Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. When I was a kid I didn't get the scene and funeral. As an adult, from "I have been and always shall be your friend." to "Of all the souls I have encountered in my travels, his was the most . . . human." gets me welling up at least every time.
One of the most powerful, humanizing scenes in all of cinema. Shatner's performance was in rare and perfect form, as well as Nimoy's, Doohan's and Kelly's. The best of the OG films.
Yeah... As a kid, it was just a scene.... Some 10 years back (43 years old), with life making me more of a 'Grumpy Brit Git', watching that scene again, made me choke up... Thinking about it now at 53, I feel those words 😎🇬🇧
Still can't hear bagpiped version of Amazing grace without thinking of that scene. Another scene in 2 that got to me years later, was Scotty bringing the injured crewman to the bridge, and then in sickbay, after Peter Preston dies. Originally, I found that scene a bit jarring, since other cadets would've been injured, or died. Why was Preston so special. It wasn't until years later; I found out Peter was Scotty' nephew. Then the full weight of that scene hit home. Don't even get me started on 3's destruction of the Enterprise. Kirk's " My god Bones. What have I done? " gets to me just as harshly.
The intro sequence of UP. Disney truly told a lifetime of history in just a couple minutes and made you care about the couple and their future together and without each other.
The first time I saw that was during a lunch break at work. They started playing it, and as it kept going….I had to walk out of the trailer were we worked at to compose myself…😂😭
The movie that always makes me teary eyed at the end is Gladiator. After Maximus collapses the woman whose name I can't remember says "he was a soldier of Rome who will help me carry him", and all his men and that kid go over to help lift up Maximus and you see the visual of Maximus walking towards his deceased family
The scene in Coco where Coco is on the brink of completely losing her memories, and possibly dying, and Miguel sings the song her dad wrote to her. The way she comes back to life almost, that scene killed me.
The "Tears in Rain" speech by Rutger Hauer at the end of Blade Runner absolutely killed me. Still does. Also, the end of One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest hits pretty hard.
Braveheart . Being male and closer to twice your age I appreciate your choices and honesty. Every time I have watched Hammish lose his father it broke me. That was before I lost my dad a few years ago. Not sure if I'll ever watch it again. Surely some will understand. Great vid. Cheers
I'm dying, let me be. No, you're going to live. I've lived long enough to be free. Proud, to see you become the man you are. I'm a happy man. You're not doing this for freedom. You're doing this for Maron, because you think she sees you. I don't think she sees me, I know she does. And I know your father sees you too!
I'm old enough to remember seeing Old Yeller as a child and sobbing when he has to be put down. I will never forget that being the first time I cried at a movie theater when I was a kid.
Saw this movie at elementary school. All 600ish kids from K to Gd 6 in the gym are crying. Not sure what adult thought it was a good thing for us to see. But it was the mid 70s and I think the treachers wanted to break us all. Have never watched it a second time.
Schindler's List: "I could have got... one more person... and I didn't" Forrest Gump: "I wish I would have been there with you." "You were" LOTR: Return of the King: 1) "I can't carry it for you... but I can carry you". 2) "My friends... you bow to no one". 3) "I won't say 'don't weep', because not all tears are an evil." Gladiator: "You're home" Shawsank Redemption: "Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies"
Another Tom Hanks movie, "Saving Private Ryan." When Hanks says, "Earn this." That really hit me hard. He wasn't just speaking to Ryan. He was speaking to us all.
1- The Lion King 2- Forrest Gump 3- Million Dollar Baby 4- Schindler's List 5- Rocky 6 (that speech to his son) 6- Harry Potter (4 7 & 8) 7- Black Panther 1 & 2 (for obvious reasons) 8- The Iron Claw 9- Jojo Rabbit 10- Fruitvale Station
Bridge to Terabithia is the biggest for me - billed as fantasy, set it up to watch with my ex wife and our children, and 2 hours later, we're all TRAUMATIZED. The Little Princess is a close second, but that at least has a happy ending.
Brian's Song. A made for TV film in the early1970s with James Caan and Billy Dee Williams. It isn't a film thought of much anymore but if you ask your dad if he watched it he would go, 'Oh Yeah.' It's a dramatization of a true story of Brian Piccolo and Gayle Sayers based on a book written by Sayers. Both were football players for the Chicago Bears in the mid 1960s. Yeah, it is a sports film, sort of but it also dealt with friendship, race, changing times and ultimately death. It is really worth a watch but the ending is rough, even more so because it is a true story.
“I love Brian Piccolo, and I’d like all of you to love him, too. Tonight, when you hit your knees to pray, please ask God to love him, too,” - Gale Sayers
I haven't read all of the comments, so I'm not sure if anybody mentioned it already. But......the goodbye/tribute to Paul Walker from the end of Fast And Furious 7! Just the way Brian O'Conner and Dominic Toretto were ENEMIES in the first movie, then the montage showed how they had grown to be not only each other's best friend, but also into BROTHERS. Then the way 'Brian' drives up and warmly smiles at Dom as "See You Again" hits its crescendo! I felt a single tear roll down my cheek. And I'm man enough to admit that it almost brings me to tears again right now just talking about it again!
I saw this in a pretty much empty theater. About 3-4 other dudes scattered around the room. During that part you could feel the emotion in the air as all us guys were absolutely FIGHTING to hold it together.
Toy Story 3. The ending when Andy goes off to college and has to leave his toys behind to the little girl. Born in 93 and grew up watching those first two as a little boy. I was going off to college right around its time of release. Seeing that scene, it hit.
Came to the comments to see if anyone mentioned this. I'm a little older than you so I was finishing college, but also watched the first movie as a kid, so the ending of 3 hit me hard...
For me, the one film that makes me not just cry, but sob, no matter how many times I watch it and know what's gonna happen, is The Land Before Time. If you know, you know. There's a few others that get the waterworks going, but this is the one that just wrecks me every time. It's not just the death of Littlefoot's mother that gets me. It's also that beautiful James Horner music that gets the tears flowing.
Man, I can't even watch that movie without a single tear in my eye. Especially with the music score by James Horner which was absolutely breathtaking. I'd say it is far up there with the music score he wrote for Titanic. May he Rest In Peace.
@@mattyskilling4522 Hearing Graeme Revell's moving score as Eric rests at Shelly's grave. Shelly kisses Eric in the afterlife and Jane Siberry's It Can't Rain All the Time plays in the end credits. I end up crying for Eric and Brandon. 😔💔❤️
Field of dreams ending, pursuit of happiness ending, Ghostbusters afterlife when Harold Raimos shows up, Turman show when he screams "you'll have to kill me", Life is Beautiful during the date and the tank scene. The ending of it's a wonderful life. some time during Amilie but I don't remember when... I just remember finding myself tear up, Jack when Robin Williams finds out he's going to die and asks JLo out, What Dreams May Come after RW's death (RIP) and an honorable mention Disney's Hunchback of Notre Dame when Quasimodo sees sees Artimes and Ezmerelda were a thing... Didn't cry, but I wanted to take him to the nearest French brothel immediately.
