Combination of the music, seeing that Rose had a fulfilling life just like Jack made her promise, seeing all the dead homies, Rose still dreaming about Jack after all this time, etc. it’s perfect
oh shit this is the one she looks back on, isn't it? I mean I know they all are, but I was thinking this was the one where they meet up and go to dinner together but that was one rose coming down the stairs and not jack up by the clock. yeah this is a very nice scene OP I don't blame you
lol why this one? cuz jack was treated like royalty despite sleeping under a bridge a week prior?
yeah, you're right. here it is if you wanna see it again. I just skip the first 30 seconds
Something about this idea that "everyone you've ever known in your life is waiting to see you when you die" just moves me to tears every time. Like when I die I'll see my dad there to give me hug even though the last time I saw him alive was when I was 12.
I feel you bro, my dad died when I was 16 and he raised me to be an atheist, but my grandma just died and she was the sweetest Christian woman you might ever meet and she really believed that kind of thing and at this point I do believe in God and I don't know what else to hope for. Hopefully we all get out of this treacherous place and are warmly welcomed back by our loved ones.
I feel you bro, my dad died when I was 16 and he raised me to be an atheist, but my grandma just died and she was the sweetest Christian woman you might ever meet and she really believed that kind of thing and at this point I do believe in God and I don't know what else to hope for. Hopefully we all get out of this treacherous place and are warmly welcomed back by our loved ones.
I hope we all get to see our dads again bros. For me at least so I can tell him I love him.
To me this is a pretty scary idea. When I die I want nothing to do with this universe anymore. Whatever the outcome ie oblivion, heaven, hell, reincarnation I just don't wanna see the fricks responsible for making my life a living hell ever again.
Hasta la vista and frick off.
oh shit this is the one she looks back on, isn't it? I mean I know they all are, but I was thinking this was the one where they meet up and go to dinner together but that was one rose coming down the stairs and not jack up by the clock. yeah this is a very nice scene OP I don't blame you
This scene is her telling her real husband that she never cared about him in the way he thought she did.
I don't think Jack was ever treated like royalty. People are just kind to him because he was a charming, nice guy. This ending is obviously a dream sequence or Rose dying
homeless people were treated notoriously bad in the early 1900s. I guess what I meant was him being treated like a person (?). Bates was really nice to him that always made me feel good
I think the majority of people had no idea he was poor. Molly Brown was just a decent person and dressed him up to be like them. Anyone that had seem him before like Rose's mother treated him like shit
You sound like the kind of simp she married and had half a dozen kids with and whose name no one even knows. What a cuckolded homosexual. I piss on you.
imagine basing your whole life around some guy you fricked on the titanic lol inspiring prostitutes everywhere to frick some random guy if you might die lol
>activate windows
how my screen finna be looking after i bring the tinder date over for "netflix and chill" and plug the hdmi cable into the laptop after booting up vlc media player fr lowkey
ACKSHULLY Queen Victoria died in 1901, leaving the throne to her son who reigned as Edward the VII. After his death in 1909, the throne went to George V, during whose reign -- the Georgian era -- the Titanic was launched on her fateful maiden voyage.
Is this normal that I don't cry anymore? Nothing can bring me to tears. I've became uncaring. Nothing really brings me joy, even drinking, it used to at least make me happy for some time, now it doesn't. I even quit drinking, because I thought I overused it, coming back to it didn't work. Frick
I'd probably be more concerned about nothing bringing you joy anymore. It sounds like you're depressed but that certainly doesn't mean you're fricked for life. Make a list of things that might help improve yourself and your life. I know exercising helps some people and also talking to a professional.
Not quite makes me cry. but does bring a tear to my eye. The end of Fantasia during Ave Maria, the slow procession through the trees as the sunrise breaks into the sky, such a great message of God and the hope within. I wish Disney was still like this.
?t=151
watch the whole thing or at least the time marked spot to the end
You need more music in your life. Much of what provokes emotional intensity in movies involves the music in some measure. I don't get emotional is most movies but listening to music it happens all the time.
I was like this until my mother died. That changed me emotionally. Now I can't even hear any of the songs that were played at her funeral without feeling like I could cry.
Sounds very sad. Personally I've always been a very emotional person, I can cry at basic stories that only take 20 minutes of setup. Don't really give a shit about reality, though. Got a little misty eyed when my cat died, that was about it.
You are jaded. Less internet, masturbation and drinking; more exercise, being outside. Compile a list of hobbies; pursue them. I promise you you will feel better.
I dont think you can feel the sting of bittersweet sadness if you've never loved anything.
You need to log off the internet for like a year or so. Figure shit out.
>apathy is death
apathy in a protective mechanism
ofc we're surrounded by so much stress and pain in every media, it seems like it is the only way to cope.
