A list of the best 1 word title movies, ranked by film lovers and fans of economy of words. All the films listed here have a short title, made up of just one word. These one word titled movies cross genres and eras and star many of Hollywood’s most famous faces. From sci-fi classics like Alien and Gattaca, to comedies like Airplane! and Ghostbusters, movies with one word names come in all shapes and styles.
The next time you are browsing Netflix, consider some of these short titled movies, and if you come across one that is not included here, add it for others to vote on. I purposefully have not included Crash on this list at the time of publishing, but you may add it if you feel passionately about that particularly bad Best Picture winner.
I like to challenge myself in terms of creativity, to make sure my mind stays sharp. One of the ways I do this is by looking at films and figuring out how I can improve upon them. «How can I creatively fix this film,» I’ll ask myself.
I also like to challenge myself in terms of laziness, to make sure my mind never gets too uppity. To that end, I looked at a bunch of movies that are out right now and tried to figure out how to fix them by doing the least amount of work possible. «How can I improve this film by only changing one word in the title?»
5 The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo
A woman with a dragon tattoo (Rooney Mara), solves mysteries with a guy (Daniel Craig), in the snow, and there’s a lot of nudity, but not the kind that you feel good about seeing.
Becomes …
If you had asked me if I wanted to see a movie where a tattooed woman covered in piercings solves murder mysteries with the help of a Star Wars planet full of dragons, I would ask you how you’d gotten a hold of my boner’s dream journal.
4 We Bought a Zoo
A Google Image Search of this movie’s title brings up the following image from TheFilmStage:
Sure, both of those actors are in the movie, but holy crap that’s the most misleading image for a film about zoos I’ve ever seen. Based on that image, I’d say this movie was about Jason Bourne going after the whole government while Scarlett Johansson challenges the tissue and hand lotion industries to compete with the impossible demand that her scantily clad appearance will surely create. Instead, the movie is about Matt Damon buying a zoo and it looks like something wacky happens with a porcupine. You should see this if that sounds like the kind of movie you’re into, but why would it be?
Also, every poster for this movie leads with «From the director of Jerry Maguire.» That doesn’t mean you didn’t make Elizabethtown, Cameron Crowe. Nothing will ever mean that.
Becomes …
Boom! I don’t even care if this is the stupidest thing I’ve ever done, I would really like to see another Zoolander movie. I don’t know what Scarlett Johansson would do, but even if her involvement doesn’t extend beyond that image of her on the poster, I’d still call it a win.
3 War Horse
Here’s what I hate about every trailer for this movie: They always lead off with «The inspiring story of a horse you simply won’t believe» or «Follow the unbelievable journey.» Really, trailer? Because I’ve seen movies where horses talked. Like, right at the people riding them, and I totally bought it. Is your thing any more unbelievable than that? Mr. Ed raised the bar for incredible horse stuff about 50 years ago, so maybe pump the brakes before you start throwing «unbelievable» around.
Anyway.
Becomes …
I didn’t even change a word, I just organized them better. This one would be about horses fighting each other! Benedict Cumberbatch could still be in it, because he rules, but I don’t imagine there’s a lot of room for any other human characters. Certainly not in the script I put together (a series of drawings of horses riding in tanks).
2 A Dangerous Method
Maybe you think this movie looks good. It’s about Carl Jung and Sigmund Freud hanging out being geniuses, right around the time that Jung gets into some pretty dark and controversial territory by carrying on a sexual relationship with one of his patients. Maybe it’s that perfect combination of sex and psychiatry that most movies lack that’s got you excited for this movie. The trailer even looks pretty good, but I still can’t endorse it, because this movie was directed by David Cronenberg, who directed A History of Violence, a movie I foolishly saw in theaters with my mother. If any of my readers don’t know why that would be uncomfortable, you obviously haven’t seen the movie or fell asleep during one of the many uncomfortably brutal sex scenes. (Or you have a really, really close relationship with your mother.)
I will never forgive you, Cronenberg.
Becomes …
Literally anything. «Method» is the least-threatening word that could possibly follow «Dangerous.» I was so on board with this movie from the first two words, and then they blew it with «method.» I offer some alternatives.
Or even …
Wouldn’t that be a good movie? An experimental form of therapy that’s filled with scorpions! Spooooky. And I bet no one would have to watch Viggo Mortenson and Maria Bello sixty-nining each other with their mother in that movie.
1 The Darkest Hour
In The Darkest Hour, aliens who feed on electricity (or something) invade earth, and it’s up to five young friends to save the world. It looks like just about every other crappy alien invasion movie that’s come out in the last few years except it features Emile Hirsch, who usually makes good movies, and Olivia Thirlby, who I would like to go on several dates with.
These Final Hours (2015)
In this one, a comet does succeed in colliding with Earth, as it’s threatened to do so many times before (see also: Armageddon and Deep Impact). The film takes place 10 minutes after impact, when Australia has about 12 hours before the firestorm reaches the country. It follows James, who wants to spend his remaining time at the «party to end all parties,» but finds himself being pulled in other directions.
WATCH NOW
This Is the End (2013)
Is it possible to make a comedy about the apocalypse? Seth Rogen tries, in a movie where people like James Franco, Jonah Hill, and Jay Baruchel play exaggerated versions of themselves amidst the looming disaster.
WATCH NOW
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Seeking a Friend for the End of the World (2012)
An asteroid is headed towards Earth, and Dodge (Steve Carrell) and Penny (Keira Knightly) decide to try and reunite Dodge with a lost love before it hits. Along the way, they meet others who are dealing with impending doom in their own unique ways.
WATCH NOW
Melancholia (2011)
Kirsten Dunst plays a bride whose wedding reception is interrupted by the discovery of a planet named Melancholia — one that’s on a collision course with Earth. What follows is a movie that’s ostensibly about the end of the world, but is also a rumination on chronic depression.
WATCH NOW
Take Shelter (2011)
What if the end of the world is on its way, and you were the only one who knew? In Take Shelter Curtis LaForche (Michael Shannon) has a premonition of what’s to come, and runs into trouble when he becomes obsessed with building a storm shelter to prepare.
WATCH NOW
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Retreat (2011)
A married couple looking to reconnect decides to go away for a vacation on a remote island off the coast of Scotland. Their holiday is interrupted by a soldier who shows up at their doorstep and says that the outside world has been decimated by an outbreak of an airborne disease, and they must hide out together until it’s safe to go into the outside world again. But is he telling the truth?
WATCH NOW
Legion (2010)
This one is about the end of the world in more Biblical terms. In it, Paul Bettany plays the Archangel Michael, who seeks to stop evil forces from bringing about the apocalypse.
WATCH NOW
The Road (2009)
Based on the book by Cormac McCarthy, this film follows a man and his son who try to survive in a post-apocalyptic world. They avoid violent scavengers and other evils as they make their way down «the road,» trying to head toward the coast where it might be warmer.
WATCH NOW
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Daybreakers (2009)
In this movie, a plague transforms humans into blood-thirsty vampires — and it’s so widespread that there are few humans left to feed off of. A cure might be out there, if anyone can stay alive long enough to spread it.
WATCH NOW
Knowing (2009)
A professor (played by Nic Cage!) retrieves a code that was buried in an elementary school time capsule, and he believes he’s cracked it — and it’s a message about the end of the world. He has to figure out if he’s right, and if the impending disasters can be stopped.
WATCH NOW
Sunshine (2007)
This is another one where the sun is the main culprit, causing the end of the world. This time, the sun is dying, and a group of scientists go on a space mission to try and re-ignite it with a bomb. (What could go wrong?)
WATCH NOW
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Children of Men (2006)
In this movie, civilization is on its last gasp as a pandemic somehow caused a global infertility crisis. But when a woman is discovered to be pregnant, she must be safely transported to a team of scientists working on a cure without her secret getting out.
WATCH NOW
Right At Your Door (2006)
A man sits at home when he hears over the radio that it’s possible that dirty bombs have been detonated in Los Angeles. Everyone’s advised to seal up their doors and windows and quarantine themselves. The man listens — and then his wife returns from work. Should he risk contamination to let her in?
WATCH NOW
The Day After Tomorrow (2004)
In a movie that embodies the term «climate crisis,» extreme weather breaks out across the country — from tornadoes to deep freezes. In New York, a group of survivors huddles in the New York Public Library and start to work toward their rescue.
WATCH NOW
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Last Night (1998)
It’s never explained why the world is ending in this Canadian film, but what’s clear is that there’s only one day left. All of the characters have to figure out what they want to do on their last night (celebrate Christmas, perhaps), and who they want to share their last moments with.
WATCH NOW
12 Monkeys (1996)
A deadly virus wipes out the world, causing a few survivors to go underground. Bruce Willis is tasked with traveling back in time to find the source of the epidemic in the hopes that it could be reversed. If you like this film, you could also try La Jetée, the French film it was based on.
WATCH NOW
The Rapture (1991)
David Duchovny and Mimi Rogers star in a movie about a woman who abandons her swinger lifestyle and turns towards religion when she starts to see signs that the Rapture is on its way. Could she be right?
WATCH NOW
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Miracle Mile (1988)
Anthony Edwards and Mare Winningham star as Harry and Julie, a who suffer a missed connection at the worst possible time — right before the breakout of a nuclear war between the United States and the Soviet Union. The film follows Harry as he tries to find Julie before the world ends.
WATCH NOW
The Quiet Earth (1985)
For fans of The Leftovers, this is a movie about a scientist (Bruno Lawrence) who wakes up and realizes the people of Earth are all gone — and thinks the energy project he was working on may have been to blame. He then goes in search of other survivors.
WATCH NOW
Senior Parenting & Relationships Editor
Marisa (she/her) has covered all things parenting, from the postpartum period through the empty nest, for Good Housekeeping since 2018; she previously wrote about parents and families at Parents and Working Mother. She lives with her husband and daughter in Brooklyn, where she can be found dominating the audio round at her local bar trivia night or tweeting about movies.
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15 Movies That Spoiled Their Own Endings In The Opening Seconds Of Screen Time
These movies made their endings totally obvious, as long as you were paying attention to their opening scenes.
WARNING: THERE ARE SPOILERS BELOW (AND IN THESE MOVIES THEMSELVES). PLEASE PROCEED WITH CAUTION.
Most moviegoers hate it when a film gets spoiled — but sometimes, it’s the movie itself that does the spoiling!
Sometimes a movie explicitly spells out its ending right at the beginning, and sometimes it just hints at its ending with clues that eagle-eyed viewers can find. Either way, the fun is in seeing how the movie eventually gets to that ending.
So with that in mind, here are 15 movies that spell out how they’ll end right at the beginning — but that makes them all the more interesting to watch:
How it starts:
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How it starts:
How it ends:
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How it starts:
How it ends:
How it starts:
How it ends:
How it starts:
How it ends:
How it starts:
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How it starts:
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How it starts:
How it ends:
How it starts:
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And finally:
How it starts:
How it ends:
Which ones did we miss? What are some other movies that spoil their own endings for you right at the very beginning? Share in the comments below!
With the ongoing pandemic crippling the world’s social, political, and financial systems rapidly, almost all of us were forced into believing that the world is actually coming to an end.
Therefore, it is not surprising that several films have been released over the years that have pledged to bring many such grave issues to light.
These end-of-the-world feature films are so impactful that they can make the viewers sit back and create their own to-do list along with the characters that they see in these films.
Not only do these movies make one wonder as to what is it that they would do during an inevitable extinction event, but they also make one realize the importance of time, family, and, ultimately, life.
Therefore, motion pictures that try to project the end of the world on the big screen have become a brand in their own right.
They amass a massive fan following the world over, courtesy of the fact that they integrate the adrenaline rush of disaster movies with the creeping panic of horror movies; both of which help them in keeping their suspense factor duly intact.
Having said that, there are no doubts about the fact that these world-ending movies are quite possibly the biggest reflection of civilization’s biggest apprehensions.
No wonder then that, in order to come out of our own personal disasters, we often resort to watching these end-of-the-world movies; movies that sometimes make us relate to our circumstances in numerous ways.
These movies span decades and have become such an integral part of the cinematic universe that one can’t help but wait for more such feature films to release.
Therefore, this list is an earnest endeavor to bring to light fifty of the finest feature films that revolve around end-of-the-world scenarios: primarily apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic worlds, alien and zombie invasions, and disaster events.
50. Legion (2010)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Legion |
Release Year | 2010 |
Watch time | 100 min |
Directors | Scott Stewart |
Cast | Paul Bettany, Dennis Quaid, Charles S. Dutton, Lucas Black |
Domestic Box office | $40.17M |
IMDb Rating | 5.3 |
Metascore | 32 |
Writers | Peter Schink |
Music By | John Frizzell |
Cinematography By | John Lindley |
Costume By | Gabrielle Petrissans |
Written and directed by Scott Stewart, ‘Legion’ starred Paul Bettany as a fallen archangel who is trying to protect the savior of mankind from a host of supernatural enemies sent to slay him.
Even though the basic plot of the movie sounds heavy on the surface, it is not too deep or dramatic.
Also, there is enough room for action and shoot-outs that more than make up for its predictability factor.
The cast and the acting performances here are good, and they help in bringing some sense of enjoyment to the screenplay.
In addition, the set pieces and props were very detailed and worked like charm as the film progressed.
Not to forget that the film maintains its momentum and never becomes stagnant or boring, thus, ensuring that the viewers do not lose interest in it at any point.
This is a guilty pleasure end-of-the-world feature film that one can sit back and enjoy.
49. Retreat (2011)
Written and directed by Carl Tibbetts, ‘Retreat’ tracks the journey of a married couple, who, in order to reconnect, decide to go away for a holiday on a remote island off the coast of Scotland.
However, their holiday is soon intruded by a soldier who shows up at their doorstep and announces that the civilization has been demolished by an outbreak of airborne disease and that they must hide out jointly until it is safe to go into the outside world again.
The trio does its best to make this motion picture an intense psychological thriller. The movie contains one tone and one gear, which makes it come across as both steady and unrelenting at the same time.
Moreover, the twist towards the finale works and does encourage the viewers to think for themselves.
48. 2012 (2009)
Director Roland Emmerich’s ‘2012’ traces the journey of Jackson Curtis, a disgruntled writer, who fights all the odds to keep his family secure when a sequence of apocalyptic catastrophes threatens to annihilate humankind forever.
This motion picture is based on the “2012 phenomenon”, which talked about a range of eschatological assumptions that transformative events would occur in or around 21 December 2012.
An ultimate disaster film, 2012 showcases the earthquakes in New Zealand and Japan so realistically that one cannot help but pause and contemplate.
That said, it delivers the right special effects and the right amount of noise that help it make the right impact on the minds of its viewers.
The only qualm one could have about the screenplay here is that it comes across as a bit too long for its concept.
47. Cockneys vs Zombies (2012)
Based on the original idea and directed by Matthias Hoene, ‘Cockneys vs Zombies’ talks about a gang of bank robbers who battle their way out of a zombie-infested London; an invasion that ultimately can threaten to destroy the civilization itself.
This one is an entertaining feature film that thrives on its solid production values and fast-paced screenplay.
The humor in this venture is good and it goes down well with the tension injected into the storytelling.
While the film carries an enthusiastic cast, the rocking soundtrack and chase sequences do not make one feel that the plot of this film orbits around an extinction event of sorts.
This lively zombie invasion title tries its best to overcome a very familiar plot that truly works in its favor as well.
46. Immortals (2011)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Immortals |
Release Year | 2011 |
Watch time | 110 min |
Directors | Tarsem Singh |
Cast | Henry Cavill, Mickey Rourke, John Hurt, Stephen Dorff |
Domestic Box office | $83.50M |
IMDb Rating | 6 |
Metascore | 46 |
Writers | Charley Parlapanides |
Music By | Trevor Morris |
Cinematography By | Brendan Galvin |
Costume By | Jille Azis |
Director Tarsem Singh’s ‘Immortals’ features an ensemble cast headlined by actors like Henry Cavill, Stephen Dorff, Luke Evans, Isabel Lucas, Kellan Lutz, Freida Pinto, and Mickey Rourke among others.
The film tells the story of how Theseus, a mortal man, is selected by the gods to fight King Hyperion, a vicious dictator who is ripping Greece apart in his search for an otherworldly weapon called the Epirus Bow that has the potential to destroy mankind.
The basic premise of the movie is clear and straightforward, but it has been told in a disjointed manner.
Having said that, this motion picture is awe-inspiring to see, courtesy of its groundbreaking arrangement of colors, breathtaking imagery, and splendid battles; each of which does its very best to bring this Greek mythology to life on the screen.
45. Reign of Fire (2002)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Reign of Fire |
Release Year | 2002 |
Watch time | 101 min |
Directors | Rob Bowman |
Cast | Matthew McConaughey, Christian Bale, Izabella Scorupco, Gerard Butler |
Domestic Box office | $43.06M |
IMDb Rating | 6.2 |
Metascore | 39 |
Writers | Gregg Chabot |
Music By | Edward Shearmur |
Cinematography By | Adrian Biddle |
Costume By | Simon Wakefield |
This Rob Bowman directorial venture showcases how a group of fire-breathing dragons wreak havoc on planet Earth, and how a group of survivors unite with the army to eliminate the beasts and protect the planet from its impending destruction.
That said, what one has to understand is the fact that this is a film about humans and not dragons.
The dragons hardly provide the reason for the devastation of the planet in the storytelling.
And even though stars like Christian Bale and Matthew McConaughey feature in this film, it is the special effects that topple the human players in the screenplay.
This fairly entertaining post-apocalypse movie is a must-see for fans of the science fiction genre.
Also, what could be more fascinating than humans fighting dragons in the modern world!
44. Knowing (2009)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Knowing |
Release Year | 2009 |
Watch time | 121 min |
Directors | Alex Proyas |
Cast | Nicolas Cage, Chandler Canterbury, Rose Byrne, Lara Robinson |
Domestic Box office | $79.96M |
IMDb Rating | 6.2 |
Metascore | 41 |
Writers | Ryne Douglas Pearson |
Music By | Marco Beltrami |
Cinematography By | Simon Duggan |
Costume By | Steven Jones-Evans |
Directed by Alex Proyas, ‘Knowing’ talks about a professor (played by Nicolas Cage) who procures a code that was buried in an elementary school time capsule and assumes that he has cracked it.
However, the message that the code contains stirs him to the very core. It is a message that talks about the potential end of the world.
Racing against time, Nicolas Cage’s John Koestler has to figure out if he is right, and if the approaching disasters can be avoided.
Even though many can complain about blatant clues placed in the first couple of scenes that can make the motion picture come across as predictable, it is still a decent enough nail-biter that comes with a fair amount of spook value infused in its screenplay.
Furthermore, Nicolas Cage does a fine job of portraying the role of concerned scientist and concerned single parent which adds to the overall goodness of this film.
43. The Rapture (1991)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | The Rapture |
Release Year | 1991 |
Watch time | 100 min |
Directors | Michael Tolkin |
Cast | Mimi Rogers, David Duchovny, Darwyn Carson, Patrick Bauchau |
Domestic Box office | $1.28M |
IMDb Rating | 6.3 |
Metascore | — |
Writers | Michael Tolkin |
Music By | Thomas Newman |
Cinematography By | Bojan Bazelli |
Costume By | Robin Standefer |
David Duchovny and Mimi Rogers star in a movie about a woman who abandons her swinger lifestyle and turns towards religion when she starts to catch a glimpse of indications that make her believe that the Rapture is on its way.
‘The Rapture’ strives to tell this story with striking insights into the modern Christian perspective and what frightens the public about its projections.
This one is not a feeble movie, and it does little to shy away from a controversial discourse, but it is, more or less a rewarding picture that gets its viewers something to think about their lives and what they believe in.
Written and directed by Michael Tolkin, the film attempts to convey that the worst thing in life is knowing that people have become so timid that they are apprehensive of being honest about anything or asking any questions that they might not like to learn the answer to.
42. Daybreakers (2009)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Daybreakers |
Release Year | 2009 |
Watch time | 98 min |
Directors | Michael Spierig, Peter Spierig |
Cast | Ethan Hawke, Willem Dafoe, Sam Neill, Harriet Minto-Day |
Domestic Box office | $30.10M |
IMDb Rating | 6.4 |
Metascore | 57 |
Writers | Michael Spierig |
Music By | Christopher Gordon |
Cinematography By | Ben Nott |
Costume By | George Liddle |
Written and directed by Michael Spierig and Peter Spierig, this motion picture throws light on how a plague transforms human beings into blood-thirsty vampires; to such an extent that there only remain a few humans left to feed off of.
That said, it is possible that a cure might be out there if anyone can stay alive long enough to circulate it. ‘Daybreakers’ is yet another entry into the endless parade of vampire films.
However, by creating an immersive and encompassing the world, it adds the angle of a possible threat to humanity which, in turn, makes this feature film make it to this list successfully.
Needless to say, an entertaining and thought-provoking film such as this always comes across as a welcome change amidst a sea of remakes, reboots, and rehashes that have become a Hollywood staple.
41. The Day After Tomorrow (2004)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | The Day After Tomorrow |
Release Year | 2004 |
Watch time | 124 min |
Directors | Roland Emmerich |
Cast | Dennis Quaid, Jake Gyllenhaal, Emmy Rossum, Dash Mihok |
Domestic Box office | $186.74M |
IMDb Rating | 6.4 |
Metascore | 47 |
Writers | Roland Emmerich |
Music By | Harald Kloser |
Cinematography By | Ueli Steiger |
Costume By | Barry Chusid |
Written and directed by Roland Emmerich, this is one motion picture that encompasses the term climate crisis and attempts to showcase extreme weather conditions that break out across the country, and possibly even beyond.
The plot traces how a group of survivors gather in the New York Public Library and begin to work toward their rescue.
This one is a disaster movie that starts rather brilliantly, with an incredible idea for a story, and truly impressive special effects.
As a matter of fact, the whole movie is well worth watching for the special effects alone.
The performances in ‘The Day After Tomorrow’ are decent and the scientific approach that it promotes is open to speculation; something that adds to its overall charm and beauty.
40. A Boy and His Dog (1975)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | A Boy and His Dog |
Release Year | 1975 |
Watch time | 91 min |
Directors | L.Q. Jones |
Cast | Don Johnson, Jason Robards, Susanne Benton, Tim McIntire |
Domestic Box office | $6.90M |
IMDb Rating | 6.5 |
Metascore | 68 |
Writers | L.Q. Jones |
Music By | Tim McIntire |
Cinematography By | John Arthur Morrill |
Costume By | Wes Dawn |
Written and directed by L. Q. Jones, ‘A Boy and His Dog’ traces the journey of a young man and his telepathic dog who wander in a post-apocalyptic wasteland.
