I Got A Pretty Big List Cause Im Kind Of An Emotional Guy And I Watched A Lot Of These With My Ex So They Extra Got To Me Cause I Thought Of What I Would Do In That Situation Or If It Could Happen To Us.
1 The Notebook "When They Died Together I Just Lost It"
2 A Walk To Remember " When She Dies I Lost It Esp With My Ex With Me "
3 Forrest Gump "When Jenny Dies And Forrest Is At Her Grave Talking About Thier Son"
4 My Girl " When Thomas Jay Dies "
5 Titanic " When Jack Dies " I Was With My Ex On This One 2
6 RENT " When Angel Dies " That Was Hard To Watch Cause Its Of Aid's In The 80's And They Really Didnt Have A Way Of Suppressing It Back Then"
7 Philidelphia " Tom Hanks Death Also Dealing With Aids "
8 The Color Purple " So Sad "
9 Alpha Dog " The Death Of Zack Esp Since It Was Based On A Tru Story "
10 Old Yellar " Gets Me Everytime "
11 Saving Private Ryan " A Lot Of Scenes But Esp Tom Hanks Last Line " Earn This " Just Goes To Show Everything They Had To Live And Go Through
12 Schlinders List " So Many Scenes Made Me Cry In This Film I Cant Name Em All "
13 Braveheart " The Final Battle Gets Me Everytime " William Wallace
14 The Shawshank Redemption " Morgan Freeman Is Brilliant " When you see Red walking toward Andy on the beach and there's a brief moment where they look at one another and wave and then as the camera pulls back and from a distance you can see the two of them embrace, a years-in-the-making, once-in-a-lifetime, friendship-defining hug. Okay, maybe that's overstating it a bit, but it's a pretty damn powerful moment.
15 Flowers In The Attic " So Sad What Happened To Those Kids "
16 Mommie Dearest " So Sad What Christine Had To Go Through " NO MORE WIRE HANGERS!
17 Antwone Fisher
Okay, so it was sort of sappy and a bit over-sentimental. But it hooked me. Derek Luke is a knockout and his search for identity and family is pretty riveting at times. It was the sequence at the end that did it for me, though. When he finally tracks down his relatives and enters a home full of excited, eager faces, welcoming him with open arms, giving him a real home for the first time in his life, I'll be honest, I blubbered. I gushed. But come on, you'd have to have a heart made of stone for this sequence not to tug at your heartstrings at least a little.
18 Dead Poets Society
The old standby. One of the few where I think it's okay for guys to admit they cried when watching it. I cried when Robert Sean Leonard committed suicide in his twig-branch crown. I cried when Ethan Hawke ran out into the snow and sobbed and had to be given a mouthful of snow to keep him calm. I cried at the end when they all get up on their desks, in defiance of the new teacher and in admiration of the departing Robin Williams, all of them crying out "O Captain, My Captain." When I was young and first saw it, I cried. I think it was the first movie to ever get me really emotional. And to this day, it still gets me.
19 In America
I'd be hard-pressed to think of a time when I cried more in a movie. I mean, I just sobbed. This one just hit me and I don't know what it was. There's this beautiful moment in the last scene of the film, a brief two-line exchange between the father and one of his daughters that just killed me. It totally snuck up on me and though I'd been expecting to watch sort of a sad movie, I didn't realize it would hit me quite so hard. It was completely unexpected and I started crying without even noticing. A truly great, powerful little movie.
20 Good Will Hunting
Terrible title, great movie. The emotional apex of the film -- "It's not your fault" -- could have gone awry in so many ways and become a parody, a spectacular misfire. It didn't. Gus Van Sant hits the mark, and Robin Williams and Matt Damon play the scene to utter perfection. And that's just the first scene that made me weep. I also lost it at the end, when Ben Affleck's character goes to pick up Will and finds an empty house. He gives a slight smile, simultaneously laced with sadness and joy. The film cuts to Will's junked up car heading West, and I'm done. The perfect ending to a classic film.
And Finally One Of The Biggest Tear Jerkers From My Childhood. E.T. (1982)
This one is self-explanatory, but it's worth mentioning because the film is a timeless classic. Heartfelt departures are always effective in generating tears, but no scene in the history of moving pictures demonstrates this better than the final scene of Steven Speilberg's early masterpiece. When E.T. leaves Elliot and returns to his ship, it hits every emotional note. You must understand that I'm replaying the scene in my head right now while trying to write about it, and I can't type the dialogue without tearing up. I'm 23 years old, by the way. That's how powerful this film is.
Wait One More Honorable Mention And Its Kinda Weird But It Really Got Me As A Kid Esp.
The Monster Squad One Of My All Time Favorite Movies From Being A Kid When Frankenstein Has To Leave Thru Limbo And The Lil Girl Phobe Says No Frankenstein Dont Go I Love You!!! And Then Throws Him Her Cubby Aka Teddybear And Its Just A Tear Jerker For Me You Know? Cause He Was The Misunderstood Monster And Basically Has The Mentality Of A Kid And I Was Just So Sad To See Him Go And Esp For The Lil Girl Cause He Was Like Her Best Friend.
This Is By Far One Of My All Time Fave Movies Of The 80's!!!!
This Is A Shirt Design Im Kicking Around In My Head.
This Is My Fave Character From The Movie "He Was The Older Bad Ass" Named Rudy
Love That 80's Hair
This Was My Second Fave Character Named Horace Aka Fatkid In The Movie. Sadly He Passed Away In The Mid 2 Late 90's RIP Horace Ill Always Remember You Killing The Creature From The Black Lagoon With That 12 Gauge