Which movie did you cry in?

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I don't think I've ever actually cried during a movie, but came close a few times.

Remember The Titans
Black Hawk Down
The Last Samurai
 
The Lion King
Spirited Away
Akira
Cast Away
Finding Nemo (the last 10 minutes that I saw in Wal Mart almost got to me)
and I'm sure a few more got to me.
 
Originally posted by Roo
...and there's another film but I can't remember what it is.

Got it now - the end of Con Air, when Nick Cage's character (I forget the name) meets his daughter for the first time.
 
I almost forgot....

In the Movie "Blow"...

When he has to say goodbye to his father, and when he composes the tape for his dad.... Those two parts initiated a psuedo Niagra Falls....lol


;)
 
I cry in "The Rock", at the part N. Cage is on his knees (with the flares) when the F-16s (?) go soaring over him, damn decent climax to a scene that was.
 
Originally posted by Sleek Stratos
I cry in "The Rock", at the part N. Cage is on his knees (with the flares) when the F-16s (?) go soaring over him, damn decent climax to a scene that was.
Haha, yeah that was a great scene. But why did you cry?
 
I wish I knew, tabs.
At the moment I'm guessing it's the whole crescendo of the situation that just brings tears to my eyes, not to say I need a kleenex or something, but I do get misty-eyed.
Most events on film that put the human spirit on trial (with a decent feeling of "emergency" to it all) they happen to move me for whatever reason.
 
I cried in a few movies.

Braveheart when Mel Gibson cries out Freeeeeedooooommm that is just a total slam to the heart if ya know what i mean.

At the end of Gladiator when Maximus kills the Caesar and then falls over dead and we get to see him go andmeet his family. Man is that a touching moment.

Probably some others I cant think of.
 
I wouldn't say "cry in" but I saw this t.v. movie? last week called "The truth about Jane" it was a very good movie about a girl that realizes she's a lesbian. It is powerful one in the sense of showing the pain of discrimination and/or racism not about being gay or lesbian. I thought it was a great movie though. I felt that I could relate a little in a sense of the struggle through school to "fit in" or "be accepted". Like it says in the movie "the world is not a nice place".
 
Well I don't usually cry in movies but I've always got a tear in my eye after watching the movie based on a true story called Awakenings with Robin Williams and Robert Deniro, Especially the scene when Leonard lowe is starting to return to his comatose state when the drugs are failing, Whoever hasn't seen this movie should see it, its one of the sadder movies I've seen. Plus Robert Deniro did such a magnificent and very touching role in this movie, that will definitely put a tear in your eye.
 
The Last Samurai got me wiping a drop or two. But don't tell anyone...SSSHHHH. :)

It was a couple of scenes. The first was toward the end of the final samurai battle and the second was with the final scene with the Emperor and Cruise's character.
 
Most recently I saw Forrest Gump again, and my eyes got watery at the end when he was at the grave. And I guess Armageddon was pretty sad but Liv Tyler is too damn hot so I was too concentrated on that.
 
Originally posted by VipFREAK
I wouldn't say "cry in" but I saw this t.v. movie? last week called "The truth about Jane" it was a very good movie about a girl that realizes she's a lesbian. It is powerful one in the sense of showing the pain of discrimination and/or racism not about being gay or lesbian. I thought it was a great movie though. I felt that I could relate a little in a sense of the struggle through school to "fit in" or "be accepted". Like it says in the movie "the world is not a nice place".

Are you talking about that documentory on the girl that got beaten and raped by these two guys she knew? That person was what the movie "Boys Don't Cry" was based on if I remember correctly.
 
Well, you can add Osamu Tezuka's Metropolis to my list. Who am I? :(
 
Originally posted by milefile
Enemy at the Gate

The scene near the begining when the Russian soldiers were retreating, weaponless, from the Nazis at Stalingrad, only to be shot down by their commanders.
That scene was harsh.
 
I cried yesterday after I saw Dumb & Dumber'er. I still can't believe I paid $1.50 to rent that "comedy," ugh.
 
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