The storyline and the execution of this movie could be a difficult pill to swallow for the viewers, mainly because of its disturbing premise.
The underground sequences in this motion picture are good and they display greater imagination than the scenes filmed on the surface.
That said, even though this motion picture lacks the pace for a major part of its run time, it really doesn’t compromise on its intrigue factor.
A Boy and His Dog is as shocking an effort that has ever come into this genre.
It is post-apocalyptic, it is satirical, and it is psychological all at once.
39. The Crazies (2010)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | The Crazies |
Release Year | 2010 |
Watch time | 101 min |
Directors | Breck Eisner |
Cast | Radha Mitchell, Timothy Olyphant, Danielle Panabaker, Joe Anderson |
Domestic Box office | $39.12M |
IMDb Rating | 6.5 |
Metascore | 56 |
Writers | Scott Kosar |
Music By | Mark Isham |
Cinematography By | Maxime Alexandre |
Costume By | Andrew Menzies |
Director Breck Eisner’s ‘The Crazies’ tracks the journey of Sheriff David Dutton and his wife, who, together with two other people, are the only ones left unaffected by a surprising spate of incidence whereby people have turned into violent killers, and are, therefore, threatening to destroy the very existence of mankind.
A remake of the 1973 film of the same name, the plot of this feature film is very well set up and builds momentum at a fine pace.
Overall, The Crazies is a well-acted, engaging, and thrilling roller coaster ride of a movie.
The screenplay in this one moves along at a fair speed and the run time is not so long to make the viewers feel that it has overstayed its welcome.
Also, the motion picture delivers a good number of jump scares to make an impact and to cement its well-deserved place on this list.
38. War of the Worlds (2005)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | War of the Worlds |
Release Year | 2005 |
Watch time | 116 min |
Directors | Steven Spielberg |
Cast | Tom Cruise, Dakota Fanning, Tim Robbins, Miranda Otto |
Domestic Box office | $234.28M |
IMDb Rating | 6.5 |
Metascore | 73 |
Writers | Josh Friedman |
Music By | John Williams |
Cinematography By | Janusz Kaminski |
Costume By | Rick Carter |
Director Steven Spielberg’s ‘War of the Worlds’ stars Tom Cruise and Dakota Fanning in the lead and talks about an alien invasion that threatens to jeopardize the future of humanity.
An alien species with higher intelligence have occupied the earth and plan to terraform it for their own survival. To do so, they need human blood and tissue to grow their vegetation.
This unfortunate nightmare is portrayed through the eyes of one American family fighting for survival.
Steven Spielberg directs his actors spectacularly in this motion picture and ascertains that everyone gives a remarkable performance.
What’s vital to note here is the fact that he does not use the special effects to impress the viewers, but only as a tool to tell his story.
Also, the inimitable Tom Cruise anchors the feature film with his portrayal of a blue-collar America who wants nothing more than his family to survive.
Not to forget that this is a technically sound film that thrives on its exemplary visuals as well.
37. This Is the End (2013)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | This Is the End |
Release Year | 2013 |
Watch time | 107 min |
Directors | Evan Goldberg, Seth Rogen |
Cast | James Franco, Jonah Hill, Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel |
Domestic Box office | $101.47M |
IMDb Rating | 6.6 |
Metascore | 67 |
Writers | Seth Rogen |
Music By | Henry Jackman |
Cinematography By | Brandon Trost |
Costume By | Chris L. Spellman |
Directors Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg bring an end-of-the-world story to life with this feature film delightfully.
The screenplay traces how during James Franco’s house party, which is being attended by celebrities, all hell breaks loose when a series of ravaging events begin to take place out of nowhere.
The film has something to say about certain issues, each of which is snappily placed in the screenplay so that they don’t come across as being preachy.
That said, ‘This Is The End’ is an adventurous little cinematic gem that manages to be exceptionally funny, all while keeping its viewers guessing and on their very toes.
However, what truly works is the fact that the incredible star cast just keeps the comedy going, even in the middle of unexpected events.
36. These Final Hours (2013)
Written and directed by Zak Hilditch, ‘These Final Hours’ makes its intentions of wanting to grab the attention of its viewers clear right from its opening sequence which, albeit uncanny for a film on this list, does what it meant to do.
The film tracks how Earth is approaching a disaster that will be its absolute end.
There are some special characteristics in this end-of-the-world enactment that manage to create an impact, courtesy of its well-timed direction.
That being said, this one is not your average apocalypse drama, but one that stresses mainly the importance of relationships and things that matter the most; especially when one comes to realize that the world is nearing its untimely end.
The brilliant and compelling entertainment that this feature film provides is aided by decent performances by its cast members.
35. Seeking a Friend for the End of the World (2012)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Seeking a Friend for the End of the World |
Release Year | 2012 |
Watch time | 101 min |
Directors | Lorene Scafaria |
Cast | Steve Carell, Keira Knightley, Melanie Lynskey, Patton Oswalt |
Domestic Box office | $6.62M |
IMDb Rating | 6.7 |
Metascore | 59 |
Writers | Lorene Scafaria |
Music By | Jonathan Sadoff Rob Simonsen |
Cinematography By | Tim Orr |
Costume By | Chris L. Spellman |
Written and directed by Lorene Scafaria, ‘Seeking a Friend for the End of the World’ stars Steve Carrell and Keira Knightley in the lead.
The film talks about an asteroid that is headed towards Earth, and how Dodge (Steve Carrell) and Penny (Keira Knightly) decide to try and reunite Dodge with a lost love before it hits and destroys the planet for good.
In addition, the story also traces how during their journey, the duo also meets others who are dealing with the impending doom in their own unique ways.
This motion picture does not necessarily portray a grim, realistic look at life; primarily because a good deal of humor is injected into the screenplay.
To add to the proceedings, Steve Carrell plays the role of a down and out loser to near perfection in this movie.
34. The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (2005)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy |
Release Year | 2005 |
Watch time | 109 min |
Directors | Garth Jennings |
Cast | Martin Freeman, Yasiin Bey, Sam Rockwell, Zooey Deschanel |
Domestic Box office | $51.09M |
IMDb Rating | 6.7 |
Metascore | 63 |
Writers | Douglas Adams |
Music By | Joby Talbot |
Cinematography By | Igor Jadue-Lillo |
Costume By | Joel Collins |
This Garth Jennings directorial venture talks about how one morning, Arthur’s friend, who is actually an alien, notifies him of Earth’s impending destruction and whisks him away in a spaceship.
Even though Arthur deals with his distress, he also has a great adventure and that is what forms the base of the film’s storyline. ‘The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy’ thrives on its sardonic sense of humor, and an underlying sense of the absurd and unpredictable; elements that it carries from its source material.
Visually, the feature film looks good as the creatures and special effects all work and grasp the tone of the vision pretty well.
That said, the screenplay throws in a bit of a surprise by injecting quirky and off-beat humor to please its viewers.
Also, the performances in this flick are neat and leave little to no margin for error.
33. The Quiet Earth (1985)
This Geoff Murphy directorial venture talks about Zac, a scientist, who wakes up from a failed suicide attempt to find himself alone on planet Earth.
Eventually, he finds two more survivors and once they begin to trust each other, they set out to find why they are the only ones left on the planet and what their purpose is.
The life and death idea in this feature film is incredible and well thought of.
For a New Zealand indie film that was produced in the mid-80s, this one is truly well-made.
The low budget in this motion picture has been used to maximum effect and it truly shows on the screen.
Even though some of the viewers might be left dissatisfied or a bit bewildered by the surreal finale, they can’t help but admire the ambiguity that tags along.
32. Contagion (2011)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Contagion |
Release Year | 2011 |
Watch time | 106 min |
Directors | Steven Soderbergh |
Cast | Matt Damon, Kate Winslet, Jude Law, Gwyneth Paltrow |
Domestic Box office | $75.66M |
IMDb Rating | 6.7 |
Metascore | 70 |
Writers | Scott Z. Burns |
Music By | Cliff Martinez |
Cinematography By | Steven Soderbergh |
Costume By | Howard Cummings |
This Steven Soderbergh directorial venture became one of the most-watched films online during the Coronavirus pandemic.
The story tracks how healthcare specialists, government officials, and the common man find themselves amid a pandemic as the Centers for Disease Control fights to thwart its unprecedented spread.
The feature film, which focuses on the symbol of human strength, desire, and endurance, thrives on its outstanding cast that includes actors like Gwyneth Paltrow, Jennifer Ehle, Bryan Cranston, and Kate Winslet in prominent roles.
In addition, Jude Law is seen in an unlikely role and his performance is better than expected.
Needless to mention, there have been a plethora of doomsday movies in the market, but this one here really «predicted» a virus that jolted humanity and brought it to its knees just years later.
31. 28 Weeks Later (2007)
Director Juan Carlos Fresnadillo’s ’28 Weeks Later’ tracks how six months after the Rage virus has turned half of Britain into zombies, the United States Army is helping secure London for the survivors after a carrier of the virus enters the city and the horror that threatens to destroy the civilization for good begins.
This motion picture is a fine piece of well-paced, atmospheric cinema, with more than enough junctures present to please not only the fans of the original but also of those who wish to watch movies that aim to depict a threat to humanity.
Needless to say, this one is a surprisingly good British horror film that not only adds to its predecessor but also leaves the door open for another sequel, courtesy of its well-timed ending.
This feature film is a series of scary set-pieces, each of which is more outlandish and dramatic than the other.
30. The Cabin in the Woods (2011)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | The Cabin in the Woods |
Release Year | 2011 |
Watch time | 95 min |
Directors | Drew Goddard |
Cast | Kristen Connolly, Chris Hemsworth, Anna Hutchison, Fran Kranz |
Domestic Box office | $42.07M |
IMDb Rating | 7 |
Metascore | 72 |
Writers | Joss Whedon |
Music By | David Julyan |
Cinematography By | Peter Deming |
Costume By | Martin Whist |
Helmed by Drew Goddard, ‘The Cabin in the Woods’ tracks the journey of five friends who unknowingly summon a family of murderous zombies in the woods.
Unwillingly, they become involved in a ritual of human sacrifice that is carried to please the cruel belowground deities; something that threatens to not only wipe out their existence but also that of the planet.
The cabin which is the battelground for these victims, is controlled and staged by an underground facility who unleash different kind of monsters to kill them.
The Cabin in the Woods is an unusual motion picture that cannot specifically claim to belong to one genre.
In fact, what it does is that it combines the clichés of several horror movies and strives to produce something entertaining and original.
That said, the final revelation in this movie is both bizarre and awesome at the same time.
However, what seems obvious is the fact that the end to this story does imply the destruction of the planet.
29. The Last Wave (1977)
Written and directed by Peter Weir, this motion picture stars Richard Chamberlain in the lead who plays the role of an Australian lawyer who takes a case of defending a local clan of Aborigines who have killed one of their own.
As Chamberlain’s David Burton becomes more engaged with the tribe, he discovers more about their prophecies and becomes haunted by apocalyptic visions of water; a vision that makes him believe that «the last wave» can truly be the end of things for civilization.
Richard Chamberlain plays David Burton, who is drawn deeper into an extraordinary web of illusions where the line between that which is real and that which does not evaporate, with conviction.
Besides being a great film with a legal curve and a murder mystery angle to it, it is also a rather underappreciated one in this list.
In addition, ‘The Last Wave’ also tries to concentrate on different cultures.
28. Miracle Mile (1988)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Miracle Mile |
Release Year | 1988 |
Watch time | 87 min |
Directors | Steve De Jarnatt |
Cast | Anthony Edwards, Mare Winningham, John Agar, Lou Hancock |
Domestic Box office | $1.15M |
IMDb Rating | 7 |
Metascore | — |
Writers | Steve De Jarnatt |
Music By | Paul Haslinger Tangerine Dream |
Cinematography By | Theo van de Sande |
Costume By | Christopher Horner |
Written and directed by Steve De Jarnatt, ‘Miracle Mile’ features Anthony Edwards and Mare Winningham as Harry and Julie, who endure a missed connection at the worst time possible — right before the breakout of a nuclear war between the United States of America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
The screenplay of this motion picture follows how Harry struggles to find Julie before the world meets its devastating end.
An underrated motion picture of its genre, it shows an apocalyptic vision of an entire city with visuals so potent that it can stir the viewers from within and make them fear for the world and their very lives.
The premise in this has a wonderfully urgent tone to it and the nail-biting moments are like a cherry on the top.
27. The Day After (1983)
This Nicholas Meyer-helmed feature film tracks the impact that a devastating nuclear holocaust has on small-town residents of eastern Kansas and then, ultimately, the repercussions that it can have on mankind.
One of the scariest non-horror movies one can ever come across, ‘The Day After’ tries to depict the reality of what could happen if there ever were a nuclear attack.
The screenplay can frighten the viewers while reflecting on the potential real-life horror that could occur if an event as disastrous as a nuclear war could take place.
The grim aftermath of the attack in the story shows how the characters are poisoned by radiation.
Having said that, even though the film can feel a bit dated for today’s time and technology, its overall theme and message remain unchanged and even more relevant.
26. Jumanji (1995)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Jumanji |
Release Year | 1995 |
Watch time | 104 min |
Directors | Joe Johnston |
Cast | Robin Williams, Kirsten Dunst, Bonnie Hunt, Jonathan Hyde |
Domestic Box office | $100.48M |
IMDb Rating | 7 |
Metascore | 39 |
Writers | Jonathan Hensleigh |
Music By | James Horner |
Cinematography By | Thomas E. Ackerman |
Costume By | Jim Bissell |
The potential end of the world has never seemed as much fun as in this Joe Johnston directorial venture.
The film tracks the journey of two kids who find and start to play a mysterious board game.
Soon after, they release a man who has been trapped in it for decades. But the catch here is that they also unleash a host of other threats that can only be stopped by completing the game.
Jumanji is a great family feature film that is packed with some of the finest graphic materials of its time.
Even though the plot is a lot of fun and appeals to both kids and adults alike, it can still turn out to be a bit too terrifying for young children.
This is because the screenplay shows hundreds of animals and other forces being unleashed as the game is played; each of which threatens to destroy the civilization altogether.
Add to that the fact that Robin Williams plays the role of Alan Parrish perfectly and is, therefore, a reason big enough for one to sit through this cult classic.
25. World War Z (2013)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | World War Z |
Release Year | 2013 |
Watch time | 116 min |
Directors | Marc Forster |
Cast | Brad Pitt, Mireille Enos, Daniella Kertesz, James Badge Dale |
Domestic Box office | $202.36M |
IMDb Rating | 7 |
Metascore | 63 |
Writers | Matthew Michael Carnahan |
Music By | Marco Beltrami |
Cinematography By | Ben Seresin |
Costume By | Nigel Phelps |
Directed by Marc Forster, ‘World War Z’ traces the thrilling journey of a former United Nations employee, Gerry Lane (played by Brad Pitt), who travels the world in a race against time to stop a zombie pandemic that is overthrowing armies and governments and is threatening to destroy humanity forever.
Gerry is one of the finest investigator of the United Nations, and in return for the safety of his family member, he has to accompany Dr. Fassbach. Fassbach has a theory that origin of disease is a virus and finding it’s origin will enable making of an antidote.
This is a quick-paced, edge-of-your-seat thrill ride that is spearheaded by one of the finest yet underrated actors of this generation, Brad Pitt.
The film exhibits how civilization is on the brink of extinction and how only a handful of experts can attempt to save the planet from further doom.
Having said that, what World War Z does in the most effective way possible is that it promises to give us hope in the face of the potential end to the world.
24. The Mist (2007)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | The Mist |
Release Year | 2007 |
Watch time | 126 min |
Directors | Frank Darabont |
Cast | Thomas Jane, Marcia Gay Harden, Laurie Holden, Andre Braugher |
Domestic Box office | $25.59M |
IMDb Rating | 7.1 |
Metascore | 58 |
Writers | Frank Darabont |
Music By | Mark Isham |
Cinematography By | Rohn Schmidt |
Costume By | Gregory S. Melton |
Helmed by Frank Darabont, the screenplay of ‘The Mist’ talks about how a monstrous storm unleashes a species of ferocious and bloodthirsty beasts on a small town, where several residents hole up in a supermarket and fight for their lives and, potentially, for the civilization.
This feature film evaluates fear and its repercussions quite effectively and showcases that even though there is horror outside in the fog, there also are horrors inside the market as paranoia, impracticality, and religion all come into conflict with the pragmatic issues of survival.
The performances in this movie are good, but it is the cinematography, editing, and direction that come together wonderfully to make it a must-watch film on this list.
23. The Road (2009)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | The Road |
Release Year | 2009 |
Watch time | 111 min |
Directors | John Hillcoat |
Cast | Viggo Mortensen, Charlize Theron, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Robert Duvall |
Domestic Box office | $0.06M |
IMDb Rating | 7.2 |
Metascore | 64 |
Writers | Joe Penhall |
Music By | Nick Cave Warren Ellis |
Cinematography By | Javier Aguirresarobe |
Costume By | Chris Kennedy |
Based on the book by Cormac McCarthy, this John Hillcoat directorial venture follows a man and his son who are striving to prevail in a post-apocalyptic world.
They do their best to evade brutal scavengers and other evil forces as they make their way down «the road,» trying to move towards the coast where the situation might be warmer and safer.
Starring Viggo Mortensen and Charlize Theron in significant roles, ‘The Road’ revolves more around the destruction of both civility and civilization.
Furthermore, the action sequences in this end-of-the-world motion picture are very well handled and are packed with enough anxiety to keep the viewers on the edge of their seats.
22. On the Beach (1959)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | On the Beach |
Release Year | 1959 |
Watch time | 134 min |
Directors | Stanley Kramer |
Cast | Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner, Fred Astaire, Anthony Perkins |
Domestic Box office | $11.00M |
IMDb Rating | 7.2 |
Metascore | 55 |
Writers | John Paxton |
Music By | Ernest Gold |
Cinematography By | Giuseppe Rotunno |
Costume By | Fernando Carrere |
Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner, and Fred Astaire headline this feature film, which takes place after a nuclear war has wiped out all but a few.
However, when it becomes apparent that the radiation clouds threaten to finish off the rest, the survivors have to adapt to the tragic news in their own specific ways.
Director Stanley Kramer’s effort is a grim apocalyptic film that attempts to cast light on the worldwide nuclear contamination as a result of an all-out nuclear war; supposedly between the United States of America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR).
However, it has never been overtly mentioned. This motion picture is a compelling reminder of how serious and deadly a nuclear war could turn out to be for humanity.
21. Melancholia (2011)
Directed by Lars von Trier, ‘Melancholia’ tracks the lives of sisters Justine and Claire who get entangled when they uncover that Earth is about to collide with an enormous planet called Melancholia — an event which threatens to destroy mankind for good.
This motion picture features some solid acting and great directing from a person who carefully identifies with and understands human interaction.
It is one of the most thought-provoking and heart-touching movies to make it to this coveted list of films that threaten to end the world, in one way or another.
In a time where the world of cinema is missing out on original stories, it is good to see the makers of this feature film trying to make something daring and challenging.
20. Sunshine (2007)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Sunshine |
Release Year | 2007 |
Watch time | 107 min |
Directors | Danny Boyle |
Cast | Cillian Murphy, Rose Byrne, Chris Evans, Cliff Curtis |
Domestic Box office | $3.68M |
IMDb Rating | 7.2 |
Metascore | 64 |
Writers | Alex Garland |
Music By | John Murphy |
Cinematography By | Alwin H. Küchler |
Costume By | Mark Tildesley |
Director Danny Boyle makes it to this list once again with ‘Sunshine’. The film tracks the story of a squad of astronauts that is assigned the enormous duty of saving the sun.
Things, however, take a terrible turn when an unseen accident occurs and the lives of the crew members, and those living on planet Earth, are endangered.
This feature film thrives on its stunning visuals and cinematography; the likes of which have not been seen before or after the release of this movie.
Add to that the breathtaking usage of light and shadow and monochrome colors that capture the spirit of this motion picture in the most outstanding way possible.
19. In the Mouth of Madness (1994)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | In the Mouth of Madness |
Release Year | 1994 |
Watch time | 95 min |
Directors | John Carpenter |
Cast | Sam Neill, Jürgen Prochnow, Julie Carmen, David Warner |
Domestic Box office | $8.95M |
IMDb Rating | 7.2 |
Metascore | 53 |
Writers | Michael De Luca |
Music By | John Carpenter Jim Lang |
Cinematography By | Gary B. Kibbe |
Costume By | Peter Grundy |
Director John Carpenter’s ‘In the Mouth of Madness’ talks about how an insurance investigator (played by Sam Neill) starts to discover that the influence a horror author’s stories have on his fans is more than just inspirational.
One of the most ambitious slasher horror feature films ever produced, ‘In the Mouth of Madness’ tries to bring in the true nature of reality; a reality that could mean doomsday for the protagonists in the screenplay.
Even though this motion picture can and does have a polarizing stand among cinema enthusiasts, John Carpenter can take pride in his smart piece of mind-bending, nightmarish insanity.
Overall, one feels that the story tries to convey that nothing is real and, therefore, there is nothing solid to hold on to in the real world.
18. Dogma (1999)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Dogma |
Release Year | 1999 |
Watch time | 130 min |
Directors | Kevin Smith |
Cast | Ben Affleck, Matt Damon, Linda Fiorentino, Bud Cort |
Domestic Box office | $30.65M |
IMDb Rating | 7.3 |
Metascore | 62 |
Writers | Kevin Smith |
Music By | Howard Shore |
Cinematography By | Robert D. Yeoman |
Costume By | Elise G. Viola |
Written and directed by Kevin Smith, ‘Dogma’ traces the journey of an abortion clinic worker with a special heritage who is called upon to save the existence of humanity from being negated by two renegade angels who are trying to exploit a loophole and re-enter heaven.
As different as the storyline sounds, it is as good and is backed by sharp comedy and a splendid star cast that delivers strong performances to make this movie connect with its core audience.
Often considered to be a motion picture that talks about the importance of faith and religion, Dogma is a unique piece of filmmaking that has managed to find a spot on this list.
It is a great piece of comedy from Kevin Smith and is truly one of his finest movies.
17. Dawn of the Dead (2004)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Dawn of the Dead |
Release Year | 2004 |
Watch time | 101 min |
Directors | Zack Snyder |
Cast | Sarah Polley, Ving Rhames, Mekhi Phifer, Jake Weber |
Domestic Box office | $59.02M |
IMDb Rating | 7.3 |
Metascore | 59 |
Writers | George A. Romero |
Music By | Tyler Bates |
Cinematography By | Matthew F. Leonetti |
Costume By | Andrew Neskoromny |
Popular director Zack Snyder brings a remake of one of the finest horror movies of all time.
