• Smithsonian
    Institution
  • Travel
    With Us
  • Smithsonian
    Store
  • Smithsonian
    Channel
  • goSmithsonian
    Visitors Guide
  • Air & Space
    magazine

Smithsonian.com

  • Subscribe
  • History & Archaeology
  • Science
  • Ideas & Innovations
  • Arts & Culture
  • Travel & Food
  • At the Smithsonian
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Games
  • Shop
  • Art
  • Design
  • Fashion
  • Music & Film
  • Books
  • Art Meets Science
  • Arts & Culture

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

| | | Reddit | Digg | Stumble | Email |
  • By Richard Chin
  • Smithsonian.com, July 21, 2011, Subscribe
View More Photos »
Ricky Schroder and Faye Dunaway in The Champ
The Champ has been used in experiments to see if depressed people are more likely to cry than non-depressed people. (MGM / The Kobal Collection)

Photo Gallery (1/4)

Jon Voight in The Champ

Explore more photos from the story


Video Gallery

Why Do We Cry?

More from Smithsonian.com

  • NASA Picks Best & Worst Sci-Fi Movies. What Are Yours?
  • Ten Movies We Loved From the 2000s
  • The Truth About Pheromones

In 1979, director Franco Zeffirelli remade a 1931 Oscar-winning film called The Champ, about a washed-up boxer trying to mount a comeback in the ring. Zeffirelli’s version got tepid reviews. The Rotten Tomatoes website gives it only a 38 percent approval rating. But The Champ did succeed in launching the acting career of 9-year-old Ricky Schroder, who was cast as the son of the boxer. At the movie’s climax, the boxer, played by Jon Voight, dies in front of his young son. “Champ, wake up!” sobs an inconsolable T.J., played by Schroder. The performance would win him a Golden Globe Award.

It would also make a lasting contribution to science. The final scene of The Champ has become a must-see in psychology laboratories around the world when scientists want to make people sad.

The Champ has been used in experiments to see if depressed people are more likely to cry than non-depressed people (they aren’t). It has helped determine whether people are more likely to spend money when they are sad (they are) and whether older people are more sensitive to grief than younger people (older people did report more sadness when they watched the scene). Dutch scientists used the scene when they studied the effect of sadness on people with binge eating disorders (sadness didn’t increase eating).

The story of how a mediocre movie became a good tool for scientists dates back to 1988, when Robert Levenson, a psychology professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and his graduate student, James Gross, started soliciting movie recommendations from colleagues, film critics, video store employees and movie buffs. They were trying to identify short film clips that could reliably elicit a strong emotional response in laboratory settings.

It was a harder job than the researchers expected. Instead of months, the project ended up taking years. “Everybody thinks it’s easy,” Levenson says.

Levenson and Gross, now a professor at Stanford, ended up evaluating more than 250 films and film clips. They edited the best ones into segments a few minutes long and selected 78 contenders. They screened selections of clips before groups of undergraduates, eventually surveying nearly 500 viewers on their emotional responses to what they saw on-screen.

Some film scenes were rejected because they elicited a mixture of emotions, maybe anger and sadness from a scene depicting an act of injustice, or disgust and amusement from a bathroom comedy gag. The psychologists wanted to be able to produce one predominant, intense emotion at a time. They knew that if they could do it, creating a list of films proven to generate discrete emotions in a laboratory setting would be enormously useful.

Scientists testing emotions in research subjects have resorted to a variety of techniques, including playing emotional music, exposing volunteers to hydrogen sulfide (“fart spray”) to generate disgust or asking subjects to read a series of depressing statements like “I have too many bad things in my life” or “I want to go to sleep and never wake up.” They’ve rewarded test subjects with money or cookies to study happiness or made them perform tedious and frustrating tasks to study anger.

“In the old days, we used to be able to induce fear by giving people electric shocks,” Levenson says.

Ethical concerns now put more constraints on how scientists can elicit negative emotions. Sadness is especially difficult. How do you induce a feeling of loss or failure in the laboratory without resorting to deception or making a test subject feel miserable?

“You can’t tell them something horrible has happened to their family, or tell them they have some terrible disease,” says William Frey II, a University of Minnesota neuroscientist who has studied the composition of tears.

But as Gross says, “films have this really unusual status.” People willingly pay money to see tearjerkers—and walk out of the theater with no apparent ill effect. As a result, “there’s an ethical exemption” to making someone emotional with a film, Gross says.


