I think it has something to do with having kids. After I had mine I started to get blubbery and as time goes on it just gets worse. I recently found myself talking about some heroic sporting act and could feel my voice beginning to quiver. I blub at the drop of a hat in movies.
I second the scenes mentioned from Toy Story 2 and A.I.. I was also deeply moved by the climactic scenes in Iron Giant (I go. You stay. No following…, and how he murmers Superman… to himself and quietly shutters his eyes just before impact), but not to tears. It was more a different kind of wrenching.
I will admit it, yes, I sniffled at the end of Titanic. And The English Patient.
I blubbered like a little boy when I first saw Dumbo (as a little boy) and they take him away from his mama, who cradles him with her trunk through the bars of her cage.
My wife never got to that scene, having fled the room in tears earlier, refusing to return until the DVD was ejected from the machine. It was a reaction to the injustice of the storyline, I think, but I’m at a loss as to why it affected her so much more than a lot of other movies.
Toy Story 2, the Jessie scene (I have yet to meet anyone over the age of about 15 who didn’t get at least a *little *bit misty at that one)
The end of Titanic
This one’s obscure, but in a movie called Allegro Non Troppo (which is kind of a European answer to Fantasia–animated vignettes set to classical music) there’s one with a little cat wandering around an abandoned house in a bombed-out city, visualizing his former life with his family. I’d forgotten about it until somebody on Fark reminded me a couple of weeks ago, so I watched it again and it still makes me cry. I can’t seem to get YouTube to work right now, but it’s here .
I have my share of legitimate blub triggers, but also one that’s kind of embarassing: The Goonies. It’s not the movie itself but a strong emotional association to one really good day that the movie was in the background of. So if you think you have a hard time keeping up your manly visage during the legitimate tear jerkers, just imagine trying to look cool when the sight of Mikey, Mouth, Chunk, and Data get the waterworks going.
The last five minutes of Breakfast at Tiffany’s does it for me every time. I don’t even need to see the whole movie. But I blub during Hallmark commercials.
Another vote for Dumbo. I can’t listen to “Baby Be Mine” without bawling like a baby. I also get weepy in Black Beauty when Beauty talks about seeing Ginger after her death and remembering what a beautiful, proud mare she once was and how horrible she looks now.
Another vote for Dumbo. I can’t listen to “Baby Be Mine” without bawling like a baby. I also get weepy in Black Beauty when Beauty talks about seeing Ginger after her death and remembering what a beautiful, proud mare she once was.
One more—Spock’s funeral scene in ST3. I’m okay through it until Scotty breaks out “Amazing Grace” on the bagpipes. When I saw the movie on opening night, there was not a dry eye in the house.
As others have said, end of Titanic and Jessie’s scene in TS2. Titanic holds a special place in my heart since I saw it on opening day as an angsty 16 year old. Even though I look back and think that I was an idiot at the time, I still can’t hear the music without it having an emotional effect.
I’d also add Boromir’s death scene in FOTR when Merry and Pippin charge forward to confront the approaching Uruk Hai. There’s something about desperate hope and courage in the face of insurmountable adversity that really gets me emotionally.
The scene in Crash when the shop owner fires his gun in rage.