But we shouldn't overindulge in it or life will become tasteless
we must be brave and learn to face our pain so we can savor happiness
Why is always white boys that talk like this? You never see a black dude with this sort of emo mentality. Even if a black dude is even close to sorta feeling down, they just go out and get some pussy and get over it.
Adopt an animal or volunteer with something “helpless”. Preferably not Black person children or the homeless, that will only make you more jaded and even less empathetic
It was a nice touch having that little girl in the front. She was immediately recognizable as the one dancing with Jack down in the poor decks and you know instantly these are all the people who died
which two anon? The Fly and Eastern Promises? just a guess
I think the majority of people had no idea he was poor. Molly Brown was just a decent person and dressed him up to be like them. Anyone that had seem him before like Rose's mother treated him like shit
what I was getting at was that he was treated so terribly in his day to day that being treated like a normal human being, especially by the upper class was to him, being treated like royalty. you are right tho, only the people that were sitting at his dinner table would have known he was homeless. most of the ship thought he was from the Dawsons of Wisconsin or wherever that guy asked him which Dawson clan he was from. so you're not wrong
The Fly and Videodrome. Which ones would you recommend next?
2 years ago
Anonymous
good flicks. pretty much all of his are great anon. I'd recommend A History of Violence, along with Eastern Promises. both with Viggo Mortensen (his go to guy) and both made in the last 20 years. A History of Violence is particularly good imo. I think you'll enjoy both of them.
2 years ago
Anonymous
thanks for the recommendations! I've always heard that A History of Violence is high up there. I'll definitely check those out. I was pretty interested in his new one too.
2 years ago
Anonymous
no problem anon! it is really good. it's like the best mix between a slow burn and an action packed well acted drama you'll ever see. really good. Viggo and Ed Harris are spectacular in it. shit so is Maria Bello and the guy playing his son. it's good all the way round. & yeah I've heard mixed reviews about Crimes of the Future by Cinemaphilebros but my brother and my best bud who have taste the most similar to mine said it was kino af. all the best bruv, hope you enjoy the films.
Saw this movie when it came out and was bored as frick. Even worst, every b***h in my school and world was playing that Celine Dion song on a nonstop loop. Haven’t seen it since but know I’d get nostalgia feels
At the end of No Country for Old Men, seeing the placid look on Tommy Lee Jones's face when he's telling his wife about the dream he had...I think about my dad and about how even the best case scenario is that I become a broken old man, except that I won't have achieved anything in the mean time. I will have just done my job, paid my bills, and gone to sleep alone.
I saw it when I was like 8 with my 13-year-old cousin. I barely paid attention, but I remember seeing this scene and hearing her say that Jack "got his beauty back". For years I thought the plot was he got his face mangled in the sinking and that scene at the end was everyone cheering that he got reconstructive plastic surgery.
Really random scene, but one in Succession. Kendall is desperately trying to find a gift from his kids in his sea of presents from random people. He fails to find it, breaks down, and almost says that he wants to die. I think I related strongly to whatever he was feeling at the time
Unironically the barrel of monkeys scene in Iron Man 3. I can't even think about it without tearing up. One of the greatest action sequences of all time.
Honorable mention to the storm scene in Fury Road.
I can’t remember the barrel of monkeys scene. Are you a filmmaker or something by chance? Surprising to see someone moved by big action scenes, but understandable
Interesting that you ask this. I was an amateur filmmaker at one point, so that probably figures in. Growing up with a fixation on spectacle sequences like the Ep 4 trench run, the destruction scenes in War of the Worlds and the first Yamato series, the approach to the second Death Star.
I'm a sucker for really good pacing and a well conducted action sequence if there's anything unexpected about it. The only non action film I can think of offhand is Magnolia which there are sequences in that movie that are just hair raising to me and give me chills. Maybe Magnolia is secretly an action movie. The whole sequence surrounding the game show catastrophe, right after the Wise Up sequence. Holy shit what a movie.
The Iron Man scene involves people falling out of a plane. They actually shot hundreds of stunt jumps for this. Spoilers here, its a mini doc about the making of the scene.
wtf, I like Iron Man 3 now. That's actually kind of neat. I think that movie gets a lot of bad flack for its choice of main villain. But its neat they put that much effort into an action sequence like that..
