His father understood what was what and comforted his son with wisdom and compassion. Mine was like that. And through the years I have come to realize what a lucky boy was I as such fathers are not common. Here's to you, Dad, watching over my brother and me from the other side! You and Mom taught us well.
This scene emphasises Jess' dad's character very well. Most of the film he doesn't give many positive comments to his son and berates him harshly if he messes up, but this scene shows that he does love his son very much and hurts him to see his child so heartbroken.
Totally! It doesn't matter what troubles they both went through, it doesn't matter how much they argue or scold each other. What matters is that they're still family, and that they still love each other. There'll *ALWAYS* be family and love even through rough, troubled times.
Yeah his father doesn't constantly give him unnecessary abuse where he should be considered a bad parent, but I think the way he has such high standards for his only son compared to how he treats his daughters is where I can understand where Jess's frustration comes from. Especially when it came to his relationship with May Belle. He was always angry over the fact that his father seemed to always be soft towards her, it made him oblivious to the fact that his sister thinks the world of him. Jess really needed this moment from his father to realize he does in fact love him, as it helped better his relationship with May Belle.
The way Jess cries "It's all gone" breaks my heart every time. The joy and light that Leslie brought to Jess left with her when she died. But his Dad was right in saying that he should hold on to that about her to keep the memory of her alive.
dude, josh hutcherson's acting in this is FUCKING INCREDIBLE. I'm not a teenage girl, just a lover of movies, and seriously this is one of the best performances I've seen out of anyone. I always come back to this clip every few months due to the brilliance it. it's so natural.
Can I just point out how fantastic of an actor this kid is? He's able to make himself legit cry his eyeballs out, and the way he portrays such sorrow is very raw and realistic, something that a kid would really convey if something this bad happened to him.
@@someidiot420 yeah i think he would be way far too, he just doesn't seem too invested in acting, probably see it as a profession and i can respect that.
"she brought you something special when she came here didn't she?" The memories of all the young loves I've cherished over the years came crashing in and my heart exploded and my eyes washed the fire away.
I lost the only woman I ever truly loved with all my heart back in September of 2019 She OD'd I was one of the last people to speak to her just a couple of weeks before it happened I was in disbelief for so long I didn't want to accept it was real It's a loss from which I've still yet to recover And I don't think I ever will And that line from Jess's dad absolutely broke me You never forget someone who made you feel that kind of emotion She took a 0iece of my heart with her when she left this world If there is a heaven and if she is there I hope she is waiting for me
Oh boy. I was a 28 year old grown ass man and when this scene hit, it hit hard. I was reduced to waterworks. The tears flowed, my throat got chocked up and my nose wouldn't stop running. I cried like a baby. In my defense, I was going through some personal mental problems but this scene broke me down. So heart wrenching.
It's okay you don't need an excuse. It's a touching scene and it's okay to cry and feel along with the characters, death is hard for everyone and those who lost a friend or loved can relate. I know I do.
It does not matter how old you are, most people have to be crying when they watch this moment of this movie. This is one of my favorite movies and it always will be. I knew Josh Hutcherson before the Hunger Games. And his acting skills are out of this world. Thank you for uploading. Anyway you could upload the father and son moment from the movie, Firehouse Dog?! Please!!! Josh Hutcherson is also in that film and he did a marvelous job just like this movie. ❤️❤️❤️😭
Had to read this book back in fourth grade, and it was one of the few I actually read. When I saw this movie years later, I thought it was a very touching adaptation of the book. AnnaSophia Robb and Josh Hutcherson really carried the film, and that is no easy task for child actors. After seeing him in this, though, I knew the kid was going places as an actor. To be able to convey the emotions of a character like Jess, a confused boy that longed friendship and the approval of his father, takes immense talent. Also, enjoyed seeing a different side of Robert Patrick in this movie as well.
How Josh Hutcherson didn't get an award for this role is beyond me. Never have I cried so hard during a performance by someone as young as he was here. What a powerful and heartbreaking scene.
Honestly never really found this movie memorable, but definitely this scene. A nicely done depiction of accepting a huge loss and a father and son just embracing the pain away.
