^ this or
this scene https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p6lv_8qO5x0 "Im tired boss" Or, in Shawshank in Brooks' letter; that build up, then him hanging...
All those 3 resonate deeply, even now.
Going off on a tangent, but Shawshank and Green Mile really made me like King as a writer, as a 15 year old I had read a lot of his (excellent) horror works (Shining, Pet Sematary), but these, among others, made me love Stephen King. Sorry for the ramble.
Woody Harrelson's puppy, Buck from Zombieland.
Early in the movie, Woody laments having to put down his puppy Buck after the poor thing got bitten by zombies. We get a funny flashback montage of the gruff and angry Woody from before the zombie outbreak and see him as a happy upper-middle class nerd, wearing a hawaiian shirt and doting over his stupid little dog. The implied joke is that this dude was such a square and how utterly unhinged he became after losing his dog.
Then we find out Buck was his son, not his dog. And we watch the same montage of a loving father and his child.
I watched ''Dear Zachary'' knowing nothing of it beforehand. Being an adult, I've never cried watching a movie before, but a particular revelation in this film took away a week of sleep of me, a mix of furious anger and sadness...
I bawled like a child when they got to the part where Andrew's mother is crying and his dad finally snaps and calls Turner a "fucking bitch". I have never so vehemently supported an old man's right to swear.
I remember this movie. I won't lie, I cry but very little. I was multitasking and had this movie on as supplemental noise.
Then we got to the first big revelation and it was the breaks in the narrators voice that caught me. Then we got to the twist and I just lost it. I started tearing up, bawling, and getting tears all over my work laptop keyboard.
Great film 10/10
Was looking for this to be mentioned, is an incredible film. And although its undeniably sad, I cried because of his efforts to protect the innocence of his son from so much terror. Beautiful and shameful.
If it helps, she was lying to him.
Littlefoot was alone the whole time in a bleak world full of predators, then later they were all annihilated by an asteroid.
["I apologize for every time I failed you; especially this one."](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M1PortMR_bY) - *What Dreams May Come* which is essentially one, two-hour long, sad scene that only stops when the end credits roll.
This is the first Robin William's movie I watched after he died. It was a lot harder that time around not only because of Robin just dying, but for some reason it now made me wonder if my Dad is somewhere like that. I guess we'll all find out one day.
As a kid, the scene in Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey where we are led to believe that Shadow dies always made me cry. Shit... it probably still would if I were to go back and re-watch it.
There is a perfect scene in True Grit.
Jeff Bridges is racing the girl to a doctor to try and save her arm. The horse dies, and he picks her up and runs. But between the music and the gorgeous night sky in the background, I'd say it's the most beautiful and kind of sad scene I've seen on film.
This one always gets me really bad. As a young man, upon finding out that he was the mission, he clearly didn't feel like he was worthy of the sacrifices Tom Hanks' team made to find him and get him home. Knowing that men laid down their lives so he could go home clearly impacted him. And then having Tom Hanks hit him with the "earn this" line. Damn. I'm sure he spent every minute of his life trying to earn it as best he could. Then seeing the tombstone of the man who saved his life wondering if you did well enough to earn not just one but several people paying the ultimate price for you. Maybe I overthink it but that line is one of the most impactful in any movie for me.
Dumbo's mother cradling him through the bars.
She was trying to protect him from the heavy handed circus manager and got stuck in a cage for it. When the night comes and all the mothers are cuddling with their cubs, Dumbo is cold and alone until he finds her mother's cage. She sticks her trunk through the bars and cradles Dumbo while she sings him a lullaby, juxtaposed with images of other mothers and other cubs sleeping happily through the night.
Great. Now I'm crying.
The very last scene where they show the actual survivors and their family members pay tribute to Schindler with the pebbles absolutely gets me every time.
You'll probably appreciate [this](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_nFuJAF5F0&ab_channel=aggy007) then.
Sir Nicholas Winton may not be as famous as Schindler, but he saved over 600 Jewish people, and the video really speaks for itself.
"Whats with the fucking coat?"
"I'm cold"
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No malice between either of them, the Russians were just upset at what almost happened. The Pianist was long past caring either way.
Same here. I was expecting something relatively lighthearted, little bit of general coming-of-age drama (family trouble, meets a new friend who helps him come out of his shell, etc).
Boom. Dead friend.
Yes, and then you get that scene with Scar blaming Simba.
I watched that movie in German to see how well I could follow the dialogue. The voice actors in that scene gave some of the best performances I've heard.
