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Category: until dawn

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  • Until Dawn’s ending, explained

    Sony Pictures’ loose adaptation of Until Dawn reimagines a beloved horror video game with a brand new story with several terrifying mysteries. Directed by David F. Sandberg (Shazam!), 2025’s Until Dawn revolves around Clover, who searches for her missing sister, Melanie, and ends up in a remote house where time is reset at sunrise and a variety of monsters try to kill her and her friends each night.

    Until Dawn raises several questions throughout its bloody and time-bending story. Even when the credits roll, the movie leaves its audience aching for more answers. The way the story leaves some things up for interpretation, particularly the evil force manipulating the events of the film, elevates the terror by invoking viewers’ fear of the unknown. However, it is clear from the movie’s ending that there is still so much that the filmmakers are dying to share with the audience.

    What’s the story?

    2025’s Until Dawn begins with Melanie’s death at the hands of a mysterious Masked Man. Cut to a year later, Clover is seen retracing her sister Melanie’s steps to figure out the truth behind her disappearance. Traveling with Max, Nina, Megan, and Abe, Clover investigates a convenience store where Melanie was last spotted. There, she meets Hill, who directs her to Glore Valley, where many people have mysteriously vanished. After driving through a heavy rainstorm, Clover and her group ended up at the visitor’s center for Glore Valley. Later that night, they are all murdered by the Masked Man, only to wake up alive and where they were when the night began.

    Clover and her friends are trapped in a time loop centered around the house. As they try to survive the night and escape the house, they are killed by supernatural forces, including a possessed elderly woman, tap water that causes anyone who drinks it to explode, and humanoid, flesh-eating monsters known as Wendigos.

    Eventually, the group learns that a mining collapse caused nearly the entire town in Glore Valley to sink into the Earth decades ago. The people who survived the collapse were treated at a psychiatric hospital and transformed into the Wendigos under the watchful eye of Dr. Alan Hill, the man from the convenience store. To this day, Hill continues to experiment on people by having them die again and again for 13 days until the fear, despair, and hopelessness they’ve experienced turn them into Wendigos. This is revealed to have been Melanie’s fate, with the Wendigo that used to be her appearing to attack Clover.

    How does it end?

    After Megan survives one of the nights and follows Hill, Clover and the others venture into the tunnels beneath the house to find her. Beneath the Earth, they kill the Masked Man and the monstrous Melanie. Clover then finds Hill in his office, where she secretly spikes his drink with the explosive tap water while rambling about his plans. Before he dies, Hill reveals that the monsters that appeared in the film are manifestations of Clover’s deepest fears that were brought to life by the house’s evil.

    With Hill dead, Clover rescues Megan from a Wendigo that Hill had imprisoned her with for testing. Her friends escape from the Wendigos and climb out of the tunnels, just in time for the sunrise. Having finally escaped the time loop, Clover and her friends return to their car and drive away. While this seems like a happy ending for them, the film cuts to the security cameras in Hill’s office, which inexplicably show footage of a lodge in a snowy, unknown region. While this may confuse newcomers to the Until Dawn franchise, fans of the video games will know this is a reference to the Washington Lodge, the mountain home where the events of the source material take place.

    What does it all mean?

    While the main plot of Until Dawn follows the cast trying to escape the time loop, the film is also about Clover overcoming her depression, which the characters address multiple times. The Wendigos embody what she and Melanie feared they would become if they stayed where they were in life, which is why the latter left home. Since Clover attempted suicide twice in the past, she is forced to confront this issue with her mental health as she relives death again and again. Though Melanie isn’t so fortunate in life, Clover comes to terms with her loss and refuses to succumb to her fear and sorrow. She thus dared to venture into the unknown darkness to rescue Megan, allowing her to break the cycle of pain and despair by making it until dawn with her friends.

    As for the time loop, there’s no explanation as to why Glore Valley keeps reliving the same day repeatedly. Since the cycle of death and rebirth is what turns people into Wendigos, the dark force that created these monsters may be responsible for the time loop. It is also likely that this evil was first awakened with the collapse of the Glore Valley mines. How it’s connected to the snowy lodge on Hill’s security camera remains unknown. Perhaps it is another test site where he watches people die and turn into monsters, which seems to pave the way for a possible sequel that falls more in line with the video game’s story.

    Until Dawn is now in theaters.

  • Until Dawn review: an incoherent disaster

    Until Dawn review: an incoherent disaster

    2/5

    ★★☆☆☆

    Score Details

    “Halfway through, Until Dawn completely falls apart.”

    ✅ Pros

    • A strong beginning
    • Nods to horror tropes

    ❌ Cons

    • Incomprehensible plot
    • A disgrace to the Until Dawn game
    • Not scary at all

    I’m supposed to be writing a review for Until Dawn. I will write a review for whatever I just watched, but I’m not sure it was Until Dawn. Maybe I walked into the wrong theater by accident? Perhaps the stress of life has finally broken me, causing me to hallucinate an entire hellishly boring movie that starred the guy from Love, Victor? In any event, here’s my review for the film I’m (not so) sure is Until Dawn.