Yes!! This Movie has so many great parts. "That's My Brother!!" To Be honest with the million cop movies out there Not as Many First responder themed Ones. This is still the best Firefighter movie out right now. Dad was a FireFighter and He will always be My Hero.
Oh god yeah - that final "I love you Gracie". My brother in law is a hard nosed bstd. I watched it when it premiered on Sky, then he turned up and I watched the second showing. Turned round to look at him and he was in absolute floods! Something in his eye apparently; yeah, right!
During their farewell, when you can see how hard Grace is trying to be brave for her dad, that was authentic. That movie is filled with Amazing actors.
I’m a fifty year old guy. Any movie where someone goes beyond themselves and does the impossible. Or they make a sacrifice gets me. Just some off the top of my head. Rudy - Rudy getting to actually play in a game. Hoosiers - Coach calls the play, and the team isn’t on board, and Jimmy says “I’ll make it.” The Return of the King - “I can’t carry it for you. But I can carry you!” My Sister's Keeper - Cameron Diaz as the mom with her daughter dying of cancer. The daughter knows and has accepted it, but her mother hasn’t. Basically tells her mom it’s ok, and it hits her mother that her daughter is going to die. Casablanca - “Welcome back to the fight. This time I know our side will win.” Finding Nemo - When Nigel tells Nemo his dad is fighting sharks to come and rescue him. Wall-E - The end when Wall-E comes back to life. Editing my comment to applaud the comments section! I’m getting a bit teared up reading them. Way to go Snarky Jay!
Artificial Intelligence is a movie that just tears your heart from you, shreds it, then repeatedly stomps on it until you feel numb inside while you ugly cry. The first five minutes had the theater i was in choking up.
The number one movie I cried every time I watched was TMNT 1990. The scene where Raphael walks in late and Splinter asks him to sit by him. Giving that speech on anger and rage. He says and quotes “ Anger clouds the mind, turned inward it can be an unconquerable enemy. You are unique among your brothers, as you choose to face this enemy alone. But as you face it, do not forget them, and do not forget me. I am here my son.” Ruined me emotionally! Because my dad was so similar to the character of Master Splinter, so wise and experienced. He passed back in 2007, it took a long time for me to get through that. I’m starting to tear up now and it still affects me today.
Independence Day; every time when the president gives the speech I choke up and have some tears. Every time I sit there getting choked up and some actual tears. It’s weird but it gets me.
The movie is typical action movie schlock, but that speech is moving because it’s ultimately about humanity’s greatest strength, courage in the face of nearly insurmountable odds.
Snarky, there is nothing to be ashamed of. WE ALL have seen films that broke us. My stepfather cried at "It's A Wonderful Life" (1946). He loved GHOSTBUSTERS (1984). Sadly, he did not live to see GHOSTBUSTERS AFTERLIFE (2021). But I'm sure we was with me watching when I saw it. Many people lost it when Egon disappeared into the stars. My actual father loved 2001 (1968). And I promise you he felt it when Frank died. And he was moved when Dave became one with the "star child."
The Incredibles. I know! It’s an animated movie! After they land the van and Mr. Incredible says stay here and starts to run to stop Syndrome. ElasticaGirl starts berating him for thinking she isn’t going to help. The he breaks down and says he couldn’t bare to lose his family again. I’m welling up just recalling the scene…
The saddest moment in media didn't happen in a movie. It happened on Futurama. The Seymore episode. Where Fry finds out that his dog Seymore he left behind in the past sat and waited for him to come back in front of Panucci's Pizza, until he took his last breath. Good boy Seymore. Good boy.
Wall-E after his reset. He stays that way just long enough to where you start panicking he's really gone. And Shadow cresting the hill in Homeward Bound. Every single time.
All respectable choices, (Especially Marley and Me) but if you really want to have your heart broken, there's a scene in the movie "All Dogs Go to Heaven" that will absolutely annihilate anyone with a heart. Charlie (voiced by Burt Reynolds) says goodbye to the little girl (voiced by Judith Barsi) and I wont go into all the details, but if you know Judith's story and then what Burt did with the Re recording of his lines in that scene, my goodness.. just be ready to be in a room full of freshly cut onions.
Terminator 2 - Judgement Day...was about young John Connor's age when that came out...and when the T800 has to voluntarily offer himself to be destroyed at the end of the movie to remove any traces of skynet tech...after everything else that happened...damn, that was a hard hitter. Also why I and many others consider T3, 4, 5 and 6 to be bad fan fiction and not worth worrying about.
The end of Blackhawk Down gets me every time. As a kid who was born in '77 but grew up in the 80s, I was around for the tears that came with ET and Land Before Time. I'm sure there are others but those are the ones that come to mind at the moment. Also, there are a few moments in video games. When Mordin sacrifices himself to save the Krogan in Mass Effect 3, that choked me up a bit. Also, the end of Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice wrecked me.
Agreed, I can't rewatch Blackhawk Down. When they are cut off and the medic is trying to save the soldier but the blood vessel slips off the clamp. The horror as the medic understands that while the soldier is alive and breathing he is a dead man because in the next several moments he will bleed out and die.
That was literally my first day in the Navy. My ship was on its way back from Mogadishu. One of the chiefs threw a 50 gal metal trashcan in my general direction out of frustration.
“Oh, it's not your fault. It's not your mother's fault. Now, you pay attention to old Rooter. It is nobody's fault. The great circle of life has begun. But see, not all of us arrive together at the end.” Littlefoot : “What'll I do? I miss her so much.” “And you'll always miss her. But she'll always be with you, as long as you remember the things she taught you. In a way, you'll never be apart, for you are still part of each other.”
@@Legit_Awesome _Land Before Time_ fits squarely in my favorite tradition of animated movies strictly about the natural life of animals (no people, no pets, just nature) that tell the most human stories of all. _Bambi; Land Before Time; The Lion King._ Each contain the most brutal and sensitive depictions of children confronting death found in any kids movie. And the triumph in the end of becoming the parent you lost, in Littlefoot’s case becoming guardian and guide of his fellow orphans, taking your place in the circle of life, for me rises beyond the peaks (after plunging beneath the depths) of any other kind of story. The direct parental death scenes are harrowing; the climactic ascensions are rapturous.
The Iron Giant - Hogarth: "You are who you choose to be" Giant: "Superman" instantly brought tears to my eyes, still does. And I was an adult when I saw it in theaters.
The ending of Empire Of The Sun when Jamie sees his parents. Those eyes could finally rest. The ending of Napoleon Dynamite made me cry too as it was such a nice ending, people just living life and “the promise” song playing in the credits.
"Life is Beautiful" gets me, the lengths the dad is willing to go to protect his son not only physically but also emotionally and while trying to keep the spirit of life alive inside of himself as well among one of the worst events in history always hit me, and even more so once I had young nieces and nephews
I find what makes me "cry" about a movie changes as I deal with more stuff simply by living. That being said, there is a lot in Its A Wonderful Life that can hit for any period in a person's life. Also, when the imaginary friend passes in Inside Out, I found that very sad too.