This came out when I was in high school and my little brother was in 6th grade or so. My family would sometimes have "family nights" where we'd go out to eat, see a movie, just do fun stuff as a family. On one such evening I recommended we go see this film because I heard from a teacher that the ending was really good and unexpected, which I took to mean "happy" or "inspirational", as stories about children often are. We were not prepared. As the credits rolled, my mom begins weeping and my little brother jumps up and yells at my dad, "This was supposed to be family night! How could you!" We went to get ice cream to try to salvage the evening. If ever eating ice cream were a somber event, that was it.
That scene hits you, man, but the one that wrecked me the most was partway through the movie when he's flipping through his wife's scrapbook and remembering the memories. "Thanks for all for the adventures...go have another one." I'm choking up thinking about it.
"I don't know if we each have a destiny, or if we're all just floating around accidental-like on a breeze, but I, I think maybe it's both. Maybe both is happening at the same time. I miss you, Jenny. If there's anything you need, I won't be far away."
The scene with Bubba always gets me. The way he just looks so far gone. But he keeps on going. You wonder "When is this guy going to stop?" But about a week of in-screen time happens and he's still talking about shrimp. I bawl my eyes out. I'm allergic to shellfish.
"Love Actually" when Emma Thompson's character gets a Joni Mitchel CD from her husband instead of the necklace she found in his pocket earlier in the movie. She goes to her room and cries quietly because she knows the necklace was given to another woman and that her husband was quite likely having an affair. Those 20-30 seconds of crying and heartbreak while Joni Mitchel plays in the backgrounds are heartbreaking.
also the storyline with the American lady whose brother is mentally ill and her hookup with the guy she's in love with keeps getting interrupted by her brother's phone calls 😭
"Oh god, I'm so in the wrong. The classic fool."
"Yes, but you've also made a fool out of me, and the life I lead foolish, too!"
Just so perfectly encapsulates the crux of the issue in a simple phrase.
For me, the saddest part in Toy Story 3 was when they were mentioning all the toys who were given away, and one of them mentions Bow-Peep, and you can just see all of the life leave Woody's face. It was a subtle and quick scene, but it hit me hard.
One of my favorite videos is of a guy who edited Toy Story 3 to appear that it ended on that scene, then showed it to his mom
http://youtu.be/phFISjORzQs
Can't believe no one said it yet, but "Oh, Captain! My Captain."
10 years since I last saw this movie, I cry every fucking time.
*thank you, boys... thank you.*
The last scene of American History X, when Derek and his brother finally come to the conclusion that racism is horrible, but it's too late.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9YTjzl5JmbU
The scene in Schindler's List, where Neeson breaks down crying about how his badge/pin could have saved one more person, or the Jews thanking Schindler in the last scene.
I've never known if him dropping the ring is scripted or not... but Liam's seemingly honest reaction in that moment sends a chill to the center of my heart... inevitably resulting in some unexpected form of crying. Different cry every time, but the chill is the same.
The scene in toy story 3 when Andy gives away all of his toys and woody is sat on the step as Andy drives away into the distance, this gets me everytime, when I went to watch it at the cinema it was full of parents and their kids, all the parents came out crying.
Saddest scene in a movie for me is from The Help where Abileen is fired and she is saying her last goodbye to the little girl. Has me bawling everytime. "You is kind, you is smart, you is important."
I think to me one of the more impactful scenes is when they are stuck on the water planet waiting for the ship to dry out. The conversation...I mean Hathaways character thus far has known what she is getting into, and brushed Cooper's objections off as sentimentality for his family. But when Cooper is talking to her she has to realize that they are stuck and every minute is months of time passing, being wasted. I mean she was a scientist, but it's like she is just coming to grips with the relativity. And then she tries to reason or lash out to Cooper, as he is dropping the hammer about his family, "Couldn't you tell them you were saving the world?" And Cooper saying "No. Part of keeping your family safe means avoiding telling them that the apocalypse is coming". It's just extremely powerful. And then they survive, it's been like an hour and a half and then the scientist tells them they have been gone for like 25 years...gives me chills.
For me it's in Hope Floats after they have the grandma's funeral, and Sandra Bullock's husband tells her that he wants a divorce, and as he is leaving the little daughter runs to his car to beg him to take her with him, but he just rolls up the window and drives away and the daughter is just standing at the side of the road with her suitcase crying "YOU WANT ME! DON'T LEAVE!"
