Bravo.Wild Cat said:Also, Satine in Moulin Rouge
Also, the ending of Big Fish. Leaves me in tears every time I watch it, even when I know it's coming.
Bravo.Wild Cat said:Also, Satine in Moulin Rouge
Dammit, ninja'd. I'd put D and Bodie up there with the ones that hit me hardest. I was upset about String too because he was so close to getting out but the way he got there... he needed to "get got". Let's not forget Frank Sabotka, too. Without the full social context of the show, I'd say his death/story was the most classically tragic.chewbacca1010 said:Z of the Na said:-Snip!-
In television though, watch The Wire. There are several tragic, moving deaths per season. (Spoiler alert) Stringer, D'Angelo, Omar, Wallace (probably the harshest), Bodie, Prop Joe, Sherrod, Snoop etc. Anyone who doesn't die ends up either on the streets or in jail for life, for the most part. Tragic, amazing show.
Sadly, most of the deaths are kids from the streets.
This, very much this, I shed a tear when I saw that scene.CK76 said:"Bridge to Terabithia"
Leslie did nothing to "deserve" the fate, Jesse is left all alone with only emptiness and misplaced guilt. There is no vengeance, no relief, no explanation, just randomness. The sense of loss is tangible and it just seems cruel to a lonely sympathetic character to lose something so dear. The only thing we're left with is sometimes we just endure life.
It was also a book, you know. -_-Knife-28 said:This, very much this, I shed a tear when I saw that scene.CK76 said:"Bridge to Terabithia"
Leslie did nothing to "deserve" the fate, Jesse is left all alone with only emptiness and misplaced guilt. There is no vengeance, no relief, no explanation, just randomness. The sense of loss is tangible and it just seems cruel to a lonely sympathetic character to lose something so dear. The only thing we're left with is sometimes we just endure life.
Yes, I know, I just say the movie first.thevillageidiot13 said:It was also a book, you know. -_-Knife-28 said:This, very much this, I shed a tear when I saw that scene.CK76 said:"Bridge to Terabithia"
Leslie did nothing to "deserve" the fate, Jesse is left all alone with only emptiness and misplaced guilt. There is no vengeance, no relief, no explanation, just randomness. The sense of loss is tangible and it just seems cruel to a lonely sympathetic character to lose something so dear. The only thing we're left with is sometimes we just endure life.
What's worse is that he never had a truly happy life. The only 2 people he loved were either murdered in the first book, or were so disgusted by what he became they turned their back on him. All he had left was an untrustworthy demon (who he realises isn't so untrustworthy).scrambledeggs said:If ANYONE knows what I am talking about, I willy be a happy chap,
but Nathaniel from the Bartimaus trilogy. It's such an amazing ending to a trilogy.
yeah its really hard if a character acompanies you for years of your life like that.spookydom said:Eddie Dean from the Drak Tower Books. Feels like I spent my whole Life waiting for King to finnish this series. Bought the first book when I was 14. The last book was released when I was 33. Eddie was my hero second only to Han Solo through most of my life. Reading about him going cold turkey helped me get through rehab and his sense of humour was a constant inspiration. Last book...he dies...I was crushed for weeks.
haven't watched firefly (i know...the horror!!) but definitely agree with Nick...though from the Dark Tower Jake's death hit me hard but not as hard as Eddie's...i mean at least Jake died in a climactic fashiondarkman80723 said:Nick Andross from the Stand, Wash from Firefly/Serenity, and Jake Chambers from The Dark Tower Series (I almost couldnt finish the book after that one)
Ninja'd! /Weep D:Zap Rowsdower said:Marvin the Paranoid Android.
Marvin reappears in the second-to-last chapter of So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish. Arthur and Fenchurch find him on the planet where God's Final Message To His Creation is located. He is barely functional, claiming that, due to time travel he is now "thirty-seven times older than the Universe itself." Every part of his body has been replaced, with the exception of "all the diodes down [his] left side," which have been giving him severe pain for the whole of his existence. Arthur and Fenchurch end up carrying him, enduring the robot's constant abuse, to the God's Final Message viewing station, where they lift him up to see the words of the message: "We apologise for the inconvenience." Astonishingly, Marvin responds "'I think... I feel good about it.'" The lights in his eyes go out and his already-worn circuits completely stop working; Marvin is no more. (In the radio dramatisation, his last words are "Goodbye, Arthur." Marvin's 'death' prompts Arthur to say, "Miserable git!" and then, to his own obvious astonishment, to add, "I'll miss him.")