The Most Confusing Movie Endings

Mulholland Drive

An aspiring LA actress finds a woman with amnesia who is living in her aunt's home. Once their story is set up, it changes, and it keeps changing. There are random stories about random characters throughout the film. David Lynch has never commented on the meaning of the film, but one critic has said that it's meant to be about nothing. 

Drive

It's rare to find a decent cliffhanger these days, but Drive makes the cut. Ryan Gosling's character speeds away at the end of the film as he's suffering from a stab wound. It's never shown if he dies or not, but film sleuths have determined that he did die. Earlier in the film, he talks about a story that ends with both characters dying, relaying that he knows he will die. 

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The More You Know

  • Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was the first American film to have a soundtrack.
  • In every scene of Fight Club, there is a Starbucks coffee cup.
  • Christopher Mintz-Plasse, who played the character of ‘Fogell/McLovin’ in the coming-of-age indie flick ‘Superbad,’ was only 17 when filming took place. Being a minor at the time, his mother was required to be on the set during the filming of his sex scene.
  • While filming ‘The Machinist,’ Christian Bale only ate an apple and a can of tuna each day. His goal was to weigh 100 pounds before producers stopped him.
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Post originally appeared on Upbeat News.