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reptongeek wrote:
Hailee Seinfeld in The Edge of Seventeen has two crying scenes the first a sobbing scene outside then a quieter one inside. I thought I saw a tear roll but it was a bit faint - expect a rant on image quality in movies later
Any good lip movement?
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John Krasinski has a sweet scene in the movie the Hollars. I admit I was disappointed there wasn't more, but he is a very good actor. Scene starts about 48-49 minutes in. No sobbing but he manages to get tears flowing pretty quick like he has been holding them back for awhile. Again, was hoping for more, but still a good scene. Movie wasn't terrible either, reminded me a lot of Garden State
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TorNorth wrote:
reptongeek wrote:
Hailee Seinfeld in The Edge of Seventeen has two crying scenes the first a sobbing scene outside then a quieter one inside. I thought I saw a tear roll but it was a bit faint - expect a rant on image quality in movies later
Any good lip movement?
There might be a little bit, it's not something I look for to be honest. My focus in the second scene is on her eyes and silently wondering where is the first tear going to come from
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Felicity Jones in Rogue One has a brief crying scene with a lip wobble and tears filling her eyes
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Anyone gone to see Into The Forest? There ought to be plenty of crying from Ellen Page and Evan Rachel Wood. There's even two clips in the trailer. I'd go to see it, but I don't find the premise all that interesting.
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The classic movie musical Meet Me in St. Louis has two crying scenes that I like. The first features Esther (Judy Garland) crying to her grandfather because she was rejected by her date (I think that was the situation). The second has Margaret O'Brien as Esther's little sister crying hysterically because she doesn't want to move away from St. Louis; it's the bit that follows the song "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas." The first scene was not on Youtube last time I checked, while the second scene I'm hesitant to post because O'Brien was underage.
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I remember reading once that Margaret O'Brien was quite the seasoned crier. Once when a director told her to cry, she asked "Do you want the tears to go all the way down my face, or should I stop them halfway down?"
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Evan Rachel Wood can do something like that too. Even better her director asked her to demonstrate and she did
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Michelle Williams has a short but fairly intense crying scene in the last 30-minutes or so of Manchester By the Sea. There aren't a lot of close-ups, so individual tears are hard to see. But her face and voice are very expressive, and she kind of shakes with repressed sobs throughout the sequence.
Casey Affleck has a number of teary and emotional moments throughout the film, but he doesn't ever really have a full-on crying scene.
There are also a couple of scenes in the second half of the film where Lucas Hedges, who plays Affleck's nephew, cries or sobs very convincingly while Affleck comforts him. (Hedges plays a high-schooler, but the actor was 19 or 20 when the film was shot.)
Emma Stone cries some pretty tears, with wobbling lip and chin, in a couple of scenes near the end of La La Land. There's also an interesting scene near the beginning of the film, where Stone (who plays an actress) begins a dramatic crying-scene as part of an audition, but is interrupted mid-way through.
There's a clip of that scene here:
Ryan Gosling looks emotional in a few scenes, but he doesn't cry.
Last edited by Tristana (January 9, 2017 9:17 pm)
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The Bollywood film "Dangal" has several scenes where tears run down the face of the two female leads. The main female lead Fatima Sana Shaikh has two sobbing scenes with a really nice bulging lip.