Film/TZ/Tear Jerker

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S

  • A Czech movie called The Shop on Main Street. The fact that it's set during the Holocaust doesn't help to begin with. Then throw in the ending, where the main character hanged himself after accidentally killing the old lady whose shop he'd been running and you get an instant hankiefest.

T

  • The end of Tae Guk Gi, a Korean movie about two brothers who fought in the Korean War. All the death and violence wasn't even as bad as the ending: Jin-seok, having lived his entire life thinking his older brother was still alive somewhere, returning to the battlefield where they saw each other for the last time, and realizing that his brother had never made it out of there.
    • Made even worse when it's combined with Please Wake Up as Jin-seok begs Jin-tae to get up and fulfill the promises they made at their last meeting.
  • The ending of Taken.
  • Just watching the trailer for the HBO movie Taking Chance. It's a simple story about one Marine escorting the body of another back to his hometown, based entirely on a true account. Very well made film, very hard to watch, especially if you are in the Armed Forces.
    • Those videos of the original Chance? God...
    • when Strobl crossed paths with the other escort...and found out the body he was taking home was his brother.
    • This scene:

Lt. Col. Michael Strobl : "If more men were like Chance in this world, we wouldn't need a Marine Corps."

  • The end scene of The Talented Mr. Ripley is a horrible Tear Jerker. Tom Ripley has escaped suspicion for murdering and impersonating Dickie Greenleaf, and is on a boat to Athens with his lover Peter, when he runs into Meredith, who thinks Tom is Dickie, and coincidentally knows Peter. Worse, she's on the boat with her entire family - Peter has no-one but Tom. Resolved, Tom goes to Peter in his room and asks Peter to tell him "some nice things about Tom Ripley." Baffled, but playing along, Peter does so as Tom cuddles up to him. Cut to Tom entering his own room, miserable and shaken, as Peter's list (which makes it very clear that he's in love with Tom) goes on in voiceover - and then changes to the sounds of Tom sobbing as he chokes Peter to death.
  • Of all places, in the 1972 Tales from the Crypt movie. The segment, "Poetic Justice", counts as one big tear jerker.
  • The documentary Taxi To the Dark Side. Invisible Children after the Mood Whiplash from the beginning.
  • Tears of the Sun. Bawled my eyes out. Especially at the ending where, after all the death and fear and chaos, the young man is safe with his people, and they punch their fists into the air with hope.
  • The Terminator hugging John one last time in Terminator 2: Judgement Day.
    • Terminator's viewpoint flicking off for the final time. *sniff* .
    • When the Terminator gives John a thumbs-up while diving to his doom.
    • "I know now why you cry, but it's something I can never do," as T-800 runs a finger down John's tearful face.
    • Sarah Connor's final monologue: "If a machine, a Terminator, could learn the value of human life... maybe we can too."
    • When the Terminator points to himself as the last possible source of the technology to inspire the creation of SkyNet. It's the point where you can see all the above coming, and the gut punch doesn't hurt any less because you know it's on its way.
    • The end of T3
    • Marcus' Heroic Sacrifice in Salvation
    • Kyle Reese's confession to Sarah in the first film. The dude has been nothing but a shouting, wild-eyed, badass military man for the whole movie, then he finally breaks down and tells Sarah how he feels. Crowning Moment of Heartwarming.

Kyle: I came across time for you, Sarah. I love you. I always have.

