Launching today

CineTrack.TV
Search movies by feeling, not title.
11 followers
Search movies by feeling, not title.
11 followers
CineTrack’s AI understands natural language in English and Vietnamese to find movies & TV shows from descriptions, moods, or vibes. Track what you watch, build shareable lists, discover new favorites, and get episode alerts. Free to use, with AI search in PRO.







Hey Product Hunt, I'm Bean, a solo dev from Vietnam.
CineTrack started because searching for a movie by how it feels never worked. Keyword search wants a title or a genre. But I don't think "crime, 2002" - I think "a revenge thriller, the kind that feels cathartic." So I built search that takes that sentence and hands back Oldboy, The Villainess, Kill Bill Vol. 2 - and shows you the tags it picked up on (Dark & Gritty, Tense), so it's not a black box.
The part I'm proudest of: it works in Vietnamese too. I can type "xem The Glory xong hả hê, tìm phim báo thù tương tự" and it gets the slang and the intent. Every tracking app I tried could search titles; none could do this, and none in my language.
The rest is a normal tracker - watchlist, shareable lists, new-episode alerts, all free. AI search is the PRO piece ($4.99/mo). It's a PWA, so it installs from the browser, no app store. Catalog is ~20k titles right now and growing every week via an automated import — so it's curated, not exhaustive yet.
It's just me, so it's rough in places. Launch day treat: first 50 people get 30% off their first month of PRO with code PHHAPPY30 (code valid through July 31). What's a movie you can never find because you only remember the feeling? Throw it at the search and tell me if it whiffs.
(It tracks & helps you discover - it doesn't stream anything.)
The vibe search actually works, which is rare for these AI recommendation tools. Described something like "cozy rainy day mystery" and got spot-on suggestions I'd never have found scrolling Netflix.
@nazlcanzay5vlt Thanks! Curious which titles it gave you for that one and did the mood tags match what you had in mind? Always want to know when it lands vs. when it's just lucky.
How well does the AI handle really abstract vibes like "something that feels like a rainy Sunday morning"? Curious how deep the natural language understanding actually goes before it falls back to basic genre filters.