In 1979, director Franco Zeffirelli remade a 1931 Oscar-winning film called The Champ, about a washed-up boxer trying to mount a comeback in the ring. Zeffirelli’s version got tepid reviews. The Rotten Tomatoes website gives it only a 38 percent approval rating. But The Champ did succeed in launching the acting career of 9-year-old Ricky Schroder, who was cast as the son of the boxer. At the movie’s climax, the boxer, played by Jon Voight, dies in front of his young son. “Champ, wake up!” sobs an inconsolable T.J., played by Schroder. The performance would win him a Golden Globe Award.

It would also make a lasting contribution to science. The final scene of The Champ has become a must-see in psychology laboratories around the world when scientists want to make people sad.

The Champ has been used in experiments to see if depressed people are more likely to cry than non-depressed people (they aren’t). It has helped determine whether people are more likely to spend money when they are sad (they are) and whether older people are more sensitive to grief than younger people (older people did report more sadness when they watched the scene). Dutch scientists used the scene when they studied the effect of sadness on people with binge eating disorders (sadness didn’t increase eating).

The story of how a mediocre movie became a good tool for scientists dates back to 1988, when Robert Levenson, a psychology professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and his graduate student, James Gross, started soliciting movie recommendations from colleagues, film critics, video store employees and movie buffs. They were trying to identify short film clips that could reliably elicit a strong emotional response in laboratory settings.

It was a harder job than the researchers expected. Instead of months, the project ended up taking years. “Everybody thinks it’s easy,” Levenson says.

Levenson and Gross, now a professor at Stanford, ended up evaluating more than 250 films and film clips. They edited the best ones into segments a few minutes long and selected 78 contenders. They screened selections of clips before groups of undergraduates, eventually surveying nearly 500 viewers on their emotional responses to what they saw on-screen.

Some film scenes were rejected because they elicited a mixture of emotions, maybe anger and sadness from a scene depicting an act of injustice, or disgust and amusement from a bathroom comedy gag. The psychologists wanted to be able to produce one predominant, intense emotion at a time. They knew that if they could do it, creating a list of films proven to generate discrete emotions in a laboratory setting would be enormously useful.

Scientists testing emotions in research subjects have resorted to a variety of techniques, including playing emotional music, exposing volunteers to hydrogen sulfide (“fart spray”) to generate disgust or asking subjects to read a series of depressing statements like “I have too many bad things in my life” or “I want to go to sleep and never wake up.” They’ve rewarded test subjects with money or cookies to study happiness or made them perform tedious and frustrating tasks to study anger.

“In the old days, we used to be able to induce fear by giving people electric shocks,” Levenson says.

Ethical concerns now put more constraints on how scientists can elicit negative emotions. Sadness is especially difficult. How do you induce a feeling of loss or failure in the laboratory without resorting to deception or making a test subject feel miserable?

“You can’t tell them something horrible has happened to their family, or tell them they have some terrible disease,” says William Frey II, a University of Minnesota neuroscientist who has studied the composition of tears.

But as Gross says, “films have this really unusual status.” People willingly pay money to see tearjerkers—and walk out of the theater with no apparent ill effect. As a result, “there’s an ethical exemption” to making someone emotional with a film, Gross says.

In 1995, Gross and Levenson published the results of their test screenings. They came up with a list of 16 short film clips able to elicit a single emotion, such as anger, fear or surprise. Their recommendation for inducing disgust was a short film showing an amputation. Their top-rated film clip for amusement was the fake orgasm scene from When Harry Met Sally. And then there’s the two-minute, 51-second clip of Schroder weeping over his father’s dead body in The Champ, which Levenson and Gross found produced more sadness in laboratory subjects than the death of Bambi’s mom.

“I still feel sad when I see that boy crying his heart out,” Gross says.

“It’s wonderful for our purposes,” Levenson says. “The theme of irrevocable loss, it’s all compressed into that two or three minutes.”

Researchers are using the tool to study not just what sadness is, but how it makes us behave. Do we cry more, do we eat more, do we smoke more, do we spend more when we’re sad? Since Gross and Levenson gave The Champ two thumbs-up as the saddest movie scene they could find, their research has been cited in more than 300 scientific articles. The movie has been used to test the ability of computers to recognize emotions by analyzing people’s heart rate, temperature and other physiological measures. It has helped show that depressed smokers take more puffs when they are sad.

In a recent study, neuroscientist Noam Sobel at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel showed the film clip to women to collect tears for a study to test the sexual arousal of men exposed to weepy women. They found that when men sniffed tear-filled vials or tear-soaked cotton pads, their testosterone levels fell, they were less likely to rate pictures of women’s faces as attractive, and the part of their brains that normally light up in MRI scans during sexual arousal were less active.

