The Saddest Movie in the World
How do you make someone cry for the sake of science? The answer lies in a young Ricky Schroder
- By Richard Chin
- Smithsonian.com, July 21, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
The 16 Short Film Clips and the Emotions They Evoked:
Amusement: When Harry Met Sally and Robin Williams Live
Anger: My Bodyguard and Cry Freedom
Contentment: Footage of waves and a beach scene
Disgust: Pink Flamingos and an amputation scene
Fear: The Shining and Silence of the Lambs
Neutral: Abstract shapes and color bars
Sadness: The Champ and Bambi
Surprise: Capricorn One and Sea of Love
Source: Emotion Elicitation Using Films [PDF], by James J. Gross and Robert W. Levenson in Congition and Emotion (1995)
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Comments (174)
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I contend that the saddest movie ever is Sophie's Choice. The moment of her decision is heart breaking - a scene that is haunting and of utter despair.
Posted by Laura on February 9,2013 | 02:38 PM
I think the 8-minute love story scene in the animated movie Up will have a better effect on emotions. I have never cried watching a movie. This one certainly moved me.
Posted by Harry Chris McNair on February 7,2013 | 11:49 AM
I think that sensitivity to the tragic dimensions of life may be a gift bestowed on depressed people. It can be overdone, of course, but my responses to particularly poignant and cathartic moments in films are particularly meaningful to me. Come to think of it, the particularly 'sad' moments in film that stand out in my memory are not usually those of irreversible loss, as in 'The Champ', but of particularly vital crises in the lives of principal characters. One of these is the moment in 'The Mission' when the DeNiro character, who murdered his own brother in a duel, finds forgiveness at the hand of a Guarani Indian, whose people the mercenary had enslaved for reward for most of his life. The former has just completed a journey of atonement in which he slogged for days through the rainforest bearing a sack containing his armor (Is that symbolic or what?)to the eponymous mission. Instead of slashing the utterly exhausted man's throat with a knife, a young Guarani cuts the bindings of the burden. My sense of identification with the forgiven man was so strong I could barely contain my sobs, grateful that I didn't arrive at the theater stoned, as was my practice in those years (the late '80s). There are cinematic episodes that have moved me to sustained bouts of extreme, nearly homicidal, rage. The slide show of news photographs of bar raids and arrests of homosexuals in the pre-Stonewall era that prefaces 'Milk'.
Posted by Mark E Harder on February 6,2013 | 01:01 AM
In the 1970s Psychology Today reported on the composition of tears. The researchers they quoted reported the use of sad films and found the the original Brian's Song to be the best "tear getter." I still agree.
Posted by Catherine Houser on February 3,2013 | 12:16 AM
no, not at all.
Posted by yuraro on January 27,2013 | 01:47 PM
Not the saddest but the most inspiring movie scene (also the funniest) I ever saw on tv long after it was in the theaters was Mickey Rooney as a terribly injured skater crawling to the window of his hospital room, pulling himself up and yelling out the window to no one in particular, "I'll skate again!" I use that expression often: I'll [whatever] again!
Posted by Mary Apodaca on January 26,2013 | 01:11 PM
As far as I'm concerned, the five-minute marriage montage at the beginning of "Up" is the saddest scene in all of film.
Posted by Lauren on January 25,2013 | 09:18 AM
@GNR Yeah, because a boy losing his dog is much more tragic than a boy losing his father.
Posted by VulpesRex on January 22,2013 | 10:43 AM
Also, I have to assume that if this was done today, Marley and Me would be a top contender.
Posted by GNR on January 7,2013 | 11:51 AM
The title of this article is misleading. The Champ isn't the Saddest "Movie" in the World, it has the Saddest "Movie Scene" in the World. And even then, it's hard to know how "Old Yeller", didn't win out.
Posted by GNR on January 7,2013 | 11:48 AM
I have never heard of "The Champ" All the people I talk to say that "Old Yeller" was the saddest movie ever.
Posted by PuffMuff on January 4,2013 | 10:02 AM
"Marley & Me" is by far the saddest movie ever made. I challenege anyone to sit through the ending of that movie and not be a wreck afterward.
Posted by Toucan Sam on December 27,2012 | 02:43 PM
Do vampires really exist
Posted by kamranahmed on December 6,2012 | 11:25 PM
The entire film "The Five People You Meet in Heaven" is sadder than that, imho.
Posted by Bobby D on December 6,2012 | 05:42 PM
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