Have any moments in superhero movies made you cry?
Have any moments in superhero movies made you cry?
Yes.
>superhero movies
None. I take comics more seriously than actors, not because the actors are bad, but because they're actors. I've cried to comics though, because even though its fictional, reading it is more personal.
Logan's death is the only death that matters.
>When Laura holds his hand and starts to cry, he smiles and says “So this is what it feels like”
Fuck man, feels like someone is squeezing my heart
I only cried on Logan and when Gwen died.
BvS was more a shock, and then floating dirt made him embodiment of hope.
No one could care less about (((disney))) soulless shlock though,
How'd that hope work out for ya Dkek
>BvS was more a shock, and then floating dirt made him embodiment of hope.
Embodiment of hope, lol good one
>>No one could care less about (((disney))) soulless shlock though
Oh wait youre serious
keep crying, samefaggot
Logan and EG almost got me.
nobody actually cares about peter parker dying, they just feel sad at the idea of spiderman dying since hes a big icon. Bucky, Groot, Scarlet witch and Vision dying were more impactful.
I went in GotG2 for a stupid and fun time, I never knew a memelord movie would make me almost fucking ball, wtf Gunn
>he is Daisy in the pic
Could have just ask for the (You)s.
> Bucky, Groot, Scarlet witch and Vision dying were more impactful.
Who?
fuck
The worst part is they won't be able to kill Superman properly for over a decade
Tony's death got me hard. It was how fragile he looked as he slowly died and couldn't even talk, especially for a guy who always had something to say, just fuck me.
Based and panelpilled
Why the hell did they think they could do Supermans death in his second movie
this
I said keep crying, samefaggot.
Yeah, I cry every time watching Batman Begins. The waterworks start at this scene where Alfred is checking on young Bruce in the hour after the Thomas and Martha funeral.
"I thought I might prepare a little supper."
Bruce doesn't acknowledge Alfred's communication attempt, so Alfred sombrely turns away.
"...Very well."
"...Alfred."
"Yes, Master Bruce?"
Bruce's lips quivering from being on the cusp of tears, he launches into holding himself responsible for their demise.
"It was my fault, Alfred. I made them leave the theatre. If I hadn't gotten scared.."
"It was nothing that you did. It was him, and him alone. You understand?"
Bruce falls against Alfred, crying "..I miss him, Alfred. I miss him so much.."
"So do I, Master Bruce. . . . ..So do I.."
I'm actually an orphan, and this scene, anons, this scene..
Just one (trilogy).
It was so fucking lame.
Yeah Equestria Girls is one sick franchise
I watched this movie very shortly after finding out my father, whom I had not spoken to in nearly a decade, had died.
It was a poor decision.
The worst part about Tony's death was Pepper's reaction and the arc reactor light switching off, that is when I had to hold it in
I really like this scene too, much better than him running off and falling some place and getting risen by a swarm of bats
don't think I ever got emotional watching a comic movie, and I constantly get emotional watching movies
Endgame probably has the best acting from RDJ in any of his Iron Man movies.
This plus his malnourished rant at Steve at the beginning of the movie really stick with you.
The moment in Shazam where Billy finally finds his mom and finds out He didn't actually get lost. She took advantage of all the confusion and abandoned him.
I don't think I got emotional watching it, but I'm a little emotional reading this post
If you cry at a comicbook film you deserve to died a virgin.
Said to who schyzo? Didn't knew having shit taste also came with mental illness. Pretty pathetic.
I miss my dad ;_;
>FRIDAY's voice fading out
>arc reactor flickering off
>his body is broken, his lips are stuck together, his words die in his chest
>you can rest now
>his death is ugly and quiet and a bit gross juxtaposed against the wacky comic book battlefield
Tasty, heartbreaking shit.
When I saw the actual story compared to what he had imagined I was like oh shit
I bet you'd cry if I punched your bitch ass, tough guy
>be me
>Watching Logan in the theater
>I'm getting sentimental
>my friend goes up to my ear and says
>"X-MEN,X-MEN,THIS IS THE DAY"
>Started laughing really loudly during Logan's death.
