Forty Disney and Pixar favorites are already on the wheel, from Snow White to Encanto. Spin once, press play, and reclaim the twenty minutes your family usually spends negotiating.
Paste your list below, one item per line
Family movie night has a design flaw: the choosing. One kid wants Frozen for the ninth time, another wants anything but Frozen, and a parent quietly lobbies for the Pixar film that makes adults cry. Twenty minutes later the popcorn’s cold and nobody’s watching anything.
The wheel replaces the debate with a ritual:
The genius is blame redistribution: when the wheel picks, no sibling won and no sibling lost. For non-Disney nights, the general movie picker wheel runs the same play with any watchlist.
Somewhere in every friend group or family is the ambition to watch the whole animated canon and rank it properly. Release order is the death of that project — three black-and-white classics in, momentum stalls. Random order keeps the mix lively: a 1940s classic tonight, a 2020s musical next week.
The format that actually finishes:
Couples’ variant: each person seeds the wheel with ten picks, and nobody reveals which was whose until the rankings are final.
A Disney park trip starts weeks before the gates — and the pre-trip movie countdown is the cheapest part of the vacation. Put the wheel on the TV, spin every family movie night in the run-up, and let randomness build the itinerary’s emotional soundtrack. Kids walk into the park with Moana and Peter Pan fresh instead of half-remembered.
The wheel keeps working inside the trip:
For the broader what-do-we-watch problem across every service, the what to watch wheel picks up where the castle ends.