Shane Black has always been the real deal. It's not surprising this is the only movie he made for them. His Predator sequel went into production a few years before Disney acquired Fox, so I can't count that against him.
bill nighy and domhnall gleeson's final moment together in about time. my grandpa passed recently and this scene made me wish i could have a final moment with him
Learn to work the saxophone
(I) I play just what I feel
Drink Scotch whiskey all night long
And die behind the wheel
They got a name for the winners in the world
(I) I want a name when I lose
They call Alabama the Crimson Tide
Call me Deacon Blues
(Deacon Blues)
Hahaha Jesus Christ I’ve never seen these movies but how the frick does anyone watch this shit, that was like a shitty scene from a video game. It’s so ham fistedly written, I just don’t get it
>woman loves some poorgay she fricked on a boat 90 years ago more than her actual husband
Has there ever been a more accurate representation of the roastie gender?
this whole movie genuinely upsets me, this is unironically the saddest movie ive ever seen and its also one of my favorite its parasite before parasite and its done right without the pretentiousness, the ending is oof too the "sequel" pisses me off beta b***h mom cant even kill a killer but can kill a puppy typical vile bugs
Great choice. Another one that gets me from the same film is all the Carpathia scenes. Just that whole series of events. >ship is sinking >telegraph guys work their asses off sending SOS messages out >if they don’t succeed everyone on the ship dies >ship sinks >a ship shows up in the graveyard to pick up the survivors >not even a ship from the same company
Just something very human about it.
This shit made me break down in tears. I wasn't even particularly engrossed in the film. The scene just hit like a fricking truck. The music, the tears welling up in his eyes.
>the scene where Diana, in a fugue state of depression simply stands in the bathroom holding her clothes she has to put on before an event
Shit made me tear up. All too familiar to me. Just aimlessly standing in your underwear or nude, knowing you need to put on clothes and get on with the day.
truly the last great epic of cinema. even the behind the scenes documentary has more heart than anything these days. the shooting of the last scene with frodo where peter jackson refuses to stop asking for more takes and bursting into tears into elijah woods' arms. but for me its sam carrying frodo that makes me cry like a b***h
Here's a scene from the middle of Edge of Tomorrow. Don't watch it if you haven't seen the movie.
I would also like to take this moment to mention that the edge of tomorrow, which is to say the point at which the earth rotates from day into night, is called the terminator.
>watch this as a kid >remember most of the major events, but not details >watch again as an adult >mfw River Phoenix acting fricking circles around Wil Wheaton
The ending scene of AI, how simple the kid wish was breaks me, he wanted nothing else, even for a day, I know one day she'll be gone but it really dawns on me when watching that scene.
Same, first and only time I've ever cried with a movie. I was 7, and it was when I watched it that I first had the realization that my parents will age and die one day.
The entire second half of the Haichiko remake after Richard Gere dies. Ive never felt genuine heartbreak over a movie like that before. I feel like it was just a long overdue cry but I refuse to watch it ever again
My mom died 2 years ago. Forrest Gump was one of her favorite movies, if not THE favorite. I want to rewatch it but I can't bring myself to just yet, but I know this scene is going to frick me up when I do.
It doesn't make me cry like a b***h because movies don't really do that to me but the closest I get is going to sound real stupid. It's the sequence in Man of Steel where he's being pounded into the seabed by the world engine while they're cutting between his fight against the machine, the military operation to destroy the sister machine in Metropolis, and the on the ground view as Lawrence Fishburne and Michael Kelly's characters struggle to free their coworker from the rubble closing in around them before resigning to their fate right as the machines stop. It's something about the pacing, the context and the music that does it. It always gets me choked up and I feel like a big fat moron on the verge of losing my composure over capeshit every single time.
i unfortunately have been colder as i have gotten older but this scene still makes me shed tears. couldnt even watch a second of it now just getting the link.
The ending isnt what gets me, it's the scene where chihiro is flying on hakus back and remembers his name.
Theres nothing inherently emotional about the revelation, it's just executed exceptionally well that it brings me to tears.
The same thing with this scene, though nostalgia might play a large part of it as I watched this film repeatedly as a 6-7 year old. It's just the execution, the animation, the music. Gets me everytime.
It's the feeling of finality, that you just witnessed something sublime in it's beauty that you'll never be able to experience purely again, just as Chihiro reenters the real world and leaves behind the fantastic spiritual realm
>Be Rose >Mom wants you to marry Rich dude >You don't want to, you want to "find love" or someshit >Rich dude buys you probably the most expensive necklace in the world >You like it and want to keep it but not keep Rich dude >Meet some poor frick who paints naked women as a hobby >Frick him on the second date >Rich dude is reasonably upset >Ship sinks and find yourself a massive door to stay afloat on >Refuse to let Jack lay on it and he dies >Survive, get married, have kids >People who are searching for the necklace get in touch with you asking about your time on the Titanic and what happened with the Necklace >Tell them and your granddaughter how you have no love for the man who raised your kids and you still lust after the dude you let die who you knew for all of three days >The crew panic as they realize the necklace is lost forever and this whole expedition will leave them bankrupt >Rose reveals to of had the necklace and just tosses it into the ocean because even after 90 years she can't think about anyone but herself
>lived a full life >got married again presumably for love instead of money because that was kind of the whole point of the movie >had children and grandchildren >dies and lives the rest of her after life with a one night stand on the worst night of her life
Bravo cameroon
I cried when Dobby dies in HP
Something about friend's sacrificing, even more if the word "friend" is thrown there does it for me
The ending of Dragonheart too "But you are my friend!"