  • Testament. Jayne Alexander deserved an Oscar that she didn't get. It's a movie about a family coping with the aftermath of a nuclear war, and it is unbearably sad. In particular, the scene where Alexander's character is shown with a stoic expression sewing something, and then the camera pulls back and you realize she's sewing a funeral shroud for her oldest child.
  • The last few minutes of Thelma and Louise.
  • Lots of scenes in The Thin Red Line, particularly:
    • Attack on the village, accompanied by Hans Zimmer's "Journey to the Line".
    • The sequence of scenes, showing death of private Witt, the vision of his "other world" and the funeral, with Sgt. Welsh saying: "Where's your spark now...".
  • The end of Thirteen Days; the Cuban Missile Crisis has been resolved, everyone's relieved and relaxing... except for President Kennedy, who excuses himself to dictate a letter of condolence to the parents of the only American military officer killed during the Crisis.
  • Jake Brigance's summation at the end of A Time to Kill.
  • The end of the courtroom scene in To Kill a Mockingbird, when the children are told to stand up. ("Your father's passing.")
    • And the scene a bit later, where Scout recognizes who rescued her and Jem from Bob Ewell. "Hey, Boo."
    • The scene where Atticus sits on the porch and listens to Jem and Scout talk about their late mother.
    • That music.
    • Everything from:

Scout: "Why. there he is, Mr. Tate. He can tell you his name...Hey, Boo."

    • To:

Older Scout: [narrating] "I was to think of these days many times. Of Jem, and Dill, and Boo Radley, and Tom Robinson, and Atticus. He would be in Jem's room all night, and he would be there when Jem waked up in the morning."

    • The image of Gregory Peck holding Mary Badham (Scout) on the seat on the verandah .
  • This tropette has cried several times during Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life when Lara is forced to kill Terry. And the music right there? Just wait for the key change.
  • Top Gun. Goose's death was the cause of a waterfall of Manly Tears. Especially because of the Mood Whiplash!
  • All of Trip To Bountiful. ALL OF IT. Especially when after all her hard work, Carrie Watts arrives in the remains of her long-abandoned hometown of Bountiful, and begins to cry as she looks around her father's old farmhouse. Then she's forced by her overly-concerned son a his awful wife to return home just as quickly as she came.
  • In Troy -- King Priam's line "I have fought many wars in my lifetime. Some were fought for land, some for money, and some for power... I suppose fighting for love makes more sense than all the rest."
    • Anything remotely connected to Patroclus/the death thereof in that movie, particularly for someone who got to like him as he was in the Iliad and managed to project that on what was going on. (Yeah, all... ten lines of him.)
    • The scene that always gets me is when Hector prepares for his battle with Achilles. Watching him say goodbye to his family, in particular his infant son is heartbreaking. Knowing that the situation he is in really isn't his fault makes it even worse.
  • The Truman Show has a triumphant tearjerker ending!
    • And yet, despite deserving what happens, some sympathy has to be set aside for Christof, as he obviously truly cares for Truman, only he can never hold Truman and is never able to truly convey how he feels for his surrogate son.
  • Turtles Can Fly is about a group of refugee children near the Iraq-Turkish border, most of whom have some some of physical injury/disability.
  • There are two such moments in The Tuskeegee Airmen: first, Cuba Gooding's last moments after his plane is hit by a German fighter and Laurence Fishburne knock the Nazi down. Knowing what's about to happen, Cuba tells Laurence to get out of range and to safety - them, as his plane heads down in flames, sings the squadron's anthem. Even the racist bomber pilot they were protecting is moved. Also, the last five minutes of the film; Laurence is presented with the Distinguished Flying Cross and a promotion to Captain for taking out a German destroyer. He is then informed that their next mission is bomber escort over Berlin, and that they were't assigned - they were requested to fly the mission. The film ends with photos of the actual Tuskeegee Airmen, their list of accomplishments - including the fact that they never lost a single bomber to enemy fire - , and that sixty-six Tuskeegee Airmen died in battle.

U

  • Under Wraps, this Disney channel original movie. The mummy is going to die if the kids don't get his sarcophagus back from antique dealers, and he knows it, and he goes through all of these terrible circumstances (being mistaken for a burn victim, etc.) trying to get it back, and then he finds his lost love, and to make matters worse, it's a Romeo and Juliet meets Hunchback of Notre Dame-type story about how the mummy was actually a high priest and the woman was somebody-or-other, and they finally get to be together in sarcophagi next to each other in a museum. Squick.