The story, as known, sheds light on how survivors of an epidemic are infected and are, therefore, turned into flesh-eating zombies who threaten to destroy the human species.
Given the fact that this one is a remake, the screenplay here unfolds in the shopping mall as well.
That said, even though this one is a remake of a classic film, both the movies carry a different attitude, although with the same name and similar premises.
The fact that this was produced more than two decades after the original also helped it take full advantage of the advancement in technology.
Needless to say, Dawn of the Dead is a solid feature film that is as entertaining as it is thought-provoking.
16. Take Shelter (2011)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Take Shelter |
Release Year | 2011 |
Watch time | 120 min |
Directors | Jeff Nichols |
Cast | Michael Shannon, Jessica Chastain, Shea Whigham, Tova Stewart |
Domestic Box office | $1.73M |
IMDb Rating | 7.4 |
Metascore | 85 |
Writers | Jeff Nichols |
Music By | David Wingo |
Cinematography By | Adam Stone |
Costume By | Chad Keith |
Written and directed by Jeff Nichols and starring Michael Shannon and Jessica Chastain in the lead, ‘Take Shelter’ talks about a man who is haunted by a series of apocalyptic visions.
Being a young husband and father, he starts to question whether to shelter his family from himself or from a coming storm that could destroy humanity altogether.
Michael Shannon plays Curtis LaForche beautifully and his portrayal of a man who has a premonition of what is to come is simply astounding.
His character projection makes the viewer contemplate how one would try to save their respective families if they knew that the world is actually coming to an end.
This feature film is a work of art and thrives on its fantastic performances, hard-hitting dialogues, catchy cinematography, but most importantly, a nerve-wracking subject matter.
15. Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Invasion of the Body Snatchers |
Release Year | 1956 |
Watch time | 80 min |
Directors | Don Siegel |
Cast | Kevin McCarthy, Dana Wynter, Larry Gates, King Donovan |
Domestic Box office | — |
IMDb Rating | 7.7 |
Metascore | 92 |
Writers | Daniel Mainwaring |
Music By | Carmen Dragon |
Cinematography By | Ellsworth Fredericks |
Costume By | Joseph Kish |
The storyline of this Don Siegel directorial venture revolves around an extraterrestrial invasion that begins in the fictional California town of Santa Mira.
It is safe to say that as far as classic science fiction movies of the said era are concerned, it does not get much better than ‘Invasion of the Body Snatchers’.
The screenplay retains its repeat value even today, courtesy of the paranoia and horror that it manages to induce in the minds of its awestruck viewers.
Kevin McCarthy is brilliant in this, and the execution of the script is simple and yet very effective.
It is not surprising then that this feature film has been remade multiple times, and that it continues to be revisited by its ardent viewers even today.
14. Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes (2011)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Rise of the Planet of the Apes |
Release Year | 2011 |
Watch time | 105 min |
Directors | Rupert Wyatt |
Cast | James Franco, Andy Serkis, Freida Pinto, Karin Konoval |
Domestic Box office | $176.76M |
IMDb Rating | 7.5 |
Metascore | 68 |
Writers | Rick Jaffa |
Music By | Patrick Doyle |
Cinematography By | Andrew Lesnie |
Costume By | Claude Paré |
Directed by Rupert Wyatt and starring James Franco in the lead, ‘Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes’ tells the story of Caesar, a chimpanzee, who has been with James Franco’s Will Rodman ever since he was born.
However, a new drug helps him think and react like humans, and when Caesar finds himself subjected to mistreatment, he decides to rebel against humanity.
The CGI apes in this motion picture work really well and the action sequences and set pieces are all too good.
Furthermore, the characters here are mostly engaging, even though it is evident that the ape roles come across as far more interesting than the human characters.
It is not surprising then that Caesar is the most spellbinding character in this feature film that strives to show a threat to the human species.
13. Zombieland (2009)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Zombieland |
Release Year | 2009 |
Watch time | 88 min |
Directors | Ruben Fleischer |
Cast | Jesse Eisenberg, Emma Stone, Woody Harrelson, Abigail Breslin |
Domestic Box office | $75.59M |
IMDb Rating | 7.6 |
Metascore | 73 |
Writers | Rhett Reese |
Music By | David Sardy |
Cinematography By | Michael Bonvillain |
Costume By | Maher Ahmad |
Director Ruben Fleischer’s ‘Zombieland’ tracks the journey of Columbus, a college student, who joins forces with three unusual strangers to overcome a zombie apocalypse and travel through the south-western USA to a haven.
The most dramatic aspect of Zombieland is the fact that it has a lot of heart.
The characters in the screenplay feel comfortable and active, and the drama here feels incredibly sincere.
No wonder then that the viewer feels invested in the storyline and the characters; two of the most important things in any feature film of any genre.
Besides the ruthless zombie killing, the motion picture also includes a nice little story on human bonding which works in the right way possible.
12. 28 Days Later (2002)
This Danny Boyle directorial venture talks about how a mysterious and incurable virus that has wreaked havoc in the United Kingdom pushes a team of survivors to cope with the aftermath of the disaster and find security for themselves.
The screenplay strives to cast a new light on the survival impulse of human beings that can scare the viewers to the very core, even if not in the traditional sense of the word.
This motion picture is an immersive cinematic experience that thrives on its exciting pace, action-packed screenplay, and eerie atmosphere to strike a chord with its audience.
In addition to all this, the abandoned cityscape has been shot excellently and makes this venture even more shocking to the human eyes.
11. The Birds (1963)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | The Birds |
Release Year | 1963 |
Watch time | 119 min |
Directors | Alfred Hitchcock |
Cast | Rod Taylor, Tippi Hedren, Jessica Tandy, Suzanne Pleshette |
Domestic Box office | $11.40M |
IMDb Rating | 7.7 |
Metascore | 90 |
Writers | Daphne Du Maurier |
Music By | Robert Burks |
Cinematography By | George Tomasini |
Costume By | Virginia Darcy |
Alfred Hitchcock is such a revered director for his innovative genius that his name itself can be used as a premier adjective to define innovative cinema.
In ‘The Birds’, he allows his viewers to follow Melanie, a rich socialite, who pursues Mitch, an attorney, to his home in Bodega Bay to play a practical joke on him.
However, things take a shocking turn when the birds in the region begin to attack the people there and threaten to destroy the civilization altogether.
What makes The Birds a storytelling and directorial triumph is the fact that Alfred Hitchcock uses terror-inducing and atmospheric background score and the sounds of the birds to create the most unique feature film that tries to depict the potential end of civilization.
The usage of both mechanical and real birds, which threaten the existence of the human species, creates a grave sense of impending horror, especially in the last quarter of this motion picture.
Moreover, the final haunting image of the landscape, in stark contrast to the beautiful landscape that had earlier been portrayed, is an attempt by the filmmaker to warn his viewers of the uncertainty of life and about the unpredictability of disasters.
10. The Fifth Element (1997)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | The Fifth Element |
Release Year | 1997 |
Watch time | 126 min |
Directors | Luc Besson |
Cast | Bruce Willis, Milla Jovovich, Gary Oldman, Ian Holm |
Domestic Box office | $63.54M |
IMDb Rating | 7.7 |
Metascore | 52 |
Writers | Luc Besson |
Music By | Éric Serra |
Cinematography By | Thierry Arbogast |
Costume By | Dan Weil |
Helmed by Luc Besson, ‘The Fifth Element’ stars Bruce Willis, Milla Jovovich, and Gary Oldman in prominent roles and is primarily set in the 23rd century.
The motion picture’s central plot revolves around the survival of planet Earth, the responsibility of which is bestowed upon Korben Dallas (Bruce Willis), a taxicab driver and former special forces major, after a young woman named Leeloo (Mills Jovovich) drops into his cab.
Thriving on its beautiful setting and fantastic visual effects, this feature film has a lot of ingredients that make it a fabulous watch of the science fiction genre.
Those who have a knack for sci-fi films or are willing to watch something truly unconventional would like this movie even more.
While Luc Besson’s direction is excellent here, Eric Serra’s atmospheric background score, and the fun and charismatic characters help in making this venture come across as artistic and wonderful in equal measure.
That said, the beauty of the film lies in the fact that while some viewers may find it complex and pretentious, others would consider it rather simple.
9. Dawn of the Dead (1978)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Dawn of the Dead |
Release Year | 1978 |
Watch time | 127 min |
Directors | George A. Romero |
Cast | David Emge, Ken Foree, Scott H. Reiniger, Gaylen Ross |
Domestic Box office | $5.10M |
IMDb Rating | 7.9 |
Metascore | 71 |
Writers | George A. Romero |
Music By | Dario Argento Goblin |
Cinematography By | Michael Gornick |
Costume By | Josie Caruso Barbara Lifsher |
Written and directed by George A. Romero, ‘Dawn of the Dead’ is undoubtedly one of the greatest horror films of all time.
There is something about being the only people left alive and breathing in a shopping mall that appeals to the film buff in all of us.
Another zombie feature film in the list that underscores the potential end to mankind, this one thrives on its excellent zombie creations.
The movie works on so many levels that one can’t help but get caught up in all the drama each time they sit to go through it, which isn’t something that can be said about too many pictures within the genre.
Furthermore, many of the filmmaker’s own views on feminism, civilization, and consumerism can also be deciphered in the screenplay.
Thankfully, it does not divert the story from making the viewers fear the end of the world.
8. Children of Men (2006)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Children of Men |
Release Year | 2006 |
Watch time | 109 min |
Directors | Alfonso Cuarón |
Cast | Julianne Moore, Clive Owen, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Caine |
Domestic Box office | $35.55M |
IMDb Rating | 7.9 |
Metascore | 84 |
Writers | Alfonso Cuarón |
Music By | John Tavener |
Cinematography By | Emmanuel Lubezki |
Costume By | Jim Clay Geoffrey Kirkland |
Director Alfonso Cuarón’s ‘Children of Men’ stars Julianne Moore and Clive Owen in significant roles and attempts to tell a possible «end» story of civilization.
It traces how mankind is breathing its last after a deadly pandemic has somehow caused a widespread infertility crisis.
However, when a woman is learned to be pregnant, a former activist takes the onus on himself to safely transport her to a team of scientists who are working on a cure without her secret being spilled out.
The screenplay, which tries to showcase the imminent extinction of the species, thrives on its incredible cinematography and innovative story idea to make an impact.
Even though this motion picture projects a gut-wrenching look at the future, it does so banking on its heart-stopping drama, stunning musical score, and flawless performances; each of which helps in making this feature film a visionary piece of cinematic art.
7. Night of the Living Dead (1968)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Night of the Living Dead |
Release Year | 1968 |
Watch time | 96 min |
Directors | George A. Romero |
Cast | Duane Jones, Judith O’Dea, Karl Hardman, Marilyn Eastman |
Domestic Box office | $0.09M |
IMDb Rating | 7.9 |
Metascore | 89 |
Writers | John A. Russo |
Music By | George A. Romero |
Cinematography By | George A. Romero |
Costume By | Charles O’Dato |
This George A. Romero directorial venture is credited with first unleashing the starving walking dead onto our screens and into the consciousness of the average cinema goer.
Even though zombies have become commonplace in the cinematic universe, courtesy of the great advancement in special effects and technology that have helped bring them to life on-screen, rarely have they been as authentically shown as in ‘Night of the Living Dead’.
Moreover, this film has something significant to say about race as well. The screenplay tracks how the surviving group in the farmhouse accepts Ben (Duane Jones), an African American man, as a leader for his smart persona and sharp thinking.
This portrayal of an African American as protagonist and problem-solver, especially in a feature film that depicts a threat to humanity and the world, was also unique to movies that hit the screens more than forty years ago.
Having said that, one has to appreciate the clever script, good special effects gave the budget and time in which the project was put together, and the decent direction; each of which helped in scaring the viewers out of their wits and making them contemplate if mankind could truly be in danger in the near future.
6. Planet of the Apes (1968)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Planet of the Apes |
Release Year | 1968 |
Watch time | 112 min |
Directors | Franklin J. Schaffner |
Cast | Charlton Heston, Roddy McDowall, Kim Hunter, Maurice Evans |
Domestic Box office | $33.40M |
IMDb Rating | 8 |
Metascore | 79 |
Writers | Michael Wilson |
Music By | Jerry Goldsmith |
Cinematography By | Leon Shamroy |
Costume By | Norman Rockett |
Directed by Franklin J. Schaffner, ‘Planet of the Apes’ is a science fiction drama film that talks about the possible changes that mankind reluctantly has to undergo after an astronaut crew crash-lands on a strange planet in the distant future.
Even though the realm appears desolate at first, the surviving crew partners encounter a civilization in which apes have advanced into creatures with human-like understanding and speech.
However, what is astonishing is the fact that the apes have come to assume the part of the dominant species, and human beings are reduced into being mute creatures who are forced to don animal skins.
This is a definitive science fiction feature film with transcendental significance that also attempts to talk a lot about the origin of human beings by showing them as non-dominant species who are under threat.
That said, the screenplay also packs a whole lot of action, exploration, intrigue, and entertainment; each of which makes this motion picture one of the finest on this list.
5. 12 Monkeys (1995)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | 12 Monkeys |
Release Year | 1995 |
Watch time | 129 min |
Directors | Terry Gilliam |
Cast | Bruce Willis, Madeleine Stowe, Brad Pitt, Joseph Melito |
Domestic Box office | $57.14M |
IMDb Rating | 8 |
Metascore | 74 |
Writers | Chris Marker |
Music By | Paul Buckmaster |
Cinematography By | Roger Pratt |
Costume By | Jeffrey Beecroft |
This Terry Gilliam directorial venture traces how a deadly virus wipes out the world, causing only a few survivors to go subsurface.
Bruce Willis’s James Cole is charged with traveling back in time to find the source of the epidemic with the hope that it could be overturned, and that is exactly when the real adventures begin.
Even though Bruce Willis is the star of this feature film, it is Brad Pitt who steals the show as Jeffrey Goines; a charismatic but mentally ill conspiracy theorist who may hold the secret to preventing the destructive plague.
The story is tight, logical, and engrossing and it continues to get better with repeated viewing.
The performances here are excellent and the treatment and overall execution of the theme are both interesting, to say the least.
That said, the detailed screenplay also showcases a nice understanding of the future, thus, making this film a refreshingly intelligent slice of science fiction cinema.
4. Mad Max: Fury Road (2015)
The dystopian future has never been more stimulating than it is in this wonderfully shot action film by George Miller.
Set in a desert wasteland where survivors are coerced into battling for water and gasoline in enormous custom-made vehicles, ‘Mad Max: Fury Road’ is not only the best installment of the Mad Max franchise, but it is also one of the better end-of-the-world feature films.
The movie features a towering performance by both Charlize Theron and Tom Hardy and thrives on its sequence of mesmerizing set pieces.
Even though the story in this motion picture is simple, George Miller’s imaginative eyes make this one of the most stunning action pictures in recent history.
In addition, the heart-pounding action sequences and the loud explosions really make the viewers’ jaw hit the floor.
That said, what truly makes this venture work is the fact that it simply strives to do what it set out to do without worrying too much about whether it will work or not.
3. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
This Stanley Kubrick-directed masterpiece takes place on the brink of nuclear war and emphasizes the government agencies dispatched to stop it.
What is special about this film is that even though it is a subtle and sophisticated «end-of-the-world» classic, there is more to it than what meets the eye.
There is an underlining political commentary under every personality, every line, and every government manifestation in the screenplay.
Dr. Strangelove himself represents the scientific community of that period; a community that labored tirelessly to build a better bomb to bring the world to an absolute standstill.
One has to take their hat off to director Stanley Kubrick for making this great piece of cinema that can be enjoyed by anyone who has a decent grip on world events and history.
No wonder then that ‘Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb’ was nominated for Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Actor for Peter Sellers at the time.
2. Wall-E (2008)
The ninth animated feature film from Pixar, Wall-E is an ambitious project that took big risks to create the impact that it did upon its release.
Helmed by Andrew Stanton, the compelling screenplay banked less on its dialogues and more on other elements like the lighting, the performances, the music, and the camerawork to come up with the desired result.
The film traces the journey of a robot who is responsible for cleaning a waste-covered Earth, and who meets another robot and falls in love with her.
Jointly, they set out on a voyage that promises to change the destiny of humanity.
The incredible animation makes the whole film fabulous to look at. Having said that, a feature film that deals with stories of alien invasion or the possible destruction or abandoning of mankind needs to look visually appealing.
Not surprisingly then, the bright colors and sublime setting are a delight to the eyes in ‘Wall-E’.
In addition, the music here is remarkable and some highly imaginative sequences such as the zero-gravity dance and the ride through space are worth watching.
1. Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)
Entity | Detail |
---|---|
Title | Terminator 2: Judgment Day |
Release Year | 1991 |
Watch time | 137 min |
Directors | James Cameron |
Cast | Arnold Schwarz, Linda Hamilton, Edward Furlong, Robert Patrick |
Domestic Box office | $204.84M |
IMDb Rating | 8.5 |
Metascore | 75 |
Writers | James Cameron |
Music By | Brad Fiedel |
Cinematography By | Adam Greenberg |
Costume By | Joseph C. Nemec III |
James Cameron, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Linda Hamilton joined forces in the early 90s to create possibly the most admired sequel in the history of Hollywood.
Arnold Schwarzenegger returns as The Terminator in this explosive action-adventure spectacle. The film talks about how a terminator is sent on a mission to kill Sarah’s son, John Connor.
However, what is interesting is that another cyborg, who was once after Sarah’s life, has now been assigned to protect him and, ultimately, mankind.
This motion picture is photographed slickly and wonderfully and tries to retain the dark and audacious tone of the first film; a tone that hints towards the possible end to mankind if the titular character does not do his best to save the day.
While the set pieces and lighting may not exactly come across as nightmarish due to the film’s massive budget, they are every bit as inventive and atmospheric as technically possible.
The superb direction by James Cameron and the haunting background score also ensure that this marvelous movie perfectly stands the test of time and continues to be lauded as one of the greatest of its type.
Good finales offer catharsis. The best deny us closure altogether.
Clockwise from left to right: Lust, Caution; Moonlight; Some Like it Hot; The Last Days of Disco; Beau Travail; The Searchers; Losing Ground; Big Night; Grave of the Fireflies; The Thin Blue Line.
Illustration: by James Clapham
Clockwise from left to right: Lust, Caution; Moonlight; Some Like it Hot; The Last Days of Disco; Beau Travail; The Searchers; Losing Ground; Big Night; Grave of the Fireflies; The Thin Blue Line.
Illustration: by James Clapham
Not every great movie has a great ending. The reverse is also true: We’ve all had that experience of watching a ho-hum flick that became instantly unforgettable thanks to an awesome conclusion (famously, or more recently). It is, arguably, the most important part of any film — how a filmmaker wants you to feel when the lights go up is often the key to what that picture was really about.
In compiling a list of the greatest endings in movie history, we had many arguments over many months about this very dynamic, and found ourselves drawn to certain types we deemed successful more than others: Ambiguous, dark endings; endings that purported to explain something but secretly did not; endings that denied us (and the characters) closure; endings that featured people dancing, but not always in joyous, triumphant fashion. Maybe that was a reflection of the times we were living. (Dark, uncertain, marked by a significant amount of human flailing.) Sometimes, we did go for the cathartic, bring-happy-tears-to-your-face finale, but we frequently found ourselves opining the sorts of stories that lack that release. The unendings.
Our goal from the jump was never to determine a set formula for the Great Movie Ending. We began with an absolute morass of nominations, hundreds of finales that stuck in at least one Vulture staff member’s maw. The idiosyncrasies piled up; if the key to a good ending was a feeling, we’d surrender to impulse. Still, we did set ourselves some rules. Most significantly, we only considered one movie (feature length) per director, in part so Billy Wilder and Stanley Kubrick and Alfred Hitchcock titles didn’t swallow up the whole list. We prioritized a diversity of tone, origin, authorship, subject matter, and genre. And we were a bit flexible on what constituted an actual “ending”: a final shot, a final passage; it just had to come at the end of the film. (You’d be amazed at how many scenes are remembered as being great endings that came well before the movie in question went to credits.) Still, there was no escaping our own unbound tastes and biases. You’ll see some classic endings on this list. You’ll also wonder (probably angrily) where some of the more iconic ones are. And you’ll hopefully see a few you’ve never heard of. (This is as good a time as any to remind you that this list contains many, many spoilers.) The thread that pulls all of these choices together is that after rewatching them, we felt that tough-to-articulate sensation when the lights went up (metaphorically, because of course we’re holed up at home just like you): The key to the story was more often a notion, not an answer.
The end of Yentl is, fittingly for this list, a beginning. Barbra Streisand’s long-gestating passion project follows the titular young woman (played by Streisand), who’s so desperate to study the Talmud that she poses as a boy — and then falls in love with a fellow student (Mandy Patinkin), who is in love with a woman he cannot marry (Amy Irving), who then falls in love with and marries Yentl in boy form, who then must reveal her true self to both. Somehow, this wild shtetl soap opera ends … happily? When Patinkin’s character admits that he, too, loves Yentl and wants her to be his wife, Yentl promptly rejects him for a life of solo Jewish study, sending him back to Irving’s character, meaning everyone gets what they wanted in the first place.
The final sequence sees Yentl sailing joyously from Poland to America, singing “Piece of Sky,” a dramatic song about how she’ll always want more from life, interpolated with the famous “Papa Can You Hear Me” to really amp up the spectacle. It’s triumphant, a bit kooky, extremely high-key. (Conntentious, too.) In other words, it’s Barbra, but it also transcends Barbra: Yentl offers a template not for a romance but for a culturally specific success story, so much so that it’s been echoed and referenced in other canonically Jewish tales, including, most recently, Seth Rogen’s American Pickle. — Rachel Handler
Stream Yentl on Pluto TV or rent it on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
When it comes to endings, it would be hard for any other filmmaker to top the surrealistic imagery of the raft full of monkeys in Aguirre: The Wrath of God. And I myself am partial to the Dada-esque charms of Stroszek’s dancing chicken. But for sheer emotional potency, nothing in Werner Herzog’s filmography can rival the ending of Grizzly Man, his 2005 documentary on the life and death of wildlife activist Timothy Treadwell. Much of the film is pieced together from Treadwell’s own videotapes of himself in the wild, frolicking around wild grizzlies, but there’s one piece of material Herzog can’t bring himself to include: the audio from the night Treadwell and girlfriend Amie Huguenard were killed by bears. Instead, the director films himself listening to the grisly scene, tellingly keeping the focus not on his own face, but on Treadwell’s friend Jewel Palovak as she breaks down in tears watching Herzog. We’re twice removed from the horrors contained in the audio, but that’s close enough — when the filmmaker tells Palovak she needs to destroy the tape, we trust him implicitly. Herzog built his legend on depicting the extremes of the human experience; here, his restraint is even more powerful. — Nate Jones
Stream Grizzly Man on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video and Tubi or rent it on iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
Most lesbian romances, as we’ve established here at Vulture, involve two women engaging in forbidden lust under extremely stressful conditions, only for one of them to die or move away or marry a man (or all three). That’s part of what makes Donna Deitch’s Desert Hearts, based on the novel of the same name, so refreshing. The 1985 rom-dram follows Vivian (Helen Shaver), a tightly wound, recently divorced 35-year-old New York City professor who heads to a Reno ranch to sign the papers and clear her head, and surprises herself by falling head over heels for free-spirited, 25-year-old local Cay (Patricia Charbonneau). Their romance isn’t without its detractors or its complications — Vivian, for one, is terrified of her feelings and subsequently of Cay until they fall into bed for an extremely hot, several-day sextravaganza — but by the end, nobody has died tragically or wept through a forced hetero wedding. Instead, Deitch gives the pair (and us) a happier ending: Vivian, about to hop on the train back to New York to resume her life, spontaneously asks Cay to go with her. Cay isn’t convinced: How will it work? Where will she live? Vivian smiles and asks Cay if she’ll just accompany her to the next train station so they can talk about a future. Cay relents; she’s madly in love. The two women bound happily onto the train, grinning at one another, the very picture of queer possibility. — R.H.
