The Greatest Tearjerkers of All-Time
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Title Screen
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Movie Title/Year and Brief Tearjerker Scene Description
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Screenshots
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Bambi (1942)
#6
#2
- the heartbreaking scene in which
young fawn Bambi (voice of Bobby Stewart) was with his mother (voice
of Paula Winslow) in the snowy meadow, grazing on some exposed green
plants. Suddenly, she sensed a human presence -- and warned: "Bambi.
Quick! The thicket!" There were gunshots as they both raced
away. She encouraged: "Faster! Faster, Bambi! Don't look back.
Keep running! Keep running!"
- As Bambi ran and ducked behind
a snowbank - and made it to the protective thicket, there was a fateful
gunshot. Bambi turned and exclaimed while panting: "We made
it! We made it, Mother! We...", but his Mother was nowhere in
sight. Bambi emerged, asking and calling out: "Mother. Mother!
Mother, where are you?!" He fruitlessly searched for her during
a raging snowstorm, not knowing she had been killed by a human hunter
- after not finding her and hearing
no response, the young fawn Bambi began to sob, and then gasped at
the imposing sight of his stag father, the Great Prince of the Forest,
who stated: ("Your mother can't be with you anymore").
A tear formed in Bambi's eye as he looked up, and was told: "Come.
My son." He followed, but looked back one last time in the direction
of where his mother had been
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"Your mother can't be with you
anymore"
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Fateful Gunshot
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Bang the Drum Slowly (1973)
- the tearjerking relationship
between two ball players on the New York Mammoths (a fictional team)
during a baseball season: mentally-slow catcher Bruce Pearson (Robert
De Niro) from Georgia, who was diagnosed with incurable Hodgkin's
Disease, and his protective best friend and star pitcher Henry "Author" Wiggen
(Michael Moriarty) [Note: The nickname was given to him because
he wrote a book. Bruce often referred to Henry as 'Arthur'.]; Henry
was protective of Bruce, especially due to his vulnerability to
his opportunistic girlfriend Katie
- the poignant performance of "Streets of Laredo
(The Cowboy's Lament)" by country-boy cowboy and team-mate
Piney Woods (Tim Ligon) about a dying cowboy's funeral wishes ("...Oh,
bang the drum slowly and play the fife lowly / Play the dead march
as you carry me along..."); Piney was a hot prospect for the
season
- the final good-bye between Henry and Bruce after
the regular season ended (before the Series) when Bruce returned
home to his parents (to die) -- as Bruce bid farewell to his friend:
("Thanks
for everything Author. Thanks. And I'll be back in the spring. I'll
be in shape then, you'll see...Hey Author, don't forget to send
me a scorecard from the Series")
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Final Goodbye Scene at the Airport Between Henry and
Bruce
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- and the very next scene of
Bruce's funeral which none of his team-mates attended, with Henry's
voice-over narrated last lines; he lamented that he neglected to send
Bruce the World Series scorecard: ("...We breezed through the
playoffs and wrapped up the Series on a Sunday - my win. I took the
scorecard home and threw it on the shelf and left it lay there. It
would have been simple to shove it in the mail. How long would it
have took? Couldn't I afford the stamps?..."
- then, Henry explained how he was the only one present
at Bruce's funeral in Georgia from the team: "I was his pallbearer
- me and some local boys. There were flowers from the club, but no
person from the club. They could've sent somebody. He wasn't a bad
fella, no worse than most, and probably better than some -- and not
a bad ballplayer neither, when they gave him a chance, when they
laid off him long enough. From here on in, I rag nobody")
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Bruce Pearson (Robert De Niro)
Henry "Author" Wiggen (Michael Moriarty)
Piney Woods' "The Streets of Laredo" Song
Henry - the Sole Team Participant at Bruce's Funeral
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Batman: Mask of the Phantasm (1993)
- the downbeat and sad ending,
in which Dark Knight Batman/Bruce Wayne's (voice of Kevin Conroy)
true love and ex-fiancee Andrea Beaumont (voice of Dana Delany),
the daughter of a wealthy lawyer with ties to the mob - was surprisingly
revealed to be the murderous and vengeful Phantasm - and decided
against a future life with Bruce
- Bruce's mourning of his loss
to consoling loyal butler Alfred Pennyworth (voice of Efrem Zimbalist,
Jr): ("I
don't think she wanted to be saved, sir. Vengeance blackens the soul,
Bruce. I've always feared you would become that which you fought against.
You walk the edge of that abyss every night, but you haven't fallen
in and I thank heaven for that. But Andrea fell into that pit years
ago, and no one, not even you, could have pulled her back")
- Bruce's discovery of Andrea's shiny pendant, which
he clutched tearfully
- and the following scene that revealed a
troubled and melancholy Andrea standing alone on a moonlit cruise
ship deck - when a tipsy partygoer asked her if she wanted to be
alone, she sighed: "I
am."
