Fiddler on the Roof/Heartwarming

"Motel: But of all God's miracles large and small The most miraculous one of all Is the one I thought could never be: God has given you to me!"
 * The song "Do You Love Me?" Tevye and Golde have been in an arranged marriage for twenty-five years, they've got five kids, and this is the first time the idea of love has even come into the equation. But, as they both say: it's nice to know. Awwww.
 * Motel singing "Miracle of Miracles" to Tzeitel.


 * The film version absolutely makes this song. Rosalind Harris, playing Tzeitel, doesn't have a word of dialogue the entire scene. And yet, while Motel is dancing around the forest like a giddy goofball, she never takes her eyes off him, and she's beaming the entire time. It's plain to anyone's eyes that she's bubbling up with just as much joy as her fiance - she looks like she's drunk on him, like her entire existence revolves around him, like she couldn't possibly ever be any happier than she is right at that very moment. It feels like the joy blazing between them should have burned the entire forest to the ground. This, tropers, is how a Heartwarming Moment is done.
 * When the Russians join in the celebration of Lazar Wolf getting engaged to Tzeitel. For these people, religion matters not.
 * This troper didn't see it as a heartwarming moment, but rather a tension filled moment.
 * There's definitely some tension, but once Tevye shakes the Russian man's hand and begins to learn the Russian dance the tension eases.
 * It's heartwarming because it shows that if not for the political pressures it would be possible for them to become friends. It's the possibility of something better.
 * The song "Sunrise, Sunset".
 * In the final scene, after Tevye's disowned Chava and acts as though she is dead and her pleas for him to accept her marriage fail, he finally cracks and lets out a quiet "God be with you" before she departs.
 * And in the film, he lets his wife tell her where they're going, so, maybe, they could someday talk again.