V

  • V for Vendetta,
    • The scene where V smashes the mirror.
    • The sequence with Valerie, and Evey's subsequent release. "God is in the rain."
      • Oh, God. The Valerie sequence and its haunting conclusion:

Valerie: But what I hope most of all is that you understand what I mean when I tell you that, even though I do not know you, and even though I may never meet you, laugh with you, cry with you, or kiss you, I love you. With all my heart, I love you. Valerie.

        • When V died at the end and was put in the train. Also tears of joy as the house of parliament was blown up.
    • "Is it meaningless to apologize?" "Never."
    • "I don't want you to die." "That's the...most beautiful thing...you could have given me...."
  • La Vie En Rose: "You must be brave, Edith." "Is it Marcel? ...What?" "The plane crashed..."
    • This must be seen to be believed, as it is all done in one continuous camera shot. Marion Cotillard's acting is sublime. Edith Piaf learned of the crash and went on to perform a recital that night. The song playing, "Hymne A'L'amour", was written by Piaf for Marcel, the only man she ever really loved.
  • Voces Inocentes, a Spanish-language film about a boy named Chava in El Salvador during their civil war. That would suck enough, but here's the clincher: At 12, the military recruits boys to be Child Soldiers and fight the guerilla army. Chava is 11. Oh Crap.

W

  • The ending of the Chinese film Wait 'til You're Older. The child protagonist Kwong, wanting to grow up, takes an aging potion. However, it backfires horribly and he finds out that he only has a few days to live before dying of old age. Realizing he has no time left, he makes amends to his father and stepmother, whom he hated before, and finally accepts her as his second mother. The film ends on a bittersweet note with an aged Kwong resting in his stepmother's arms before his inevitable death. There was not a single dry eye in the theatre.
  • WALL-E: WALL-E is severely damaged by Auto closing the holo-detecor on him. After the Axiom returns to Earth, EVE frantically flies back to WALL-E's home to repair and re-energize him. She's successful, but WALL-E does not recognize EVE, as it seems as if his memory banks were erased. He reverts back to his original programming and starts compacting trash. EVE tries to jog his memory back by showing off the random objects that WALL-E has collected but to no avail. Believing that he's "gone", a heartbroken EVE grasps his hand and gives him a farewell kiss. As EVE lets go of WALL-E's hand, he doesn't let go..and He's Back. It ended happily, but if you weren't at least trying to hold back tears before the end...you have no soul.
  • Watchmen: the flashback leading up to Jon's disintegration. And Rorschach's death, obviously.
    • The death of Hollis Mason, shamelessly edited out of the theatrical cut but restored for the DC is absolutely heart-wrenching, even more so than in the book.
    • The opening titles, showing the idealism of the first Minutemen falling away as they get old (or murdered), and the political changes taking place as the new Watchmen take their place. The scene with the hippy fearlessly putting a flower in an MP's gun during a protest... only for the line of MPs to open fire is what does it. It's peace and idealism being shot in the face.
      • Dr. Manhattan's split second hesitation before killing Roschach. Crudup sold the lines beautifully.

Doctor Manhattan: I can change almost anything, but I can't change human nature.

  • The movie version of Watership Down. When the Black Rabbit finally comes for Hazel. Actually, you'll probably spend at least fifty percent of the movie in tears and the other fifty shuddering from the Nightmare Fuel. And this is an animated movie about rabbits!
  • Were the World Mine: when Timothy breaks the spell and says goodbye to Jonathon. It's a combination of Timothy looking like he wants to share one last kiss but being too much an actor to break character like that on stage and Jonathon's look of confusion that does it for me. The fact that The Show Must Go On, so the music plays a triumphant tune as the spell on the lovers is broken doesn't help, either.
  • Honestly, if you don't find yourself crying at least once during We Were Soldiers, especially during the scene with the reinforcement charge and any of the poignant moments that underscore the horror and senselessness of war. The song Sgt. McKenzie.
    • Most sand-in-the-eyes moment in the film? The Taxi driver, who has just had his head proverbially bitten off by Mrs. Moore for freaking her out by coming to her door with a death notice telegram... and asking her for directions to the right house.

