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The means don't justify the end... it's the other way around! Welcome to WatchMojo, and today weโ€™re counting down our picks for the most notable movies that were totally ruined thanks to their unnecessarily bleak and dour endings. A major spoiler warning is in effect.
Transcript
00:00Your turn. Truth or dare.
00:03Welcome to WatchMojo.
00:05And today we're counting down our picks for the most notable movies that were totally ruined
00:09thanks to their unnecessarily bleak and dour endings.
00:12A major spoiler warning is in effect.
00:15I can't decide what's worse, stealing my story or ruining the ending.
00:22Number 30. Man of Steel.
00:30Zack Snyder loves him some dark superhero movies.
00:35And while that worked for something like Watchmen, in which the source material is
00:39inherently moody, it didn't quite work for Superman.
00:42In the very controversial ending to this reboot,
00:45Superman kills Zod as he attacks an innocent family in the train station.
00:49The decision to have the iconic hero commit murder was highly divisive,
00:53especially among diehard fans and those involved with the comics.
00:57It was a big creative swing, and we have to commend that.
00:59But many felt that the overt violence betrayed the tone and character of Superman.
01:04No matter how violent or how cruel, it's for the greater good.
01:11Number 29. Knowing.
01:13All we can say is what we've been repeating all morning.
01:16Get to any kind of underground shelter.
01:18An apocalyptic thriller starring Nicolas Cage, Knowing follows John Kessler,
01:23an astrophysics professor who learns that a massive solar flare is primed to hit Earth.
01:28Well, um, that's exactly what happens.
01:30This is one of those rare disaster movies in which the entire world ends,
01:35as the planet is slammed by the solar flare and everyone dies.
01:38Well, everyone except a number of children who are taken away by alien creatures and
01:42brought to an Eden-like planet, supposedly to save the human race.
01:46But this only raises more questions, not to mention some dour implications.
01:51Just imagine the state of their sanity as they grow up without parents and learn all
01:55these truths about Armageddon, alien life, and what seems like forced repopulation.
02:00Where's Caleb?
02:03Caleb's safe.
02:04Number 28. Sunshine.
02:06At the end of time, a moment will come when just one man remains,
02:15and the moment will pass.
02:17The sun is failing, and we gotta kickstart that sucker to prevent the apocalypse.
02:21What a fascinating subject for a movie.
02:23Too bad Sunshine ruined it by randomly turning into a mediocre slasher movie in the third act.
02:28The crazed Captain Pinbacker hunts down the crew and kills some of them,
02:32supposedly for defying God's plan.
02:35He's even covered in horrible burns.
02:37Remind you of anyone?
02:39It was a weird shift, turning Sunshine from a philosophical space drama into a violent horror
02:44flick.
02:44It's not a shift that many were expecting.
02:47Or wanting.
02:48Don't fight.
02:51Don't fight.
02:59Number 27. Would You Rather.
03:01But RSVP by 8 o'clock tonight if you do decide to join us.
03:06A fun idea for a horror film, Would You Rather follows Iris,
03:10a young woman trying to save her brother Raleigh from cancer.
03:13She's introduced to Shepard Lambric,
03:15a disturbed philanthropist who offers to pay for Raleigh's treatments
03:18if Iris wins a twisted game of Would You Rather.
03:21Iris wins, after much blood and depravity of course,
03:24and is rewarded with both money and a bone marrow donor for Raleigh.
03:28But upon returning home, she finds that her despondent brother has just taken his own life.
03:34We know horror movies don't often have happy endings, but this is just needlessly cruel.
03:39Number 26. Mother.
03:41What do they want?
03:42I don't know. They've come here to see me.
03:45Darren Aronofsky is a subversive filmmaker, and he certainly proves that with Mother.
03:50On the surface, it's about a woman who grows increasingly anxious about the
03:53sheer number of guests invading her house.
03:55But it's really an allegory about God, Eden, and Mother Earth.
03:59And it does not have pleasant things to say about humanity.
04:02The guests eventually turn into a ravenous cult devoted to Mother's husband,
04:06nearly beating Mother to death and causing her to burn the house down.
04:10And that is to say nothing of the horror they inflict on her newborn son.
04:14It's all shown in very graphic detail, and it has proven way too much for many viewers.
04:20Can you hear that?
04:22No!
04:25Number 25. Spring Breakers.
04:28I want us all to fall in love.
04:31Let's cause some trouble now.
