Titanic.in a big masucline manly way.
2006-09-20 08:53:05
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answer #1
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answered by Talach_Ninneed 2
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I don't normally cry (after all I'm straight ;-)
But then when I watch films on planes, I find I cry for anything that has some romanticism in it. Say, "You've got mail". But I also cried over "Sixth Sense", also in an airplane. And I cried over "Contact" also in an airplane.
I have a pilot friend who says that this could be done to the reduced oxygen inflow (cabine pressure is about 80 percent of ground air pressure corresponding to an altitude of about 3'000 metres / 10'000 feet).
I have other (male) friends who have observed the same behaviour with themselves.
2006-09-20 09:00:58
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answer #2
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answered by AntoineBachmann 5
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Bambi.
Beaches
Step Mom
Steel Magnolia's
Terms of Endearment
Kramer versus Kramer
Ghost
Whos' Gonna Love My Children
Pretty Woman
Notting Hill
Bridget Jone's Diary
All About a Boy
I think i cry at all sad and boy meets girl films
2006-09-20 09:11:18
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answer #3
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answered by chris w. 7
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Star Trek II: the Wrath of Khan, specifically the slashy Spock death scene at the end.
Ah, those were the days. Pretty much the first time it aired in our local cinema, when Spock passed you couldn't see the screen for all the silhouettes of the hands going up with the Vulcan salutes ...
Nowadays, when Hollywood make movies to evoke certain emotions, they have a tendency to try too hard. Horrors are awash with the leftovers of an abattoir sprayed liberally about and splashed over the camera lens; comedies are dreadfully vulgar, tasteless affairs where the gags are rammed into your eyes with a metaphorical sledgehammer. "Look. Boy does fart joke. Boy does pee pee joke. Boy does drooling over naked women pictures joke" etc.
I don't go to weepies. I just get irritated at all the stupid decisions the characters seem forced to make, as if their fate was to be steered along from scene to scene as if they were on rails, and I think: "Dear Thoth, God of Writers, if I end up writing such tawdry, artifically exaggerated feebleness into the characters I create for my stories, take me then and there."
2006-09-20 09:03:54
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answer #4
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answered by fiat_knox 4
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Bambi, but not till I took my five year old son to see it. It was the bit where Bambi's mum (or was it his dad) gets shot that did it for me. For some reason I've got more emotional as I've got older. The scene in "A Beautiful Mind" where the disturbed mathematician guy gets recognition for his genius from all of the dons at the university I found very moving too. A brilliant film incidentally, sensitively handled and inciteful into the problems of the mind gone wrong.
2006-09-20 09:11:07
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Million Dollar Baby
Great Movie
2006-09-20 09:13:17
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answer #6
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answered by KT 2
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Braveheart even though its not accurate, & as for the Green Mile Well what can i say i cried watching the film n cried reading the book, Check it out its a good one
2006-09-20 10:11:38
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answer #7
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answered by Anita M 1
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I did not cry in any film as I am not an actor. But the 2 films that always get me blubbing are It's a Wonderul Life and Field of Dreams
2006-09-20 09:37:57
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Shadowlands, when Debra Winger dies and Anthony Hopkins prays over her body. I'm not conventionally religious but that really touched me.
Also the Bollywood film Kuch Kuch Hota Hai, which is just so over-the-top romantic I couldn't help myself.
2006-09-20 23:44:48
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answer #9
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answered by Kyo-the-cat 3
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Any film by John Claude Van Damme makes me holler like a drain.
2006-09-20 10:10:21
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answer #10
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answered by albert_rossie 4
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most indian movies but 2 american and that is what a girl wants and moulan
2006-09-20 09:13:12
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answer #11
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answered by riddhi2092 2
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