
This story contains spoilers for Hamnet, though it’s based on a true story that happened more than 400 years ago.
Molly Thomas cried so hard watching Hamnet in the movie theater that the woman sitting in front of her reached back to hold her hand for 10 minutes.
From its description alone, it’s clear that this film is a tearjerker: It’s a fictional imagining of the marriage between William Shakespeare and his wife, Agnes, before and after the death of their son, 11-year-old Hamnet — who is, according to the movie, the namesake and inspiration for the play Hamlet.
Thomas, a London-based lawyer, was well aware that Hamnet would devastate her emotionally. She prefers her movies that way — One Battle After Another, The Testament of Ann Lee and Sentimental Value all made her weep during the same recent film festival. In Hamnet’s case, she started sobbing halfway through the film and continued through the end credits.
“I cry extremely easily … I’m very easily manipulated,” Thomas jokes. “I have cried so hard at movies that I have lost three to five eyelashes … I've always been drawn to films that make me feel something.”
She may bawl more than most, but she’s far from the only person who has lost it during Hamnet. As it gains momentum as an awards season frontrunner — it was recently nominated for six Golden Globes — audiences are hearing that it’s a tour de force of abject sadness and gleefully submitting themselves to the gut-wrenching experience. They’re sniffling through half its 125-minute runtime and emerging tear-soaked and reborn to post about it online.
Wait, why is Hamnet so sad?
Hamnet tackles one of the saddest things a human being can experience: the loss of a young child. Watching the death of sweet, rambunctious Hamnet, played affectingly by Jacobi Jupe, through the eyes of his parents is nothing short of devastating.
“The bond that I felt to Hamnet truly is what shattered me — we only know him briefly, but we see that he is a child. Innocent, curious, ambitious and playful,” Marygrace Graves, a New Yorker, tells Yahoo. “I cried leaving the theater, in the cab home and for about 15 minutes when I got home.”
Fortunately, she knew Paul Mescal (who plays Shakespeare) to be the quintessential sad boy, infamous for only taking on heartbreaking roles, so she packed tissues.
Chloe Zhao, who directed and cowrote the film, knows she’s wreaking havoc on the hearts of the masses. At its Toronto International Film Festival premiere, she led theatergoers in a breathing exercise, encouraging them to tell themselves that “all of our emotions and feelings are welcome.”
Emilia Marcus, a college student in South Carolina, had a feeling that the movie was going to hit hard for her because she has siblings around Hamnet’s age. Still, she knew she wanted to see Mescal and get the “full story” of the legendary writer’s life through his wife’s perspective.
She, like many other viewers, knew tragedy was coming but hadn’t read the bestselling 2021 book of the same name by Maggie O’Farrell. That major, devastating plot point wasn’t all that had people choked up, though.
Daysha Niles, a pre-K teacher from Utah, was moved by so much of what happened with Agnes, who’s played by Jessie Buckley — her tender relationship with a pet bird, the way she cried out for her mother while giving birth and the lessons she taught her children through nature.
“Basically, I was emotional throughout the whole movie,” Niles says.
So why are people wilfully subjecting themselves to this heartbreak?
As Hamnet’s popularity grows, more people are starting to complain about its emotional heavy-handedness. Some people feel manipulated to the point that New York magazine has declared it the first villain of awards season. Some say that’s the point.
“You know what I don’t like? People are now doing backlash to Hamnet,” Thomas says. “Hamnet’s good. Get a life.”
Carlie Casey, a screenwriter and actor in Los Angeles, tells Yahoo the sadness was done with purpose and intention. It is so beautifully shot, indulging in nature and serene moments of romantic connection, that audiences are forced to “slow down and immerse [themselves] into this world with these characters,” she says.
“I loved the stillness,” she adds. “There was always an undercurrent of unease, even during some of the beautiful moments, because you could sense something was coming.”