Stream Desert Hearts on HBO Max, Showtime and with a premium subscription on Hulu, Sling TV, fuboTV and Amazon Prime Video.
Look, it’s impossible to explain what, exactly, is going on at the end of Jordan Peele’s twisty, twisted horror hit, but that’s also why it’s so transfixing and resonant. The suggestion that Adelaide (Lupita Nyong’o) has for years secretly been her “tether” — the alternate, underground version of herself, the result of a failed experiment — is certainly a great genre twist, but what makes the whole thing so incredibly eerie and unforgettable is the sight of all those tethers, holding hands across fields and hills and mountaintops — which will send a chill down the spine of any child of the ’80s who experienced the “Hands Across America” craze. There’s a bit of the famous ending of The Birds here, but it’s in many ways an unlikely way to end a horror movie. Because horror is the most intimate of genres — it’s so often about personal, unspoken demons made real — and great horror endings usually focus on the protagonist’s experience: They close in rather than expand out. But Peele takes the drama of what’s just happened beyond the boundaries of this family and this community and makes it national, perhaps even universal. It’s a rich metaphor made even richer by the fact that it never quite tells you what it’s a metaphor for. — Bilge Ebiri
Stream Us on HBO Max and with a premium subscription on Hulu and Amazon Prime Video, or rent on YouTube, Vudu and Google Play.
Jean Renoir’s great 1937 humanist drama about French officers in a German prisoner of war camp during World War I is only intermittently a prison-escape drama — it’s more about classism, anti-Semitism, and the different ways in which different people understand honor. It strikes the perfect note of liberation and uncertainty in its stark final image of two distant figures — the two men who have managed to escape, thanks largely to the sacrifice of others — as they trudge through the snowy wastes of Switzerland, the future before them like a vast blank page. For a Europe that was once again on the brink of war, the light at the end of this film was both hopeful and weirdly melancholy. It was also an enormously influential finale, its open-endedness presaging entire generations of existentialist (often French) films that closed on notes of hesitant freedom. — B.E.
Rent The Grand Illusion on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
The fourth-wall-shattering final sequence of Mel Brooks’s classic comedy Blazing Saddles works so well because Brooks’s characters — especially Bart (Cleavon Little), Jim (Gene Wilder), and Hedley Lamarr (Harvey Korman) — are already established as unbound by the limiting technicalities of diegesis and spatio-temporal continuity. Instead, Bart and Jim operate with the deft comic mastery of Bugs Bunny. They are trickster gods. In the film’s climax — a town-wide main-street shootout — Brooks pans out from the horse-punchin’ action to reveal what the audience knows, but what we’re not supposed to be reminded that we know: The Western town is a flat-lined studio backlot.
Brooks cuts to a neighboring soundstage, where rows of gay-coded chorus boys are filming a Busby Berkeley–inspired top hats and tails number called “The French Mistake.” The brawlin’ cowpokes burst through the wall, tussle with the chorus boys, and eventually spill out into present-day Hollywood at large, coloring the world with their slapstick Roger Rabbit—leaving-Toontown routine. The most technically impressive and hilariously captivating moment is when Hedley chases Jim to the Blazing Saddles premiere at Grauman’s Chinese Theater, and Jim hides out inside, to see how his own movie, that he’s currently starring in, will play out.
This leads to the most timeless joke of the film — Hedley trying to get the student-ticket discount with an old ID. By this point in his career, Brooks had mastered the rules of comedy filmmaking; Blazing Saddles is him throwing those rules off a cliff. — Rebecca Alter
Stream Blazing Saddles with premium subscriptions on Hulu and Sling TV or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
Some movie endings gain legendary status because they present a twist, a reversal. And then there’s the ending of Mikey and Nicky, so emotionally potent for its tragic inevitability. Elaine May’s seedy 1976 crime flick is a type of ending in itself, acting as a sobering postscript to the macho heist and mafia movies of the decade. It begins with Nicky (John Cassevetes) fearing for his life, certain that the mob has a hit out on him, calling his oldest and last friend in the world, Mikey (Peter Falk), for help. We soon learn he’s right to be paranoid, and he was even right to be doubtful of Mikey, who is urging hitman Ned Beatty to get the job done that night. Although the pair spends the night hopping from seedy to seedier spot — the bar, another bar, a midnight movie, some mistreated women’s homes, various sundry alleys, buses, a cemetery — they can navigate these spaces. Real danger for an overgrown street kid like Nicky comes in early daylight, in a prim and exclusive residential suburb, where Mikey has sold Nicky out and sold out at large.
With the curtains drawn and with Nicky’s paranoia turned contagious, Mikey realizes that by killing the last living person outside of himself to have known his own deceased family, it’s like he’s killing his brother and mother twice over. Nicky arrives and pounds on the door to be let in; Mikey barricades it with the world’s ugliest suburban floral footstools. Death stalks Nicky in the form of a hitman’s black sedan, and as the gun peeks out the window he yells to it in a heartbreaking, desperate moment — “you, wait!” — as if he could reason his way out. But death doesn’t listen and so he is shot, on his oldest friend’s doorstep, begging for refuge. The brotherly betrayal is Old Testament stuff, and Mikey’s already told Nicky he’s forgotten his Kaddish. To say this movie’s ending sticks to your ribs implies too much nourishment; rather, it tears through you like a stomach ulcer. — R.A.
Stream Mikey and Nicky on HBO Max, Tubi and Amazon Prime Video or rent on YouTube and Google Play.
As promised, this list is populated by endings in which characters dance — sometimes ecstatically, sometimes solemnly. Let’s begin with Bette Davis, twirling at the close of Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? This hagsploitation classic from director Robert Aldrich remains firmly embedded in our collective cultural imagination thanks to the heated offscreen rivalry between stars Joan Crawford and Bette Davis. But we’re here to talk about what happens onscreen, when “Baby” Jane Hudson (Davis), a former child star gone mad, learns from her once-ultrafamous sister, Blanche (Crawford), that Jane did not cause the accident that left Blanche unable to walk. It was Blanche who tried to run over her sister, and in the process crashed into a gate and severed her spine.
But by this point in the story, Baby Jane is too far gone for the confession to sink in: “You mean all this time we could have been friends?” She spins on the beach, strawberry ice cream in hand, in front of a crowd of gawkers as the police discover the body of Blanche nearby. Baby Jane maintains a spiritual connection to the ending of Sunset Boulevard, in which Norma Desmond descends into the utter madness of a crowd of press and police onlookers. But Baby Jane is more tragic, deftly mining — thanks to Davis’s tremendous performance — the prickly reality of a woman beset by mental illness and guided by cruelty. — Angelica Jade Bastién
Stream Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? on HBO Max or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
Early on in Thomas Vinterberg’s film, one of Mads Mikkelsen’s fellow Danish teaching buddies mentions that Mikkelsen’s character, Martin, trained in jazz ballet. At first, it registers as just another memory the friends left behind on their way to dreary middle age. In order to reinvigorate themselves, the group launches into an experiment in microdosing alcohol in accordance with a theory that humans are born with a .05 percent deficiency. It works, and then it quickly doesn’t. They’re cheerier at school, but soon launch into deeper binges, messing up their personal and professional lives. Eventually, Martin’s friend Tommy, seemingly more depressed than the others have realized, travels out into the ocean on his boat and dies.
In the film’s stirring final sequence, Martin slips into his students’ celebration on the Copenhagen harbor and launches into an exuberant dance sequence set to the Danish pop group Scarlet Pleasure’s “What a Life.” It’s a showcase for Mikkelsen’s talents — the actor has his own dance background — and a moment that is at once an act of mourning and a celebration of life. The scene’s euphoria is all the more poignant considering the context of its making: the death of Vinterberg’s daughter days before the film’s shoot began. “I think every scene in this movie is to some extent about my daughter, for everyone who made it. But maybe particularly that scene, because when Ida died, we all just surrendered to life, no barriers, everything,” Vinterberg said. — Jackson McHenry
Rent Another Round on Youtube, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
When Universal executives screened Terry Gilliam’s dystopian epic for the first time, they had one big note: It’s too long; cut a few minutes. Specifically, the final few minutes, in which Jonathan Pryce’s Sam escapes his captors and retreats to a bucolic hideaway with his true love Jill (Kim Greist), only for that to be revealed as a fantasy concocted by his torture-addled brain. Gilliam refused, kick-starting a bitter battle between filmmaker and studio that involved dueling cuts, a public war of words, and the weaponization of the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards. Eventually Universal relented, and the film was released with its original ending intact. You could say that both sides were ultimately proven right: As the suits feared, Brazil did indeed flop in wide release, but the bleaker ending was undoubtedly the better creative choice, its darkly comic twist cementing the film’s reputation as Gilliam’s masterpiece. — N.J.
Rent Brazil on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
For much of Gillian Armstrong’s 1987 film, Lillie (Judy Davis), a down-and-out backup singer who’s reached the end of her rope, and her teenage daughter, Ally (Claudia Karvan), are kept apart. Lillie left town long ago, and Ally has no idea that the odd, alcoholic lady whom she met facedown in the public bathroom one day is actually her long-lost mom. Lillie, for her part, has been warned away from reconnecting with Ally by the girl’s grandmother. And besides, Lillie knows she can’t handle the responsibility of raising a child. But in the film’s final act, mom and daughter go off together, making an impromptu decision to get in Lillie’s car and venture into an uncertain future. But then, at the first rest stop, Lillie steps away and contemplates driving off — as she has from so many of her problems over the years. She watches her daughter, sitting in a rest-stop restaurant, by herself, waiting for her mom. The way Armstrong frames their reconciliation — with her camera taking on Lillie’s point of view and gliding toward the girl, and finally letting the two of them embrace in the center of the frame (all the while Peter Best’s amazing score kicks into high gear) — is one of the most beautiful, emotionally explosive things you’ll ever see. — B.E.
High Tide is not currently available to stream or rent in the U.S.
The best sports-movie ending ever is proof you don’t have to be a fan to get invested. This is a movie about cricket, but while the rules of the game may be obscure to some viewers, the stakes are crystal clear: In 1893, a team of plucky Indian farmers face off against the dastardly Brits. If the former win, their drought-stricken village won’t have to pay any tax for three years; if they lose, they’ll have to pay three times as much. At the big game, everything comes down to the final ball, at which point we get flashbacks to pivotal moments earlier in the film, at least two fake-outs where it seems like all is lost, and a generous helping of slow motion. It plays like gangbusters, of course. I don’t think all movies need to be so shamelessly crowd-pleasing, but I’m very glad this one is. — N.J.
Stream Lagaan on Netflix and with a premium subscription on Sling TV.
Here’s a documentary that ends with that rarest of things in nonfiction cinema: a twist. Charting the complicated, yearslong friendship between Czech painter Barbora Kysilkova and Karl-Bertil Nordland, an addict and thief who helped steal two of her paintings from a gallery in Oslo, Benjamin Ree’s documentary always hovers on the edge of something, only kind of hinting at a certain attraction between these two people who lead very different lives. For all their difficulties, the painter and the thief each see each other in ways other people seem unable to. Ree also cuts at times to a sensuous painting of Nordland and his girlfriend in bed that Kysilkova has been working on. In the film’s final shot, when we finally see the painting finished, we see that she has inserted her own face in place of the girlfriend’s. It’s not so much prurient as it is a portrait of two souls who have found an inextricable bond. And, yes, it’s also a welcome acknowledgment that horniness and the sublime are often connected. — B.E.
Stream The Painter and the Thief on Hulu or rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
After an hour of search parties and police interrogations in English settler society proves fruitless, this Australian New Wave adaptation of Joan Lindsay’s 1967 novel ends with a documentary-style voiceover. The case of the missing schoolgirls, we learn, was never solved. The audience is left, aptly, hanging, with the gauzy, impressionistic images of the picnicking girls at the edges of civilization. How much agency did they have, in their magnetic compulsion to the rock? What did we really understand about their cloistered innocence? As the audience watches the “Botticelli” Miranda wave good-bye, she turns away from Russell Boyd’s soft-core-glowy camera. It’s an invitation for generations of curious young women in the Appleyard Girls’ wake to follow her, into the depths of the rock, to continue telling stories of young women coming into their own, beyond the reach of sense-making Victorian society, wherein mysteries must have clinical answers and young women are to be infantilized and sexualized all at once.
It is a testament to the generosity of Weir’s filmmaking that he leaves the story open. As long as the case is never definitely closed or explained, it allows the story to be taken up and retold in the imagination of female filmmakers like Sofia Coppola, whose Virgin Suicides and The Beguiled are spiritual and stylistic sequels. I like to think the girls knew what they were doing when they abandoned their boots and gloves and corsets and disappeared into an ancient and unknowable nature. Or maybe they simply fell down a hole. You get to choose, and therein lies the beauty of the un-ending. — R.A.
Stream Picnic at Hanging Rock on HBO Max or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
There are only two ways to watch the Mamma Mia franchise. One is to believe that nothing is a miracle. The other is to know that everything is a miracle. I strongly suggest the latter. The exquisite joy of the Mammas Mia is that they are insane, the only films that have ever existed wherein Colin Firth allows himself to be filmed dancing in a spandex jumpsuit cut to the navel and Meryl Streep’s ghost sings Abba. It’s only fitting that Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again, part two of a franchise that unfolds entirely in Greece but takes its title from a Swedish pop song borrowing from a stereotypical Italian catchphrase, concludes its hallucinogenic run by having its entire cast — some of whom are meant to be dead and some of whom are different versions of the same person, in the style of a film ending that will show up later on this list — perform “Super Trouper” (while gazing adoringly at Cher, who has just arrived randomly via helicopter).
The last 20 minutes or so of this objectively perfect masterwork throw any remaining structure and rationale to the wind, discarding the notions of time and space and mortality in the interest of allowing Andy Garcia and Cher to make out while Meryl watches. There’s also a brief, incredibly emotional interlude between dead Meryl and Amanda Seyfried that, paired with the aforementioned “Super Trouper” number, induces the purest form of catharsis — which is appropriate, as “catharsis” was also invented in Greece. — R.H.
Stream Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again with premium subscriptions on Hulu and Sling TV or rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
At first blush, Letter From an Unknown Woman has the posture of a tragic romance. But upon closer inspection, this story is powered by obsession more than anything else, and its ending exemplifies the costs and particulars of that obsession. In early-20th-century Vienna, an aging playboy, Stefan (Louis Jordan), comes to the end of a letter written by a dead woman, Lisa (Joan Fontaine), whom he could never quite remember over the span of their various entanglements during her life, but who in fact long held him in a passionate grasp. Faced now with the totality of Lisa’s suffering — among other things, she bore his child after a single tryst he can’t recall — Stefan agrees to duel with the widower she left behind, realizing that such a decision might very well lead to his death. On the way, he encounters Lisa’s ghostly image opening the door to the apartment building as she did as a teenager at the beginning of the film. It’s an ending type plentiful in the history of cinema: the revelation followed by resignation. But Letter puts a trenchant spin on it, finding not sorrow but pure yearning in the grooves of this decision. — A.J.B.
Stream Letter from an Unknown Woman on FlixFling.
By director Paul Schrader’s own accounting, First Reformed takes the main character from Robert Bresson’s Diary of a Country Priest, about an ill priest facing an unfriendly congregation, and drops him into the plot of Ingmar Bergman’s Winter Light, about a man who fears a nuclear apocalypse, but places it all in the context of contemporary America’s climate crisis. Ethan Hawke’s Reverend Toller does his best to console Philip Ettinger’s despairing Michael at the encouragement of his pregnant wife, Mary, played by Amanda Seyfried. Michael shoots himself, fearing that God could not forgive what man has done to the world. His doubt haunts Toller, who takes steps toward carrying out a plan to detonate the suicide vest Michael left behind and kill the CEO of a major polluter at a church service. At the last moment, he sees Mary in the pews, reverses course, wraps himself in barbed wire, and pours Drano into his whiskey glass. Then, suddenly, Mary appears, the music swells, and they kiss.
It’s a mirror of the ending of Carl Theodor Dreyer’s Ordet, where, suddenly, pastoral life is interrupted by a miracle, except maybe not. “Isn’t it very odd that all of a sudden she’s there? And the room is bright? […] Could this not be an ecstatic experience?” Schrader told Vulture. The ending, according to him, is calibrated to split the audience 50/50. “Here’s my favorite explanation,” he added. “You have this man in the garden with the cup. No one is going to take that cup away from him. So he drinks it. And then he falls on all fours, and starts disgorging his stomach. And then God walks in the room. God, who had never talked to him over the course of the film. And God says, ‘Reverend Toller, would you like to see what heaven looks like? I’m going to show you right now. Heaven looks like one long kiss.’ And that’s the last thing he sees.” — J.M.
Stream First Reformed on Showtime and with premium subscriptions on Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, Sling TV and FuboTV, or rent on YouTube, Vudu and Google Play.
It’s the kind of ending that will give you nightmares, not just because it’s scary but also because it’s so weird. In the big climax of Tod Browning’s 1932 cult horror film, the heartless but beautiful trapeze artist who has been attempting to get her hands on the fortune of a carnival sideshow performer is finally found out, pursued, and caught by the so-called “freaks.” It is then revealed (in the film’s final scene) that they have turned her into a “human duck” and put her on display. Yes, it is just as gruesome and shocking as it sounds — proof that nobody made stranger movies than pre-Code Hollywood. But in its suddenness, its almost avant-garde surrealism, it also feels so … well, modern might not be the right word, simply because most movies today still couldn’t get away with an ending like this. — B.E.
Rent Freaks on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
Many films have ended by lingering on the face of a single actor (you’ll see several more on this list), but who can sustain the attention of the camera with the aplomb of Alfre Woodard in the closing moments of Clemency? The focus on Woodard is bifurcated here — at first, the close-up lasts for nearly three minutes, fixed on death-row prison warden Bernadine (Woodard) as she watches the state-sanctioned murder of Anthony Woods (played by an excellent Aldis Hodge). It’s only interrupted by the voice of a priest, after which the shot continues for over a minute as Bernadine walks from the death chamber out into the fresh air.
The sequence is the result of a collaboration of cinematic elements — the costume design, in which prisoner, warden, and doctor all wear white; the assured direction of Chinonye Chukwu and cinematographer Eric Branco; the subtly effective sound design of the chamber in contrast to the area beyond the glass occupied by a tremulous audience. All work in tandem to support Woodard’s tremendous performance — her face, streaked with tears, shifting from shock to existential despair. She’s reeling, expertly broadcast in the subtle shifts of Woodard’s eyebrows and the loosening of her jaw. — A.J.B.
Stream Clemency on Hulu or rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
Very few films end on such a beautiful, emotionally dynamic image of the interior lives of young Black girls. That’s precisely where writer-director Kasi Lemmons roots the finale of her first (and best) film, about contested memories and familial trauma. After discovering a letter in which her father (Samuel L. Jackson) accuses her sister of instigating a sexual encounter, Eve (Jurnee Smollett) confronts her older sibling, Cisely (Meagan Good), about what really happened. Did she suffer abuse at the hands of their father, like Cisely had originally recounted to Eve, or was it something else entirely? Eve doesn’t come up with a clear answer when she puts her hands over her sister’s and, using her gift of second sight, visualizes the night the bond between Cisely and her father was irrevocably broken. So the two sisters stand together, hands clasped, looking out onto murky waters and a sunset. They remain there, in a liminal state, underscoring the film’s interest in the sheer power of storytelling rather than a tidy conclusion. — A.J.B.
Stream Eve’s Bayou on Philo and with premium subscriptions on Hulu, Amazon Prime Video and Sling TV, or rent from YouTube, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
The Silence of the Lambs, written by Thomas Harris, ends with a final communication from cannibalistic serial killer Hannibal Lecter to FBI Agent Clarice Starling in the form of a letter. For the film adaptation, screenwriter Ted Tally knew something more cinematic was required. After writing an initial ending that director Jonathan Demme deemed too “horrifying,” Tally crafted the simultaneously wry and chilling final phone call between Jodie Foster’s Starling and an elegantly sinister Anthony Hopkins as Lecter that made the final cut. When Demme cuts to Lecter, who hasn’t appeared onscreen since he escaped incarceration earlier in the film, he’s in disguise and calling Clarice from the Bahamas. He tells her that he’ll leave her alone — “The world is more interesting with you in it,” he coos — if she does him the same courtesy. Then he says one of the all-time great final lines in a motion picture — “I do wish we could chat longer but I’m having an old friend for dinner” — as Dr. Frederick Chilton (Anthony Heald), Lecter’s former jailer at a Baltimore prison, arrives on the island, blissfully unaware that he’s probably about to become a meal.
In the closing shot, after he hangs up on Clarice, who’s repeating “Dr. Lecter” in vain, Lecter dons a fedora and glides into the crowd, heading in the same direction as Chilton. It is an image that perfectly matches Lecter’s personality: purposeful, sophisticated, terrifying. It confirms that the murderous may actually be walking among us. — Jen Chaney
Stream The Silence of the Lambs on Showtime and with premium subscriptions on Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, Sling TV and FuboTV, or rent from YouTube, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
Possession is the kind of movie that evades easy description. Andrzej Żuławski’s cult horror classic is full to the brim with images beguiling and repulsive in equal measure. On the surface, it’s about a married couple — Mark (Sam Neill) and Anna (Isabelle Adjani) — whose roiling issues are brought to the surface when she asks for a divorce. But this premise gives way to a violent consideration of the matters of the heart, ending with Mark and Anna dying in the most bloody fashion possible, leaving their doppelgangers to survive. The final image is of Anna’s other, Helen (Adjani), staring directly at the camera with those unnatural, nearly aglow green eyes, as Mark’s twin writhes on the other side of the frosted glass door she stands in front of, the noise of explosions and sirens crowding the air. Many films close with their madwomen staring defiantly at the screen (Revenge, Black Swan), but Possession feels singular thanks to the weight of Adjani’s and Neill’s performances, and how they bluntly uncover with a delicate accuracy the horror that comes on the other side of romance. — A.J.B.