This scene made me cry in the theaters during my 5th grade year because I had previously made best friends with a nice boy who appreciated the real me. I couldn't imagine the thought of losing him at that age. During our college years is when I almost lost him from a car accident. 💔 He was lucky to have survived. He really wanted to see me when he barely recovered enough to call me on his cell phone and say so.🙏🥺
Josh did so good in this scene. Crying is so hard probably when your in a movie and he totally had the character in the bag and where his dad is just holding him telling him it wasn't his fault is just peer sadness, this movie is ugh just a whole bunch of feels thrown at you at once
This movie reminds of the movie My Girl in many similarities from both of the movies. Where two protagonists are both lonely outsiders (Vada & Jess). Jess and Vada were both bullied by their classmates. They both have one best friend (Leslie & Thomas J), and Jess and Vad both had an inability to relate to their own fathers (Jack and Harry). Harry was busy all the time working at the funeral home and Jack doesn't get along with his son because of poverty and Jess's little sister get all the attention. Vada and Jess that they both have crushes on teachers (Mr. Bixler and Ms. Edmunds). During the climax, Jess learned that Leslie accidentally drowned in the woods while playing there and Vada learned that Thomas died from an allergic reaction from bees while looking for Vada's ring. It brought both emotion to the main protagonists and they both ran away from home. Not long, their grief finally brought connection with both of their fathers. Both Jack and Harry became more supportive to their children, and both explain it's not their fault of what happened, Vada and Jess both learned that bad things like that can happen without explanation. They both pay tribute to their best friend in the end. Vada wrote an emotional poem in poetry class about Thomas J and Jess decided to keep Leslie promise to rule over Terabithia and even decided to let his little sister Maybelle join with him.
here's my theory: jesse';s dad was the dark master. because when leslie said they had come to free the prisoners, when she died, it brought jesse closer to his dad, thus freeing them. that would explain why jesse saw the shadow of the dark master and then t was dad
Josh Hutcherson is such an underrated actor! He is really talented and deserves more recognition for his work! This scene and the hunger games movies proves how talented he is!
This scene captures such honesty…the kids acting really portrays the awful pain of guilt when going through grief and the need to hear someone tell you it will be ok, a yearning for comfort. One of the most moving scenes in a movie that is so grown up in its tackling the nature of grief and loss….such an underrated movie…
"It's all gone." Didn't know I could cry this hard. "That's what you hold on to. That's how you keep her alive." Didn't know my eyes contained this much water. Like talking about Leslie in the past tense "brought"..........f**k why do I keep coming back to this scene !??!??
Bridge to terrabitha has a powerful depiction of grief. When there is loss in our lives, we tend to blame ourselves. What if I had more time. What if I had done more. If only I was there. Its my fault. We didn't do enough. Bridge to terabithia was hard to watch... After someone I loved, passed on. But when I found the courage to revisit, I needed that cry. Movies like this and Little women (1998) or Even, P.S I love you, and films of a similar nature are the things I turned to To have that cathartic cry. Rather than run from the grief. I had to face it. Im still... Facing it. I still miss my friend. But bridge to terabithia was one of the few films I utilized to cry out the feelings of grief. Cancer took my friend, but Like Leslie and Like Beth, she gave me so much to hold onto. This film has touched my heart over Many many years. And even now, it helped me to heal. Grief is inevitable. It happens. But when u face it. Don't run from it. I didn't. Grieve healthily. And allow yourself to feel.
This scene kills me to watch now. When this movie came out I had a gf at the time and we were about the same age as the characters in the movie. We watched this one a bunch of times. She was blonde, athletic and very creative and I was more quiet and sensitive and together we just had so much fun all the time. So we both really identified with the characters in this film. She unfortunately had to move away when I was in 11th grade and for years we never saw each other again. I'd always think of her when this movie would come on. By some miracle we found each other again but unfortunately this Christmas, not long after we reconnected she unexpectedly passed away. Even though we're 30 now I still feel just like Jess does in this scene. His acting is so good here and I can't watch this scene or movie without being flooded by emotions. But I'm grateful for the memories.
When I was younger I believed that Lesley didn't die and she became queen of Terrabithia, but when I watched movie now I realise that she really died and I really feel sad more than before, even I'm 20 years old.
This scene is extremely sad, it even made me start to cry with tears. It just breaks my heart to see these scenes and I think it that way in the future if I ever lose my family’s lives.
No matter how many memes he has *insert whistle* Josh Is an amazing actor and you can’t tell me otherwise, this film proves how good he really is at acting!