I watched the Iron Giant in the theater with my wife and son. He was 6 at the time. My wife was so tickled that the men in her life were tearing up over a cartoon robot. By far, one of my favorite movies to this day.
"Beaches." I went with my two buddies to see it at the dollar show. We were Seniors in High School. All three of us manly men cried like babies when Barbara Hershey's character died.
Just to hear Bette Midler's version of The Wind Beneath My Wings is a heartbreaker in and of itself. Beaches is a BEAUTIFUL story yet it makes me cry every time ESPECIALLY when Hilary's daughter Victoria is in tears while asking Cece if she can be her guardian. 😔💔❤️
When Optimus Prime died in Transformers The Movie I wept like a child. Because I was one. Toy Story 3 when the toys are going down into the inferno and hold hands, accepting their fate together. The ending of Plague Dogs.
'X-Men' - At the end, Wolverine pulls his glove off to touch Rogue's face, but nothing happens and he thinks he's too late so he just hugs her, like a dad. I weep buckets over that. 'Independence Day' - When Jeff Goldblum lays out his plan to go into space and hack the alien shields, Judd Hirsch just randomly says "I'm proud of you" and Goldblum looks surprised for a second, that one messed me up too. I had a really complicated relationship with my dad, it would feel so weird and yet so good for him to say that to me. Even if I was about to go to space to save Earth, it's just not something I would ever expect.
Two things that have made me cry: the death of Lieutenant Colonel Henry Blake in MASH (first saw it in the late ‘70’s, and it was the first time I had ever had a favourite fictional character die on screen). The Rise of Skywalker - tears of fury, for what the Star Wars franchise had become…
I’m a server at a movie theater/restaurant. When I go to last call the guests half the theater is crying or tearing up. I really want to see it for myself, the dark humor is a plus for me.
There should've been a duel between Darth Vader vs. Chirrut Îmwe. Chirrut Îmwe shuts down Darth Vader using the Force. We realize he's a Jedi or a Jedi in spirit that is very Force sensitive.
@@egarza9241 I suppose. For me Rogue One has a strong female lead character and a bunch of strong male supporting characters. It's the exception to the rule for Disney Star Wars.
@@johnmiwa6256yes, Rouge One directors and writers belived the galaxy was big enough for BOTH strong women AND men - I guess no one else in Lucas Films got the memo. 🥺
Warrior was probably one of the few movies that made me tear up. Fighting your own brother who basically hates you and you're trying to end it as painlessly as you can. When Brendan says "I love you, Tommy" and his brother taps out, oof the waterworks almost start. Another would be Cars cause I grew up with the movie, I don't tear up in a heart wrenching way, it's more of a nostalgia hit.
Thanks for sharing! Solid choices. Sorry these made you cry, but I completely understand-especially with The Green Mile. Spider-Man 3 makes me cry because of Harry at the end, and The Amazing Spider-Man 2 hits hard too. There’s an episode of The Walking Dead in season 2 and another in season 3 that devastate me every time. And that part in Winter Soldier when Steve tells Bucky, “I’m with you ‘til the end of the line” always gets me. I can't tell if it’s sad tears or inspirational tears; I think maybe both!
A couple that have wrecked me. 1. Somewhere in Time - When he finds the penny in his suit and it destroys everything he's accomplished. (If you've seen it, you know what I'm talking about.) And the ensuing sadness his life becomes. Yeah that one hurt. 2. The Bride With White Hair - A Hong Kong swordplay film with a Romeo & Juliet vibe. When you find out his motivation as to why he's secluded in the mountains, it just makes you go, "damn". 3. Bram Stoker's Dracula - Not a conversational romance story. But Coppola and Oldman worked the fuck out of that script. When he initially refused to let Mina drink his blood, I heard a guy behind me say "Oh my God, that's deep".
I also shed a tear every time I watch the ending of On Her Majesty's Secret Service...Tracey's death after getting married hits home. I am a huge James Bond fan so it's something I have overcome a bit after seeing it 1000x.
i cried alone in the cinema watching the death of tony stark. it was disgusting. it was like watching bing bong fade away. i knew it was the end of marvel and i was grieving. "for frodo".. this line still make me want to charge recklessly at something and die valiantly with snort and all when gandalf died.. when he came back.. this list is depressing me.. i am crybaby so what. "dad, wake up.." my brothers were bastards to expose me to such a tragic scene at a young age. the lion king is indeed the king
For a 53 year old 'Grumpy Brit Git', stubborn, set in his old ways, and just pretty much 'Switched off' emotionally... 'The Green Mile' knocked me for six. Yeah, I got teary eyed. Another was 'The 6th Sense' that blew my mind. 😎🇬🇧
As someone who served in the navy, I realized that alotta military movies just hit me different afterwards. Saving private ryan, black hawk down, I still like those movies, but I can’t just turn on Netflix, make some popcorn and sit next to give it a watch with those kinda movies anymore
So many Parts in that Movie. But I think the Part that gets me the Most is when He (Matt Damon) asks his wife If He had been worth their Sacrifice at the End. Tears Me up.
Your best video yet. This video made ME laugh and cry. The way you tell your stories and me thinking back how I felt, when I saw movies like The Boy and the Iron Giant, The Green Mile and Logan😂❤️
I was in 3rd grade when our teacher showed us Where the red fern grows. Room full of kids all crying and hugging each other. 30 years later and still traumatized
Two scenes from "Children of Men" when all the fighting stops as Theo and Kee bring the baby out of the building and the soldiers kneel, Then when we Kee says she will named the baby Dylan after Theo's son "because its a girl's name too", his half smile as he is dying.
No other movie make me feel more devastated than a "Grave of the Fireflies" by Isao Takahata. Love it with all my heart, by i just can watch it for the second time.
Logan still makes me weep. I was a single dad to my daughter for a few years. I had to learn how to be a parent at an awkward time in my life. It was kind of thrust on me and I had to go with it. Watching Logan in theaters was cathartic and ridiculously emotional. I was crying so hard I couldn’t breathe once the credits rolled. So I get it dude, Wolverine was my guy growing up, my favorite X-Man, one of my favorite hero’s.
Two movies that got me deep are: Ordinary People Dear Frankie They are two of the most emotionally moving films I've ever seen, and yet both leave you with a hopeful ending. The gut punches really come in the climaxes right before the endings, when the full weight of things come out.
@@ChromeVader Ordinary People was BRILLIANTLY directed by Robert Redford. Timothy Hutton TRULY stood out. He earned his Oscar for his first major role no less. The scene where Judd Hirsch's Dr. Berger comforts Conrad Jarrett (Hutton) as he's crying over losing his brother always gets to me. Terms of Endearment is another heartbreaker. 💔
Mac’s dance and Frank’s reaction from that Sunny episode was one of the most beautiful things I’ve seen on tv. As far as movies, the ending of “Train to Busan” devastated me.
I’m not a fan of MMA. Neither is my mother who recommended this film. I wept at the end of Warrior with Tom Hardy, Nick Nolte & Joel E. This is a movie that lets men be real men. Each character deals with their own issues in a deep thoughtful way. A father who seeks redemption but may never find it. Another father who will protect his family against tough odds. A friend who will honor a decision made years ago. Plus, I can’t listen to The National’s “About Today” without crying. If there is a minor gripe, turn up the volume for the first scene. The dialogue is captivating but the first scene is a little too quiet.