The Terror too, "Are we friends, Francis..."
I have no friends
the ending scene in "the royal tenenbaums", when ben stiller's character breaks down in front of his dad and says "i've had a rough year" and hackman replies "i know you have, chazzy"
This always got me. Very similar upbringing with very similar mates who met very similar ends to all these characters. We even did the deal of our lives.
Most films don't make me cry, but this one did: "The Shawshank Redemption." I cried like a baby. It's not that it was sad or anything, because it wasn't; it's just the way they made you feel. The movie was about Andy Dufresne, who had been wrongly convicted of murdering his wife and her lover. He spent 20 years in prison for a crime he didn't commit. He kept himself sane by writing letters to a fellow prisoner named Red, who was serving life without parole. In the end, Andy gets out of prison after 20 years, thanks to a warden named Ellis Boyd Redding. And when he gets out, Red is waiting there for him at the gates with his arms open wide.
"I've got my whole life ahead of me now," says Andy.
Red replies, "You do? You sure?"
Andy says yes.
And Red says, "Well, then, let's start today."
That scene was so powerful. The film made me realize how much I wanted to get out of my own prison—the one I called my job
me too OP
lol why this one? cuz jack was treated like royalty despite sleeping under a bridge a week prior?
Combination of the music, seeing that Rose had a fulfilling life just like Jack made her promise, seeing all the dead homies, Rose still dreaming about Jack after all this time, etc. it’s perfect
oh shit this is the one she looks back on, isn't it? I mean I know they all are, but I was thinking this was the one where they meet up and go to dinner together but that was one rose coming down the stairs and not jack up by the clock. yeah this is a very nice scene OP I don't blame you
that one was rose coming down**
yeah, you're right. here it is if you wanna see it again. I just skip the first 30 seconds
Something about this idea that "everyone you've ever known in your life is waiting to see you when you die" just moves me to tears every time. Like when I die I'll see my dad there to give me hug even though the last time I saw him alive was when I was 12.
I feel you bro, my dad died when I was 16 and he raised me to be an atheist, but my grandma just died and she was the sweetest Christian woman you might ever meet and she really believed that kind of thing and at this point I do believe in God and I don't know what else to hope for. Hopefully we all get out of this treacherous place and are warmly welcomed back by our loved ones.
listen to wing for marie part 1 and 2 from tool with lyrics and try not to cry m8
I hope we all get to see our dads again bros. For me at least so I can tell him I love him.
I'm sure he knew you love him anon, but I hope you get the chance.
That sounds terrible. There's a lot of people I wouldn't want to meet again in the afterlife.
To me this is a pretty scary idea. When I die I want nothing to do with this universe anymore. Whatever the outcome ie oblivion, heaven, hell, reincarnation I just don't wanna see the fricks responsible for making my life a living hell ever again.
Hasta la vista and frick off.
I still dream about her, but even in my dreams she doesn't love me
Iktf, it gets better with time, though.
This scene is her telling her real husband that she never cared about him in the way he thought she did.
I don't think Jack was ever treated like royalty. People are just kind to him because he was a charming, nice guy. This ending is obviously a dream sequence or Rose dying
homeless people were treated notoriously bad in the early 1900s. I guess what I meant was him being treated like a person (?). Bates was really nice to him that always made me feel good
I think the majority of people had no idea he was poor. Molly Brown was just a decent person and dressed him up to be like them. Anyone that had seem him before like Rose's mother treated him like shit
This scene is eerie as frick. Reminds me of The Shining. Also Rose is a prostitute.
She only slept with Jack and Cal.
>more than one
LITERALLY used goods.
You sound like the kind of simp she married and had half a dozen kids with and whose name no one even knows. What a cuckolded homosexual. I piss on you.
imagine basing your whole life around some guy you fricked on the titanic lol inspiring prostitutes everywhere to frick some random guy if you might die lol
Did she sleep with Cal though? I thought that the necklace bribe and "open your heart to me" were code for give me that pusy
"only"
>activate windows
how my screen finna be looking after i bring the tinder date over for "netflix and chill" and plug the hdmi cable into the laptop after booting up vlc media player fr lowkey
>he doesn’t have an NAS broadcasting to his multiple Roku kino station throughout his house
ngmi
Can you imagine being one of the poor bastards who got sucked into the funnel and into the boilers? Victorian era was terrifying as frick
ACKSHULLY Queen Victoria died in 1901, leaving the throne to her son who reigned as Edward the VII. After his death in 1909, the throne went to George V, during whose reign -- the Georgian era -- the Titanic was launched on her fateful maiden voyage.