04:33Don't let the colorful bikinis and neon lights fool you.
04:36Spring Breakers is not a sexy romp.
04:39Quite the opposite, in fact.
04:40Four girls partying in St. Petersburg meet a drug dealer named Alien
04:44and soon fall into his life of crime and hedonism.
04:47Faith quickly grows disillusioned and leaves,
04:49and Cotty later departs after getting injured in a drive-by shooting.
04:53But Brit and Candy fall fully into the lifestyle and turn into vicious murderers
04:57by shooting up a rival gang and killing its leader in cold blood.
05:01Turning heroes into psychotic villains is always a risky proposition,
05:05and some are not convinced that Spring Breakers pulled it off.
05:08It was way more than just having a good time.
05:12We're different people now.
05:14We see things differently.
05:16Number 24. On Her Majesty's Secret Service.
05:19Ladies and gentlemen, the toast is the bride and bridegroom, Mr. and Mrs. James Bond.
05:29While it's now considered one of the best Bond films,
05:32On Her Majesty's Secret Service was met with a muted reception in 1969.
05:37Most of this is due to the absence of Sean Connery,
05:39who was replaced with newcomer George Lazenby.
05:42But many people also found the story too bleak.
05:45It depicts Bond in a far more personal and vulnerable light,
05:48with the secret agent falling in love with a countess named Tracy.
05:51He eventually marries Tracy, but she is killed in a drive-by shooting in the movie's famous ending.
05:57Most fans wanted to watch Bond get the girl and kick some butt,
06:00not cry over his late wife's bloody corpse.
06:03It's all right.
06:06It's quite all right, really. She's having a rest.
06:11We'll be going on soon.
06:13Number 23. Beau Is Afraid.
06:15But if you know where you are, then you must also know where you just were,
06:20and where you just did what you just did, which I saw every second of.
06:25Ari Aster's third major film was highly anticipated, and ended up highly divisive.
06:30The reasons for this are many, including its tragic and exhausting ending.
06:35The titular Beau travels far and wide to attend his mother Mona's funeral,
06:39but in a bizarre twist ending, both we and Beau learn that Mona is actually alive.
06:44Not only that, but she is horribly abusive towards Beau and reveals that the entire odyssey was a
06:50test. Oh, and his father is a literal monster. He then enters a mock trial for supposedly
06:55mistreating his mother, suffering public humiliation and eventually execution.
07:00The ending is full of metaphor and allegory, but come on,
07:03we endured three hours of Beau's misery for this? Talk about a bummer.
07:17Number 22. Last Night in Soho.
07:19They send me to hell, so I send them to theirs.
07:24Edgar Wright made his first foray into horror with Last Night in Soho,
07:28a deconstruction of the swinging 60s and all its glitz and glamour.
07:32Fashion student Ellie is transported back to the 1960s whenever she sleeps,
07:36observing the abused life of a singer named Sandy. As the movie nears its conclusion,
07:41we learn that Sandy developed into a serial killer, murdering the men she had been pimped to
07:45and hiding their corpses under the floor of her bedsit. She then grew into the elderly Miss Collins,
07:51who now rents the place to Ellie. And when Collins confronts Ellie,
07:55the latter defends her brutal life of serial murder. The messy twist
07:59turns the victims into villains and leaves behind a rather muddled message.
08:11Number 21. The Butterfly Effect.
08:14Um, did you remember to bring those home movies that we used to make?
08:20Yeah, they're right here.
08:21This movie is essentially two hours of unending misery. Ashton Kutcher plays Evan,
08:27a young man who tries changing his tragic past by reading a journal and going back in time.
08:32But this proves more difficult than it sounds thanks to, you guessed it, the butterfly effect.
08:36Unfortunately, there's no winning when it comes to the resolution. The theatrical ending is a
08:41happy one, but it doesn't gel with the relentlessly depressing tone of the movie. The director's cut
08:46fixes this, but it makes the movie even more depressing by having baby Evan strangle himself
08:51in the womb. It's almost comically morbid, and some even find it unintentionally goofy.
09:04Number 20. Glass.
