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

Guest MissSiul

Im a sensitive person,a lot of things can affect me

or make me feel bad,but I hardly really cry

The movies that I cried are Titanic and Marley & Me(I like the book better,

but the movie made me cry more)

Link to comment
  • 3 weeks later...
  • Replies 104
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • JenniferB

    2

  • MaryEllen

    1

  • Sally

    1

  • KimOrbit

    1

  • 3 weeks later...
Guest Nightgirl

OK here I go. The one that gets me the most is," The Notebook " both of my parents died of Alzheimer's disease.

"Revenge of the Sith" When Anakin Skywalker kill the young ones. Now on Hormones I cry at everything, today the girl I work with got me a cake for my birthday. She said, "why are you crying". I said I don't know.

I'm crying now because of the movies you've listed.

I actually love being able to cry. Night-girl

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Happy Birthday Nightgirl!

I am sorry I didn't include you on the cake and ice cream today but your birthday wasn't listed so I didn't know.

I hope it was a good birthday and that the coming year will be fulled with wishes coming true.

Hugs

Johnny and Laura's Playground

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

I shed a tear every time I see The Green Mile. I swear, that's the saddest thing ever, gets me every time.

A few tragic LGBT-themed movies have also made me cry. I almost cried during that episode of Mental that was based on the story of David Reimer.

Nothing much else, though. Movies probably just don't touch me like music.

Link to comment

I usually cry during most movies, I guess the latest movie I saw that I cried in was Super 8.

For the latest TV shows (which I hardly cry over). It has to be the episode entitled "Jurassic Bark" from Futurama. By far the saddest episode in any tv series I have ever seen.

Link to comment

There are a few films which get me teary eyed, but to this day the one that I have to set aside a couple of hours at least for "alone time to reflect" despite how many times I have seen it and know what happens is by far my favorite film of all time:

American History X

If you have not seen it, you have missed out greatly. I do warn you though. It will haunt you.

Link to comment
Guest Vixen Amber

Yeah I didn't really tear up for him, I felt bad but it was hard to get attached to that character because of his personality throughout the movie. Fanboys definitely made me cry hard at the end. Also it's not a movie but several episodes of Fullmetal Alchemist brotherhood left me in tears. When they try and bring back their mom, the girl crying at the fathers funeral, it was all touching and hit home hard with me.

Link to comment

So I watched Titanic the other night.

-bawl-

The mother telling the story to her children as the ship breaks -bawl-

And the one that always, without fail, makes me absolutely lose my stuff and just cry for hours on end - What's Eating Gilbert Grape.

Yes, both Decap movies, but it wasn't Decap's role that made me cry. Darlene Cates. ''YOU GIVE ME MY BABY BACK!''

Link to comment

At least one scene in every movie produced in the last 50 years (except Citizen Kane which I just watched). I cry when they're real happy, or when they achieved some great feat, or when they've lost someone or found someone. Movies about horses, or dogs, always seem to tear me up. I especially get going when something very good and unexpected happens to someone who is down on their luck. It's usually not a hard cry, just lumps and maybe a little sniffle.

I used to hide my emotions but not so much anymore.

Shari

Link to comment
Guest Julie1957

"Maggie and Annie"

This is a film about a wife falling in love with a lesbian and coming to terms with the relationship, her husband, and family. I cried throughout the film but the ending is really sad.

-Julie

Link to comment

"Born Free"

I almost outed myself accidentally back in the early 70s by not being able to stop crying after Elsa the lioness died. I was about 9 years old, I think, and my brothers and father teased me relentlessly as I wept, when all I really needed was comforting, comforting that never came...

Svenna

Link to comment

Movies

Suckerpunch (my favorite movie)

Tangled

Up!

Wall-E

Little Mermaid

^ a few i have recently watched that made me cry a lot

What about video games too?

Final Fantasy X

Final Fantasy VIII

Link to comment

Movies

Suckerpunch (my favorite movie)

Tangled

Up!

