Soderbergh Lifts Ocean's Eleven in Tudum's 15 Rewatchable Movies

Soderbergh Lifts Ocean's Eleven in Tudum's 15 Rewatchable Movies

tudum puts Ocean's Eleven back in the frame with an 83% Rotten Tomatoes approval score, and AOL’s list of the 15 most rewatchable movies of the 2000s makes the case for why it keeps getting played again. The selection treats repeat viewing as a real marker of staying power, not just nostalgia.

Soderbergh's Ocean's Eleven

Steven Soderbergh rebooted Ocean's Eleven as a star-packed action-adventure saga, and the list argues nothing beats the original for rewatchability. Danny Ocean is freshly sprung from a four-year stint in the pen when he reconnects with Rusty Ryan to plot a heist against Terry Benedict, with Reuben Tishkoff supplying the cash for the assault on three of Benedict's properties.

The setup is tight enough to survive repeat viewings, especially because the story keeps folding in the same pressure points: Tishkoff wants revenge after Benedict shoved him out of their shared casino business, and Danny's ex-wife Tess is dating Benedict. That is the kind of clean, loaded conflict that makes a studio-era caper feel engineered for reruns on paid streaming, Blu-ray, or a platform like Netflix.

Kill Bill's 85%

Kill Bill Part 1 lands even higher, with an 85% Rotten Tomatoes approval rating, and the list places Quentin Tarantino at his high-octane, highly stylized best. Beatrix Kiddo has been in a coma for four years when she wakes up, kills a man trying to sexually assault her, and starts working through the revenge run that follows her near-death and the loss of her baby daughter.

Part 1 holds several fights that the list says require rewatches to fully enjoy, while Part 2 supplies the conclusion to Beatrix's odyssey of blood-soaked revenge. Brad Pitt, George Clooney, Andy García, Elliott Gould, and Julia Roberts are part of the wider 2000s film landscape here, but the business point is narrower: the films that survive multiple passes tend to be the ones with crisp design, easy-to-track motivations, and set pieces viewers can revisit without losing the thread.

Why the list lands

The 15-film ranking turns rewatchability into a commercial signal. It is not just a nostalgia exercise; it tracks the movies people return to on streaming and in physical formats, and these two titles sit near the top because they combine strong approval scores with plots that reward another viewing.

For readers deciding what to put on next, the shortlist is doing the work already: start with Ocean's Eleven if you want the cleaner caper, or Kill Bill if you want the tougher, more stylized revenge arc. Either way, the list says the 2000s still have titles built to be watched again, not just remembered once.

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