14 Movies That Leave You Sitting in Silence for 10 Minutes When They’re Over | Wealth of Geeks

When someone asks in an online forum, “What movie had you sitting in silence for 10 minutes after watching?” the answers vary in interesting ways. While most responses are about films that left the viewers emotionally impacted, some are about more thematic impacts and surprise plot twists. 

1- Saving Private Ryan (1998)

Image Credit: DreamWorks Pictures and Paramount Pictures.

The most agreed upon answer by all in the conversation is Saving Private Ryan, a World War II film about a group of soldiers sent on a mission to find a low-level soldier who is to return home to his family after the combat deaths of his three brothers. One person shares that they saw it in school, and many of their teachers could tell that the students who had seen the film were “off” for the rest of the day. 

2- Schindler’s List (1993)

Schindler's List Liam Neeson, Ben Kingsley
Image Credit: Universal Pictures.

Another 1990s film from Steven Spielberg, Schindler’s List dramatizes the story of Oskar Schindler, who rescued more than one thousand Jews from the Holocaust. It’s a devastating film, and one film over says when the movie ended, “I literally sat there for about 15 min gathering my thoughts.”

3- Prisoners (2013)

Prisoners
Image Credit: Warner Bros.

Any film about child abduction and abuse is hard to watch. But Prisoners goes even further by exploring the shocking lengths parents will go to find and protect their children. It’s a taut thriller that left one viewer “frozen in [their] seat.”

4- Arrival (2016)

Arrival Amy Adams
Image Credit: Paramount Pictures.

It’s a bit surprising at first to learn that Arrival is directed by the same person who made Prisoners. But where Prisoners takes a brutal look at the horrors humans can unleash on one another, Arrival is a celebration of life and love. The movie, which centers on a linguist tasked with learning to communicate with recently arrived aliens, left many viewers in tears from its beautiful final moments of catharsis. 

5- The Green Mile (1999)

The Green Mile
Image Credit: Warner Bros. (Select territories) Universal Pictures.

Based on Stephen King’s novel of the same name, The Green Mile centers on a mysterious convict and the supernatural events that seem to surround him. Many fans agree that the film is powerful, but one says there was no silence after they watched it because they were sobbing so loudly. 

6- Children of Men (2006)

Children of Men Julianne Moore
Image Credit: Universal Pictures.

Children of Men, based on the novel The Children of Men by P.D. James, takes place in a world where humans are no longer being born. It’s a dark and seemingly hopeless world, but the film’s plot is set into motion when a group recruits the protagonist to help a young woman who is pregnant. One fan says it left them “stunned.”

7- Once Were Warriors (1994)

Once Were Warriors
Photo Credit: Fine Line Features.

Multiple people are eager to highlight the 1994 adaptation of Alan Duff’s novel We Were Warriors as one of the most affecting and underrated movies they’ve seen. One person says the film, which centers on a Māori family and their struggles in South Aukland, left them and their partner “so emotional [we] couldn’t talk to each other for about a half hour after.”

8- Ex Machina (2014)

Ex Machina Alicia Vikander, Sonoya Mizuno
Image Credit: Universal Pictures.

Ex Machina is one of the films mentioned in the discussion that’s not exactly an emotionally impactful film as much as it is a mindbender, which makes sense for a movie about an android with artificial intelligence so developed that she may be able to pass as a human. Without spoiling anything, suffice to say, as one user does, “The ending had me completely gobsmacked.” 

9- City of God (2002)

City of God
Image Credit: Miramax.

Several film fans agreed that City of God, based on the novel of the same name by Paulo Lins, left them breathless and silent for a while after finishing it. One movie lover says that the movie, which centers on several young people and their involvement with organized crime in Rio de Janeiro from the 1960s to 80s, is “one of those movies I was glad to have seen, but wished I hadn’t.”

10- Full Metal Jacket (1987)

Full Metal Jacket
Image Credit: Warner Bros. Pictures.

Based on Gustav Hasford’s novel The Short-TimersFull Metal Jacket is Stanley Kubrick’s last war film and fits right in with the bleak worldview of his earlier war movies. The movie centers on a group of young recruits during their time in boot camp and in the Vietnam War, highlighting the horrors of both. 

11- Saw (2004)

saw movie
Image Credit: Lionsgate Films

Saw is another film that gets mentioned because of its shocking finale more than any emotional punch it might pack. The first film in the lengthy horror series centers on two men trapped in a seemingly abandoned warehouse bathroom and the detectives trying to find the man who put them there. Its final twist is now the stuff of movie legend and still works just as well as it did twenty years ago. 

12- The Blair Witch Project (1999)

The Blair Witch Project
Image Credit: Artisan Entertainment.

It’s hard to overstate how many people thought The Blair Witch Project was an authentic document of what happened to a group of film students researching a witch in the woods outside Burkittsville, Maryland. Multiple horror fans say that when they first saw the film in 1999, they thought it was real and were floored by it. 

13- Spotlight (2015)

Spotlight Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams
Image Credit: Open Road Films.

It makes sense that the story of journalists uncovering a pattern of sexual abuse of children by clergy leaves viewers silent after it’s over. Spotlight isn’t an easy movie to watch, but, as one fan says, it makes an important statement: “People will be complicit in the darkest behavior before they move to disrupt the systems around them.”

14- We Need To Talk About Kevin (2011)

We Need To Talk About Kevin
Image Credit: Oscilloscope Laboratories.

Most movies about violent psychopaths center either on the killers themselves or their victims, but We Need to Talk About Kevin, based on the book of the same name by Lionel Shriver, focuses on the mother of the eponymous teen murderer. It’s less a thriller than a psychological portrait of a woman attempting to come to terms with the violence her son unleashed and is all the more remarkable for that perspective. 

Source: (Reddit)..


Kyle Logan is a film and television critic and general pop culture writer who has written for Alternative Press, Cultured Vultures, Film Stories, Screen Anarchy, and more. Kyle is particularly interested in horror and animation, as well as genre films written and directed by queer people and women. Kyle is a member of the Chicago Indie Critics and along with writing, organizes a Queer Film Challenge on Letterboxd.


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