
‘The Secret Life of Walter Mitty’ (2013)
Directed by Ben Stiller
A modern remake of the classic film from 1947, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty follows a lonesome, timid magazine photo manager who often spends his simple life daydreaming of something more. While he dreams of living an extravagant and adventurous life, he is stuck in a loop of boredom and office work, something that suddenly finds itself changing when he ends up going on a real-life adventure when a photo negative goes missing.
Few films have been able to fully encapsulate the inherent wonder and majesty that can come from daydreaming, imagining oneself in another world with all the wonder and possibilities of imagination. While these daydream sequences are certainly a major highlight of the film, Ben Stiller also does an exceptional job of showing the calming and powerful nature that everyday life can provide. Walter Mitty’s story has proven to be one that provides unending comfort and escapism to audiences, becoming one of the defining hidden gem comedies of the 2010s.
![The Secret Life of Walter Mitty Movie Poster](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/04/the-secret-life-of-walter-mitty-movie-poster.jpg)
- Release Date
-
December 25, 2013
- Runtime
-
114 Minutes
23
‘Chan Is Missing’ (1982)
Directed by Wayne Wang
Wayne Wang’s (The Joy Luck Club) noir is a timeless indie from 1982. At times, the Chinatown-set mystery without a solution looks either modern or straight out of the 1950s. It’s a stunning, less-is-more film about identity, life in San Francisco’s Chinatown, politics, and coming to America.
For an 80-minute-long movie, it’s a dense piece of work that’s also elegant and relaxed. Chan Is Missing was a serious influence on director Richard Linklater. The inspiration shows in the film’s vignettes and random yet vital conversations. The detectives in the film, a cab driver named Jo (Wood Moy) and his nephew Steve (Marc Hayashi), are a low-key ball to hang with as they search for a missing man. It’s a simple but complex tale with more questions than answers and exchanges you’ll never forget. What a movie.
![0170632_poster_w780.jpg](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/11/0170632_poster_w780.jpg)
- Release Date
-
April 24, 1982
- Director
-
Wayne Wang
- Cast
-
Wood Moy
, Marc Hayashi
, Laureen Chew
, Peter Wang
, Presco Tabios
, Frankie Alarcon
, Judi Nihei
, Ellen Yeung
, George Woo
, Emily Woo Yamasaki
, Virginia R. Cerenio
, Roy Chan
, Leong Pui Chee - Runtime
-
76 Minutes
22
‘Chef’ (2014)
Directed by Jon Favreau
Jon Favreau is at his most easygoing and crowd-pleasing in Chef. Free of interference, Chef depicts an artist, in front of and behind the camera, doing his thing without constraints. It’s a cathartic movie, as well as a mouth-watering one. The food porn in Chef is delicious eye candy, but unlike most big studio eye candy, it’s hand-crafted and personal. It’s such a loving movie, too, about craft and fatherhood.
Balancing one’s personal life and career, which is likely no foreign subject to any working filmmaker, is the main conflict in Chef. There are personal stakes and sadness, both of which are handled with the grace of an all-star cook. It’s a light meal not without substance. Chef is intimate but epic in terms of comfort.
![Chef Movie Poster 2014](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/04/chef-movie-poster-2014.jpg)
- Release Date
-
May 30, 2014
- Runtime
-
114 minutes
21
‘Dave Chappelle’s Block Party’ (2005)
Directed by Michel Gondry
Michel Gondry’s doc is two hours of hanging out with Dave Chappelle and the likes of Erykah Badu, poet Jill Scott, Questlove, and the list goes on and on. Dave Chappelle’s Block Party is like the Nashville of concert docs. It is a movie packed to the brim with charismatic and wonderful people, including the residents of Brooklyn and Dayton, Ohio.
Everyone is a joy to meet and greet in this movie, whether they’re singing music, joking around, or having a kind exchange on a street corner or in a cigarette shop. It is a fantastic movie about harmony and strangers brought together by Chapelle for an unforgettable day of music and sheer positivity. Dave Chappelle’s Block Party is a piece of lightning in a bottle to cherish. Everyone is having a great time in this movie, and it’s wildly infectious.
