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10 most depressing movie endings ever

min0 lee

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10 Most Depressing Movie Endings Ever - Den of Geek


Be warned: spoilers a-plenty lie within, as Martin reveals the movies that leave you feeling completely depressed once the final reel has finished.
One famously mistranslated sign in a Swiss restaurant reads: 'Our wines leave you nothing to hope for'. You'll know how the patrons feel if you walk out of Blockbuster with this little lot....


THERE ARE SO MANY SPOILERS IN THIS ARTICLE THAT IT HURTS. BE WARNED!

10: Soylent Green (1973)
Future cop Chuck Heston has been through hell trying to find out what the big secret at the core of his overcrowded society is, only to find that the Soylent Company that provides food for the starving earth has been processing human bodies and feeding it to the populace. Dragged off by the authorities, the last shot is of desperate Heston's hand crying out for justice as he cries: 'Soylent Green is people!'.

9: The Elephant Man (1980)
David Lynch's classic telling of the fortunes of the deformed but transcendent John Merrick could actually have had a relatively happy ending, with Merrick loved and cared for. Instead Lynch shoots right past this hard-won contentment to create a bittersweet montage of images that pre-figure the beginning of his next film, Dune (1984), showing the ghostly visage of Merrick's possibly imaginary mother floating through space as Merrick peacefully takes his own life. "Nothing will die..."

8: The Descent (2005)
Exactly how depressing you find the ending of Neil Marshall's tale of pot-holing horror depends on how involved you are able to become with his abrasive set of female characters. The re-cuts in the U.S. release leave the film with two possible endings, the bleaker of which finds the surviving character awaking from a psychotic dream of an improbably easy escape, to find herself buried alive in the goblin-strewn labyrinth.

7: Invasion Of The Body Snatchers (1978)
Jittery Veronica Cartwright approaches fellow refugee Donald Sutherland, having lost him in the flight from the pod-people Sutherland is standing by some trees looking confused. He spies Cartwright. They've been through hell together. He raises his arm and points at her accusingly, and lets out a ululating cry that will alert all the other pod-people to her presence!

6: The Fly (1986)
Brundlefly, in a last ditch effort to reverse the genetic collision between himself and a house fly, takes one last, unwise trip in his teleportation devise, to emerge as a ghastly fusion of teleporter metal and monster. A horrified Geena Davis watches the thing approach with a shot gun in her hand. Brundlefly's had enough - he gets hold of the end of the barrel and positions it between his own fly eyes. Davies pulls the trigger and breaks out in tears.

5: Dead Ringers (1988)
More vein-opening from David Cronenberg. This bizarre and affecting tale of twin gynaecologist brothers concludes with a touching but miserable suicide pact between the insane siblings.

4: Spider (2002)
Yet more Canadian grimness from Cronenberg, as Ralph Fiennes' oedipal protagonist decides to end the drudgery of his impoverished and schizophrenic life by taking it.

3: Nineteen-Eighty Four (1984)
Dissident Winston Smith realises there's a limit to the power of love, as a nasty run-in with rats in Room 101 turns him into a model Oceanian citizen who renounces his rebel girlfriend and embraces Big Brother.

2: A.I. - Artificial Intelligence (2001)

Having been abandoned by his mum in one of the most disturbing and misery-inducing scenes in contemporary cinema, robot boy Haley Joel Osment stares depressed into space at the bottom of the Hudson River for 2000 years, only to be rescued by itinerant aliens who use science/magic to give him the long lost mum he always wanted - and then take her away from him just before he expires forever.

1: The Mist (2007)
After driving desperately through the blasted, monster-strewn landscape of Frank Darabont's 2007 Stephen King adaptation, Thomas Jane finally runs out of fuel. With only four bullets left, Jane gallantly spares his son, his new love interest and two close friends the horror of being eaten by the nasties, and nobly goes out to face his fate - only to find that the Military have finally come and are mopping up the debris. Another two minutes and everyone in the car would have been saved!
 
