Did the ending really happen in Baby Driver?
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Did the ending really happen in Baby Driver?
I recently rewatched Baby Driver and I just noticed something at the end.
Miles receives a postcard from Debora and we see in the last scene he gets released and she's waiting for him with a shiny new Cadillac. Both are wearing 50's style outfits and there's a long rainbow in the perfect blue sky. So did that really happen or was him just dreaming?
He was supposed to be released on parole in 5 years (it must be - they haven't aged enough to be after 25 years of his sentence), but that outfit wasn't the one he got arrested with - and throughout the movie he's never seen wearing such outfits.
It sort of fits Debora's dream of going west "in a car she can't afford". Plus we see it earlier when Miles had the same sort of "vision" of her waiting for him and smiling in front of a car.
So is the ending real or just his imagination and he's still in jail?
plot-explanation baby-driver
add a comment |
I recently rewatched Baby Driver and I just noticed something at the end.
Miles receives a postcard from Debora and we see in the last scene he gets released and she's waiting for him with a shiny new Cadillac. Both are wearing 50's style outfits and there's a long rainbow in the perfect blue sky. So did that really happen or was him just dreaming?
He was supposed to be released on parole in 5 years (it must be - they haven't aged enough to be after 25 years of his sentence), but that outfit wasn't the one he got arrested with - and throughout the movie he's never seen wearing such outfits.
It sort of fits Debora's dream of going west "in a car she can't afford". Plus we see it earlier when Miles had the same sort of "vision" of her waiting for him and smiling in front of a car.
So is the ending real or just his imagination and he's still in jail?
plot-explanation baby-driver
3
why the quick downvote with no explanation?
– Luciano
9 hours ago
add a comment |
I recently rewatched Baby Driver and I just noticed something at the end.
Miles receives a postcard from Debora and we see in the last scene he gets released and she's waiting for him with a shiny new Cadillac. Both are wearing 50's style outfits and there's a long rainbow in the perfect blue sky. So did that really happen or was him just dreaming?
He was supposed to be released on parole in 5 years (it must be - they haven't aged enough to be after 25 years of his sentence), but that outfit wasn't the one he got arrested with - and throughout the movie he's never seen wearing such outfits.
It sort of fits Debora's dream of going west "in a car she can't afford". Plus we see it earlier when Miles had the same sort of "vision" of her waiting for him and smiling in front of a car.
So is the ending real or just his imagination and he's still in jail?
plot-explanation baby-driver
I recently rewatched Baby Driver and I just noticed something at the end.
Miles receives a postcard from Debora and we see in the last scene he gets released and she's waiting for him with a shiny new Cadillac. Both are wearing 50's style outfits and there's a long rainbow in the perfect blue sky. So did that really happen or was him just dreaming?
He was supposed to be released on parole in 5 years (it must be - they haven't aged enough to be after 25 years of his sentence), but that outfit wasn't the one he got arrested with - and throughout the movie he's never seen wearing such outfits.
It sort of fits Debora's dream of going west "in a car she can't afford". Plus we see it earlier when Miles had the same sort of "vision" of her waiting for him and smiling in front of a car.
So is the ending real or just his imagination and he's still in jail?
plot-explanation baby-driver
plot-explanation baby-driver
edited 9 hours ago
Paulie_D
95.9k19355321
95.9k19355321
asked 10 hours ago
LucianoLuciano
3,60222044
3,60222044
3
why the quick downvote with no explanation?
– Luciano
9 hours ago
add a comment |
3
why the quick downvote with no explanation?
– Luciano
9 hours ago
3
3
why the quick downvote with no explanation?
– Luciano
9 hours ago
why the quick downvote with no explanation?
– Luciano
9 hours ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
It's left unclear
Edgar Wright said:
"I think the end scene is up for interpretation. And I sort of learned quickly through the test screening process that I should let people interpret it how they want. I think it's an important thing with movies where you don't have to state your actual intention because nobody's response to it is wrong. I think that's a good thing to do; you don't want to have anybody say, 'No, you're wrong, you read that wrong.' It's better if you have two different interpretations."
source
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
It's left unclear
Edgar Wright said:
"I think the end scene is up for interpretation. And I sort of learned quickly through the test screening process that I should let people interpret it how they want. I think it's an important thing with movies where you don't have to state your actual intention because nobody's response to it is wrong. I think that's a good thing to do; you don't want to have anybody say, 'No, you're wrong, you read that wrong.' It's better if you have two different interpretations."
source
add a comment |
It's left unclear
Edgar Wright said:
"I think the end scene is up for interpretation. And I sort of learned quickly through the test screening process that I should let people interpret it how they want. I think it's an important thing with movies where you don't have to state your actual intention because nobody's response to it is wrong. I think that's a good thing to do; you don't want to have anybody say, 'No, you're wrong, you read that wrong.' It's better if you have two different interpretations."
source
add a comment |
It's left unclear
Edgar Wright said:
"I think the end scene is up for interpretation. And I sort of learned quickly through the test screening process that I should let people interpret it how they want. I think it's an important thing with movies where you don't have to state your actual intention because nobody's response to it is wrong. I think that's a good thing to do; you don't want to have anybody say, 'No, you're wrong, you read that wrong.' It's better if you have two different interpretations."
source
It's left unclear
Edgar Wright said:
"I think the end scene is up for interpretation. And I sort of learned quickly through the test screening process that I should let people interpret it how they want. I think it's an important thing with movies where you don't have to state your actual intention because nobody's response to it is wrong. I think that's a good thing to do; you don't want to have anybody say, 'No, you're wrong, you read that wrong.' It's better if you have two different interpretations."
source
edited 9 hours ago
Napoleon Wilson♦
42.9k45281538
42.9k45281538
answered 9 hours ago
Paulie_DPaulie_D
95.9k19355321
95.9k19355321
add a comment |
add a comment |
3
why the quick downvote with no explanation?
– Luciano
9 hours ago