I cried so much at this scene...nothing hurts a soul more then being alone, and more then that to finally meet someone to understand you. Then for a split second There taken away from you...no one should have to feel that pain...Leslie won't go to hell neither will Jess ^^
I swear Josh needs to stop crying in movies! He's so great at crying. I mean have you seen Little Manhattan?? I have loved him every since I was little. He's cute and such a great actor.
I remember after re-reading this book and rewatching the movie for a class project that I'd received the news that my best friend had died from health complications. It was my sophomore year and it was literally the next day during homeroom I was told. I'd seen my homeroom teacher at the time crying and, of course, we'd all been confused at that time; not knowing what was going on. And when she broke the news to all of us I couldn't help but leave the classroom and called my mom straight away. To this very day, I miss him. The very last words that he'd said to me was "I love you, bro" and we'd planned to hang out that very weekend. He was only sixteen when he'd passed but was more man than anybody I've ever known, other than my brother in law (who recently took his life December 8th). Shawn knew he was going to die and lived every moment to the fullest, even though unaware of how soon it was gonna be. The moral of this story is even though a loved one passes that they're forever in your heart and memories. You must live life to it's fullest potential and to not fear death. Instead of fearing, make a legacy for yourself. Allow yourself to live on through memories and impact. #RestInPeaceMyBrothers #ForeverLoved
Jack is such an underrated movie/novel father. Up to this point we see him as a hard, tough man who wants his only son to be tough and manly like him and doesn't really much like that jess isn't that kind of guy. Doesn't help that they dont spend a lot of time together. So when Jack catches him you expect something that amounts to "man up. don't cry." Then Jack shows he's more than that by letting jess feel everything and talk it out. Just by letting that happen Jack shows that at the end of the day he loves his kids unconditionally and Jess's lack of traditional masculinity doesn't matter to him when all is said and done.
I always thought it was so powerful how Jess imagined each person in his life who gave him a hard time as one of the monsters or dark creatures in Teribithia. He had to overcome each obstacle: standing up to the bullies, befriending Janice. But connecting with his father was the biggest obstacle, which is why I always cry at this scene.
This scene is the one throughout the whole movie that made me cry.. and I'm still trying to figure out why. Maybe because it shows the love between a father and his son. And regardless of the stress in life that stripped away his father's compassion, when he sees his child hurting he was there exactly the way Jess needed him to be.. and that to me is so touching.
This is the most mature moment I've ever seen in a Disney live action family oriented movie. Usually they try to present clergy or religion in a way that isn't advocating it, but here they didn't.
Been a few years since I've seen this movie and I thought I could handle this.... I'm now curled up in a ball, laying in the corner, crying my eyes out....
I usually don't cry from a movie or book, but I'd say this is the closest I ever came to breaking down in a movie without actually breaking down. I saw this in the theater with some old friends, and when this scene came up...oh man.
Every time I watch this movie I think of my best friend that I lost when I was younger and just bawl my eyes out. I'm 16 now and was pretty young when it happened but I still remember
When I first saw this movie in the theater with my friend, she began crying the instant Leslie died. I was sad but I didn't cry until this scene when Jess mentioned hell. The whole theater was sobbing, I swear! Everytime I see this movie, I still cry.
This is such a great scene. His father was portrayed as this cold SOB the whole movie, to see him comforting him like this you really do see the father's love for his son, and it's so beautiful...
I don't cry often, not sure why. But you know what? My heart still shrinks, slows, and deflates whenever I watch this movie, how emotionally powerful it is.
Everyone here is talking about Hutcherson in this clip, but nothing about Robert Patrick who really balances the scene, contrasting Jess's emotional state with a Jack's more down to earth tone and view. He stops the scene from becoming too overly dramatic, giving the scene a sense of realism.
This is some of Josh's best acting. This scene is so heart felt. I also watched the 1985 version of this scene and the acting was just cringey. This scene was so beautifully done by Josh and the score is way better.
Same here! I was trying so hard to hold it together and then when he blamed himself and said he was going to hell, I just lost it and let the tears fall.
