
10 Best Movies Like Sight: Extended
If you loved Sight: Extended, we've curated the perfect watchlist for you based on shared genres, themes, and directorial style.

Jonathan
Why watch this? A perfect follow-up to Sight: Extended for fans of Drama. It captures a similar emotionally gripping atmosphere.
Jonathan is a young man with a strange condition that only his brother understands. But when he begins to yearn for a different life, their unique bond becomes increasingly tested...

Omni Loop
Why watch this? A perfect follow-up to Sight: Extended for fans of Drama. It captures a similar emotionally gripping atmosphere.
Diagnosed with a black hole growing inside her chest and stuck in a loop reliving the last five days of her life, a 55-year-old wife and mother from Miami, Florida decides to solve...

Light of My Life
Why watch this? A perfect follow-up to Sight: Extended for fans of Drama. It captures a similar emotionally gripping atmosphere.
Parent and child journey through the outskirts of society a decade after a pandemic has wiped out half the world's population. As a father struggles to protect his child, their bon...

2073
Why watch this? A perfect follow-up to Sight: Extended for fans of Thriller. It captures a similar compelling atmosphere.
Inspired by Chris Marker's iconic 1962 featurette La Jetée; the year is 2073—a not-so-distant dystopian future—and the setting is New San Francisco, the scorched-earth tech-dominan...

Bicentennial Man
Why watch this? A perfect follow-up to Sight: Extended for fans of Drama. It captures a similar emotionally gripping atmosphere.
Richard Martin buys a gift, a new NDR-114 robot. The product is named Andrew by the youngest of the family's children. "Bicentennial Man" follows the life and times of Andrew, a ro...

The Giver
Why watch this? A perfect follow-up to Sight: Extended for fans of Drama. It captures a similar emotionally gripping atmosphere.
In a seemingly perfect community, without war, pain, suffering, differences or choice, a young boy is chosen to learn from an elderly man about the true pain and pleasure of the "r...