Yeah i choked up when Tom hardy gets nasty to nick, then the next scene nick fell off the wagon of sobriety and Tom held him in the bed knowing he fucked up a good thing for his dad
The storytelling in that movie was incredible. The only parts that took me out were seeing real pro MMA fighters lose to the main characters. My brain refused to accept that Joel Edgerton was standing toe to toe with Anthony “Rumble” Johnson (RIP) and not getting KOd. Not being an mma fan probably made an already fantastic movie even better for you.
Thanks Jay, I'm glad we can be honest with each other like this. Great list of films!!! And same, losing Wilson always gets me. And Logan is incredibly moving.
For me it was the end of The Family Man, with Nicholas Cage trying to stay awake while his baby daughter is holding onto one of his fingers as she sleeps because he knows next time he wakes up that reality will no longer exist and his family will be gone. It probably won't surprise anyone that I had a baby daughter at the time.
The first Rocky after the fight when he's just screaming for Adrian gets me every time. Also Scrooged with Bill Murray. Not even just one scene. I've cried when he's watching his brother talk about him, and I've also cried at the very end when he's had his revelation. Those were on separate viewings. The Rocky one though, literally every time. He just loves her so much!
The Art of Racing In The Rain, Big Fish, Field of Dreams...I don't consider crying to be a bad thing; you WANT to be moved; that means the artist, the creator, the musician, has done their job. And I am not ashamed to say that I cried hard, at Avengers Endgame, either.
Bing Bong is the greatest hero in western mythology. I was 37, 37! in 2015. Couldn’t hold the tears back as he faded. “Take her to the moon for me. Okay?” 😭
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. When I was a kid I didn't get the scene and funeral. As an adult, from "I have been and always shall be your friend." to "Of all the souls I have encountered in my travels, his was the most . . . human." gets me welling up at least every time.
Same, it is such a powerful scene.
I recently watched a Reaction video to that movie, the reviewer was welling up too and so was I.
One of the most powerful, humanizing scenes in all of cinema. Shatner's performance was in rare and perfect form, as well as Nimoy's, Doohan's and Kelly's. The best of the OG films.
Yeah... As a kid, it was just a scene.... Some 10 years back (43 years old), with life making me more of a 'Grumpy Brit Git', watching that scene again, made me choke up... Thinking about it now at 53, I feel those words 😎🇬🇧
This one broke me along with Artax
Still can't hear bagpiped version of Amazing grace without thinking of that scene. Another scene in 2 that got to me years later, was Scotty bringing the injured crewman to the bridge, and then in sickbay, after Peter Preston dies. Originally, I found that scene a bit jarring, since other cadets would've been injured, or died. Why was Preston so special. It wasn't until years later; I found out Peter was Scotty' nephew. Then the full weight of that scene hit home.
Don't even get me started on 3's destruction of the Enterprise. Kirk's " My god Bones. What have I done? " gets to me just as harshly.
The intro sequence of UP. Disney truly told a lifetime of history in just a couple minutes and made you care about the couple and their future together and without each other.
Yes that is #1 for me
Yup 😢 My wife and I just looked at each other with tears.
The first time I saw that was during a lunch break at work. They started playing it, and as it kept going….I had to walk out of the trailer were we worked at to compose myself…😂😭
@@charliemessenger6537 Same here!
I love the scene at the end where he's looking at the book and the note from his wife: Thanks for the adventure. Now go have one of your own.
The movie that always makes me teary eyed at the end is Gladiator. After Maximus collapses the woman whose name I can't remember says "he was a soldier of Rome who will help me carry him", and all his men and that kid go over to help lift up Maximus and you see the visual of Maximus walking towards his deceased family
And not a soul lifted a finger to move the emperor.
That was comeuppance
Yup... close to crying on that one... every damn time.
Same. That scene hits me hard. The second one has a really steep hill to climb to be as memorable as the first.
“I would have followed you. My brother. My captain. My king.”
One of the most heart wrenching yet spectacular sacrifices in cinematic or novel history
@@mistermarkham101 Yes This! yesss!!
Be at peace. Son of Gondor
Also "You bow to no one"
Only LOTR can make men cry
The scene in Coco where Coco is on the brink of completely losing her memories, and possibly dying, and Miguel sings the song her dad wrote to her. The way she comes back to life almost, that scene killed me.
The "Tears in Rain" speech by Rutger Hauer at the end of Blade Runner absolutely killed me. Still does.
Also, the end of One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest hits pretty hard.
Rutger Hauer was a BRILLIANT actor. 😢 I love Blade Runner. ❤
Yes so deep and sad... :(
Yes and YES!!!
I understand it was an ad-lib and the director loved it, so it stayed. So glad he did, I saved the clip just to ground myself from time to time.
Braveheart . Being male and closer to twice your age I appreciate your choices and honesty.
Every time I have watched Hammish lose his father it broke me. That was before I lost my dad a few years ago.
Not sure if I'll ever watch it again. Surely some will understand. Great vid. Cheers
I'm dying, let me be. No, you're going to live. I've lived long enough to be free. Proud, to see you become the man you are. I'm a happy man.
You're not doing this for freedom. You're doing this for Maron, because you think she sees you. I don't think she sees me, I know she does. And I know your father sees you too!
@@pittland44 That's the part that gets me every time, the discussion about it later.
@@pittland44 Even reading the quote conjures up visuals in my head. Tough scene. Incredibly well acted.
I'm old enough to remember seeing Old Yeller as a child and sobbing when he has to be put down. I will never forget that being the first time I cried at a movie theater when I was a kid.
This is the only movie where adult men are allowed to cry.
Saw this movie at elementary school. All 600ish kids from K to Gd 6 in the gym are crying. Not sure what adult thought it was a good thing for us to see. But it was the mid 70s and I think the treachers wanted to break us all. Have never watched it a second time.
Don't forget Where The Red Fern Grows!!! Still gets me to this day!!!
Yep. Wrecked my childhood.
@@jdsrcs8061 Yep. Another tough one.
The Last Samurai- "I will miss our conversations" - Tom Cruise
Click- Basically, the second half of the movie had me in tears.😢
Their final charge at the end for me, everytime. 💔😭😭
Schindler's List: "I could have got... one more person... and I didn't"
Forrest Gump: "I wish I would have been there with you." "You were"
LOTR: Return of the King: 1) "I can't carry it for you... but I can carry you". 2) "My friends... you bow to no one". 3) "I won't say 'don't weep', because not all tears are an evil."
Gladiator: "You're home"
Shawsank Redemption: "Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies"
YOU BOW TO NO ONE always catches me, I've seen the movie 100 times and that delivery on the line is an oscar
Your #2 gets me every time too. Such a good line
Man to me the tear inducing Gump moment is Lt Dan walking up to the wedding. No words just him walking up.
