The best movie endings ever

20 Se7en
David Fincher, 1995
Kevin Spacey?s gruesomely creative serial killer takes the Seven Deadly Sins as his inspiration for a series of horrible and slightly sanctimonious murders. Can Brad Pitt and Morgan Freeman catch the killer before he dispatches all of his targets?
The ?head in a box? denouement is a jaw-dropper of an ending. Pitt and Spacey?s characters take on the mantles of Wrath and Envy, respectively: Spacey?s jealousy of the cop?s domestic bliss with bride Gwyneth Paltrow causes him to chop her head off; Pitt?s rage and grief prompts him to execute the killer on the spot. WENDY IDE



19 The Blair Witch Project
Daniel Myrick, Eduardo Sanchez, 1999
After numerous screen freak-outs, lost students Heather (Heather Donohue), Mike (Mike Williams) and Josh (Josh Leonard) are in a deserted house. Heather screams, Mike is killed by an unseen assailant and the last shot we see, in Heather?s grainy video footage, is of Josh standing in a catatonic stupor, facing the corner walls of the basement, like a punished child. Creepy. KEVIN MAHER


18 Memento
Christopher Nolan, 2000
Leonard (Guy Pearce) is so traumatised by his wife?s murder that he is incapable of remembering anything, bar the occasional jigsaw-like flashback. As he pieces together the clues and tracks down the man who killed his wife, we share his revelations and his triumphs, sympathising with his need to remind himself of what he?s done using notes and tattoos. Then we realise that Leonard is on his way to kill an innocent man. As Leonard drives away his satisfaction at killing his wife?s ?murderer? is, we realise, only temporary. We have been had. Leonard?s amnesiac quest for revenge has turned him into a serial killer, doomed to repeat his actions ad infinitum. And we have been on his side. NIGEL KENDALL



17 Planet of the Apes
Franklin J Schaffner, 1968
Dignified seminaked astro-hunk George Taylor (Charlton Heston) has finally escaped from his brutish gorilla overlords, and is taking a coastal canter when it happens. First the mangled torch creeps into shot, then the crown of lady Liberty herself. Taylor realises that he?s not on another planet but on postapocalyptic Earth! ?You maniacs!? he screams. ?You blew it up! Damn you! God damn you all to Hell!? KM Read the Times review

16 The Shawshank Redemption
Frank Darabont, 1994
Having endured decades of wrongful incarceration, beatings, rape and false hope, Andy Dufresne (Tim Robbins) escapes from his gothic jail. After gleefully detailing Dufresne?s flight, Darabont was unsure whether to show his subsequent reunion with jail buddy Red (Morgan Freeman) on a Mexican beach. He wisely chose the even more uplifting option ? as his editor noted: ?Tell me that smile on Morgan?s face isn?t going to leave the audience as high as a kite.? ED POTTON



15 Gone With the Wind
Victor Fleming, 1939
Boasting a double-whammy of iconic endings, this Civil War epic closes with the destitute heroine Scarlett O?Hara (Vivien Leigh) being dumped by husband Rhett Butler (Clark Gable) with the immortal lines: ?Frankly my dear, I don?t give a damn.? The feisty Scarlett regroups and, within 50 seconds of screen time, faces the camera for that classic tear-stained close-up, announcing: ?I?ll think of some way to get him back. After all, tomorrow is another day.? KM Read the Times review


14 Doctor Strangelove
Stanley Kubrick, 1964

This comedic countdown to nuclear apocalypse concludes in appropriately bombastic style, with Peter Sellers? eponymous, wheelchair-bound strategist suddenly finding the use of his legs and Slim Pickens?s bomb commander riding an ICBM, rodeo style, out of a plane. Kubrick?s masterstroke was following such outrageousness with a michievously serene montage of explosions set to Vera Lynn?s We?ll Meet Again. EP Read the Times review



13 Les Diaboliques
Henri-Georges Clouzot, 1955

Forget the so-so American remake ? the black-and-white French original has one of the most shocking denouements in screen history. The illtreated wife and the mistress of a cruel provincial head-master are conspiring to kill him, and appear to have done so. Until his ?corpse? rears up out of the bathtub, sending his wife into terminal cardiac arrest. Just as her plotting husband and his mistress had hoped. EP Read the Times review