Possession is not currently available to stream or rent in the U.S.
For his final feature film released during his lifetime, Orson Welles went out with a spectacular cinematic bang to match that of his first feature, Citizen Kane. The story goes like this: Welles was handed footage his cinematographer Francois Reichenbach had shot for a never-completed documentary about the art forger Elmyr de Hory. He then discovered that one of the film’s interview subjects, biographer Clifford Irving, had himself been outed as the author of a fake autobiography of Howard Hughes. Welles stitched these stories together with his own life and observations and came up with something genuinely pioneering: an essay-film meditation on the nature of art, fakes, celebrity, and whether who made what ultimately matters. (Don’t laugh, but it would make a fascinating double feature with Mank.)
Welles promises in the opening scenes to tell us the truth for the next hour. But at the end, he reveals to us that our hour was up a long time ago and that for the past 17 minutes, he’s “been lying his head off.” The whole film is a moving discourse on how art is a lie that tells the truth, but perhaps more importantly, it’s also an explanation of why we need such lies. As Welles puts it, right before he bids us good night: “Reality? It’s the toothbrush waiting at home for you in its glass. A bus ticket. A paycheck. And the grave.” — B.E.
Stream F for Fake on HBO Max or rent on iTunes and Amazon Prime Video.
How strange to come of age right when something is ending, though maybe that’s the perpetual lot of college grads who move to New York. In Whit Stillman’s The Last Days of Disco, Chloë Sevigny and Kate Beckinsale arrive in the early 1980s, get entry-level jobs in book publishing, move into a railroad apartment with the help of their parents’ money, and spend most of their time going out to clubs just as the disco scene is falling apart. The characters are really uppercrust tourists in the whole business, but they feel deeply about it, so much so that, as the movie ends, Matt Keeslar’s neurotic, and now also unemployed, former assistant DA gives a whole speech about how “people will laugh about John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John, white polyester suits, and platform shoes, but we had nothing to do with those things and still loved disco.” “Those who didn’t understand will never understand,” he adds. “Disco was much more, and much better, than all that. Disco was too great, and too much fun, to be gone forever.”
It’s one of those overblown youthful statements that’s also kinda true. He and Sevigny then get on the subway, stewing in aimlessness, as the O’Jays’ “Love Train” starts to play. They dance awkwardly, and the film fades to black. But then it returns, now with the whole train car and everyone on the platform dancing too. Suddenly, they really are part of something much bigger than them. — J.M.
Stream The Last Days of Disco with Starz and Philo, and with premium subscriptions on Hulu, Amazon Prime Video and Sling TV, or rent on YouTube, iTunes and Google Play.
The final shot of Losing Ground has Sara Rogers (Seret Scott) acting in a student film, slowly, tearfully raising a prop gun and pulling the trigger on her co-star, Duke (Duane Jones). There’s a reading of that gunshot where her true target is her husband of a decade, Victor (Bill Gunn). After all, Victor’s been philandering for years, and that summer he’s blatantly cultivated a paramour. Maybe she’s finally had it, and we’re getting to watch her set herself free. Losing Ground is a film about the search for ecstasy — Victor’s not just fucking around on Sara, he’s also keeping her at arm’s length from happiness, something Victor finds easily in his art and other women, but that Sara, a bookish philosophy professor, can only imagine. She attempts another way in, a fling with Duke, who seems such a perfect gateway to the “amorphous energy” she’s read about. But Victor sabotages her romance because he needs Sara’s cool rationality to counterbalance his tranced wanderings.
Like so many of Collins’s stories and plays, and so many other great film endings, Losing Ground’s final scene is steeped in the tensions of ambivalent characters stuck in emotional quagmires. Sara’s most instructive relationship is actually with her mother, who, when asked to console a daughter whose husband takes advantage of her levelheadedness, confides: “That’s the quality in you that even I admit to counting on.” Coming just before the gunshot scene, it’s the moment when the tears welling in Sara’s eyes begin to fall, when her solitude balloons, when an easy resolution recedes from view. — Melvin Backman
Stream Losing Ground on the Criterion Channel.
In all of their projects together — The OA, Sound of My Voice, The East — Brit Marling and Zal Batmanglij have proven themselves to be absolute masters of the jigsaw-puzzle narrative. In Sound of My Voice, Marling is Maggie, a cult leader who claims she’s traveled back in time and demands absolute loyalty from her small group of devoted followers in exchange for her wisdom. Unbeknownst (or is it?) to Maggie, two of those followers, Peter (Christopher Denham) and Lorna (Nicole Vicius), are actually fledgling documentary filmmakers attempting to expose Maggie for the con artist they believe her to be (or do they?). Near the end of the film, Maggie asks Peter to prove his fealty by bringing her a child, Abigail Pritchett (Avery Kristen Pohl), an odd little girl whom Maggie claims is going to grow up to be her mother. At this point, a horrified Lorna decides to deliver Maggie straight to the FBI under the guise of arranging the requested meeting.
But just before the FBI barge in and put Maggie in cuffs, Maggie and Abigail have an impossible moment: Both wordlessly perform the cult’s elaborate secret handshake. “How do you know my secret handshake?” asks Abigail. “You taught it to me,” says Maggie, her eyes brimming with tears. Peter looks on, his mind entirely blown. Sound of My Voice, like all of Marling and Batmanglij’s art, asks questions about faith, belief, cynicism, vulnerability, the unknown — and rather than answer those questions, it leaves you to consider your own assumptions. — R.H.
Stream Sound of My Voice on HBO Max and with premium subscriptions on Hulu and Amazon Prime Video, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
We’ve written about Moonstruck at great length here at Vulture: how it’s the funniest film ever made about astrologically induced horniness, about love and death and fear and opera and eggs in the hole, about the sheer exuberance and pain of being alive. John Patrick Shanley manages to touch on all of these themes in the film’s final scene, a madcap tribute to familial bonds and being extremely Italian. Johnny Cammareri (Danny Aiello) shows up to tell Loretta Castorini (Cher) he can’t marry her; moments later, his brother Ronny (Nicolas Cage) proposes to her at the breakfast table in front of her entire family, where her mother (Olympia Dukakis) and father (Vincent Gardenia) have just calmly resolved a marital conflict over bowls of oatmeal. Loretta’s grandfather, confused, bursts into tears.
In a span of minutes, everyone at the table experiences nearly every human emotion — anger, jealousy, horror, love, gratitude — only to conclude by pushing aside everything save for love and gratitude, popping the Champagne and toasting joyfully to one another’s happiness. Whereas most rom-coms might end the movie with an image of the happy couple, Moonstruck slowly pulls away from the Castorinis and settles on something else: an old photograph of their ancestors, suggesting, not so subtly, that there’s nothing stronger and more worth protecting than la famiglia. — R.H.
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Having your hero announce, “This just might be my masterpiece,” is certainly a bold way for any filmmaker to end a movie, especially if you immediately cut directly to your own writing and directing credit. But of course that’s how Quentin Tarantino would choose to end his victory of American revenge-movie tropes over the Nazis in his World War II fantasia. His alternate history climaxes with Mélanie Laurent’s Shosanna announcing to the German high command that they are all going to die, literally, through film, in the midst of a fiery massacre.
But then it carries on to a scene where Christoph Waltz’s “Jew Hunter” Hans Landa, who had given up his compatriots in exchange for his life, surrenders to Brad Pitt’s Aldo “The Apache” Raine, the leader of a group of Jewish American soldiers. Instead of letting Landa slip into civilian life as many Nazis did, Aldo announces that he’s going to give him something “he can’t take off,” and carves a swastika into his forehead with his knife. Tarantino, who claims to be one-quarter Cherokee, said at the time that he was “equating the Jews in this situation, in World War II, with the Indians.” The film carries on that queasy equivalence through Pitt’s character, also described as part-Cherokee, and his Jewish squad’s scalping of German soldiers in reductive and stereotypical appropriation of what Tarantino dubbed “Apache resistance.” Like many a bombastic yet unsettling Tarantino ending — as in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood — it’s a triumph of gushy, gory, in-bad-taste movie violence over actual violence, asking, what if schlock rewrote history? — J.M.
Stream Inglourious Basterds on Philo and with a premium subscription on fuboTV, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
Studio Ghibli is responsible for so much wonder, whimsy, and bittersweet delight — and also one of the most devastating endings of all time, courtesy of Isao Takahata’s landmark 1988 World War II film. We know from the first scene that teenage Seita (Tsutomu Tatsumi) is dead. He tells us so himself, his spirit surveying his own battered body as he starves to death in a train station, as indifferent and hurriedly sympathetic travelers pass him by. But knowing that, and knowing that he was carrying around the ashes of his late sister, Setsuko (Ayano Shiraishi), at the time, doesn’t do anything to soften the blow. After the film takes us through the tragedies the two children endure over the course of the war — including the loss of their mother and their desperation after running away from the resentful aunt who takes them in — little Setsuko dies just as her brother uses the last of their money to get her some food. The final shot of their spirits sitting together, overlooking the rebuilt, contemporary cityscape of Kobe, where they used to live, is just about the saddest look forward imaginable. — Alison Willmore
Stream Grave of the Fireflies on Hulu, or rent on Vudu and iTunes.
Ida Lupino, known among other things as the first woman to make a noir in the U.S., filled her story of a hitchhiker on a killing spree with men. The movies she’d made before this tended to revolve around actresses (Not Wanted tackled pregnancy out of wedlock; Never Fear was partially based on Lupino’s own experience with polio; Outrage was the second post-Code Hollywood movie to address rape), but in fictionalizing the story of Billy Cook, the Missouri-born drifter who killed six people (including a family of five) just a couple years before the movie premiered, she turned to a trio of actors (Edmond O’Brien, Frank Lovejoy, William Talman) to bring her stunning indictment of a certain kind of masculinity to life. She puts it plainly in a scene that comes before The Hitch-Hiker’s final act, in which antagonist Emmett Myers forces his captives, two male friends meant to be on a fishing trip, to shoot at cans in each other’s hands — a relentless scene of psychological torture that situates men as the victims of their own violent tendencies.
The film crawls in sequences like this toward a climax that could have been bombastic. But instead, after dragging the audience along on Myers’s sadistic journey, denigrating his prisoners with the goal of setting one against the other, Meyers is brought down not with a bang, but a whimper: After a failed gambit, he’s easily handcuffed by authorities who’ve been on his trail the whole time. His captives are free to walk away, arm in arm, knowing that their commitment to each other served them well; neither prevails as an outright hero. Decades before a generation of bloggers and podcasters made true crime an object of fascination for the 21st-century audience, Lupino made clear that the most horrifying aspect of serial murder is not how difficult is to take a perpetrator down, but how easy it is for him to exist in the first place. — Katherine Brooks
Stream The Hitch-Hiker on Amazon Prime Video, Tubi and Vudu.
Who is sending ominous videotapes to Georges (Daniel Auteuil) and his family? The answer, director Michael Haneke has said, is ultimately less important than the other questions the plot raises — questions of guilt, colonialism, and historical memory. But if you do want to solve the mystery, your eye may be drawn to the film’s final shot: a crowd scene where, if you look closely, you can see two characters we thought were strangers having some sort of conversation. Haneke gives us just enough to set our mind wandering down paths: Is this their first meeting, or do they have a preexisting relationship? And if they haven’t just met, could they be the ones making the tapes? And if they are behind the tapes, why did they do it? — N.J.
Rent Caché on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
John was killed by a drunk driver. Terry went MIA in Vietnam. Steve became an insurance agent. Carl is a writer in Canada. American Graffiti was not the first movie to end with text revealing the fates of the main characters — Army of Shadows, for one, had done it a few years earlier — but it was the most influential, inspiring the epilogues of Animal House, Stand by Me, The Sandlot, and That Thing You Do!, among others. You’ll notice that all those films take place in the innocent days of the late ’50s and early ’60s, an era that acquired a honey-hued glow only a few years later. (Thanks, in part, to the success of American Graffiti.) This literary-inspired flourish became a handy tool for filmmakers looking to nod to the seismic cultural shift to come, and the technique even made its way into music when Bryan Adams used a similar construction on “Summer of ’69.” — N.J.
Stream American Graffiti on HBO Max and with premium subscriptions on Hulu and Amazon Prime Video, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
Sometimes known by the more accurately translated title The Bread and the Vase, Mohsen Makhmalbaf’s key work of the New Iranian Cinema follows the director’s own attempts to re-create the moment when, as a young anti-Shah protester, he stabbed a policeman and went to prison. Also helping out: the policeman himself, who has tracked Makhmalbaf down after 20 years. As they cast and prepare the actors playing their younger selves, the two men separately try to settle old scores with the past and to rewrite the incident according to how they view themselves now. The whole movie builds up to this cinematic re-creation with a disarming mixture of documentary, comedy, and, ultimately, extended tension. And then, it all ends on a very sudden, unexpected freeze-frame that will rock your world — it comes in the middle of the action the film has been leading up to, leaving the audience to decide how to interpret it. Amazingly, audiences tend to burst into applause at this precise moment, in part because Makhmalbaf has calibrated the whole film so well. — B.E.
Rent A Moment of Innocence on Vimeo.
The Descent is a ruthless and wild ride, somehow successfully squeezing at least four different types of terror into one Brian De Palma–level bloody, 110-minute horror film. The first is a trauma narrative that kicks off about five minutes in, when protagonist Sarah (Shauna McDonald) loses her husband and child in a horribly violent car accident. The second — claustrophobia incarnate — begins shortly thereafter, when a PTSD-ridden Sarah and her five close friends descend into an uncharted cave system, where they promptly get trapped and lost. The third centers on a series of humanoid cave monsters who, hungry for land-dwelling human flesh, begin preying on the spelunkers. The fourth and most unsettling horror story explores the ways Sarah and her friends begin to turn on one another underground.
Neil Marshall’s gut-punch ending — which has two incarnations, one of which played nearly everywhere around the world and the other of which Marshall made slightly less bleak for American audiences specifically — pulls it all together brilliantly by returning us to the initial arc of Sarah’s grief. In the original U.K. version, Sarah escapes the cave and races to her car, where she’s confronted with the ghost of her friend Juno (Natalie Mendoza), only to wake up and realize she’d been dreaming and is actually still trapped underground. Now entirely dissociated, she smiles calmly at what she believes to be her dead daughter blowing out a birthday candle as the humanoids slowly close in on her. (The American version leaves the possibility of her escape more open-ended.) It’s hopeless and incredibly grim, but ultimately a cathartic exploration of the impossibility of truly escaping deep grief. — R.H.
Stream The Descent on Amazon Prime Video, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
The Maysles Brothers probably didn’t think that when they got the chance to film the Rolling Stones’ 1969 Altamont Free Concert that the event would turn into a generational catastrophe, thanks to the Hells Angels’ killing of Black audience member Meredith Hunter. The result is both concert doc and procedural, intercutting the performances with the preparations for the event as well as scenes of the Stones themselves viewing the footage afterward. (That last framing device was the brainchild of editor and co-director Charlotte Zwerin.) It all leads up to the remarkable, unnerving image of Mick Jagger watching, frame by frame, the murder of Hunter, and quietly walking away. The freeze-frame on Jagger’s face is inscrutable: Is this a man forever haunted by what he’s seen, or an aloof rock god slinking away from the disaster he helped cause? (Jagger was unhappy with his depiction in the film, for what it’s worth.) This is followed by the title track playing over sunlit scenes of concertgoers walking through the fields toward Altamont, a lyrical coda to what would turn out to be regarded, at least in some corners of the popular imagination, as the death of an entire era. — B.E.
Stream Gimme Shelter on HBO Max, or rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video and Google Play.
The movie that taught an entire generation the meaning of the word meta. It’s the story of Charlie Kaufman (Nicolas Cage) struggling to write the very movie we’re watching — a smart, original adaptation of Susan Orlean’s The Orchid Thief — as his deadbeat brother, Donnie (Cage again), effortlessly coasts into a successful writing career by slavishly following Robert McKee’s storytelling formula. As Charlie gradually defers to the more assertive Donnie, so, too, does the film’s plot: Suddenly there’s more sex, drugs, and even a car chase. On its face, the action-packed climax is artificial and unearned, but that is of course the point. What started as a Charlie movie has now become a Donnie movie. (The script is credited to both of them, though only one of them exists.) Not everyone enjoys the trick — one critic said the movie “ends up slapping its target audience in the face by shooting itself in the foot” — but if you’re on the Kaufmans’ wavelength, it’s rarely been more fun to watch a film disappear up its own asshole. — N.J.
Rent Adaptation on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
Alan J. Pakula’s paranoid The Parallax View — a movie that feels like it was spontaneously generated by the bad political juju of the 1960s — opens with a grisly assassination and cover-up, and over the course of its running time we watch curious but strangely hapless journalist Warren Beatty try to get to the bottom of it. Our hero finds his way into the world of what appears to be a secret organization of assassins, and in the film’s intense, creepy finale, fails to prevent another political assassination and then winds up walking into his own murder. Needless to say, his killing is also covered up, in the same calm, pro forma, we-will-not-be-taking-any-questions stonewalling fashion as the earlier murder. To a society just a decade removed from John F. Kennedy’s assassination (and even closer to the murders of Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr.), it’s a nausea-inducing finale, and it maintains its icy resonance to this day. — B.E.
Stream The Parallax View on Amazon Prime Video and Pluto TV, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
Jane Campion has said that she “didn’t have the nerve at the time” to close The Piano the way she now thinks she should have: with her electively mute heroine Ada (Holly Hunter) drowning alongside her precious instrument. As it exists now, the climactic high point of the film finds Ada looping her foot into the rope attached to her piano after asking that it be thrown overboard, and gets pulled into the water alongside it — a gesture of dark resolution that, like her refusal to speak, seems like something she would not be entirely able to explain. And then she kicks free, a choice she marvels at in the voiceover: “What a death. What a chance. What a surprise. My will has chosen life.” Campion’s initial impulse would have made for a more dramatic conclusion, certainly, than the epilogue in which we see Ada, her daughter Flora (Anna Paquin), and her lover Baines (Harvey Keitel) leading what appears to be a happier life in a new town. But then we couldn’t have had the haunting final touch. Ada confesses that sometimes, at night, she lulls herself to sleep by thinking of her body down there in the sea, tethered above the sunken, where everything is still and silent. We see her there, in the murky waters, and it’s infinitely more unsettling an image for not being literal, and instead being one of comfort. — A.W.
Stream The Piano on Pluto TV or rent on iTunes and Vudu.
The Wicker Man marks one of the freakiest twist endings in horror history: For the duration of the film, both the audience and Detective Neil Howie (Edward Woodward) believe Howie has been summoned to the mystical Summerisle to investigate the reported disappearance of a young girl — but it turns out the island’s incredibly chill, attractive cult members just want to burn him to death inside a massive, man-shaped wicker building as an offering to their pagan gods. The reveal is both elegantly dreamlike and disturbing. Howie, who believes he’s rescued the young girl in question from what ends up being his eventual fate, learns in real time, alongside the audience, that the entire trip has been a ruse, that everyone he’s met has been playacting — and that their beliefs are so fundamentalist, he’ll never be able to talk them out of it. Regardless, he tries to reason with the villagers. “I am a Christian, and I believe in the resurrection,” he tells Christopher Lee’s Lord Summerisle. “It is I who will live again, and not your damned apples.” They don’t believe him, nor do they care to listen; as Howie burns and screams inside the wicker structure, they drown him out with a cheerful song about the imminence of summertime. The ending is as chilling and startling as it is riffable — we’ve seen its direct influence in everything from Nicolas Cage’s unhinged Wicker Man to Midsommar. — R.H.
Rent The Wicker Man on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
In Maren Ade’s nearly three-hour-long Toni Erdmann, each scene, each bit of dialogue, is fresh and unpredictable. The whole thing is an exercise in excruciating build-up and explosive payoff: For two hours we watch uptight, miserable corporate executive Ines (Sandra Hüller) ignore and lash out at her father Winfried (Peter Simonischek), a sad, lovable clown of a man who can’t help but turn everything in life into a sweet little practical joke. When Winfried realizes just how despondent and detached Ines truly is, he creates and becomes the titular character — a goofy, false-teeth-sporting, bewigged life coach — in order to reach her. He nearly fails, until the film’s final scenes, when he shows up to her apartment on her birthday, flowers in hand, dressed in a gigantic mask and bodysuit made of hair. Ines, naked both literally and emotionally, follows Winfried to a local park, where the two have a breakthrough, finally able to see past their shortcomings and embrace as two lost souls.
When they meet again at a funeral in Berlin, Winfried briefly explains himself: He’s just trying to turn everything into a memorable moment, so he can capture the elusive present, which he recognizes now is an impossible task. Ines, for the first time, tries to meet him on his level, putting in false teeth and popping on a kooky hat. Thrilled, he runs off to grab a camera, and the moment is, ironically, lost. Ines pulls off the disguise and stares off into space. It’s unclear if she’s sad, pondering the brief time she and her father were able to transcend the endless static, or thinking about something else entirely. — R.H.
Rent Toni Erdmann on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
By the year The Social Network came out, birth-to-death biopics had gone out of style, which is lucky for the filmmakers, since Mark Zuckerberg was only 26 at the time. Instead, the idea was to find a specific episode that would stand in and represent the whole life, which, in the hands of Aaron Sorkin and David Fincher, became Zuckerberg’s battle for sole ownership of the Facebook empire. At film’s end, Jesse Eisenberg’s Zuck is now so rich he can simply pay all the former friends he betrayed to go away. (“In the scheme of things, it’s a speeding ticket,” his lawyer says.) But it’s not the triumph he, or we, might have expected. Completely victorious and completely alone, he turns for solace to Facebook, where he sends out a long-shot friend request to the girl who once dumped him. Even the man who created the monster isn’t immune to its simulacrum of human connection. If you want a picture of the future, imagine a lonely nerd online-stalking his ex, forever. — N.J.
