For film buffs of a certain stripe, Terrence Malick movies are always an event. Blindspot Boss Explains [Spoiler]'s Surprising Series-Ending Fate — Plus, Grade the Series Finale By Rebecca Iannucci / July 23 2020, 6:59 PM PDT Courtesy of NBC A feckless playboy (Cruise) suffers near-death and disfigurement after his relationship with his new girlfriend (Penélope Cruz) plunges his ex-lover (Cameron Diaz) into homicidal obsession. As for the ambiguity of that last shot? So why the hellish visions, and why at the end do they turn more peaceful, with Jacob ascending into heaven with his son? Jacob's chiropractor, Louis, who serves as his guardian figure in the movie, explains to him that if you resist death, and try to hold on, "you'll see devils tearing your life away. When Adam's double is killed, he contemplates a return to the show, at which point she appears to him as a spider, coiled in the corner in fear. Christopher Nolan's sci-fi epic Interstellar is a lot of things—action thriller, thoughtful treatise on the love between a parent and a child, and an effects-driven spectacle—but easy to understand isn't necessarily one of them, particularly in the film's final act. Few things are more terrifying than the knowledge that no matter how far you go or how fast you travel, your pursuer will keep gaining on you and eventually you'll be caught. And what problems is the hero distracting himself from? Why would someone report me for asking a question about films in the Movies section? In perhaps the most surprising and effective post-modern coup in modern television, the entire last season of the show is revealed to be the character Roseanne's fantasies as she struggles to deal with the death of Dan (who presumably did not survive his heart attack during Darlene and David's wedding). "Some people have suggested that the whole second part of the film is nothing but a nightmare. Midway through, he meets a scientist who once worked with the military to experiment on soldiers with psychedelic drugs meant to put them into killing frenzies. The It Comes At Night ending scene has lead to a number of discussions amongst the viewers. He's given the choice to either reboot the dream or exit it once and for all by jumping off a building and being brought back to life. As he's said in multiple interviews, he was originally inspired by a nightmare in which he knew he was being followed, knew he couldn't get away, and knew the people with him in the nightmare weren't able to help him. Once she got down, Emma's big monologue, in the basement, we started to understand the relationship and what it was. She becomes powerful, she becomes, in her mind, free—the only cost is her mortal soul. bad ending! But that's not a dream—it's just the best way for Wayne to show Alfred he's alive. Initially, Sam looks down, but she slowly turns her head to the sky and she smiles. There are a lot of theories that attempt to explain the hows and whys of The Matrix Revolutions' head-scratcher of an ending, in which Neo lies on the brink of defeat until he realizes he doesn't need to beat Smith, but assimilate into the system—after which Smith is wiped out and the Matrix reboots under the dawn of a brand new day. The Beth as killer concludes with the first fadeout. There have also been theories about how the virus got inside the house. Unlike a few of the movies on this list, figuring out The Babadook isn't that difficult—provided you keep up with the sudden change in perspective in the final act. The last lines of the Elie Wiesel's novel, Night, is as follows: From the depths of the mirror, a corpse gazed back at me.The look in his eyes, as they stared into mine, has never left me. He explained during an interview while promoting Exodus: Gods and Kings: "[Alfred] was just content with me being alive. The fact that she has bird tattoos on her arm and that her father played a superhero with bird-based powers suggests the strong connection between the two. It Comes At Night ending explained. Fraught with guilt, he leaves Philadelphia early, leaving Laura and Andy alone for the presentation to their clients. Before the movie's end, we learn along with Lucius Fox that Bruce Wayne fixed the Bat-plane's autopilot six months before the final showdown in Gotham. Rather than telling a straightforward story, suggested film critic Matt Zoller Seitz, "I just think [Malick is] opening up the top of his head and letting the memories and fantasies and personal anecdotes pour out, and arranging the pieces in such a way as to prompt you to remember your own life and reflect on it, and think about your own place in the cosmos, however small or large you may imagine it to be.". "The film becomes anything the viewer sees in it," he continued. But separating the real world and that otherworld is a misty in-between, where humans and the monsters can cross paths. ), but it got more complicated. Following a night of murder, a police manhunt, and a confession to his lawyer, Bateman attends a social occasion to find that nothing's changed.