Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Movies That Make You Cry


Guest CattalieChan

Recommended Posts

Movies can make me pretty sad but they don't make me cry.

Recently I watched Leon the Professional with some friends, and that made me really sad. It was so good though.

Link to comment
  • Replies 104
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • JenniferB

    2

  • Sally

    1

  • Carolyn Marie

    1

  • Milly

    1

I am sure there are many movies, with powerfull moments that could bring me to the brink depending on my mood...

Babylon5 - In the beginning -

Edited by MaryEllen
Non transgender video removed per rule 26 of the site Terms and Conditions
Link to comment
  • 4 months later...
Guest BeccaC

There are so many for me.

Forrest Gump already mentioned but there are so many scenes...When Bubba dies right as he said, "I wanna go home", then his Momma dies, when Jenny dies.. But the worst two scenes that get to me is when he is telling Jenny about Vietnam, the desert, being on the water and she tells him that she wished she was there. When he simply replies You were.... OMG I'm tearing up now thinking about it.. and the other is when she tells him about little Forrest and he is trying to ask if he is smart...

Steel Magnolias already mentioned but its so boo hoo worthy to mention again.

Princess Bride at the end with the "perfect" kiss.

Regarding Henry, Harrison Ford... need I say more.

Cast Away, when he is finally rescued, to only realize he has lost her all over again..

Ok I'm a sap... I gladly admit it.

As far as TV shows the only two I remember is Jonny Carsons last Tonight Show, and Several episodes of Smallville (on top of a sap, I'm also a geek lol) the worst one though is where he had to bury his father...That's all I can put my finger on right now.

Link to comment
Guest MissSiul

I usually don't cry at movies,but I cried in those:

Titanic,the part were the people are running to the smaller boats,there are a man separating from his family,his wife and child crying and everything

Mama Mia,in the "Sliping trhough fingers" song,mother/child relationship changing trhought the time,makes me cry

Marley and Me,I liked the book better(I read it first) but I cried a lot in the movie!my throat was hurting and my eyes too.

Link to comment
Guest Sarah Marie

Same thing happened during the final episode of "Lord of the Rings," when all the people at the ceremony bowed to the Hobits in tribute.

I'm tearing up just thinking about that scene. Geez! wink.gif

Carolyn Marie

Absolute agree with that observation. There are multiple other scenes in the trilogy that leave me in tears, however, only the parting scene at the Grey Havens also really gets to me.

The final scene in Gone With the Wind also leaves me tears, as does the scene in Dances With Wolves where the wolf is senselessly shot & dies.

Interestingly, in both Field of Dreams and The Bridges of Madison County it is the Iowa countryside itself that leaves me in tears. Not tears of sadness, but tears of recognition and longing.

Link to comment
Guest PhoebeJoan

agree with Titanic, there are some stirring scenes in the film, like the one you mentioned. The ending is amazing as well, where the ship comes alive again and she joins all the nice, tragic people in her dream/heaven. So beautifully done. Say what you like about Cameron's blockbusters, but he really directs the hell out of them!

Terms of Endearment is a powerful tearjerker as well. When that youngest son looks back at his mum teary-eyed as he is leaving through the door, and nods, reassuring her that she was good in telling them, my heart just breaks. I almost cant watch that scene, I lost it completely.

Link to comment

There's a movie that came out on cable like 7-8 years ago called "Things behind the Sun" starring Kim Dickenson, Eric Stolz, and Don Cheadle. It's about a rock reporter doing the story behind an indy rock girls new hit song about her brutal gang rape at the age of 13 that she never recovered from. The rock reporter knows things about the rape, the victim, and the rapists, that have left him a shell of a man ever since.

This is a great movie, but it is really hard to watch. The rape scenes of the poor little girls in the neighborhood as well as their teenaged rapists cavalier attitudes toward them messed me up for weeks afterward and it probably will do the same to you too. But you'll never regret that you watched this movie.

From me to you,

Jada

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...
Guest Ney'ite

“The Notebook” (especially the ending)

“When Night Is Falling” (when I thought she was going to die in the snow)

Gawd, I would be here all day long remembering movies - LOL!

Link to comment

For many years, I was fighting my own emotions so hard that very few films could actually make me cry. Although I now may end up crying much easily, those few that managed to break through the façade are worth a mention:

First ever was The Lion King. Both the scene when Simba is trying to wake a dead Mufasa; and the part when Mufasa appears as a cloud to lecture his son were too strong for me to hold back the first few times I saw the film.