09:06We so wanted the concluding chapter in M. Night Shyamalan's unbreakable trilogy to live up to
09:11its crossover potential. And while some of the interactions between the superhuman characters
09:16have their moments, fans were largely left scratching their heads following a rather
09:20anticlimactic finale. Subverting the notion that a superhero movie has to lead up to an epic set
09:35piece, Glass instead has its three leads die in unceremonious fashion. Perhaps none more so than
09:42David Dunn, who is literally drowned in a puddle of water. The movie tries to end on an optimistic
09:54note as the existence of superheroes is made public, but we can't help but feel it's undercut
09:59by its underwhelming and rather dour climax. Number 19. 47 Meters Down.
10:14The simple setup of divers having to survive a pack of hungry sharks after their cage plummets
10:19them to the bottom of the ocean has the makings for a brisk creature feature. But unfortunately,
10:2447 Meters Down tries to throw in too many narrative curveballs when it matters most.
10:34After numerous close calls, it seems like sisters Lisa and Kate have finally made it back to the
10:39boat. After a thrilling ascension, it turns out Lisa has been hallucinating and is still at the
10:45bottom of the ocean. Not only that, but she realizes Kate has been killed by the sharks a
10:50while ago. Just as quickly as it took to explain this, Lisa is rescued by the coast guard,
11:08making us question this whole narrative back and forth. Number 18. Serenity. No,
11:14not the movie adaptation of Firefly. This one is way, way worse.
11:20Before being thrown out the window by a ludicrous twist, Serenity does at least have some atmosphere
11:26and intrigue about it. The bulk of the plot sees Matthew McConaughey's fishing boat captain
11:30contemplate murdering his ex-wife's cruel new husband, Frank. But as the walls of his reality
11:36begin to crumble, Baker Dill eventually realizes that he's merely part of a computer simulation
11:41created by his son Patrick in the real world. Baker going through with killing Frank is the
11:59motivation Patrick needs to kill his abusive stepfather in the real world.
12:03Patrick is charged with murder, and we're left asking, what the heck did we just watch?
12:11Patrick!
12:16Number 17. Truth or Dare. Truth or Dare is about as convincing as you would expect from a horror
12:22movie based on the titular game. But the ending still manages to sink to new lows.
12:33The basic premise is this. A group of college kids get roped into playing a supernatural game
12:38of truth or dare, whereby you have to either tell horrible truths, commit dangerous dares,
12:43or die. Because the evil game is twisted, apparently, it leads to their deaths eventually.
12:49But players can extend the time between their turns by inviting other players to join.
12:54Carter was the only one who could stop this. So now the game won't end until all the players are
13:00dead. And your turn's next. Unless you find some new friends to play with.
13:06Rather than roll the dice again, Olivia instead ends the movie by uploading a video whereby she
13:11invites potentially the whole world to play. This feels edgy for edginess' sake.
13:17I'm so sorry, but I have to ask you. Truth or Dare?
13:26Number 16. The Son. This film, tangentially related to Florian Zeller's previous film The
13:32Father, tackles some very serious issues. However, it's been criticized for doing so
13:37through melodrama. At the heart of the story is Peter and his son Nicholas,
13:41the latter of whom struggles greatly with depression. Eventually, Nicholas is placed
13:46in an inpatient treatment facility for his own safety, and makes an impassioned plea for release
13:50towards the end of the film. His parents relent even against doctor wishes, and as soon as they
14:03return home, Nicholas tragically takes his own life. It's far from the most tactful presentation
14:09for sensitive viewers, and the final scene where the film briefly tricks us into thinking Nicholas
14:14survived doesn't help matters. Number 15. The Entity. This horror film supposedly based on
14:31true events distinguishes itself by going further than most in the genre would.
14:36The trouble is, the ending manages to go too far.
14:44After being plagued by a malicious supernatural force, Carla is finally able to prove her sanity
14:52and the existence of the invisible entity. Only, the person with the ability to officially validate
14:58her claims goes into denial. The film ends with Carla moving away with her family,
15:10but not before the Entity greets her by saying,
15:17followed by a weirdly vulgar British slang word. We think you know what it is. It's a decidedly
15:23dour downbeat to end on, with the Entity's colorful language eliciting little more than confusion.
15:29Number 14. The Number 23. Now, here's a movie that makes the wrong call at every turn,
15:36with its twist being at the center of it all.
15:46Jim Carrey stars as Walter Sparrow, a man who becomes obsessed with a book that may hold the
15:51secrets to a murder. Wrapped up in this mystery is The Number 23, which Walter can't help but
15:57see everywhere. At no point is the film less convincing than the third act, wherein Walter
16:13overcomes his amnesia and remembers that he wrote the book and committed the murder.