Requiem for a dream is a hard one to watch because how disturbing it is
What gets me is still "The Fox and the Hound", when widow Tweed leaves Tod in the wild and drives away!
Another Tom Hanks movie, "Saving Private Ryan." When Hanks says, "Earn this." That really hit me hard. He wasn't just speaking to Ryan. He was speaking to us all.
For me it was "tell me I'm a good man"
"My Girl" the Macaulay Culkin funeral scene killed me when l was younger.
"He can't see without his glasses!"😭
Yup... Me also ___"i told him not to pick with those bees 🐝" ___heart wrenching
@@martezdetroit3164 🤧
@@MylezNevison that was a guy wrench moment
@@travisnickerson7452 💯
Right there with ya! Crushing.
"I am a leaf on the wind, watch how I ....."
Not now Mal, I'm a leaf on the wind.
"Brooks was here"
"So was red"
The Green Mile always gets me.
"Don't put me in the dark. I's afraid of the dark."
Every time!
Green Mile really gets me.
Yep. Can't watch it again, too much.
mr jingles
Hard to watch without crying but enjoy the film. Don't like Percy though.
When laura calls Logan daddy as he's dying, basically wrecked me...
Same dude. Same.
Thats a tough one
1- The Lion King
2- Forrest Gump
3- Million Dollar Baby
4- Schindler's List
5- Rocky 6 (that speech to his son)
6- Harry Potter (4 7 & 8)
7- Black Panther 1 & 2 (for obvious reasons)
8- The Iron Claw
9- Jojo Rabbit
10- Fruitvale Station
Bridge to Terabithia is the biggest for me - billed as fantasy, set it up to watch with my ex wife and our children, and 2 hours later, we're all TRAUMATIZED.
The Little Princess is a close second, but that at least has a happy ending.
THIS is why I enjoy your channel, Jay. You are a very engaging and honest presence on this platform.
good to see your less snarky side
Brian's Song. A made for TV film in the early1970s with James Caan and Billy Dee Williams. It isn't a film thought of much anymore but if you ask your dad if he watched it he would go, 'Oh Yeah.'
It's a dramatization of a true story of Brian Piccolo and Gayle Sayers based on a book written by Sayers. Both were football players for the Chicago Bears in the mid 1960s. Yeah, it is a sports film, sort of but it also dealt with friendship, race, changing times and ultimately death. It is really worth a watch but the ending is rough, even more so because it is a true story.
That was a beautiful film; good choice.
“I love Brian Piccolo, and I’d like all of you to love him, too. Tonight, when you hit your knees to pray, please ask God to love him, too,” - Gale Sayers
Oh yeah - that one made me cry too.
For men born in the 50s and 60s in the United States..... the only movie you are allowed to cry in.
Good Will Hunting when Robin is telling him "it's not your fault"
Will: I know
Sean: No, no, you don't. It's not your fault
That one makes me tear up. Been down a similar road and hits home.
*"I gotta go see about a girl."*
I haven't read all of the comments, so I'm not sure if anybody mentioned it already. But......the goodbye/tribute to Paul Walker from the end of Fast And Furious 7! Just the way Brian O'Conner and Dominic Toretto were ENEMIES in the first movie, then the montage showed how they had grown to be not only each other's best friend, but also into BROTHERS. Then the way 'Brian' drives up and warmly smiles at Dom as "See You Again" hits its crescendo! I felt a single tear roll down my cheek. And I'm man enough to admit that it almost brings me to tears again right now just talking about it again!
I saw this in a pretty much empty theater. About 3-4 other dudes scattered around the room. During that part you could feel the emotion in the air as all us guys were absolutely FIGHTING to hold it together.
Toy Story 3. The ending when Andy goes off to college and has to leave his toys behind to the little girl. Born in 93 and grew up watching those first two as a little boy. I was going off to college right around its time of release. Seeing that scene, it hit.
That scene hit me for different reasons. The little girl who gets the toys looked a lot like my daughter at the time.
Yeah that was the case with me until Toy Story 4 came around and ruined everything
@@Jollyjose251Haven’t seen part 4. Maybe one day. It ended well as a trilogy.
@@codyclark2780 Don’t bother watching it, just keep your memories safe
Came to the comments to see if anyone mentioned this. I'm a little older than you so I was finishing college, but also watched the first movie as a kid, so the ending of 3 hit me hard...
Cried at the end of gladiator that whole third act hits hard
For me, the one film that makes me not just cry, but sob, no matter how many times I watch it and know what's gonna happen, is The Land Before Time. If you know, you know.
There's a few others that get the waterworks going, but this is the one that just wrecks me every time. It's not just the death of Littlefoot's mother that gets me. It's also that beautiful James Horner music that gets the tears flowing.
Man, I can't even watch that movie without a single tear in my eye. Especially with the music score by James Horner which was absolutely breathtaking. I'd say it is far up there with the music score he wrote for Titanic.
May he Rest In Peace.
Omg yes!!! Effing sobbing!
His music is always great - and is part of the power behind very emotional scenes in Glory and Star Trek 2. Also recommend - Sneakers.
Uffffff i can't watch that movie ever again
@@dereklopez9060Titanic? Weird way to spell Balto
The scene in The Crow, when Eric tells Sarah, "It can't rain all the time." That gets me every time, POW, right in the heart.
@@mattyskilling4522 Hearing Graeme Revell's moving score as Eric rests at Shelly's grave. Shelly kisses Eric in the afterlife and Jane Siberry's It Can't Rain All the Time plays in the end credits. I end up crying for Eric and Brandon. 😔💔❤️
Field of dreams ending, pursuit of happiness ending, Ghostbusters afterlife when Harold Raimos shows up, Turman show when he screams "you'll have to kill me", Life is Beautiful during the date and the tank scene. The ending of it's a wonderful life. some time during Amilie but I don't remember when... I just remember finding myself tear up, Jack when Robin Williams finds out he's going to die and asks JLo out, What Dreams May Come after RW's death (RIP) and an honorable mention Disney's Hunchback of Notre Dame when Quasimodo sees sees Artimes and Ezmerelda were a thing... Didn't cry, but I wanted to take him to the nearest French brothel immediately.
The ending of Big Fish gets me in my feels.
Agreed. That one broke me.
My grandpa died of Alzheimer’s when I was 18 and he loved to tell stories, that movie destroys me
@@TheCapedWanderersame
The end of Backdraft when Kurt Russell is dying in the ambulance and his brother played by William Baldwin is by his side, man….
When Bull knows Axe is the killer but still won't let him drop, that alone tore me up. "You go, we go." The feels, man! I can't take it!
"I beat it. The fire never got me."
Wow! Backdraft is BARELY mentioned. DEFINITELY an emotional scene. 😢❤
I was on a first DATE. Toughest acting I've ever done.
Yes!! This Movie has so many great parts. "That's My Brother!!" To Be honest with the million cop movies out there Not as Many First responder themed Ones. This is still the best Firefighter movie out right now. Dad was a FireFighter and He will always be My Hero.
Being a father of 2 girls Armageddon shredded me when Bruce Willis had to break his promise to his daughter to save the world.