Is this normal that I don't cry anymore? Nothing can bring me to tears. I've became uncaring. Nothing really brings me joy, even drinking, it used to at least make me happy for some time, now it doesn't. I even quit drinking, because I thought I overused it, coming back to it didn't work. Frick
Am I fricked for life?
brilliant film
I’ll give ya something to cry about
>I'll give ya something to cry about
based dad lashing out on father's day
I'd probably be more concerned about nothing bringing you joy anymore. It sounds like you're depressed but that certainly doesn't mean you're fricked for life. Make a list of things that might help improve yourself and your life. I know exercising helps some people and also talking to a professional.
Not quite makes me cry. but does bring a tear to my eye. The end of Fantasia during Ave Maria, the slow procession through the trees as the sunrise breaks into the sky, such a great message of God and the hope within. I wish Disney was still like this.
?t=151
watch the whole thing or at least the time marked spot to the end
You need more music in your life. Much of what provokes emotional intensity in movies involves the music in some measure. I don't get emotional is most movies but listening to music it happens all the time.
Try
>be like this
>meet girl
>breaks heart
>cry
it's simply that easy and awful
Been there done that. To sprinkle that a lot of people in my life died.
Literally me.
I was like this until my mother died. That changed me emotionally. Now I can't even hear any of the songs that were played at her funeral without feeling like I could cry.
I never cried until I put my dog down a few months ago. Its broke something in me and now little stupid shit makes me cry. Turned me into a softy
Sounds very sad. Personally I've always been a very emotional person, I can cry at basic stories that only take 20 minutes of setup. Don't really give a shit about reality, though. Got a little misty eyed when my cat died, that was about it.
You are jaded. Less internet, masturbation and drinking; more exercise, being outside. Compile a list of hobbies; pursue them. I promise you you will feel better.
I dont think you can feel the sting of bittersweet sadness if you've never loved anything.
You need to log off the internet for like a year or so. Figure shit out.
>apathy is death
apathy in a protective mechanism
ofc we're surrounded by so much stress and pain in every media, it seems like it is the only way to cope.
But we shouldn't overindulge in it or life will become tasteless
we must be brave and learn to face our pain so we can savor happiness
Why is always white boys that talk like this? You never see a black dude with this sort of emo mentality. Even if a black dude is even close to sorta feeling down, they just go out and get some pussy and get over it.
AYO dis kang been keepin' it real y'all, telling da truth bout crackas. Mad respect brudda. SHIEEEET.
>BAWWW WHY DIDN'T DISNEY WANT DAISY RIDLEY TO GET BLACKED WHY'D I GET STUCK WITH THE APTLY NAMED TRAN WAAAH WAAAH
black "men" are regular crybabies
Adopt an animal or volunteer with something “helpless”. Preferably not Black person children or the homeless, that will only make you more jaded and even less empathetic
It was a nice touch having that little girl in the front. She was immediately recognizable as the one dancing with Jack down in the poor decks and you know instantly these are all the people who died
is this the Stephen King show or whatever?
cosmopolis by Cronenberg
glorious, thanks for linking it
thanks anon, i'll have to check that out. I've only seen like two Cronenberg movies
which two anon? The Fly and Eastern Promises? just a guess
what I was getting at was that he was treated so terribly in his day to day that being treated like a normal human being, especially by the upper class was to him, being treated like royalty. you are right tho, only the people that were sitting at his dinner table would have known he was homeless. most of the ship thought he was from the Dawsons of Wisconsin or wherever that guy asked him which Dawson clan he was from. so you're not wrong
The Fly and Videodrome. Which ones would you recommend next?
good flicks. pretty much all of his are great anon. I'd recommend A History of Violence, along with Eastern Promises. both with Viggo Mortensen (his go to guy) and both made in the last 20 years. A History of Violence is particularly good imo. I think you'll enjoy both of them.
thanks for the recommendations! I've always heard that A History of Violence is high up there. I'll definitely check those out. I was pretty interested in his new one too.
no problem anon! it is really good. it's like the best mix between a slow burn and an action packed well acted drama you'll ever see. really good. Viggo and Ed Harris are spectacular in it. shit so is Maria Bello and the guy playing his son. it's good all the way round. & yeah I've heard mixed reviews about Crimes of the Future by Cinemaphilebros but my brother and my best bud who have taste the most similar to mine said it was kino af. all the best bruv, hope you enjoy the films.
based anon actually being nice on here
from the thumbnail at a glance and on my phone, i thought this was the reunion scene from manchester by the sea
not a good feeling
Saw this movie when it came out and was bored as frick. Even worst, every b***h in my school and world was playing that Celine Dion song on a nonstop loop. Haven’t seen it since but know I’d get nostalgia feels
>Hello, Rose. Welcome to the S.S. Based
i don't know why they made me laugh so much
It was killed by a guy whose surname ends with -berg, must have been.