16:18The Number 23 takes the well-worn trope of an unreliable protagonist and stretches it
16:30beyond its limits. If it was less concerned with simply being dark, it might have offered
16:35a halfway satisfying solution. Number 13. The Box.
16:40The financially desperate Norma and Arthur are presented with an option by a mysterious man.
16:45If they press a button, they'll receive one million dollars, but a stranger will die.
17:00Rather than lean into the psychological angle of the plot, the movie eventually takes a turn
17:05into the realm of science fiction. In the end, the mysterious man reveals his assistants have
17:10blinded and deafened their son, and offers them another choice. Keep the money and live
17:15with their son's condition, or Arthur can kill Norma and their son's senses will be restored.
17:20We get the latter, but we feel like the movie should have taken option C.
17:24That is, if option C is anything else. Number 12. The Woman in Black.
17:35For what it's worth, The Woman in Black is actually a creepy little haunting film,
17:39with plenty of atmosphere to spare. But we're still not sold on the dour ending.
17:44Throughout the film, lawyer Arthur Kipps handles an estate that turns out to be haunted by the
17:48spirit of a woman who lost her young son. The titular woman in black gets her revenge by
17:53taking the lives of the children in the nearby village. Realizing she's going after his son
18:07Joseph next, Arthur attempts to save him. However, after Joseph wanders onto train tracks,
18:13both he and Arthur are killed. While Arthur is reunited with his deceased wife in the afterlife,
18:34we can't help but wish things had turned out better in the end.
18:37Number 11. The Boy in the Striped Pajamas.
18:41This one is incredibly heavy, so get ready. The film is set in Nazi-occupied Poland,
18:46and follows the friendship between two boys. Bruno is the son of an SS officer,
18:51and Shmuel is a Jewish prisoner at a nearby extermination camp.
19:00The boys' ignorance of the real horrors going on reaches a critical point at the end when
19:05Bruno is mistaken for a prisoner and rounded up with the rest of them.
19:11Bruno, Shmuel, and countless others are tragically executed, and the film ends with
19:17Bruno's family utterly devastated. While the film has garnered mixed reactions, detractors of the
19:23ending have criticized it for being contrived and sympathizing with Nazis. Either way, it's
19:28definitely a gut punch we wish we could forget. Number 10. Secret Window. Certain endings are
19:38so cliche, their inclusion nearly always detracts from the rest of the story.
19:42A tired twist in murder mysteries is revealing the protagonist to be the killer,
19:46usually with multiple personalities thrown in for good measure. In Secret Window,
19:50Johnny Depp plays Mort, a writer who suffers a mental break after learning about his wife's
19:55affair. Throughout the film, Mort is tormented by a person named Shooter,
19:59before the third act reveals the two to be one and the same.
20:08Number 9. Sucker Punch.
20:16Zack Snyder's film is a grim psychological drama about abuse that also loves to drop
20:21its attractive cast in video game scenarios devoid of consequence. Despite being set in
20:26a horrifying mental institute fond of lobotomizing its patients, Baby Doll's
20:30explosive dream sequences are pure escapism. As a result, Sucker Punch's tone is all over the place.
20:37Ultimately, Baby Doll is lobotomized to allow one of the other captives to escape.
20:42It's an ending that may have actually worked had Sucker Punch focused more on the psychological
20:46storyline rather than constantly stopping dead to show glorified music videos.
20:51Number 8. Knock Knock.
20:58Starring Keanu Reeves, Knock Knock's married protagonist engages in a touch of infidelity
21:03before the two determined women torture him as punishment for succumbing to temptation.
21:08For the most part, Knock Knock plays it relatively straight, but the over-the-top
21:12ending jumps right over satire into parody territory,
21:16including a no moment capable of making Anakin Skywalker blush.
21:23After the protagonist accidentally likes his own assault video on Facebook,
21:26the girls gleefully escape to presumably torture another day.
21:31At the very least, the movie that inspired Knock Knock
21:33had the decency to hit the villains with a truck.
21:41Number 7. Paranormal Activity โ€“ The Ghost Dimension.
21:44The sixth entry in the franchise, The Ghost Dimension finally answers
21:48a couple of long-standing questions. As it so happens, some things are better left a mystery.
21:53Long story short, a cult needs the blood of a girl named Leela to revive a demon called Toby,
21:58and the villains succeed while killing the rest of the child's family.
