Let me see........Bo Derrick running on the beach in "10"
No, that made me smile!

(BTW, whatever became of Bo Derek? I think her real name was Cathy Collins until she married John Derek, who was Ursula Andress's and Linda Evans's ex, too. That guy could really pick 'em, and he certainly had consistent taste in blondes.
What makes me cry? "We Were Soldiers", every time. It's a true story, and I've read the book by the officer who Mel Gibson portrayed, Lt. Gen. Hal Moore. I think he received the DSC for that action, and three of those involved were eventually awarded the Medal of Honor. By golly, they earned it. It is a raw shame that the two helicopter pilots were delayed for so long in in receiving the Medal.
The whole movie is intense, and it got to me when the Oriental GI was lost to a US napalm drop. What Sgt. Savage's platoon endured was awful. I think the real Savage also received the DSC. Not to mention the Purple Heart...
Not shown was the nearby action the next day, I think, for which Lt. Joe Marm received the Medal of Honor.
These men were heroes who went through Hades and were mostly treated like stepsons by their ungrateful nation and a largely hostile media.
Another one that gets to me a little is, "Out of Africa", with the way that Bror treated Karen. Denys also was too much of a free spirit to settle down with her.
Here's a tearjerker not in the movie: John A. Hunter, the aptly named friend and sometime safari partner of Denys Finch Hatton, told in one of his books how the real Finch Hatton had been given some oranges by a lady at a farm just before he took off on his fatal flight. Hunter arrived soon after the crash and saw the blackened oranges rolling out of the burning cockpit and that was his last memory of his friend.
The loss of Karen's farm and her return to Denmark was also saddening, as was the death by blackwater fever of one of Denys's friends, Barkley.
But the hunting scenes and some of the wartime footage and the massive landscape views were redeeming. The guns were dead-on for the characters and the times. It's my favorite film with both Redford and Streep, ably assisted by Klaus Maria Brandauer. It's one of the best tellings of a true story that I've seen. Redford even looked a lot like the real Finch Hatton.
Good gosh! I just realized that this is an old thread!