#1 does sound like a messed up ending, I saw #8 descent and regretted it.
Will rent #1.
I think the ending of Se7en was rather fucked up.
 
I can't believe they didn't include of mice and men......I was suicidal for 3 years after I watched that.
 
Pan's Labyrinth when the little girl gets shot...

Sixth Sense when Bruce Willis realizes he's actually dead.....
 
The only movie I know out of those 10 is The Descent. All I remember about that movie was that it was nothing special. And I do remember it having a shitty ending.
 
Pan's Labyrinth when the little girl gets shot...

Sixth Sense when Bruce Willis realizes he's actually dead.....

Thx for ruining it for me...:mooh:
 
Big Fish is pretty sad, I don't know about depressing...



The Myst is definetly #1.
 
Harry Potters last movie when he's 50 trying to play the part of a High School kid....
 
Signs is the most depressing movie ending ever cause if you ever make it to the ending you'll realize that you just sat through the worst movie possibly ever made all the way to the end.....

Donnie Darko was depressing too....
 
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Signs is the most depressing movie ending ever cause if you ever make it to the ending you'll realize that you just sat through the worst movie possibly ever made all the way to the end.....

Signs, Unbreakable, and Sixth were his best films. I absoultely loved the ending, even though it's surprise doesnt make sense for the planet the aliens chose.

1# is a pretty good choice. I loved that shit!

The Descent was a pretty good horror flick by todays standards.

I like endings like that, where the bad guy wins or that its a :wtf: moment. Endings like A.I. are downright depressing. Body Snatchers has a good ending too. Shit, right before the destruction of the green house, when his girl friend crumbles is quite sad.
 
Whatever you do don't go see Valkyrie!

Used my GFs AMC gift card, and regretted getting to see it for free

(I wish I had two more hands)

:dwnthumb: - :dwnthumb: - :dwnthumb: - :dwnthumb:
 
Damn, the ending of the Mist is rough. Movies don't normally 'get' to me, but damn. The guy just shot his frikkin kid in the head moments before the troops roll through...

The Descent was just a bad movie overall, I can't believe that the original Night of the Living Dead didn't make the list. Ben manages to survive the hordes of the undead only to be shot for looking out a window.
 
Well, what kind of ending did you predict for Valk? You know he doesnt kill Hitler...

I thought the ending was actually "not bad",
as it did my heart good to see them execute Tom Cruise,
after having to had watch him produce, direct, and star, in this turd of a film.

The best part of the entire experience were the previews for Gran Torino.
 
Requiem for a Dream caused me major psychological and emotional damage. Seriously, I felt depressed for an entire week after watching it.


The ending of that movie almost made me break down.
 
Requiem for a Dream caused me major psychological and emotional damage. Seriously, I felt depressed for an entire week after watching it.


The ending of that movie almost made me break down.

Yea that whole movie was pretty fucked up

as was Donnie Darko
 
I never really understood Donnie Darko. I only watched it once, but I couldn't figure out if he was schizophrenic with the most of the movie being in his head, or if he could really see into the future.
 
I never really understood Donnie Darko. I only watched it once, but I couldn't figure out if he was schizophrenic with the most of the movie being in his head, or if he could really see into the future.

To be honest I didn't really either, I remember reading an article from the creator of the movie saying that he has read people's thoughts interpreting what the film was all about that were better than what he intended it to be hahah

I can't remember what he said he meant it to be, but he ended with something cliche like "It is what the viewer wants it to be." or something like that...
 
Wiki said:
Writer/director Richard Kelly does not deny the validity of personal interpretations, but has expressed his own theories through the extra commentary on the two DVDs, his own (fictional) book The Philosophy of Time Travel, and in various other interviews.

According to Kelly and his Philosophy of Time Travel, at midnight on October 2 a Tangent Universe branches off the Primary Universe around the time when Donnie is called out of his bedroom by Frank, immediately before the appearance of the Artifact, the faulty jet engine. The inherently unstable Tangent Universe will collapse in just over 28 days and take the Primary Universe with it if not corrected. Closing the Tangent Universe is the duty of the Living Receiver, Donnie, who wields certain supernatural powers to help him in the task.

