It Ends Is Existential Nightmare Fuel
It Ends isn’t a horror movie in the traditional sense. There are no cheap jump scares, no relentless chase sequences, no over explained mythology. Instead, it delivers something far more unsettling, existential horror rooted in the inevitability of life and death.
At its core, It Ends feels less like a story about events happening and more like a meditation on what it means to exist at all. The film weaponizes inevitability. From the very beginning, there’s a quiet understanding that something final is approaching not necessarily violently, but absolutely. That looming finality becomes the film’s true antagonist.
What makes the movie so effective is how it frames death not as spectacle, but as certainty. There’s no dramatic orchestration of fate. There’s just time. And the characters are forced to confront that time is limited that everything, every relationship, every memory, every moment of love or regret, eventually… ends.
That’s where the existential horror creeps in.
The film asks uncomfortable questions:
If everything ends, what gives anything meaning?
Are we defined by how we live, or by how we face the end?
Is death terrifying because of pain or because of oblivion?
Rather than answering these questions directly, It Ends lets them linger. Silence becomes just as important as dialogue. The pacing allows dread to seep in gradually, the kind of dread that isn’t about monsters in the dark but about the void waiting at the edge of consciousness.
Visually, the film reinforces this theme with stark framing and negative space. Characters often appear isolated within the frame, dwarfed by their surroundings, emphasizing how small and fragile human life feels in the grand scheme of things. Even moments of warmth carry a subtle melancholy as if the film is reminding us that joy is fleeting precisely because it cannot last.
What elevates It Ends beyond typical horror is its emotional honesty. The fear here isn’t external. It’s internal. It’s the quiet panic that surfaces at 3 a.m. when you think about your own mortality. It’s the realization that everyone you love is temporary. It’s the uncomfortable awareness that you are, too.
By the time the film reaches its conclusion, the horror doesn’t explode, it settles. And that may be the most disturbing choice of all. There’s no catharsis, only acceptance.
In that sense, It Ends succeeds not because it terrifies you in the moment, but because it lingers long after the credits roll. It transforms life and death from abstract ideas into something intimate and immediate.
It doesn’t just ask what happens when things end.
It asks what it means that they have to.
Here is my video review of this movie as well: