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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Jacob's Ladder (1990)
- in an hallucinatory scene,
lethally-wounded Vietnam veteran Jacob Singer (Tim Robbins) had
a horrific experience in hell/purgatory where he was bluntly told
by an Evil Doctor (Davidson Thomson) that he was dead ("You've
been killed. Don't you remember?")
- Jacob was then visited by
his ex-wife Sarah (Patricia Kalember) and their two sons while
in the hospital, as he asserted to her: ("I'm
not dead, I'm alive. I'm not dead"). She responded: "Oh,
Jacob. I still love you, whatever it's worth," but their reconciliation
was dashed when a sardonic disembodied voice taunted: "Dream
on" - causing Jacob to break down in tears, as he realized that
her appearance was only a wish-fulfilling fantasy while he was dying
(as he pleaded: "Help me")
- Jacob experienced the ongoing
trial of being reconciled with the death of his young 6 year-old
son Gabriel (uncredited Macauley Culkin) while he was in Vietnam,
when he remembered /imagined Gabe's death by an automobile when the
young boy was picking up baseball cards he had dropped in the middle
of the street while walking his bicycle
- the scenes of Jacob
being thwarted by demons into seeing his son again - until the next-to-final
scene (in his old apartment bathed in golden light) in which he finally
accepted his own death. In the tearjerking climax, Jacob spotted
his dead son Gabe, who was playing with a red music box (playing "Sonny
Boy") on the stairs - the boy looked up and greeted him with: "Hi
Dad!" As they hugged, Gabe reassured his father: "It's
OK" - followed by Gabe telling him: "Come on, let's go
up" - meaning their ascension up the staircase into the golden
light.
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Ascending the Staircase Together in
Golden Light - Jacob's Death
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- Jacob's death on an operating table in Vietnam was
then revealed, as an army doctor stated: ("He's gone. He looks
kind of peaceful... He put up a hell of a fight, though")
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Jacob's Torment
Gabriel's Death
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The Jazz
Singer (1927)
- the moving reconciliation scene in which jazz singer
Jack Robin (Al Jolson) met his estranged dying father Cantor Rabinowitz
(Warner Oland) and later decided to sing "Kol Nidre"
in his father's place in the synagogue
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Jack with Dying Father
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Jean de Florette (1986, Fr.)
#50
- the sad scenes leading up
to the tragic death of hunchbacked prospective farmer Jean de Florette
(Gerard Depardieu), who planned to generate a temporary income
of 2000 francs by pawning his wife Aimee Cadoret's (then real-life
wife Elisabeth Depardieu) heirloom emerald necklace - however,
his plans were dashed when she admitted that she'd already pawned
her necklace away for 100 francs a month earlier to pay their
expenses ("I had no more money. You bought
many things: books, tools, bran for the rabbits"), since it had
fake emeralds, not real ones ("The emeralds were fake")
- Jean's desperate delivery of a prayer to God for
rain -- and when it did rain in a faraway place elsewhere, it caused
him to scream at God and berate him in anger and anguish:
("Thank you, God. But it's raining over there!
The rain is over there! I'm a hunchback! Have you forgotten that?
Do you think it's easy? Isn't there anybody up there? There's nobody
up there!")
- the scene of Jean's death after a dynamite explosion
he set off while trying to dig his own well to get water to feed
his crops, when he rushed forward into the smoke and debris and
fell into the dynamited hole; his wealthy,
covetous and cruel neighbor-landowner Cesar Souberyan (Yves Montand),
who desired the property for himself for growing red carnations,
had deliberately blocked the well spring
- Cesar's nephew Ugolin (Daniel
Auteuil) was grief-stricken with guilt over his own duplicity
(he had been pretending to be Jean's friend):
"It's not me that's crying. It's my eyes"
- Jean's daughter
Manon (Ernestine Mazurowna) showed tearful anger upon viewing
the uncovered well by the greedy Cesar and Ugolin; she sought
revenge against the two co-conspirators in the sequel film
[Note: The film was the first
half of a two film series based on Marcel Pagnol's novel L'Eau
des Collines,
followed by Manon des Sources (1986, Fr.).]
