32 cozy movies for a rainy day

Moonrise Kingdom
(Image credit: Focus Features)

Some days, when you hear thunder roll and watch solid ജgray clo☂uds block the sun, you know there's only one thing to do: Get under the covers and watch a movie. But which movies are actually the best for watching on a rainy day?

"Rainy day" movies, which differ heavily from snow day movies, are all about vibes. It's ha𒁏rd to define it exactly, but you kind of know the feeling when you see it. The greatest rainy day movies can be bright and breezy, or dark and moody - it all depends on how much th𒁏e storm outside rages.

For the next time that the weather doesn't play nice and forces you to cancel plans (which, let's be honest, we're all seꩲcretly happy about), here are 32 cozy movies to settle in with on a rainy day.

32. Clue (1985)

Clue

(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

The famous murder mystery board game comes to life in this witty and madcap classic from director Jonathan Lynn. When several anonymous government officials are invited to an isolateᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚd mansion - on a dark and stormy night, no less - the lights go off and a murd🍌er is committed. The culprit is inside, but their identity is up for the audience to decide in one of three different (and hilarious) endings.

31. The Truman Show (1998)

The Truman Show

(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

In one of Jim Carrey's best movies of his career, the comic star plays an ordinary man who has no idea that his whole life is, in fact, a staged reality TV production. Part psychological drama, part romantic comedy, and part social satire, The Truman Sho♒w still hits hard with its omnipresent understanding of technology and the and the ironic isolation we feel in things that are supposed to connect us. When it rains it pours, and that's especially true in The Truman Show.

30. Pig (2021)

Pig

(Image credit: NEON)

In this late-career classic from Nicholas Cage, the Oscar-winning actor plays a reclusive truffle forager who, in a previous life, was a renowned restaurant chef in Portland. After losing his prized pig, Cage returns to the city in search of the ones who took away his happiness. Often described inc🔴orrectly as "Nicholas Cage is John Wick," Pig is actually an emotional drama and meditative character study that rejects traditional revenge narratives to instead explore themes like grief and loss. It's a heavy movie, but its slow pace makes it perfect for those afternoons where you're not going anywhere.

29. Moonrise Kingdom (2012)

Moonrise Kingdom

(Image credit: Focus Features)

Pretty much any Wes Anderson makes for perfect rainy day viewing. But his young adult romantic drama Moonrise Kingdom from 2012 feels especially made for overcast weather coziness. Set in New England, two 12-year-old pen pals in love abscond to an isolated beach, which plunges their little seaside town iꦬnto chaos as the adults - including a cast featuring Bruce Willis, Edward Norton, Bill Murray, Tilda Swinton, and Jason Schwartzmann - search for the tween romantics against a major storm. An elaborate coming-of-age adventure about young love, Moonrise Kinജgdom is Anderson at his finest.

15. A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood (2019)

A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood

(Image credit: Sony Pictures Releasing)

For those days when it's not actually a beautiful day in your neighborhood, there is this uplifting drama that makes us believe in the legend of Mister Rogers. In Marielle Heller's film, Tom Hanks dons the cardigans of famed TV host Fred Rogers when he's interviewed by a jaded magazine journalist (Matthew Rhys). The two form an unexpected bond as Fred Rogers instructs the writer on how to cope with his estranged father's imminent death. Based on the drafting and publication of a real Esquire article, A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood isn't a gaudy show of Hanks doing Rogers impr༒essions, but actually a moving film about the importance of kindness.

14. Knives Out (2019) and Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery (2022)

Knives Out

(Image credit: Lionsgate)

Rian Johnson's homage to Agatha Christie whodunnits comes alive in both his 2019 murder mystery Knives Out and its semi-connected 2022 sequel, Glass Onion. Both follow the gentleman detective Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) as he investigates cases of murder, as well as the web of lies, deceit, and betrayal that surround them. While Knives Out became an instant autumnal favorite due to its layered wardrobes and crunchy leaves exteriors, Glass Onion has some fun in the sun set in an exotic Greek 🍰island. Whether you're trying to match the vibes or counteract them, rainy days call for Benoit Blanc to get the job done. 