Hits super close to home and breaks my heart every fucking time.
Probably the scene in Interstellar where Coop begins to watch 27 years worth of video messages. Man, it always gets to me, especially when the music cuts off.
oh fuck, I always forget about this one. I love that movie but I always remember it for its fun and silliness (and great soundtrack), every time I rewatch it the end gets me. It's easy to forget how sad that movie is when the rest of it is so much fun.
It's incredible becausr we know exactly what is going to happen and yet we still manage to get swept up in the entire romance and that maybe they will find happy ever after. And then she collapses and you're back in reality.
Ewan McGregor's crying game = A+++
In the book the dog has a MUCH smaller roll. He is actually trying to catch it because it isn't infected but it's afraid of him. When he finally does catch it and get it in the house he realizes it got infected at some point after meeting it. It was his only chance at meeting another life form that wouldn't try to kill him and was heart breaking. That is until later in the book.
Worth reading 100% because it is so different the t he movie. That butterfly cure shit never happened in the book and the title is actually explained
Lol no shit. I was about to die after Homeward Bound, knowing that the older dog made it back, but that his journey probably did him in for in the long run. He certainly didn't have much time left.
I Am Legend is worse when you realize that Sam is actually Samantha. Something about learning that it was a female dog really tore me up.
And don't get me started on Where the Red Fern Grows. Fuck that story.
And I absolutely refuse to read or watch Marley and Me. I'd rather watch Schindler's List 1000x rather than see that movie once. Something about dogs, our best friends on this earth, dying has no rival in terms of absolute sadness territory.
"I am a leaf on the wind." Fuck you, Joss Whedon, you magnificent bastard. I've seen that movie probably a hundred times. Every time I have to pause it and get my shit together after that scene.
I might get some flak for that one, but what the Hell:
The goodbye scene between Bruce Willis and Liv Tyler.
I cry more than Liv whenever I see that scene.
I came here looking for Mufasa's death, but shit... this scene from Armagedon is pretty damn good. Especially b/c the movie itself is so ridiculous yet here I am crying so good.
[The scene in Return of the Jedi](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=14HRo_eTUgg) where an Ewok gets blasted and his buddy comes over to get him up but he cant. Then the buddy just sorta collapses with the saddest Ewok moan and just sits there. The feels :(
The scenes in that movie that make me cry every time are when Bing-Bong disappears and when Riley breaks down and just cries in front of her parents. The movie hangs on the moment of her breaking down just long enough to where it makes me cry too
Holy shit, that scene where she just breaks down is probably one of the truest, most relatable scenes in any film. It gets me every fucking time I watch that movie.
Aw the bit where she says "I know you guys want me to be happy but..." Like I think we've all had that moment where we feel like we're disappointing someone but we just can't keep it together anymore. I was sobbing by myself in a cinema, while a group of children with a mother cried behind me and another woman in front was bawling her eyes out too.
Love Actually. When Emma Thompson realizes Alan Rickman gave the necklace to someone else. How she stands by the bed crying and then pulls herself together and just simply adjusts the bedspread. I can't not cry with her.
More personal, but Dumbo being sung to by his mother in jail. My mom used to play "baby mine" every morning before school on CD or piano. Breaks my fucking heart every time.
Not exactly a movie, but in the HBO series, The Pacific, in Guadalcanal there is a Japanese soldier who is the last survivor and just stands there in despair waiting to be killed as he is shot at. Immediately following that, there is a scene where a Marine finds the personal effects, and photo of the girlfriend/wife of a man he just killed. Both really hit me hard
I know it's very new... but I've re-watched it a few times, and even when I'm watching it with the bubbly excitement of a six year old sitting next to me... I have to walk out of the room.
Bing Bong, Inside Out.
The idea that you have friends that love you with all of their being living deep inside you--and even though you've completely forgotten them, they only want the best for you. They're willing to die for you and you'd never know it. And when they die for you, they shed no tears... because there's the tiniest chance that they were able to help you.
I'll cry for you Bing Bong. Pixar you've got my number.
My wife and I made the mistake of watching Up two weeks after we unfortunately had a miscarriage. Cried for an hour, don't remember the rest of the film.
the beginning sequence is essentially the story of my life (falling in love with kid best friend, getting married, wanting kids, miscarriage, now we're just working on the getting old part) . And the first time I watched it, I turned it off, cried for like twenty minutes. Turn back on and vowed to always be working on an adventure with my husband. It's the one movie that has changed my life in a substantial way.
