01-08-2008, 07:45 PM | #41 (permalink) | |
Darth Papa
Location: Yonder
|
Quote:
|
|
01-08-2008, 07:49 PM | #42 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
|
Quote:
|
|
01-09-2008, 07:58 PM | #44 (permalink) |
Minion of the scaléd ones
Location: Northeast Jesusland
|
The last time I teared up in a movie was back a couple of years ago. I think I was waiting for the Matrix Revolutions, and the Trailer for LOTR: Fellowship came up, and Instant Waterworks. Smile ear to ear and tears streaming down my face. I waited 20 years for that movie and they Nailed it.
Booty Call made me laugh so hard that I cried. Ditto the South Park movie. Now, I know, like Will said, that it's a cheap trick. I've taken ethnopoetics classes, and I know how a really good speech can press your buttons. The one in Independance Day does it for me. The presentation scenes in The Lion King are meant to do the same thing. Ratatouillie, when the Critic tastes the food - that is one of the few times I have managed to sink into the skin of an animated character and I was right there with him. (Fantastic movie, that.) And I think I may be forgiven by the male cred committee for tearing up the first time I watched the Grinch with my daughters (as I was remembering the first time my dad watched it with me.) / Off to eat some Testosteroni (TM) Pasta For Men (TM)
__________________
Light a man a fire, and he will be warm while it burns. Set a man on fire, and he will be warm for the rest of his life. |
01-09-2008, 08:10 PM | #45 (permalink) | |
I Confess a Shiver
|
Quote:
Hell, I got teary-eyed reading this. Great post, man. Testosteroni. HAH! |
|
01-09-2008, 10:20 PM | #47 (permalink) |
Deja Moo
Location: Olympic Peninsula, WA
|
A movie (a commercial even) that does a good job of presenting loss has me bawling like a baby. Hubby always gets the sniffles watching Brian's Song.
__________________
"You can't ignore politics, no matter how much you'd like to." Molly Ivins - 1944-2007 |
01-09-2008, 10:26 PM | #48 (permalink) |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
|
Is that an id/masculine/machismo thing to think it's okay for women to cry but not men? I don't really find myself choking down tears at movies.
I will admit that books are a bit of a different story, though. I got choked up a bit when I was reading the RFK bio and it went into the assassination. |
01-10-2008, 12:26 AM | #50 (permalink) |
Young Crumudgeon
Location: Canada
|
Books don't do it for me either. Really, it's a good thing Crompsin cries for me, because I'm not a teary dude as a rule. I'm not worried about being unmanly or any nonsense like that; I just don't, as a rule.
The flip side of that is that when I do turn on the waterworks, it's because something has seriously got me fucked up, emotionally speaking.
__________________
I wake up in the morning more tired than before I slept I get through cryin' and I'm sadder than before I wept I get through thinkin' now, and the thoughts have left my head I get through speakin' and I can't remember, not a word that I said - Ben Harper, Show Me A Little Shame |
01-10-2008, 04:19 AM | #51 (permalink) | |
Psycho: By Choice
Location: dd.land
|
Quote:
and now that i have been thinking about it, I blinked a lot during the movie I Am Sam but didn't cry.
__________________
[Technically, I'm not possible, I'm made of exceptions. ] |
|
01-10-2008, 06:46 AM | #52 (permalink) | |
Minion of the scaléd ones
Location: Northeast Jesusland
|
Quote:
History and Alternate history don't make me sad. They make me furious.
__________________
Light a man a fire, and he will be warm while it burns. Set a man on fire, and he will be warm for the rest of his life. |
|
01-13-2008, 02:47 AM | #54 (permalink) |
At The Globe Showing Will How Its Done
Location: London/Elysium
|
A few that immediately come to mind:
1) Braveheart - When Wallace sees Murron in the crowd strapped to the table. 2) Shawshank Redemption - Seeing Red walk down the beach. 3) Saving Private Ryan - When the old man falls to his knees at the beginning. (I was fall out balling the first time I saw the ending to Band of Brothers) 4) Shakespeare In Love - The End 5) Tombstone - Doc & Wyatt saying goodbye. I will stop there with my manhood still intact...................
__________________
"But a work of art is a conscious human effort that has to do with communication. It is that or its nothing. When an accident is applauded as a work of art, when a cult grows up around the deliciousness of inadvertent beauty, we are in the presence of the greatest decadence the West has known in its history." |
01-15-2008, 10:55 PM | #56 (permalink) |
Psycho
|
Not a lot of movies that get me emotionally involved enough to get teary eyed, but Schindlers List was up there. Definitely at the top of the list is Life is Beautiful, along with What Dreams May Come.
And Return of the Jedi, those Father/Son moments are always so emotional. "let me... look on you with my OWN eyes" always gets me weepy.
__________________
"A ouija board just works better if you've made it yourself. It's sortof like how 'Clue' is more interesting when one of you has actually killed someone." |
01-15-2008, 11:06 PM | #57 (permalink) |
Future Bureaucrat
|
Man the first and only movie I had to leave the room for because I couldn't help but cry:
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind The part in the end when Jim Carrey's memory is being deleted and he tries to stop it.....reminded me a lot about how I felt about a recent ex. Because I was trying my best to delete all the good times we had together.. meh. |
Tags |
cry, movie |
|
|