90s & 2000s Movies Trivia
From Titanic to Iron Man, from Toy Story to The Dark Knight, the films of the 90s and 2000s defined modern blockbuster culture and launched most of the franchises still running today.
138 quizzes in Movies
Donnie Darko Trivia: Mad World Edition
12 questions about the 2001 cult time-loop indie.
Dumb and Dumber Trivia: Lloyd and Harry Edition
So you're telling me there's a chance — at acing 12 questions.
DVD Era Family Movies Trivia
12 questions about the early-DVD-era kid movies played 47 times in your minivan.
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Trivia
12 questions about Charlie Kaufman and Michel Gondry's 2004 masterpiece.
Fight Club Trivia: First Rule of the Quiz Is...
12 questions about Fincher's 1999 anti-consumerist landmark.
Final Destination Franchise Trivia
12 questions about death's most inventive movie series.
Finding Nemo Trivia: 12 Questions Across the Pacific
Just keep swimming — through 12 reef-themed questions.
Forrest Gump Trivia: Box of Chocolates Edition
Run, Forrest, run — through 12 questions about the 1994 Best Picture winner.
Free Willy Trivia: Whale Movie Edition
12 questions about the 1993 boy-and-his-orca cultural moment.
Garden State Trivia: Zach Braff Era
12 questions about the 2004 indie that defined a decade of Sundance.
Gladiator Trivia: Are You Not Entertained?
12 questions about Ridley Scott's 2000 swords-and-sandals comeback.
Goodfellas Trivia: Henry Hill Edition
As far back as I can remember, I always wanted to take this 12-question quiz.
About 90s & 2000s Movies
Movies from 1990 through 2009 occupy a peculiar nostalgic sweet spot — old enough to feel like artifacts, recent enough that everyone agrees they were great. This was the era of the practical-effects spectacle (Jurassic Park, The Matrix, Independence Day), the indie revolution (Pulp Fiction, Reservoir Dogs, Office Space, Fight Club), the rise of CGI animation (Toy Story, Shrek, The Incredibles, Finding Nemo), and the teen comedy renaissance (Mean Girls, Bring It On, Clueless, 10 Things I Hate About You, Legally Blonde).
It was also the era when "going to the movies" still meant something. There were no streaming alternatives, no second-screen distractions, no $24 IMAX surcharges — just you, a dark room, and an extremely sticky floor. We test the obvious classics, the cult favorites, and the supremely 2003 "I rented this from Hollywood Video on a Friday night" specials.