Stream The Social Network on Netflix, or rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
Israeli filmmaker Ari Folman’s 2008 documentary uses animation to contend with the effects of guilt and the slipperiness of memory, but its most striking moment comes at its end, when it switches, abruptly, to live-action. Throughout the film, Folman tries to reckon with the amnesia he developed around the time of the 1982 Lebanon War, when he was a 19-year-old soldier. Animation becomes a way of realizing onscreen both those gaps and the nightmares of a friend who also served at the time — especially when it comes to what the filmmaker remembers of the night of the Sabra and Shatila massacre, when the IDF stood by while hundreds to thousands of refugees and other civilians were killed. At first it comes to him only as a strangely beautiful tableau in which he bathes in the ocean and watches as flares fall on torn-up West Beirut. It’s after talking to fellow former soldiers and reporters that he comes to terms with what he was really doing that night, and his feelings of culpability. An account of the carnage gives way to actual, horrifying footage from the aftermath of the killing, with women wailing in grief and bodies piled in the street, the squishy subjectivity of human recollection replaced by brutal reality. — A.W.
Rent Waltz with Bashir on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
Christopher Nolan loves an obsessive, and in his dueling-magicians movie The Prestige, he gets to tell a story about two of them. Well, technically, three of them, though identical twins Alfred and Freddy Borden (Christian Bale) have effectively been sharing a single life, including the women they’ve married or taken as lovers. That realization, coming after one of the brothers is hanged for murder, serves as the ending’s first big reveal, bringing with it the shock of the immensity of their commitment to their calling. And still, it’s nothing on what Borden’s rival, Robert Angier (Hugh Jackman), has up his sleeve. As the film ends, and Angier dies, he confesses that whenever he uses the machine built for him by Nikola Tesla to replicate Borden’s teleportation trick, it creates a copy of himself who’s then drowned in a waiting tank of water. Angier dies surrounded by dead versions of himself, an image that rhymes with a certain Jane Campion conclusion that’s on this list, but that also serves as a monstrous metaphor for what it means to make sacrifices to your art. — A.W.
Stream The Prestige on Amazon Prime Video or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
How do you qualify an ending as iconic and influential as Casablanca’s? It would be impossible to list all the works that rip off, steal from, and pay homage to this finale, which contains the oft-quoted lines “Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but soon and for the rest of your life” and “Here’s looking at you, kid.” But it’s the final line that makes the moment — “I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship” — which Rick (Humphrey Bogart) delivers to Louis (Claude Rains, reminding everyone why he was one of the best character actors to ever exist) as they walk into the fog to face their uncertain, but more morally upright futures. It’s tricky to fully capture the power of this film, seen as stuffy by contemporary detractors who can’t appreciate the platinum poise and silken qualities of the story. This is the might of the classic Hollywood studio system firing on all cylinders — the acting sings, the use of shadows envelope, the emotional dimensions are richly expansive. It’s what happens when a great film does in fact land on a great ending. — A.J.B.
Stream Casablanca on HBO Max, or rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, iTunes and Vudu.
Few movie endings are as despairing as the sight of ambitious, brooding George Eastman (Montgomery Clift) making his way to his execution at the end of George Stevens’s classic adaptation of Theodore Dreiser’s An American Tragedy. Despairing … and also philosophically thorny. Eastman has been convicted of killing his girlfriend Alice Tripp (Shelley Winters) in part because he was so mad with desire for gorgeous society scion Angela Vickers (Elizabeth Taylor). His defense has rested on the question of thought versus action: He had thought of killing Alice, he confessed, but he couldn’t go through with the plan. In the film’s closing minutes, however, Stevens turns this into a spiritual question: Whom did George see in his mind at the time? The helpless, working-class girl he was unable to save as she drowned, or the beautiful, wealthy Angela, the symbol of his ambition and the upper-class life he could never have? And so, as George walks, he sees (and so do we) images of Angela. The spell has still not been broken. We are as condemned as he is. — B.E.
Stream A Place in the Sun on Pluto TV and Amazon Prime Video, or rent on YouTube, Google Play, Vudu and iTunes.
In some of history’s scariest movies, there is no end to the horror and no sense of closure. The Blair Witch Project, the surprise indie hit that smartly deployed the internet to make audiences believe in its mythology before they had even taken their movie-theater seats, understands this. Within its found-footage-from-a-faux-documentary framework, it leads to a place that, like virtually every bone-chilling moment in the movie, is more disturbing for what it doesn’t show than for what it actually does. In the final moments of this investigation into a Burkittsville, Maryland, entity responsible for killing young children over decades, allegedly by forcing a third party to stand in a corner while the murders of two others are committed, Montgomery College student filmmakers Heather (Heather Donohue) and Mike (Michael C. Williams) wander around a creepy cabin deep in the woods, hoping to find Josh (Joshua Leonard), the other member of their trio. The sounds of Mike and Heather shouting for Josh and their feet running up and down stairs are all we hear. The possibility of Josh — or worse, something or someone else — suddenly popping into the frame looms around every turn.
Then the movie goes to the basement. That’s where Mike’s Hi-8 camcorder camera gets dropped on the ground, and through Heather’s stark, black-and-white 16mm footage, we see the final image of The Blair Witch Project: Mike standing in a corner, his back facing out, as Heather screams and her camera, too, gets knocked to the ground. We do not get any gory imagery, but we know exactly what’s happened. Filmmakers Eduardo Sánchez and Daniel Myrick let our imaginations do the work of making sense of the ending, knowing full well that doing so ensures that our brain cells will hold on to the discomfiting horror of it for a long time. After all, legends about witches only continue to thrive if human beings believe fully in what their eyes, and their camera lenses, don’t see. — J.C.
Stream The Blair Witch Project on Netflix, or rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
With the authorities nipping at their heels, Thelma (Geena Davis) and Louise (Susan Sarandon) are faced with a choice: prison, or continue to run. It’s Thelma who suggests, as they look out toward the majesty of the Grand Canyon, “Let’s not get caught. Let’s keep going.” Louise hits the gas and they launch over the cliff, the film ending on a freeze-frame of the convertible suspended midair. This could of course feel deeply tragic, but instead it makes my heart soar watching the ways two women decide to live (and die) on their own terms rather than fall prey to societal and patriarchal forces closing in on them. This ending wasn’t set in stone, with director Ridley Scott suggesting to Sarandon that while her character would definitely perish, Thelma’s fate wasn’t as inflexible. Thankfully, the story sticks to the ending scripted by writer Callie Khouri, a bold, feminist-minded, and achingly sincere finale that highlights the strength of the bond between these women. — A.J.B.
Rent Thelma & Louise on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
Vanity is not for the weak of spirit. The Broadway star Madeline Ashton (Meryl Streep) and her best frenemy, the best-selling author Helen Sharp (Goldie Hawn), claw their way toward the next implant or brow lift. In Death Becomes Her, the duo gets their hands on a magic potion that leaves their every feature perfectly plumped — and their wrists without a pulse. By the end of the movie, they’re less focused on looking young than they are satisfied to just look alive: They smear on paint instead of foundation, paint thinner instead of moisturizer. There was a man they used to fuss over — Bruce Willis, whose complexion is always hilariously corpse-y — but he’s long gone. The price of their beauty is living forever, just long enough to turn up at his funeral. As they’re doing their usual fussing, eyebrows and lips sliding down their faces, Helen trips on one of their used paint cans. Old habits and all that, Madeline pauses before she reaches to help her. Why not let the old girl fall? Helen has the same instinct, and they both go down together. They tumble over the stairs, split into a dozen limbs, the music that soundtracked Battleship Potemkin’s runaway baby-carriage scene played for laughs. They’re spray-paint soul mates, after all. It’s the perfect ending to Robert Zemeckis’s Technicolor gonzo confection about friendship and beauty and the mysteries of both: All these women need is each other, and a bit of Bondo on the chin, babe. — Hunter Harris
Stream Death Becomes Her on HBO Max and with premium subscriptions on Hulu or Amazon Prime Video, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Vudu or Google Play.
Ingmar Bergman loved bleak, ambiguous endings that encouraged his audience to ponder the futility of the human condition (think: Persona, Hour of the Wolf, Cries and Whispers). But with Fanny and Alexander, which he described as his most autobiographical work, Bergman took the rare step of concluding a movie joyfully, with something resembling life-affirmation. In fact, its entire mind-bending final act is hopeful, arguing for the existence of a world filled with magic, mystery, and unconditional love — all things Bergman seemed to question earlier in his career.
In the final series of scenes, our young and jaded protagonist Alexander Ekdahl (Bertil Guve) is rescued, along with his sister Fanny (played by Pernilla Allwin), from his evil stepfather by a gentle rabbi who hides them away inside a sort of magical, ever-expanding curio workshop. There, Alexander meets and is forever altered by an ethereal figure named Ismael, who imbues in him a fresh sense of wonder. When he is returned to his family home, which he’d once thought lost forever, Alexander curls up with his beloved grandmother, who reads to him from August Strindberg’s A Dream Play as he drifts off to sleep: “Everything is possible and probable. Time and space do not exist. Only a flimsy framework of reality. The imagination spins, weaving new patterns.” The lines between states of being are now permanently blurred, but this isn’t the cause for alarm that it was earlier in Bergman’s work; it marks an appreciation for the expanse and generosity of the human imagination, for our collective ability to get comfortable with the unknown instead of rage against it.
F&A was intended to be Bergman’s final film, and to watch it is to see the evolutionary endpoint of his perspective, which moved from a kind of nihilism to something much deeper and warmer. — R.H.
Stream Fanny and Alexander on HBO Max, or rent on iTunes and Amazon Prime Video.
At the end of Akira Kurosawa’s immortal crime saga, Toshiro Mifune’s businessman finally faces the man who kidnapped his driver’s son (and led Mifune’s character to ruin). The kidnapper has been sentenced to death. As the two men sit facing one another, their faces merge in the reflection on the glass partition separating them, symbolic of the fact that they are, in some ways, similar. Both came from nothing, but while one rose to prominence and success in the boom years of postwar Japan, the other found only hatred, madness, and crime. It seems as if there might be a human connection between them, but then the kidnapper starts screaming, out of control, and is taken away. Suddenly the partition is closed. Mifune is left to face his own reflection, and what brief link they might have found has dissolved. It’s a strikingly grim finale to a film that, up until now, has been very deliberate and methodical in its storytelling. A lot of crime movies deny us closure by the very end, but Kurosawa’s does it with incredible poignancy and power; until that final shot, we may not have realized that we’ve really been watching a movie about two men who are effectively two sides of the same coin. — B.E.
Rent High and Low on iTunes and Amazon Prime Video.
The final act of Barry Jenkins’s Moonlight begins with a heartbreaking transformation: The reedy, sensitive boy of the first two parts has grown into a hardened man. His grill, his muscles, his silence — everything about adult Chiron (Trevante Rhodes) is a wall keeping others away. A late-night reunion with childhood love Kevin (André Holland) crackles with the emotion of old-school melodrama. Will Chiron admit how much Kevin means to him, or will he keep up the pretense that he’s just visiting an old friend? Kevin chips away at his armor, question by question, until he comes to the heart of the matter: “Who is you?” It’s an agonizing question, and it’s what finally breaks Chiron, who admits he hasn’t been physically touched since the night they shared years ago. As the two men embrace, we cut to a shot of 7-year-old Chiron on the beach. It’s a mark of confidence for Chiron — the man has let the boy out again — and also for Jenkins. In nodding to the final shot of Truffaut’s The 400 Blows, he was consciously putting himself in conversation with the greats. — N.J.
Stream Moonlight on Netflix, or rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
In their endings, the Coen brothers tend to reveal an extra dimension to their stories, suggesting a secret through line that has always been there, lurking just under the surface. Well, this is the greatest example: In the Coens’ freewheeling caper-comedy-action, Nicolas Cage and Holly Hunter play a couple who, unable to conceive, steal a newborn from a local furniture mogul who has too many. Paced like a runaway train and filled with both broad, surreal humor and delirious action scenes, the film doesn’t dare pause to take a breath, until its incredible finale, in which Cage’s H.I. McDunnough has a vision of himself and his wife growing old, raising a family, and sitting with their kids and grandkids around a big old dinner table. It’s an incredibly tender image, and — coming at the end of a movie that hasn’t previously had much room for such sincerity — it is thoroughly overwhelming. — B.E.
Stream Raising Arizona with premium subscriptions on Amazon Prime Video and Hulu, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
The definition of “Hollywood ending” should simply be a recounting of the difference between the conclusion of George Sluizer’s 1988 thriller The Vanishing and the Dutch filmmaker’s own 1993 English-language remake. The Vanishing is a horror story terrifying in its mundane details — a man and a woman are on vacation when the woman disappears at a rest stop and is never seen again. The man eventually moves on to a new relationship, but can’t let the past go. When a stranger contacts him, identifying himself as the kidnapper and claiming to be able to reveal what happened if the man agrees to go through everything his girlfriend did, the man can’t help himself. Here’s where the big divergence happens: In the American version, which stars Kiefer Sutherland, this leads to the new girlfriend riding to the rescue, and to the baddie being defeated. In the original, though, it leads to a conclusion so sublimely dark it’s enough to haunt dreams. The main character, played by Gene Bervoets, is poured a cup of drugged coffee by the perpetrator, and after raging fruitlessly, he decides he has to know, and drinks it. He awakens in a box underground, buried alive the way his dead love was, while the pair’s killer goes back to his respectable life. In a nightmarish way, everyone gets what they want. — A.W.
Stream The Vanishing with a premium subscription on Amazon Prime Video, or rent on iTunes.
To the residents of the low-cost motels that dot Route 192, Walt Disney World is like the sun: a necessary part of the ecosystem, but you shouldn’t try to touch it, or even look at it directly. Disney is for other people; the closest 6-year-old Moonee (Brooklynn Prince) can get is watching the nightly fireworks over the horizon. So the motel becomes her theme park, a world of freewheeling joy untouched by the hand of a global corporation. But her world is also fragile, and it shatters in one heartbreaking moment — at which point the film suddenly switches from 35 mm to iPhone video, and Moonee and her best friend Jancey (Valeria Cotto) flee hand in hand into the Magic Kingdom. Then the film cuts to black. There’s no Graduate-style rude awakening here: The girls get to live forever in that fleeting moment where the park really does live up to its billing as the most magical place on earth. — N.J.
Stream The Florida Project on Netflix, or rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu or Google Play.
Trapped in a house and glued to the news because the great un-distanced masses are carrying a rapidly spreading deadly disease outside? I’ve never heard of such a thing! The ending of George Romero’s genre-defining zombie movie Night of the Living Dead (it’s so genre-defining that the shambling, flesh-eating monsters aren’t even called zombies yet … they’re “ghouls”) isn’t scary for the reasons you expect. The hero, Ben (Duane Jones) has survived through the night thanks to his cool-headed ingenuity, as the other characters holed up in the farmhouse with him succumbed one-by-one to the invasion. The sun rises, the posse of zombie-huntin’ vigilantes makes their way to the farmhouse with their guns and their dogs, and they shoot Ben through the window. They slap one another on the backs — another ghoul felled! — and police photos of Ben’s body being carted away and eventually burned in a fire roll with the credits over the ambient sounds of the posse.
It’s bleak, and the bleakness boils down to more than just innocent confusion over Ben’s humanity. Ben is a strong and heroic Black lead, still rare in a movie with a mostly white ensemble in the ’60s, and the posse is made up of white Southerners, whose zealous mission to eradicate the zombies reads eerily as the consequences of sundown-town racism. From the posse’s vantage point, we can see Ben holding a gun, carrying himself like a man and not a zombie. Whether or not the hunters made a mistake, or saw him as less-than-human the whole time, is left ambiguous. A simple misunderstanding would make this ending a tragedy. Instead, it’s an indictment. — R.A.
Rent Night of the Living Dead on YouTube or Google Play.
Dirk Diggler’s penis is the Jaws shark of Boogie Nights. Everyone knows that Dirk, the protagonist played by Mark Wahlberg in Paul Thomas Anderson’s gonzo portrait of the porn industry in the 1970s and ’80s, is hauling a lot of cargo below the belt. It’s Dirk’s calling card in that world and what makes him famous. But we never actually see the thing, played by Mark Wahlberg’s prosthetic appendage, until the final scene, much the way the Great White in Jaws doesn’t show his chompers until that blockbuster’s third act. (Anderson even frames the moment in those terms: “I kept thinking, This is exactly like seeing the dinosaur in Jurassic Park or seeing the shark in Jaws or seeing E.T. for the first time.”)
After a long tracking shot through porn patriarch Jack Horner’s house, the camera settles on Dirk, who has returned to the adult-film world after crashing and burning outside of it. He’s dressed in what could pass for a Miami Vice Halloween costume and nervously running lines in the mirror for the scene he’s about to shoot. Then he stands, unbuckles his white trousers, and pulls out that famous 13-inch organ, which is, indeed, jarringly large. “I’m a star,” he repeats. “I am a big, bright, shining star.” His face is no longer in the frame. Dirk is only visible from the neck down. It is a dehumanizing moment, a money shot that gives the audience its payoff — hey, we finally saw the thing! — and makes us feel cheap for ever wanting it. After zipping up, Dirk punches the air a few times to psych himself up and leaves his dressing room while ELO’s “It’s a Living Thing” — a double entendre of a song choice — begins to play. — J.C.
Stream Boogie Nights on Hulu, or rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
The expression on Theresa Russell’s face at the end of Bad Timing is that of someone who was burned alive and who emerged from the experience stronger, tempered like steel. Nicolas Roeg’s 1980 movie is the story of a toxic relationship that’s folded up like a mystery. It jumps back and forth in time from when the free-spirited Milena Flaherty (Russell) and possessive psychoanalyst Alex Linden (Art Garfunkel) meet in Vienna, and when Milena is being treated for a possible suicide attempt. Just how bad it gets between them as they spiral into ugliness — and what Alex does to the object of his obsession, and what he doesn’t take responsibility for — becomes the stuff of a bleak reveal. But then there’s that coda, in which there’s one final encounter between the two in passing in New York, Milena piling out of a taxi in front of the Waldorf Astoria and Alex getting into one. He glances up and sees her, and the camera zooms in on the scar on her throat from the procedure that allowed her to survive an overdose. He calls out her name, but she only stares down at him, impassive and entirely done, and then walks away. It’s the gesture of someone flaunting her own survival in the face of her abuser, with the pain she endured written right onto her skin. — A.W.
Rent Bad Timing on iTunes or Amazon Prime Video.
Hal Ashby’s Being There is a prescient, pitch-perfect satire of the superficiality and platitudinal meaninglessness of modern life. Chance the gardener-turned-Chauncey Gardiner (Peter Sellers) is a man whose entire world has been limited to caring for another man’s flora and watching copious amounts of television. When that man dies, and Chance is forced to leave the mansion he’s spent his entire life in — looking the part of a rich white man himself — he becomes something of a tabula rasa onto which the outsiders he soon encounters project their expectations. A dying millionaire (Melvyn Douglas) finds the empty-headed Chance to be a trustworthy friend and future business leader. The actual president of the United States believes him to be a keen political mind. A wealthy, soon-to-be widow (Shirley MacLaine) falls desperately in love with him. The much-debated, suddenly whimsical end of the film sees Chance literally walking on water, implying, perhaps, that Chance is an allegorical Christ figure, whatever that might mean to Ashby — maybe he’s poking fun at us for being as gullible as his characters, or perhaps he’s suggesting that Jesus was a sort of similarly projected-upon cipher. But it’s also possible Ashby’s implying that the only thing stopping us from walking on water is the belief that we can’t: As Chance strolls across the lake, we hear the president intone, “Life is a state of mind.” However you interpret it, it’s the rare movie conclusion that’s genuinely enigmatic, borne out in the fact we’ve been chewing on it for a few decades now. — R.H.
Stream Being There on HBO Max, or rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
Has any character ascending stairs ever been as powerful as Catherine Sloper (Olivia de Havilland) at the end of William Wyler’s The Heiress? For most of its run time, The Heiress is a stately, detailed portrait of a young woman whose controlling, rich father (Ralph Richardson) is deeply disappointed in her plainness and will remind anyone he can how she doesn’t hold a candle to her deceased mother. In many ways, The Heiress is a film about power. By the end, the balance has shifted in Catherine’s favor: She inherited her father’s great wealth in the wake of heartbreak over Morris Townsend (Montgomery Clift), who left her before their plans to rush a wedding could be executed. Years later, Morris tries to snake his way back into her heart, and Catherine puts on what we eventually learn is a ruse, convincing him that they can marry now despite the past betrayal. But when he returns to her home, the doors are bolted and the windows draped. He beats against the door as Catherine — lit by the lamp in her hand — ascends that staircase wearing a facial expression that can only be read as triumphant. Here is what it looks like for a woman to live, unabashedly, on her own terms. — A.J.B.
Stream The Heiress with premium subscriptions on Hulu or Sling TV.
Harold Shand, the Cockney gangster brought to snarling life by Bob Hoskins, is a man who knows how to coin a memorable phrase. He sums up the global contributions of England versus the U.S. like so: “Culture, sophistication, genius … a little bit more than an ‘ot dog.” Here’s him on a late, exploded colleague: “Apart from his arsehole being 50 yards away from his brains … he ain’t too happy.” And his most famous boast needs no explanation: “The Mafia? I’ve shit ‘em.” So it’s all the more striking when, having been caught in a trap from which there’s no escape, Harold is suddenly wordless. Instead, for two long minutes we simply watch the emotions play out on Hoskins’s face: confusion, fear, anger, incredulity, and then finally, acceptance. As we’ve already made clear, ending a film on such a close-up has since become a popular filmmaking flex, but it was Hoskins who set the bar future generations would measure themselves against. — N.J.
Stream The Long Good Friday on the Criterion Channel.
Satyajit Ray’s classic “Apu Trilogy” is both a collective cinematic bildungsroman as well as a tale of relentless loss. Our protagonist, Apu, is faced with tragedy in each installment — from the death of his beloved older sister to that of his mom. In this third installment, he loses his young wife in childbirth, and can’t even bear to face his newborn son. After years of drifting on his own, and giving up on his writing career, Apu finally returns to see the boy, only for his son to angrily reject him. Their reconciliation doesn’t happen until closing frames of the film, and Ray builds up to it with such queasy mastery that it’s hard not to find yourself awash in tears right as the credits start to roll. It all makes for a great, surprisingly joyous ending not just to this film, but to the entire trilogy. — B.E.
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Brian Cohen (Graham Chapman) has been mistaken for the Messiah one too many times; now he’s strung up on a cross waiting to die. But before he does, here comes Eric Idle’s cheerful Cockney on the next cross over to sing a little ditty about staying optimistic through times of trouble. (“When you’re chewing on life’s gristle / Don’t grumble, give a whistle.”) It’s a joke, of course — if there’s one situation where a frown might be permitted, it’s crucifixion — but, weirdly enough, “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life” is so catchy that it actually does do exactly what it says on the tin. Just ask the British sailors who sang it after their ship sank in the Falklands. — N.J.
