last time you cried from any type of media

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The Wonder of the net

chasing ninjas and giant robots
Mar 12, 2011
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This might be a forum post already and if it is sorry. But anyway back to the topic the last time I cried was last night at the end of .hack//roots.
This was when they told you what happened to phyllo and how after being this insightful person he up and dies. How you ask? From terminal cancer that he was told 8 months before his death that he would die. The part thats the most sad is that he spent all his time playing a mmo trying to talk to as many people that would come and stand next to him just like he normally did anyway. He only told one person that he had terminal cancer the day before he died. I hope if I am ever told I only have a certain amount of time left that I can do the same and just live my life like normal.
 

unicron44

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Oct 12, 2010
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I watched the Futurama episodes "Luck of the Fryrish" and "Jurassic Bark" and I wept like a baby after both. Futurama is such a great show.
 

DirgeNovak

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Jul 23, 2008
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I shed a tear during that one bit in Tali's loyalty mission in Mass Effect 2. If you've played it you know what I'm talking about.
 

Lord Devius

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Aug 5, 2010
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I nearly cried at the end of Majora's Mask because I forgot how "d'aww they're friends now" it was.

I cried when I watched Clannad. Haven't really cried at anything since then, though I came damn close some times. Thanks, Clannad, for making me more susceptible to emotional moments. [sub]That's not even sarcasm, it's really a weird experience[/sub]
 

LCH1988

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Jun 26, 2011
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I teared up a bit reading Randall Clark's computer journals in Honest Hearts.
 

Rabish Bini

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Jun 11, 2011
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There were moments where I teared a bit during Sleepers, but never actually cried.

I also shed a tear at the end of the Season 2 finale of Buffy The Vampire Slayer
 

samuraikatana1

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Dec 16, 2009
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Last episode of Tokyo Magnitude 8.0. That's about the only thing (media wise) I've ever cried to. Up's opening scene is a close second though.
 

Fenix7

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Jun 14, 2011
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Last time... I don't really remember. I think it was TWEWY's ending.

Always makes me cry :'(
 

PlasmaFrog

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Feb 2, 2009
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Armageddon's ending, the one with Bruce Willis. It's just so damn difficult not to considering the hindering emotions of certain characters and the unfolding events that very much hold a traumatic impact on the whole plot.
 

SillyBear

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May 10, 2011
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It was The Office. Michael's last episode made me cry like a baby.

AmbushIntheDark said:
End of Toy Story 3.

I dont think I need to explain why.
Oh God, that made me melt really bad.
 

Blastinburn

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Apr 13, 2011
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Just finished watching AnoHana recently. (full title hidden)
Ano Hi Mita Hana no Namae o Bokutachi wa Mada Shiranai
 

katsumoto03

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Feb 24, 2010
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I watched the 3:10 to Yuma remake the other day. I fucking love that movie and I always cry a little at the ending. Same with Red Dead.
 

CATB320

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Jan 30, 2011
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I cried a little at the end of LA Noire.
I bawled at some of the last-ish Battlestar Galactica episodes.
 

Sovvolf

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Mar 23, 2009
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You know, call me an heartless prick but I've never cried at any form of media. Though honestly, I'm not that heartless, nor am I saying it to show how hard and nonchalant I am. I've certainly come very, very close however never quite got there. Mostly from the typical stuff most do, Lion King and such. I got really close at the ending of Kingdom Hearts, I think I did at the second one, can't remember though. One game did get me really, really close and that was Lost Odyssey, reading one of the memories just nearly kicked me off. I can't remember which one it was but it was a sad one.

The most recent one though was Yakuza 3, there's a part in that game where a character dies and well, thanks to the fact that the character was likable and the game had a good perfomance... It was really upsetting. I imagine fellow fans know what I'm talking about.

However aside from those, I can't remember ever shedding some tears over a film or media.

