Saddest Anime Movies

People often disregard anime movies as mere cartoons, but it’s in these movies that some of the greatest stories take place. When the studio isn’t worried about casting issues, creating realistic-looking CGI, directing actors, and all the other things that are involved with producing a live-action film, all the effort goes towards creating the best animation, stories, and characters.

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Some anime movies fall within the universe of their anime TV shows, essentially acting as an extension of their plots, or are a feature-length condensation of a multi-episode arc. But there are plenty of standalone movies that go straight for the audience’s heartstrings, touching them in ways few other shows and films could with their sad stories.

Updated on May 2, 2025, by Mark Sammut: Sometimes, nothing hits the spot like a good cry, and anime knows a thing or two about triggering waterworks. The best anime tearjerker movies tell relatable stories that are enhanced by the medium, and they will stay with viewers long after the credits roll.

13

Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms

Love, Time, & War

A fantasy war epic, Maquia has a lot going for it. The animation is fantastic, as is Mari Okada’s direction. The story delivers an impressive sense of scale and touches upon mature themes like discrimination and power. In this universe, Iorphs are beings who resemble humans but live for centuries, all the while looking like teenagers. They are attacked by a human kingdom, with Maquia just about escaping with her life. After leaving her home, she ends up finding and adopting a human baby, starting a mother-son relationship that feels doomed from the start.

The second half of the narrative revolves around an all-around war, but the movie’s heart is Maquia and Ariel’s relationship. Their family bond is complicated, touching, and frequently devastating. While not constantly sad, Maquia has plenty of powerful moments, along with a constant sense of foreboding.

12

Look Back

A Beautiful Friendship & Heartbreak

Based on a well-loved manga by Tatsuki Fujimoto, Look Back is a movie of two halves. The first revolves around the slow-budding friendship between Fujino and Kyomoto, two very different people who gradually bond over a passion for manga. While not starting on positive terms, their dynamics grow naturally, eventually reaching a point when they are nearly inseparable. The second half of the movie takes a drastic turn that packs a lot of emotion into roughly 20 minutes.

Look Back is a slice-of-life drama that might take inspiration from the Kyoto Animation arson attack, a real-life tragedy that happened in 2019. While not an easy watch at times, Look Back is among the best anime movies of the 2020s so far, along with comfortably being one of the saddest of all time.

11

Wolf Children

A Single Mother And Her Two Lovable Children


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Wolf Children


Release Date

July 12, 2012

Runtime

117 Minutes

Director

Mamoru Hosoda





Mamoru Hosoda’s crowning achievement, Wolf Children is one of the definitive anime stories dealing with parenthood. Hana falls in love with a Wolfman, and they have two kids. However, when her partner passes away, Hana is left to raise Yuki and Ame alone, a responsibility that threatens to overwhelm her.

The story follows the family over several years, showing not only Hana’s attempts to adapt to a seemingly impossible situation but also Yuki and Ame’s efforts to find their place in the world. Wolf Children does not tell a constantly devastating story, but rather captures both the simple beauty and sporadic struggles that define life.

10

The Tale of the Princess Kaguya

Bringing Out the Sadness in a Classic Folk Tale

The Tale of the Princess Kaguya is essentially a retelling of one of Japan’s oldest folk tales, ‘The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter’. It follows the tale faithfully, as the bamboo cutter cuts open one bamboo stalk to reveal an infant no bigger than his thumb. Choosing to raise the child as his daughter, whom he names Kaguya, he’s rewarded for his benevolence by discovering a gold nugget with each stalk he cuts, becoming rich in the process.

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The movie expands on the tale by showing the cutter get conceited as he gets richer, and overprotective of Kaguya as she grows up and gains more suitors. They go to their utmost lengths to win her favor, even dying in the process, which shocks her deeply. All she wanted was to live an ordinary mortal life, living simply in the village. But that path is lost to her, and as she regains memories of her past life, her mortal father soon begins to regret what he let wealth do to him.

9

Into the Forest of Fireflies’ Light

Love, But Don’t Touch


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Hotarubi no Mori e


Release Date

September 17, 2011

Runtime

45 minutes

Director

Takahiro Omori





Hotarubi no Mori e (‘Into the Fireflies’ Forest’) goes into the same folklorish territory as Princess Kaguya, only with a more unique story. It sees a young girl called Hotaru who gets lost in the forest on her way to her grandfather’s place. There she meets Gin, a human-like figure in a fox mask who’s actually a spirit. If he’s touched by a human, he’ll disappear forever, so he keeps his distance from Hotaru as he helps her find her way out.