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Andrea's Grief
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Bruce/Batman's Mourning About the Loss of Andrea to Alfred
Clutching Andrea's Pendant
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*batteries not included (1987)
- in the plot of this bizarre
sci-fi fantasy, small extraterrestrial living spaceships
helped to try and save an East Village apartment building under threat
from property development; the building was managed by an elderly
couple, Frank (Hume Cronyn) and silver-haired Faye Riley (Jessica
Tandy)
- the crooked development manager named Lacy (Michael
Greene) sent tough Hispanic gang leader Carlos (Michael Carmine)
to intimidate and bribe the Rileys and the other tenants - without
success, until some of the residents decided to move on
- to the Riley's surprise, tiny alien spaceships arrived
to repair damage and to save the building - they were nicknamed "The
Fix-Its" by the remaining residents, and for a long while, they
were able to foil the developers' plans
- frustrated by delays, Lacy hired an arsonist to deliberately
set a fire and burn down the apartment complex, to force the residents
out; as the destruction was occurring, Carlos discovered that Faye
was still in the building, and with a change of allegiance, he posed
as Faye's deceased son Bobby to get her transported to a hospital;
he was able to convince Faye (a severely afflicted Alzheimer's patient)
to believe him, by showing Faye news clippings of her son's death
- meanwhile, the mechanical family of 'Fix-Its' returned
to entirely repair the building to its original condition
- in a complex, heart-breaking,
non-formulaic scene, Carlos appeared in the hospital where Faye was
a patient - he appeared with flowers and donuts; Faye's clear-headed
husband Frank who was visiting attempted to cheer Faye up by presenting Carlos as Bobby: ("Faye,
look who's here! It's Bobby! He came back, how about that?")
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Carlos' Failed Attempt to Pose as Faye's Deceased Son
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- Faye, who was distraught over
the departure of her alien mechanical life-form friends, began to sob
as Frank embraced her; then she blurted out: "That's
not Bobby" - she had
finally come to terms and acknowledged her real son's death over 40
years earlier, and at the same time dashed Carlos' hopes of redemption
- on his way down the hall and out of the hospital as
he silently left, Carlos dumped
the flowers he brought to give her in a trash can
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The "Return" of the 'Fix-Its'
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The Battle Over Citizen Kane
(1996)
- the sorrowful, downbeat conclusion
(or epitaph) in this made-for-TV documentary in which a teary-eyed
and regretful Orson Welles commented on his professional struggle
to finance and make films after Citizen
Kane (1941), and how he should have quit the movies: ("I
have wasted the greater part of my life looking for money and
trying to get along, trying to make my work from this terribly
expensive paint-box, which is a movie. And I've spent too much
energy on things that have nothing to do with making a movie.
It's about two percent movie-making and ninety-eight percent hustling.
It's no way to spend a life")
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Beaches (1988)
#12
- in flashback, the fateful meeting in 1958 of New York
child performer Cecilia Carol "C.C." Bloom (Bette Midler
as adult, Mayim Bialik as 11 year old) with San Francisco rich kid
Hillary Whitney (Barbara Hershey as adult, Marcie Leeds as 11 year
old) at an Atlantic City holiday resort - the beginnings of a life-long
friendship
- the scene in which Hillary's
daughter Victoria Cecilia Essex (Grace Johnston) found her uptight
WASP single mother Hillary Whitney Essex collapsed
on the bedroom floor when she was in the last stages of her terminal
cardiac disease (viral cardiomyopathy)
- the hospital scene following in which Hillary
asked her life-long best friend - brassy, Jewish, low-brow and spirited
NY singer/entertainer C.C. Cecilia Bloom - to take
her from the hospital ("I don't want Victoria to see me here") to live
out her last days at a Pacific Ocean beach house (C.C. to Staff:
"Who do I speak to about getting Hillary Whitney released?...Yes,
I know how sick she is, and so does she. She wants to go")
- the scene of their conversation while playing cards
at the beach, when C.C. told Hillary: "Listen,
I know everything there is to know about you and my memory is long.
My memory is very, very long" - followed by Hillary's response
to herself:
"I'm counting on it"
- Cecilia's (or Bette Midler's) rendition of
"Wind Beneath My Wings" on the soundtrack as they watched
a final sunset together - ending with Hillary's funeral after her
death
Hillary's Final Days at Hospital and Death at the
Beach House
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"I don't want Victoria to see me here."