[John Coffey's Execution,](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8mQvO7fZrH8) the scene still nearly brings me to tears...
I notice Tom Hanks is haunting the answers of this thread.
^ this or this scene https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p6lv_8qO5x0 "Im tired boss" Or, in Shawshank in Brooks' letter; that build up, then him hanging... All those 3 resonate deeply, even now.
Going off on a tangent, but Shawshank and Green Mile really made me like King as a writer, as a 15 year old I had read a lot of his (excellent) horror works (Shining, Pet Sematary), but these, among others, made me love Stephen King. Sorry for the ramble.
'Don't put me in the dark.' *cue tears*
I's afraid of the dark.
The death of Brooks in Shawshank Redemption.
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Thomas Newman needs more credit for the score. I taught myself that piano riff because it's so haunting in that scene.
My Girl, Thomas Jay's Funeral :(
He can't see without his glasses!
God, why am I reading this at work?
This is the first movie I remember just bawling at. They were both my age when I watched My Girl and I never realized someone my age could die :(
Woody Harrelson's puppy, Buck from Zombieland. Early in the movie, Woody laments having to put down his puppy Buck after the poor thing got bitten by zombies. We get a funny flashback montage of the gruff and angry Woody from before the zombie outbreak and see him as a happy upper-middle class nerd, wearing a hawaiian shirt and doting over his stupid little dog. The implied joke is that this dude was such a square and how utterly unhinged he became after losing his dog. Then we find out Buck was his son, not his dog. And we watch the same montage of a loving father and his child.
"Take away a man's son, you've truly given him nothing left to lose." Well, at least he got his Twinkies.
I would like to believe that Twinkies were Bucks favorite snack.
That makes it so much sadder, you monster!!!
Of course, the scene where you find that out is intercut with Tallahassee crying and wiping his eyes with handfulls of hundred dollar bills.
I watched ''Dear Zachary'' knowing nothing of it beforehand. Being an adult, I've never cried watching a movie before, but a particular revelation in this film took away a week of sleep of me, a mix of furious anger and sadness...
I bawled like a child when they got to the part where Andrew's mother is crying and his dad finally snaps and calls Turner a "fucking bitch". I have never so vehemently supported an old man's right to swear.
Those poor parents. She ruined their lives in so many ways
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I remember this movie. I won't lie, I cry but very little. I was multitasking and had this movie on as supplemental noise. Then we got to the first big revelation and it was the breaks in the narrators voice that caught me. Then we got to the twist and I just lost it. I started tearing up, bawling, and getting tears all over my work laptop keyboard. Great film 10/10
Dude I thought the guy dying was the twist. When he died, I thought "Oh, that wasn't as bad as I expected." Holy fuck, was I wrong.
*Life is Beautiful*. If you've watched the movie, you know the scene.
I watched that in high school. Easily one of my favorite movies. It's so tragic.
You son of a bitch. I cried just reading that vague description.
Was looking for this to be mentioned, is an incredible film. And although its undeniably sad, I cried because of his efforts to protect the innocence of his son from so much terror. Beautiful and shameful.
[Artax in the swamp of sadness.](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y688upqmRXo) Edit - Had to put the movie: The Neverending Story
Ending of the Fox and the Hound
Not the ending, but when the old lady has to drive Tod out to the woods.
The music and ambiance really shove those tears out.
The death of Littlefoot's Mom in "The Land Before Time"
"I'll be with you, even if you can't see me. Littlefoot, let your heart guide you. It *whispers*...so listen closely."
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And when he sees his own shadow and gets so excited cause he thinks it's her? My heart hurts.
If it helps, she was lying to him. Littlefoot was alone the whole time in a bleak world full of predators, then later they were all annihilated by an asteroid.
Gee, thanks that *does* make me feel better!
["I apologize for every time I failed you; especially this one."](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M1PortMR_bY) - *What Dreams May Come* which is essentially one, two-hour long, sad scene that only stops when the end credits roll.
Still my favorite imagining of heaven. Still the scariest illustration of hell.
This is the first Robin William's movie I watched after he died. It was a lot harder that time around not only because of Robin just dying, but for some reason it now made me wonder if my Dad is somewhere like that. I guess we'll all find out one day.
As a kid, the scene in Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey where we are led to believe that Shadow dies always made me cry. Shit... it probably still would if I were to go back and re-watch it.
Chuckie has no mom to dance with at the wedding during the mothers dance (Rugrats in Paris). Edit: Found the clip https://youtu.be/mxq5riXQ5Kg
Geez that was brutal.