Wall-E

Little Mermaid

^ a few i have recently watched that made me cry a lot

What about video games too?

Final Fantasy X

Final Fantasy VIII

I don't go to the movies much anymore (I can wait for netflix/redbox and save the 11 dollar difference for the snip-snip fund) so I rented suckerpunch on a whim expecting the usual 300-esque action film with plenty of CGI eye candy and boy did I get more than what I bargained for.

I thought it was a brilliant film and the ending was just brutally gut wrenching and had me reaching for the kleenex box.

Strangely enough, I had a similar reaction to another film from the same creators: Watchmen.

But yeah, Suckerpunch was pretty awesome.

Link to comment

there are lots of movies who was trying to make me cry. but I couldn't cry because of "Boys must not cry" policy. When I start Crying every one look at me strangely. that's hard to handle that situation. but when some thing really good or some thing bad happens I cant stop crying.

and In every thing even musics and even jokes, I cry when some thing is similar to my life. for example last thing made me cry was a music from Epica band. It was "Living A Lie" and b4 that "Cry for the moon" made me cry a lot.

but some movies like Wall.E and Cinderella makes me cry.

and only movie who made me cry and I couldn't stop crying was Black Swan. In the last scene of movie I was crying a river and when my mother and my sister tried to prevent me from crying I couldn't handle that and I shout at them. then they leaved me alone and I cried a lot. Here is a photo of that scene:

BlackSwan4.jpg

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

Her's my list

Titanic

Pay it Forward

Schindler's List

The Notebook

Fireproof(not so much now)

Dear John

Philadelphia

The most recent is Courageous. There's a part of the movie in which the main character asks his friends the question "When did you realize you were a man?". I started bawling. I never could say I ever felt like a man.

Meredith

Link to comment
Guest Felicia Anne

ok. we all know the story. felicia can't cry. blah blah blah.

but if you want to cry... and trust me, if tears would flow, this would be the water faucet... find a copy of disney's "the ugly duckling". it was an academy award winning short from 1939. you can find it on youtube. and believe me, any tears i may have will be shed one day for that little swan. to this day, it really gets my emotions overloaded.

Link to comment

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   4 Members, 0 Anonymous, 178 Guests (See full list)

    • Ashley0616
    • MaeBe
    • MaryEllen
    • Carolyn Marie
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      768.4k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,029
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Selkimur
    Newest Member
    Selkimur
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Anyatimenow
      Anyatimenow
      (23 years old)
    2. Aria00
      Aria00
    3. Ava B.
      Ava B.
      (24 years old)
    4. Claire Heshi
      Claire Heshi
    5. CrystalMatthews0426
      CrystalMatthews0426
      (41 years old)
  • Posts