Those who die within the Tangent Universe (and would not have died otherwise) are the Manipulated Dead (Frank, Gretchen). Frank, at least, is also given certain powers in that he is able to subtly understand what is happening and have the ability to contact and influence the Living Receiver via the Fourth Dimensional Construct (water). All others within the orbit of the Living Receiver are the Manipulated Living (e.g. Ms. Pomeroy, Dr. Monnitoff), subconsciously drawn to push him towards his destiny to close the Tangent Universe and, according to the Philosophy of Time Travel, die by the Artifact.

Frank appears in the story in two guises (indeed, three guises if we assume that he 'never' dies on account of the restoration of the Primary Universe through the negation of the Tangent Universe). First of all, there is the Manipulated Dead Frank who appears to Donnie as a premonition from the future of the Tangent Universe in the disturbing rabbit suit. Dead Frank is aware of Donnie's fate and destiny, and impels him to realize it so that the Primary Universe can be restored at the point where/when the Tangent Universe branched off from it. Secondly, there is the living boyfriend of Donnie's sister, Frank, whose fate unfolds within the Tangent Universe by means of Donnie's successes in realizing his mission. This living boyfriend is fatally (in both senses) shot by Donnie towards the end of the film, a killing which was foreseen by Donnie (albeit through a glass darkly).

In regard to Donnie's mission, the question arises as to whether his success in fulfilling it was predetermined. If we assume that it was, then Donnie was fated to die a young death in the Primary Universe. If we assume that it was not, then there would not have necessarily been a Manipulated Dead Frank to guide Donnie on his mission. The fact that such a Frank existed suggests that it is probably the case that Donnie was, throughout the film, taking the inevitable steps towards his own demise.
 
Requiem for a Dream caused me major psychological and emotional damage. Seriously, I felt depressed for an entire week after watching it.


The ending of that movie almost made me break down.
I'd read the book long before the movie, it's just where addiction will get you that's all Selby knew to write about....He was quite a liver ol' Hubert/by liver I mean he liked to live his writing itself was a work of unconventional art much like Jack Kerouac he used the stream of consciousness style and never worried about the grammar aspect/in fact he rarely used puncuation/these were the days of bennies when a man could pop reds all day long and get more from the corner drugstore the next day/but Hubert wrote all of his stuff sober so he says but I think he just meant off the nod, la la stuff which he'd been addicted to for years before he became a writer/then he got back into it did a hitch in the slam and after that he refused to ever touch smack again even on his dying day when in pain he didn't want morphine.... he used the / much like Jack used the , writers commonly use some form of odd puncuation to help them discern where a thought process jumped track much like how I use my oft seen......it's closer than the enter and tab keys
 
#1 does sound like a messed up ending, I saw #8 descent and regretted it.
Will rent #1.
I think the ending of Se7en was rather fucked up.

What made the ending of The Mist even worse is that when the adults decided to be killed, along with the guy's kid, the kid woke up right before the dad was going to shoot him.
 
^I was talking to a friend of mine about that ending. He said he found the ending funny. When asked why, he said cuz it was too fast. Had the army showed up hours or even days later, it wouldve still been a devastating ending, but the fact that it was within 2 min made it laughable.

I sort of agreed, but not 100%. I was thinking that when the writers were almost done with the ending, they said..."wait, you know what would REALLY be fucked up????"
 
Has anyone of you watched the movie called, 'The Island'?
I think if we continue to ignore our moral value and give too much emphasis on materialism, we will sometime in the future, become like those rich people and those scientists in the movie.:yes:
 
Has anyone of you watched the movie called, 'The Island'?
I think if we continue to ignore our moral value and give too much emphasis on materialism, we will sometime in the future, become like those rich people and those scientists in the movie.:yes:
Which one?
 
Which one?
Are there two movies called 'ISLAND' or did I screw up on my punctuation?:geewhiz: If there are two movies, then I mean the newer one.:yes:
 
I hear that movie 'Marley and Me' is pretty sad...?
 
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