This is the only one that's ever got me. I can't even really explain why, just seeing the appreciation they have for him gets me.
Zack has autism, Goyer is a dipshit and Nolan really didn't care.
She had such a sad life, too. He was like, 4ish when he was abandoned? And she was 17, meaning she'd been knocked up at like 13-14, thrown out and was in a shitty place mentally. Then she goes on to have a shitty abusive white trash life.
You probsbly think you're being hip and cool and shitting on Snyder, but if you weren't a Yea Forums renegade, you'd know this is taken directly from The Dark Knight Returns
The super unsubtle Christ imagery makes it too comical not to laugh at.
When does Jesus get rockstar carried on a train?
I never noticed it and idc in the first place. It was still well done
None becasue I need to really like a movie before it can move me like that and Superheor movies mostly suck.
There were a few moments that made me rather sad like Yondu and Logan but other than that they don't do much for me.
I cried laughing during the ASM2 Gwen scene.
Oh, oh no...
Do DCucks ever get tired of constantly being shit on?
Probably not because they're retarded enough to still be DC fans
The last ten minutes of this movie are just so relentless. It gave me daddy issues.
ASM2's Gwen scene was kino. I didn't cry but I did get emotional
Peter dying didn't really affect me emotionally because I knew he was coming back, and because I was more impressed that they were actually ending the movie on the snap.
Tony's death also didn't really do much for me because I've been waiting for that fucker to die since he told Cap that everything special about him came out of a bottle.
What did get me during Endgame was
>Scott reuniting with his daughter
>Tony reuniting with Peter
>Steve reuniting with Peggy
Basically, positive emotional cathartic scenes affect me much more strongly than negative emotional death scenes.
That being said, Logan's death was actually a positive catharsis and a death, and it got me good.
go read a comic book you brainlet.
Shut the fuck up you beta cuck.
I know now why you cry. But it's something I can never do.
I thought Tony would go out in style, a big showy sacrifice.
Instead half of his face is melted and his brains are mush as he can barely react to those around him
Goddamn even Logan got some last words. Tony went out like a candle
I went to the movie expecting a dramatic death with a final "I love you". Instead her head bounces off the ground with a sick *crack* and Peter is left with nothing. No farewell, no blessing, just a broken man sobbing into his dead lover's shirt, begging her not to leave him
delicious
>crying at capeshit
Op, grow the fuck up.
I'm not a sissy, OP. Why are you?
>Marvirgins are crybabies
>DChads know that crying about fiction is stupid
Based OP.
DC Pajeets with no empathy shit in public spaces and rape casually
Followed up by the funeral scene.
>nobody actually cares about peter parker dying
You've got to be kidding me. Spider-Man's death hits hardest because it's much more prolonged than the others and throughout it all he's just a kid begging not to die.
>"He may have been your father, but he ain't your daddy"
That hit me hard
youtu.be
His death was really shocking and I had every family member asking me about the next one for months because they worried it was permanent.
But it wasn't permanent, so half points
Is it really a religious imagery? I don't think there's any at all in the entire trilogy otherwise.
Except they set this up even with three super obvious bits for the mouthbreather audience
In the infinity war when he's talking to Pepper about his dream family and never leaving but he does just that
With Strange when he says he's not willing to sacrifice the gem and then he does just that
With Cap when Tony says he's absolutely out of the hero business cause he doesn't want to sacrifice having his family then he does just that
Even without spoilers you knew RDJ was retiring from the franchise, of course they're gonna give him a death scene
Given how super obvious his death was coming from even Infinity War I felt absolutely nothing, like fucking Dr Manhattan in the theater watching events play out. No wait I felt more than that, because I think I gave a long bored groan that pissed off the normies
Have fun
>All the times I cried, keeping all the things I knew inside
>It's hard, but harder to ignore it
>If they're right then I'd agree, but it's them they know not me
I don't know why this part gets me every time
>Crying at Peter's death
>When he'd obviously come back
I laughed when vision died twice, fuck vision
Fuck you
I got teary at Gwen's death, unexpectedly, since I didn't care for the films, and I knew it was coming.