Another one that triggered some tears the first time was Million Dollar Baby.

And last, but not least (in fact, that's the first that came to mind when I read the topic title), there is one that gets me every single time I watch it: What Dreams May Come. It just gets so deep into my heart and soul. Ouch, just remembering about the film is already making me drop some tears ^^'

Hugs

Ethain

Link to comment
  • 3 weeks later...
Guest Harle

Every time i watch Powder gets me every time, especialy the ending and Donnie Darko the whole movie is amazing, and the song at the very gets me everytime

Link to comment
Guest SKing

Most depressing in a non-cathartic way movie I ever saw was Grave of the Fireflies. The movie starts off rather sad. Then, our main characters undergo an entire movie of depressing hardships. So, as the end was unfolding, I expected the story to finally show the light at the end of the tunnel. It turns out that light was only the on-coming train, rolling through to make sure I had no tears left while it finished crushing my heart. Utterly depressing on every level. Absolutely a beautiful film, but horrifically depressing. It should come with a disclaimer, "Anyone taking Prozac, or other anti-depressants are warned that this could override your medication and send you into a fit of melancholy."

Link to comment

Let me see, movies that make me cry - name one.

Seriously, just about anything makes me cry, when a favorite character dies, falls in love, loses their love........just about anything.

I find myself crying during the credits if the music is right.

Love ya,

Sally

Link to comment
Guest erica970

Steele magnolias when after the funeral, Sally Fields character does the 10 minute monologue about being first to go. Gets me everytime!!!

Link to comment
Guest Guest_SL

Black Swan was mentioned.

The Kings Speech.

And about 75% of Lars and the Real Girl. The flower scene! Buckets!

50 First Dates.

Never Been Kissed, again buckets.

Link to comment
Guest Addy K.

Lets see: The Notebook, A Walk to Remember (so cried for like the last 15minutes of), The Patriot(when Heath Ledger's character dies and Mel Gibson's character shows up), Last Samurai are some of mine that have made me cry over the years.

Link to comment
Guest 101remington7

The Boy in the Stripped Pajamas is the first movie that comes to mind. I watched it a few monthes back and at the end, I was crying so hard. Its such a sad movie.

Link to comment
  • 3 months later...
Guest Lady Anya

The following movies/short films move me to tears every time:

Big Fish- The end where the son is telling his father the story of how his life ends, finally understanding the father's passion for storytelling, and how everyone he ever encountered was there for one final farwell

The Snowman- The ending where the boy sees that the snowman had melted, and he takes a moment, ruling the previous night as a dream, until he pulls out the scarf that Santa gave him and realized it was all real, including the snowman who was now gone, and he kneels down to mourn the loss of his friend

Pleasantville- the part where Bud gives his boss a book of paintings he had never seen before and he responds with, "They're lucky to have colors like that, I bet they don't realize how lucky they are"

Rocky Balboa- Quite a few scenes really, the scene where he talks about the pursuit of happiness to the Boxing Commission, the speech he gives his son about "It's not about how hard you can hit, but how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward", and the end where he's sitting in front of Adrian's grave after the fight and says, "Yo Adrian, we did it" and walks away

Instinct- The part where the doctor says goodbye to his patient, talking how how he has to go back into "the game"

Harry Potter The Deathly Hallows Part 2- The scene where Harry's going off to die at the hands of Voldemort, and he uses the resurrection stone to see his parents, Remus Lupin and Sirius Black to maintain his courage

Pink Floyd The Wall- The Comfortably Numb scene and The Trial scene

Rock Star- The end where Chris walks off stage to pursue his own music and his own spirit

Link to comment
Guest Maria_B

You know what movie had me bawling over in tears? (Besides the Whats Eating Gilbert Grape and Titanic I mentioned)

Precious.

The scene that always gets me (well two) is the ''But Momma, I don't wanna eat no more'' and when the Mum just does away with the baby.

Link to comment
Guest Chrysee

Okay. . .

'West Side Story', 'Shakespeare in Love', 'The Bridges of Madison County', 'Field of Dreams' (I never met my father), 'Sophie's Choice', Bette Midler's remake of 'Stella', 'To Sir With Love' (the film that inspired me as a schoolboy to enter teaching), Avatar, The Last Samurai (which was already mentioned).

I'll no sooner log off before thinking of others. I'll get back to you.

