Greatest Tearjerkers
Scenes and Movie Moments
of All-Time

D


The Greatest Tearjerkers of All-Time
Title Screen
Movie Title/Year and Brief Tearjerker Scene Description
Screenshots

Dances with Wolves (1990)

  • the downbeat ending in which Lt. John Dunbar/Dances With Wolves (Kevin Costner) rode off from his adoptive Sioux tribe with Stands With a Fist (Mary McDonnell), because of the threat and danger he posed living with them; from a clifftop closeby, Wind in His Hair (Rodney A. Grant) shouted out a friendly goodbye ("Dances With Wolves. l am Wind ln His Hair. Do you see that l am your friend? Can you see that you will always be my friend?")

Lt. Dunbar's Departure with Stands With a Fist

Wind In His Hair's Goodbye
  • the epilogue in which a scrolling placard revealed that in the next 13 years, all of the Sioux were either wiped out or put on reservations: ("Thirteen years later, their homes destroyed, their buffalo gone, the last band of free Sioux submitted to white authority at Fort Robinson, Nebraska. The great horse culture of the plains was gone and the American frontier was soon to pass into history")

Film's Downbeat Epilogue

Dark Victory (1939)

  • the scene of Judith Traherne (Bette Davis) realizing that her prognosis was "negative"
  • Judith's true acceptance of her coming death with her husband/Dr. Steele (George Brent) before he left for a conference: ("You know I used to be afraid. I died a thousand times. When death really comes, it will come as an old friend, gently and quietly")
  • the ending scenes of her comforting her best friend Ann King (Geraldine Fitzgerald) in the garden: ("Don't, Ann. I'm happy, really I am. Now let me see, is there anything else? Oh yes, one more thing. When Michael runs Challenger in the National, oh, and he'll win - I'm sure he'll win - have a party and invite all our friends. Now let me see, silly old Alec, if he's back from Europe, Colonel Mantle and old Carrie and, oh yes, and don't forget dear old Dr. Parsons. Give them champagne and be gay. Be very very gay. I must go in now. Ann, please understand, no one must be here, no one - I must show him I can do it alone. Perhaps it will help him over some bad moments to remember it. Ann, be my best friend. Go now. Please")
  • in her house, Judith greeted her dogs and then made a request of maid Martha to leave her to die in peace alone in the upstairs bedroom - with dignity: ("Is that you, Martha? I don't want to be disturbed")
Judith's Upstairs Bedroom Deathbed Scene

Judith's "PROGNOSIS NEGATIVE"

Judith's (Bette Davis) Last Dialogue with her Husband Dr. Steele (George Brent)

With Best Friend Ann King (Geraldine Fitzgerald) in the Garden

Dead Man Walking (1995)

  • the heart-rending, awkward scene in which Sister Helen Prejean (Susan Sarandon) visited the family of the girl that convicted killer Matthew Poncelet (Sean Penn) had murdered, and parent Clyde Percy's (R. Lee Ermey) hostile incredulity at the nun's counseling of Matthew and her claim that God forgave everyone: ("Are you a Communist?")
  • comforting nun Sister Prejean's poignant words to Matthew before he took a walk to the execution room: ("Look, I want the last thing you see in this world to be a face of love, so you look at me when they do this thing. You look at me. I'll be the face of love for you")
  • the tearjerking ending at the Louisiana prison, including Matthew's last words before he died from lethal injection while strapped on a cross-shaped gurney, as victims' families and the comforting nun witnessed the capital punishment behind a glass window: ("Mr. Delacroix, l don't want to leave this world with any hate in my heart. l ask your forgiveness for what l done. lt was a terrible thing l done in taking your son away from you...Mr. and Mrs. Percy. l hope my death gives you some relief. l just wanna say l think killin' is wrong no matter who does it. Whether it's me or y'all or your government...")



Matthew's Prison Execution With Sister Prejean Present

Dead Poets Society (1989)

#43
#20

  • the moving tribute/protest by the Welton Academy students, led by the formerly timid and tongue-tied betrayer Todd Anderson (Ethan Hawke), over the expulsion of eccentric, unorthodox 1959 Vermont prep school English teacher Mr. John Keating (Robin Williams), when they stood on their desks in front of the school's headmaster Mr. Nolan (Norman Lloyd) and recited Walt Whitman's "O Captain! My Captain!" in an emotional chant

Students' Chant: "O Captain! My Captain!"

