Sad movies.
Here are a few (I'm not a bot, I just couldn't choose):
For comfortably depressing, Romeo & Juliet. The Baz Luhrmann version has a great soundtrack.
For tragic, yet magical and at times hopeful, Photographing Fairies.
For tragic, yet magical, but horrendously so bleak that you'll wonder what the point of anything was, Pan's Labyrinth.
For existential doom and expansive settings, Melancholia.
For existential doom, with perseverance of the human spirit, 28 Days Later.
For existential doom, with perseverance of the replicant spirit, Blade Runner.
For the vastness and smallness of life on Earth since the beginning of time and the sad mix of love and cruelty of being, yet with the overarching power of a mother's love, Tree of Life.
For a cautionary tale for why to avoid war, The Thin Red Line.
For a funny movie about depression and creative paralysis, Ghost World.
For a movie about love, loss, and the taboo tendencies human beings use to cope with shocking tragedy, Exotica.
For a movie that devastates you in an instant, The Grifters.
For a movie that seems fun, but is actually profoundly sad, Cowboy Bebop.
For Artax, The Neverending Story.
For a heartbreaking sweeping epic with music that you feel in your soul, Once Upon a Time in the West.
For a movie about a mother's endless grief, Orca: The Killer Whale.
For a movie where the location itself is very depressing and sets the tone for deep yet beautifully moving sadness, Dark Water.
For a movie about trying to forget, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.
For a kid who needs his glasses, My Girl.
For Ryan Gosling doing what he has to do, Drive.
For Ryan Gosling doing what he has to do, Stay. (This one is beautiful and strange)
For Patrick Swayze, Ghost.
For a depressed kid who wants to make mistakes, but also wants to do the right thing, Donnie Darko.
For Ewan McGregor sobbing, Moulin Rouge.
For the most incredible Christian Bale movie you will ever see, and a truly heartbreaking yet inspiring movie about friendship in the midst of large scale tragedy, Empire of the Sun. (This one is so beautiful)
For a young woman forced to be a concubine in China, Raise the Red Lantern.
For the one who got away, The Age of Innocence.
For the one who got away in Hong Kong, In the Mood For Love.
For a man on a path with death, The Passenger (Jack Nicholson).
For the love of an idol, Perfect Blue.
For an American girl who just wanted to love a boy, Splendor in the Grass.
For American girls with a crush on a boy, The Man in the Moon.
For a girl who just wanted to be normal, Steel Magnolias.
For an epic Western ill-fated romance with a beautiful biracial orphan girl, Duel in the Sun.