I think it's implied that he was a rape baby, since she said his father's in the prison for a long time.
>>Giving a long loud groan in the middle of a packed theater during a dramatic death
You're a rude cocksucker
What is suspension of disbelief user? Iron Giant's death is still sad, even if we know he comes back. So are Wall-E and Gandalfs.
>No wait I felt more than that, because I think I gave a long bored groan that pissed off the normies
Yeah, because you're bit of an asshole. Don't be rude
>Peter
I mean, it was done ffectively, but it was more disturbing than sad, especially since you knew he was gonna be back
>Logan
Again, well done, but it felt nice with him actually at peace, so no crying for me.
>Tony
Teared up. for the reasos mentioned.
>BvS
Didn't even make it to that part; walked out and watched Zootopia instead.
Only time the MCU actually made me cry was Yondu's funeral and Thor saying goodbye to his mum in Endgame.
PS: I'm a nurse and used to work with high-mortality patients, so it's not very easy to make me cry with deaths.
>The things I can do... All these powers... And I couldn't save him
to this day i still cant believe WB thought it was a good idea to kill Superman in the second movie of their extended Universe?
like really did they really expect it to have some kind of effect? where we barely getting to know this Superman
cant believe im saying this but even Superman Returns handled his death better
I actually started crying during Endgame when everyone was gathering together. It was just that awesome.
No fuck you
Having Nite Owl there made it better.
No, but GOTGv2 brought me pretty damn close.
Only time one of these movies has ever made me legit cry is when Batman was flying the bomb away in Dark Knight Rises. I legit thought I was about to watch Batman die and it hit me like a truck.
Iron Giant wasn't a part of a decade long franchise that runs on name recognition and branding
No. It made it comical and dumb. It's supposed to be a somber scene, where viewers decide what to feel.
That melodramatic "nooooo" with a close-up is just a shitty needless addition that ruins the moment, since it's supposed to be a death for nothing, and a death that nobody cared about, even his "friends".
Oh wow, I kinda wish they explained in a way that was at least confusing for the kid audience but was clear for the adults. Something like "you were the kind of miracle I didn't want but I was forced to have"
Deleted scene where his dad shows up is good too.
Garfield's a good fuckin' actor, man, why did they waste him.
It doesn't matter who the characters were or who made it. It's cinema. It only matters what you felt in the moment.
Nothing ITT comes close to this. The true feeling of powerlessness I have watching that interaction is rage inducing but my rage is meaningless. Only despair.
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Spider-Man 3 had a ton of problems but I thought this scene was well done. I'm kind of glad they didn't go for a fourth one and this Peter got a mostly happy ending.
I've cried at a few and I've had more sex than you ever will.
You didn't know the Iron Giant wold come back until the end.
He was hit by a nuke, not by anobviously reversible macguffin.
ontop of that there were several sequels announced for the character and a direct follow up to it next year.
Suspension of Disbelief means give some allowance the fantastic or romantic that consistently fit within that work and thus are believable, not blindly believe literally anything put in front of you and just feel what you think you're wanted to feel despite contextually it not actually being that big a deal.
In that moment there was a chance that the Giant died because we had no idea if he COULD survive obliteration on that scale. Everyone who was snapped was done so with magic and the next movie was going to be them fighting to undo that. Ontop of that the already highly advertised sequels involving most "dead" characters.
It's like saying to believe a magic trick, when you can see how they're doing the trick behind the curtain.
Theater I was in had shocked gasps crying kids. People in the lobby asking if he was really dead
I'd say it worked
For them I guess.
space isn't cold, there is just an absence of heat
in fact, there is an untold number of pockets of ionizing radiation
>when Gwen died
Seriously? I fucking laughed when that happened.
When cap passed the shield to Sam. Mind you, I wasn’t balling my eyes out, but I did shed a tear. He just seemed so honored and privileged that Steve trusted him with it.
>Yondu's Funeral
My own late father was a big Cat Stevens fan....
Cold isn't "cold", it's just an absence of heat.
