Ahead of a promotion, a police chief becomes entangled in a deadly incident and uncovers an intrigue fueled by grudge that threatens his colleagues.
Warning: spoilers below!
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Still thinking about how Grudge (2021) ended? Here’s a full breakdown of the ending, key final moments, major twists, and the deeper meaning behind the film’s conclusion.
In the final act Grudge pulls together the tangled threads of past injustice and present vengeance. Inspector Harun Celiktan finally learns that the murder of the taxi driver and the shoot‑out on the roof were not isolated crimes but part of a larger retaliation for a case he and his senior, Cevat, had fabricated years earlier. The real victims were Ramazan Turel and his family; the police had falsely accused the waiter’s son of poisoning seven diners, sending Ramazan to prison where he was killed.
Ramazan’s children, Gül Cankir and Emre Tuncay, survived the trauma and swore revenge. Gül, posing as a film actress, becomes “the Crane Killer,” murdering the three officers who helped frame their father and hiring the taxi driver to eliminate Harun. When Harun kills the driver in self‑defence, Gül captures the footage, then demands that Harun murder Cevat in exchange for the video. Harun refuses, and Gül blows up Cevat’s car, publicly exposing Harun’s crime and sending the police after him.
The chase leads Harun to the abandoned Macca Club, where Gül, having overdosed on the meth‑like drug Metopon, collapses and, with her dying breath, points Harun toward the true mastermind: her brother Emre, now calling himself Tuncay Kokdemir and serving as a police officer. Back at headquarters, Inspector Yadigar uncovers the full truth: the dead taxi driver and the rooftop suspect were the only witnesses who could have cleared Ramazan, and the three slain officers were all part of the same corrupt investigation.
Tuncay confronts Yadigar, murders him, and kidnaps Harun’s young son Aslan. In a park, he confesses that he had poisoned the soup that killed the seven diners—an act of desperate vengeance after the police humiliated his father—yet the authorities chose to imprison Ramazan instead, sealing the family’s fate. He explains that his sister’s killing spree was meant to finish what he could not, and he urges Harun to finish the cycle by shooting him. Harun, finally seeing the damage his own choices caused, drops his weapon and walks away, choosing not to become another instrument of vengeance.
Faced with the collapse of his moral world, Tuncay turns the gun on himself, ending his own tragic crusade. The film closes with Harun being handcuffed in front of Aslan, his career and freedom destroyed by the very corruption he once helped uphold. A flashback shows the moment Harun first recruited Tuncay, underscoring how a single lapse in judgment set off a chain of grudges that consumed everyone involved.
In the end, Grudge leaves Harun isolated, forced to confront the consequences of his silence, while the cycle of revenge is broken—not through bloodshed, but through a painful choice to stop perpetuating the very grudges that birthed the tragedy.
Last Updated: September 19, 2025 at 06:55
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