Sunday Express Skeleton 24Th November...
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I see A.I. came up for it boredom factor and I have to agree with that. My husband and I fell asleep watching A.I. and when we woke up we thought it was the end and we grabbed our coats to get out of the cinema but apparently the film didn't know when to end. OH MY GOD!!!!!!
But crying wise Mel Gibsons film We Were Soliders always makes me cry.
Of course Schindler's List stands out as emotionally affecting. Platoon also in certain places.
A film I have only seen once but not for 15 years or so, was called Lamb. It was very good, moving but very bleak.
Somewhat different, but still something that stunned me in a different sense perhaps, was The Others. It left me completely speechless, as I didn't see what coming at all. Very clever. I won't give it away for those who haven't seen it.
I agree with bancodegaia - irreversible is the most shocking film I have ever seen. It is beautifully made by french director gaspar no�, but at the same time very challenging to watch.
as for crying I'm afraid its titanic - I cried my eyes out at the end the 1st time, and now when I watch it I cry all the way through because I know what's coming! pathetic I know, same with forrest gump!! And My girl
Absolutely agree with KingKonk in amazement that no one else has mentioned "The Deer-Hunter". I cried and shouted and cried again when poor, lost, Christopher Walken finally pulled the trigger, and I've thought about some aspect of that film every week or so in the years and years since I first saw it... and again just yesterday before I saw this post. I never realised before The Deer-Hunter that it was possible for a director to traumatise the viewer by a film, in exactly the same way America was traumatised by Vietnam, to explain the feeling. One of the greatest films ever made.
The two films which have made me cry (and I'm talking uncontrollable, painfull sobbing) are The Green Mile (even when vile Percy steps on Mr Jingles) and Instinct with Anthony Hopkins and Cuba Gooding Jr. The bit when the poachers attack the gorillas sent me over the edge.
Edward Scissorhands gets me every time. As does The Lion King.
Schindler's List is very emotional. I found Saving Private Ryan distressing but not sentimental. I don't think I could watch it again.
I can't believe no one's mentioned Bram Stoker's Dracula (with Gary Oldman, THE best actor in the world ever). That's so moving, i cry every time.
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