That's really what it's all about.
After the wedding, you'll watch it often. You'll notice things you missed, catch parts of speeches you didn't hear, and see your day from a new perspective.
Then life gets busy with work, kids, and everything else. You won't watch it every month, and that's okay.
After a few years, you might watch it again—maybe on an anniversary or just because. It feels different. You pay more attention to the people, how they looked, and how they sound. If you have kids by then, they'll want to watch it too. They'll ask about everyone, and they'll laugh at how you looked. It quietly becomes part of your family's story.
This is the bit couples don't think about at the start.
People change. Some people who were there won't always be. Voices you heard every week become voices you can't hear anymore — except here.
Photos show you how things looked. Video lets you hear them, see them move, and feel the room again. That's the difference.
I've had couples message years later just to say thanks. Not because they watch it all the time, but because when they do, they're glad it exists.
You don't book a wedding video to watch it every day. You book it so that when the moment is right and you press play, it still means everything.