Optimus Prime dying was the saddest thing to me when I was younger:
Jesus this episode made me cry rewatching it.
Goku's sacrifice during the Cell Games.
I've cried like a little girl.. I already feel like tearing up thinking about this moment...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4n3l2tTz09A
I've been looking for this for forever, I saw it once years ago and it devastated me. It's just called Remi?
Edit - Damn autocorrect
Makes you cry over a ship.
Yeah, in Latin America is just Remi
I think it is called Nobody's child in some other countries, not sure about that
I fairly easy to find on DVD here in Mexico, and maybe in Japan
Caution: Psychologic trauma might occur
I remember this moment but not the episode or the context. Can someone help me out?
They in it together.
Edit: Looks like I'm not alone in finding that scene sad as hell.
I remember this moment but not the episode or the context. Can someone help me out?
Was looking for this. Man that made me feel sad.Does anime count?
Cuz Komugi...
;___;
:BibleThump
Anohana, Menma's letters.
Rurouni Kenshin (samurai X) OVA is one of the saddest and most dramatic out there.
This was a "happy sad" moment for me that just crushed me with the feels...
what is going on here?
what is going on here?
That's why people should watch the superior and more focused original series. Brotherhood was good overall, but the first series focuses a lot better on the bond between the brothers Elrich, and the people whose lives they affect. The music alone magnifies each emotional moment on a whole other level compared to Brotherhood.
Everyone's going to post Futurama dog, but I've always felt that Land Before Time was the epitome of sad cartoon moments.
Sorry everyone, Grave of the Fireflies exists and trumps your paltry children's movies and shows.
Even worse is when you realize the author of the original story based it on his actual life and what happened to his sister.
what is going on here?
Sorry everyone, Grave of the Fireflies exists and trumps your paltry children's movies and shows.
Even worse is when you realize the author of the original story based it on his actual life and what happened to his sister.
Optimus Prime dying was the saddest thing to me when I was younger:
Alright you assholes, after hearing about this movie multiple times here I decided to watch it last night, and figured since I was going in expecting it too be the saddest movie ever, I won't cry due to the expectation.Sorry everyone, Grave of the Fireflies exists and trumps your paltry children's movies and shows.
Even worse is when you realize the author of the original story based it on his actual life and what happened to his sister.
I used to laugh at friends that cried their eyes out at this moment, I just didn't get it.... probably because I didn't actually watch the full movie myself until I was 20 years old (first time I watched it from start to finish on dvd!).
As a child it was seeing He-Man near death in The Secret of The Sword
I was like noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Your Lie in April had me crying on numerous occasions. Beautiful show. Here's I guess one specific part, major spoilers it's the end https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=_O0FqweeiEU
I remember this moment but not the episode or the context. Can someone help me out?
Pokemon gang bang on a passed out Ash.
Unfortunately, yes.He's pretty much lost all interest in fighting in the new series/movies to the point where he has weakened drastically. I mean he's still stronger than the other Z fighters, who aren't Goku and Vegeta, but they're not really relevant anyway. Well, neither is Gohan now I suppose. He gets bodied by first form Frieza in Resurrection of F .... with one punch iirc.
I hadn't watched anime in years and a friend decided to get me to watch that and another one about the ghost of a little girl showing up to a kid that couldn't get over her death years after.
I once again do not watch anime.
Anohana was the first movie/tv show/game that has actually made me cry. Fuck me that ending.
Your lie in April was also very sad and I teared up a bit.
Leaves from the vine
Falling so slow
Like fragile, tiny shells
Drifting in the foam
Little soldier boy
Come marching home
Brave soldier boy
Comes marching home
what is going on here?
Mary Louise Dahl was a female actor who was born with systemic hypoplasia, a rare condition which kept her from ever growing, meaning that she spent all of her life looking like a young toddler. She became famous for a brief period when she played the title character in the TV sitcom "Love That Baby" (when she was 20, though she still looked like she was 5). She and the show were wildly popular, but as the series got older, the ratings dwindled. In the final season, the producers of the show decided to add a new character; Baby Doll's cousin who was called Spunky. Baby Doll was angry at Spunky because she thought that he was stealing her spot light, especially on one occasion on her birthday episode, where she got her face pushed into her birthday cake by him. Furious, she left the show in order to turn herself into a proper dramatic actress.
...
Without any jobs coming her way, Mary went through a rough, depressing period of her life where she realized that the only time when she had been truly happy was when she was in the show as Baby-Doll, when she used to have a "family" in the show and was adored by millions of viewers.
Keeping her persona as Baby Doll permanently, Baby went around with her hired thugs and kidnapped all of the original cast of Baby Doll, bringing them together so that she get revenge on Spunky and have her old family back.
...
While Robin released the captives, Batman chased Baby into a nearby fair, and then into a Fun House. Inside the Fun House, Baby came across a hall of mirrors. Within one of the distorted mirrors, Baby saw herself as an adult, how she believed she should look without her condition. Knowing this to be fake, just as her family and life, she shot and broke all of the mirrors before breaking down mentally and running out of bullets. When the Batman walked up to her, she went peacefully, uttering her infamous catchphrase "I didn't mean to".
Sorry everyone, Grave of the Fireflies exists and trumps your paltry children's movies and shows.
Even worse is when you realize the author of the original story based it on his actual life and what happened to his sister.
Always gets me.man this one hit me hard too indeed
DC:AU Batman is the best. This scene is from one of my favorite episodes of Justice League, meant to be the series finale. It closes the story on the entire DC:AU, wrapping back around to Batman and his compassion for others.
The scene that almost got me to tear up was whenSorry everyone, Grave of the Fireflies exists and trumps your paltry children's movies and shows.
Even worse is when you realize the author of the original story based it on his actual life and what happened to his sister.
You've let me down Gaf.
Also, this thread inspired me to check out Luck of the Fryish and Jurassic Bark. Maybe it was the hype, but eh. I guess they are pretty good from a Simpsons, Futurama, etc. standpoint. But they were just nice moments, nothing amazing.