At the end of No Country for Old Men, seeing the placid look on Tommy Lee Jones's face when he's telling his wife about the dream he had...I think about my dad and about how even the best case scenario is that I become a broken old man, except that I won't have achieved anything in the mean time. I will have just done my job, paid my bills, and gone to sleep alone.
Dude, the first two in your last sentence distinguish you as a decent and worthy human being, particularly in this era.
I saw it when I was like 8 with my 13-year-old cousin. I barely paid attention, but I remember seeing this scene and hearing her say that Jack "got his beauty back". For years I thought the plot was he got his face mangled in the sinking and that scene at the end was everyone cheering that he got reconstructive plastic surgery.
fricking kek, nice one anon
I remember people actually thought Kate Winslet was fat in this movie
I’m a huge coomer but her breasts are too small to give me an erection. Nice ass though.
she has implants and I'm pretty sure has new leaks showing them off
bold statement that and I dont believe you. so show me how Im wrong.
Sacre bleu, he doesn't know how to pirate Windows
Really random scene, but one in Succession. Kendall is desperately trying to find a gift from his kids in his sea of presents from random people. He fails to find it, breaks down, and almost says that he wants to die. I think I related strongly to whatever he was feeling at the time
Unironically the barrel of monkeys scene in Iron Man 3. I can't even think about it without tearing up. One of the greatest action sequences of all time.
Honorable mention to the storm scene in Fury Road.
This was a good post.
I can’t remember the barrel of monkeys scene. Are you a filmmaker or something by chance? Surprising to see someone moved by big action scenes, but understandable
Interesting that you ask this. I was an amateur filmmaker at one point, so that probably figures in. Growing up with a fixation on spectacle sequences like the Ep 4 trench run, the destruction scenes in War of the Worlds and the first Yamato series, the approach to the second Death Star.
I'm a sucker for really good pacing and a well conducted action sequence if there's anything unexpected about it. The only non action film I can think of offhand is Magnolia which there are sequences in that movie that are just hair raising to me and give me chills. Maybe Magnolia is secretly an action movie. The whole sequence surrounding the game show catastrophe, right after the Wise Up sequence. Holy shit what a movie.
The Iron Man scene involves people falling out of a plane. They actually shot hundreds of stunt jumps for this. Spoilers here, its a mini doc about the making of the scene.
wtf, I like Iron Man 3 now. That's actually kind of neat. I think that movie gets a lot of bad flack for its choice of main villain. But its neat they put that much effort into an action sequence like that..
wow, no way the MCU would do something like this today production-wise.
Shane Black has always been the real deal. It's not surprising this is the only movie he made for them. His Predator sequel went into production a few years before Disney acquired Fox, so I can't count that against him.
If you haven't seen Magnolia, avoid looking at the suggestions or comments. Video is just music from the sequence I mentioned above.
I feel I should mention this movie could be pretty rough on you guys. Sorry for your loss.
Thanks anon
bill nighy and domhnall gleeson's final moment together in about time. my grandpa passed recently and this scene made me wish i could have a final moment with him
Titanic is overrated as a tearjerker,and as a movie overall. I find The Green Mile and Philadelphia way more crying inducing,for instance
I saw it when it came out, and now that I’m an adult the story is shit and makes me not want to watch it again.
Some guy you’re gonna start a family with takes a road tie on a cruise where she cheats on him. Then she throws away millions of dollars.
Just nonsensical roastie fanfic. Women shouldn’t be allowed to watch this movie, it glorifies their poor choices and tendencies
Learn to work the saxophone
(I) I play just what I feel
Drink Scotch whiskey all night long
And die behind the wheel
They got a name for the winners in the world
(I) I want a name when I lose
They call Alabama the Crimson Tide
Call me Deacon Blues
(Deacon Blues)
/thread
Hahaha Jesus Christ I’ve never seen these movies but how the frick does anyone watch this shit, that was like a shitty scene from a video game. It’s so ham fistedly written, I just don’t get it
The Rookie - Father/son stuff
Cocoon - Grandfather/grandson goodbye
Brian's Song - Friendship between real men interrupted
Sicario 2 - Brolin almost cries as he flies away from brother-in-arms [spoiler would go here] he's forced to abandon
The green mile.
i really need to see this fricking movie. it's listed in this thread a couple times and I'm not sure how i've missed it
It's classic 90s kino and definitely worth being in this thread but it's also really damn long, perhaps more than it needs to be
Young Gloria Stuart was really hot
sometimes hot women make me wanna cry too, anon.
More like Gloria bawdart
She looks fricking crazy.
The whole movie is kind of heavy-handed, but it still worked.
