The Greatest Tearjerkers of All-Time
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Movie Title/Year and Brief Tearjerker Scene Description |
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The Pianist (2002)
#59
- the disturbing imagery of a ragged, bearded Polish-Jew
named Wladyslaw Szpilman (Adrien Brody), half-limping and wandering
through the war-torn, bombed-out streets of German-occupied Warsaw,
and entering abandoned buildings in a desperate search for food
- the upsetting scene in which classical
pianist Szpilman, a Polish-Jew in hiding, was caught
as he was clumsily opening a large tin can of vegetables; the
camera panned upward from a pair of shoes to reveal Wehrmacht Captain
Wilm Hosenfeld (Thomas Kretschmann) in front of him; under threat
of death, Szpilman was asked questions: ("What
are you doing here? Who are you?...What are you doing?...Do you
live here? Do you work here?...What do you do for a living?");
when Szpilman identified himself as a pianist, he was forced to
play a piece on his intact piano ("Come. Play something")
- Chopin Ballade No. 1 in G Minor; afterwards, the officer asked: "Are
you hiding here? Jew? Where are you hiding?" Wladyslaw
replied: "In the attic"; afterwards, Hosenfeld brought
Szpilman food to help him survive: (Szpilman: "I don't know
how to thank you." Hosenfeld: "Thank God, not me. He
wants us to survive. Well, that's what we have to believe")
- the rescue scene when Szpilman was found by Polish
troops liberating Warsaw, but ironically was almost shot because
he was wearing Hosenfeld's German Army coat in order to keep warm:
("No! Don't shoot, I'm Polish! I'm Polish!...Please! I beg
of you! Don't shoot, don't shoot. Don't shoot. I beg you, I'm a
Polish");
the troops asked: "Why the f--king coat?" - and he simply
replied:
"I'm cold"
- after the liberation, the scene of freed Jews decrying
their German captors, now imprisoned in an enclosed barb-wired
yard: ("German
f--kers! Murderers! Murderers! Dirty bastards! Assassins! Bastards!"),
and Hosenfeld's desperate entreaty to one of the Jews (who revealed
he was a violinist) to seek assistance from a musical acquaintance
named Szpilman ("I helped him to hide himself. Tell him I'm
here. Ask him to help me")
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Pickup on South Street (1953)
- the scene in which embittered,
world-weary tie-seller and "stoolie" informant street peddler Moe
Williams (Thelma Ritter) told her killer Joey (Richard Kiley) in
her dingy rooming house: ("So
I don't get to have the fancy funeral after all. Anyway, I tried.
Look, Mister, I'm so tired you'd be doin' me a big favor if you'd
blow my head off")
- the camera panned to the left and a gunshot was heard - with the
final image of her bedside Victrola's needle reaching the end of
the record (the popular French tune "Mam'zelle")
- the
subsequent scene in which pickpocket Skip McCoy (Richard Widmark)
reclaimed Moe's body from a tugboat (taking her in coffin # 11 to
potter's field) in order to give her a proper burial ("I'm gonna
bury her")
- fulfilling her sole wish in life
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A Place
in the Sun (1951)
- the final prison farewell
scene of condemned
and doomed poor boy George Eastman (Montgomery Clift) in his death
cell before his execution with his rich society girlfriend
Angela (Elizabeth Taylor): (Angela: "...I'll
go on loving you for as long as I live." George: "Love
me for the time I have left. Then, forget me." (They kissed
one last time.) Angela: "Goodbye,
George."
(She half-turned away and then looked back.) "Seems like we
always spend the best part of our time just saying goodbye")
- George took to his death the superimposed image
of dark-haired Angela kissing him
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The Plague Dogs (1982)
- the opening scene of the near-drowning
of black labrador Rowf (voice of Christopher Benjamin) to see
how long he could dog-paddle before he gave up, by animal research
experimenters in a British lab in Coniston
- the continuing, upsetting experimentation on lab
animals (monkeys, rabbits, rats, etc.), including the brain-tests
on fox-terrier Snitter (voice of John Hurt) who had dreams/memories
of his days as a house pet, sitting with his owner in a living
room near a warm fire
- the heart-rending scene
of a dead puppy being scraped out of its cell
- the ending in
which the two dogs swam out to sea - choosing to be dead and free
rather than captured: (Snitter:
"I can't swim anymore, Rowf...", Rowf: "We must... be
near the island...There is. There. Can't you see it? Our island...")