Oh god yeah - that final "I love you Gracie". My brother in law is a hard nosed bstd. I watched it when it premiered on Sky, then he turned up and I watched the second showing. Turned round to look at him and he was in absolute floods! Something in his eye apparently; yeah, right!
I love when he's talking to her and he tells her "Gracie, I want you to know AJ saved us, he did. I want you take good care of him.
During their farewell, when you can see how hard Grace is trying to be brave for her dad, that was authentic. That movie is filled with Amazing actors.
I’m a fifty year old guy. Any movie where someone goes beyond themselves and does the impossible. Or they make a sacrifice gets me.
Just some off the top of my head.
Rudy - Rudy getting to actually play in a game.
Hoosiers - Coach calls the play, and the team isn’t on board, and Jimmy says “I’ll make it.”
The Return of the King - “I can’t carry it for you. But I can carry you!”
My Sister's Keeper - Cameron Diaz as the mom with her daughter dying of cancer. The daughter knows and has accepted it, but her mother hasn’t. Basically tells her mom it’s ok, and it hits her mother that her daughter is going to die.
Casablanca - “Welcome back to the fight. This time I know our side will win.”
Finding Nemo - When Nigel tells Nemo his dad is fighting sharks to come and rescue him.
Wall-E - The end when Wall-E comes back to life.
Editing my comment to applaud the comments section! I’m getting a bit teared up reading them.
Way to go Snarky Jay!
Hachi: A Dog's Tale. I've watched it once and even thinking about since then it chokes me up.
If this one didn't have ya tear up, ya broken
Literally a traumatizing movie… I genuinely feel like I’ve seen half the movie bc I was in tears for the other half
Very emotional. 😔
Artificial Intelligence is a movie that just tears your heart from you, shreds it, then repeatedly stomps on it until you feel numb inside while you ugly cry. The first five minutes had the theater i was in choking up.
The blue fairy scene at the end kicked me in the face while throwing onion juice into my eyes
@kadashiuzubara2226 one of the many scenes that killed me
@@sodog44 i could not see a thing anymore. My eyes were full of tears.. i feel you brother
The number one movie I cried every time I watched was TMNT 1990. The scene where Raphael walks in late and Splinter asks him to sit by him. Giving that speech on anger and rage. He says and quotes “ Anger clouds the mind, turned inward it can be an unconquerable enemy. You are unique among your brothers, as you choose to face this enemy alone. But as you face it, do not forget them, and do not forget me. I am here my son.” Ruined me emotionally! Because my dad was so similar to the character of Master Splinter, so wise and experienced. He passed back in 2007, it took a long time for me to get through that. I’m starting to tear up now and it still affects me today.
When Bubba died in Forrest Gump.
I teared up when Forrest was worried his kid would be like him.
Me too for both parts.
@@beartackle Especially that scene.
😂
"I wanna go home."
Independence Day; every time when the president gives the speech I choke up and have some tears. Every time I sit there getting choked up and some actual tears. It’s weird but it gets me.
Best speech by a movie president EVER! 👏🥹
I choked up when Randy Quad said “tell my children I love them very much.”
The movie is typical action movie schlock, but that speech is moving because it’s ultimately about humanity’s greatest strength, courage in the face of nearly insurmountable odds.
@@rknight56this scene is beautiful! 😢
I Cry every time I see the Enterprise Blow up in ST III. She was The Best of them.
Gallipoli. I watched it when it first came out. Several people in the audience were openly weeping when it ended.
Snarky, there is nothing to be ashamed of. WE ALL have seen films that broke us. My stepfather cried at "It's A Wonderful Life" (1946). He loved GHOSTBUSTERS (1984). Sadly, he did not live to see GHOSTBUSTERS AFTERLIFE (2021). But I'm sure we was with me watching when I saw it. Many people lost it when Egon disappeared into the stars. My actual father loved 2001 (1968). And I promise you he felt it when Frank died. And he was moved when Dave became one with the "star child."
Oh man... John Coffey made me cry several times in that movie. He was such a pure soul that didn't deserve his fate.
The 19 years later epilogue in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 had me happy-crying the entire time.
The Incredibles. I know! It’s an animated movie! After they land the van and Mr. Incredible says stay here and starts to run to stop Syndrome. ElasticaGirl starts berating him for thinking she isn’t going to help. The he breaks down and says he couldn’t bare to lose his family again. I’m welling up just recalling the scene…
The saddest moment in media didn't happen in a movie. It happened on Futurama.
The Seymore episode. Where Fry finds out that his dog Seymore he left behind in the past sat and waited for him to come back in front of Panucci's Pizza, until he took his last breath.
Good boy Seymore. Good boy.
The episode with his brother is pretty rough too.
THIS!
Don't watch the movie My Dog Skip then. You'll need an IV to deal with the dehydration..
That's basically the premise of Hachi.
That's a good one. I also like the 4 leaf clover episode as well.
Wall-E after his reset. He stays that way just long enough to where you start panicking he's really gone.
And Shadow cresting the hill in Homeward Bound. Every single time.
For me it was Homeward Bound, the Incredible Journey, when the older dog comes limping over the hill at the end. Cried every time.
All respectable choices, (Especially Marley and Me) but if you really want to have your heart broken, there's a scene in the movie "All Dogs Go to Heaven" that will absolutely annihilate anyone with a heart. Charlie (voiced by Burt Reynolds) says goodbye to the little girl (voiced by Judith Barsi) and I wont go into all the details, but if you know Judith's story and then what Burt did with the Re recording of his lines in that scene, my goodness.. just be ready to be in a room full of freshly cut onions.
Terminator 2 - Judgement Day...was about young John Connor's age when that came out...and when the T800 has to voluntarily offer himself to be destroyed at the end of the movie to remove any traces of skynet tech...after everything else that happened...damn, that was a hard hitter.
Also why I and many others consider T3, 4, 5 and 6 to be bad fan fiction and not worth worrying about.
I grow up whit that movie, pal. I know why you cry, even if it's some thing i could never do 🔥👍🏼🔥
I'm 36, gets me every single time.
The end of Blackhawk Down gets me every time. As a kid who was born in '77 but grew up in the 80s, I was around for the tears that came with ET and Land Before Time. I'm sure there are others but those are the ones that come to mind at the moment.
Also, there are a few moments in video games. When Mordin sacrifices himself to save the Krogan in Mass Effect 3, that choked me up a bit. Also, the end of Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice wrecked me.
Agreed, I can't rewatch Blackhawk Down. When they are cut off and the medic is trying to save the soldier but the blood vessel slips off the clamp. The horror as the medic understands that while the soldier is alive and breathing he is a dead man because in the next several moments he will bleed out and die.
That was literally my first day in the Navy. My ship was on its way back from Mogadishu. One of the chiefs threw a 50 gal metal trashcan in my general direction out of frustration.
Land Before Time. When Little Foots' mother passed away. As a kid I balled my eyes out lol. Even now as an adult, it still makes me teary.
I feel you mate! Can't watch that movie ever again
“Oh, it's not your fault. It's not your mother's fault. Now, you pay attention to old Rooter. It is nobody's fault. The great circle of life has begun. But see, not all of us arrive together at the end.”