Yet they continue to meet every summer and grow closer together as Hotaru grows up. Their feelings grow stronger, yet they cannot touch each other, or Gin will essentially die. They find ways around their different issues, but their love has an uncertain future, as couples can only go on so long without physical contact. It’s a brief but bittersweet love story that’s bound to make the heartache.

8

Your Name

A Romance That Transcends Time and Space


Your Name (2016)

Your Name


Release Date

August 26, 2016

Runtime

106 minutes

Director

Makoto Shinkai





Your Name is arguably the most popular modern anime film to this date. It showcases the beautiful story of two high school students, Mitsuha and Taki. Mitsuha Miyamizu, a high school girl, yearns to live the life of a boy in the bustling city of Tokyo. Meanwhile, in the city, Taki Tachibana lives a busy life as a high school student while juggling his part-time job and hopes for a future in architecture.

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One day, Mitsuha awakens to find herself living her dream life in Tokyo but in Taki’s body. Elsewhere, Taki finds himself living Mitsuha’s life in the humble countryside. In pursuit of an answer to this strange phenomenon, they begin to search for one another. Things only get more complicated from there, as the two make dramatic impacts on each other’s lives through their choices, and the phenomenon ends up going beyond body-swapping.

7

The Garden Of Words

A Tale of Love, Literature, and Shoemaking

Intriguingly enough, The Garden of Words takes place in the same universe as Your Name. Both of its leads make cameo appearances in the film, though teacher Yukari’s role stands out more as she brings up the metaphor that reveals its time-shifting shenanigans. But The Garden of Words keeps strange phenomena out of its plot in favor of poetical metaphors, as high school student Takao meets Yukari one rainy day in the gardens of Shinjuku Gyoen.

The two regularly come across each other in the park, forming a connection over Takao’s dreams of becoming a shoemaker, while Yukari bids farewell with a tanka poem. Their friendship grows into something more as Takao learns more about the poem she recited, and he makes a set of shoes in her size. But Yukari’s past and their 12-year age gap provide complications no amount of poetry could help overcome.

6

A Silent Voice

Making Up for the Past to Create a Better Future


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A Silent Voice


Release Date

September 17, 2016

Runtime

130 Minutes

Director

Taichi Ishidate, Naoko Yamada





A Silent Voice comes with a quiet but powerful message about redemption, peppered with beautiful visuals and a wonderful soundtrack, which would be reason enough for any anime lover to watch the film. Yet it starts off harshly, as elementary school student Shouya decides to overcome his boredom by picking on Shouko, the new deaf transfer student. He and the rest of the class bully her, but when the faculty gets involved, his classmates turn on him and single him out as her sole tormenter.

Eventually, it gets so bad that Shouko is transferred out, and Shouya spends the rest of his school days treated as a pariah. Now an adult, Shouya considers committing suicide but decides to make amends with Shouko beforehand. What starts out as a bitter tale of bullying becomes a heartwarming story about Shouya’s honest efforts to redeem himself and overcome the shadows of his past. It’s touching without being sickly sweet and makes Shouya’s path of redemption fit his misdeeds.

5

5 Centimeters Per Second

How Love Doesn’t Always Endure

Makoto Shinkai likes his tearjerking tales, and 5 Centimeters per Second is no exception, as it shows what happens when a couple cling onto their love for as long as possible, even when it has no future. Takaki and Akari are childhood friends who spent nearly all their time together as kids. But due to circumstances beyond their control, they end up drifting apart, despite their promises to keep in touch with each other.

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Takaki clings to the past, unable to move on past Akari as he tries in vain to somehow reconnect with her. But all it does is cost him opportunities and friendships in the present. The most bitter pill to swallow in life is that some relationships aren’t meant to last. They’re like the cherry blossoms Takaki and Akari hoped to see together again: beautiful when they bloom, but they only last for so long before they drop off.

4

Millennium Actress

The Lengths People Go to For Love


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Millennium Actress


Release Date

September 14, 2002

Runtime

87 Minutes

Director

Satoshi Kon





The impact of brief love affairs also plays a big part in Millennium Actress. First, it’s about a filmmaker called Genya and his cameraman Kyoji, who seek to interview the reclusive actress Chiyoko Fujiwara about her career for a documentary about the defunct Ginei film studios. But as they (literally) get absorbed by her story, they learn of her early life, where she befriended an artist-turned-political dissident during World War 2. When he leaves for Manchuria, she vows to meet with him again someday.

Years later, when she learns Ginei is scouting for actresses for a film set in Manchuria, she opts for the part, starting her career just so she can see what happened to her artist friend. The events of her life are told through a combination of flashbacks and her film roles, as Genya and Kyoji get swept up in the action. As exciting as it is, it comes to a bittersweet conclusion, as it shows how people can affect each other’s lives, even if they become nothing but a memory over time.

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