Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah it was sad but it didn't hit me that hard, he died in the 1500s of the bubonic plague, a lot of people died then of plague.
Thanks for spoiling it. now I won’t watch it.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah it was sad but it didn't hit me that hard, he died in the 1500s of the bubonic plague, a lot of people died then of plague.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't stand movies (or books) about lost or abducted children. The show with Nicole Kidman as an expat in Hong Kong just gutted me.
Also, anything with child abuse. True Detective season 1 was a masterful show, but the scenes with those children have been seared into my brain and I sometimes wake up in the middle of the night in horror.
But I think I'll watch Hamnet. It sounds very sad, but not on the same level as the above.
Oh my goodness, thanks for the heads up about true detective season 1. I will definitely have to avoid.
Anonymous wrote:I can't stand movies (or books) about lost or abducted children. The show with Nicole Kidman as an expat in Hong Kong just gutted me.
Also, anything with child abuse. True Detective season 1 was a masterful show, but the scenes with those children have been seared into my brain and I sometimes wake up in the middle of the night in horror.
But I think I'll watch Hamnet. It sounds very sad, but not on the same level as the above.
Anonymous wrote:I can't stand movies (or books) about lost or abducted children. The show with Nicole Kidman as an expat in Hong Kong just gutted me.
Also, anything with child abuse. True Detective season 1 was a masterful show, but the scenes with those children have been seared into my brain and I sometimes wake up in the middle of the night in horror.
But I think I'll watch Hamnet. It sounds very sad, but not on the same level as the above.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the same OP. I watched Lion in the theaters and sobbed uncontrollably for most of the movie. Honestly most people around me were probably doing the same. I remember the NYT review of Lion saying something like if you’ve ever been a mother, had a mother, been a child, or had a child— you will cry throughout the entire movie. Funny but accurate.
Lion w dev Patel? I loved that movie. And book.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t connect the real people with the fictional plot. I have watched lots of crazy unbelievable fiction but for some reason it annoys me to see a made up fiction about Shakespeare’s wife. I don’t know why.
There isn't enough documentation about them to NOT be fiction. They do research on life in that time and base it off that.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t connect the real people with the fictional plot. I have watched lots of crazy unbelievable fiction but for some reason it annoys me to see a made up fiction about Shakespeare’s wife. I don’t know why.
Anonymous wrote:I don't like that kind of sad and depressing movie. But I have a depressive friend who revels in anything sad, in book or movie form. We have both lost pregnancies.
It's a well-known fact, OP, that a solid portion of the population is attracted to miserable plots to alleviate their own sadness. Some of us are the opposite - after my teen phase of reading the most depressing classical literature (Zola and Dostoevsky, for ex), I decided, no more. Only happy endings for me. I want escapism, not corroboration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For me it's animals dying. John Wick lost me quickly. I am so thankful for the "does the dog die" website.
+1
Anonymous wrote:I am the same OP. I watched Lion in the theaters and sobbed uncontrollably for most of the movie. Honestly most people around me were probably doing the same. I remember the NYT review of Lion saying something like if you’ve ever been a mother, had a mother, been a child, or had a child— you will cry throughout the entire movie. Funny but accurate.