As an adult when you hear him say "It's all gone" it's really sad it's speaks to the level of the whimsy and wonder of childhood just no longer being there and you can't get at it
this was the best individual to talk to about death considering he killed so many as his time as a terminator. all jokes aside this was a touching and powerful scene
Robert Patrick, what an amazing actor. Not only he played one of the best villains in not only Science fiction history but movie history as well as the T-1000 from Terminator 2: Judgement Day and as FBI Special Agent John Doggett in The X-Files. Him in this movie does give him a different persona as a father. I actually met him twice and he in my opinion is one of the nicest and genuine celebrities ever.
I was thinking about how something romantic could have eventually happened between the two of them had Leslie live, but this immediately made me think of the opening montage in UP which made me even sadder.
Powerful, incredible scene. He lost his friend but found his father.
i expected his father to get after him and rip him a new one for how he treated his sister
feralbigdog he understood that Jess was grieving.
@@feralbigdog I was thinking the same thing....
I never thought of it like that
His father understood what was what and comforted his son with wisdom and compassion. Mine was like that. And through the years I have come to realize what a lucky boy was I as such fathers are not common. Here's to you, Dad, watching over my brother and me from the other side! You and Mom taught us well.
This scene emphasises Jess' dad's character very well. Most of the film he doesn't give many positive comments to his son and berates him harshly if he messes up, but this scene shows that he does love his son very much and hurts him to see his child so heartbroken.
Totally! It doesn't matter what troubles they both went through, it doesn't matter how much they argue or scold each other. What matters is that they're still family, and that they still love each other. There'll *ALWAYS* be family and love even through rough, troubled times.
I wish I had a father like that but he’s nothing but a great big jerk who only wants me to be prefect nothing more
Yeah his father doesn't constantly give him unnecessary abuse where he should be considered a bad parent, but I think the way he has such high standards for his only son compared to how he treats his daughters is where I can understand where Jess's frustration comes from.
Especially when it came to his relationship with May Belle. He was always angry over the fact that his father seemed to always be soft towards her, it made him oblivious to the fact that his sister thinks the world of him.
Jess really needed this moment from his father to realize he does in fact love him, as it helped better his relationship with May Belle.
This is not Jess
And I thought he'd be mad at Jess for pushing her sister
The way Jess cries "It's all gone" breaks my heart every time. The joy and light that Leslie brought to Jess left with her when she died. But his Dad was right in saying that he should hold on to that about her to keep the memory of her alive.
Lol this scene didn't even start and I started crying
Karen V me too, dang this scene was powerful
Me too, I mean I know the feeling of losing a friend. We all do.
Karen V me too 😭
I cried a few seconds after he said “You’re friend Leslie is dead”
Karen V yep same here
dude, josh hutcherson's acting in this is FUCKING INCREDIBLE. I'm not a teenage girl, just a lover of movies, and seriously this is one of the best performances I've seen out of anyone. I always come back to this clip every few months due to the brilliance it. it's so natural.
This is by far the best acting he has done in his whole career.
Have you see warm creatures and the hunger games mockingjay part 1 and 2. His acting was only getting started and better after this.
Sorry winged creatures.
I still consider this movie his best role in his career! How he didn’t get award recognition is beyond me
@@jamaljames9331
He won multiple awards for this movie, look it up
Who’s? Hutcherson’s or Patrick’s?
Can I just point out how fantastic of an actor this kid is? He's able to make himself legit cry his eyeballs out, and the way he portrays such sorrow is very raw and realistic, something that a kid would really convey if something this bad happened to him.
When you get in the role of someone in a book then you can get in the emotions the character feels
dude, josh hutcherson is going places
@@someidiot420 yeah i think he would be way far too, he just doesn't seem too invested in acting, probably see it as a profession and i can respect that.
@@theplacebeyondthepines4284 thats true, im glad he's taken a break. his skills CANNOT be discounted tho
@@someidiot420 yeah all movies he is in, are good, he's good at showing emotion and that goes a long way in the industry.
24 years old and still absolutely bawl my eyes out at this movie. It is still one of my favourites ever!
Haha my old brother did that too and hes 25 😭😭😂
I'm 30 and crying like a baby :"(
@@kevincorncone me as well and I'm also 25
Now you’re 30 omg 😢 that’ll be me I’m a few years
@@saraeissa4954 and still bawling my eyes out!!
T-1000 melted our hearts this time
Damit. I came here to get emotional, not lol.
😂
"she brought you something special when she came here didn't she?" The memories of all the young loves I've cherished over the years came crashing in and my heart exploded and my eyes washed the fire away.