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C.C. Requesting Hillary's Release From Hospital
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Sunset Goodbye
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- after Hillary's death, there was a tear-jerking scene
of C.C. discussing the future with Hillary's teary-eyed daughter
Victoria, inviting her to come live with her and admitting her selfishness:
("If
you don't want to come with me, Victoria, I - I will understand. I'll
understand. I mean, I don't know what kind of a mother I'd make. You
wouldn't believe the things that go through my head sometimes. And
I'm very selfish too. I don't know what she was thinking of when
she picked me. Now that I don't want to do it, there's
nothing in the world I want more than to be with you. You think about
it"),
and Victoria's request: "C.C.? if I go with you, can I bring my
cat?" - with
C.C.'s reply: "Of course you can bring your cat. You can bring
any old thing you want" - the two consoled each other's grief
with a strong embrace
- C.C.'s resumed performance at the Hollywood Bowl
- singing an encore tribute song "The Glory of Love" to her
friend, while wearing a wine-velvet gown: ("Ya gotta laugh a little,
cry a little and til the clouds roll by a little / That's the story
of, that's the glory of love...") with Victoria watching back-stage
- afterwards, they walked off together, hand-in-hand, as C.C. told
the young girl about first meeting Hillary in 1958 under the boardwalk
on the beach at Atlantic City, NJ: ("I
sang that song the day your mother and I met in Atlantic City. We were
just about your age. Did you know that?...We met when I was under the
boardwalk smoking cigarettes")
- a concluding flashback (in color
and then freeze-framed black and white) of 11 year-olds Hillary (Marcie
Leeds) and C.C. (Mayim Bialik) having their pictures taken in a photo
booth on the day they first met in Atlantic City on the boardwalk
- as they promised always to write to each other - in voice-over:
("Be sure to keep in touch, C.C.,
OK? Well sure, we're friends, aren't we?")
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Flashback to 11 year Olds
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Hillary Found by Daughter Victoria Collapsed on Bedroom
Floor
C.C. to Hillary: "My memory is very, very long"
Hillary: "I'm counting on it"
C.C. and Victoria At Hillary's Funeral
C.C.'s Talk with Hillary's Daughter Victoria
"The Glory of Love"
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Beau Geste
(1939)
- the scene in which John Geste
(Ray Milland) presented Lady Patricia (Heather Thatcher) with a
letter from brother Beau (Gary Cooper), disclosing that her prized
valuable gem - "The Blue Water" sapphire, had been sold
years before and that Beau had stolen a substitute gem to save
her the embarrassment of selling it - she read the letter aloud
at the foot of the stairs: ("I was inside the suit of armor
in the hall the day you sold the Blue Water to the Maharajah's
agent and received an imitation to take its place. When the wire
from Sir Hector came, I thought I could repay your devotion to
us by giving Brandon Abbas its first robbery. So the lights went
out and so did Beau. Lovingly, Beau Geste")
- after reading the letter, she delivered a tearful
last line of thanks: ("Beau Geste? Gallant gesture. We didn't
name him wrongly, did we?")
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"We didn't name him wrongly, did we?"
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Before Sunrise
(1995)
- the concluding hours between
two young tourists: American Jesse (Ethan Hawke) and French Celine
(Julie Delpy), after roaming around Vienna throughout the night,
when they realized that they would have to part
- the concluding heartbreaking
scene set in the train station when they hastily split with
a few final kisses and embraces: ("OK, I guess this is it, no?...Have
a great life. Have fun with everything you're gonna do!").
They vowed to see each other again in exactly six months at the same
location, and then boarded separate trains (and each reflected upon
their time together as the film returned to the locations they had
visited which were now empty) - to the sound of Bach's Andante
from Sonata No. 1 in G Major for Viola
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Train Station Goodbye and Vow to Meet 6 Months Later
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The Best Years of Our Lives
(1946)
- war veteran double amputee Homer
Parrish's (Harold Russell) self-loathing homecoming with his family
when his mother (Minna Gombell) first noticed her son's hooks/hands
- Homer's speech to his
fiancee Wilma Cameron (Cathy O'Donnell) later in the bedroom: ("Well,
now you know, Wilma. Now you have an idea of what it is. I guess you
don't know what to say. It's all right. Go on home. Go away like your
family said")
- Wilma's
refusal to abandon Homer - her vow of devoted, steadfast love for Homer
and that nothing had changed her love for him: ("I love you and
I'm never going to leave you, never") as she wrapped her arms
around his neck and kissed him, before helping him to bed. After she
left, Homer laid in bed, staring upward at the ceiling, with tears
welling up and streaming down
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Homer's Awkward Homecoming
Homer in Bedroom with Fiancee Wilma
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The Big Broadcast of 1938 (1938)
- in a touching and sentimental
scene, womanizing radio host Buzz Fielding (Bob Hope) and ex-wife
Cleo Fielding (Shirley Ross) serenaded each other with a duet of
the Academy Award-winning Best Song Thanks
For the Memory. [Note: this was the song that
would launch Hope's career and become his famous trademark or signature
theme song.]
