Midsommar Ending Explained: Bad Breakups, Burning Buildings, And Bears, Oh My!

The A24 daylight horror "Midsommar" isn't your typical slasher or haunted house flick. Writer and director Ari Aster balances running meta-commentaries on trauma, gender, relationships, race, cults, and personal identity all while providing plenty of scares and a surprising number of laughs. 

"Midsommar" follows Dani (Florence Pugh) after she loses her entire family in an unspeakable tragedy. Her relationship with her boyfriend Christian (Jack Reynor) isn't great, but he invites her along on a trip with him and his friends to a remote village in Sweden anyway. Christian and his friends Josh (William Jackson Harper) and Mark (Will Poulter) are going with transfer student Pelle (Vilhelm Blomgren) to witness an ancient ceremony that only happens once every 90 years. They are met by Connie (Ellora Torchia) and Simon (Archie Madekwe), students from London brought by Pelle's brother, Ingemar (Hampus Hallberg).

Because of the village's placement on the globe in rural Hälsingland, Sweden, they have days in the summertime where the sun shines for 23 hours or more. This near-constant daylight is already disorienting, but the people of the commune of HÃ¥rga also encourage their visitors to take psychedelic drugs. Things go from strange to scary as the guests start disappearing one by one. By the time "Midsommar" ends, Dani has gone through all of the stages of grief for her family, her relationship, and her former self. So how does the violent, wild ending of "Midsommar" stand up now that the shock has worn off? Let's take a look, spoilers and all.

Communal Catharsis And Shared Grief

Dani, Christian, and the rest of the visitors are understandably shaken after witnessing an Ã¤ttestupa, a ritual in which two elders sacrifice themselves by jumping off a cliff. Connie and Simon both take off, allegedly getting rides back to town. Dani and Christian begin arguing more, as she doesn't feel safe in this bizarre environment. Meanwhile, HÃ¥rga member Maja (Isabelle Grill) clearly has eyes for Christian, and she sets about doing a love spell ritual that involves feeding him her pubic hair and menstrual blood. 

Dani participates in more rituals with the HÃ¥rga, including a dance around the maypole while high on psychedelic tea to choose the new May Queen. Dani is the last one standing and is crowned the May Queen, adorned in a crown of flowers and carried around on a platform and pulled in a human-drawn carriage. While she's off performing a harvest ritual using flowers and other sacrificial items, Christian participates in a sex ritual with Maja and many of the other women. Dani catches him in the act and runs, sobbing, into the young people's living area. She's caught by the other young women, who hold her and begin sobbing along with her. 

Throughout the course of Dani's ordeal, she has felt isolated. Christian never made her feel supported or loved, and her own family was gone. The women of the HÃ¥rga embrace her and make her "feel held" as they share in her grief. Dani has been looking for community all along, and she's finally found it. The question becomes whether that community is better or worse than her isolation. 

A 21st Century Fable

After Dani and Christian each go through their separate ordeals, the HÃ¥rga prep them for the final ceremony. We discover that Mark, Connie, Josh, and Simon were all killed by the commune and each has been dressed to represent their place as a sacrifice. Pelle's brother, heartbroken over Connie, offers himself as one of the sacrificial members from HÃ¥rga, alongside another member named Ulf. As the May Queen, Dani is expected to choose the final sacrifice and is offered two choices: a random villager, or Christian, sewn into the skin of a grizzly bear. She chooses Christian, of course, in what's possibly the harshest breakup of all time. Christian is taken into the yellow, pyramid shaped temple, and then the members of the commune light it ablaze. 

Dani and the rest of the commune flail and scream in unison with the men who are trapped, burning alive inside of the temple. They share in more communal suffering, but the final shot lingers on Dani's face as a smile breaks across her face. 

While that smile is extremely cathartic for Dani and anyone who identifies with her struggle, it's also a little scary. Dani went from being isolated and miserable to held and happy, but at what cost? Nine people are dead, counting the elders, and Dani has joined a commune that's fine with drugging people and ritual sacrifice. It's a great "be careful what you wish for" kind of fable, because there's no telling what kinds of horrors Dani might eventually commit herself as a member of HÃ¥rga.

Differences In The Director's Cut

Ari Aster's original vision for "Midsommar" ran long — clocking in at nearly three hours. Subplots that gave characters more depth were dropped, because most of them intertwined too deeply to cut one and leave the others. Thankfully, Aster and A24 released his director's cut, which provides more context for the film's fiery finale. 

Included in the director's cut are extended scenes of Christian and Josh's dueling theses, some hints that the HÃ¥rga are white supremacists, a sequence that explains Connie's death by drowning, and more. The scenes make HÃ¥rga seem much more sinister, and Dani's joining them at the end is much more bittersweet. It does also show just how awful most of the visiting Americans are, providing heavier commentary on American imperialism. 

Perhaps the most important scene added back into the director's cut shows Christian consenting to the sex ritual long before he takes any psychedelics. His betrayal of Dani is more concrete, making his brutal end just a teensy bit more justified. The director's cut is a much more complete story that gives viewers more to chew on, and fans of the theatrical cut are bound to get something out of it. Unfortunately, the only way to do that currently is on Apple TV or by finding one of the A24 special edition Blu rays. 

"Midsommar" is a complex film with a lot to say, but its ending doesn't give any easy answers.

Read this next: 'Midsommar': Ari Aster And Florence Pugh's Complex, Climactic Catharsis

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