Has a movie ever brought you to tears, Cinemaphile?
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Has a movie ever brought you to tears, Cinemaphile?
Shopping Cart Returner Shirt $21.68 |
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Shopping Cart Returner Shirt $21.68 |
>It's not your fault
yes, dont laugh but "Lord of the Rings"
I was crying tears of joy because of "my god they've actually done it"
Boromir's death was incredibly emotional, makes me tear up every time
Return of the King ending with Annie Lennox singing 'On the Horizon.'
You're not alone, fren.
LOTR is one of the few times you may cry and no one should laugh.
Same for the death of an immediate family member or a long living, infinitely loyal dog.
gay post
The ending when Gandalf and Frodo get on the boat legit made me feel feel something after watching the extended trilogy for the first time over the span of a few days. I don't get emotional easily, but that scene got to me.
Boromir dying was funny because it was Sean Bean.
God damn Braveheart is such a great movie.
This. They don’t make them like that anymore. While it does have its flaws, it’s my favorite movie.
Perfect World as the only one ever for some reason. but i was like 12. it's not real you know.
Why were the English so evil?
on the wrong side of history since 12th century a.d.
>Why were the English so evil?
They were fighting the Scottish.
Imagine if you found a parasite like a tapeworm inside of you or a leech stuck on your arse sucking your blood.
You wouldn't show mercy.
this post is antisemetic
Weird how the Scots and israelites share a bunch of negative stereotypes.
>Why were the English so evil?
They learned from the Romans, and the Norse and the French.
Was that a Japanese forged sword? How did he cut through armor, cloth, flesh and bone with a single swing?
Frickin nerf sword threw me out of immersion, insurance were c**ts and didn't trust Gibson holding a metal object I guess.
The English have done a lot of bad but there's also reason why it was legal to kill a scotsman on a sunday. The scottish acted like absolute animals themselves, well recorded stuff from their own side. Braveheart is a sanitized depiction of what they were because Mel understandably hates the international israelite.
except on a sunday*
if you had english as a neighbour youd be fricking mental an all
>Be England
>Rape and commit genocide against your neighbours
>They fight back
>AAAAA HOW COULD THIS HAPPEN WHAT SAVAGES!!!
Frick you
Big Fish, that entire sequence, oof
I've only seen it once because of how hard it made me cry
Tru Confessions. was a disney channel original movie where Shia lebouf played a kid with crippling autism. nobody ever talks about that movie when they bring up his arc to a "good actor" he was like 15 and played the role perfect. there was a few really sad parts in that movie where he's like freaking out and melting down and nobody knows how to help him. that hit me in the feels cause i'm basically that moron and have been my whole life.
Lots of them. I watched my dad die a few years, so its usually any scene that touches on that subject matter
To many older movies, yes. However, nothing in the last decade has caused any emotion, save for Maverick but that’s cause it was good nostalgia bait
New movies rely on sovless CGI and spectacle.
The whole movie is pure kino imo, but especially the final scene
I cried at the end of Free Willy when I was a little kid and my parents have made fun of me for it ever since. It's been like 25 years now.
Top 10 scenes that made me cry (try not to copy anyone)
>in no particular order
1) 50/50
> Personal Experience.
2) Macross Plus
> When Guld crashes his Veritech into the AI jet
3) Dear Zachary
> A documentary where the director was fighting Canadian's bail system to rescue his murdered best friend's baby son from the mother that killed him... and the baby gets murdered during production.
4) Man of Fire (2003)
> the ending
5) Last Samurai
> Katsumoto's death
6) Turner & Hooch
> the dog dies... THE DOG DIES
7) Requiem for a Dream
> the end credits, after trying to comprehend the ending, and realize how fricked up and sad their whole existence is.
8) Pursuit of Happyness
> Say what you will about Will Smith these days, anyone fighting to get a job these days, 'you know'.
9) Clerks 3
> Say what you will about Kevin Smith these days, but I did kind of grew up with the ViewAskew universe and when Dante died, can't say I held back.
10) Iron Giant
> "Superman....BOOM"
>Superman boom from the iron giant
I'll admit that was a kino scene
Reddit stench
Scotsman here. The part about Robert the Bruce being a traitor is akin to a movie making Lincoln a secret confederate. Also, why the kilts? The Scottish army werent pagan savages. sad to say though that lots of scottish people think the movie is accurate given our fricked education system.
You all loved it so much you made an ugly statue in Mel Gibson’s image. I mean, I loved the film too but that statue was a horrible idea.
It was out of pity. The guy spent all that time creating a shitty statue and they had to put it somewhere. This is the true statute
Deep water Horizon. So many scenes but especially the end. I worked in the oil field for awhile and left after I realized how dangerous it was and how pointless it was to make so much money but never have time or energy to spend it.
>Has a movie ever brought you to tears, Cinemaphile?
yes. i was watching gods must be crazy and i cried like a b***h when lil homie was reunited with his children
>scene features an old man full of melancholy looking back on his youth and the woman he fell in love with just before he dies and reunites with her
That’s fricking brutal god damnit
The quote at the end in English reads:
Anyone who misses out on the most beautiful story of their life will only be as old as their regrets and all the sighs of the world cannot cradle their soul.
Jenny..
Not a lot of movies but these are the ones I remember:
Deep Impact
>when the crew says goodbye to their families
My Dog Skip
>when Willie leaves to go to college and Skip tries to climb in his bed but he's too old, so Willie's dad helps him up
Cast Away
>When he looks back at the island
The Mist ending
i've spent a large portion of my life caretaking for a developmentally disabled family member, so the scene that leads into and plays through the credits of Good Time was unexpectedly emotional, the opening similarly so.
>mfw i touch the pan, burn my hand
>the credits of Good Time
That hit me too. Really unexpected.
Calvary
Passion of the Christ
The Hunt
Gattaca
Blood Diamond
The Place Beyond the Pines
the first time I ever cried during a film was when my mum took me to see Dragon Heart. I was like 10 years old and fricking loved dragons so much I used to draw them all the time.
How emotional was it on a SCALE of 1 to 10?
Forrest Gump... when he realized he has a son, and he wasn't moronic.
>Im so sorry Tommy! It's ok Tommy! I love you!
Was that the movie about the Elephant?
When my daughter was about 12 weeks old I wat he'd Con Air and absolutely wept at the idea of him going to prison and missing his little girl growing up
Not a movie but when Vegeta died from Frieza I didn't know they could be wished back.
I was also 10.
We Need to Talk About Kevin, the very end where that “Mother’s Boy” song is playing
It Comes at Night, when the mom tells the dying son “it’s all right, you can let go”
>I just want to know that I did one thing right with my life!
Brendan deserved the Oscar for that line alone.
I cry all the time at movies.
I'm a 34 year old man, I look physically masculine, but I just cry all the time at movies. I cry at sad things but also when someone does something self-sacrificial.
I've wanted to kill myself for 13 years and I wonder if it's connected.
Nice digits
same except to add i haven't cried at my family and friends dying irl for decades
Every scene with love because I know I will never experience it personally.
>touching a spear thistle
Those things are terrifying.
>when the daughter starts singing