Most Emotional Movies You Can’t Bear to Watch Twice


Movies Too Hard to Rewatch

Some movies leave such a deep emotional impact that watching them once is more than enough. These are the films that break your heart, bring you to tears, and stay in your memory long after the credits roll. Their powerful stories and unforgettable performances make them masterpieces — but too painful to revisit twice.

In this article, we’ve gathered the most emotional movies you can’t bear to watch again. From heartbreaking dramas to true stories of loss and survival, each of these films delivers an intensity that few viewers can handle more than once. Get ready for a list that will move you, shock you, and stay with you forever.

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30 Melancholia, 2011

Melancholia

On the night of her wedding, Justine is struggling to be happy even though it should be the happiest day of her life. It was an extravagant wedding paid for by her sister and brother-in-law who are trying to keep the bride and all the guests in line. Meanwhile, Melancholia, a blue planet, is hurtling towards the Earth. Claire, Justine’s sister, is struggling to maintain composure with fear of the impending disaster.

Director: Lars von Trier
Writer: Lars von Trier
Starring: Kirsten Dunst, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Alexander Skarsgård
Budget: $7 400 000
Box office: $15 946 000

Trailer:

 

 

29 Leaving Las Vegas, 1995

Leaving Las Vegas

Ben Sanderson, a Hollywood screenwriter who lost everything because of his alcoholism, arrives in Las Vegas to drink himself to death. There, he meets and forms an uneasy friendship and non-interference pact with prostitute Sera.

Director: Mike Figgis
Writers: Mike Figgis, John O’Brien
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Elisabeth Shue, Julian Sands
Budget: $4 000 000
Box office: $32 029 000

Trailer:

 

28 Manchester by the Sea, 2016

Manchester by the Sea

Lee Chandler is a brooding, irritable loner who works as a handyman for a Boston apartment block. One damp winter day he gets a call summoning him to his hometown, north of the city. His brother’s heart has given out suddenly, and he’s been named guardian to his 16-year-old nephew. As if losing his only sibling and doubts about raising a teenager weren’t enough, his return to the past re-opens an unspeakable tragedy.

Director: Kenneth Lonergan
Writer: Kenneth Lonergan
Starring: Casey Affleck, Michelle Williams, Kyle Chandler
Budget: $9 000 000
Box office: $78 988 000

Trailer:

 

27 Boys Don’t Cry, 1999

Boys Don't Cry

Based on actual events. Brandon Teena is the popular new guy in a tiny Nebraska town. He hangs out with the guys, drinking, cussing, and bumper surfing, and he charms the young women, who’ve never met a more sensitive and considerate young man. Life is good for Brandon, now that he’s one of the guys and dating hometown beauty Lana; however, he’s forgotten to mention one important detail. It’s not that he’s wanted in another town for GTA and other assorted crimes, but that Brandon Teena was actually born a woman named Teena Brandon. When his best friends make this discovery, Brandon’s life is ripped apart.

Director: Kimberly Peirce
Writers: Kimberly Peirce, Andy Bienen
Starring: Hilary Swank, Chloë Sevigny, Peter Sarsgaard
Budget: $2 000 000
Box office: $11 540 000

Trailer:

 

26 Pan’s Labyrinth (El laberinto del fauno), 2006

El laberinto del fauno

In 1944 Spain, a girl is sent to live with her ruthless stepfather. During the night, she meets a fairy who takes her to an old faun. He tells her she’s a princess, but must prove her royalty by surviving three gruesome tasks.

Director: Guillermo del Toro
Writer: Guillermo del Toro
Starring: Ivana Baquero, Sergi López, Maribel Verdú
Box office: $83 258 000

Trailer:

 

 

25 127 Hours, 2010

127 Hours

127 Hours is the true story of mountain climber Aron Ralston’s remarkable adventure to save himself after a fallen boulder crashes on his arm and traps him in an isolated canyon in Utah. Over the next five days Ralston examines his life and survives the elements to finally discover he has the courage and the wherewithal to extricate himself by any means necessary, scale a 65 foot wall and hike over eight miles before he can be rescued. Throughout his journey, Ralston recalls friends, lovers, family, and the two hikers he met before his accident. Will they be the last two people he ever had the chance to meet?

Director: Danny Boyle
Writers: Danny Boyle, Simon Beaufoy, Aron Ralston
Starring: James Franco, Kate Mara, Amber Tamblyn
Budget: $18 000 000
Box office: $60 738 000

Trailer:

 

24 Biutiful, 2009

Biutiful

Uxbal, single father of two children, finds his life in chaos as he is forced to deal with his life in order to escape the heat of crime in underground Barcelona, to break with the love for the divorced, manic depressive, abusive mother of his children and to regain spiritual insight in his life as he is diagnosed with terminal cancer.

Director: Alejandro G. Iñárritu
Writers: Armando Bo, Nicolás Giacobone, Alejandro G. Iñárritu
Starring: Javier Bardem, Maricel Álvarez, Hanaa Bouchaib
Box office: $25 147 000

Trailer:

 

23 Big Fish, 2003

Big Fish

When Edward Bloom becomes ill, his son, William, travels to be with him. William has a strained relationship with Edward because his father has always told exaggerated stories about his life, and William thinks he’s never really told the truth. Even on his deathbed, Edward recounts fantastical anecdotes. When William, who is a journalist, starts to investigate his father’s tales, he begins to understand the man and his penchant for storytelling.

Director: Tim Burton
Writers: John August, Daniel Wallace
Starring: Ewan McGregor, Albert Finney, Perry Walston
Budget: $95 000 000
Box office: $122 919 000

Trailer:

 

22 Martyrs, 2008

Martyrs

A young woman’s quest for revenge against the people who kidnapped and tormented her as a child leads her and a friend, who is also a victim of child abuse, on a terrifying journey into a living hell of depravity.

Director: Pascal Laugier
Writer: Pascal Laugier
Starring: Morjana Alaoui, Mylène Jampanoï, Catherine Bégin
Budget: $6 500 000
Box office: $1 149 000

Trailer:

 

21 The Road, 2009

The Road

It’s a post-apocalyptic world, several years after whatever the cataclysmic event, which has in turn caused frequent quakes as further potential hazards. The world is gray and getting quickly grayer as more and more things die off. A man and his pre-teen son, who was born after the apocalypse, are currently on the road, their plan to walk to the coast and head south where the man hopes there will be a more hospitable environment in which to live. The man has taught his son that they are the «good people» who have fire in their hearts, which in combination largely means that they will not resort to cannibalism to survive. The man owns a pistol with two bullets remaining, which he will use for murder/suicide of him and his son if he feels that that is a better fate for them than life in the alternative. Food and fuel are for what everyone is looking. The man has taught his son to be suspect of everyone that they may meet, these strangers who, out of desperation, may not only try to steal what they have managed to scavenge for their own survival, but may kill them as food. Although life with his father in this world is all the boy has known, he may come to his own thoughts as to what it means holistically to be one of the good or one of the bad. Meanwhile, the man occasionally has thoughts to happier times with his wife/the boy’s mother before the apocalypse, as well as not as happy times with her after the apocalypse and the reason she is no longer with them.

Director: John Hillcoat
Writers: Joe Penhall, Cormac McCarthy
Starring: Viggo Mortensen, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Charlize Theron
Budget: $25 000 000
Box office: $27 635 000

Trailer:

 

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