![dave-chappelle-s-block-party-poster.jpg](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/08/dave-chappelle-s-block-party-poster.jpg)
- Release Date
-
September 12, 2005
- Runtime
-
100 Minutes
20
‘Little Women’ (2019)
Directed by Greta Gerwig
Before Greta Gerwig directed the box office phenomenon, Barbie, she found a way to bring to life one of the most acclaimed and legendary novels in American history in a fresh and compelling way in Little Women. Following the main story of Louisa May Alcott‘s masterpiece, the film sees a quartet of sisters as they grow and learn the difficulties of life as they come of age in the aftermath of the American Civil War.
While nearly every adaptation of Little Women is going to be calming and melancholy in its own way, Gerwig adds her own signature touch that makes the emotional moments and core themes hit that much harder, even when you already know the story. The stories of branching love and coming into one’s self find themselves to be deeply relatable and compelling no matter what age you are, with Little Women easily being one of the best when it comes to tackling these themes in a timeless way.
![little-women-2019-movie-poster.jpg](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/04/little-women-2019-movie-poster.jpg)
- Release Date
-
December 25, 2019
- Cast
-
Emma Watson
, Timothée Chalamet
, Bob Odenkirk
, Florence Pugh
, Eliza Scanlen
, Abby Quinn
, Lilly Englert
, Chris Cooper
, James Norton
, Sasha Frolova
, Meryl Streep
, Saoirse Ronan
, Laura Dern
, Louis Garrel - Runtime
-
135 minutes
19
‘The Holdovers’ (2023)
Directed by Alexander Payne
One of the most acclaimed and comforting holiday films of recent memory, The Holdovers harkens back to a classic era of storytelling and filmmaking with its wholesome nostalgic trip to the 90s. The film follows a strict prep school professor who is forced to look over a group of students who have nowhere to return to during the Christmas season. Initially annoyed at the prospect, he soon finds himself forming an unexpected friendship with one of the students as they begin to get caught up in the holiday spirit.
Holiday films always come with an inherent charm and calmness about them, able to conjure up feelings of family togetherness during the most special time of the year. The Holdovers greatly succeeds thanks in part to its calming and relaxing holiday setting, unparalleled in its portrayal of the holiday spirit among modern comedy films. The film will most assuredly be in the conversation as one of the defining holiday film experiences of the 2020s, with its calming nature being a major reason why.
![The Holdovers Poster](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/04/the-holdovers-poster.jpg)
- Release Date
-
November 10, 2023
- Director
-
Alexander Payne
- Runtime
-
133 Minutes
18
‘Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai’ (1999)
Directed by Jim Jarmusch
In the same vein as Linklater, plenty of Jim Jarmusch movies could go on this list. There’s a calmness to his movies, even when he’s following a poet bus driver, hipster vampires, a Don Juan facing his past mistakes, or in the case of Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai, a hitman living the life of a samurai in Brooklyn, New York.
Jarmuch’s movie is impossible to break down in one sentence, though. The Forest Whitaker-led and RZA-scored samurai movie has a vibe of its own, pure Jarmusch yet drawing from a wide range of influences. There are bursts of violence in The Way of the Samurai, but the meditative tale is a reposeful look at self-discipline, honor, the power of knowledge, and yes, the life of an ice cream truck driver. Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai is Jarmusch’s samurai classic, which has a ton of great laughs and an all-timer finale. “This is the final shootout scene,” the samurai says. “Yeah. Well, it’s very dramatic… it’s very dramatic.” Even in death, there are laughs in Jarmusch’s movie.