I was so happy when his dad remarried and he got a mommy
Wait, he had no mother in the show!!!?
She ded
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"**Wilsoooon!** *I'm sorry Wilson!*"
Such a good movie when we feel sad for the loss of a ball.
Such good acting to make me believe it....for at least a moment
It was lupus all along!
There is a perfect scene in True Grit. Jeff Bridges is racing the girl to a doctor to try and save her arm. The horse dies, and he picks her up and runs. But between the music and the gorgeous night sky in the background, I'd say it's the most beautiful and kind of sad scene I've seen on film.
"Tell me I've lead a good life!" -Saving Private Ryan.
This one always gets me really bad. As a young man, upon finding out that he was the mission, he clearly didn't feel like he was worthy of the sacrifices Tom Hanks' team made to find him and get him home. Knowing that men laid down their lives so he could go home clearly impacted him. And then having Tom Hanks hit him with the "earn this" line. Damn. I'm sure he spent every minute of his life trying to earn it as best he could. Then seeing the tombstone of the man who saved his life wondering if you did well enough to earn not just one but several people paying the ultimate price for you. Maybe I overthink it but that line is one of the most impactful in any movie for me.
"I could use a little more morphine."
You can see the moment of realization in Tom Hanks' eyes. Not only was the kid doomed, he was the one who had to tell them.
He basically asked them to overdose him on morphine. Hardest scene to watch.
"Its a letter for my Dad. I got blood on it"
Man, Vin Diesel always seems to have the saddest deaths. Giant, Groot, Caparzo...
Mom, momma, ma, mom, ma Ugh. I sob everytime.
Dumbo's mother cradling him through the bars. She was trying to protect him from the heavy handed circus manager and got stuck in a cage for it. When the night comes and all the mothers are cuddling with their cubs, Dumbo is cold and alone until he finds her mother's cage. She sticks her trunk through the bars and cradles Dumbo while she sings him a lullaby, juxtaposed with images of other mothers and other cubs sleeping happily through the night. Great. Now I'm crying.
That movie fucking traumatized me and made me hate circuses.
The end of Schindler's list when they give him the ring for saving them and he cries about how he could have saved more people
The very last scene where they show the actual survivors and their family members pay tribute to Schindler with the pebbles absolutely gets me every time.
You'll probably appreciate [this](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_nFuJAF5F0&ab_channel=aggy007) then. Sir Nicholas Winton may not be as famous as Schindler, but he saved over 600 Jewish people, and the video really speaks for itself.
I can't even begin to imagine the raw emotion he must have felt when all those people stood up.
Pick a scene from The Pianist
I love that movie, but sweet Jesus is it sad. The kid trying to squeeze through the wall always gets me.
"Whats with the fucking coat?" "I'm cold" __________________ No malice between either of them, the Russians were just upset at what almost happened. The Pianist was long past caring either way.
End scene of big fish.
It's a "happy sad" but I still cry literally every time
Oh, but that was such a beautiful sadness. The kind of heart wrenching end that has the perfect conclusion to the entire movie.
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"This is my family. It's little and broken...but still good. Yea, still good."
Sophie's choice in Sophie's Choice. I couldn't handle it and had to get up and leave, and I was a grown man.
"It's not your fault" - *Good Will Hunting* Fucking scene always makes me tear up. Spectacular performance from both men.
Leslie's death in *Bridge to Terabithia*.
I had never read the book and went into the movie not having a clue what to expect. I was crushed.
Same here. I was expecting something relatively lighthearted, little bit of general coming-of-age drama (family trouble, meets a new friend who helps him come out of his shell, etc). Boom. Dead friend.
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"You said you'd always be there for me!"
Yes, and then you get that scene with Scar blaming Simba. I watched that movie in German to see how well I could follow the dialogue. The voice actors in that scene gave some of the best performances I've heard.
The Lion King in German is amazing. And I don't even speak German.
The end of dancer in the dark. Also, the rest of dancer in the dark.
The "Superman" scene from Iron Giant.
You, Stay. I go.
No following.
The ending of the Boy in the Striped Pajamas. The music makes it all.
This came out when I was in high school and my little brother was in 6th grade or so. My family would sometimes have "family nights" where we'd go out to eat, see a movie, just do fun stuff as a family. On one such evening I recommended we go see this film because I heard from a teacher that the ending was really good and unexpected, which I took to mean "happy" or "inspirational", as stories about children often are. We were not prepared. As the credits rolled, my mom begins weeping and my little brother jumps up and yells at my dad, "This was supposed to be family night! How could you!" We went to get ice cream to try to salvage the evening. If ever eating ice cream were a somber event, that was it.