Your tongue will still stick to a flagpole because it's un-hot enough
I can feel sad but crying and shedding tears? no, I'm not a faggot
Seething Pajeet.
no
I've grown up with a stepfather that has been far more present than my biological father, so Yondus death sceen hit me really hard
>Superman vs the Elite
The part where it looks like the Elite killed Superman, and Lois falls to her knees with the paper being revealed to say “Believe. Always Believe.” It made me tear up.
>le epic Real Men Don't Cry maymay
This scene is so weirdly powerful to me, like it straight up makes me angry every time I see it and it's not even that long of a scene or anything. I guess it's just watching an old lady get picked on or something that infuriates me for whatever reason. I didn't cry, but I feel desolate?
The epitaph at the end always got me.
I teared up during mister miracle when big barda was giving birth and the umbilical cord was wrapped around Jacob Frees' neck and the next panel was darkseid is
Say what you will about tom king but that book was really good
If I drink enough, its Steve Rogers saying he doesnt like bullies and then him holding back thanos in infinty war.
Also pic related also gets me to tear up desu
Step aside plebs
Not cry but that's probably the saddest scene for me
The ending to Super
other than that, no.
The part of the funeral with the "Proof that Tony Stark has a heart" float made tears roll.
Real men don't cry over dumb capeshit
Uncle Ben's death in Spider-man, on the other hand his death in ASM was hilarious.
>reminder that he died over 2 cents and a botte of chocolate milk and the killer is never brought up again.
Literally the only time I've ever cried during a movie was first time I saw the ending of Spider-Man 3.
the ending to super is literally pic related
Guardians 1 had a better tear jerker ending
AINT NO MOUNTAIN HIGH ENOUGH
Death ruined by the interaction between Pepper and Peter. I don't know, just seemed awkward. Like they weren't sure which character should have last words with him so they went with both. Ruined the scene for me for some reason
I've never cried because of any of the movies, but both the comic and animated versions of For the Man Who Has Everything still get me.
I'm surprised rhody didn't get a lot of time with his best friend
I cried from Scott meeting teenage Cassie in EG and realizing he'd missed 5 years of her life but at least she wasn't dead too.
Peter went up to Tony, started to get hysterical when he saw Tony was gonna make it, but kept it together so Tony and Pepper could have a last moment together
I thought it was good
Is it sad I kind of hope in the sequel billy ends up supporting his birth mom occasionally as shazam? Not because he wants her to be his mom but understands she is going through hard times too and even “maybe she won’t have to leave any little brother or sister I might have?”
Xavier's funeral made me tear up a bit in Logan
Yes
>Is it sad I kind of hope in the sequel billy ends up supporting his birth mom occasionally as shazam?
Nah not necessary.
It is very much in line with most interpretations of Shazam and would make for a good development for Billy; going from only looking out for himself to providing aid and kindness that might not even be deserved.
Watching this with my best bro after my grandpa died a month after the premiere wasn't really a good idea.
I mean, he also was on the verge of tears, but... Damn.
Fuck this gets me every time. Even listening to the Rami theme music gets me kinda emotional.
Depending how far you are away from a sun space can absolutely be cold.
You are like a little baby. Watch this:
I saw this three months after watching my father die in the hospital.
I also love the part when Doc Ock shows back up and some of the passengers stand in his way. It was a nice touch.
Yes, killing a character and teasing bringing him back to life less than 5 minutes later is a great idea. The only movie that ever made that work was the Iron Giant.
I never knew my biological dad and my stepdad raised me as if I were his. He wasn't very emotionally available and I didn't have a very good relationship with him, but he's still the only father I ever had and he raised me as best as he could. This scene hit me like a truckload of bricks, I couldn't stop sobbing.
It's really true what they say, the people who can make you laugh the hardest often can make you cry the hardest.
Not enough emotional impact for me, Man of Steel did it a lot better since Pa Kent sacrificed himself to protect Superman's identity.
Everyone agrees that the Sandman scenes in Spider-Man 3 were all pretty great.
In 22 movies, never has Marvel created an emotional scene so realistic and pure. "Hurr durr I couldn't save everyone, hurr I gotta sacrifice myself" are all such stock heroic tropes that can't possibly hit real emotions because real people aren't heroes.
