rednoah wrote: ↑05 Jan 2025, 20:43

Do you have an example file name where FileBot didn't match the correct movie? The screenshots above show file names and matches that are correct and not questionable.
Hello, I didn't use some movies that would have given me problems, I just put them as an example. But on more than one occasion I have gone to watch a movie and realized that it was not the one I wanted to see.

In any case, you can use
Double-Click <Edit Match> or
CTRL+M when a match is in doubt, to see the covers and select a different match where necessary:
The problem has arisen when Filebot does movie renaming without consultation. Maybe it was my mistake, but when it offers me options and I have doubts, I go by the cover and if I still have doubts, by the synopsis and by the tmdb id (as I always put it in the title of the movies, I compare it with that of TMDb).
EDIT:
I experimented with adding 48x48 thumbnail images to the Inspect ➔ Match view but I didn't like the result.
We could consider adding an additional Inspect tab that displays all the movies / series / episode details including a high-resolution poster. If it's got its own tab and layout we can make it look good, but I worry that the result might be somewhat cumbersome and inefficient, and thus not all that useful, since loading all the metadata and high-resolution poster might just take quite a few seconds, multiplied by the number of options if we want to display / compare / cycle multiple options.
A high resolution image would not even be necessary. A quick display option would be enough to make matching easier.
CTRL+M (or F3 for left-handed easy access) and UP / DOWN / ENTER keyboard navigation is going to be much faster if a decision can be made based on the 48x48 thumbnail image.
I didn't know CTRL+M, thank you very much for this advice. It will always be more convenient than going to look for the id match in TMDb.