Littlefoot : “What'll I do? I miss her so much.”
“And you'll always miss her. But she'll always be with you, as long as you remember the things she taught you. In a way, you'll never be apart, for you are still part of each other.”
😭😭😭
@@Legit_Awesome _Land Before Time_ fits squarely in my favorite tradition of animated movies strictly about the natural life of animals (no people, no pets, just nature) that tell the most human stories of all. _Bambi; Land Before Time; The Lion King._
Each contain the most brutal and sensitive depictions of children confronting death found in any kids movie. And the triumph in the end of becoming the parent you lost, in Littlefoot’s case becoming guardian and guide of his fellow orphans, taking your place in the circle of life, for me rises beyond the peaks (after plunging beneath the depths) of any other kind of story. The direct parental death scenes are harrowing; the climactic ascensions are rapturous.
@@TheCapedWanderer I would have to say that I agree with you
"Gordy's gone. I'll be outside. Good luck."
Black hawk down 😭😭😭 hits harder at the fact that it actually happened
Rest in peace Msgt. Gordon, and SFC Shughart. MOH.
The Iron Giant - Hogarth: "You are who you choose to be" Giant: "Superman" instantly brought tears to my eyes, still does. And I was an adult when I saw it in theaters.
Hi Snarky, I want to say, first of all, congratulations on having 200,000 subscribers. I have seen The Iron Giant, and it's an unbelievable movie.
The ending of Empire Of The Sun when Jamie sees his parents.
Those eyes could finally rest.
The ending of Napoleon Dynamite made me cry too as it was such a nice ending, people just living life and “the promise” song playing in the credits.
The ending of Blood Diamond always chokes me up with him up on the mountain talking to her in the city.
Ya ya
"Life is Beautiful" gets me, the lengths the dad is willing to go to protect his son not only physically but also emotionally and while trying to keep the spirit of life alive inside of himself as well among one of the worst events in history always hit me, and even more so once I had young nieces and nephews
I find what makes me "cry" about a movie changes as I deal with more stuff simply by living. That being said, there is a lot in Its A Wonderful Life that can hit for any period in a person's life.
Also, when the imaginary friend passes in Inside Out, I found that very sad too.
I watched the Iron Giant in the theater with my wife and son. He was 6 at the time. My wife was so tickled that the men in her life were tearing up over a cartoon robot. By far, one of my favorite movies to this day.
"Beaches." I went with my two buddies to see it at the dollar show. We were Seniors in High School. All three of us manly men cried like babies when Barbara Hershey's character died.
Just to hear Bette Midler's version of The Wind Beneath My Wings is a heartbreaker in and of itself. Beaches is a BEAUTIFUL story yet it makes me cry every time ESPECIALLY when Hilary's daughter Victoria is in tears while asking Cece if she can be her guardian. 😔💔❤️
Bridge to Terabithia broke me. Saw it about 5 years ago, still not over it.
That one is brutal. So good but so heart wrenching.
One of the best movies ever!
When Optimus Prime died in Transformers The Movie I wept like a child. Because I was one. Toy Story 3 when the toys are going down into the inferno and hold hands, accepting their fate together. The ending of Plague Dogs.
@@JurassicRod YOU GOT THE TOUCH! YOU GOT THE POWER!
Schindler's List....especially the "I could have done more" scene at the end.
“I could have saved just one more person…but I didn’t…” 😭😭😭😭
Paddington 2.
The ending of that film hits me where I live every time I watch it.
Oh yes I love that movie
'X-Men' - At the end, Wolverine pulls his glove off to touch Rogue's face, but nothing happens and he thinks he's too late so he just hugs her, like a dad. I weep buckets over that.
'Independence Day' - When Jeff Goldblum lays out his plan to go into space and hack the alien shields, Judd Hirsch just randomly says "I'm proud of you" and Goldblum looks surprised for a second, that one messed me up too. I had a really complicated relationship with my dad, it would feel so weird and yet so good for him to say that to me. Even if I was about to go to space to save Earth, it's just not something I would ever expect.
Two things that have made me cry: the death of Lieutenant Colonel Henry Blake in MASH (first saw it in the late ‘70’s, and it was the first time I had ever had a favourite fictional character die on screen). The Rise of Skywalker - tears of fury, for what the Star Wars franchise had become…
Funny how this video came out right as I returned from _The Wild Robot_ that made me tear up.
I’m a server at a movie theater/restaurant. When I go to last call the guests half the theater is crying or tearing up. I really want to see it for myself, the dark humor is a plus for me.
The last time I teared up at a movie was seeing Jyn Erso and Cassian Andor hug before they are engulfed by the firestorm at the end of Rogue One.
There should've been a duel between Darth Vader vs. Chirrut Îmwe. Chirrut Îmwe shuts down Darth Vader using the Force. We realize he's a Jedi or a Jedi in spirit that is very Force sensitive.
Yes, the ending always make me cry.
@@egarza9241 I suppose. For me Rogue One has a strong female lead character and a bunch of strong male supporting characters. It's the exception to the rule for Disney Star Wars.
@@johnmiwa6256yes, Rouge One directors and writers belived the galaxy was big enough for BOTH strong women AND men - I guess no one else in Lucas Films got the memo. 🥺
Warrior was probably one of the few movies that made me tear up. Fighting your own brother who basically hates you and you're trying to end it as painlessly as you can. When Brendan says "I love you, Tommy" and his brother taps out, oof the waterworks almost start. Another would be Cars cause I grew up with the movie, I don't tear up in a heart wrenching way, it's more of a nostalgia hit.
I don't really remember a movie or tv show making me cry, but damn. Cyberpunk Edgerunners nearly broke me.
Same for me with Arcane in several scenes. Somehow animated shows hit different.
“The ship… out of danger?” 🖖
I am a leaf in the wind.
Thanks for sharing! Solid choices. Sorry these made you cry, but I completely understand-especially with The Green Mile. Spider-Man 3 makes me cry because of Harry at the end, and The Amazing Spider-Man 2 hits hard too. There’s an episode of The Walking Dead in season 2 and another in season 3 that devastate me every time. And that part in Winter Soldier when Steve tells Bucky, “I’m with you ‘til the end of the line” always gets me. I can't tell if it’s sad tears or inspirational tears; I think maybe both!
Walking Dead... Hershel? Do you mean Hershel? Heeeeeershell😭😭😭
Did you ever see the wedding gift? It was in the mid 90s but was very powerful.
A couple that have wrecked me.
1. Somewhere in Time - When he finds the penny in his suit and it destroys everything he's accomplished. (If you've seen it, you know what I'm talking about.) And the ensuing sadness his life becomes. Yeah that one hurt.
2. The Bride With White Hair - A Hong Kong swordplay film with a Romeo & Juliet vibe. When you find out his motivation as to why he's secluded in the mountains, it just makes you go, "damn".
