10 Final Movie Scenes That Changed Everything

Everything you thought you knew went up in smoke in the final scene.

Men In Black 3
Sony

Endings are so, so important in movies - get them right and they can elevate the entire experience in immeasurable ways, but get it wrong and it'll leave the audience with a sour parting impression.

All the same, it's rare for a final scene to completely change the audience's perception of what they've seen, even if in rare cases it's absolutely possible.

And so, inspired by this recent Reddit thread on the very subject, we come to these 10 closing movie scenes, each of which totally changed everything we thought we knew, and perhaps even coloured our entire opinion of the film.

From endings that gleefully detonated audience expectations of what an ending could be, to those that made viewers rethink the story's entire scale and everything in-between, these movie endings quite literally changed it all.

In some cases it absolutely changed things for the better, while in others not so much, and then there are those contested endings which continue to divide fans to this very day.

All the same, most will agree that these endings made everyone look at these movies in a totally unique way...

10. La La Land

Men In Black 3
Summit Entertainment

Damien Chazelle's La La Land is a technically astonishing romantic musical which, in spite of its filmmaking ingenuity, seemed primed to conclude with estranged lovers Seb (Ryan Gosling) and Mia (Emma Stone) getting their happily ever after ending.

But the mesmerising final sequence instead sees Chazelle cannily subvert audience expectations for the genre.

The scene takes place five years after Seb and Mia's breakup, where they've both successfully pursued their dreams - of becoming a jazz pianist and actress respectively - and are now living happy lives, with Mia even married with a daughter.

Mia and her husband visit a jazz bar only for Mia to realise it belongs to Seb, who is playing piano on stage.

Once Seb spots Mia, he starts playing their love theme, after which the pair appear to romantically embrace and imagine what their life could've been if they managed to stay together while following their dreams.

The elaborate, gorgeously staged sequence finally ends, and Mia and her husband then go to leave the club, but not before Mia looks back to share a final glance with Seb.

Their eyes meet across the club, but rather than lament what could've been, they smile at one another, seemingly proud at each other's accomplishments and fondly recalling their time together, before going their separate ways once again.

It's a bittersweet ending but a perfect riposte to the conventionally sentimental finale a lesser movie would've sprung for, getting Seb and Mia back together at the last minute.

Instead, this ending felt so much more real in every possible way, in turn cementing La La Land's status as not merely a well-crafted musical but a bonafide genre classic.

Contributor
Contributor

Stay at home dad who spends as much time teaching his kids the merits of Martin Scorsese as possible (against the missus' wishes). General video game, TV and film nut. Occasional sports fan. Full time loon.