12 The Wizard of Oz
Victor Fleming, 1939

The prototype twist ending has Dorothy Gale (Judy Garland) waking up back in drab and dreary Kansas and realising that the previous 90 minutes of multicol-oured action adventure were only part of a fever dream. Bummer. Farm hands Hunk (Ray Bolger), Zeke (Bert Lahr) and Hickory (Jack Haley) gather round Dorothy?s sickbed, invoking their counterparts from Oz ? Scarecrow, Lion and Tinman respectively. Dorothy decides that, despite the allure of faraway lands, ?There?s no place like home?. KM Read the Times review



11 Thelma & Louise
Ridley Scott, 1991
In this outlaw chick-flick Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis are on the lam in a Ford Thunderbird convertible. After a truck-stop altercation turns deadly, the two women flee across the US. Eventually they are cornered by the police, but Sarandon floors the accelerator and sends the car hurtling over a cliff. Part exploitation movie, part cri de coeur for abused women, this film let its girls go down gloriously unrepentant. WI


10 The Sixth Sense
M. Night Shyamalan, 1999
The twist to end all twists. Try as he did in subsequent movies such as Signs and The Village, Shyamalan has failed to trump his debut film?s climax. Malcolm Crowe, Bruce Willis's child psychologist is making good progess with a troubled boy who can ?see dead people? (Haley Joel Osment), until it dawns on Crowe that he himself is a ghost. The genius of the ending was not just its unexpectedness, but the way it forced a reevalution of the film?s previous events ? ?So that?s why his wife was ignoring him!? EP


9 The Usual Suspects
Bryan Singer, 1995
Cop Dave Kujan (Chazz Palminteri) thinks he has the case of enigmatic criminal mastermind Keyser S?ze sewn up, until it turns out that Verbal Kint (Kevin Spacey) ? the informer Kujan has rashly set free ? made up most of his story and is probably S?ze himself, a double bombshell that Singer drops in a dazzlingly edited final flourish. EP


8 The Italian Job
Peter Collison, 1969

This light-hearted heist movie boasts the ultimate cliff-hanger ending ? literally. Michael Caine and his colourful band of crims have just pulled off a daring bullion robbery from a bank in Turin. The getaway by bus goes smoothly until an accident sends the vehicle into a skid, leaving it dangling precariously over the edge of a cliff. Cue great final line: ?Hang on lads, I?ve got an idea . . .? WI Read the Times review

7 Some Like It Hot
Billy Wilder, 1959

It?s the perfect ending to the perfect screwball comedy. Italian mobsters have seen through Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis?s female disguises. Along with Marilyn Monroe, they flee on board the yacht of millionaire Osgood Fielding III, who is smitten by Lemmon?s female alter ego, Daphne. Lemmon desperately tries to dissuade Osgood, finally ripping off his wig and shouting: ?I?m a man.? The smirking Osgood?s reply is one of the great last lines: ?Nobody?s perfect.? WI Read the Times review



6 Breakfast At Tiffany?s
Blake Edwards, 1961

In torrential rain, in an insalubrious Manhattan alleyway, Audrey Hepburn?s Holly Golightly desperately searches for Cat, the stray pet she just cruelly dumped from a cab. The missing cat represents her decision not to close herself off from love and mutual dependency. Only when she finds him can she move on with George Peppard?s impoverished writer Paul. There?s not a dry eye in the house ? and the sodden cat?s furious expression is hilarious. WI Read the Times review



5 Chinatown
Roman Polanski, 1974
Private eye Jake Gittes (Jack Nicholson) has blundered into a murder case that involves multimillionaire Noah Cross (John Huston) and a scandal about the Los Angeles water supply. Gittes, hired by Cross, discovers that Cross has had an incestuous relationship with his daughter, Evelyn, that has produced a child, Katherine. Cross wants the child. Evelyn wants to keep her away from her wicked father. Gittes has fallen in love with Evelyn, but suspects her of murder.
In the devastating final scene, all the film?s protagonists and plotlines twist together. Evelyn drives away at high speed with her daughter through the streets of Chinatown. The police fire warning shots, one of which kills Evelyn. Cross takes Katherine. He has the child he wanted.