Making a big space comedy that is essentially about dysfunctional family dynamics is such a weird choice, but it hits emotional marks harder than any other Marvel movies - heck, it hits them harder than most DISNEY movies, period.
What a weird world we live in.
108790605
(you)
>do i still get the toaster?
That hurts.
>he's just a kid
Actually, that's only with a deposit of 300 or more.
Professor X's death
Star Lord's mom
But in the first movie pa Kent died and Clark learned that there are things that are even beyond his control
In man of steel pa Kent dies showing that Superman should be willing to sacrifice himself for lesser beings on a whim
dishonest and cringe
It's a fiction movie about superheroes and aliens retard
To be fair, Pa died saving a dog and more to the point because he still wanted his son to be afforded the peace of not being thrust into the spotlight AND upsetting the world's beliefs.
HOWEVER it was really forced, Clark could've ran out there and saved him while subtly using his powers not to get wisked away and just said he was really lucky. And even worse, at the end of the movie and BvS, there aren't really much global ramifications for Superman's existence past petty congressional hearings but the world at large chugs along pretty fine until one single asshole exacerbates everything.
And worse even yet, Suicide Squad and I think a few other future films don't even make metahumans something new to the world.
it really is
First incredibles movie, when mr incredible believes he just watched his family blown out of the sky. The way his shoulders just slump, and you can see his spirit breaks because he failed at a fathers only job protecting their family. Fucking gets me everytime
Because it was a different time
>A hero can be anyone, even a man doing something as simple and reassuring as putting a coat on a young boy's shoulders to let him know that the world hadn't ended.
>.....Bruce Wayne...?
GotG2 almost was a shit film but the perfectly handled moments of drama and sincerity saved it.
Personally, I didn't cry until the funeral.
except for "DID I MENTION I GAVE YOUR MOM CANCER?" Not a great example of organic plot progression there.
Closest I was to shedding a year was when X-23 turned the makeshift cross over to make an X, signifying the final end to FoX-Men. Apocalypse and Muh(dark) Phoenix are not canon.
GOD this scene makes me angry.
Who the FUCK doesn't give a free toaster by opening up a checking account? It makes more sense to do that, then doing a 300 dollar deposit. FOR 300 DOLLARS I CAN FUCKING BUY LIKE 5 TOP OF THE LINE, 4 SLOT DIGITAL TOASTERS
I wept at the scene where Eisenluthor slowly pushes the candy into the Senator's mouth, because at that exact moment I realized the franchise was well and truly fucked beyond redemption.
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It's rough watching the death-rattle of a franchise like this. Still chokes me up.
Xavier's death hit me like a truck. Logan's death was incredibly well done, but Charles' was plain heartbreaking.
>Charles had a happy day for the first time in however long
>that's when the clarity of mind and the guilt over his actions hits him
>he confesses to his surrogate son
>only it turns out that person he's talking to is a rabid animal clone of Logan who kills him, yet he's certainly, in that moment thinking it's Logan finally "getting rid of him"
>that horrifying fucking scene of the clone killing off the family and dragging Laura away to her bloodcurling screams just afterwards
I was more sad about Yondu's death and funeral than I was about Tony's.
Real men cry over what they goddamn well please.
Excellent taste.
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>music from Krypton destruction scene in S:TAS pilot makes a return
>Batman only wants to watch his dad beat up the mugger for eternity and has to let the scene revert to the actual sequence of events in order to wake up
This was a strong moment for sure. It made up for baby Groot, whom I absolutely hated.
Logan, Endgame and GotG2 almost got me.
To this day the only movie that made me cry is Dragonheart, stupid fucking dragon.
>Charles dies in X3 and Logan
>Charles about to die in DOFP right before Logan fixes time
>Charles is fated to die knowing mutants will never be accepted
Based. Even better and more emotionally impactful than Tony's death tbqh.
Damn dude, you're a riot. I don't even like Iron Man or RDJ that much, but this is some high grade assholery.
Cat Stevens is an asshole now, but when Father and Son kicked in it hit me like a fucking truck.
