
Some films spend their entire runtime building momentum, only to lose their impact in the final moments. When an ending fails to deliver, it can leave audiences feeling swindled by the story they were invested in. Even otherwise solid movies will be remembered for how they finish. Here are fifteen movies where the ending ruins the whole thing.
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The Number 23 (2007)
The explanation behind the mystery feels underwhelming compared to the buildup. It removes much of the intrigue established earlier.
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The Village (2004)
The twist redefines the entire premise in a way that feels more frustrating than revealing. It undercuts the tension that the story carefully built.
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War of the Worlds (2005)
The ending resolves the conflict abruptly with little involvement from the characters. It feels disconnected from the journey that came before.
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Glass (2019)
The ending resolves major arcs quickly and with limited impact. It reduces the weight of the characters’ journeys.
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Hancock (2008)
The ending leans into a mythology that feels disconnected from the initial setup. It changes the focus of the story too late.
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High Tension (2003)
The twist introduces inconsistencies that make earlier scenes difficult to reconcile. It disrupts the internal logic of the story.
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Law Abiding Citizen (2009)
The final outcome contradicts the tension and ideas developed earlier. It simplifies a complex conflict into a more conventional resolution.
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Lucy (2014)
The conclusion becomes abstract in a way that leaves the narrative without clear resolution. It moves away from the grounded elements introduced earlier.
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Now You See Me (2013)
The final reveal introduces a twist that raises more questions than it answers. The logic behind it does not hold up under closer attention.
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Remember Me (2010)
The final twist reframes the entire story in a way that feels abrupt. It introduces a real world event that shifts the tone dramatically.
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Signs (2002)
The resolution weakens the threat that was built throughout the film. The reveal makes the central conflict feel less convincing.
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Sunshine (2007)
The final act shifts tone dramatically, changing the type of story being told. This shift can feel out of place compared to the earlier sections.
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The Happening (2008)
The explanation behind the events feels unclear and underdeveloped. The resolution does not match the tension built earlier.
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The Matrix Revolutions (2003)
The resolution feels less satisfying compared to the buildup across the series. It leaves key ideas without strong closure.
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