But at what cost? Gittes knows the truth about Cross?s relationship to the child, but is powerless to stop him. A crowd gathers around the fatal scene. Gittes is told to turn away. ?Forget it, Jake. It?s Chinatown.? The camera, indifferent, fades out, leaving us as desolate and shocked as Gittes. NK Read the Times review



4 E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial
Steven Spielberg, 1982

After weeping at E.T.?s tragic death, then weeping again at his resurrection, and again as Elliott (Henry Thomas) and Co magically take to the skies, what could possibly be next? Nothing but the mother of all weepies in the final farewell scene. Here the composer John Williams pummels the soul, Spielberg yanks every heartstring, and E.T. touches the blubbering Elliott?s forehead with his flashlight finger, saying: ?I?ll be right here.? Then E.T. disappears up inside a giant Faberg? egg. Brilliant. KM Read the Times review



3 Casablanca
Michael Curtiz, 1942

Driven to cynicism and exile in wartime Casablanca by a woman who abandoned him in Occupied Paris, Rick (Humphrey Bogart) is not best pleased when she turns up in town with her freedom-fighting husband. But Bogie can?t stop loving her, nor she him. Now though, with Nazis all around, the fate of the world may depend on her husband?s safe passage out of Casablanca. Rick and Ilsa (Ingrid Bergman) must choose between enriching their own lives by eloping, or enriching the world?s by helping her escape with her husband. On the tarmac, the plane ready to taxi and the Nazis ready to spring, Bogart and the love of his life embrace for what we know will be the last time. Bogie?s ability to suggest the soft centre at the heart of a tough nut has never been matched. NK Read the Times review



2 Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
George Roy Hill, 1969

Pale, bullet-ridden, yet still bantering, our improbably handsome bank-robbing heroes Butch Cassidy (Paul Newman) and the Sundance Kid (Robert Redford) are trapped in an adobe barn, surrounded by the entire Bolivian army. They have just enough time for a few gags before it?s time for a suicidal frontal assault on their foes. ?For a minute there, I thought we were in trouble,? quips Butch, before leading the charge. The soundtrack then reveals the inter-ballistic mayhem that follows, yet the screen simply freeze-frames on the men, an elegant portrait of courageous insanity. KM Read the Times review



1 Carrie
Brian De Palma, 1976

At the end of this Stephen King adaptation, Carrie (Sissy Spacek), who begins the film doused in the blood of her first period, has ended it drenched in the blood of pigs at a high-school prom. Unfortunately for her classmates, Carrie?s womanhood brought with it telekinetic powers, which she then uses to wipe out most of them ? and herself ? in a blaze of purifying flame. Sue (Amy Irving), one of the few survivors, visits Carrie?s freshly dug grave. She lays flowers. Carrie?s arm thrusts out of the soil and grabs her. A million stomachs leap. Sue wakes up. It was just a nightmare, but one that will never end. NK Read the Times review



http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/film/article4302890.ece
 

winkyduck

TYVM Morgan William!!!
Re: The best movie endings ever

No Way Out

The ending is one of the best ever making this one of the best movies ever and leaving it off the list makes this list worthless in my book
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

This is too good not to be in Main forum...

CASABLANCA is my all time favorite movie so its nice to see it listed #3...

I also thought the ending to West Side Story was great....

Gone with the Wind at #15 is a joke and should be near the top!!!
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

This is too good not to be in Main forum...

CASABLANCA is my all time favorite movie so its nice to see it listed #3...

I also thought the ending to West Side Story was great....

I didn't know if it belonged out there or not. :cheers
 

Journeyman

EOG Master
Re: The best movie endings ever

Shawshank came to mind.

The best endings are the ones you never expect, I think most will agree with that.
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

I think the endings of "The Hustler", "Rounders", and "Let It Ride" were all pretty good also. :)
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

some great movies, not in agreement with the order they rank them though. good find dawg.
 

Journeyman

EOG Master
Re: The best movie endings ever

The Wizard of OZ, is a great ending .... the problem is we all see the movie from the time we're too young to realize how ingenius it was, which waters down the effect ,seeing it every year from a young child on.
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

I guess I have been sheltered, I have only seen a handful of those movies.
 

