The Greatest Tearjerkers of All-Time
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Movie Title/Year and Brief Tearjerker Scene Description |
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Touching the Void (2003, UK/US)
#89
- mountain climber Simon Yates and
his broken-legged climbing partner Joe Simpson, while returning
from an unprecedented climb up the 21,000 foot high west face of
the Peruvian mountain Siula Grande in 1985, ran into severe problems.
Joe was at the end of a rope and being supported and lowered by
Simon, but when Joe went over the edge of a steep slope, he was
accidentally suspended over the side of a cliff and was unable
to respond, and was thinking to himself: ("I think psychologically
I was beaten. 'Cause there was nothing I could do, so I just hung
on the rope and waited to die")
- the moment that Simon, thinking
Joe had passed away when he didn't respond to rope tugging, was
forced to cut the line with a knife ("To me, it just seemed like
the right thing to do under the circumstances...If was an awful night.
My mind was plagued with the thoughts of what had happened to Joe")
- the rope-cutting sent Simpson deep into a crevasse
- the moving description
of Simpson "touching the void," feeling
utterly alone in the universe, as he stared death in the face: ("I
felt very, very alone. And I was very scared") - although he
survived
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Toy Story 2 (1999)
- in a flashback sequence, Jesse the Yodeling Cowgirl's
(voice of Joan Cusack) touching torch song: "When
She Loved Me" (performed by Sarah McLachlan):
"When somebody loved me Everything was beautiful Every hour we
spent together Lives within my heart And when she was sad I
was there to dry her tears And when she was happy so was I When
she loved me Through the summer and the fall We had each other. That
was all Just she and I together Like it was meant to be And
when she was lonely I was there to comfort her And I knew that She
loved me So the years went by I stayed the same But she began to
drift away I was left alone Still I waited for the day When she'd
say I will always love you Lonely and forgotten I never thought she'd
look my way..."
Jesse described to Woody (voice
of Tom Hanks) her sorrow. In the visuals during the song, beloved owner
Emily matured into a teenager - and no longer played with toys (but
was more interested in nail polish and makeup, parties and boyfriends)
- thereby abandoning her under her bed; years
later when the toy was rediscovered, Jesse's hopes were dashed when
Emily left her in a cardboard charity donation box on the side of the
road
- Jesse's sorrowful words to Woody were about her
previous toy owners:
"You never forget kids like Emily or Andy. But they forget
you"
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Trois Couleurs: Bleu (1993, Fr./Pol./Switz.)
(aka Three Colors: Blue)
- the first segment of Krzysztof Kieslowski's
"Three Colors" Trilogy
- the raw, intensely emotional tale of composer-wife
Julie Vignon-de Courcy (Juliette Binoche) who unexpectedly lost
her husband Patrice de Courcy and daughter Anna in a car accident
(on a foggy road, the vehicle ran into a tree) that she had survived,
and her inability to cope with the tragedy - completely deadened
and unable to outwardly display any sense of loss or grief except
the most subtle displays
- the scene
in the hospital where suicidal Julie was caught trying to swallow
an overdose of pills, but couldn't actually swallow them
- at her hospital bed in which Julie
watched the funeral - with the dark shadow of her finger tracing
the image of her daughter's small coffin on a tiny LCD TV screen
- the scenes in which Julie attempte to commit "spiritual
suicide" by disassociating herself from her past - including
floating face down in a pool bathed in a blue light to
escape
- the scene of her frozen reaction to exotic dancer-friend
Lucille (Charlotte Véry) touching one of her past's
sole mementos: her daughter's blue crystal beads mobile
- other scenes in which Julie destroyed her late
husband's last composition and gave his estate to his pregnant
mistress Sandrine (Florence Pernel)
- the final image - Julie crying - a rare sight
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Truly Madly Deeply (1990, UK)
#44
#24
- the scene in which devoted husband
and cellist Jamie (Alan Rickman) returned from the dead as a ghost
to join his inconsolable, bereaved lover Nina (Juliet Stevenson),
an interpreter, with her questions of him, and his explanation of
his return: ("I dunno, maybe I didn't die properly.
Maybe that's why I can come back. It was like standing behind a glass
wall while everybody else got on with missing me. It didn't hurt.