    For those who have played the game, here’s the plot because I have questions, comments, and concerns. In the film, a girl named Melanie (Maia Mitchell) goes missing. A year later, her sister Clover (Ella Rubin) and her friends Max (Michael Cimino), Nina (Odessa A’zion), Megan (Ji-young Yoo), and Abel (Belmont Cameli) decide to visit the spot where she went missing to find closure. They drive into a mystical valley where they get stuck in a time loop and battle monsters, supernatural entities, killers, and Wendigos. They’re killed every single night, restarting the dreaded evening over and over again.

    It turns out that the entire thing is actually a study being conducted by a psychologist in a town that sank into the Earth after a mining disaster, and he’s somehow controlling all the supernatural stuff … and the water makes you explode … and it’s all happening thanks to the mental trauma of Clover. It’s not a Fight Club deal where it’s all in Clover’s head, but more like her mental pain is somehow powering the evil forces that the doctor is using to make the, um, experiment happen. I mentioned the water makes you explode, right?

    So, gamers around the world, help me out here. Do I suffer from amnesia? Did a brain aneurysm pop? Am I completely misremembering the game Until Dawn? Because this is nothing like the game I remember playing. It has new characters, a new setting, a new story, and new gimmicks that unfortunately don’t work. Oh, but they throw in an Easter egg that implies the film is a prequel to the game, which is a mess that requires its own scathing article.

    Until Dawn starts out pretty strong

    Holding an axe in Until Dawn movie
    Sony Pictures

    The worst part of Until Dawn is that I liked the beginning, and it gave me false hope. When the film finally gets going, we see the group in a secluded house in the forest with a giant hourglass on the wall that has somehow flipped over, revealing that a timer has started counting down. They’re all killed by a masked murderer and then suddenly find themselves restarting the evening with the hourglass refilled. But they all still have their memories of the previous night, and instead of being a true Groundhog Day film, each night in Until Dawn is different. Their goal is to survive until dawn.

    When the plot kicked into gear, I was like, this isn’t Until Dawn, but it’s actually fun, and I’m enjoying it, so I don’t care. It’s not really “scary” since you know they’ll restart the night anyway, making their deaths emotionally meaningless. But it was fun. It was a unique twist to an overused formula, so I appreciated that it incorporated some variation.

    Halfway through, Until Dawn becomes a different movie

    The problem with Until Dawn is that it all falls apart. As I said, we have our plot, rules, and goals. But then, halfway through the film, one of the characters wakes up from a dream. She finds herself in the living room with her friends, and there’s been a massive time jump. We learn they’ve been there for 13 nights and suddenly have no memory of the previous evenings. It was shocking to see a movie go through all that work to create a setup, drop it, and then move on to something new halfway through the film.

    From there, everything continues to crumble. A big chunk of the movie is watching the group run from things, whether it’s the masked killer, supernatural forces, or Wendigos. Director David F. Sandberg told THR he was excited to make a movie that combined so many horror tropes, saying, “This is awesome because it has every horror genre. I’ll get to do slasher, supernatural, body horror, monster, and found footage.’ It had everything in one movie, which is what really drew me to it.”

    Unfortunately, Until Dawn never feels like an homage or nod to horror classics. It just feels like a big fiasco. There is an endless stream of horror-ish nonsense thrown at you, but no connective tissue to tie it together. Until Dawn feels more like a random series of events than a story. At a certain point, my eyes started to glaze over because there weren’t any scares, and worse, the movie had started breaking its own rules. Now, it was anything goes. We find ourselves in a realm of fantasy, sci-fi, and horror, where anything can happen and your choices mean nothing because the supernatural whatever-it-is will just poof something new into existence to ruin it.

    Until Dawn gives no answers

    Hiding from a Wendigo in Until Dawn
    Sony Pictures

    The film tries to tie it all together by bringing back Dr. Hill (Peter Stormare) from the game. In the video game, Dr. Hill somewhat acts as the narrator and is also Josh’s psychologist. But in the film, he’s completely unrecognizable as some grand architect of this psychotic “experiment” in a magical valley full of evil supernatural forces that have somehow remained undiscovered. But the experiment is also powered by the trauma of certain tormented people who have gotten lost there throughout the last century.

    Dr. Hill’s motives are unclear. Whether he’s real or undead himself remains unclear. How and why he chooses his victims is unclear, and worst of all, we never figure out what this supernatural force is or why it teamed up with some psychologist. Who created the mystical valley, the time loop, or the monsters? If this sounds like a coherent, interesting plot, get yourself some popcorn and see Until Dawn.

    But if you want scares, an interesting plot, or answers, Until Dawn won’t provide them. It will create even more questions because there’s an Easter egg at the end where the snowy cabin from the Until Dawn video game suddenly appears on the evil psychologist’s video monitors. To me, this is absolutely offensive because the film is now trying to bastardize the plot of the Until Dawn video game and insert its horrendous and nonsensical plotline instead.

    The good news — there’s still the real Until Dawn

    If you want to watch Until Dawn, my advice is to play the game instead. Its unique gameplay style makes it feel like an interactive movie anyway. It’s got a better plot, and your choices and actions have consequences. Depending on how you play, you can either have everyone survive, let everyone die, or have a mixture. Honestly, it’s way more fun and interesting.

    Until Dawn is now playing in theaters.