    • Ivy
      Like @MaeBe pointed out, Trump won't do these things personally.  I doubt that he actually gives a rat's a$$ himself.  But he is the foot in the door for the others.   I don't really see this.  Personally, I am all in favor of "traditional" families.  I raised my own kids this way and it can work fine.  But I think we need to allow for other variations as well.   One thing working against this now is how hard it is for a single breadwinner to support a family.  Many people (I know some) would prefer "traditional" if they could actually afford it.  Like I mentioned, we raised our family with this model, but we were always right at the poverty level.   I was a "conservative evangelical" for most of my life, actually.  So I do understand this.  Admittedly, I no longer consider myself one. I have family members still in this camp.  Some tolerate me, one actually rejects me.  I assure you the rejection is on her side, not mine.  But, I understand she believes what she is doing is right - 'sa pity though. I mean no insult toward anyone on this forum.  You're free to disagree with me.  Many people do.   This is a pretty complex one.  Socialism takes many forms, many of which we accept without even realizing it.  "Classism" does exist, for what it's worth.  Always has, probably always will.  But I don't feel like that is a subject for this forum.   As for the election, it's shaping up to be another one of those "hold your nose" deals.
    • Ivy
      Just some exerts regarding subjects of interest to me.
    • Ivy
      Yeah.  In my early teens I trained myself out of a few things that I now wish I hadn't.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I was thinking in particular of BLM, who years ago had a 'What We Believe' section that sounded like they were at war with the nuclear family.   I tried to find it. Nope.  Of interest https://www.politifact.com/article/2020/aug/28/ask-politifact-does-black-lives-matter-aim-destroy/   My time is limited and I will try to answer as I can.
    • Ivy
      Well, I suppose it is possible that they don't actually plan on doing what they say.  I'm not too sure I want to take that chance.  But I kinda expect to find out.  Yet, perhaps you're right and it's all just talk.  And anyway, my state GOP is giving me enough to worry about anyway. I remember a time when being "woke" just meant you were paying attention.  Now it means you are the antichrist. I just don't want the government "protecting" me from my personal "delusions."
    • MaeBe
      1.  I think there are some legitimate concern.   2. Thoroughly discussing this will consume many threads.   3. I disagree partially with @MaeBe but there is partial agreement.   4. The context includes what is happening in society that the authors are observing.  It is not an isolated document.   The observation is through a certain lens, because people do things differently doesn't mean they're doing it wrong. Honestly, a lot of the conservative rhetoric is morphing desires of people to be treated with respect and social equity to be tantamount to the absolution of the family, heterosexuality, etc. Also, being quiet and trying to blend in doesn't change anything. Show me a social change that benefits a minority or marginalized group that didn't need to be loud.   5. Trump, if elected, is as likely to spend his energies going after political opponents as he is to implementing something like this.   Trump will appoint people to do this, like Roger Severino (who was appointed before, who has a record of anti-LGBTQ+ actions), he need not do anything beyond this. His people are ready to push this agenda forward. While the conservative right rails about bureaucracy, they intend to weaponize it. There is no question. They don't want to simplify government, they simply want to fire everyone and bring in conservative "warriors" (their rhetoric). Does America survive 4 year cycles of purge/cronyism?   6. I reject critical theory, which is based on Marxism.  Marxism has never worked and never will.  Critical theory has problems which would need time to go into, which I do not have.   OK, but this seems like every other time CRT comes up with conservatives...completely out of the blue. I think it's reference is mostly just to spark outrage from the base. Definitely food thought for a different thread, though.   7. There are groups who have declared war on the nuclear family as problematically patriarchal, and a lot of other terms. They are easy to find on the internet.  This document is reacting to that (see #4 above).   What is the war on the nuclear family? I searched online and couldn't find much other than reasons why people aren't getting married as much or having kids (that wasn't a propaganda from Heritage or opinions pieces from the right that paint with really broad strokes). Easy things to see: the upward mobility and agency of women, the massive cost of rearing children, general negative attitudes about the future, male insecurity, etc. None of this equates to a war on the nuclear family, but I guess if you look at it as "men should be breadwinners and women must get married for financial support and extend the male family line (and to promote "National Greatness") I could see the decline of marriage as a sign of the collapse of a titled system and, if I was a beneficiary of that system or believe that to NOT be tilted, be aggrieved.   8.  Much of this would have to be legislated, and this is a policy documented.  Implementation would  be most likely different, but that does not mean criticism is unwarranted.   "It might be different if you just give it a chance", unlike all the other legislation that's out there targeting LGBTQ+ from the right, these are going to be different? First it will be trans rights, then it will be gay marriage, and then what? Women's suffrage?   I get it, we may have different compasses, but it's not hard to see that there's no place for queer people in the conservative worldview. There seems to be a consistent insistence that "America was and is no longer Great", as if the 1950s were the pinnacle of society, completely ignoring how great America still is and can continue to be--without having to regress society to the low standards of its patriarchal yesteryears.    