Though I think this story is the closest I've been to shedding tears

http://www.ocregister.com/news/pixar-128978-up-movie.html

HUNTINGTON BEACH - Colby Curtin, a 10-year-old with a rare form of cancer, was staying alive for one thing - a movie.
From the minute Colby saw the previews to the Disney-Pixar movie Up, she was desperate to see it. Colby had been diagnosed with vascular cancer about three years ago, said her mother, Lisa Curtin, and at the beginning of this month it became apparent that she would die soon and was too ill to be moved to a theater to see the film.
After a family friend made frantic calls to Pixar to help grant Colby her dying wish, Pixar came to the rescue.
The company flew an employee with a DVD of Up, which is only in theaters, to the Curtins? Huntington Beach home on June 10 for a private viewing of the movie.
The animated movie begins with scenes showing the evolution of a relationship between a husband and wife. After losing his wife in old age, the now grumpy man deals with his loss by attaching thousands of balloons to his house, flying into the sky, and going on an adventure with a little boy.
Colby died about seven hours after seeing the film.
With her daughter?s vigil planned for Friday, Lisa Curtin reflected about how grateful she is that Pixar - and "Up" - were a part of her only child?s last day.
?When I watched it, I had really no idea about the content of the theme of the movie,? said Curtin, 46. ?I just know that word ?Up? and all of the balloons and I swear to you, for me it meant that (Colby) was going to go up. Up to heaven.?
Pixar officials declined to comment on the story or name the employees involved.
THE PREVIEWS
Colby was diagnosed with vascular cancer on Dec. 23, 2005 after doctors found a tumor in her liver. At the time of her death, her stomach was about 94 inches around, swollen with fluids the cancer wouldn?t let her body properly digest. The rest of her body probably weighed about 45 pounds, family friend Carole Lynch said.
Colby had gone to Newport Elementary School and was known for making others laugh, family friend Terrell Orum-Moore said. Colby loved to dance, sing, swim and seemed to have a more mature understanding of the world than other children her age, Orum-Moore said.
On April 28, Colby went to see the Dream Works 3-D movie "Monsters Vs. Aliens" but was impressed by the previews to "Up."
?It was from then on, she said, ?I have to see that movie. It is so cool,?? Lynch said.
Colby was a movie fan, Lisa Curtin said, and she latched onto Pixar?s movies because she loved animals.
Two days later Colby?s health began to worsen. On June 4 her mother asked a hospice company to bring a wheelchair for Colby so she could visit a theater to see "Up." However, the weekend went by and the wheelchair was not delivered, Lisa Curtin said.
By June 9, Colby could no longer be transported to a theater and her family feared she would die without having seen the movie.
At that point, Orum-Moore, who desperately wanted Colby to get her last wish, began to cold-call Pixarand Disney to see if someone could help.
Pixar has an automated telephone answering system, Orum-Moore said, and unless she had a name of a specific person she wanted to speak to, she could not get through. Orum-Moore guessed a name and the computer system transferred her to someone who could help, she said.
Pixar officials listened to Colby?s story and agreed to send someone to Colby?s house the next day with a DVD of "Up," Orum-Moore recalled.
She immediately called Lisa Curtin, who told Colby.
?Do you think you can hang on?? Colby?s mother said.
?I?m ready (to die), but I?m going to wait for the movie,? the girl replied.
THE MOVIE
At about 12:30 p.m. the Pixar employee came to the Curtins? home with the DVD.
He had a bag of stuffed animals of characters in the movie and a movie poster. He shared some quirky background details of the movie and the group settled in to watch Up.
Colby couldn't see the screen because the pain kept her eyes closed so her mother gave her a play-by-play of the film.
At the end of the film, the mother asked if her daughter enjoyed the movie and Colby nodded yes, Lisa Curtin said.
The employee left after the movie, taking the DVD with him, Lynch said.
?He couldn?t have been nicer,? said Lynch who watched the movie with the family. ?His eyes were just welled up.?
After the movie, Colby?s dad, Michael Curtin, who is divorced from Lisa Curtin, came to visit.
Colby died with her mom and dad nearby at 9:20 p.m.
Among the Up memorabilia the employee gave Colby was an ?adventure book? - a scrap book the main character?s wife used to chronicle her journeys.
?I?ll have to fill those adventures in for her,? Lisa Curtin said.
 

Zantos

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Jan 5, 2011
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Muppets Christmas Carol. When he get's shown the future where
Tiny Tim's chair is empty because he died