That was the crappiest movie ever. A little bit better than The Blindside. They turned a really good story into a really terrible, over sappy film depiction.
LMAO! for some reason when the guy tried to force his way into the bathroom I couldn't stop laughing. The way Will Smith tried to brace the door with his toe, for some reason, had me rollin'! I was watching Bridge to Terabithia with my little sister the little girl in the film died, it caught me off guard, was not expecting that at all. I didn't cry but I got a knot in my throat. It was all the little boy's fault too! She went to the bridge in the rain to wait for him but he was too damn busy at the mall crushing on the damn school teacher smh.
I agree. The opening of UP was very moving. The part of the montage where they find out they can't have kids (or she miscarries its not clear) was particularly moving.
Up got me pretty bad multiple times. Tonight I was reading the end of 'Charlotte's Web' to my daughter and I started to get choked up when Charlotte died. I felt dumb because I knew it was coming and it didn't bother me when I read it as a kid.
- Dear Zachary - Into The Wild - 127 Hours - UP Other than Dear Zachary - which had tears streaming down my face - I generally only got choked up as opposed to actually crying.
By cry, if you mean trying to blink really fast so that not a single tear falls down your face in order to appear manlier to your S.O., then I am guilty of doing it now and then. In the last five years, these gave me a hard time: -The Champ -Click -Grave of the Fireflies -La Vita รจ Bella/Life is Beautiful -Atonement
I know it's not a movie but the last Sun Kil Moon album Admiral Fell Promises made me cry because it was so beautiful.
I teared up when he finally broke free, and then when the hikers see him. The score really added so much to that film. The only ones I cried like a baby during were Dear Zachary (of course) and Marley & Me. The certain "scene" in that movie is torture, especially if you've ever had a dog.
The Urinal Cake (1937) - A touching documentary about the invention of the cake and the thick skin it has had to develop over the years. We might not think of it as much, but between the different streams of urine splashing down fiercely and the cigarette butts/other foreign bodies, the mental and physical abuse each cake has to take is pretty phenomenal. A moving but powerful piece of cinema history. My tears mixed with phlegm and I finished a box of tissues by the intermission.