"Giriş yaparak Mintik'in Hizmet Şartlarını kabul ettiğinizi ve Gizlilik Politikasının geçerli olduğunu onayladığınızı kabul etmiş olursunuz."
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"Giriş yaparak Mintik'in Hizmet Şartlarını kabul ettiğinizi ve Gizlilik Politikasının geçerli olduğunu onayladığınızı kabul etmiş olursunuz."
Dude, if you want a guaranteed sob-fest for your assignment, you have to go with The Green Mile. Seriously, it’s brutal. It’s not just sad, it’s unfair sad, which is always worse for the waterworks. The main character, John Coffey, is the most gentle, innocent person you could imagine, but he’s on death row for a crime he absolutely did not commit. Tom Hanks is great as the head prison guard, Paul Edgecomb, who slowly realizes this awful truth. The whole movie builds this incredible sense of injustice, where you are desperately hoping for some kind of miracle, some way for him to be saved, but you know in your heart how the story has to end. The scene near the end, where Coffey explains that he’s actually ready to go because he’s just so tired of all the world’s cruelty and pain, is what absolutely destroyed me. He’s saying he’s ready to face death just to escape the sheer awful brutality of living in a world that would condemn him, and it’s heartbreaking. Then, the execution itself, even though it’s done as humanely as possible in that world, is just pure anguish. I remember watching it and having to pause it a couple of times because I couldn’t see the screen through the tears. Plus, the whole metaphor of the mouse, Mr. Jingles, living for so long, acts as a really sad bookend to Paul’s long life and the impossible memory he has to carry. It’s one of those movies that sticks with you for days, making you think about morality and fairness. Absolute tearjerker gold for an assignment.
You want a cry? Watch Hachi: A Dog’s Tale. Forget romantic dramas, the unconditional love and loyalty of a dog is what really breaks people. The movie is based on a true story about a Japanese Akita dog named Hachiko who waited for his owner, a professor, at the train station every single day, even after the professor suddenly passed away at work. The film follows the dog’s life, and after the professor dies, Hachi keeps going back to that station for years, until his own death. The final scenes where the elderly Hachi is laying down in the snow, waiting, are just devastating. It’s the sheer loyalty, the hope in his eyes even as he ages and becomes frail, that just crushes you. My husband openly wept, and he never cries during movies. It’s a simple, pure story but it gets you right in the heart every time because it’s so real and the bond is so pure.
Okay, here’s a different one that might be good for a unique assignment response: A Monster Calls. It’s a fantasy drama but it’s really about a young boy, Conor, coping with his mother’s terminal illness. It’s heavy stuff, not gonna lie. The ‘monster’ in the title is this ancient tree-like being that comes to him and tells him stories. The tears come from how accurately it shows the complicated and confusing emotions of grief and fear. Conor isn’t just sad, he’s angry, he’s in denial, he wants the suffering to end but he doesn’t want to lose his mum. The climax is when he finally tells the monster the truth his secret wish which is so much more messed up and human than simple sadness. It’s a beautifully shot film, but the emotional truth of it, the raw look at a kid dealing with the impossible, is what makes it a definite tearjerker. It’s an interesting pick because it deals with a much more nuanced kind of sadness than just a straight-up tragedy.
Has anyone mentioned Coco? I know, it’s Pixar again, but the scene with Miguel and his Great-Grandmother Coco, when he sings “Remember Me” to her to bring back her memories before she forgets her father entirely? Oh my gosh, that is a river of tears moment. It’s all about family, memory, and the fear of being forgotten, and they handle those massive concepts so well. It’s a beautiful moment of connection that pays off the entire story, and even though the movie is visually vibrant, that scene is just so quiet and focused on the love between the generations. It’s the kind of crying where you are happy for the moment but completely heartbroken about the rest of it. Get ready to feel all the family feels.
I usually don’t cry much at films, but for me it was Forrest Gump. It’s one of those movies where you’re chuckling and feeling good for 90 percent of it, and then BAM, they hit you with the serious stuff. Obviously, the relationship with Jenny is the big one. Her struggle, his unwavering love for her, and the whole saga of their lives together is incredibly moving, especially the scene where he’s visiting her grave. But the part that really got me was Forrest’s final goodbye to his son as he’s waiting for the school bus, fixing his collar, and giving him that little life lesson. Seeing him be such a good, dedicated dad, after everything he went through and having lost the person he cared about most, just got to me. It’s an inspirational-sad kind of cry, like a mixture of pride and major melancholy.
I’m probably going to sound like every other person, but honestly, Up by Pixar gets me every single time, and it’s only the first ten minutes. It’s wild that a kids movie can deliver such a gut punch right at the start. That entire silent montage where they show Carl and Ellie’s life together, their dreams, their struggles, the happy moments, and then her eventual passing it’s just a condensed masterpiece of emotional storytelling. You see a whole life and a lifetime of love and loss pass by in minutes. Even though I know it’s coming, it always catches me off guard how quickly they make you care so much about these two cartoon characters. You get attached to their relationship goals and their shared dream of going to Paradise Falls, and when that moment comes and Carl is sitting alone, holding her balloon, I’m already reaching for the tissues. The rest of the movie is a fun adventure, but the power of that beginning sequence is what makes it a massive cry movie. I think it hits harder now that I’m older, seeing the reality of growing old and losing someone.
If you’re looking for something that just tears you to shreds with sheer injustice and historical tragedy, go with Schindler’s List. It’s not a weep-for-my-boyfriend movie, it’s a deep, existential sadness. The whole film is incredibly powerful and disturbing, but the end of the movie, when Oskar Schindler is saying goodbye to the people he saved and he breaks down, saying “I could have saved more,” that’s the part that is impossible to watch without crying. Liam Neeson’s performance there, the realization of the small, tangible sacrifices he didn’t make that could have translated to one more life saved, it’s just pure, overwhelming grief and guilt over the face of genocide. It’s a very different kind of tear, one of profound sadness for humanity. I had to sit in silence for ages after that movie finished.