I lost the only woman I ever truly loved with all my heart back in September of 2019
She OD'd
I was one of the last people to speak to her just a couple of weeks before it happened
I was in disbelief for so long
I didn't want to accept it was real
It's a loss from which I've still yet to recover
And I don't think I ever will
And that line from Jess's dad absolutely broke me
You never forget someone who made you feel that kind of emotion
She took a 0iece of my heart with her when she left this world
If there is a heaven and if she is there I hope she is waiting for me
This is heartbreaking. But Josh Hutcherson sure made this scene real; the kid can act!
Oh boy. I was a 28 year old grown ass man and when this scene hit, it hit hard. I was reduced to waterworks. The tears flowed, my throat got chocked up and my nose wouldn't stop running. I cried like a baby. In my defense, I was going through some personal mental problems but this scene broke me down. So heart wrenching.
baronvg same omg
It's okay you don't need an excuse. It's a touching scene and it's okay to cry and feel along with the characters, death is hard for everyone and those who lost a friend or loved can relate. I know I do.
I like this scene, a father consoling his son upon the death of his friend: and not rebuking him for crying.
why did you have to parrot that shitty strawman.
Well, he understood what his son was going through.
It does not matter how old you are, most people have to be crying when they watch this moment of this movie. This is one of my favorite movies and it always will be. I knew Josh Hutcherson before the Hunger Games. And his acting skills are out of this world. Thank you for uploading. Anyway you could upload the father and son moment from the movie, Firehouse Dog?! Please!!! Josh Hutcherson is also in that film and he did a marvelous job just like this movie. ❤️❤️❤️😭
I didn’t cry I never cry in movies
I never cry during movies
Or real life
I feel sadness but don't express it
i'm crying right now i cry in every movie and i should have known because every movie someone dies but that took another level than i thought it would
In Zathura I didn't cry and Journey too
Had to read this book back in fourth grade, and it was one of the few I actually read. When I saw this movie years later, I thought it was a very touching adaptation of the book. AnnaSophia Robb and Josh Hutcherson really carried the film, and that is no easy task for child actors. After seeing him in this, though, I knew the kid was going places as an actor. To be able to convey the emotions of a character like Jess, a confused boy that longed friendship and the approval of his father, takes immense talent. Also, enjoyed seeing a different side of Robert Patrick in this movie as well.
You think his dad is standoffish and hard nosed. Until this scene, then you realised he cared the whole time
This scene breaks my heart every time... The fact that Jess is blaming himself for what happened is devastating to see.
Why does anyone dislike a scene like this?It's a beautiful moment between father and son and this is something I know I never had with my own father.
bluestar32 haters gotta hate
The tears in their eyes made everything blurry so they accidentally pressed the wrong button
Some people don't like to feel
Trolls
Same
The part that made me cry was that it was the first time in the movie that is father actually seemed to really care for him.
DAVID COURCOUX Fair point
He always cared for him, he was just showing tough love.
What a loving father and son scene
After seeing the T-800 become a loving, and protective father, it's nice to see that the T-1000 also learned to be such a comforting and loving dad.
How Josh Hutcherson didn't get an award for this role is beyond me. Never have I cried so hard during a performance by someone as young as he was here. What a powerful and heartbreaking scene.
Honestly never really found this movie memorable, but definitely this scene. A nicely done depiction of accepting a huge loss and a father and son just embracing the pain away.
This scene made me cry in the theaters during my 5th grade year because I had previously made best friends with a nice boy who appreciated the real me. I couldn't imagine the thought of losing him at that age. During our college years is when I almost lost him from a car accident. 💔 He was lucky to have survived. He really wanted to see me when he barely recovered enough to call me on his cell phone and say so.🙏🥺
What is life like now for you two?
Josh did so good in this scene. Crying is so hard probably when your in a movie and he totally had the character in the bag and where his dad is just holding him telling him it wasn't his fault is just peer sadness, this movie is ugh just a whole bunch of feels thrown at you at once
How on earth did he learn to cry on cue that way? Kudos to Josh, the guy can act!