Similarly, Trey Nesbit, a content creator in Los Angeles, says theaters are like church to him, and Hamnet was “one of those life-altering moviegoing experiences.” As the credits rolled, 12 other people — all over the age of 65, by his estimation — stayed completely still for several minutes. One person stood up to applaud, and the rest followed suit.
“The movie … was not afraid to reach into those primal emotions that people can have in the worst and the best times of their life,” he tells Yahoo. “These big swings of emotion are known to work well and can be seen as cheap, but I do feel like, since Chloe is such a master at her craft, and the acting [is so] sublime, that I didn’t mind the manipulation.”
After all, isn’t the point of art to make you feel … something? Madison Randolph, a content creator from Louisiana, felt emotion in every scene — even the joyful ones, which were tinged with sadness as she anticipated the inevitable loss of Hamnet.
“I love to question my existence through philosophy, art and film. I thought I might be moved by the film and cry at some scenes, but nothing like this,” she tells Yahoo. “Anything involving grief or loss appeals to me. I want to see it depicted in film more.”
Deborah Rayne, a filmmaker in New Jersey, purposefully didn’t wear mascara to the theater, anticipating tears as a Shakespeare aficionado. The end, where it’s revealed that Shakespeare’s son lives on through the play he named after him, had Rayne “weeping buckets,” and she was not trying to hold them back. That’s sort of the point of the movie, she tells Yahoo — ”there is catharsis in art.”
“Some people feel better writing a poem after a loss. Some people feel better listening to sad breakup songs in their room at night. It’s the same thing,” Rayne says. “The only way to get to the other side of something is to go through it. To go through some heartbreak — to go through something emotionally taxing and challenging — is healing.”
NEUESTE BEITRÄGE
- 1
Poll: By a 2-to-1 margin, Americans say Trump has done more to raise prices than lower them26.11.2025 - 2
The most effective method to Look at Medical caretaker Compensations Across Various Clinics17.10.2023 - 3
The Best Cell phone Brands for Tech Lovers07.07.2023 - 4
10 Demonstrated Tips to Expand Your New Android Cell phone: A Thorough Aide30.06.2023 - 5
Step by step instructions to Shield Your Wellbeing Around 5G Pinnacles\17.10.2023
Ähnliche Artikel
Science is best communicated through identity and culture – how researchers are ensuring STEM serves their communities15.01.2026
How mountain terraces have helped Indigenous peoples live with climate uncertainty15.01.2026
How Mars 'punches above its weight' to influence Earth's climate15.01.2026
Mummified cheetahs found in Saudi caves shed light on lost populations15.01.2026
Prehistoric wolf’s gut frozen in time reveals an ice age giant15.01.2026
Fossil analysis changes what paleontologists know about how long T. rex took to grow full size15.01.2026
Limited Rain Chances in Brazil Boost Coffee Prices15.01.2026
China’s new condom tax will prove no effective barrier to country’s declining fertility rate15.01.2026
The EU Is Considering Lifting Tariffs on Chinese Electric Vehicles15.01.2026
California warns of death cap mushrooms outbreak resulting in 3 deaths15.01.2026
Tanzania president remorseful over internet shutdown on election day15.01.2026
What is the Insurrection Act? Can Trump really use the military to 'put an end' to Minneapolis ICE protests?15.01.2026
First Greenland, now Iceland? Annexation joke by Trump ally gets frosty response in the Arctic nation.15.01.2026
ChatGPT served as "suicide coach" in man's death, lawsuit alleges15.01.2026
The Hybrid Volkswagen ID. ERA 9X Will Become the Brand’s New Flagship in China15.01.2026
Watch This Glacier Race into the Sea15.01.2026
The secret appeal of Harlan Coben’s messy, addictive TV thrillers15.01.2026
How is 'A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms' connected to 'Game of Thrones'?15.01.2026
3 back-to-back storms forecast to bring snow and surges of cold air across the Midwest to the Northeast15.01.2026
'Every day I planned an escape': Ariel Cunio shares details of Hamas captivity15.01.2026