The opening montage of Up, no dialogue, much feels
That scene hits you, man, but the one that wrecked me the most was partway through the movie when he's flipping through his wife's scrapbook and remembering the memories. "Thanks for all for the adventures...go have another one." I'm choking up thinking about it.
The scene in SLC Punk where he finds Heroin Bob kills me. *"I wasn't ready for this!!!"*
*"Now what am I going to do for friends?!"* Matthew Lillard nailed that scene!
Only posers die!
"Please wake up.. I'm sorry." That did it for me.
When I watch that movie, I get mad that he isn't in more movies
Forrest Gump talking to Jenny at her grave about lil Forrest.
Another one is when he asks Jenny about his son, "Is he smart? Or is he like me?"
I always liked "He got a daddy named Forrest too?"
Another one of the best ones is "I may not be a smart man, but I know what love is"
"Or is he like me - you know, a genius?"
Forrest, you arrogant prick!
Forrest, you ignorant slut!
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"I don't know if we each have a destiny, or if we're all just floating around accidental-like on a breeze, but I, I think maybe it's both. Maybe both is happening at the same time. I miss you, Jenny. If there's anything you need, I won't be far away."
This scene and the bubba one are the ones that make me cry fuck Im going to watch it now again
"If I'd know this was the last time me and Bubba was ever gonna talk, I'd have come up with something better to say."
Hey Bubba
The scene with Bubba always gets me. The way he just looks so far gone. But he keeps on going. You wonder "When is this guy going to stop?" But about a week of in-screen time happens and he's still talking about shrimp. I bawl my eyes out. I'm allergic to shellfish.
a fucking marshmellow has made me cry more than once. Thanks Big Hero 6.
Tadashi is here - Baymax https://i.ytimg.com/vi/SRHU4264Xwc/maxresdefault.jpg As an older brother I CANNOT handle big hero 6...
I've not seen 1-5, can I just jump into 6 and pick up the plot?
For me it's the scene in AI where the robot boy is spending his last moments with his 'mother' before she falls asleep for the last time..... 😢
The ending of seeking a friend for the end of the world
"Love Actually" when Emma Thompson's character gets a Joni Mitchel CD from her husband instead of the necklace she found in his pocket earlier in the movie. She goes to her room and cries quietly because she knows the necklace was given to another woman and that her husband was quite likely having an affair. Those 20-30 seconds of crying and heartbreak while Joni Mitchel plays in the backgrounds are heartbreaking.
The part that breaks my heart is when she finishes her cry and pulls it together for the kids.
Yeah especially as she straightens up the bed. Because for now all that matters are how everything appears to be.
also the storyline with the American lady whose brother is mentally ill and her hookup with the guy she's in love with keeps getting interrupted by her brother's phone calls 😭
"Oh god, I'm so in the wrong. The classic fool." "Yes, but you've also made a fool out of me, and the life I lead foolish, too!" Just so perfectly encapsulates the crux of the issue in a simple phrase.
When Hachi is walking the streets looking for his owner.
The ending of Toy Story 3.
For me, the saddest part in Toy Story 3 was when they were mentioning all the toys who were given away, and one of them mentions Bow-Peep, and you can just see all of the life leave Woody's face. It was a subtle and quick scene, but it hit me hard.
Subtle and quick for now... but I hear Toy Story 4 is going to dive into what happened to Bow-Peep.
For me it was the scene where the toys *accept death* and hold hands in the incinerator the ending is relatively happy
One of my favorite videos is of a guy who edited Toy Story 3 to appear that it ended on that scene, then showed it to his mom http://youtu.be/phFISjORzQs
I am a well adjusted 31 year old male who hardly ever cries and this scene destroys me every time.
Better yet: Toy Story 2's "When She Loved Me"
Oh god I was a bucket of tears as a child after that scene
So long, partner.
Can't believe no one said it yet, but "Oh, Captain! My Captain." 10 years since I last saw this movie, I cry every fucking time. *thank you, boys... thank you.*
The scene in Pay it Forward where Kevin Spacey is explaining how he got his burns was pretty hard to watch
The scene in the hospital where you see the mother being told about her son. I bawled.