Link to comment
  • 3 weeks later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   5 Members, 0 Anonymous, 116 Guests (See full list)

    • MaybeRob
    • Heather Shay
    • Ashley0616
    • Willow
    • Karen Carey
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      769.3k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,061
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Vivelacors
    Newest Member
    Vivelacors
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Aelia
      Aelia
      (22 years old)
    2. Just-Jenny-finally
      Just-Jenny-finally
      (65 years old)
    3. KelcieK
      KelcieK
      (50 years old)
    4. Krimson Kya
      Krimson Kya
      (35 years old)
    5. Robin
      Robin
      (56 years old)
  • Posts

    • Willow
      Good morning    wow, this is what 6 AM looks like not looking out the windows at work. Interesting week of start times 7,8,7,7,4.  ASM is off most of the week.     No coffee this morning, at least not until I get to work.  I’m going to see if no coffee makes a difference in how I feel today, I’ve head a headache for several days now, nothing has helped.  I do realize that stopping coffee cold turkey can bring on caffeine withdrawal headaches so I expect today to be no better.  But I’m hoping for tomorrow.  Today is just to see what if any affect it has on my throat.    time to fix my hair and walk the dog before I motor across the road.  Cherri o .   keep a stiff upper lip and all that stuff.  (Sorry, nothing the least bit funny coming to mind this morning, you’ll have to entertain yourself today}
    • Heather Shay
      What do you think is the biggest block to LGBTQ+ acceptance?
    • Heather Shay
      Nice Sunday, several new LGBTQ+ friends.
    • Heather Shay
      DON’T ADD JUDGEMENT TO YOUR FEELINGS by Olga Lacroix | Anxiety relief, Happiness, Mindfulness I’m sitting here drinking my favorite coffee, and as I enjoy this moment I cannot wait to share with you the thoughts that are in my head.  Recently, I have talked about how circumstances don’t determine your future. And somewhere along the line, I wanted to explore a little bit more about our thought process. How we discourage ourselves so often from our goals and from the things that we want, because we have beliefs that go against what we want. In this episode, I want to talk about how it’s important for us to learn not to judge our feelings. Aside from being a Life Coach, I’m also a Certified Mindfulness Instructor. And non-judgement is one of the learnings that I enjoy understanding, applying, and teaching. WHY BEING JUDGEMENTAL IS HARMFUL Sometimes it’s so difficult to be non-judgmental, especially if it’s coming from a bad experience or emotions. For example, a client of mine just had a pregnancy loss and a part of her coping mechanism is to hate or be indifferent to people who have babies.  It’s her way of processing the grief and protecting herself from anger and sadness. And recently someone close to her had a baby. She wanted to feel excited for that person but somehow her bad experience was holding her back. Like her, a lot of people cope this way. Some people try to hide their feelings and emotions just because they’ve already judged them as maybe improper or inappropriate emotions. And what happens is, those emotions stay inside them longer, they don’t get to process their emotions, and it becomes more painful. HOW NOT TO BE JUDGEMENTAL When we judge our feelings as bad, our natural response is to avoid it. We go through crazy lengths just to avoid the feeling, but by avoiding it we’re actually growing it. So what do we do? Do not judge the emotion, allow yourself to feel the negative emotions. Don’t mask it, instead embrace it.  DON’T IDENTIFY WITH YOUR EMOTIONS For someone like me who experienced Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or PTSD, a common side effect is anxiety. I have learned that the more I try to repel the anxious thoughts, the stronger they feel in my body, and the longer they stay. But when I’m courageous enough, and I say to the feeling, I’m not gonna judge you for existing, you’re just a feeling. I tell myself something neutral. There is anxiety, not I am anxious. Separate yourself from the feeling. The feeling is not you and it’s just temporary. FINDING THE BALANCE Now when the feeling is good and positive, we jump into attachment, wanting that feeling to linger longer and even forever. But according to Buddha, that’s when the suffering begins, when you want to make something last forever, and when you’re not ready to understand and accept the impermanence of emotions. Find the balance in your emotions. Learn to separate yourself from the emotion. Feel the emotions whether they’re good or bad, but don’t dwell in it. It’s an emotion that we need to feel, process, and eventually let go. Through this, we will achieve a healthier mind. STEPS TO FREE YOURSELF FROM JUDGEMENT The first step is awareness. Being aware of the emotion and how you have judged it. This step will allow you to think of the next step to free yourself from judgement. Step two is processing your emotion in neutrality. Go to a quiet place, close your eyes, and meditate. Bring all of your senses, all of your awareness to the feeling. Give it attention and wait for it to dissipate.  The last step is to pay attention to the lesson. Become curious and think about what this emotion is teaching you, what wisdom can you take from it. Be an observer of your emotions. You need to react, you need to fix them, change them, modify them, you just need to notice them. And then you need to open the space, let them be felt. These are moments of growth, these are moments of transformation. And most importantly, these are moments where we allow the emotion to be processed. Reset Your Mindset is opening in January of 2022. A program that helps you with making decisions, set clear boundaries without drama or guilt. Stop the hamster wheel that keeps you in overthinking mode, switching off the mean inner voice and switching on confidence and compassion instead. Reset your mindset and discover your true self. Click here to know more! Bonus: I’m also giving participants lifetime access to Detox The Mind online course. A course that emphasizes on helping you create new neurological connections so that you have a happier mind and healthier habits. See you inside!