Let's hope the new generation is beter because z boys are all into disney shit.
raimi fags and their shallow satire
yup
>Steve reuniting with Peggy
This! I don't tend to cry when movies but I really got emotional when Steve showed up and gave Sam the shield, the waterworks were building up but I manned the fuck up... Until that last scene with Steve and Peggy, I just couldn't help it. There's a good reason why he's probably my favorite MCU character, even though I'm more of a cosmic marvel guy.
The thing that got me in Infinity war was groot dusting in front of Rocket.
>There are children on board! I repeat, there are children on board!
This comment made me happier than what it should
More happy than you were while writing it?
Somethings we all carry alone.
>ctrl+f We Are Groot
>0 results
Really?
Oh yeah, when hype hits a certain level, I can understand that.
They framed how hopeless everything was so well, with Cap alone and then you remember...
Nah
Try just groot
Larp elsewhere, faggots.
That hit me extra hard cause my buddy talked me into a screening that was all the movies back to back. So that little bit from Begins was still extra fresh in my mind.
People talking about his dusting and Baby Groot.
L-lewd!
I do t know why, but the end of bumblebee is super emotionally poignant for me. It makes my chest wrench and my eyes well up everytime.
>that moment when Charlie's face becomes crestfallen when bee opens his door and says "come on let's go!"
>"I can't go with you, bee. You have people out there who need you, and so do I"
>that moment when she hugs him with tears streaming down her face.
>"Thank - You - So much - For Giving - Me - My Voice" "thank you for making me feel like me again"
>"I'll never forget you..."
>Don't you forget about me plays
>Objects in mirror are closer than they appear
There's so much emotion I. That one scene and its just Hailee and a big blob of CGI(well designed and perfectly animated, mind you). Also, the moment at the end when she fixes the corvette and there's a picture of her and bee beside her father's picture. Christ, how did it take this long to get a good live action transformers movie?
>Oh, oh no...
God, that was so perfect. Such a little, small, formal thing. He knew exactly what was happening and he wasn't ready to go.
I'm an oldfag, and I'll occasionally pull up scenes from that first Superman movie and cry over them. I remember growing up with those films, then watching Chris go through his accident, therapy, and eventual death. He was the first person who really did make me believe a person could fly, and to seem him turned into an immobile husk was too cruel for words.
Tom King has his moments. His Green Lantern issue with Hal Jordan getting New God powers is spectacular, and legitimately does make me cry. Him realizing that he was the one who gave the young him the words he needed to keep going, and how immensely and immediately more important that was than any dumb god shit he can do right now hits me hard.
"My name is Hal Jordan. My father cut the sky open."
No, just happy because I loved to saw it, it made me a little bit happy and less sad
>I'm damn lucky you was my boy. m'sorry I didn't do none of it right.
AAAAAAAAAAAAA
>STOP, MY INVINCIBLE SON.
Fuck that stupid horse. If only Reeve never got in that accident.
Mental Gymnastics 101
Yeah.
Closest I've ever come. That subtle cheek patting is what gets me.
I like that for the realism. Sometimes people die over dumb shit and there's nothing you can do about it. Sometimes there is no justice. I don't get why people think it's dumber than a random break-in robbery gone wrong.
It's not mental gymnastics to know that you shouldn't bring a character back to life right after killing them if you want their death to have any impact whatsoever, especially when their death is completely preventable like in BvS.
It helps that Peggy and Steve had the best chemistry in the MCU. And were the hottest couple.
Not enough quips, MCUck?
Unironically kill yourself, Laddernigger
>That damn music....
Moses never sees the promised land, Martin never got to see his dream
Logan was the only one.
Tony might've if I didn't see it coming a mile away.
this scene was so fucking dumb.
A) how did they know who he was? at this point in the universe Peter Parker is a literal who highschool grad who just got his first job. Did anyone on the train actually recognize him? So the whole 'we promise we won't tell' thing had no bearing.
B) Okay, even IF they knew if he was, we really expected to believe those kids aren't gonna tell? Haha
Don't get me wrong, I'm not trying to hate on Spidey 2. I still enjoy it a bit, I just think this is a lame scene to cry at. It was cool when it first came out but in hindsight it's just stupid.