- they sang as they shared drinks, poignantly
and slightly regretfully looking back on the good times they had
experienced within their failed relationship
- he began singing with "Thanks
for the memory / Of rainy afternoons / Swinging Harlem tunes/ Motortrips
and burning lips / And burning toast and prunes" and she joined
in: "How lovely it was / Thanks for the memory / Of candlelight
and wine / Castles on the Rhine / The Parthenon..." as they
continued to alternate the lyrics
- their singing ended wistfully,
as they clinked their glasses together again and sang: "Hooray
for us." She asked, still singing: "Strictly entre
nous, darling, how are you?" and he replied: "And
how are all those little dreams that never did come true?"
She responded: "Awfully glad I met you," with his response: "Cheerio,
toodle-oo." She collapsed in tears in his
arms when they finished
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"Thanks For the Memory"
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Big Fish (2003)
- Tim Burton's fantasy drama
with a series of dramatized fanciful stories, legends, myths, whimsical
and magical autobiography - when estranged and doubting prodigal
son Will (Billy Crudup as adult son) returned home to console and
confront his tall tale-telling, dying cancer victim father Ed Bloom
(Albert Finney and Ewan McGregor as a younger traveling salesman);
Will had spent his life struggling to determine what was 'fact' and/or
'fiction' in his father's life
- in Ed's dying moments, it was revealed what
Ed had seen his own moment of death in the glass eye ("with mystical
powers") of a witch/Jenny Hill (Helena - he saw that he died in
the river surrounded by all the people he had met on his far-flung
adventures
- while Will was at his father's bedside in the hospital,
he told his father of their imagined daring escape from the hospital
-- Ed was revived, removed his breathing apparatus
and affirmed: "Let's get outta here!"; he ordered Will to get his
wheelchair and get him out of the hospital; they raced in Ed's old
red Charger to the river side
- at the river, the real-life
versions of the people from Ed's stories turned up to bid their
final farewells and pay respects at his death - this
illustrated to Will that his father's tall tales were very close to
reality: (Will: "We see that everybody is
already there. And I mean everyone. It's unbelievable." Ed: "The story
of my life." Will: "And the strange thing is, there's not a sad face
to be found. Everyone is just so glad to see you and send you off right")
- as Ed was carried to the river's edge by Will to be
dipped in the water, he bid everyone goodbye: "Goodbye, everybody! Farewell! Adieu!" He
was transformed into the 'big fish' (a giant catfish) that he always
wanted to be - a beautiful metaphoric death
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Death Scene: Ed Carried to River's Edge, Where He
Was Transformed into a "Big Fish"
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Dying Father Ed Bloom (Albert Finney)
Son's Imagined Story of Ed's Death
"Let's get outta here!" - Flight From the Hospital to the River
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The Big Heat
(1953)
- director
Fritz Lang's landmark bleak, film noir crime classic and violent
melodrama
- the scene in which homicide Police Sergeant Dave
Bannion's (Glenn Ford) pretty wife Katherine 'Katie' (Jocelyn Brando)
was killed in a car-bombing intended for him
- the retaliatory
scene in which heroine Debby Marsh (Gloria Grahame), the beautiful
moll and kept-woman of sadistic, reflexive, cold-blooded Vince Stone
(Lee Marvin) sought revenge with hot coffee, but was shot fatally
twice in the back - Bannion sympathetically cradled her head with
her mink coat while kneeling at her side, although she pulled it
up to hide her disfigured face. She expressed peacefulness in her
final words when she referred to Bannion's murdered wife: ("I
like her...I like her alot")
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The Car-Bombing Accidental Death of Bannion's Wife 'Katie'
The Death of Face-Disfigured Debby Marsh
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The Big
Parade (1925)
- the scene of French girl Melisande's (Renee Adoree)
farewell to her lover, World War I American soldier James Apperson
(John Gilbert), as he was taken away in an army truck and she ran
after it -- James tossed his watch, dog-tags chain and shoe to
her, which she clutched to her breast
- the scene of James' return from war and amputation,
as he came down a French road in a traveling suit - hobbling on
a wooden leg and steadied with a cane, returning to the girl of
his dreams as he promised. In the gripping, moving finale, he tried
feverishly to quicken his pace and run into her arms, as they called
out: "MELISANDE! JIMMEE!" They were finally reunited
and overjoyed as they embraced and hugged each other once more
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The Gripping Farewell Scene
James' Return
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The
Birth of a Nation (1915)
- mentally and physically scarred Benjamin
"The Little Colonel" Cameron's (Henry B. Walthall) homecoming,
in which his arrival on the doorstep of his old ruined home was greeted
by a hug from his initially reticent sister Flora (Mae Marsh) --
and the brilliant side-shot in which the house itself seemed to beckon
him back home as hands and arms of his unseen mother (Josephine Crowell)
held him lovingly and pulled him inside
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"The Little Colonel" Returning Home
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