Have you ever watched a film which you could not stop watching and wanted to watch it again?
I have watched such a film - xxxx directed by xxxxx.
not a teacher/native speaker.

Student or Learner
does this sentence sound natural to native speakers or not? If not, will you please tweak it?
Have you ever watched a film you could not be eager to pause it, or made you watch it again? I have already watched one, known as [blaah blaah blaah] written by [Blaah Blaah Blaah].
Thanks in advance.![]()
Have you ever watched a film which you could not stop watching and wanted to watch it again?
I have watched such a film - xxxx directed by xxxxx.
not a teacher/native speaker.
Remember - if you don't use correct capitalisation, punctuation and spacing, anything you write will be incorrect.
What do you mean by not being eager to pause?
For me, a good movie makes you want to pause - if for instance you need to take the dog out or fix a snack.
A bad movie, you aren't so worried that you might miss a few minutes of the action.
I took it to mean a movie so good that you are completely gripped by it, unwilling to pause the film even for a snack or a toilet break. You are so desperate to see what happens next, you can't bring yourself to stop it. If a film were that good, I certainly wouldn't take the dog out for a walk in the middle of it!
With a bad movie, I would probably pause it quite happily to go and do something else. I might stop it and not bother finishing it.
Remember - if you don't use correct capitalisation, punctuation and spacing, anything you write will be incorrect.
Exactly!![]()
Is it all right to use the present tense instead of the past tense? How does this sentence sound to the natives?
Have you ever watched a film you are reluctant to pause, or makes you want to watch it again? I have already watched/seen one lah blah blah written by Blah Blah Blah.
Have you ever watched... - is in the present perfect tense, about something you have done, a film you have watched.
When we talk about a film, we usually talk about the director rather than the writer.
not a teacher