I randomly got choked up at the end of Up and The Last Samurai. Others where I've come close or cried have already been said...Shawshank, Private Ryan, Braveheart, Forrest Gump, Green Mile.
I randomly got choked up at the end of Up and The Last Samurai. Others where I've come close or cried have already been said...Shawshank, Private Ryan, Braveheart, Forrest Gump, Green Mile.
Because the hair-piece came off?![]()
Never cried from a movie cause I dont listen to Drake but i've cried from laughter plenty of times from the movie Kung-Pow
Chosen One!
I'm coming!
I HOPE THEY HAVE ICEES!
It will be significant.
It's convoluted & completely absurd, but, I always cry at the end of "Indecent Proposal." And though it is all the things I state in my first sentence, what is said twixt the two then on that pier is honest & a revelation. They once again perform their marriage vows. He takes the lion's share of blame for it all by countering with a soft & incredulous query to her vow of love for him..."Still?"...She takes what is left of the blame by the simple recantation of all that's they've suffered..."Always."
Harrelson then reclines the back of his head to the wooden bench as Orbison's rare recording of "A Love So Beautiful" goes over the credit. I have it on the DVR and once a month I imbibe.
I'm naturally empathetic, so pretty much any movie or TV show that has people crying also makes me cry. They don't always make me genuinely sad or touched (that's far more difficult and takes far more skill), but they make me cry. Even movies I flat out hate, ing Seven Pounds for example, can make me cry like an idiot.
Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father
^ That movie is infuriating.
TV shows -
Futurama episodes "Jurassic Bark" and "Luck of The Fryrish."
I don't remember watching all of the Fresh Prince episode, "Papa's Got A Brand New Excuse," but I don't want to after seeing that last scene on YouTube.
Movies-
Schindler's List
The Pianist - Not nearly as sad as Schindler's List, though.
Chinatown - The ending.
The Lives of Others - "No, it's for me." Anybody who saw this movie knows what I am talking about.
Most of these were sad, but "Jurassic Bark" and especially "Luck of the Fryrish" get me.
Yeah, that's ed up.
3:20 mark
Chif
--Opening scene of "Up"
--That scene from Toy Story 3
--For some reason, Forrest Gump's speech at Jenny's gravesite
Probably a few I'm forgetting, but those are the ones that come immediately to mind.
I cry every time I see Captain Von Trapp sing Edelweiss in The Sound of Music…
Also Planes Trains and Automobiles where Steve Martin realizes that John Candy has nowhere to spend thanksgiving so he drives back to the train station and finds him and invites him over…(I understand that this is pure fantasy. People that have families and make lots of money would never give a “loser” the time of day. But still it’s a nice thought…)
That is very very deep...I just remember that weird looking kid yelling Come Back Shane, Come Back!
Still gives me the creeps...
Just thought of another one: the scene in We Are Marshall where the guy keeps shouting that his shoulder is fine.
My wife is the same. Even if she's seen the movie a million times she will cry every time.
And yes, the opening scene of Up caught me off guard and I damn near teared up. You just don't expect that at the beginning of a cartoon.
Duncan's post-game press conference>>>>>any sad movie
(game 6iixx)
Well, the kid (Brandon DeWilde) was cast correctly and then depicted accurately...he wasn't dressed to the 9's in the middle of the Montana frontier. No, he was in ill fitting clothes of a farmer's young son. He was isolated there and new adventure has come to his world. He's been around his parents his entire young life and they love and care for him deeply. They're quality people and stewards of his life. This upbringing pays off when he's able to decipher what kind of man "Shane" is. That's parenting, 1800's, 1900's, wherever man dwells. It's timeless.
What he cannot decipher is the quandary that Shane has brought upon the family. Shane does, but, the child is too young here. "Joey's" mother has fallen in love with Shane and vice versa. Shane knows this and uses his killing of Jack Palance's character to not only avenge "Rebs" murder in the streets, and cleanse the community, but, then to extricate himself from the family--from the community before he damages this family, this community that he just saved.
Shane cannot Come Back!
John Q tbh
'I am not gonna bury my son, my son is gonna bury me.'![]()
I forgot this one.
When he says 'Not goodbye, see you later' at the end of the movie......![]()
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