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VIDEOS MENU:
CLIPS FROM MOVIES 1TRAILERSTHE SIMPSONS


ENGLISH LISTENING COMPREHENSION THROUGH MOVIE CLIPS



Learning through media (movies, music, etc.) is one of the best ways to learn a new language. The exercises below use movie clips to help you to better understand spoken English.



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NEWEST VIDEOS (2025-2026):


Mercy (American English)



Song Sung Blue (American English)



The Plague (American English)



Fackham Hall (British English)



100 Nights of Hero (British English)



Oh.What.Fun. (American English)



Merv (American English)



Housemaid (American English)



I Wish You All the Best (American English)



Anniversary (American English)


OLDER VIDEOS:

Rye Lane
(British English)

First Reformed
(American English)

Emily the Criminal
(American English)

The Adam Project
(American English)

Pale Blue Eye
(American English)

Banshees of Inisherin
(Irish English)

The Covenant
(American English)

Beautiful Disaster
(American English)

Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania
(American English)

Don't Look Up
(American English)

Till
(American English)

The Hummingbird Project
(American English)

Silver Linings Playbook
(American English)

Away We Go
(American English)

Aftersun
(British English)

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
(British English)

Emergency
(American English)

Licorice Pizza
(American English)

Adventureland
(American English)

End of the Tour
(American English)





TOP TIP: How to use movies effectively to practice listening comprehension

1. Use subtitles strategically
Try this progression:
1. Target-language subtitles (not your native language)
2. Short scenes without subtitles
3. Rewatch with subtitles to check understanding

2. Choose the right content
Better for learning:
Dialogue-heavy movies
Contemporary settings
Clear speech

Harder (not ideal at first):
Heavy slang or dialects
Action movies
Historical/fantasy films

TV series are often better than movies because of repeated vocabulary, familiar characters, and shorter, manageable chunks

3. Active listening techniques
To actually improve:
1. Pause and repeat lines aloud
2. Write down phrases you didn't catch
3. Notice connected speech ("gonna," "wanna," dropped sounds)
Even 10-20 focused minutes beats 2 hours of passive watching. What movies are best for

Movies are great for:
1. Intermediate → advanced learners
2. Improving natural comprehension
3. Accent exposure

They are not ideal for:
1. Beginners
2. Learning precise grammar
3. Understanding formal speech



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