22:02Since most entries in the series conclude with a win for the bad guys,
22:05The Ghost Dimension's shocking ending happens to be the most predictable outcome possible.
22:09Along with an absence of scares, The Ghost Dimension's theatrical ending
22:13represents a franchise that never should have been running out of steam.
22:18Number 6. The Descent โ€“ Part 2.
22:23Following six women who enter a cave occupied by cannibalistic humans,
22:272005's The Descent is a fantastic horror movie with a seemingly happy ending
22:32that winds up being the exact opposite.
22:34Despite obviously lacking the element of surprise key
22:37in making the original film's climax so effective,
22:40the sequel could not resist closing with another switcheroo.
22:43The Descent's protagonist sacrifices themselves to allow another woman to escape the cave.
22:48Unfortunately, a rarely seen minor character shows up to ensure nobody survives.
22:52It's almost as if the film suddenly remembers it needs a crushing ending
22:56and opts for the flimsiest solution possible.
23:03Number 5. Remember Me.
23:08In the hands of the right director and writer,
23:10any subject matter can work.
23:12That being said,
23:14adopting a real-life tragedy to artificially bloat a story's self-importance
23:18is a recipe for disaster.
23:20For approximately 95% of its runtime,
23:23Remember Me is a meandering drama about pretty people grieving over senseless acts of violence.
23:29Then the 9-11 attacks happen while the protagonist is in the World Trade Center.
23:33For some reason,
23:34Remember Me turns one of America's worst moments
23:37into a poorly-timed twist ending that no one asked for.
23:41Number 4. Splice.
23:47Strange, twisted, and often great,
23:49Splice sees a pair of scientists fusing human and animal DNA
23:53to create a female hybrid called Dren.
23:55As Elsa's own DNA is used,
23:57the engineer is basically Dren's mother.
24:00Meanwhile, the other scientist begins to sleep with the hybrid creature.
24:04Following a thoughtful exploration of this unorthodox love triangle,
24:07Splice forgoes atmosphere in favor of a purely insane climax.
24:12After becoming male,
24:13Dren forcibly impregnates Elsa,
24:16who opts to keep the baby for money.
24:18Anything interesting Splice says about genetic engineering
24:21is overshadowed by the overly grotesque third act.
24:24Nobody would blame you if you didn't do this.
24:27Number 3. High Tension.
24:35Starting out as a relatively grounded slasher film about Marie,
24:38a teenager desperate to protect her friend from a deranged serial killer,
24:42High Tension ultimately exposes the protagonist as a psychopath
24:45suffering from dissociative identity disorder.
24:48Framed as Marie recounting her version of events while in a mental institute,
24:52High Tension asks audiences to believe all these violent murders
24:55were committed by a petite teenager rather than a brawny guy.
24:58Even if the ending's inconsistencies can be waved away
25:01as the ravings of an unreliable narrator,
25:03this does not mean logic can be thrown out the window.
25:06Otherwise, everything prior to the twist is rendered irrelevant.
25:10Number 2. The Life of David Gale.
25:13Focusing on a philosophy professor sentenced to death
25:15after being wrongly convicted of murder and assault,
25:18The Life of David Gale's twist ending is hardly to blame for all of the film's problems.
25:23That being said, it definitely does not help.
25:26In an attempt to discredit capital punishment,
25:28David Gale frames himself for the murder of a close personal friend
25:32who actually took their own life,
25:33with a video of the real death surfacing after the protagonist is executed.
25:38Consequently, The Life of David Gale takes the criminal justice system,
25:42Kate Winslet's investigative reporter,
25:44and audiences on a wild and profoundly ill-advised ride.
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26:04Number 1. Pay It Forward.
26:06That's me, that's me, and that's three people.
26:12Seeking to make the world a better place,
26:14a young boy named Trevor creates a pay-it-forward system
26:18where favors are reimbursed by the benefactor helping out three other people.
26:22Despite touching upon serious themes,
26:24Pay It Forward is an uplifting family drama that highlights the good inside most humans,
26:29but the film cannot help delivering one final and unnecessary gut punch.
26:33Trevor shockingly dies while defending a friend from a group of mean kids,
26:38an ending so out of nowhere and blatantly manipulative,
26:41it cheapens the rest of the movie.
26:43Did you still enjoy these films despite their controversial endings?
26:46Let us know in the comments below.
26:49That was intense.
26:51Did you enjoy this video?
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