Death in Venice (1971, It.) (aka Morte a Venezia)

#96

  • the beautifully shot, quiet and lonely death scene of aging, avant-garde German composer Gustav von Aschenbach (Dirk Bogarde) slumped on a deck chair on a Venice beach (accompanied by music from a Gustav Mahler symphony) dying of heart failure with dark hair dye dripping down his sweaty, chalk-white face, while lovingly watching an angelic-looking teenaged boy Tadzio (Bjorn Andresen) on the beach who pointed out toward the horizon of the ocean - Gustav's expression mixed contentment, pain, and acceptance



Death of Gustav on Beach Chair

The Deer Hunter (1978)

#26

  • the final poignant and emotional scene at the breakfast wake in Welsh's Bar of mourners following Nick's (Christopher Walken) death (while playing Russian Roulette in a Saigon back alley) after his body was brought home for the funeral - everyone was awkwardly silent, disillusioned, moody and overtaken by grief. As they prepared breakfast, the community of hardened survivors amidst the disfiguring tragedy of the failed war picked up the impromptu hummed tune of God Bless America and thereby comforted each other and healed each other's wounds by singing the words to the familiar and naively patriotic anthem - everyone joined in. At first, they were embarrassed, but then uplifted and renewed by the singing of the ritualistic song - they reverentially raised their beer mugs to Nick, as best friend Michael (Robert De Niro) toasted: "Here's to Nick," quietly understanding that he paid the ultimate price for his patriotism - their ordeal was over. The film ended and freeze-framed with their mugs held in mid-air as a toast


Breakfast Wake For Nick

Defending Your Life (1991)

  • the scene in which yuppie Daniel Miller (Albert Brooks), in the temporary 'afterlife' of Judgment City following a fatal traffic accident, learned that he was returning to Earth to be reincarnated, knowing that his angelic newfound lover Julia (Meryl Streep) would "move on" to the next higher plane of existence without him

The Diary of Anne Frank (1959)

  • the story of the Frank family hiding out for two years in an attic in Nazi-occupied Holland, including young idealistic and innocent 13 year-old Anne (Millie Perkins) - in the opening scene, Anne's father Otto (Joseph Schildkraut), the only survivor, returned to the Amsterdam attic to retrieve Anne's diary, which provided the main body of the film through flashbacks and voice-over narration, with Anne's famous line of optimistic dialogue at the film's conclusion: ("in spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart")

Anne Writing in Her Diary

Moment of the Seizure of Anne's Discovered Family in the Attic By Nazis
  • the tragic ending in which the family rejoiced that the war was almost over and then were found by the Nazis and sent to concentration camps - they watched in stunned silence as the bookcase entrance to the attic was broken into by the Nazis and they were seized


Looking Through Anne's Retrieved Diary

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (2007, US/Fr.) (aka Le Scaphandre Et Le Papillon)

  • an awe-inspiring, yet tearjerking sad film about Elle French magazine editor Jean-Dominique Bauby (Mathieu Amalric) who suffered a debilitating stroke at the age of 43 that left him with "locked-in" syndrome
  • Jean-Do's glimpse of himself in a mirror, thinking to himself: "God, who's that? Me?" and then commenting internally about his shock: ("I look like I came out of a vat of formaldehyde. How awful!").
  • as he recovered but remained restricted, immobile and frustrated (comparing his mind to a diver in a bulky, imprisoning and restrictive deep-sea suit or outfit, his body shell), he often would be wheeled/carried out (seen externally) to watch his children (unaffected by his slumped over torso and twisted face) playing on the French coastline beach -- with his son wiping the saliva-drool from his lip

Jean-Do: "God, who's that?"

Jean-Do Comparing Himself to a Diver in a Deep-Sea Suit

Saliva-Drool Wiped
  • in one of the film's most affecting scenes, Jean-Do listened by speaker phone to his frail, forgetful, and estranged 92 year old father (Max von Sydow) - both were trapped in their lives in similar ways: ("It's impossible to talk like this. I forget everythng I want to say...I've had a thought about us. We're in the same boat. I'm stuck in this apartment, unable to use the stairs...You see, we're both locked in. You in your body, me in my apartment")
  • the final scene of Bauby's death just ten days after publication of his painstakingly-written book, the film's title

Dauby's Speaker Phone Conversation with 92 Year-Old Father


Publication of His Book 10 Days Before His Death

Greatest Film Tearjerkers, Moments and Scenes
(alphabetical by film title)
Intro | A | B | B | C | C | D | D | E | F | F | G | G
H-I | J-K | L | L | M | M | N | O | P | P
Q-R | S | S | S | S | T | T | U-V-W | X-Z


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