This movie reminds of the movie My Girl in many similarities from both of the movies. Where two protagonists are both lonely outsiders (Vada & Jess). Jess and Vada were both bullied by their classmates. They both have one best friend (Leslie & Thomas J), and Jess and Vad both had an inability to relate to their own fathers (Jack and Harry). Harry was busy all the time working at the funeral home and Jack doesn't get along with his son because of poverty and Jess's little sister get all the attention. Vada and Jess that they both have crushes on teachers (Mr. Bixler and Ms. Edmunds). During the climax, Jess learned that Leslie accidentally drowned in the woods while playing there and Vada learned that Thomas died from an allergic reaction from bees while looking for Vada's ring. It brought both emotion to the main protagonists and they both ran away from home. Not long, their grief finally brought connection with both of their fathers. Both Jack and Harry became more supportive to their children, and both explain it's not their fault of what happened, Vada and Jess both learned that bad things like that can happen without explanation. They both pay tribute to their best friend in the end. Vada wrote an emotional poem in poetry class about Thomas J and Jess decided to keep Leslie promise to rule over Terabithia and even decided to let his little sister Maybelle join with him.
Exactly what I thought!!
this is the only film that ever made me cry in the movie theatre - i couldn't help it!
here's my theory: jesse';s dad was the dark master. because when leslie said they had come to free the prisoners, when she died, it brought jesse closer to his dad, thus freeing them. that would explain why jesse saw the shadow of the dark master and then t was dad
jordanrb1996 Yeah the dark master was like a metaphor of his dad
Josh Hutcherson is such an underrated actor! He is really talented and deserves more recognition for his work! This scene and the hunger games movies proves how talented he is!
The build up right from the start was greatly done which lead to a great father and son moment.
Probably one of the best father/son moments in all of cinema.
This scene captures such honesty…the kids acting really portrays the awful pain of guilt when going through grief and the need to hear someone tell you it will be ok, a yearning for comfort. One of the most moving scenes in a movie that is so grown up in its tackling the nature of grief and loss….such an underrated movie…
"It's all gone." Didn't know I could cry this hard.
"That's what you hold on to. That's how you keep her alive." Didn't know my eyes contained this much water.
Like talking about Leslie in the past tense "brought"..........f**k why do I keep coming back to this scene !??!??
Bridge to terrabitha has a powerful depiction of grief. When there is loss in our lives, we tend to blame ourselves. What if I had more time. What if I had done more. If only I was there. Its my fault. We didn't do enough. Bridge to terabithia was hard to watch... After someone I loved, passed on. But when I found the courage to revisit, I needed that cry. Movies like this and Little women (1998) or Even, P.S I love you, and films of a similar nature are the things I turned to To have that cathartic cry. Rather than run from the grief. I had to face it. Im still... Facing it. I still miss my friend. But bridge to terabithia was one of the few films I utilized to cry out the feelings of grief. Cancer took my friend, but Like Leslie and Like Beth, she gave me so much to hold onto. This film has touched my heart over Many many years. And even now, it helped me to heal. Grief is inevitable. It happens. But when u face it. Don't run from it. I didn't. Grieve healthily. And allow yourself to feel.
Now that's a good father.
And now we hate him now
because he against his own son.
Yeah, T-1000 Is A Good Father
@@reddragon4204 Except in Peacemaker, he was an absolute asshole.
This scene kills me to watch now. When this movie came out I had a gf at the time and we were about the same age as the characters in the movie. We watched this one a bunch of times. She was blonde, athletic and very creative and I was more quiet and sensitive and together we just had so much fun all the time. So we both really identified with the characters in this film.
She unfortunately had to move away when I was in 11th grade and for years we never saw each other again. I'd always think of her when this movie would come on. By some miracle we found each other again but unfortunately this Christmas, not long after we reconnected she unexpectedly passed away.
Even though we're 30 now I still feel just like Jess does in this scene. His acting is so good here and I can't watch this scene or movie without being flooded by emotions. But I'm grateful for the memories.
Every scene with father and son/daughter relationship makes me cry.... this movie and interstellar does that...
When I was younger I believed that Lesley didn't die and she became queen of Terrabithia, but when I watched movie now I realise that she really died and I really feel sad more than before, even I'm 20 years old.
What do you see as the fundamental difference? Why can't heaven look like Terabithia to Leslie?
@@dreamfall77 yes, it can be like that.
Every bit of acting, cutting, and music in this scene is perfect
This scene is extremely sad, it even made me start to cry with tears. It just breaks my heart to see these scenes and I think it that way in the future if I ever lose my family’s lives.