Ma'am, I don't like this job. I'm just trying to do it.

  • What Dreams May Come.
    • The movie is absolutely beautiful. He goes to hell for the sake of his wife! And the very end of the movie mirroring the very beginning, except that it's their reincarnations meeting as children...*sniffle*
    • And then there is the part where he realizes the woman he's been talking to all day is really his daughter..
  • Where the Red Fern Grows (1974) practically has you to the tearjerking point the whole time. When the ending finally arrives after what seems like years of watching, you're left sobbing.
  • Renee Zellweger crying at the end of The Whole Wide World.
  • The last five minutes of the manly-man's adventure The Wind and The Lion
    • "I'll see you again, Missus Pedicaris . . . when we are both like golden clouds on the wind."
    • "I'd like to be alone with my bear."
    • Raisuli's letter to Theodore Roosevelt
    • "Is there not one thing in your life that is worth losing everything for?"
  • The 2003 horror movie Willard is a combination of awkward, uncomfortable moments and a creeping sense of unease. One heavy Tear Jerker occurs, however, when Willard's first and dearest rat, Socrates, is killed by Willard's boss at work, followed by Willard's complete breakdown.
  • Most of The Wind That Shakes the Barley.
      • Sinéad's screaming at the end. That alone could make the movie.
  • The HBO movie Wit, an adaptation of the Pulitzer-winning play of the same name. It is about an English Literature professor, Vivian Bearing, portrayed by the incredible Emma Thompson, and her battle with cancer. This is a movie that hurts so much that Roger Ebert cannot watch it a second time.
    • The scene with Vivian's old professor visiting her and reading her the Runaway Bunny.
  • Withnail and I:
    • "I shall miss you, Withnail."
    • The fact that only a pack of wolves know just how good an actor Withnail can be. Especially that in the original ending Withnail kills himself with a shotgun.
  • The All Just a Dream ending of The Wizard of Oz. Such a fantastic adventure, and none of it really happened...
    • The original ending called for a pan down to under her bed, where the Ruby slippers were.
    • The Books and quasi-sequel Return to Oz subvert All Just a Dream. Not only will Dorothy return to Oz, she will come to live there as heir to the throne.
    • Countless reviews analyzes of the film have consistently named The Wicked Witch of the West to be the absolute most evil character in the history of film. But after seeing Wicked, you'll cry when Dorothy accidentally kills her to save The Scarecrow.
    • All the scenes where the Lion cries, but the worst one is the ending scene. Dorothy obviously never gets to see them again, and everyone's crying and the Tin Man's heart is breaking... *sob*
    • Watch Charley Grapewin as Uncle Henry while Dorothy is telling everyone what happened. He is absolutely straightfaced. He believes her.
    • At the end of the film, Dorothy got exactly what she wanted from Oz: A carefree, perfect world where everybody is kind and friendly, yet more than anything else, she wanted to go back home and see reunite with her aunt. As Dorothy herself said: "Toto, we're home – home! And this is my room – and you're all here – and I'm not going to leave here ever, ever again, because I love you all! And... oh, Auntie Em, there's no place like home!"
  • In The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm, when Wilhelm is deathly ill, he has a vision of his fairy tale characters coming to tell him that if he dies now, before he has written their stories down, no one will know that they ever existed.
  • The World According To Garp, especially the end where Garp gets shot and is taken in a helicopter to the hospital, but dies on the way, and before he dies he says "I'm flying..." (a reference to when he was a kid and obsessed with his pilot father). Cue "There Will Never Be Another You" by Nat King Cole
  • World's Greatest Dad. Yikes. When he discovers his son's body? Holy Christ. Best performance of grief friggin' ever. And it doesn't fade to black anywhere or anything... Just the song "Love is Simple" is depressing.
  • World Trade Center, a movie about 2 Port Authority officers who fight for their lives to survive 9/11, after having survived the collapse, and it's based off of a real story? Yeah, I'll just leave you to dry your tears

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