And you know, I'm very sensitive to pain. It really didn't hurt").
After they kissed, he spoke about her pain: (Jamie: "Thank you
for missing me." Nina: "I have. I do. I did." Jamie:
"I know. But the pain, your pain, I couldn't
bear that.")
- his description of a local neighbor girl who died:
("There's a little girl. I see this little girl from time to time.
Alice, who's three, three and a half. And she's great. Everybody
makes a big fuss, but she isn't spoiled. Well, she wasn't spoiled.
She was knocked over and she died. And her parents and her family
and her friends from kindergarten. Well, she used to go to this
park. And she was telling me, they made an area in the park, gave
the money for swings and little wooden animals. And there are these
plaques on each of the, on the sides of the swing, the bottom
of the horse, from Alice's mum and dad: 'In loving memory
of Alice, who used to play here.' And, of course, Alice goes
back there all the time. You see parents take their child off
the swing and see the sign. And then they hold onto their son
and daughter so tightly, clinging on for dear life. And yet
the capacity to love that people have. What happens to it?")
- the scene of their lengthy proclamation of their
love for each other: (Nina: "I love you." Jamie: "I
love you." Nina: "I really love you." Jamie: "I
really, truly love you." Nina: "I really, truly, madly
love you." Jamie: "I really, truly, madly, deeply love
you." Nina: "I really, truly, madly, deeply, passionately
love you." Jamie: "I really, truly, madly, deeply, passionately,
remarkably love you." Nina: "I really, truly, madly, deeply,
passionately, remarkably, uhmm... deliciously love you." Jamie: "I
really, truly, madly, passionately, remarkably, deliciously... juicily
love you...." Nina: "Deeply! Deeply! You passed on deeply,
which was your word, which means that you couldn't have meant it!
So you're a fraud, that's it!...(They hug) You're probably a figment
of my imagination. (pause) Juicily?")
- their singing of "The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore" (accompanied
by his playing on the cello) and then their
joining together in a piano duet
- toward the end of the film, Jamie recalled
the first night that they spent together when Nina asked him to describe
it: "What did we do?" - he remembered: ("We talked...Well, talking
was the major component. You played that piano. Then I played, then
we both played. Something, duet. Something, I can't remember. And
then you danced for about three hours, until I fell asleep. But you
were fantastic. And then we had some cornflakes. And when we kissed
which was at about 11 o'clock the following morning, we were trembling
so much, we couldn't take off our clothes")
- later, he recited Pablo Neruda's
Spanish poem La
Muerta to
Nina (which she translated line by line from Spanish to English)
when she was beginning to decide that she was ready to move on
from Jamie: ("Forgive
me...If you are not living...If you, beloved, my love, if you have
died... All the leaves will fall on my breast... It will rain on
my soul all night, all day... My feet will want to march to where
you are sleeping... But I shall go on living.") Jamie then
asked Nina: "Do you want me to go?" She tightly hugged
him: "No,
never, never, never."
- Jamie's fellow ghosts came to him and asked if Nina
was ready to move on to a new relationship - with art therapist-psychologist
Mark (Michael Maloney). One asked: "Well?", and Jamie
responded: "I think so. Yes." In the next scene, Nina admitted
to Mark: "I think I am free. I did love someone very much, you
see. Very much. But he died. He died. And I found it quite hard to
get over it." Soon after, she would be sleeping over at Mark's
house, with her overnight toothbrush. The ghosts watched from her
upstairs apartment window the next morning as Nina left for good
to be with Mark from now on
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The Truman Show (1998)
- the triumphant moment in which
unwitting reality-TV show star Truman Burbank (Jim Carrey) rejected
omniscient, God-like producer Christof's (Ed Harris) plea to remain
in the artificial world (where he had "nothing
to fear" - "You
belong here with me") rather than venture into the real world
(with "the
same lies, the same deceit"). Truman smiled beatifically at the
camera, and sarcastically uttered
his cheerful catchphrase: ("In case I don't see ya, good afternoon,
good evening, and good night!"), took a deep farewell bow, and
then exited from the massive set through the stage door to freedom
from the virtual prison of Seahaven Island's massive set
and a new existence (to the sounds
of Philip Glass' stirring "The
Opening from Mishima") - as TV's Truman Show ceased
transmission
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12 Monkeys (1995) (aka Twelve Monkeys)
- in the film's conclusion, the sad, long drawn-out
death scene of time-traveling, delusional convict James Cole (Bruce
Willis), who was shot in the Philadelphia airport by security guards,
and was mourned over by grieving present-day blonde lover, psychiatrist
Dr. Kathryn Railly (Madeleine Stowe), as a young incarnation of himself
(Joseph Melito) looked on and was knowingly recognized by Kathryn
as he witnessed his own death
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2001: A Space Odyssey (1968, UK)
- the scene in which astronaut
David Bowman (Keir Dullea) incapacitated-lobotomized the sentient
HAL-9000 computer (voice of Douglas Rain) by turning off his higher
functions as HAL begged: ("Dave,
stop. Stop, will you? Stop, Dave. Will you stop, Dave? Stop, Dave.
