Nothing really sad happens in LOTR. People probably cry because of the soundtrack. Throughout the trilogy they play that Shire theme at every nice and nostalgic moment, and then at "you bow to no one" they build up the melody really well. This is the piece: link if video doesn't show
(This post was last modified: 05-15-2014, 12:45 AM by Froge.)
(05-15-2014, 12:44 AM)Froge Wrote: Nothing really sad happens in LOTR. People probably cry because of the soundtrack. Throughout the trilogy they play that Shire theme at every nice and nostalgic moment, and then at "you bow to no one" they build up the melody really well.[/video]
Wooderson Wrote:which gets me close to tears at the end
Doesn't have to make you cry, just that it's an emotional part of the movie.
Well I've cryed real badly when Terminator 2 was released. 20 years ago. I was a young lad at that time and I crearly remember that primiere day when the theater was a full of people. And at the end of the movie the whole damn theater was full of crying people. Yup, Terminator 2 was extremely touching.
(This post was last modified: 05-15-2014, 03:40 PM by Alex Ros.)
I remember when Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire was first released. I went to see it in the cinema and was sitting next to two grown men that were crying at the end because of Robert Pattinson's characters death. Surprised I still remember that...
(05-15-2014, 05:14 PM)Wooderson Wrote: I remember when Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire was first released. I went to see it in the cinema and was sitting next to two grown men that were crying at the end because of Robert Pattinson's characters death. Surprised I still remember that...
Maybe they thought it was real...and that it was over.
"What you think is irrelevant" - A character of our time
That would involve some seriously cool time travel (...or premonition skills)! The movie for Goblet of Fire (released November 2005) came out just after the first book in the Twilight series (published in October of 2005) :p
I don't watch movies, so perhaps I should start using this thread as a guide for myself...