Animated films too painful to watch twice

Of course, the other possibility is that people are deliberately being snarky. ;)

I do have a sense of internet humour at times, so I can sometimes 'get it' when posters are fooling around.:p
 
Hey, I've actually heard of that movie- haven't seen it though. For those that don't know, it's about two dogs who escape an experiment laboratory in England, but face adversity not only from their unfamiliar environment but the captors who are sent to retrieve them. I recall a movie guide said it was downbeat but well-done.

Oddly, I haven't seen many (if any) animated movies which are so downbeat that it's hard to rewatch them. I haven't seen End of Eva or Grave of the Fireflies, which are apparently some of the more depressing movies out there, regardless of their quality.
 
I'm with the majority who thought it was awful over sad

I can't think of a movie too sad to watch(I've never cried in a movie, with the exception of X-Men 3 when Professor Xavier dies, idk why i did). The only animated thing i can think of is the ending of Jurassic Bark, if you don't cry your a communist
 
I can't say I've CRIED- in fact I can't say any form of entertainment has driven me to tears... but it is indeed a sad ending and sometimes at least produces a lump. Ditto for "Mother Simpson"'s ending.
 
I have rarely cried watching a TV show. Not even the "Jurassic Bark" episode, not even the "Luck of the Fryish" episode (though the latter came close).

I did cry, for some strange reason, watching a GTO episode. It was during this flashback sequence when some girl was thinking about her childhood friendship with someone who was no longer her friend. It was quite lame on my part, because the episode was so obviously trying to push the viewer's buttons.
 
"When the Wind Blows" along with its LA contemporaries "Threads" and "Testament" are the quintessential apocalypse awareness trio. They're difficult films to watch the first time and even harder to watch the second (I should know, I've actually pulled it off).
 
I was too young to really understand what made "Luck fo the fryish" and "Jurassic Bark" so specialwhen I first saw them, and when I did, I've already seen the eps a few time, so I never felt the need to cry, althought they're still tear-jerkers nonetheless. The only time an animated series drove me to tears was AD's "Homecoming". I mean, Jake's perfect girl just lost her memory after 39 episodes of warming up to her.
 
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