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The following five movies have extremely unsettling endings, and they deserve much more recognition.
5) Joy Ride (2001)

In Joy Ride, brothers Lewis (Paul Walker) and Fuller (Steve Zahn) embark on a road trip to pick up a friend. Using a CB radio in their car, they prank a nearby trucker named Rusty Nail by posing as a woman interested in meeting him at their motel. Rusty Nail finds a man staying in the room next to the brothers and puts him in a coma, triggering a terrifying series of events that pits Lewis and Fuller against an out-of-control madman. At the end of Joy Ride, Rusty Nail is presumed dead after his truck crashes into the motel where he’s holding Lewis’s friend hostage. While receiving treatment for their injuries, the group learns that the dead body found was not that of Rusty Nail. Then, Rusty Nail’s voice can be heard from the ambulance’s radio, revealing that the deranged trucker is still out there.
Joy Ride‘s eerie final twist is an excellent way to conclude the thriller. From its beginning, the film throws numerous surprises and misdirections at viewers, generating a great deal of suspense and tension. Rusty Nail’s survival at the end of Joy Ride paved the way for two sequels โ neither of which reached a similar level of success. Nonetheless, Joy Ride stands out as one of the creepiest and most exhilarating movies of the 2000s, and its ending confirms that it’s criminally underrated.
4) Black Death (2010)

Black Death is pretty bleak from the start, given that it focuses on the deadly bubonic plague outbreak in medieval England. Even so, its ending is far more harrowing than one would expect. Osmund (Eddie Redmayne), a monk tasked with guiding a group of soldiers to a village unaffected by the disease, hopes to see his lover Averill (Kimberly Nixon) again once he investigates rumors of necromancy in the town. After finding Averill’s bloodstained clothes, Osmund believes her to be dead, though he later discovers her alive in the village. Assuming that she was brought back to life via witchcraft, Osmund fatally stabs Averill to save her soul. Black Death‘s ending reveals that Osmund, turned cruel and merciless, spends his years hunting down innocent women accused of witchcraft and burning them at the stake.
It’s not surprising that Black Death‘s love story doesn’t have a happy ending; however, Osmund’s descent into madness and ensuing violent crusade is particularly disturbing. The tragedy of Osmund killing his romantic partner is depressing enough on its own, yet his act of unleashing his anguish on countless women makes Black Death‘s story even more disheartening. Death and disease evidently take a massive toll on Black Death‘s characters. Thus, the movie’s somber conclusion makes a lot of sense.