>No room in this city for big hearts like ours
Also Pacino was hot as frick with that beard/facial hair
this one
it was the first time a movie made me cry when I was a kid and it still makes me. i think its the music that does it but idk
The fact that he falls on Jake Gyllenhaal to save him from any extra damage was really the cherry on top
Funeral scene at the end broke my heart.
surprised it's not this scene
>woman loves some poorgay she fricked on a boat 90 years ago more than her actual husband
Has there ever been a more accurate representation of the roastie gender?
can I throw in tv scenes?
AAAAAAAAAAAAA
this whole movie genuinely upsets me, this is unironically the saddest movie ive ever seen and its also one of my favorite its parasite before parasite and its done right without the pretentiousness, the ending is oof too the "sequel" pisses me off beta b***h mom cant even kill a killer but can kill a puppy typical vile bugs
It really is an amazing movie
>that scene where his daughter comes back from the dead just to hug him
Great choice. Another one that gets me from the same film is all the Carpathia scenes. Just that whole series of events.
>ship is sinking
>telegraph guys work their asses off sending SOS messages out
>if they don’t succeed everyone on the ship dies
>ship sinks
>a ship shows up in the graveyard to pick up the survivors
>not even a ship from the same company
Just something very human about it.
Reminder that pic related made a commercial sadder than any film in this thread.
this didnt make me cry but the part with the "dont miss me too much" almost did it
i remember when this came out and i lied to my family and told them i saw billy zane's character at the end in this scene, just to mess with them.
When the two old ladies are crying on the bench in Requiem for a Dream after seeing their friend in the mental ward
shitty pseud movie but this ending made me cry like a b***h
I fricking love that movie
>I wonder if it remembers me
This shit made me break down in tears. I wasn't even particularly engrossed in the film. The scene just hit like a fricking truck. The music, the tears welling up in his eyes.
I enjoyed the scene you were meant to cry at, the coffin being dropped into the ocean bit with that Zombies song in the background
>the scene where Diana, in a fugue state of depression simply stands in the bathroom holding her clothes she has to put on before an event
Shit made me tear up. All too familiar to me. Just aimlessly standing in your underwear or nude, knowing you need to put on clothes and get on with the day.
this is the only manly cry ITT. The rest of you are homosexuals
truly the last great epic of cinema. even the behind the scenes documentary has more heart than anything these days. the shooting of the last scene with frodo where peter jackson refuses to stop asking for more takes and bursting into tears into elijah woods' arms. but for me its sam carrying frodo that makes me cry like a b***h
the ending scene from Philadelphia
Here's a scene from the middle of Edge of Tomorrow. Don't watch it if you haven't seen the movie.
I would also like to take this moment to mention that the edge of tomorrow, which is to say the point at which the earth rotates from day into night, is called the terminator.
When Clint Eastwood had to turn off the potato boxing chick
From Gettysburg:
"General Pickett, you must look to your division."
"General Lee, I have no division."
Holy shit I need to watch that again
For me, it's the ending of Stand By Me
>watch this as a kid
>remember most of the major events, but not details
>watch again as an adult
>mfw River Phoenix acting fricking circles around Wil Wheaton
The ending scene of AI, how simple the kid wish was breaks me, he wanted nothing else, even for a day, I know one day she'll be gone but it really dawns on me when watching that scene.
Same, first and only time I've ever cried with a movie. I was 7, and it was when I watched it that I first had the realization that my parents will age and die one day.
the ending of where the red fern grows also this
also the ending of superbad now that ive lost some good friends the look back with seth and evan gets me everytime
This scene and when they show him putting the Googley eyes on everything
Yes, I cried in an Adam Sandled fiilm
The scene where he ignores his dad is brutal
the top of his career where everyone cried then every movie after went down hill.
Oh also this one
The entire second half of the Haichiko remake after Richard Gere dies. Ive never felt genuine heartbreak over a movie like that before. I feel like it was just a long overdue cry but I refuse to watch it ever again
This one's underrated as frick https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SfGeYdOeh3w
Even sadder knowing the lead had fricking cancer during it all.
t. woman
My mom died 2 years ago. Forrest Gump was one of her favorite movies, if not THE favorite. I want to rewatch it but I can't bring myself to just yet, but I know this scene is going to frick me up when I do.
For me it's Lt. Dan thanking Gump for saving his life
As someone who has a very bad, almost non-existent relationship with his little brother, this one hit hard.
this whole dam movie
forgotten kino
It doesn't make me cry like a b***h because movies don't really do that to me but the closest I get is going to sound real stupid. It's the sequence in Man of Steel where he's being pounded into the seabed by the world engine while they're cutting between his fight against the machine, the military operation to destroy the sister machine in Metropolis, and the on the ground view as Lawrence Fishburne and Michael Kelly's characters struggle to free their coworker from the rubble closing in around them before resigning to their fate right as the machines stop. It's something about the pacing, the context and the music that does it. It always gets me choked up and I feel like a big fat moron on the verge of losing my composure over capeshit every single time.