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Cadillac parts are pretty expensive, so repairing them costs more.  But they don't seem to break down more than other makes.  Lots of Lincoln models use Ford cars as a base, so you can get parts that aren't much more expensive.    My family has had good luck with "Panther platform" cars.  Ford Crown Victoria, Mercury Marquis, Lincoln Towncar or Continental.  4.6 V8 and 5.0 V8.  Reasonable fuel economy, and fairly durable.  Our county sheriff's office was running Chargers and SUV's for a while, but has gone back to older Crown Victorias for ease of maintenance.  GF rebuilds them here.  But they are getting more scarce, since the newest ones were made in 2011.    1992-1997 years were different than the later years.  1998-2001 they did some changes, and apparently the best years are 2003 to 2011.  Check Craigslist, and also government auctions.  GF has gotten a lot of them at auction, and they can be had in rough-but-running shape for around $1,000.  Ones in great shape can be found in the $5,000+ range.  Good for 200,000 miles without significant rebuilding.  Go through engine and transmission and electrical systems, and they go half a million.    Some Chrysler models are OK.  The 300 mostly has the same engines as the Charger and Challenger, so parts availability is pretty good.  But they tend to get timing issues.  The older Chrysler Sebring convertibles were pretty reliable, sometimes going 200,000 miles without tons of problems, although after that they were pretty much worn out. 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I think I have read everything the Southern Baptists have to say on transgender, and it helped convince me they are dead wrong on these issues.  They can be nice people.  I would never join an SBC church.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      You come across as a thoughtful, sweet, interesting and pleasant person.    There are parts of this country, and more so the world, where evangelicals experience a great deal of finger wagging.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      It has been an interesting experience being in a marriage in a Christian faith community, yet being intersex/trans.  I stay pretty quiet, and most have kind of accepted that I'm just the strange, harmless exception.  "Oh, that's just Jen.  Jen is...different."  I define success as being a person most folks just overlook. 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Well, I live in an area with a lot of Southern Baptists, Evangelicals, etc...  We've experienced our share of finger-wagging, as the "standard interpretation" of Scripture in the USA is that the Bible only approves of "one man, one woman" marriage.  My faith community is mostly accepted here, but that has taken time and effort.  It can be tough at times to continue to engage with culture and the broader population, and avoid the temptation to huddle up behind walls like a cult.    Tolerance only goes so far.  At one point, my husband was asked to run for sheriff.  He declined, partly because an elected official with four wives would have a REALLY tough time.  (Of course, making way less than his current salary wasn't an option either). 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      My bone structure is far more female than male.  I can't throw like a guy, which has been observed by guys numerous times, and moving like a woman is more natural.  It just is.  I'm not going out of my way to act in a fem. way, as you say, but I am letting go of some of the 'I am not going to move like that because I am a guy' stuff I have defensively developed.  The other breaks through anyway - there were numerous looks from people at work when I would use gestures that are forbidden to men, or say something spontaneously no guy would ever say.   At one point, maybe a year or more ago, I said it was unfair for people to think they were dealing with a man when they were actually dealing with a woman.    Girl here.  'What is a woman' is a topic for another day.
    • Willow
      Mom, I’m home!  What’s for lunch?   Leftover pizza .   ok.    Not exactly our conversation but there is truth in the answer.     @KymmieLsorry you are sick. Feel better soon.   Girl mode, boy mode no mode, not us. Nothing functional for either of us.   anyone here have or had a 10 year old (plus or minus) Caddy, Lincoln or Chrysler?  How was it?  Lots of repairs?  Comfortable seats? Anything positive or negative about it?  I need to replace my 2004 Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer, it’s eating $100 dollar bills and needs a couple of thousand dollars worth of work and that doesn’t even fix the check engine code.  Obviously, it isn’t worth putting that kind of money into a 20 year old car with a 174 thousand miles.   Willow
    • Ashley0616
      Oversized pink shirt, pink and black sports bra
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I think you mean the worst possible interpretation of 2025 situation.  Keep in mind that there are those who will distort and downright lie about anything coming from conservatives - I have seen it time and time again.  It's one of the reasons I want to read the thing slowly and carefully.  They want you to be very, very afraid. 
  • 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...