13. Road to Perdition (2002)

Road to Perdition

(Image credit: DreamWorks Pictures)

In one of the few movies where the affable Tom Hanks channels his darker side, Sam Mendes' handsome Depression-era period thriller Road to Perdition feels appropriate for when the rain has you in the mood for shady anti-heroes and pitch black atmospherics. Adapted from a comic by Max Allan Collins and Richard Piers Rayner, itself a retelling of the Japanese samurai manga Lone ✨Wolf & Cub, Hanks plays an Irish mob enforcer who takes his young son (Tyler Hoechlin) on a long road to revenge against those who slaughtered their family. Road to Perdition isn't stress-free, but there's something reassurin🥂g about Tom Hanks knowing how to use a tommy gun that makes you believe everything's gonna be fine.

12. Streets of Fire (1984)

Streets of Fire

(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

In Walter Hill's rock-'n-roll fairy tale, the city streets of Richmond are soaked in both rain and blood. An ex-soldier (Michael Paré) must rescue his club singer ex-girlfriend with big dreamsꩵ, Ellen (Diane Lane) from the clutches of an outlaw motorcycle gang led by the venomous Raven (Willem Defoe). Not only is the noir-inspired, neon-centric set design of Streets of Fire gorgeous to look at, but its story about lovers with too much history between them is exactly the kind of thing that makes us all want to take a stroll in the rain.

11. Rear Window (1954)

Rear Window

(Image credit: Paramount Pictures)

Alfred Hitchcock's mega-classic mystery knows all too well about isolated boredom. James Stewart plays an injured photographer who, with a pair of binoculars out of his bedroom window, suspects his nꦛeighbor might have murdered his wife. Rear Window is simply too perfect for rainy days because, well, who among us haven't been a little bit nosy about our next door neighbors when we're stuck at home?

10. The Perks of Being a Wallflower (2012)

The Perks of Being a Wallflower

(Image credit: Summit Entertainment)

Written and directed by Stephen Chbosky, and based on his own 1999 novel, The Perks of Being a Wallflower is a tender-hearted rom-com dripping with melancholic youth and weeping nostalgia for the friendships we forge during our most preciouജs years. Logan Lerman stars as a teenager suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder who befriends two cool older students, played by Ezra Miller and Emma Watson. Beloved today as a cult classic and an exemplar of early 2010s pop culture - it's truly a "Tumblr movie" if there ever was one - The Perks of Being a Wallflower shows the upside of staying inside.

9. Sleepless in Seattle (1993)

Sleepless in Seattle

(Image credit: TriStar Pictures)

Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan are icons for a reason, and it's because of movies like Sleepless in Seattle. A towering romantic comedy from Nora Ephron, Hanks plays a widower whose son calls in to a popular radio show. He goes "viral" (in a pre-internet way), including attracting the attention of a lovesick journalist (Ryan) stuck in a loveless engagement. Nora Ephron's movies speak for hopeless romantics everywhere, and Sleepless in Seattle especially captures that familiar kind of yearning - 𝓡the kind that only the rain makes us feel.

8. The Batman (2022)

The Batman

(Image credit: Warner Bros. Pictures)

A dark Batman reboot movie ain't nothing new. But through the deliberate craftsmanship of Matt Reeves, Gotham City comes alive as the rain-soaked hellscape it's meant to be. In Reeves' 2022 epic The Batman, Robert Pattinson dons the cape and cowl aꦦs an inexperienced crusader still learning the tricks of his trade in a corner of the DC multiverse where the sun never seems to shine. Unlike Christopher Nolan's version of the Batman story, Reeves' movie pierces the screen with its otherworldly imagination of Gotham City - not to mention a romantic and sweeping score by Michael Giacchino 🅠- to create a place overrun with nocturnal creatures. 

7. The Breakfast Club (1985)

The Breakfast Club

(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

While all of the movies in the John Hughes canon feel right for dreary days, Hughes' 1985 teen classic The Breakfast Club really knows how to brighten up darkened moods. Set over a fateful Saturday detention at a suburban high sch♛ool, five studen🥃ts with virtually in common find ways to connect in ways none of them could ever imagine. A touchstone of 1980s pop culture and an outsized influence in the teen movie genre, The Breakfast Club's bottle-episode setting makes for timeless viewing whenever we, too, feel stuck in detention.