I'm afraid. I'm afraid, Dave. Dave, my mind is going. I can feel
it. I can feel it. My mind is going. There is no question about it.
I can feel it. I can feel it. I can feel it. I'm a-fraid...")
- HAL's end of life as he mindlessly sang "Daisy" or "A
Bicycle Built for Two"
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2010: The Year We Make Contact (1984)
- the scene on Earth, in which the ghost (an incorporeal
being) of astronaut David Bowman (Keir Dullea) visited his former
wife Betty Fernandez (Mary Jo Deschanel) - now remarried. he appeared
on her television screen to check on her and say good-bye for one
last time: ("I remember Dave Bowman and everything about him...All
Dave Bowman really was is still a part of me...Something's gonna
happen and I wanted to say goodbye...something wonderful");
he also paid a visit to his terminally-ill mother before her death
- the tearful scene in which
Dr. Chandra (Bob Balaban), HAL-9000's creator, told HAL (voice
of Douglas Rain) the truth -- that they intended to sacrifice HAL
on the spaceship Discovery One to escape an imploding Jupiter
(due to rapidly-multiplying Monoliths and a nuclear fusion reaction)
- HAL's quiet and dignified acceptance of his fate -
and his thanks: ("I understand now,
Dr. Chandra...Thank you for telling me the truth"), and Chandra's
response and farewell: ("You deserve it...Thank you, HAL")
- the fond, final exchange
between an ethereal David and a doomed HAL: (HAL: "I'm
afraid." David: "Don't be. We'll be together")
- HAL's final transmission to Earth, repeatedly broadcast:
("ALL
THESE WORLDS ARE YOURS EXCEPT EUROPA ATTEMPT NO LANDING THERE USE
THEM TOGETHER USE THEM IN PEACE")
- Dr. Heywood R. Floyd's (Roy Scheider) final transcendent
speech and transmission, to his son Christopher (Taliesin Jaffe),
about the miraculous appearance of a second star in the sky (the
remains of Jupiter) and his dreams of long-lasting interplanetary
friendship and peace: ("My
dear Christopher. This is the last time I'll be able to speak
to you for a long while. I'm trying to put into words what has happened.
Maybe that's for historians to do sometime later. They will record
that the next day, the President of the United States looked
out of the White House window and the Premier of the Soviet
Union looked out of the Kremlin window and saw the new distant
sun in the sky. They read the message, and perhaps they learned something
because they finally recalled their ships and their planes. I'm going
to sleep now. And I will dream of you and your mother. I will sleep
knowing that you are both safe, that the fear is over. We have
seen the process of life take place. Maybe this is the way it happened
on Earth millions of years ago. Maybe it's something completely different.
I still don't know really what the Monolith is. I think it's many
things. An embassy for an intelligence beyond ours, a shape of some
kind for something that has no shape. Your children will be born
in a world of two suns. They will never know a sky without them.
You can tell them that you remember when there was a pitch black
sky with no bright star, and people feared the night. You can tell
them when we were alone, when we couldn't point to the light and
say to ourselves: 'There is life out there.' Someday the children
of the new sun will meet the children of the old. I think they will
be our friends. You can tell your children of the day when everyone
looked up and realized that we were only tenants of this world. We
have been given a new lease -- and a warning -- from the landlord.")
- the final evocative shot of the Monolith in a primordial
jungle on Europa as Richard Strauss' Thus Spake Zarasthustra plays
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