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
    • April Marie
      Welcome to the forums, Felix!! It sounds like you keep yourself very busy and have some wonderful musical talent. My wife enjoys playing the ukulele, too.   There are lots of veterans here - not sure if any were Marines, though.   The forum is filled with lots of information, links and amazing people. Jump in where you feel comfortable.
    • Roach
      I just want to mention, where I live there are tons of cis guys your height or shorter. Among them is my dad and one of my professors (who are well over 17 y/o lol), and I honestly don't think twice about it. Every time I go to the grocery store I see at least 4 different guys around that height too. I don't think your height will be an issue towards passing long-term. (Well, maybe it's different in your region, but just wanted to throw in my 2 cents.)   I can relate to the hands thing though. If I ever hold something in front of the camera to take a photo of it, I feel like I have to crop my hands out so they don't "out" me. (I admit that that's silly.)  
    • Roach
      I noticed something like this too once I socially transitioned. I am so accustomed to people referring to me as a guy and using the right name, that socially I feel fine most of the time. This just makes me more aware of how physically uncomfortable I get sometimes.
    • KymmieL
      I have wondered how basic training is for transgender recruits?   Kymmie 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Some of them are us.  I view while logged out sometimes.  But I also know that so much of this forum is public.  I really wish more areas were "members only."  I'm aware that stuff I post here is publicly viewable, so I never post last names, first names of other people, pictures, or give my location.  I tend to think my husband and GF would be displeased at the few things I do post here.... and they may be right.   Our times are pretty uncertain, and it seems to be "fox hunting season" out there. 
    • VickySGV
      Welcome to the Forums Felix, enjoy yourself, but please get the homework done!!
    • VickySGV
      On May 4, the Trans Chorus Of Los Angeles did a whole 90 minutes of music that was all written by Trans composers and all of our singers and musicians were Trans / NB.  Several of the pieces were actually written by our chorus members.  (I was running a $3,500 set of video cameras on the show and am editing the the massive gigabytes they put out today. We had several guest artists either on stage or who contributed material.  One of the artists was Wrabel who wrote the song The Village which he has dedicated to the Trans Community and describes a young Trans child and the problems they had in their village.  The other MAJOR Trans Artist was Jennifer Leitham, a Bass Viol and Bass Guitar player who as a young man played with the Big Bands of the 60's and 70's in her male self into Transition, and wrote an autobiographical song entitled Manhood which tells of her love of the men she played with in the bands but her not really fitting as a man. Jennifer has played with the Chorus before and is always good music fun to have around.  Two of our members collaborated on a music and poetry piece simply entitled "I'll - - " which brought some tears with a promise to Trans Young People with the whole chorus shouting "I'll be there for you, I will be there for you" said for Trans Kids.  (We actually had a few Trans kids in the audience to hear it.)  My video editing program has about 40 minutes to go producing the main body of the edited video which has the actual song clips in the right order.  Next to put in the Title slides and the credits.  The stuff I get myself into.   The concert took place at the Renberg Theater which is part of the Los Angeles LGB Center in Hollywood.   
    • FelixThePickleMan
      Hi, I'm Felix a little trans guy from a small town. My pronouns are he/they and I enjoy music and all wildlife, I doodle on all my homework assignments. I really don't know what to say but, my favourite animal is a cow, my favourite musical genre is country, I play electric bass & acoustic guitar as well as the ukulele a little bit of piano and drums (hand drums and drum sets). I like things of all sorts and I like food, a lot. My favourite meal is French fries and a good steak. My Personal Record for dead-lifting is 310 lbs and I like to sprint and play basketball. My mum's a "bit" overbearing but what can you do. I love reading Manga, I'm currently reading Assassination Classroom, I also enjoy reading Stephen King. I plan on joining the Marines after high school and become a k-9 handler.  I think that's all. For now :) 
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...