Other researchers kept test subjects up all night and then showed them clips from The Champ and When Harry Met Sally. Sleep deprivation made people look about as expressive, the team found, as a zombie.

“I found it very sad. I find most people do,” says Jared Minkel of Duke University, who ran the sleep-deprivation study. “The Champ seems to be very effective in eliciting fairly pure feeling states of sadness and associated cognitive and behavioral changes.”

Other films have been used to produce sadness in the lab. When he needed to collect tears from test subjects in the early 1980s, Frey says he relied on a film called All Mine to Give, about a pioneer family in which the father and mother die and the children are divided up and sent to the homes of strangers.

“Just the sound of the music and I would start crying,” Frey says.

But Levenson says he believes the list of films he developed with Gross is the most widely used by emotion researchers. And of the 16 movies clips they identified, The Champ may be the one that has been used the most by researchers.

“I think sadness is a particularly attractive emotion for people to try to understand,” Gross says.

Richard Chin is a journalist from St. Paul, Minnesota.

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)




Single Page 1 2 3 Next »

    Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.


Related topics: Movies Psychology


| | | Reddit | Digg | Stumble | Email |
 

Add New Comment


Name: (required)

Email: (required)

Comment:

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.

Comments (186)

+ View All Comments

Never seen Old Yeller because I know what happens in the end. However, the black and white film "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" although a drama has me in floods of tears at the last scene. Even hearing the music makes me want to cry. I have no idea why the idea of Mrs. Muir dying and being reunited with the Captain has this effect on me but it does. Never saw the movie Watership Down but read the book and the last page makes me weep buckets. Who knows what makes us so sad?

Posted by kate on May 13,2013 | 05:32 PM

I disagree. In my opinion, the saddest movie of all time was "The Way of All Flesh", which starred Akim Tamiroff and Gladys George. This was the talking version of the film originally made as a silent with Emil Jannings in the lead role. I believe Jannings won Best Actor for his role in the silent version. You needed a rowboat to get out of the theater where this supreme tearjerker was shown. The 1979 version of "The Champ" couldn't hold a candle to the earlier version starring Wallace Beery and Jackie Cooper.

Posted by Stanley Flax on May 10,2013 | 07:05 PM

Also, Old Yeller is hilarious compared to a British animated film called "The Plague Dogs". It's from the same people who made Watership Down, and even makes that look cheery in comparison. Another animated British film, "When the Wind Blows" is also probably one of the most depressing things ever made. It's about an elderly British couple trying to survive after a nuclear attack, and it goes about as well as you'd expect. Not a movie, but the short anime "Mobile Suit Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket" is also in the top tier of the most depressing works of fiction. IMHO it's easily as sad as Grave of the Fireflies, and if anything it shows an extremely important perspective of the horrors of war as it's told from someone who hasn't been experiencing the combat and brutality directly (the main character is a young boy living on a colony that declared itself neutral, and in the beginning sees war as little more than something distant and exciting. That changes, OH BOYYY does it change). But yeah, I think it says something when someone who laughed when Mufasa bit it finds something sad.

Posted by A.r. on April 25,2013 | 08:20 AM

Yeah, I'm the kind of person who cackles in amusement when Bambi's mom or Mufasa bites it. Not sure this would get the intended results from me. Now, to prove I'm not a pod person, I can't make it five minutes into the last episode of Puella Magi Madoka Magica without being reduced to a sobbing wreck. The one time I watched Grave of the Fireflies produced similar results.

Posted by A.r. on April 25,2013 | 07:05 AM

Thank yo for showing us this wonderful stuff

Posted by Kiley smith on April 17,2013 | 01:50 PM

For everyone saying Sophie's Choice, read the article. It has to be a scene where no other emotions can be felt, pure sadness. I've seen Sophie's Choice and the scene you're all mentioning didn't make me cry of sadness, but of anger that she was put in that position. Pay It Forward made me cry, A.I., lots of Disney films and anything with kids/animals being emotionally strained. For people saying how can an animal dying be sadder than a kid losing his father; it has to do with the connection kids and animals have and the purity of it. A dog never got mad at a kid, their relationship is pure and there is nothing negative about it. When I saw My Dog Skip, I started crying like crazy. If you have a dog you know how special they can be and how when you are down they are always there and never judge you. As far as fear, I think that would be the hardest to test. Neither of those films would work. I'm a horror movie geek and I can't think of one that would scare me. Show me a drama about WWII and I will have chills. Now that is scary!

Posted by Megan on March 24,2013 | 12:08 AM

The saddest part about the movie isn't just that the Champ dies, but that he dies trying to earn money to buy a pony for the boy, who cries, "I don't want the pony!"