6. Language Lessons (2021)

Language Lessons

(Image credit: Shout! Studios)

The COVID-19 pandemic spawned many "Zoom movies" that made use of our sudden familiarity with online video calls. While many of these movies explored the horror genre, writer/director/star Natalie Morales collaborated with Mark Duplass for the wonderful, uptempo comedy Language Lessons. A widowed man (Duplass) learns to grieve for his late husband with his online Spanish teacher (Morales), their time together an unexpected last "gift" of love. Language Lessons is all about the importance of connection and understanding e🍸ven if it's over long-distance. Even on rainy days, it can make us say "te amo" with a smile.

5. Drinking Buddies (2013)

Drinking Buddies

(Image credit: Magnolia Pictures)

When the bad weather still makes you want to get buzzed, raise a glass to Drinking Buddies. Joe Swaꦏnberg's cult mumblecore gem stars Olivia Wilde and Jake Johnson as coworkers at a Chicago brewery who refuse to openly recognize their feelings for one another as they date other people. With fully improvised dialogue and real alcohol imbibed by the actors, Drinking Buddies helps wash away those boring afternoons.

4. Safety Not Guaranteed (2012)

Safety Not Guaranteed

(Image credit: FilmDistrict)

Before reigniting the Jurassic Park series with his impossibly big summeওr tentpole Jurassic World, Colin Trevorrow delighted audiences with his sentimental indie sci-fi Safety Not Guaranteed. A magazine intern (Aubrey Plaza) meets an eccentric man (Mark Duplass) whose classified ad asking for time travel companions kicks off a journey about love in strange places and faith in the impossible. While Safety Not Guaranteed is saccharine enough to induce diabetic shock, it's sunny and easygoing, with a big heart that can t🉐riumph over the dullest of days.

3. Lost in Translation (2003)

Lost in Translation

(Image credit: Focus Features)

Sofia Coppola's new millennium classic Lost in Translation is a soft focus portrait of companionship, its story transcending cliched meet-cutes for something more and undefinable. Which is why it's perfect for those cloudy afternoons spent indoors. In Japan, an a𝓰ging Hollywood star (played by Bill Murray) forges a connection with a captivating and lonely college graduate (Scarlett Johansson). More than just the movie that catapulted both Coppola and Johansson's careers, Lost in Translation has allowed us all to find how to express what we feel without us hearing a word. 

2. The Crow (1994)

The Crow

(Image credit: Miramax)

A moody and macabre '90s classic drenched in shadows, its dark story of a star taken too soon is woefully too fitting. Based on the indie superhero comics of the same naღme, The Crow tells of a rock musician (played by the late Brandon Lee) who comes🦩 back to life one year after his murder to avenge his family and protect a helpless, crime-ridden city. Through the eye of director Alex Proyas, The Crow soars with a magnetic Lee, a killer soundtrack, and a goth rock aesthetic that has aged impossibly well.

1. Good Will Hunting (1997)

Good Will Hunting

(Image credit: Miramax)

Gus Van Sant's decorated late '90s classic just knows what it means to be a cozy rainy day movie. Matt Damon stars as Will Hunting, a janitor at MIT who is found to have genius-level intellect. Ordered by court to attend therapy, he spends time with Dr. Sean Maguire (Robin Williams), who helps Will truly learn how to live his lꦐife in a way that makes sense. When the weather forbids adventure, Good Will Hunting is inspiring e🧔nough to make us get up and get out anyway. Because all of us, in our own ways, have to see about a girl.

Eric Francisco is a freelance entertainment journalist and graduate of Rutgers University. If a movie or TV show has superheroes, spaceships, kung fu, or John Cena, he's your guy to make sense of it. A former senior writer at Inverse, his byline has also appeared at Vulture, The Daily Beast, Observer, and The Mary Sue. You can find him screaming at Devils hockey games or dodging enemy fire in🅠 Call of Duty: Warzone.