My cousin in-law died on February 28, 2023.
No matter how many memes he has *insert whistle*
Josh Is an amazing actor and you can’t tell me otherwise, this film proves how good he really is at acting!
I cried so much at this scene...nothing hurts a soul more then being alone, and more then that to finally meet someone to understand you. Then for a split second There taken away from you...no one should have to feel that pain...Leslie won't go to hell neither will Jess ^^
I swear Josh needs to stop crying in movies! He's so great at crying. I mean have you seen Little Manhattan?? I have loved him every since I was little. He's cute and such a great actor.
I remember after re-reading this book and rewatching the movie for a class project that I'd received the news that my best friend had died from health complications. It was my sophomore year and it was literally the next day during homeroom I was told. I'd seen my homeroom teacher at the time crying and, of course, we'd all been confused at that time; not knowing what was going on. And when she broke the news to all of us I couldn't help but leave the classroom and called my mom straight away. To this very day, I miss him. The very last words that he'd said to me was "I love you, bro" and we'd planned to hang out that very weekend. He was only sixteen when he'd passed but was more man than anybody I've ever known, other than my brother in law (who recently took his life December 8th). Shawn knew he was going to die and lived every moment to the fullest, even though unaware of how soon it was gonna be.
The moral of this story is even though a loved one passes that they're forever in your heart and memories. You must live life to it's fullest potential and to not fear death. Instead of fearing, make a legacy for yourself. Allow yourself to live on through memories and impact. #RestInPeaceMyBrothers #ForeverLoved
K.J. Midgette
Sorry for your loss
I'm so sorry, I'm sure they're smiling down at you
I've never completely gotten over the pain of this movie
Jack is such an underrated movie/novel father. Up to this point we see him as a hard, tough man who wants his only son to be tough and manly like him and doesn't really much like that jess isn't that kind of guy. Doesn't help that they dont spend a lot of time together. So when Jack catches him you expect something that amounts to "man up. don't cry." Then Jack shows he's more than that by letting jess feel everything and talk it out. Just by letting that happen Jack shows that at the end of the day he loves his kids unconditionally and Jess's lack of traditional masculinity doesn't matter to him when all is said and done.
*novel father
I always thought it was so powerful how Jess imagined each person in his life who gave him a hard time as one of the monsters or dark creatures in Teribithia. He had to overcome each obstacle: standing up to the bullies, befriending Janice. But connecting with his father was the biggest obstacle, which is why I always cry at this scene.
How do you not want to cry along with Josh hutcherson?
This scene is the one throughout the whole movie that made me cry.. and I'm still trying to figure out why. Maybe because it shows the love between a father and his son. And regardless of the stress in life that stripped away his father's compassion, when he sees his child hurting he was there exactly the way Jess needed him to be.. and that to me is so touching.
This is the most mature moment I've ever seen in a Disney live action family oriented movie. Usually they try to present clergy or religion in a way that isn't advocating it, but here they didn't.
It sucks that Disney probably wouldn't have made this film today
Seems Josh Hutcherson's characters got blessed with good dads; this movie and Zathura.
In my opinion, he acted as kind of an asshole towards Jess, while favouring the youngest girl big time, until this scene.
SheepInCabbage He's the boy, dad's are often harder on the boys, teaching them to be responsible.
jasonhylnd001 It does make sense on why he's pushing his only son so hard, while spoiling his daughters, including Maybelle.
This part😭
Been a few years since I've seen this movie and I thought I could handle this.... I'm now curled up in a ball, laying in the corner, crying my eyes out....
Josh is a fantastic actor. The scenes he can play are the dark scenes like this. I love actors like Josh, Logan, Freddy and Dylan.
Josh Hutchison is a fantastic actor, indeed.
I usually don't cry from a movie or book, but I'd say this is the closest I ever came to breaking down in a movie without actually breaking down. I saw this in the theater with some old friends, and when this scene came up...oh man.
he’s such an incredible actor, this movie made me bawl
"It's all gone...."
Damn.... short, but powerful.
Every time I watch this movie I think of my best friend that I lost when I was younger and just bawl my eyes out. I'm 16 now and was pretty young when it happened but I still remember
When I first saw this movie in the theater with my friend, she began crying the instant Leslie died. I was sad but I didn't cry until this scene when Jess mentioned hell. The whole theater was sobbing, I swear! Everytime I see this movie, I still cry.