The Prophet

EOG Dedicated
Re: The best movie endings ever




Witness For the Prosecution (1957)

There are many unexpected twists here, and the ending is a real shocker, a complete surprise, and quite satisfying.


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Re: The best movie endings ever

Shawshank was a great movie all the way around - with a fabulous ending. I also loved Breakfast and Tiffany's.
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

One of my absolute favorites, not on this list, is Pulp Fiction. I know the "ending" really isn't the END, but seeing Travolta and Jackson, as mean as they are, walking out of that diner in those ridiculous clothes was a classic to me.
 

Journeyman

EOG Master
Re: The best movie endings ever

The movie where Matt Damon gets wacked as he exits the elevator, after you think he has one upped everyone, that was a great scene and big surprise....can't think of the name of it.
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

Does anyone remember Ten Little Indians (sometimes known as And then There Were None)?

Now that was a GREAT ENDING!!!
 

jlawbaker

EOG Senior Member
Re: The best movie endings ever

One of my favorite endings is near the end of Schindler's List when Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson), breaks down after being giving the ring from his bookkeeper, Itshak Stern (Ben Kingsley), when he begans to reflect on how many more lives he could have saved if he hadn't wasted so much money and Stern tells him that because of what he did do that generations will have been saved because of his actions. Great scene. Fantastic movie.
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

The movie where Matt Damon gets wacked as he exits the elevator, after you think he has one upped everyone, that was a great scene and big surprise....can't think of the name of it.


jack nicholson played a great mob character as well
 

Blondie

EOG Master
Re: The best movie endings ever

One of my favorite endings is near the end of Schindler's List when Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson), breaks down after being giving the ring from his bookkeeper, Itshak Stern (Ben Kingsley), when he begans to reflect on how many more lives he could have saved if he hadn't wasted so much money and Stern tells him that because of what he did do that generations will have been saved because of his actions. Great scene. Fantastic movie.

VERY good one!
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

It wasn't a "surprise" ending, but A Few Good Men... Nicholson's tirade on the stand was AWESOME!
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

i believe the movie "heat" with deniro and pacino, i think that's the name of it, had a great "chase" scene as well.
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

It wasn't a "surprise" ending, but A Few Good Men... Nicholson's tirade on the stand was AWESOME!

Excellent choice - I loved that movie! 91023i2ndw;l

Oh, and City of Angels ... great movie, great soundtrack, and really sad ending :(
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

Sweded, you need to get hooked up with Netflix and start catching up on some great films.

I actually already own The Departed...I just haven't had a chance to watch it. I'll tell you this, though...the Bopston accents better be spot on, or I'll turn it off within 10 minutes. I can't stand a bad Boston accent.
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

I actually already own The Departed...I just haven't had a chance to watch it. I'll tell you this, though...the Bopston accents better be spot on, or I'll turn it off within 10 minutes. I can't stand a bad Boston accent.

How about Good Will Hunting ... speaking of Boston accents and great endings!
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

another great one is the movie with ed norton and robert dinero, they are safe crackers and norton get's his in the end.........
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

How about Good Will Hunting ... speaking of Boston accents and great endings!

LOVE that movie!

"I got heh numbah, how'd ya like those apples?"...or whatever the exact words are. Ben and Matt only have good Boston accents because they're from the area. Same with Mark Wahlburg. Jimmy Fallon's is a joke. Rhode Island accents are tougher though. Most people think it's the same as Boston. Not even close.
 
Re: The best movie endings ever

Had they incorporated the REAL ending into First Blood, it would have been an even better movie than it was.
 

jlawbaker

EOG Senior Member
Re: The best movie endings ever

I actually already own The Departed...I just haven't had a chance to watch it. I'll tell you this, though...the Bopston accents better be spot on, or I'll turn it off within 10 minutes. I can't stand a bad Boston accent.

As far as accents go, I think that Leonardo DiCaprio's and Mark Wahlberg's are pretty spot on, as for Jack's; you be the judge.

Furthermore, if you would like to see just how diverse DiCaprio can be, watch the Departed and then watch him in Blood Diamond; talk about two very different accents. The guy can adapt, as well as act.
 
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