This movie makes me cry every single fucking time. I had a really bad relationship with my dad. So seeing that people can have a good relationship like this really hurts. It's a bittersweet sort of feel.
Very much agree! Though Scott and Hope are getting there too.
Typical WORDSWORDSWORDS Goyer.
>A hero can be anyone, like a man comforting a boy.after his parents died
"On your left."
I was holding it together fine, and then that ASSHOLE said that line and FUCK!
Its when he's alone, facing all of Thanos' soldiers and all he does is... tighten the buckles on his shield. He knows at that moment the fight is unwinnable, but goddamnit, he's going to make every step they take *hurt*.
Autism in posting form detected.
The point we that they respected the guy enough not to rat him out in case someone comes inquiring about his identity, which you can still tell by a facial description, you know? And they remask him to preserve the mystique of his appearance, it doesn't matter they don't know his name.
Can't believe I'm actually explaining the point of the scene of a 15 year old movie.
>Old movies are automatically explained to people watching them
Cry more beta faggot.
It's more like I assumed people already had plenty of time to mull over the scene and understand the point, specially when it's spelled out right after the civilians get in front of him to defend him. But I guess that's too much to ask.
>Crying during Iron Man's Death
Okay how many of you were big enough of faggots to actually cry because of that?
So you have seen every movie that is older than a few years?
Okay you're that autist, never mind, last (You).
Nah, I'm just baiting. But thanks man. Here's your (You)
Gotta push my Zack grimdark verse!
Oh god fucking Dragonheart was my first taste of fictional loss
Not Bambi
Not Snow White
Fucking Dragonheart
Wasn't Bad Horse from Dr Horrible a riff on that accident?
when father & son plays during the colors of ogord, that shit hits
this and the funeral. fuck
I was actually just happy. I knew it was coming and i wanted to him to die properly so that they (hopefully) dont dig up his corpse
Damn you, you fucking cunt. It made my young eyes water, but the effect was kinda-ruined for me because... well... it's Sean Connery and his distinct inability to properly pronounce his eshes.
On a more serious note, the first time I cried at a film was a rerun of Watership Down. Then not a week later the BBC was so kind they put Fox and the Hound on.
Goodbye may seem forever~
Not really.
I remember seeing it in cinemas. The first time I actually bothered going to a cinema, really. There wasn't any hints of his being able to survive a nuke to the face.
All you get at the end of the film is him flying up to stop the nuke. Which he does, all the while saying just a simple word. He meets the nuke head on, and the audience just... erupted, really.
And then, right at the very end of the film it showed the scattered bodyparts moving, and what had been universal shock suddenly became cheers and tears of joy.
Now *that*, that is how you subvert expectations. That is how you kill and bring back a character.
Well I was fine until you posted this, you bastard
This thread is making me want to rewatch GotGv2
If you cry because of an MCU movie you're a faggot
Don't you have a street to shit in?
>Tony's death also didn't really do much for me because I've been waiting for that fucker to die since he told Cap that everything special about him came out of a bottle.
To be fair, Cap doubted his mettle as a hero, saying that he wasn't the type to sacrifice his life to save others, whereas Tony was the one putting himself most at risk in the Avengers movies in favor of protecting the world, and DID sacrifice himself in the final movie so it was really just a case of both parties judging each other based on first impressions alone and being wrong about each other.
That, and Cap DID technically throw the first verbal punch.
I hear you, dude. I especially agree with the spoiler.
I'm surprised that no one mentioned young Xavier talking to his older self or the final scene when he convinced Raven not to shot in DOFP.
I wonder who owned that bank.
No because I am not a faggot
so marvel fanboys are steven universe?
>Never had a dad
>cant feel shit for this scene.
Damn.
Guardians of the Galaxy 1 when young Starlord lost his mom
Gotg2 when Rocket cries at Yondu's funeral because "Even though he was an asshole all these people still loved him?"
As a guy who went through the Foster system, that almost got me to cry.
I'm sorry, that must have been rough
Dkek
>be the literal joke movie
>ends up being the only one with serious moments in it
Looking forward to GotG3.