Trace Blog
Why Can't I Find This Movie?
You've got a clip stuck in your head, you've tried everything, and nothing's turned it up. Here's why the usual methods come up empty on older, obscure, or badly sourced footage — and what actually finds it.
I have a 10-second clip stuck in my head and I can't figure out what it's from. What do I even do with that?
Search by the clip itself instead of trying to describe it. Apps like Trace let you upload the actual footage and match it directly — no title, no actor name, no line of dialogue required. If the clip exists, that's your starting point.
Why doesn't reverse image search just work for this?
Reverse image search is built for still images — a single frame, a screenshot, a poster. Video is a different problem: you're matching motion, sequence, and a moving scene, not one static picture. That's why pasting a screenshot into Google often turns up nothing, even when the movie is well known. It's not that the tool is bad, it's that it's answering a different question than the one you're asking.
I've had this same clip saved for months and gotten nowhere. Is it a lost cause?
Not necessarily — it usually means whatever you tried was built for popular, recent titles rather than the wider pool of older or lesser-known movies. A lot of clip-identification tools work well for last year's blockbuster and poorly for anything older or more obscure, simply because of how narrow their library is. Trace is built to cover that wider range — older films, foreign titles, shows that never trended — since that's where most "unidentifiable" clips actually come from.
My clip is a screen recording of a screen recording, filmed off a laptop, half blurry. Does that ruin my chances?
It depends on the tool, but it shouldn't ruin it. A clip that's been reposted, re-compressed, or filmed off a phone loses real detail, and plenty of matching tools need cleaner source footage to work. The catch is that this is the normal state of most clips people actually have — nobody's identifying pristine studio footage, they're identifying a shaky repost from three phones ago. Trace is built to work from exactly that kind of degraded footage, not just clean originals.
I posted it on r/tipofmytongue three days ago. Should I just wait?
You can, and sometimes it pays off — those communities are genuinely good at the odd, detailed cases. But they rely on a person recognising your clip, and the more obscure it is, the smaller that chance gets. An app scanning the actual footage doesn't need anyone to have seen the movie recently, so it can answer in seconds instead of leaving you refreshing a thread for days.
Okay, so what actually finds the obscure stuff?
Something built to match on the footage itself rather than on how well-known the movie is. That's the whole idea behind Trace — Shazam, but for video — and it's specifically built for the clips that are hardest to place: old, obscure, or badly sourced.
Bottom line
The clips that feel impossible to place — old, foreign, or filmed off someone's screen three times over — are exactly the ones a footage-matching app like Trace is built for. If a person hasn't been able to name it, matching the video itself is your best shot.