Stream Monty Python’s Life of Brian on Netflix, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video or Google Play.
A sad discovery from a card-carrying Anglophile: This Swinging ’60s caper comedy doesn’t hold up as a film nearly as well as I’d hoped, but the ending — that’s still killer. Having pulled off a delightful heist on the streets of Turin, Michael Caine & Co. ditch their iconic Minis, load their haul of stolen bullion onto a bus, and head for Switzerland. Mission accomplished, in perfect style. But thanks to some movie high jinks, the bus ends up teetering on the edge of a cliff, Caine and the boys on one end, the gold on the other. Any attempt to retrieve it only places it further out of reach. “Hang on a minute, lads,” Caine says. “I’ve got a great idea.” Whatever that plan is, we don’t see it. The camera pans away with the bus still perilously seesawing on the ledge. Predating the similarly ambiguous ending of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid by a few months, the cliffhanger was originally intended to set up a sequel. Though that didn’t end up happening, the scene still works as a perfect time capsule of its era — the crazed optimism of the ’60s frozen in amber. — N.J.
Stream The Italian Job on Amazon Prime Video and CBS All Access, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Vudu or Google Play.
Of course, this wasn’t the only Ang Lee ending considered for this list; Brokeback Mountain (2005) was also discussed. But it’s Lust, Caution by which I feel fully enraptured. The image of Tony Leung as Mr. Yee, with his hand slowly grazing the bed his lover once slept in, cuts me to the quick. There’s something achingly sad and poignant in this moment that makes the film sing at the mournful register it aims for. The fate of all those involved hinges on a single pink diamond ring. When faced with it, Wong Chia Chi (Tang Wei) is so overcome by her love for Yee, she urges him to leave, revealing to him an assassination plot that’s been unfolding around him. In doing so, she effectively ensures her own death as well as the deaths of her co-conspirators. That’s when we find Yee on her bed, reminiscing. The score overwhelms. The blocking and shot composition highlights the utter desolation. The acting captures the tricky particulars of love formed on the basis of deception. Ultimately, the sequences that comprise this ending cut like the edge of a freshly sharpened blade: precisely, and with an ability to draw blood. — A.J.B.
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There’s a reason Vulture named Melancholia the best film of the 2010s. As our film critic Alison Willmore wrote at the time, “Lars von Trier’s 2011 magnum opus is a film about depression, and it’s a film about the end of the world, and more than anything, it’s a profoundly resonant film about how the two can feel indistinguishable from one another.” Melancholia is both beautiful and disconcerting to watch, with a rare honesty about what those apocalypses — both personal and planet-wide — would actually look and feel like. It’s something we almost never get to see onscreen; the Bruce Willises and the Dennis Quaids usually manage to scramble to the rescue before it’s too late. But Melancholia goes all the way, burning it down, literally and figuratively.
The final scene sees Kirsten Dunst’s Justine building a “magical cave” with her nephew Leo (Liam Smith/Alexander Artemov) and her terrified sister Claire (Charlotte Gainsbourg), all gripping one another’s hands as the rogue planet Melancholia barrels toward Earth. Where most movies might fade to black, Melancholia stays trained on its characters’ faces: Justine’s quiet sadness; Leo’s blind trust; Claire’s profound horror. We watch the planets collide, unleashing flames that consume the trio — and the entire Earth — in seconds. At the end of Melancholia, just as Leo puts it at the end of the world, “There’s nowhere to hide.” — R.H.
Stream Melancholia on Tubi, Vudu and with a premium subscription on Hulu, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video or Google Play.
A great needle drop can make an ending, and Lynne Ramsay’s 2002 film features one of the greatest, juxtaposed over a scene it clearly doesn’t match. It’s one of the tracks on the mixtape left to the title character (Samantha Morton) by her boyfriend. Morvern Callar is an elliptical film about the mysteries of mourning that finds its heroine hiding her lover’s body and taking his manuscript, and his money, for her own — an act of seemingly ruthless self-interest that’s counterbalanced by the way she wraps herself in the music he left for her like it’s a protective garment. Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazlewood’s “Some Velvet Morning” turns a trudge through the grocery store where Morvern works into something dreamlike and distant. And the Mamas & the Papas’ sumptuous version of “Dedicated to the One I Love” blossoms over the final scene, after Morvern has left behind life in Scotland and everything she knows for new terrain. She’s in a club somewhere, out on a dance floor full of people bouncing and gyrating in slow motion. The flickers of light illuminate Morton’s smooth oval face and fathomless eyes, as well as the headphones she has in, as her character moves through the crowd. She’s with them and alone at the same time, and nothing can touch her. — A.W.
Stream Morvern Callar on Amazon Prime Video.
Studio-note serendipity. An American oil man (Peter Riegert) has fallen in love with an enchanting Scottish village, but now he’s back home with only a pocketful of seashells and some memories. He looks out at the Houston skyline, a million miles away from the place that changed his life. Cut to black, roll credits … until Warner Bros. asked director Bill Forsyth if he couldn’t send viewers out on a happier note. Forsyth didn’t want to ruin this idiosyncratic film with a big Hollywood ending, but, as he later revealed, he only had a day to think of something else. The filmmaker found his solution in B-roll: a throwaway wide shot that highlighted the red phone booth that serves as the town’s only link to the outside world. Forsyth put it in, added a sound effect of a telephone ring, and voilà, a bittersweet ending got slightly sweeter — that million miles doesn’t seem so far away after all. — N.J.
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What may be the swooniest closing scene on here is notable for being, as promised by the title, never quite a love story. Peter Chan’s 1996 film is at least as much a migrant drama about two people whose trajectories bring them temporarily together, then fling them away from one another before they can admit they’ve fallen in love. Naïve Xiao-Jun (Leon Lai) and wheeling-dealing Qiao (Maggie Cheung) meet as lonely mainlanders trying to make it in Hong Kong, bonding over a shared love for pop star Teresa Teng and pretending they care more about their plans than each other. The movie follows the two after commitments and aspirations pull them apart, tracking the reversals of fortune that eventually have them both washing up in New York. And it’s there, far from home, that Xiao-Jun and Qiao find one another again by chance, both of them walking the streets of an indifferent city while poleaxed by the news that the singer they loved so much has died. Qiao comes to a stop in front of a storefront filled with televisions playing footage of Teng, and then Xiao-Jun does as well. It’s a moment of grief that slowly, perfectly, gives way to something else as they turn and see whom they’re standing next to, breaking into smiles of joy and disbelief. It may not be a love story, but at that moment, you can tell it’s about to become one — if you can even see through the tears. — A.W.
Comrades is not currently available to stream or rent in the U.S.
A showpiece of earned cynicism. In a film based on actual events in director Costa-Gravras’s native Greece, the leader of the opposition in an unnamed Mediterranean country has been killed by right-wing paramilitaries. Eventually, a straight-arrow magistrate is appointed to investigate the death, and he discovers a shocking cover-up that stretches into the senior ranks of the government. In the end, the truth is exposed: Four high-ranking generals are indicted for murder. But if it’s a triumph for the good guys, why does the leader’s widow look so sad? Because she knows it’s not really the end yet. A newscast informs us that the key witnesses all died before the trial, the killers received light sentences, and the generals saw their charges dropped. The resulting scandal seemed likely to power the opposition to victory in the upcoming elections … but then there was a military coup. (A second newscast then reveals the original newscaster got thrown in jail for disclosing government secrets.) It’s a pitch-black vision of what happens when the powerful get to be their own jurors, a lesson that remains depressingly timely more than 50 years later. — N.J.
Stream Z on HBO Max, or rent on iTunes and Amazon Prime Video.
Steven Spielberg’s movie endings are famous for their sentimentality. E.T. closes with teary eyes and a rainbow streak across the sky. Saving Private Ryan winds down with a love note to veterans, complete with a graveside salute and an American flag blowing in the breeze. Even some of Spielberg’s darker sci-fi, like A.I., Minority Report and War of the Worlds, can’t resist the temptation to wrap on a note of uplift. But the strongest ending in the Spielberg canon, in part because it stands out from the showier conclusions he’s delivered, is the final scene in Raiders of the Lost Ark, a film conceived by George Lucas and Spielberg and scripted by Lawrence Kasdan, that is big in a lot of ways: big star, big adventure, big boulder. Yet it concludes with restraint and a quality that Spielberg didn’t often evoke early in his career: cynicism. After risking life, limb, and excessive exposure to snakes, Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) and Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen) finally recover the Ark of the Covenant from the clutches of the Nazis and hand it over to the U.S. government. Officials assure Dr. Jones that the Ark will be handled with care, but he has doubts.
The final scene validates those doubts: The last thing Spielberg shows us is a large warehouse where the crate that houses the Ark is being placed in storage alongside an endless array of other identical crates. The government is doing the opposite of what an archaeologist like Jones seeks to do. It is burying a treasure. Spielberg keeps panning out wider and wider, revealing how vast the collection of boxes is while the worker pushing the one that contains the Ark, a crate labeled “Top Secret,” shrinks smaller and smaller until he’s lost in the space. The last image in this adventure is not of our hero in all his swashbuckling glory, but an acknowledgement that in a flawed system, an incredibly powerful, valuable religious artifact is just another piece of inventory. — J.C.
Stream Raiders of the Lost Ark on CBS All Access and with a premium subscription on Amazon Prime Video, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
The seminal closing-with-a-smile finale has to be the one in Charlie Chaplin’s 1931 milestone, which ends on an exquisitely choreographed sequence in which the Tramp, Chaplin’s famous recurring character, reunites with the no longer blind flower girl (Virginia Cherrill) he devoted himself to helping. She always believed her guardian angel was a rich man, and here the Tramp is, fresh out of prison and being taunted in his tattered suit by the newsboys, a ridiculous figure she giggles at, not knowing his identity. But she’s still kindhearted, so she makes him an offering of a flower and a coin, and it’s when she reaches out to him to insist on giving him the money that everything changes. She stops, and her smile fades, as she recognizes the touch of his hands from the time before she regained her sight. “You can see now?” he asks her, abashed, and she answers that she can, and as she clasps his hand to her chest, it’s clear that she means it in more than just the literal sense. His answering smile feels like it could be a beacon over decades of dark nights — providing a final-shot template that movies going forward would look to. — A.W.
Stream City Lights on HBO Max, and rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
Errol Morris’s groundbreaking documentary follows the case of Randall Dale Adams, who’s serving a life sentence for the murder of a police officer. Morris is convinced that the real killer is a man named David Harris, and over the course of the film, we gradually become convinced, too. For reasons known only to himself, Harris agreed to take part in the film, but during his final interview, the camera broke. Morris had no choice but to tape-record the rest of the session and hope he got something usable. Boy, did he. In a spellbinding scene, we hear Harris all but confess to the murder — “I’m the one that knows” — his words all the more chilling because we can’t see his face. Morris’s film eventually helped Adams get out of prison, a high that true-crime filmmakers have been chasing ever since. — N.J.
Stream The Thin Blue Line with premium subscriptions on Sling TV and Amazon Prime Video, or rent on YouTube, iTunes and Google Play.
Music is central to so many of the endings on this list, whether it be in the context of a climactic song-and-dance number or a precisely chosen needle drop. But there’s maybe no choice quite as piquant as that made in the final moments of Robert Altman’s 1975 sprawler. Everyone’s gathered at a fundraising gala for the populist presidential candidate Hal Phillip Walker, who never actually appears onscreen. The fragile country singer Barbara Jean, played by Ronee Blakley, is performing onstage when she’s shot by a character in the audience, throwing the attendees into a panic. As she’s carried off, her status unclear, the ambitious impresario Haven Hamilton (Henry Gibson) rallies the crowd by exhorting everyone to sing, insisting that “this isn’t Dallas,” and, “They can’t do this to us here in Nashville.” The aspiring star Winifred (Barbara Harris) is handed the mic, and she launches into “It Don’t Worry Me,” first with uncertainty, and then with growing confidence as the choir joins in. It’s music as a sedative, and music as a repudiation of reality — a perfectly rousing feel-bad take on a feel-good ending. — A.W.
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At the end of All About Eve, its titular schemer (Anne Baxter) has everything she’s ever desired: She’s usurped Margo Channing (Bette Davis), garnered recognition and praise, and is now heading from the stage to Hollywood. After she wins the defining Sarah Siddons Award, she opts to skip a party being held in her honor to head home, where she finds a young fan, Phoebe (Barbara Bates), just as eager as Eve was at the start of the film. Unbothered by the fact that Phoebe has wiggled into her home, Eve allows the intruder to stay and resigns to rest in another room. That’s when Phoebe puts on Eve’s elegant robe and clutches her award, admiring the reflection in a multi-paneled mirror. One of the reasons All About Eve has endured is due to director Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s lightning bright arc: There will always be Eves nipping at the heels of successful women. It’s a never-ending cycle, and one that has gained resonance in a time when the line between famous and not is as porous as ever. — A.J.B.
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Hitchcock knew how to send audiences out on a big note: Judy jumping from the bell tower in Vertigo, the reveal of Norman’s mother in Psycho. (We will not discuss the scene with the psychiatrist.) But for The Birds, he went smaller and quieter. Having survived a night of winged terror, Tippi Hedren and Rod Taylor emerge at dawn to discover that the avian onslaught has paused, if only for a moment. But the birds are still there, hundreds of them, watching impassively as the humans flee Bodega Bay for good. Hitchcock invests the scene with muted dread. We’ll never know why the birds stopped, or when they might start again. And isn’t that convertible top looking awfully fragile? Only one thing is clear: The beaks shall inherit the earth. — N.J.
Stream The Birds with premium subscriptions on Sling TV and Hulu, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
The Searchers sees John Wayne play one of his least-lovable heroes, a man so consumed with hatred for the Comanches who abducted his young niece that he decides to kill the girl when he learns she’s assimilated into their culture. He ultimately changes his mind, but still, this is not a cuddly guy. Which is why, after he’s scooped her up and brought her back home (a mirror of the film’s opening sequence), he lingers on the doorstep, unable to cross the threshold. He doesn’t belong in the land of happy endings; his place is outside, in the world of violence that’s slowly fading into the past. The famous shot of Wayne silhouetted against the doorframe is both painfully human — the Duke was never so vulnerable as in those few wordless seconds — yet suffused with the weight of myth. No wonder it inspired a whole generation of imitators. — N.J.
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“This life came so close to never happening.” At the end of Spike Lee’s devastating drama about the final free day in the life of drug dealer Monty Brogan (Edward Norton), our protagonist’s father (played by the great Brian Cox), while driving his son to prison, makes one last-ditch attempt to convince him to run away. We see images of Monty and his father driving out West, finding some small town for Monty to hide out in and start a new life. We see a whole life play out — before being pulled back to that car, still on its way to prison. It’s a variation on an ending not long after this entry, and as such it’s immensely powerful in its own right. But dad here isn’t a devil. And that’s the key. What makes the sequence really sing is Cox’s delivery, at times stern, desperate, loving, a broken father imagining an alternate world where his son might find the thing parents always want for their children: happiness. It’s an absolutely agonizing way to end a picture that has already put us through the emotional wringer in all sorts of ways. — B.E.
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It might seem a bit silly to put the ending of the third Godfather film on this list, since the first two (far more widely acclaimed) entries in the series both had iconic endings — in particular the second picture, which of course ends with Michael Corleone (Al Pacino) having his brother Fredo (John Cazale) killed. But hear us out: The third Godfather film ends on the most emotionally shattering moment of the entire series: Michael Corleone’s “silent scream” as he wails over the death of his daughter Mary (played by Sofia, director Francis Ford Coppola’s daughter), quickly followed by a shot of him as an elderly man, sitting alone in a nondescript garden somewhere.
In the original cut of the 1990 film, we saw him drop dead; in Coppola’s recently re-edited version, Michael gets to live, while an end-title card reminds us that “a Sicilian never forgets,” which means that he will be haunted by his daughter’s death till the end of his days. When considered in light of the fact that the director himself was at the time still grieving the shocking death of his son Gian-Carlo just several years earlier, this finale gains an even more tragic dimension. It is not only a great capper to this film, it is a great capper to the entire Godfather saga. — B.E.
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The structurally and emotionally perfect Brief Encounter shows us its ending in, of all places, the beginning. It starts with a seemingly dull interaction in a rail station café: Trevor Howard and Celia Johnson have a cup of tea; a lady joins them; he leaves for his train. After he goes, Celia pops out briefly to the platform as an express train roars by. Only at the end of David Lean’s film, after we’ve seen the couple’s story in flashback, do we appreciate that the scene was the rudely interrupted end of a deeply felt affair and — very nearly — a heartbroken woman’s suicide attempt. In that jolly, bustling tearoom were the Great Things: love and loss, life and death. Brief Encounter is like an instruction manual: It teaches us how to perceive the immensity hidden in the everyday, which people cannot or will not see. (Tellingly, the pair meet when he takes a mote out of her eye.) Both times we see the lovers’ silent leave-taking, it’s wrenching, but the second time, it’s also hopeful. When Celia goes home to her dull husband, we’ve been primed to look beneath his jolly, bustling façade to see the beating emotional life in him as well. For as long as we stay under the film’s spell, we seem to see it everywhere — a great passionate humanity all around us, modestly veiled by this humdrum world. — Helen Shaw
Stream Brief Encounter on HBO Max, or rent on iTunes and Amazon Prime Video.
There are more abbreviated or interrupted romances on this list than ones that end in fulfilled clinches, and Wong Kar-wai’s 2000 masterpiece offers one of the great melancholic conclusions to a love story. In the Mood for Love may bubble over with longing, but it’s about two people — Su Li-zhen (Maggie Cheung) and Chow Mo-wan (Tony Leung) — who seem to be living in sync while never managing to fully connect. They’re married to other, mostly absent people, and their almost affair evolves out of proximity and loneliness. While it’s chaste, it’s also suffused with desire, which may be why even a final sequence that finds Chow alone, resigned to never reuniting with Su, has a distinct sensuality to it. “In the old days,” Chow tells a friend, “if someone had a secret they didn’t want to share, they went up a mountain, found a tree, carved a hole in it, and whispered the secret into the hole.” And on a visit to Angkor Wat, in Cambodia, Chow does just that, telling a hollow in a wall what he will never tell a person, and then covering the hollow up and leaving it behind. Somehow, it still has the feeling of a kiss. — A.W.
Stream In the Mood for Love on HBO Max.
Now, Voyager is best known as a wonderous and beautiful example of the women’s picture, a unique proto-feminist genre spanning from the 1930s into the 1950s, curtailed only by the dissolution of the original incarnation of the studio system. The genre made stars out of women like Bette Davis, who leads this film with a performance unlike any other in the history of cinema. It’s a singular work charting the transformation of a spinster into her own woman — romantically, financially, psychologically. When Charlotte Vale looks at her married lover, Jerry Durrance (Paul Henreid), sighing with a well of emotion behind her words — “Oh, Jerry, don’t let’s ask for the moon. We have the stars.” — your heart can’t help but swell, recognizing the platinum elegance at play. The final scene has it all: the eroticism of Jerry’s cigarette; the grace note of dialogue that is both melancholy and romantic; a final image that harkens to the emotional expansiveness of the story. It demonstrates what the women’s picture could do better than Hollywood has been able to in recent decades: explore the cultural, interpersonal, and singular dynamics of what it means to be a woman with clear-eyed honesty and a capitulation toward glamour. — A.J.B.
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Never has blasphemy been more moving. Near the end of Martin Scorsese’s controversial Christ tale (adapted from Nikos Kazantzakis’s equally controversial novel), Jesus (Willem Dafoe, in his greatest performance) is urged by an angel to descend from the cross and live a normal life, and he gets married, has kids, and grows to a ripe old age. Then, as Jerusalem burns around him, the elderly, dying Jesus is visited by his embittered old pal Judas (Harvey Keitel, in his greatest and most misunderstood performance — fight me), who reveals to him that the angel who freed him was in fact Satan himself, offering to Christ one last temptation: that of an ordinary, happy, anonymous life. But it’s more than just a temptation — it is also a motivation, the final barrier to Jesus’s very human heart. He screams at the skies, “I want to be the Messiah!” And, in a flash, he’s back on the cross.
Throughout the film, Scorsese has tried to depict a Christ who is believable and relatable, and the tension between his holy fate and his very human anxiety has fed the picture’s drama. Now, the two are finally reconciled. And then suddenly, we see the film go off its reel. We get some surreal flashing lights, and Peter Gabriel’s wondrous banger of a score kicks in. Scorsese has always loved to give us one final jolt with his endings — think of Travis Bickle looking in his rearview mirror in Taxi Driver, or Jake LaMotta’s final speech in Raging Bull, or the close-up of the hidden rosary in Silence. The Last Temptation of Christ offers the director’s greatest jolt to date. Not to mention one of his most influential: Over the past 30 years, any number of filmmakers — from Spike Lee in 25th Hour to Richard Kelly in Donnie Darko — have utilized some variation of the Last Temptation concept to close out their films. — B.E.
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Reports of the death of the romantic comedy have been greatly exaggerated, but it’s true that the genuinely wonderful ones have been fewer and farther between in recent years. Sometimes I worry that we may have reached the apex of the genre back in 1997, when two-faced, big-haired food critic Julianne (Julia Roberts) conspired to seduce Michael (Dermot Mulroney) away from the deliriously perky Kimmy (Cameron Diaz). The first two-thirds of My Best Friend’s Wedding represent the platonic ideal of a rom-com, overflowing with low-stakes high jinks, quirky charm, and incredible Julia Roberts hair, but the ending is a genuine rejiggering of the formula. Ronald Bass’s whip-smart script didn’t need to totally reinvent the rom-com denouement — the movie would’ve worked nearly as well if it had continued to adhere to the formula, and Roberts had walked away with Mulroney’s heart. But Bass went ahead and subverted our expectations anyway, letting Roberts’s Julianne lose the guy — and her dignity — and then get swept off her feet by her gay best friend, George (Rupert Everett). (This ending was, in part, a matter of necessity: Bass originally wrote an ending for Julianne that saw her meeting and falling for a new man, but audiences were so irritated by her bad behavior that they wanted her to suffer, at least a little bit.) Maybe there isn’t marriage, maybe there isn’t sex, but by God, there’s dancing. — R.H.