Posted by Bobby Dellwood on March 24,2013 | 10:25 AM

I remember my mom recommending "All Mine to Give" to a neighbor telling her it was such an uplifting movie. When my mom checked with neighbor after the seeing the movie, upon opening the door, our neighbor had the most swollen face and eyes my mom had seen! The neighbor was totally distraught after seeing the film and crying helplessly. My mom laughed so hard at her reaction though...that was my mom's thought of a fun prank. I'd add other "sad" scenes: TV mini-series Holocaust (tons of crying scenes), "The Pianist" (good grief...I never cried so much), "Schindler's List" end, and I hate the scene in "Somewhere in Time" when Christopher Reeve finds the 1979 penny in his inside pocket! (Richard!!!!!)

Posted by Keith Lee on March 10,2013 | 12:00 PM

I agree with some of those that state "Ole Yeller" as the saddest movie ever. For me, I believe it was because I was so young when I saw it and even way back then a staunch dog lover. It was literally also the first movie where the main animal star ended up dying. I cried for hours and even my Mom always remembered how much I reacted to that movie. I would not watch TV for quite some time afterwards. One of the next saddest ones for me was Brian's Song...strange that even in my 60's I can well recall my sadness at these movies. These are the movies that really made me cry, not just tear up abut ones that affected me deeply. I am sure everyone has their own movie or even book that affected them, the one thing we all have in common is how much we recall the pain even if we do not fully remember the movie itself!!

Posted by susan on February 28,2013 | 07:47 PM

How can death in an animated film be just as sad? Which part is sad? When they stop drawing the animated character? The Champ is one of the saddest films I've ever seen. So realistic. I saw it once when I was young and I've never forgotten the scene when the dad dies.

Posted by Pandora on February 23,2013 | 07:29 AM

Oh I left something out of my previous comment; it should be: Old Yeller, Bambi, Land Before Time, Charlotte's Web (73), There's Good Boos Tonight (Casper), Champ.

Posted by diana on February 21,2013 | 07:36 PM

I thought this was going to be about Old Yeller, which is still tops for me. And while that scene from the Champ is very sad, I personally find key death scenes in Land Before Time, Dumbo and There's Good Boos To-Night (Casper) to be sadder than Champ's.

Posted by diana on February 21,2013 | 07:20 PM

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

+ View All Comments



Advertisement


Most Popular

  • Viewed
  • Emailed
  • Commented
  1. Will the Real Great Gatsby Please Stand Up?
  2. The Revolutionary Effect of the Paperback Book
  3. The Story Behind Banksy
  4. TKO By Checkmate: Inside the World of Chessboxing
  5. The Real Deal With the Hirshhorn Bubble
  6. Never Underestimate the Power of a Paint Tube
  7. The Saddest Movie in the World
  8. A Brief History of Chocolate
  9. When Did Girls Start Wearing Pink?
  10. What Turned Jaron Lanier Against the Web?
  1. The Surprising Satisfactions of a Home Funeral
  2. The Story Behind Banksy
  1. How Do Smithsonian Curators Decide What to Collect?
  2. A Call to Save the Whooping Crane
  3. The Measure of Genius: Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel at 500
  4. When Did Girls Start Wearing Pink?

View All Most Popular »

Advertisement

Follow Us

Smithsonian Magazine
@SmithsonianMag
Follow Smithsonian Magazine on Twitter

Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian.com, including daily newsletters and special offers.

In The Magazine

May 2013

  • Patriot Games
  • The Next Revolution
  • Blowing Up The Art World
  • The Body Eclectic
  • Microbe Hunters

View Table of Contents »






First Name
Last Name
Address 1
Address 2
City
State   Zip
Email


Smithsonian Store

Shop Our Cultural Books



View full archiveRecent Issues


  • May 2013


  • Apr 2013


  • Mar 2013

Newsletter

Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

Subscribe Now

About Us

Smithsonian.com expands on Smithsonian magazine's in-depth coverage of history, science, nature, the arts, travel, world culture and technology. Join us regularly as we take a dynamic and interactive approach to exploring modern and historic perspectives on the arts, sciences, nature, world culture and travel, including videos, blogs and a reader forum.

Explore our Brands

  • goSmithsonian.com
  • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
  • Smithsonian Student Travel
  • Smithsonian Catalogue
  • Smithsonian Journeys
  • Smithsonian Channel
  • About Smithsonian
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscribe
  • RSS
  • Topics
  • Member Services
  • Copyright
  • Site Map
  • Privacy Policy
  • Ad Choices

Smithsonian Institution