20 Movies that Make Men Cry

So maybe he didn’t shed a tear during Steel Magnolias or Beaches, but that doesn’t mean he’s hard-hearted. We have a list of tearjerkers will have even the most macho man reaching for his hankie.


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1. Brian’s Song (1971)

This Emmy-winning movie of the week focuses on Chicago Bears running back Gale Sayers (Billy Dee Williams) and his friendship with fullback Brian Piccolo (James Caan). Coach George Halas (Jack Warden) encourages Piccolo to be Sayers's roommate during the season -- the first white-black pairing of its kind in professional sports. When Piccolo develops cancer, Sayers stands by his pal. Perfect for all ages.

2. Rudy (1993)

In this fact-based drama about the triumph of the human spirit, scrawny high schooler Rudy Ruettiger (Sean Astin) dreams of playing football at Notre Dame. But his father (Ned Beatty) can't afford to send him, and his mediocre grades don't cut it, so he ends up at a college across the street instead. Undaunted, Rudy eventually transfers to Notre Dame, where he begins assisting the groundskeeper (Charles S. Dutton) and joins the practice squad.

3. Saving Private Ryan (1998)

As U.S. troops storm the beaches of Normandy, three brothers lie dead on the battlefield, with a fourth trapped behind enemy lines. Ranger captain Tom Hanks and seven men are tasked with penetrating German-held territory and bringing the boy home. Steven Spielberg and cinematographer Janusz Kaminski paint a harrowing picture of the price of war and heroism -- one that netted them Oscars for Best Director and Best Cinematography, respectively.

4. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975)

The first movie since It Happened One Night to win all five major Academy Awards (picture, director, actor, actress, screenplay), Cuckoo's Nest still has the ability to entertain and inspire. Implacable rabble-rouser Randle Patrick McMurphy (Jack Nicholson) is committed to an asylum and inspires his fellow patients to rebel against the authoritarian rule of head nurse Mildred Ratched (Louise Fletcher).

5. The Natural (1984)

A bat made from a tree struck by lightning and a passion for baseball define Roy Hobbs (Robert Redford). But when he's shot and severely wounded, his career gets cut short. Years later, Hobbs tries out for a struggling team. He steps to the plate and knocks the ball out of the park in this mythic film that's as epic as America's national pastime.

6. Shawshank Redemption (1994)

Upstanding banker Andy Dufresne (Tim Robbins) is framed for a double murder in the 1940s and begins a life sentence at the Shawshank prison, where he's befriended by an older inmate named Red (Morgan Freeman). During his long stretch in prison, Dufresne comes to be admired by the other inmates for his upstanding moral code and unquenchable sense of hope. Co-stars Gil Bellows and Bob Gunton (who's memorable as the amoral prison warden).

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Turner and Hooch.

I watched it in college with 3 of the guys I played football with, and when Hooch dies, and Tom Hanks is cradling him and crying, and saying "Hooch"...there wasn't a dry eye in the room. And nobody even cared if the other guys saw them. What's more heartbreaking than a man losing his beloved dog.

I've heard other guys say the same thing.

- August 05, 2008 06:45 PM

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Here are some movies that made me cry:

  1. Way home – Korean movie about a young Korean boy (about 9 years old) sent to live with his grandmother in the country. He is a spoiled city kid who doesn’t appreciate what his grandmother, who is mute, does for him. Anyone with a heart will cry at this movie. The boy does some mean things to her during the movie but gradually comes to appreciate what she does for him. At the end when his mother comes to pick him up to go back to the city, he is sad to leave his grandmother. If you see this grandmother, you will want to call your mother or grandmother and tell them how much you love them.
  2. The Abyss – A couple who have divorced are forced to work together on an underground platform. Things go wrong and there is a scene where they are left somewhere with one tank of oxygen. One person has to die. They are both willing to sacrifice their life for the other. The woman ends up dying because the man can swim faster and stronger and take her body back to the main platform where he can try to do CPR to resuscitate her. He gets her back to the platform and works hard to get her to breathe again. After a while, it looks like there’s no hope. For a second he stops then in a rage he continues and she finally comes back to life. I thought the scene where self sacrifice was needed was truly touching because only in true love would people be willing to die for each other.
  3. Karate Kid I – the end scene where he uses the crane technique to beat the other more experienced kid at a karate tournament was as exhilarating as a sports movie can get.

From the 20 tear jerker movies for men list, these are the ones that mad me cry:

Schindler’s List, Million Dollar Baby, and Life is Beautiful.

Some of the other movies on the list made me feel uplifted but didn’t make me cry. I agree that this movie list must have been put together by a woman because seriously what guy cried at Terms of Endearment? J

- August 01, 2008 05:20 PM

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I'm not sure if anyone has mentioned these yet, but there are two movies that no matter how many times I watch them I still tear up for. First one, The Green Mile...mainly when hank williams and michael clark duncan are talking before the walk. Second one, Ladder 49, that one though is probably because of my background, but still.
- July 29, 2008 03:46 AM

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