Not what's trending. Not what the algorithm pushed.
The film your mood has been waiting for.
Every streaming platform gives you a catalogue. None of them gives you a conversation.
You spend 40 minutes browsing thumbnails, feel exhausted before the movie even starts, and end up rewatching something you've already seen. Sound familiar?
"Action" when you need something cathartic. "Romance" when you want to cry productively. Genre labels are blunt instruments for a very personal need.
Recommendation engines push what keeps you on the platform, not what will resonate with you tonight. Popularity ≠ personal fit.
Some of the most emotionally precise films ever made are in Telugu, Tamil, Hindi, or Korean — but they rarely surface unless you already know to look.
Most apps ask you to pick a genre. Moodfilm asks how you're actually feeling — and means it. You type freely, like you're texting a friend, and the app reads between the lines.
"I'm tired but not sleepy. Had a weird week. I just want something that reminds me the world is still kind of beautiful."
Moodfilm's Theme Engine shifts the entire visual atmosphere of the app in real time as your mood is detected. It's not a gimmick — it's a signal that the app is genuinely paying attention.
Every search surfaces a single Hero Pick — the film with the highest emotional resonance for your exact mood and intent — alongside a mood-match score and a personal explanation written just for you, right now.
After your Hero Pick, Moodfilm surfaces five more films — one per genre — each individually matched to your mood, not just popular titles slotted into boxes. The genre is a lens, not a filter.
Six moments from a single mood session — from the opening splash to your personalised picks, with cinema-grade design throughout.
We don't talk much about what's powering Moodfilm — but here's a plain-English look at the ideas that make it work.
No sign-up. Just your mood and a blank text box.
Moodfilm is in private testing — public launch coming soon.