![ghost-dog-the-way-of-the-samurai.jpg](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/06/ghost-dog-the-way-of-the-samurai.jpg)
Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai
- Release Date
-
June 2, 1999
- Director
-
Jim Jarmusch
- Cast
-
Forest Whitaker
, John Tormey
, Cliff Gorman
, Dennis Liu
, Frank Minucci
, Richard Portnow - Runtime
-
116
17
‘Ratatouille’ (2007)
Directed by Brad Bird
Cooking has proven to be one of the most calming and satisfying things to watch unfold, playing a big factor in the popularity of cooking shows over the years. However, the world of animation creates limitless possibilities for the inherent calmness of cooking and beautiful dishes, with no film succeeding in this factor more than Pixar’s Ratatouille. The film follows the life and struggles of a street rat named Remy with large ambitions to become a legendary chef, finally getting the chance to prove to the world his skills at one of the finest restaurants in Paris.
While all of Pixar’s filmography has an inherent calming and soothing nature to its storytelling, the wholesome and relatable journey of achieving one’s dreams no matter the uphill battle makes Ratatouille an especially calming experience. The beautiful and serene cooking sequences combined with the pristine Paris backdrop create an undeniable aura that few animated films, Pixar or otherwise, have been able to live up to.
![Ratatouille Movie Poster](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/04/ratatouille-movie-poster.jpeg)
Ratatouille
- Release Date
-
June 29, 2007
- Director
-
Brad Bird
- Runtime
-
111 Minutes
16
‘Happy-Go-Lucky’ (2008)
Directed by Mike Leigh
Sally Hawkins is a blinding ray of sunshine in what’s maybe Mike Leigh’s most cheerful film. The world is dark, but nothing and certainly nobody can dim Poppy’s sincere enthusiasm for life. The North London school teacher’s joy is infectious throughout Happy-Go-Lucky. Even when Poppy faces misery, like a character played by Eddie Marsan, she stays resilient. Such a positive and wholesome character whose happiness in the face of misery is almost heroic. Somebody will always try to rain down on anyone’s parade, but Poppy is such a strong character, somebody who doesn’t let others deter her mood or outlook, as strange as it may look to others.
The ending is one of the happiest endings ever seen in film. It is a long take of Poppy and a dear friend simply enjoying a lovely day out. It is pure peacefulness, just two friends on a boat relishing each other’s company. It’s a heavenly moment through Leigh’s eyes, especially after all the painful feelings touched on that we expect from Leigh. There is real misery in Happy-Go-Lucky, but Poppy is still Poppy in the end.
Happy-Go-Lucky
- Release Date
-
April 18, 2008
- Director
-
Mike Leigh
- Runtime
-
118 minutes
- Main Genre
-
Comedy
15
‘Harvey’ (1950)
Directed by Henry Koster
Harvey is a film that premiered over 70 years ago. After all those years, this slice of life and magical realism hasn’t lost any of its powerful charm. James Stewart plays Elwood P. Dowd, a man who simply wants to drink and relish the company of his best friend in the world, an “imaginary” six-foot-tall bunny rabbit named Harvey.
It’s a buddy movie in which one of the buddies doesn’t ever appear on-screen, not until one stunning moment that’s as much about the magic of friendship as the magic of movies. Harvey is a classic story of basic acceptance, learning to accept someone’s harmless quirks and let them enjoy themselves, no matter how silly they look.
![harvey-poster-1.jpg](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/08/harvey-poster-1.jpg)
- Release Date
-
December 21, 1950
- Director
-
Henry Koster
- Cast
-
James Stewart
, Josephine Hull
, Peggy Dow
, Charles Drake
, Cecil Kellaway
, Victoria Horne
, Jesse White
, William H. Lynn
, Wallace Ford
, Nana Bryant
, Grayce Mills
, Clem Bevans
14
‘Marcel the Shell with Shoes On’ (2021)
Directed by Dean Fleischer Camp
A feature-length continuation of the series of viral internet shorts, Marcel the Shell with Shoes On follows the quaint, simple adventures of Marcel, a 1-inch tall shell living in the corners of a suburban home. After being discovered by an amateur filmmaker renting out the home for an Airbnb, Marcel’s simple life is documented, how he goes about his day and keeps a cheery attitude. However, Marcel has sadly been separated from his extended family, aside from his loving Grandma Connie, so Marcel and the filmmaker set out to search for Marcel’s missing family in the vast open world outside the home.