I couldn’t sleep for days after watching this movie
Damn, I bawled at this scene after watching this film today !
This is such a great scene. His father was portrayed as this cold SOB the whole movie, to see him comforting him like this you really do see the father's love for his son, and it's so beautiful...
He never seemed cold in my opinion..
I don't cry often, not sure why.
But you know what?
My heart still shrinks, slows, and deflates whenever I watch this movie, how emotionally powerful it is.
Same thing with me 👍
The part about this scene that makes me cry is how Jesse’s dad is there to support him after giving him a hard time earlier on the movie
Oh my goodness!! Josh your amazing!! Very emotional scene.
Arrow in my heart. That scene is an arrow in my damn heart!
Jon Mison the whole movie was 😭 💔
Everyone here is talking about Hutcherson in this clip, but nothing about Robert Patrick who really balances the scene, contrasting Jess's emotional state with a Jack's more down to earth tone and view. He stops the scene from becoming too overly dramatic, giving the scene a sense of realism.
This is some of Josh's best acting. This scene is so heart felt. I also watched the 1985 version of this scene and the acting was just cringey. This scene was so beautifully done by Josh and the score is way better.
Yeah 100% agree, the young actor who played Jess wasn't good at all. The original Dad didn't do too bad but it's just the actor whp played Jess
Wolfie's fine, Jess. Wolfie's just fine...
Where are you?
Jess their's something I have to tell you I killed Leslie cause I'm a robot
Hard to believe Robert Patrick is the same person who portrayed the T-1000
This scene almost gets me crying every time.
The part where Jess thinks that he’s going to hell and says that it’s all his fault is so sad and just makes me break down
Same here! I was trying so hard to hold it together and then when he blamed himself and said he was going to hell, I just lost it and let the tears fall.
As an adult when you hear him say "It's all gone" it's really sad
it's speaks to the level of the whimsy and wonder of childhood just
no longer being there and you can't get at it
This scene makes my heart hurt I cry every time I see this movie 😫 I felt for him
This scene always makes me cry.
Coming back years later after seeing as a kid, this scene belongs to Robert Patrick. Phenomenal.
I cried so hard in this scene.
This is the saddest scene. Was really shocked at ending
this was the best individual to talk to about death considering he killed so many as his time as a terminator.
all jokes aside this was a touching and powerful scene
Watched this movie as a kid. One of the best although it was heart wrenching.
Notice how the dark master throughout the film is finally revealed when his dad finally hugs Jess....
THIS FIRST TIME I SAW THIS I CRIED
So i always sob like a baby watching this film. i didnt expect to start sobbing watching just the snippet
Want to cry within 5 seconds? Watch this.
This scene gets me every time that’s how my friends hug me to calm me down
When I read the book, I was like, "What.... that's too bad." When I saw the movie, I balled my eyes out. I knew it was coming and I was still crushed.
im crying so much 😭
I wish my dad and i had this moment before he died.
I never cry in any movies and when I was watching this movie for like the hundredth time I started crying when I saw this scene 😭
Man I rlly love josh hutchersin's acting he makes u feel like ur in the movie and feel the way they feel I cry almost everytime I see josh cry :')
Robert Patrick was wonderful in this scene
All these years I never realized the dad is the T-1000
Robert Patrick, what an amazing actor. Not only he played one of the best villains in not only Science fiction history but movie history as well as the T-1000 from Terminator 2: Judgement Day and as FBI Special Agent John Doggett in The X-Files. Him in this movie does give him a different persona as a father. I actually met him twice and he in my opinion is one of the nicest and genuine celebrities ever.
I was thinking about how something romantic could have eventually happened between the two of them had Leslie live, but this immediately made me think of the opening montage in UP which made me even sadder.
Why did I write this? It seems so wrong now.
i always cry at this scene ;'(
The T 1000 was reprogrammed into a good guy
I've read the book, I cried when they said Leslie died.
I saw the movie, I didn't cry when Leslie died, but this is the scene where I broke down.
T-1000 Making up being an absentee father from chasing John Connor and Arnie
Every actor has at least one great performance, this was Josh Hutcherson’s greatest.
I'm not crying, YOU'RE crying!
just typing the movie in the search bar makes me tear up
This scene is so emotional..like he lost his best friend but found his dad🥺❤