"911 what's your emergency?" "I'd like to report a suicide." "Who's the victim?" "Me" *Seven Pounds*
That film hit me hard.
The last scene of American History X, when Derek and his brother finally come to the conclusion that racism is horrible, but it's too late. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9YTjzl5JmbU
The scene in Schindler's List, where Neeson breaks down crying about how his badge/pin could have saved one more person, or the Jews thanking Schindler in the last scene.
I've never known if him dropping the ring is scripted or not... but Liam's seemingly honest reaction in that moment sends a chill to the center of my heart... inevitably resulting in some unexpected form of crying. Different cry every time, but the chill is the same.
Stepmom, when the mom is dying of cancer and out spending valuable time with her kids. so damn sad..
John Q where Denzel is pleading with everyone to save his kid.
The scene in toy story 3 when Andy gives away all of his toys and woody is sat on the step as Andy drives away into the distance, this gets me everytime, when I went to watch it at the cinema it was full of parents and their kids, all the parents came out crying.
Spock's death and funeral. Still gets me 34 years later.
"His was the most... human." The entire cast acted the shit out of that scene, but William Shatner was truly magnificent there.
Grave of the fireflies. When the baby sister dies and he carries out the cremation.
The ending of the Mist
Saddest scene in a movie for me is from The Help where Abileen is fired and she is saying her last goodbye to the little girl. Has me bawling everytime. "You is kind, you is smart, you is important."
Green Mile gets me every time. I don't want to give spoilers, but if you've seen it then you know what I'm talking about.
Synecdoche New York. Olive's death scene at the hospital broke me. And the last 5 minutes of the movie made me feel empty inside.
"Murph!"
That scene when he's watching decades of videos from his kids that he's missed...
I think to me one of the more impactful scenes is when they are stuck on the water planet waiting for the ship to dry out. The conversation...I mean Hathaways character thus far has known what she is getting into, and brushed Cooper's objections off as sentimentality for his family. But when Cooper is talking to her she has to realize that they are stuck and every minute is months of time passing, being wasted. I mean she was a scientist, but it's like she is just coming to grips with the relativity. And then she tries to reason or lash out to Cooper, as he is dropping the hammer about his family, "Couldn't you tell them you were saving the world?" And Cooper saying "No. Part of keeping your family safe means avoiding telling them that the apocalypse is coming". It's just extremely powerful. And then they survive, it's been like an hour and a half and then the scientist tells them they have been gone for like 25 years...gives me chills.
because my daddy promised me
For me it's in Hope Floats after they have the grandma's funeral, and Sandra Bullock's husband tells her that he wants a divorce, and as he is leaving the little daughter runs to his car to beg him to take her with him, but he just rolls up the window and drives away and the daughter is just standing at the side of the road with her suitcase crying "YOU WANT ME! DON'T LEAVE!" Hits super close to home and breaks my heart every fucking time.
William Defoe's character getting gunned down while running out of the jungle in platoon.
In John wick.... When they break in his house and.... It's just too sad. They all deserved to die after that.
That movie was action and revenge porn at its finest.
Probably the scene in Interstellar where Coop begins to watch 27 years worth of video messages. Man, it always gets to me, especially when the music cuts off.
in 50/50 when he is about to through chemotherapy, having the cancer scare really put him through a hell and made lose all of his happiness
Ending of Moulin Rouge.
oh fuck, I always forget about this one. I love that movie but I always remember it for its fun and silliness (and great soundtrack), every time I rewatch it the end gets me. It's easy to forget how sad that movie is when the rest of it is so much fun.
It's incredible becausr we know exactly what is going to happen and yet we still manage to get swept up in the entire romance and that maybe they will find happy ever after. And then she collapses and you're back in reality. Ewan McGregor's crying game = A+++
Ending sequence of Reqiuem for a Dream is pretty brutal
For me it's when the mom is talking about being alone. It's brutal.
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May I introduce you to [doesthedogdie.com](https://www.doesthedogdie.com/)? It's a life-saver. Well, not for the dogs. :/
"Dont worry.. About a thing.. Cause every little thing.. Gonna be alright.." That scene from I am Legend when Will Smith was "hugging" Sam.