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Jean's Prayer to God For Rain
Jean's Outrage At God
Jean's Death From Explosion
Ugolin's Grief Over Jean's Death
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Jeffrey (1995)
- in this gay oriented comedy, homosexual NY actor/waiter
Jeffrey's (Steven Weber) opening line (in voice-over) under the
title credits, that he loved: "I love sex. It's just one of the
truly great ideas. I mean, just the fact that our bodies have this
built-in capacity for joy, oh it makes me love God. Yes!" - but
he was facing tremendous fear of the AIDS epidemic due to his having
sex with multiple partners
- fearful of contracting AIDS, Jeffrey decided to
become celibate; Jeffrey's quick-witted, middle-aged, flamboyant
interior decorator friend Sterling (Patrick Stewart) counseled
Jeffrey, as a devil's advocate, to find a monogamous male life
partner to end his fear of AIDS; Patrick had already done so with
a life-partner relationship of his own - with his dim-witted boyfriend-lover Cats chorus
member Darius (Bryan Batt)
- then came the off-screen death of HIV-positive Darius (Bryan Batt) from a brain hemorrhage
- after Darius' death, Sterling spoke to Jeffrey,
who was experiencing feelings of sadness and fear in the face of
his own impending mortality; Jeffrey had been concerned about what
to do in his relationship with hunky HIV positive Steve Howard
(Michael T. Weiss): (Sterling: "You
know, Darius once said that you were the saddest person he ever
knew...(he said that) because he was sick, because he had a fatal
disease, and he was one million times happier than you");
Jeffrey replied: "You loved Darius, and look what happens.
Do you want me to go through this - with Steve?"
- Jeffrey turned to look at Darius' apparition from
the afterlife that appeared in the hallway, to comfort him:
("Jeffrey,
guess what. It's the tunnel of light you're supposed to see right
before you die....Jeffrey, I'm dead, you're not...Go dancing...hate
AIDS, Jeffrey, not life...just think of AIDS like the guest that
won't leave, the one we all hate, but you have to remember...Hey,
it's still our party")
- there was a parting glance
between Jeffrey and Darius, after which Darius added: "Be
nice to Sterling" - he also directed
a great big smile toward Sterling, who was smiling back
Darius' Apparition From the Afterlife to Comfort
a Fearful Jeffrey
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Jeffrey's Astonishment at Darius' Appearance
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Darius to Jeffrey: "Go dancing...hate AIDS, Jeffrey,
not life"
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Sterling (Darius' Lover) with Jeffrey
Sterling Listening as Darius As He Advised Jeffrey to be
Nice to Him
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Jerry Maguire (1996)
#34
#56
- cocky sports super agent Jerry Maguire's
(Tom Cruise) admission of his love to his stunned wife Dorothy Boyd
(Rene Zellweger) in front of her friends during a
divorced womens' support group meeting in her own living room, stressing:
("I'm
looking for my wife...If this is where it has to happen, then this
is where it has to happen. I'm not letting you get rid of me. How about
that?...Our little project, our company had a very big night. A very,
very big night, but it wasn't complete. It wasn't nearly close to being
in the same vicinity as complete, because I couldn't share it with
you. I couldn't hear your voice, or laugh about it with you. I missed
my wife. We live in a cynical world, a cynical world, and we work in
a business of tough competitors. I love you. You complete me, and I
just....")
- Dorothy interrupted with tears:
("Aw,
shut up. Just shut up. You had me at hello. You had me at hello")
- they embraced (viewed from outside the window)
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Jerry's Admission of Love for Dorothy
Dorothy: "Aw, shut up. Just shut up. You had me at
hello. You had me at hello"
Couple Embracing (Shot From Outside Window)
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Joe Versus the Volcano (1990)
- the extreme long-shot of Joe Banks
(Tom Hanks) leaving his doctor's office during his lunch hour, after
finding out that he had an incurable terminal disease; Doctor Ellison
(Robert Stack) counseled: ("You have some time left, Mr. Banks.
You have some life left. My advice to you is: Live it well")
- Joe
was so lonely for contact that he bent down and embraced
a Great Dane being walked outside the office - with Ray Charles'
mournful rendition of "Old
Man River" on the soundtrack
- he straightened out a trampled
single daisy that was growing out of a crack in the pavement
- the astonishing fever-dream
Joe hallucinated, while drifting on an ocean raft in the Southwest
Pacific, of a gigantic full moon on the horizon to which he bowed and
prayed: ("Dear
God, whose name I do not know - thank you for my life. I forgot how
big. Thank you. Thank you for my life")
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Joe's Fever Dream
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Long Shot of Joe Leaving Doctor's Office
Straightening a Trampled Daisy Flower
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Johnny Belinda (1948)
- mute rape victim Belinda McDonald's
(Jane Wyman) silent recitation of the Lord's Prayer in sign language
at the bedside of her dead father Black (Charles Bickford)
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Belinda's Recitation of the Lord's Prayer
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The Joy Luck Club (1993)
#22
- the criss-crossing stories stretching
over 30 years told by the "Joy Luck Club" (a mah-jongg group
of four aging Chinese women in San Francisco) - Suyuan Woo (Kieu Chinh),
Lindo Jong (Tsai Chin), Ying-Ying St. Clair (France Nuyen), and An-Mei
Hsu (Lisa Lu) - about their lives in China and their coming to America
and their relationships with their Chinese-American daughters
- the hairdresser salon scene
in which frustrated child chess prodigy Waverly Jong (Tamlyn Tomita)
admitted to her passive-aggressive controlling mother Lindo how she
never seemed satisfied with her: ("You don't know the power you have over me.