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The ending of Point Break, much like the film itself, hits directly at the pleasure center. Months after his failed attempt to capture the criminal who has in turn wholly captured his imagination, FBI Agent Johnny Utah (Keanu Reeves in top form) tracks down Bodhi (a pitch-perfect Patrick Swayze) on an Australian shore in the midst of the “50-year storm” he eagerly spoke of earlier in the movie. The two men — whose bond radiates with a certain romanticism — fight on the beach, but Johnny ultimately lets Bodhi go from the handcuffs he surprises him with. Johnny’s last words are “vaya con Dios” as Bodhi paddles out into the mammoth waves, only to be consumed by them. Here, the strengths of the story collide: its exploration of the fraught bonds between men; its obsession with capitulation to nature. Director Kathryn Bigelow and cinematographer Donald Peterman excel at demonstrating the terror of the ocean as well as the essential wonder of cinema: watching bodies in motion. Action flicks that have come since — including the forgettable remake from 2015 — never quite reach the emotionally rich, downright beatific final note of Point Break. — A.J.B.
Stream Point Break on HBO Max and with premium subscriptions on Hulu and Amazon Prime Video, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
Before Sunset features the sexiest movie ending that doesn’t involve onscreen sex. Celine (Julie Delpy) and Jesse (Ethan Hawke) have reunited in Paris nine years after they first fell in love on that fateful, garrulous evening in Vienna. (This is, after all, the sequel to Before Sunrise, and the prequel to the finale of Linklater’s trilogy, Before Midnight.) The sparks are still there, the conversation just as rousing, the attraction just as intense. But this time around, Jesse’s trapped in an unhappy marriage. The two twirl around each other for most of the film, flirting delicately, then pulling back, each unsure of whether they’re going to go so far as to blow up their lives for a person they still don’t actually know. But Jesse keeps finding excuses not to leave Celine: He’ll drop her off at home on the way to the airport. He’ll walk her to her door. He’ll just pop up to her apartment so she can play him a song. Once he settles on Celine’s couch and watches her dance around her apartment to Nina Simone, it’s clear that he’s totally cooked. Celine looks at him slyly. “Baby,” she sings, “You’re gonna miss that plane.” We don’t even get to see them kiss before the camera fades to black, but the palpable attraction and anticipatory nervousness in the air leave us feeling just as electrified. — R.H.
Stream Before Sunset with premium subscriptions on Hulu and Amazon Prime Video, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
In the run-up to its release, Michael Mann’s Heat was billed as the first time Robert De Niro and Al Pacino would be onscreen together (after having appeared in different timelines in The Godfather Part II). But the two legendary actors would still be separated for the vast majority of this crime saga, as it was a cat-and-mouse thriller about them evading one another. They came together only twice in the movie: once, for that legendary, chatty coffee-shop scene, and then, for the film’s nearly wordless final scene, in which Pacino’s cop finally shoots De Niro’s master thief, and then stands there holding the man’s hand as he quietly expires. (And of course, because this is Michael Mann, the scene takes place right next to the runway at LAX, with planes landing all around them, and Moby’s “God Moving Over the Face of the Waters” playing on the soundtrack.) It’s a moment both epic and intimate: The whole film has been about the abortive relationships of these men, and about the fact that the connection between them is more powerful than any romantic one could ever be. Without one, there is no other. And in the magnificent closing image of this magnificent movie, that idea is finally made heartbreakingly explicit, because in truth, it’s not just De Niro’s death scene; it’s Pacino’s, too. — B.E.
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Chantal Akerman’s Jeanne Dielman might be the most brazen movie ever made — 201 hypnotic minutes of a single mother and part-time sex worker (played by the great Delphine Seyrig) going through her routines of cooking, cleaning, and care over the course of three days. But it also has one of the most brazen endings ever filmed. After stabbing one of her johns with a pair of scissors — framed in the same kind of oblique, purposefully static way as the rest of the picture — Jeanne sits by herself, completely quiet and immobile, for seven whole minutes. Is this a post-traumatic pause? Just another moment in her day? A meta-textual break? The film has already put us in such a state that by the time this ending comes, our minds are racing with ideas, interpretations, and counterinterpretations, even as we remain riveted to the screen. — B.E.
Rent Jeanne Dielman on iTunes, Amazon Prime Video and Vudu.
In the third entry in Abbas Kiarostami’s humanist hall-of-mirrors “Koker Trilogy,” a film crew attempts to shoot a scene from the previous entry, And Life Goes On, featuring two young nonprofessional actors playing newlyweds. But the boy has real feelings for the girl he’s acting opposite, thus turning the film into a kind of mock-meta-documentary about the ways in which real life affects cinema and vice versa. The picture is self-reflective, but it’s never aloof; if anything, it’s one of the director’s most lyrical, touching films, never more so than in its remarkable final shot, a long take from a distance that shows the boy running toward the girl in a field, talking to her, and then running back. Did she reciprocate, or tell him off? Is he running in joy, or dejection? It’s an exciting, emotional moment — and yet the director doesn’t tell us what we should be feeling. How we interpret the scene is up to us. In its final image, the film reflects its audience, and each of us sees something different. — B.E.
Stream Through the Olive Trees on the Criterion Channel.
Can a lie cause a physical reaction in the person telling it? During the now-disputed finale of Andrew Jarecki’s 2015 docuseries The Jinx, Robert Durst appeared to be overcome by a series of uncanny burps, as though his very body were rebelling against what he was trying to say to the camera. But for anyone who’d seen Joshua Oppenheimer’s brilliant documentary from three years before, the sight was nothing on the final moments with Anwar Congo, one of the two gangsters turned death-squad members the film is centered on. Throughout the The Act of Killing, the two unapologetic participants in the Indonesian genocide of the ’60s recount and reenact their days of slaughter by way of different genres, in full costume, until something appears to start bleeding through the denial they’ve been maintaining for decades. It’s playing one of the victims that finally breaks Anwar, and at the film’s close, there’s a remarkable sequence in which he stands on a rooftop, which he says was the site of many murders, and begins retching. He curls over a concrete ledge, but he doesn’t throw up — instead it’s as though something he long ago swallowed were trying to force its way out of his throat. Maybe it’s the truth. — A.W.
Stream The Act of Killing on Amazon Prime Video and Pluto TV, or rent from YouTube, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
The Thing is a perfect encapsulation of the horror of isolation, which makes it an especially cutting rewatch during a pandemic. The Thing ends with MacReady (Kurt Russell) facing Childs (Keith David), unsure if he’s the monster, but rightfully suspicious. They share a bottle of liquor, aware that neither can do anything about their predicament, stuck in the icy tundra of Antarctica, staring down their assured deaths. It’s bleak. Director John Carpenter has crafted some dynamite endings throughout his career (I am particularly partial to the meta-fashioned closing of In the Mouth of Madness with Sam Neill maniacally cackling in a movie theater watching what we’ve just seen). And there are many other carefully wrought ambiguous endings from other directors worth noting on this list. But I’d argue none arrives with the gut punch that is The Thing’s return to square one. — A.J.B.
Rent The Thing on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
Look, it’s all perfectly simple. The Hobo of Death puts a small box in a paper bag, out of it scramble two tiny, cackling grandparents, who then show up in our sad, lonely heroine’s apartment, whereupon they become life-size and shriek at her until she blows her brains out (because she was dead all along) and then a blue-haired woman whispers “Silencio” and then the movie’s over. Just another neatly packaged and thoroughly satisfying ending from Mr. David Lynch of Missoula, Montana, USA, who definitely intended this finale all along and was certainly not trying to desperately salvage a TV pilot that had been abruptly canceled, no sir. One of the great mindfuck horror movies of all time gets one of the great mindfuck endings of all time (and a jump scare, no less) and we’re still arguing about it, 20 years later, the hallmark of a fantastic finale. — B.E.
Stream Mulholland Drive on HBO Max, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
Celine Sciamma’s Portrait of a Lady on Fire is a cinematic poem about the act of watching, of seeing and capturing, the erotic power of the female gaze. Painter Marianne (Noémie Merlant) is hired to create a portrait of a noblewoman, Héloïse (Adèle Haenel), so that the latter can be married off to an Italian suitor; over the course of the film, the two fall inextricably in love by quietly looking at each other, as we quietly look at them. It’s fitting, then, that the final scene is yet another extension of that gaze. Years after their love affair has ended, the two end up at the same orchestra performance — meaningfully, of Antonio Vivaldi’s “Summer,” which Marianne played for Héloïse earlier on in the film as their relationship bloomed. Héloïse has no idea Marianne is in attendance, but from her seat, Marianne can see Héloïse perfectly, and she observes silently as Héloïse begins gently sobbing. The camera stays on Héloïse as she allows herself to fall back into the memories of her love for Marianne. As Marianne does the same from afar, neither acknowledge the other. (This recalls another key thread in the film, about Orpheus and Eurydice and the act of choosing, painfully, the memory of someone over the reality.)
It’s heartbreaking, and, as Sciamma put it, “It unveils itself as cinema. It’s a reverse shot between the two characters. And at that point, it’s not about the story anymore. It’s about you being in your seat, her being in her theater seat, and you watching.” — R.H.
Stream Portrait of a Lady on Fire with a premium subscription on Hulu, or rent from YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
Running throughout Nicholas Ray’s 1950 noir is the possibility that screenwriter Dixon Steele (Humphrey Bogart) is a killer. It becomes the filter through which we, and the other characters in the movie, start seeing the guy — even for Laurel Gray (Gloria Grahame), who embarks on a sparky, uneasy relationship with Dix that becomes increasingly serious even as her fear of him builds. Dix has anger issues; he’s prone to bursts of violence; he’s a little too good at imagining how the murder of the hatcheck girl that shapes the movie might have gone. By the time the movie reaches its indelible conclusion, the romance at its center has been snuffed out by the stress of suspicion and the realities of who Dix really is. In that final sequence, Dix discovers that Laurel has been making plans to run away and wraps his hand around her throat in a fit of rage, throwing her down while she swears she’ll marry him and begs for her life. It’s only when the phone rings that he relents, walking away to take a call clearing him of the crime. As Laurel puts it herself, by this time, this revelation “doesn’t matter — it doesn’t matter at all.” There’s no going back from where they were, and what he did, and what was always there inside him. — A.W.
Stream In a Lonely Place on Tubi and Amazon Prime Video, or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Vudu and Google Play.
Stanley Kubrick was the master of the abrupt ending. Think of the smash cut to a frozen Jack Torrance right before that slow zoom-in on the Fourth of July photo in The Shining. Or the cut to the atomic-bomb explosions in Dr. Strangelove. Or even that final title card in Barry Lyndon. But the master outdid himself with the very final moment (and very final line) of his very final film, in which Nicole Kidman’s Alice Harford informed her sorta-kinda-straying husband Bill (Tom Cruise) that there was one last thing they had to do after their final reconciliation: “Fuck.” For a filmmaker who loved to close out his films on dark thoughts that unsettled us one last time before the lights came up, this was an oddly sweet note on which to end a movie, not to mention an entire career. The MVP here, however, is Kidman, who delivers that last four-letter-word with a combination of compassion and confrontation. “Fuck.” It is more than an invitation — it’s a challenge. — B.E.
Stream Eyes Wide Shut on Hulu or rent on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
The iconic and-all-my-friends-were-there dance ending belongs to Federico Fellini’s magnificent 8 ½, his 1963 film about a creatively blocked director, Guido Anselmi (Marcello Mastroianni), struggling with the vision for his new autobiographical sci-fi film as well as with his personal life. As Guido frets and struts and indulges his own angst while avoiding working throughout the movie, people cycle through, giving a sense of his personal sphere — like his producer, his mistress, his estranged wife and their friends, a film critic, a cardinal. Then there are the figures from his memories, and the ones from his fantasies, among them the “ideal woman,” played by Claudia Cardinale, that he dreams will save him. In the end, all these layers of Guido’s self collapse into one, and the setting it takes is not the rocket ship that was originally built for his set. It’s something warmer and sillier and appropriately absurd — a circus. And somehow everyone is there, impossibly together, including Guido’s younger self, all of the milling around the ring and joining hands in a joyous dance. What can Guido do but join them? It’s life as a messy, absurd spectacle, and it’s wonderful. — A.W.
Stream 8 ½ on HBO Max, or rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu or Google Play.
Nelly Lenz (Nina Hoss) has survived the Holocaust, but what comes after proves to be a different kind of harrowing. After facial reconstruction surgery to accommodate a bullet wound, Nelly tries to reconnect with her husband, Johnny (Ronald Zehrfeld). He doesn’t recognize her, but he does see this person’s presence as an opportunity: He’ll have her pretend to be his wife so he can secure her inheritance. We study the ways these two interact, with Johnny unaware that Nelly is who Nelly says she is. The ending sees the couple visit friends who have already grieved Nelly. After an initial establishing shot, the camera pays less attention to the friends and more to the musically inclined Nelly and Johnny. Her numbered tattoo, a relic from the concentration camp, peeks out from under the sleeve of her red dress as she sings “Speak Low.” He stops playing the piano. He looks hollowed out at the realization that, yes, this is the wife he thought died in the war. The same wife he betrayed. It’s a pure punch to the gut, with the tender song and warm noonday lighting directly contradicting the emotional resonance of this moment. — A.J.B.
Stream Phoenix with a premium subscription on Sling TV, or rent on YouTube, iTunes and Google Play.
Like Phoenix, this film’s ending is predicated on a revelation, although one of a very different mood. “Well, nobody’s perfect,” ultrarich Osgood Perkins (Joe E. Brown) says to Jack Lemmon’s character, after the latter reveals he’s not “Daphne” and is actually a man. In that moment, the romantic dealings between Joe (Tony Curtis) and Sugar (Marilyn Monroe) take a literal backseat to the humorous high jinks that have been happening between Osgood and Daphne/Jerry. It’s hard to imagine a better ending. With those three simple words, Some Like It Hot brings the queer undercurrents of its story to the surface, emphasized by both the flustered shock on Lemmon’s face and the peaceful delight on Brown’s. (We have both the rhythm of the acting and the camera’s eye to thank for the scene’s perfection.) Co-writer I.A.L. Diamond came up with the famed last line as a placeholder until he could come up with something better. He never did. Writer-director Billy Wilder had a knack for coming up with stellar endings — take, for example, Kirk Douglas’s scheming newspaperman falling to his death, with his face landing in front of the camera in Ace in the Hole (1951); a wholly different kind of revelation concerning a cunning Marlene Dietrich in Witness for the Prosecution (1957); Norma Desmond descending those stairs, lost in her own reverie in Sunset Boulevard (1950). Yet no matter how many times I’ve watched Some Like It Hot, the ending still surprises me with its artistry and sparkling wit. — A.J.B.
Stream Some Like It Hot on YouTube, Pluto TV and Tubi, or rent on iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
The climax of Big Night — a movie about two brothers, Primo (Tony Shalhoub) and Secundo (Stanley Tucci), attempting to run a modest Italian restaurant on the Jersey shore — arrives at the end of the evening promised by the title. Up until this point, the story has been marked by the kind of silence that fills empty dining rooms, and small moments between pairs of characters with comically divergent accents. (Only two of the four actors playing Italian, Tucci and Isabella Rossellini, have the ancestral bona fides. Shalhoub grew up in an Arabic-speaking household, and Ian Holm was born in Essex to Scottish parents.) By the time a momentous timpano is served, the camera has been agitating for the ecstatic reactions a great meal can provoke for more than an hour; at one point, the lens physically shakes in time with a raw fish bouncing in the back seat of a vintage car. So when it’s revealed, after frames of decadent dishes and dancing and anything but the silence of an empty dining room, that the reason for their big night is a ruse — that their restaurant will not be saved — the brothers unravel on the beach nearby, loudly, with waves crashing behind them.
But that’s not the end. The camera winds its way back to Primo’s kitchen, where a defeated Secundo is fixing an omelet. It’s silent again, save for the scrapes of his fork against a metal bowl and the sizzle of the skillet. The shot here is steadier, so that when Primo walks in, sits down next to Secundo, and wordlessly accepts breakfast, the emotional denouement is as perfectly rendered as their eggs. It’s hardly a happy ending, but there are few sweeter images than Shalhoub and Tucci, arms on shoulders, scarfing down the only thing that mattered this whole time: good food. — K.B.
Stream Big Night on Pluto TV and with a premium subscription on Amazon Prime Video, or rent from YouTube, iTunes, Vudu or Google Play.
Bong Joon Ho is incredible with endings, but there was never any question of which of his most belongs on this list. By itself, the final scene in 2009’s Mother is brutal, but, bookended by the opening, it’s brilliant. Mother begins with its unnamed protagonist (Kim Hye-ja) winding her way toward the camera in an empty field, and then beginning, meditatively and unselfconsciously, to dance alongside the credits. It’s droll the way the premise seems to be: an aging widow and unlicensed acupuncturist turns amateur detective to clear the name of her doted-on son. But as Mother unravels its murder mystery, the maternal ties at its center go from amusingly close to an inescapable burden. By the time the title character finds herself on a “Thank You Parents” bus tour with other mothers, she’s learned terrible things about herself and the person she’s devoted her life to. Sitting alone, she takes out her needles and puts one in the spot on her thigh where, she’s said before, it “unknots the heart.” It’s a bright afternoon, and the other passengers are dancing in celebration in the aisles, for a moment, the sounds drops out. Then the song from that first scene starts up, and she joins the other women, and we understand that she will keep going, no matter how broken she is inside — such is love, as she sees it. — A.W.
Stream Mother on Tubi, Vudu and Crackle and with a premium subscription on Hulu.
Noir is a genre often defined by its great endings, some of which are on this list (the emotionally bruising In a Lonely Place and the firecracker of a flick The Hitch-Hiker). But The Third Man stands out in this landscape. After faking his own death, cunning racketeer Harry Lime (an ever-magnetic Orson Welles) tries to escape the authorities closing in on him by fleeing into the sewers. This gives way to a wholly engrossing chase sequence. The camera’s use of space is immaculate, instilling a sense of claustrophobia and tension into the proceedings. Silhouettes and shadows are used to maximum effect; a slinking vein of water glows against the cobblestones. It’s all amped-up by the sound design and zither score by Anton Karas, thrilling in equal measure. Lime exchanges a final, icy look with his friend and protagonist Holly Martins (Joseph Cotten) before a single shot echoes through the tunnels. Cue the second (and final) funeral for Lime, and his girlfriend Anna’s (Alida Valli) solitary yet assured walk past Holly on the side of the road afterward — a cherry on top of another conclusion that brings us back to the location where everything began. — A.J.B.
Rent The Third Man on YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Vudu and Google Play.
As we argued over the many endings on this list (and, of course, the many, many endings not on this list), we saw ourselves regularly drawn to scenes and moments that exemplified a specific type of conclusion: the all-dancing ending. The freeze-frame ending. The repressed-character-finally-lets-it-all-out ending. The “Was it all a dream?” ending. The “Wait, what just happened?” ending. But here, in Claire Denis’s Beau Travail, we have a finale that somehow fits a number of these categories, and yet remains unclassifiable. Yes, it’s a dancing ending, but it’s not quite the joyous, oh-well dance-off that we might expect. That’s not to say it’s not delightful: There are few spectacles more wondrous in all of cinema than the great Denis Lavant dancing his ass off to Corona’s “Rhythm of the Night.” But in the context of the film itself, the scene becomes (literally) otherworldly.
Lavant plays Galoup, a nervous, submerged officer in the French Foreign Legion who becomes both obsessed and repulsed by Sentain (Grégoire Colin), a young, beautiful new arrival. In director Claire Denis’s oblique, lyrical telling, their relationship takes on the qualities of a tense, sadistic dance itself. Lavant was known at the time for his intense physicality and his whirling-dervish performances in films by Leos Carax, including The Lovers on the Bridge. To see him so constrained and coiled was quite a thing. At the end of the film, a disgraced Galoup, now out of the military and back in France, seems to contemplate suicide — right before we cut to him dancing alone in a nightclub, finally letting go. Is it a flashback, a dream, a fantasy, a glimpse of his afterlife? Is it maybe all of these things? The whole film is transcendent, but this final moment — unforgettable, bizarre, hilarious, exuberant, and also, on some level, deeply, deeply sad — is downright life-changing. — B.E.
Purchase Beau Travail from the Criterion Collection.
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*A version of this article appears in the March 1, 2021, issue of New York Magazine. Subscribe Now!
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Want more songs and dancing? We do too. Which is why this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this and this show up on our list.
To jump to other celebrated documentary finales on this list, head here, here, here, here, and here.
This might be one of our few truly “happily ever afters.” The romance endings we tended toward included this, this, this, this, this, this, and this.
Want more horror? Head here, here, here, here, here, here, here and here.
And so begins the unraveling of many unendings, like this, this, this, this, this and this.
You’ll find a lot of death on this list, like here, here, here, here,here and here.
Ah, the endings that are actually visions, dreams and or bouts of insanity, like this, this, this and this.
For more close-ups, head here, here and here.
The sentiment is different, but Gangs of New York also closes out with a shot of the modern city looming large above the landscape its historical characters were existing in. Loop in 2020’s global box office champ The Eight Hundred, which takes place on the cusp of World War II and concludes with a shot of present-day Shanghai, and you’ve got a subgenre of endings. — A.W.
You could even say that, following American Graffiti, George Lucas turned the whole idea of finding-out-the-characters’-ultimate-fates-after-the-movie-ended into a lucrative film franchise in and of itself. One way of looking at the Star Wars saga is as a decades-long attempt to explain what happened to all these people. — B.E.
I am haunted by the fact that this is on our list. The Prestige cheats on its own premise by creating a fake scientific deus ex machina conclusion that has nothing whatsoever to do with stage magic. The ending of this movie is like the ending of a rambling story being told by a 4-year-old as he is falling asleep. — R.H.
The downside of making interesting, unconventional choices is that sometimes you wind up passing over one of the best closing lines of all time: “I’m finished!” Sometimes the obvious picks are obvious for a reason. — N.J.
Congratulations: After this one you will have completed Nate’s course on Famous Endings in Post-Sixties British Cinema. — N.J.
We don’t have many other Westerns on this list, but it’s worth noting here how much the Western genre has been one of unforgettable endings. There is, of course, the classic cliche of the cowboy hero riding off into the sunset, but so many Western films play with that idea: from John Wayne and Claire Trevor fleeing “civilization” at the end of Stagecoach, to Eli Wallach screaming profanities at an increasingly distant Clint Eastwood in the final frames of The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, to an enraged Eastwood snarling one final threat to the hellish town of Big Whiskey before disappearing forever into the mists of time in Unforgiven. We could probably do an entire list of the 101 Greatest Endings in Western Movie History. — B.E.
Some titles that ended up on the cutting room floor: The Good The Bad and the Ugly, Simeon, Faces Places, The Rapture, Enough Said, Widows, Call Me By Your Name, Salaam Bombay, Faces, Clerks, Take Shelter, Cabin in the Woods, Death in Venice, Days of Heaven, Stalker, Avengers: Infinity War, Ginger Snaps, Se7en, Rosemary’s Baby, First Wives Club, Chinatown, Only Angels Have Wings, Farewell My Concubine, and so many more.
The 101 Greatest Endings in Movies History
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