Just like the short films that inspired it, Marcel the Shell with Shoes On succeeds greatly in the simple, calming and simple world that Marcel lives, with his small stature and use of everyday objects to get around creating a cute and wholesome experience. The feature-length film only further expands on what makes Marcel as a character so great, with a powerful emotional core and providing a lot of hilarious moments. The film is about as wholesome and calming as a modern family film can get and received mass critical acclaim as a result.
![marcel-the-shell-with-shoes-on.jpg](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/10/marcel-the-shell-with-shoes-on.jpg)
Marcel the Shell with Shoes On
- Release Date
-
September 3, 2021
- Director
-
Dean Fleischer-Camp
- Runtime
-
1h 30m
13
‘Hopscotch’ (1980)
Directed by Ronald Neame
There are few spies as chill as Miles Kending. He’s a happy-go-lucky man of no mystery. The veteran American spy is living it up in Hopscotch. Here’s a bouncy spy story without any collateral damage or the world in peril. Kending is all smiles in this wonderful movie, in which the agent is writing a memoir riddled with government secrets after he’s forced to retire early. As Kending goes on the run from his incompetent superiors, the good times keep rolling.
Walter Matthau is the definition of chill in Ronald Neame’s Criterion classic. Matthau is one of those actors that you can tell when he’s having fun, and his glee and playfulness rubs off strong in Hopscotch. Matthau is a big guy, so sort of he’s a larger-than-life entertainer when he’s in comedy mode. Just thrilling to watch. Hopscotch is a spy movie that is masterfully light on its feet with one of the coolest and politest spies to ever grace the screen.
12
‘Local Hero’ (1983)
Directed by Bill Forsyth
It’s difficult to describe the effect of Bill Forsyth’s Local Hero. It’s a fitting feeling, because two businessmen, Mac (Peter Riegert) and Oldsen (Peter Capaldi), don’t know quite how to describe the enchantment of the fishing village, Ferness, either. The characters are often left speechless by the unexplainable sights they witness, just like the audience.
Again, it’s tricky to explain Local Hero, as it’s an easier movie to feel than it is to intellectualize. What’s certain is this movie has a euphoric effect on almost anyone who basks in the heavenly imagery and Mark Knopfler‘s divine score (with his song “Going Home: Theme from Local Hero” going on to become more famous than the film). The movie just plays as one of the best dreams you’ll ever have. Another source of unbridled happiness in Burt Lancaster. He’s as delightful as the rest of Forsyth’s classic. Lancaster’s big businessman says and does such ludicrous things, but like Being There, maybe there’s something there… or not.
11
‘My Neighbor Totoro’ (1988)
Directed by Hayao Miyazaki
Studio Ghibli have proven themselves to be masters of calming and simple cinematic experiences that make the most out of the medium of animation, with easily one of their best in terms of its calming nature being My Neighbor Totoro. The film follows a duo of young sisters who find inherent difficulties when moving out to the countryside to be closer to their hospitalized mother, yet they soon find comfort in the magical creatures that inhabit the nearby forest. They find themselves going on various ventures with these forest spirits as they come to appreciate their time spent together.
While the film doesn’t have a massive, overarching plot, My Neighbor Totoro massively succeeds through an array of interconnected scenes of calming magic and sweetness, emphasized by top-of-the-line 2D animation. It’s easy to simply destress and let the cutesy, otherworldly visuals take control and create a calming and serene cinematic experience. While Ghibli would continuously find themselves attempting to recapture this aura and energy with each subsequent release, none hold a candle to the inherent beauty of My Neighbor Totoro.
![My Neighbor Totoro Movie Poster](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/sharedimages/2024/04/my-neighbor-totoro-movie-poster.jpg)
- Release Date
-
April 16, 1988
- Runtime
-
86minutes