One word from you, one look and I'm four years old again, crying myself
to sleep. Because nothing I do, can ever, ever please you")
- the scene
in which abusive and demeaning husband Lin Xiao (Russell Wong) introduced
and kissed his opera
singer mistress (Grace Chang) in the presence of his wife Ying-Ying
and their crying young baby son: ("This person
is a whore, just like you"); Ying-Ying grabbed
a piece of broken china and threatened him, although he ordered:
("Look at you! Disgusting! You make me sick!
Clean up this mess! You hear me?")
- soon after, the
depressed Ying-Ying vengefully and semi-accidentally
drowned her own baby son while washing him in order
to end the connection between herself and her cruel and unfaithful
husband Lin Xiao: ("He had taken from me my innocence, my youth,
my heart, everything. So I took from him the only thing I could.
My baby was so light in my arms because his little spirit had flown
away. And with his, my spirit had also gone")
- the scene of Ying-Ying's obedient daughter Lena
(Lauren Tom) complaining to her dominating,
miserly, bespectacled husband Harold (Michael Paul Chan) that their
marriage was contentious, due to his continual making of financial
lists and splitting things unfairly: ("Why do you have to be
so goddamn fair? The way we account for everything. What we share,
what we don't share. I'm sick of it. Adding things up, subtracting.
Making it come out even when it's not. I'm sick of it....I--I just
think that we need to change things. We need to think about what
this marriage is based on, not this balance sheet")
- the older and mentally-unstable
Ying-Ying told Lena to demand
respect and tenderness from Harold, or leave him: ("Then
tell him now. And leave this lopsided house. Do not come back until
he gives you those things [i.e., respect, tenderness], with both hands
open")
- the concluding scene of half-sister June Woo's (Ming-Na
Wen) arrival in China for a reunion with her long-lost
twin sisters, telling them that their mother Suyuan Woo was dead:
("Mama's
gone to heaven...Four months ago. I'm so sorry. She loved you very
much. I'm your sister, June...I've come to take our mother's place.
I've come to bring you her hopes");
June accepted her Chinese heritage with them, and the sisters gratefully
replied and hugged June: ("Our
sister, our family")
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Reunion Between June Woo and Her Two Twin Sisters
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- in voice-over, June narrated that she had finally
found peace with her dead mother: ("It was enough for them and
for me. Because really she was there and I'd finally done something
for her. I'd found the best of myself, what she kept for all of us,
her long-cherished wish")
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Mah-Jongg Group
Conflict Between Lin Xiao and Wife Ying-Ying
Lena with Husband Harold
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Kes (1969, UK)
#44
- the torment, bullying and abuse inflicted by older
working-class brother Jud (Freddie Fletcher) on his younger brother
Billy Casper (David Bradley)
- Jud had given Billy horse-betting
money for two horses, but he spent it on a meal of fish and chips
for himself and was also planning on getting meat for Kes (his loving
pet falcon/kestrel) although the meat was given to him for free by
the butcher - and then the horses won the race, and Jud felt cheated
out of his winnings
- the scene of Jud's senseless, cruel and vengeful
murder of Billy's beloved pet - the baby kestrel (falcon)
- afterwards,
Billy frantically searched for Kes, retrieved the bird's body from
a trash bin, confronted Jud, and then dug a grave (with an axe) in
the side of a hill, and buried his beloved pet
Billy with Kes
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Kes Found in Trash Bin
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Burying His Beloved Pet
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Abused Billy Casper (David Bradley)
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The Kid (1921)
#99
- the heart-breaking scene of an emotional separation
in which social workers of the County Orphan
Asylum tried to take The Kid (Jackie Cooper) away from
his de
facto foster parent The Tramp (Charlie Chaplin); he
outstretched his arms from the back of the truck toward the Tramp
- the Tramp's run across the rooftops and jump into
the vehicle to hug, kiss and rescue the Kid
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Emotional Separation of the Kid From the Tramp
The Tramp's Rescue of the Kid
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The Killing
Fields (1984, UK)
#30
- the tearful reactions over the
plight of Cambodia (abandoned by the callous United States, and
invaded by the vicious Khymer Rouge)
- the close relationship between New York Times reporter
Sydney Schanberg (Sam Waterston) and Cambodian assistant, friend
and interpreter, Dith Pran (Dr. Haing S. Ngor); their separation
when the Khymer Rouge took over Phnom Penh
- the trials Dith underwent
while a prisoner of the Khymer Rouge and his escape through "the killing fields"
- the famous
reunion scene on October 9th, 1979, with
Schanberg's request for forgiveness: "(Do) You forgive me?", and
Dith's memorable reply ("Nothing
to forgive, Sydney. Nothing"), as John Lennon's "Imagine"
played
- the film's epilogue was provided in two title cards
as the camera slowly panned to the left over the rooftops, and looked
out over rice fields, followed by a still image of two refugee children
(that changed from color to black and white): "Dith Pran returned
with Sydney Schanberg to America to be reunited with his family.