3. Bram Stoker's Dracula - Not a conversational romance story. But Coppola and Oldman worked the fuck out of that script. When he initially refused to let Mina drink his blood, I heard a guy behind me say "Oh my God, that's deep".
only film that got me all like that as a kid was "The Champ"..🥺
I also shed a tear every time I watch the ending of On Her Majesty's Secret Service...Tracey's death after getting married hits home. I am a huge James Bond fan so it's something I have overcome a bit after seeing it 1000x.
Same here, yet the ending of Casino Royale leaves me cold for some reason...
Million Dollar Baby was brutal, but as a parent Arrival hit extra hard.
Have you ever seen Gifted with Chris Evans or Southpaw with Jake Gyllenhaal? They hit hard.
i cried alone in the cinema watching the death of tony stark. it was disgusting. it was like watching bing bong fade away. i knew it was the end of marvel and i was grieving.
"for frodo".. this line still make me want to charge recklessly at something and die valiantly with snort and all
when gandalf died..
when he came back..
this list is depressing me.. i am crybaby so what.
"dad, wake up.." my brothers were bastards to expose me to such a tragic scene at a young age. the lion king is indeed the king
The Last Samurai when Katsumoto finishes his poem as he dies.
Yandu's sacrifice was pretty rough.
His sacrifice bit so much, his funeral on the other hand….gets me every single time
For a 53 year old 'Grumpy Brit Git', stubborn, set in his old ways, and just pretty much 'Switched off' emotionally... 'The Green Mile' knocked me for six. Yeah, I got teary eyed. Another was 'The 6th Sense' that blew my mind. 😎🇬🇧
Saving private Ryan is too heartbreaking to sit thru again.
As someone who served in the navy, I realized that alotta military movies just hit me different afterwards. Saving private ryan, black hawk down, I still like those movies, but I can’t just turn on Netflix, make some popcorn and sit next to give it a watch with those kinda movies anymore
So many Parts in that Movie. But I think the Part that gets me the Most is when He (Matt Damon) asks his wife If He had been worth their Sacrifice at the End. Tears Me up.
"You can rest now." - Pepper Potts - Avengers: Endgame. Broken...
part of me was expecting to see “Click” on this list. That one always gets me.
Your best video yet.
This video made ME laugh and cry. The way you tell your stories and me thinking back how I felt, when I saw movies like The Boy and the Iron Giant, The Green Mile and Logan😂❤️
I was in 3rd grade when our teacher showed us Where the red fern grows. Room full of kids all crying and hugging each other. 30 years later and still traumatized
Two scenes from "Children of Men" when all the fighting stops as Theo and Kee bring the baby out of the building and the soldiers kneel, Then when we Kee says she will named the baby Dylan after Theo's son "because its a girl's name too", his half smile as he is dying.
No other movie make me feel more devastated than a "Grave of the Fireflies" by Isao Takahata.
Love it with all my heart, by i just can watch it for the second time.
Logan still makes me weep. I was a single dad to my daughter for a few years. I had to learn how to be a parent at an awkward time in my life. It was kind of thrust on me and I had to go with it. Watching Logan in theaters was cathartic and ridiculously emotional. I was crying so hard I couldn’t breathe once the credits rolled. So I get it dude, Wolverine was my guy growing up, my favorite X-Man, one of my favorite hero’s.
If you didn't cry during the last scene of Toy Story 3, you're not human
Penny: you cried during Toy Story 3
Leonard: THEY WERE HOLDING HANDS IN AN INCINERATOR...😭
I teared up when Kirk blew up the Enterprise. "My god Bones... What have I done!" Sniff on😢.
Two movies that got me deep are:
Ordinary People
Dear Frankie
They are two of the most emotionally moving films I've ever seen, and yet both leave you with a hopeful ending. The gut punches really come in the climaxes right before the endings, when the full weight of things come out.
@@ChromeVader Ordinary People was BRILLIANTLY directed by Robert Redford. Timothy Hutton TRULY stood out. He earned his Oscar for his first major role no less. The scene where Judd Hirsch's Dr. Berger comforts Conrad Jarrett (Hutton) as he's crying over losing his brother always gets to me. Terms of Endearment is another heartbreaker. 💔
Mac’s dance and Frank’s reaction from that Sunny episode was one of the most beautiful things I’ve seen on tv. As far as movies, the ending of “Train to Busan” devastated me.
I’m not a fan of MMA. Neither is my mother who recommended this film. I wept at the end of Warrior with Tom Hardy, Nick Nolte & Joel E. This is a movie that lets men be real men. Each character deals with their own issues in a deep thoughtful way. A father who seeks redemption but may never find it. Another father who will protect his family against tough odds. A friend who will honor a decision made years ago. Plus, I can’t listen to The National’s “About Today” without crying. If there is a minor gripe, turn up the volume for the first scene. The dialogue is captivating but the first scene is a little too quiet.
YES!!! That movie hit me like a ton of bricks, the relationship the brothers had with the dad hit me to close to home.
Yeah i choked up when Tom hardy gets nasty to nick, then the next scene nick fell off the wagon of sobriety and Tom held him in the bed knowing he fucked up a good thing for his dad
The storytelling in that movie was incredible. The only parts that took me out were seeing real pro MMA fighters lose to the main characters. My brain refused to accept that Joel Edgerton was standing toe to toe with Anthony “Rumble” Johnson (RIP) and not getting KOd. Not being an mma fan probably made an already fantastic movie even better for you.
"I'm sorry Tommy, I love you."
Thanks Jay, I'm glad we can be honest with each other like this.
Great list of films!!! And same, losing Wilson always gets me. And Logan is incredibly moving.
For me it was the end of The Family Man, with Nicholas Cage trying to stay awake while his baby daughter is holding onto one of his fingers as she sleeps because he knows next time he wakes up that reality will no longer exist and his family will be gone. It probably won't surprise anyone that I had a baby daughter at the time.
Hell yes. An enthralling, insightful, sassy, and honest video. I haven't seen any of the other film-critique content producers be this honest.
The Intro of 'Up' is my thing. 'Interstellar' is another heavy one...
The first Rocky after the fight when he's just screaming for Adrian gets me every time. Also Scrooged with Bill Murray. Not even just one scene. I've cried when he's watching his brother talk about him, and I've also cried at the very end when he's had his revelation. Those were on separate viewings. The Rocky one though, literally every time. He just loves her so much!
The Art of Racing In The Rain, Big Fish, Field of Dreams...I don't consider crying to be a bad thing; you WANT to be moved; that means the artist, the creator, the musician, has done their job. And I am not ashamed to say that I cried hard, at Avengers Endgame, either.
Yeah, the catch with dad in the Field of Dreams ending was a four tissue moment
@@deepzone31 I know, right:)
Bing Bong is the greatest hero in western mythology. I was 37, 37! in 2015. Couldn’t hold the tears back as he faded. “Take her to the moon for me. Okay?” 😭
The opening scene in Guardians of the Galaxy when Peter won't take his mom's hand!!
Noooooo! 😭😭 i forgot about that scen!
A powerful scene that I forgot all about! 😮👍
The Green Mile, Million Dollar Baby, Interstellar, Bridge to Terabithia and Toy Story 3. Commercials can bring me to tears so those movies wrecked me.