Nice to see Snyder getting some respect, it is a great scene.
inb4 the inevitable seething by anti-Snyder gays
Snyder deserves all the hate he gets,specially after "Martha"
basado
Yes.
contrary to what the haters say, MoS is a fine film. the disappointing thing is it could've been a great one
For me it was the Super 8 scene: https://youtu.be/395Jc01WXmA
Such a fantastic film, I really need to watch it again at some point.
oh my god anon this made me cry now
i unfortunately have been colder as i have gotten older but this scene still makes me shed tears. couldnt even watch a second of it now just getting the link.
ffffuuuuuu
Frick her husband I guess. Frick those guys who were looking for the israeliteel I wasnt attached to anymore that I dropped in the sea.
It was partially that, partially how others in the cinema burst into laughter. It was a school viewing, we must've been 12 or 13 at that time.
LOL
The ending of Spirites Away of all things got me sobbing, watched it with my gf and couldn't explain why
The ending isnt what gets me, it's the scene where chihiro is flying on hakus back and remembers his name.
Theres nothing inherently emotional about the revelation, it's just executed exceptionally well that it brings me to tears.
The same thing with this scene, though nostalgia might play a large part of it as I watched this film repeatedly as a 6-7 year old. It's just the execution, the animation, the music. Gets me everytime.
It's the feeling of finality, that you just witnessed something sublime in it's beauty that you'll never be able to experience purely again, just as Chihiro reenters the real world and leaves behind the fantastic spiritual realm
?t=107
Barely can make it through the opening... ;_;
sharp tooth was a dick
Look who came out of his room!
not a movie but seeing scenes from jim hensons funeral recently milked a tear from my dry soul
>Be Rose
>Mom wants you to marry Rich dude
>You don't want to, you want to "find love" or someshit
>Rich dude buys you probably the most expensive necklace in the world
>You like it and want to keep it but not keep Rich dude
>Meet some poor frick who paints naked women as a hobby
>Frick him on the second date
>Rich dude is reasonably upset
>Ship sinks and find yourself a massive door to stay afloat on
>Refuse to let Jack lay on it and he dies
>Survive, get married, have kids
>People who are searching for the necklace get in touch with you asking about your time on the Titanic and what happened with the Necklace
>Tell them and your granddaughter how you have no love for the man who raised your kids and you still lust after the dude you let die who you knew for all of three days
>The crew panic as they realize the necklace is lost forever and this whole expedition will leave them bankrupt
>Rose reveals to of had the necklace and just tosses it into the ocean because even after 90 years she can't think about anyone but herself
>lived a full life
>got married again presumably for love instead of money because that was kind of the whole point of the movie
>had children and grandchildren
>dies and lives the rest of her after life with a one night stand on the worst night of her life
Bravo cameroon
Redpilled.
I cried when Dobby dies in HP
Something about friend's sacrificing, even more if the word "friend" is thrown there does it for me
The ending of Dragonheart too "But you are my friend!"
The Terror too, "Are we friends, Francis..."
I have no friends
This scene in Ghost with Unchained Melody playing in the background made me bawl.
Pretty based thread, glad it’s still up
the ending scene in "the royal tenenbaums", when ben stiller's character breaks down in front of his dad and says "i've had a rough year" and hackman replies "i know you have, chazzy"
Surprised nobody posted this.
This scene didn't affect me very much when I first saw it. It gets to me now.
Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door (1997)
Trial on the Road (1971)
Life with Judy Garland: Me and My Shadows(2001)
Phenomenon (1996)
He ni zai yi qi (2002)
Almost cried....
>Something inside sick boy was lost and never returned
This always got me. Very similar upbringing with very similar mates who met very similar ends to all these characters. We even did the deal of our lives.
Most films don't make me cry, but this one did: "The Shawshank Redemption." I cried like a baby. It's not that it was sad or anything, because it wasn't; it's just the way they made you feel. The movie was about Andy Dufresne, who had been wrongly convicted of murdering his wife and her lover. He spent 20 years in prison for a crime he didn't commit. He kept himself sane by writing letters to a fellow prisoner named Red, who was serving life without parole. In the end, Andy gets out of prison after 20 years, thanks to a warden named Ellis Boyd Redding. And when he gets out, Red is waiting there for him at the gates with his arms open wide.
"I've got my whole life ahead of me now," says Andy.
Red replies, "You do? You sure?"
Andy says yes.
And Red says, "Well, then, let's start today."
That scene was so powerful. The film made me realize how much I wanted to get out of my own prison—the one I called my job