He now works as a photographer for The New York Times where Sydney
Schanberg is a columnist. Cambodia's torment has not yet ended. The
refugee camps on the Thai border are still crowded with the children
of the killing fields."
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Reunion Scene Between Schanberg and Dith
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Schanberg with His Cambodian Interpreter Dith
The 'Killing Fields'
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Kings Row (1942)
- the melodramatic scene of playboy
Drake McHugh (Ronald Reagan) waking up, calling to Randy Monoghan (Ann
Sheridan) and looking toward the foot of his bed to discover that
both his legs had been amputated by a vindictive doctor following
a railroad accident ("Where's
the rest of me?")
- the embrace between legless
Drake and best friend/doctor Parris Mitchell (Robert Cummings) while
Randy repeated over and over again at the door:
("Mary, Blessed Mother of God")
- the final triumphant
scene of Parris running off to meet his new 19 year-old love Elise
Sandor (Kaaren Verne) as Erich Wolfgang Korngold's music swelled
at the end
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Drake: "Where's the rest of me?"
Randy's Thankfulness: "Mary, Blessed Mother of God"
Triumphant Ending - Parris Running to Meet Elise
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Kitty Foyle (1940)
- the concluding scene in this
'women's picture' in which hard-working and self-reliant Philadelphia
woman Kitty Foyle (Ginger Rogers) made her final decision before
her mirror-reflection 'conscience': ("You're no longer a little
girl, you're a grown woman now") with a snowglobe in her hand
-- about her choice for marriage, either to (1) upper-crust philanderer
and ex-husband Wyn Strafford VI (Dennis Morgan) who was on the dock
ready to sail for South America, or to (2) struggling and idealistic
Dr. Mark Eisen (James Craig) at the hospital - the scene provided
an answer to the question
- her note left with the doorman
was about her choice of life's path: ("...I'm going to be married
tonight -- (to taxi driver: "St. Timothy's Hospital"))
- and the astonished doorman's last line: ("Well, Judas Priest")
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Kitty's Mirror-Reflection - Should She Get Married?
To the Hospital
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Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)
#13
#36
- the scene in which separated dad Ted
Kramer (Dustin Hoffman) read a heartless letter
from "Mommy" Joanna (Meryl Streep) to their young son Billy
(Justin Henry): ("Mommy has gone away...Being your mommy was one
thing, but there are other things too and this is what I have to do...I
will always be your mommy and I will always love you. I just won't be
your mommy in the house, but I'll be your mommy at the heart. And now
I must go and be the person I have to be")
- Ted's heart-felt
defense plea on the courtroom witness stand at a child custody hearing,
admitting that he wasn't a perfect parent, but pleading that his ex-wife
Joanna should not take Billy: ("Billy has a home with me. I've
made it the best I could. It's not perfect. I'm not a perfect parent.
Sometimes I don't have enough patience 'cause I forget that he's a
little kid. But I'm there. We get up in the morning and then we eat
breakfast, and he talks to me and then we go to school. And at night,
we have dinner together and we talk then and I read to him. And we
built a life together and we love each other. If you destroy that,
it may be irreparable. Joanna, don't do that, please. Don't do it twice
to him.")
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Letters From Heartless "Mommy"
Ted's Courtroom Defense to Keep Billy
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