!!The series
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* Thanks to the RelationshipUpgrade of TheRemake, in which the Kimbles were HappilyMarried, the same emotional undercurrent of Richard's lingering grief for his wife permeates the show:
--> "She was my '''''life'''''."
* "[=DrRichardKimble=].com". While suffering from an illness, he has hallucinations of Helen. One particularly agonizing conversation has him tearfully telling her, "I miss you so much, and I can't even get to mourn you."
* In the episode "Jenny", he falls in love with a widowed innkeeper and loses her too when he's forced to leave her to keep her safe.
--> "Forget that you ever heard my name."
* In the episode "St. Christopher's Prayer", he sneaks home to visit his ill father. After barely escaping Gerard yet again, the final scene shows him reading a newspaper with the headline "Fugitive's Father Dies", collapsing in tears while clutching the St. Christopher medal his father gave him. [[note]] The patron saint of travelers. His father is essentially wishing him well in his quest for freedom and to find his wife's killer. [[/note]]

!!The movie
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* As Harrison Ford himself stated during an interview, the relentless emotional undercurrent of Kimble's grief for his wife:
** Kimble's [[https://youtu.be/Kv264z8Gblk thoroughly haunting nightmare]] about his late wife, which starts off all good and romantic, then abruptly segues into his desperate, futile attempts to revive her, then holding her in his arms as she already died.
** [[https://youtu.be/ZStVTLoOWnk Helen Kimble's 911 call]]--her voice weak and shaky, her pleas for her husband Richard to help her. A literal example of this trope, as he is seen crying as it's played in court -- where it's being used as evidence ''against'' him.
** Helen's death in general. Richard just came home from a charity party, there were rose petals all over the stairs leading up to their room so it was implied that his wife was waiting for him to come home so they could have sex. Only for him to find her dead and Sykes still in the house.
** Kimble breaking down during the interrogation as the full impact of what's happened (his wife has been murdered) and what's going to happen (he's being blamed for it) starts to hit him. The cops mocking, taunting tones really don't help.
** Kimble pleading to Gerard, "I DIDN'T KILL MY WIFE!". The man is just desperate for somebody, ''anybody'' to believe him, and Gerard responds with his infamous "I don't care!" (makes the MeaningfulEcho at the film's end that much more). For a split second, it looks as though Kimble is seriously contemplating killing Gerard, possible figuring he has nothing to live for anymore and that he might as well be executed for ''something''.
** In the midst of beating up his treacherous friend, Kimble pauses for a moment to sorrowfully ask, "Why Helen?", not understanding why his innocent wife had to die because of some conspiracy she knew nothing about.
** Kimble CryLaughing when Gerard tells him that Nichols lets Sykes into his house, realizing that his nightmarish ordeal would never have happened if he hadn't done something as simple as loan his friend his keys.
*** In the novel, when Kimble finds the injured Renfro and has to give himself a SurvivalMantra--"Don't think of Helen. Not now. There isn't time."--to make sure Nichols doesn't get the better of him or Gerard.
** Even with Richard's innocence proven and the guilty men caught, [[BittersweetEnding at the end of the day,]] Helen is still dead, and nobody is going to be able to change that for Richard.
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