Top 10 Saddest Movie Deaths That You Never Actually See
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Welcome to WatchMojo, and today we’re counting down our picks for the most devastating character deaths that take place off-screen. Obviously, this list reveals some major plot points, so a spoiler alert is in effect.
#10: Newt & Hicks
“Alien 3” (1992)When fans found out Sigourney Weaver’s battle against the acid-blooded Xenomorphs was not over, they eagerly awaited the third installment of the “Alien” series. Last we left Lieutenant Ripley, she had safely escaped in a spacecraft with Corporal Hicks and her surrogate daughter, Newt. The noticeably darker in tone “Alien 3” opens with Ripley’s escape pod landing on a penal colony. Newt and Hicks are revealed to have perished in that crash. Fans who were eager to see the deepening of Ripley’s relationship with Newt were left devastated and confused by the choice to kill the character before the main titles were even over.
#9: Llewlyn Moss
“No Country for Old Men” (2007)The Coen brothers’ 2007 neo-western follows a veteran, played by Josh Brolin, who stumbles upon a mislaid pile of cash from an aborted drug deal. He finds himself the target of a vicious and cold-blooded hitman as a result. Moss dies in an off-screen shootout at a motel, where his body is found by Sheriff Ed Tom Bell. Like many Coen protagonists, Llewllyn’s not exactly a model citizen who makes incredible decisions, but he’s devoted to his wife, Carla Jean. It’s exactly that quality that makes his death all the more depressing. The fact that the Coens don’t let us see it leaves us to focus less on the gunplay and more on the tragedy of the story.
#8: Tom Robinson
“To Kill a Mockingbird” (1962)This Harper Lee adaptation stars Gregory Peck as Atticus Finch, the lawyer defending a Black man in the Jim Crow South. Accused of attacking a local white girl, Atticus’s client, Tom Robinson, is found guilty despite mounting evidence pointing to his innocence. Atticus later learns Tom was killed while supposedly trying to escape prison. But keeping Tom’s death off-screen leaves enough room for doubt. Did he really try to flee, or was he murdered in retaliation? We’ll never know. However, the trial has broken open the truth about how deep racism and hatred goes in this community, and we can never trust the official story again.
#7: Leslie Burke
“Bridge to Terabithia” (2007)Adapted from a beloved children’s book, this movie follows two middle schoolers who invent an imaginary kingdom in the woods. Jess and Leslie find a refuge from their loneliness for a while, but then the real world comes crashing in. One day, Jess comes home to find out his friend died playing in the woods without him. As it does in real life, her death comes out of nowhere. There’s no build-up, no real foreshadowing. She’s there one minute and gone the next. It’s a devastating way for a child to learn how harsh the world can be.
#6: Chris Chambers
“Stand by Me” (1986)Gordie Lachance narrates this tale of the summer he and his three friends went on an adventure to see a dead body. Based on a comparatively lighthearted story by Stephen King, “Stand by Me” ends with Gordie meditating on the whereabouts of his three friends. It’s equal parts sad, nostalgic, and hauntingly realistic. Gordie saves the final gut punch for last. His best friend, Chris, was stabbed to death in a restaurant the week prior to writing their story. If that weren’t enough, actor River Phoenix dissolves from the frame like a fading memory as Gordie tells us his fate.
#5: T’Challa
“Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” (2022)Early in this MCU sequel, T’Challa, also known as the Black Panther, dies from an unnamed illness. Despite the joyous and celebratory funeral procession, his sister, Shuri, breaks down in grief as Wakanda’s savior is laid to rest. Not only is it a solemn end for a heroic character, it also serves as an on-screen tribute to T’Challa’s actor. The legendary Chadwick Boseman passed away in 2020 after a long and private battle with cancer. The sequel was rewritten as a result, and the scene served as a way for fans to say goodbye to Boseman and the superhero he played.
#4: Thomas J. Sennett
“My Girl” (1991)This coming of age classic about Vada, a morbid and precocious mortician’s daughter who is fascinated by death, has one of the most tear-jerking funeral scenes of all-time. Her only friend is Thomas J., a nerdy outcast played by a post-“Home Alone” Macaulay Culkin. Late in the movie, Thomas J. is stung by bees and dies of an allergic reaction. The last we see of him is the bees swarming and his glasses falling to the ground. The scene where Vada finds out, and her subsequent breakdown beside his casket, make for an off-screen death that really stays with you.
#3: Tracy Mills
“Seven” (1995)The sociopathic serial killer at the center of this morose neo-noir has patterned his murders off of the seven deadly sins. After turning himself in, the suspect leads Detectives Mills and Somerset to a spot in the desert where a mysterious box is delivered. We never see its contents, but the killer implies it is the severed head of Mills’ wife. The revelation is too much for Mills. He completes John Doe’s master plan by embodying rage, and shooting the envious killer dead in retaliation. It’s one of those plot twists that’s made all the more horrifying by leaving it up to our imagination.
#2: Rosie Betzler
“Jojo Rabbit” (2019)Taiki Waititi’s heartbreaking dark comedy tells the story of Jojo Betzler, a young German boy living in Germany during the Third Reich. His mother, Rosie, is revealed to be working with anti-Nazi political groups to undermine Hitler’s poisonous influence. However, she pays the price for her betrayal of the state. Jojo finds her hanged in the street alongside several other traitors. As Jojo is our point of view character, we experience it from his perspective. The camera remains at Jojo’s height, never letting us see her entirely. We only know her from her distinctive shoes.
#1: Guido Orefice
“Life Is Beautiful” (1997)Writer, director, and star Roberto Benigni headlines this World War II film about a Jewish bookshop proprietor named Guido who ends up in a concentration camp with his young son. Guido finds new and inventive ways of fooling his son into believing the camp is an elaborate game. Even as Guido is led to his death by soldiers, he winks at his son, keeping up the ruse that their time in the camp is not at all what it seems. His son, of course, has no idea that this is the last time he’ll see his father, who sacrificed so much to shield him from the horrors of their imprisonment.
Which off-screen death haunted you the most? Tell us in the comments.
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