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Platoon (1986)
- the startling scene in which the saintly and compassionate
Sgt. Elias (Willem Dafoe) staggered out of the jungle after being
shot by sociopathic, malevolent and murderous Sgt. Barnes (Tom Berenger)
and left for dead in the Vietnamese jungle - his arms outstretched
upwards in slow-motion in a sacrificial, crucifixion pose (while
Samuel Barber's Adagio For Strings played) as he was repeatedly
shot by VC enemy forces - viewed from a chopper overhead
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Powder (1995)
- the opening scene of the death of pregnant mother
Anna, who was struck by lightning, although her son survived but
was born prematurely; the doctor announced: ("Anna didn't
make it, Greg. We tried everything. The trauma was just too much...The
baby, I'm concerned, might have some abnormalities. Outwardly,
we can already tell that the child has no pigmentation. It's called
albinism. It's strictly genetic....Greg, you have to remember that
an unborn child experiences everything that the mother experiences")
- and the father Greg's (Phil Hayes) reaction of disowning his
child after first looking at it: "That's not my son. That's
not my son"
- the scenes of cruelty aimed at a mystical outcast
- a lonely, bald albino teenager Jeremy "Powder" Reed
(Sean Patrick Flanery) by his peers, including bully John Box (Bradford
Tatum) who labeled him a homosexual; when John's heart stopped beating
due to a strong electromagnetic impulse emanating from Jeremy's body,
John was miraculously revived by "Powder's" touch to his bare chest
- the climactic yet bizarre
ending in which Powder bid farewell to his three sole friends who
wanted him to find peace and happiness elsewhere: social worker/special
educator Jessie Caldwell (Mary Steenburgen), compassionate Sheriff
Doug Barnum (Lance Henriksen) and high-school science teacher Donald
Ripley (Jeff Goldblum), who told him while referencing Albert Einstein:
("'It's become
appalingly clear that our technology has surpassed our humanity.'
Alfred Einstein. I look at you and I, I think that someday our
humanity might actually surpass our technology")
- and then, under a threatening and dark cloudy sky,
Powder (with his shirt open and arms outstretched) ran into an
open field where he was pursued by everyone. After a lightning
flash struck him, a brilliant and colorful ring of light exploded
or emanated from him and he dissipated into the sky as pure energy.
His friends were stunned but ecstatic about his electromagnetic
transformation
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Pretty Woman (1990)
- the ultimate rescue of street
prostitute Vivian Ward (Julia Roberts) by her Prince Charming -
corporate raider Edward Lewis (Richard Gere) - in the film's Cinderella-like
fantasy-conclusion; in her hotel apartment, she turned as she heard
a horn honking (and opera music blaring) as Edward arrived in
a white chauffeured limousine (standing in the sun-roof) and
greeted her with a bouquet of red roses and a closed black umbrella.
She climbed out onto her fire-escape balcony, where they shared a
conversation:
Edward: "Vivian, Princess Vivian! Come down! It had to be the top floor,
right?"
Vivian: "It's the best."
Edward: "All right. I'm coming up. (When he reached her level.) So,
what happened after he climbed up the tower and rescued her?"
Vivian: "She rescues him right back." (They kissed)
- in the film's ending, the camera pulling back,
overhearing the words of a Happy Man (Abdul Salaam El Razzac) crossing
the street, to the tune of Roy Orbison's title song "Pretty Woman":
("Welcome
to Hollywood! What's your dream? Everybody comes here. This is Hollywood!
The land of dreams. Some dreams come true, some don't. But keep on
dreamin'. This is Hollywood! Always time to dream, so keep on dreamin'")
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The Pride of the Yankees (1942)
- the emotional turmoil New York
Yankees star first baseman Lou Gehrig (Gary Cooper) suffered after learning in his mid-30s that
he was afflicted with the uncurable disease of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
(ALS)
- Gehrig's famous farewell
speech in his # 4 uniform on July 4, 1939 in front of a packed Yankee
Stadium of 62,000 fans, before which he was joined by his tearful
wife Eleanor (Teresa Wright) in the dark tunnel leading to the infield,
where he was honored and then spoke: ("...People
all say that I've had a bad break. But today -- today I consider myself the
luckiest man on the face of the earth")
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