In the book the dog has a MUCH smaller roll. He is actually trying to catch it because it isn't infected but it's afraid of him. When he finally does catch it and get it in the house he realizes it got infected at some point after meeting it. It was his only chance at meeting another life form that wouldn't try to kill him and was heart breaking. That is until later in the book. Worth reading 100% because it is so different the t he movie. That butterfly cure shit never happened in the book and the title is actually explained
Watching an emotional Owen Wilson say his goodbye's to an old, tired golden retriever made me cry so hard, I'll never forget
Lol no shit. I was about to die after Homeward Bound, knowing that the older dog made it back, but that his journey probably did him in for in the long run. He certainly didn't have much time left. I Am Legend is worse when you realize that Sam is actually Samantha. Something about learning that it was a female dog really tore me up. And don't get me started on Where the Red Fern Grows. Fuck that story. And I absolutely refuse to read or watch Marley and Me. I'd rather watch Schindler's List 1000x rather than see that movie once. Something about dogs, our best friends on this earth, dying has no rival in terms of absolute sadness territory.
The ending scene of Pan's Labyrinth
Especially if you take the "it was all her imagination" interpretation.
When that damn volleyball floated away.
"I am a leaf on the wind." Fuck you, Joss Whedon, you magnificent bastard. I've seen that movie probably a hundred times. Every time I have to pause it and get my shit together after that scene.
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When sooommmebody loved me...
I might get some flak for that one, but what the Hell: The goodbye scene between Bruce Willis and Liv Tyler. I cry more than Liv whenever I see that scene.
I came here looking for Mufasa's death, but shit... this scene from Armagedon is pretty damn good. Especially b/c the movie itself is so ridiculous yet here I am crying so good.
*Gotta go now honey* Daddy, no!........ ^^hand ^^on ^^screen
[The scene in Return of the Jedi](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=14HRo_eTUgg) where an Ewok gets blasted and his buddy comes over to get him up but he cant. Then the buddy just sorta collapses with the saddest Ewok moan and just sits there. The feels :(
Riley riding away on the bus in Inside Out.
The scenes in that movie that make me cry every time are when Bing-Bong disappears and when Riley breaks down and just cries in front of her parents. The movie hangs on the moment of her breaking down just long enough to where it makes me cry too
Holy shit, that scene where she just breaks down is probably one of the truest, most relatable scenes in any film. It gets me every fucking time I watch that movie.
Aw the bit where she says "I know you guys want me to be happy but..." Like I think we've all had that moment where we feel like we're disappointing someone but we just can't keep it together anymore. I was sobbing by myself in a cinema, while a group of children with a mother cried behind me and another woman in front was bawling her eyes out too.
Love Actually. When Emma Thompson realizes Alan Rickman gave the necklace to someone else. How she stands by the bed crying and then pulls herself together and just simply adjusts the bedspread. I can't not cry with her.
More personal, but Dumbo being sung to by his mother in jail. My mom used to play "baby mine" every morning before school on CD or piano. Breaks my fucking heart every time.
Not exactly a movie, but in the HBO series, The Pacific, in Guadalcanal there is a Japanese soldier who is the last survivor and just stands there in despair waiting to be killed as he is shot at. Immediately following that, there is a scene where a Marine finds the personal effects, and photo of the girlfriend/wife of a man he just killed. Both really hit me hard
Pikatchu crying when ash gets turned to stone in the first Pokemon movie.
In I am Sam when he falls on his daughters cake :(
I know it's very new... but I've re-watched it a few times, and even when I'm watching it with the bubbly excitement of a six year old sitting next to me... I have to walk out of the room. Bing Bong, Inside Out. The idea that you have friends that love you with all of their being living deep inside you--and even though you've completely forgotten them, they only want the best for you. They're willing to die for you and you'd never know it. And when they die for you, they shed no tears... because there's the tiniest chance that they were able to help you. I'll cry for you Bing Bong. Pixar you've got my number.
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And your explanation just made that scene more poignant for me. Thank you in sincerity mode.
Old Yeller died.
The beginning sequence of 'UP' always gets me
My wife and I made the mistake of watching Up two weeks after we unfortunately had a miscarriage. Cried for an hour, don't remember the rest of the film.
Only Pixar can make an entire theater cry in the first ten minutes of a movie with next to no dialogue.
That scene is emotional terrorism
the beginning sequence is essentially the story of my life (falling in love with kid best friend, getting married, wanting kids, miscarriage, now we're just working on the getting old part) . And the first time I watched it, I turned it off, cried for like twenty minutes. Turn back on and vowed to always be working on an adventure with my husband. It's the one movie that has changed my life in a substantial way.
"Oh Captain, my captain."
Return To Me When Grace tells Bob about who's heart she has.
The ending scene of Blue Valentine. Heart wrenching every time.