For me it was Titan AE, Treasure planet, FF spirits within, chronicles of riddick and pitch black and iRobot
This means I'm cool.
I also watched a lot of Cars but only cos my brother liked it.
Scooby Doo on Zombie Island and Witches Ghost. The peak of that franchise.
Veggietales on VHS was on rotation on my house a lot. From time to time, Thomas and the Magic Railroad (2000) was also on, a fever-dream of a film that has a coked-out Alec Baldwin, a too-depressed Peter Fonda, and an in-her-prime Mara Wilson. I watched a lot of Cars as well when that came out.
I also watched The Brave Little Toaster a bunch whenever I went to my grandma's house, at the same age when I enjoyed Barney. That probably explains my distrust of clowns and messed me up a little.
Fukin love thomas the tank engine, worms its way in my brain its so friendly yet so uncanny.
I was around when the VHS to DVD transition happened, I remember Blockbuster and small-time movie rental places, and then as I got older I remember when Netflix came in the mail . My family would get The Next Generation on DVD and it's kind of incredible just how little information was on those things, just 3-4 episodes of prime TNG in standard definition.
two I can remember were Land Before Time and Macross DYRL, some TMNT episodes too
Gremlins 1 & 2, Ghostbusters 1 & 2, a bunch of 90s Disney movies and some more obscure stuff because we didn't have that many VHS movies. Anyone remember that there was a Jetsons movie made around 1990? Yeah, we had that.
Oh yeah, original Star Wars trilogy too, first the original versions recorded off TV, then retail VHSs of the CGI crap special editions.
I fondly remember Tremors always being on TV. Didn't matter where I started, I would often watch until the end.
It's a great family movie. Exciting and action-packed, but not violent. There's no on-screen deaths. And there's an amazing happy ending that feels earned.
My parents are Trekkies and had all the 80s movies on VHS, the whole collection together looks like the Enterprise. Pretty cool.
So much nostalgia in that little collection! I truly believe that there were no bad TOS movies. They were all great in their own ways. We go from high-concept classic slow-burn sci-fi, to a tense naval battle between brilliant captains with major consequences, to an exciting adventure story for the sake of friendship, to a family-friendly non-violent fun romp through time, to a slightly silly story that's straight out of TOS but also has some fantastic moments with our main trio, to an action-packed mystery thriller that gives our crew a heartwarming send-off.
I would re-watch any of those movies happily. Yes, even #5. It's only "bad" by TOS movie standards. It's way better than any TNG movie or any episode of Discovery or Picard. Sybok's actor deserves a lot of credit for his work. He's that best and most interesting kind of antagonist: someone who thinks he's the hero of the story, and who thinks he's doing the right thing to help others.
Star wars movies, especially 4 and 6 (this was before the prequels) 6 more because my sister loved seeing Jabba die (she associated him to my father which is probably something) and the ewoks.
And Disney movies, especially little mermaid, and Bambi, and Aladdin. Edit, and the original TMNT movie which I missed all dark overtones and just liked the turtles being bros and didn't get the second movie but I did totally get the third and it was radical. Also I may have a profound attraction to women in yellow jumpsuits holding microphones... Do not look into this.
That one was animated by aardman animations same studio that made wallace and gromit, and funded by dreamworks
Look Who's Talking
the movie with Bruce Willis doing voices for a baby's thoughts. Kristie Alley, John Travolta, Olympia Dukakis, Abe Vigoda.
straight up, I could open a notepad doc and type up like 75% of the screenplay cold.
VHS copy of The Three Amigos. But taped from a TV broadcast (we skipped most of the ads, but weird sections were missing because of editing and length).
The ol' strategy of pausing the recording during ads, which pretty much always led to missing some of the movie too.
There's this shitty horror movie about giant spiders called "eight legged freaks", when I was a little one spiders were my special interest so my parents plonked me down in front of it one stormy day and I just kept rewatching it.
Also early Red Dwarf (I've an embarrassing memory from my childhood of watching Polymorph getting to the bit where Rimmer complains about the name he's created for the protest group "on the other hand the abbreviation is CLITORIS", completely missing the joke, and assuming that clitoris meant cluttered and awkward and using it that way at school the next day).
And for some reason, the film remakes of the Dr Who serials "Dr Who and the Daleks" and "Daleks' invasion of Earth 2150 AD".
I remember watching it once or twice as a child, but I didn't, like, play it on a loop like eight legged freaks.