MovieChat Forums > Mystery Road (2013) Discussion > Can anyone explain the ending?

Can anyone explain the ending?


I enjoyed watching this film and was looking forward to the resolution of the plot. But I could not work out was was happening at the end.

Jay finds some cocaine hidden in a TV set in the ransacked house of his ex-wife and somehow seems to know who it belongs to because he phones some guys up and arranges to meet them. (who they are, or how he knows it's theirs is not explained). Then he hands the drugs over and they all start shooting at each other. I assumed this must be the corrupt cops (Johnno and the sergeant), but then we see Hugo Weaving's character (one of the dodgy cops) shooting in defence of Jay! What? Then when Jay removes the hockey mask of one of the bad guys, he's not even a character we have seen before!

I literally could not figure out what was supposed to be happening here.

Then we see Jay find evidence that Julie must have died in the car (as there are scratch marks in the cloth), but it's not explained why or what she had to do with them.

Also, it is not explained who the second dead girl is (found by the dumped cars). Why were the girls killed?

And why does his ex-wife suddenly seem to like him again at the very end of the movie, after having previously had nothing but contempt for him?

And why do they keep referring to wild dogs? That plot line appears to go nowhere.
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My God, it's full of stars!

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The man in the hockey mask is actually Robbo, the policeman played by Robert Mammone.
Most of your other questions and problems are answered- or not answered, in the case of the dogs- in other threads here,

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Major, major spoilers!! Do not read until you have seen the movie.

I too enjoyed the movie, watched it in one sitting, didn't get bored or yawn once, understood every word as I watched it with sub-titles due to a crappy (or crapped out) sound card in my aging laptop. I too was left wondering.

I didn't recognize the hockey-mask fellow. I thought it was going to be the Police Sergeant, then when it was not him, thought it must have been the farmer who owned the land 'as far as you could see', the father of the 'roo shooter' and owner of the utility truck.

To me, the movie was a cross between Chuck Norris' 'One Wolf McQuade' - a deep-thinking loner, new in town, comes to solve the mystery - and a Jason Statham or Liam Neeson over-the-top, Gunfight-at-the-OK-Corral where our hero is a crack shot able to kill countless bad guys who are not.

From the start, the movie required a suspension of disbelief. A truck driver stops at a bridge relatively close to town to check his tires - why not drive a little further to a well-lit area? There, he is able to smell a corpse in a culvert a hundred feet away when the local (enhanced?) wild dogs could not.

At the shootout on Slaughter Hill:

I thought that Johnno was crooked as, when they were in the Chinese restaurant he tells Jay that he wishes he could find what was missing, and warns him to look out for his daughter. When Jay finds what's missing, the house ransacked and vacant, he makes a phone call, I assumed to Johnno to tell him he found the dope.

I wrongly assumed that they would exchange the dope for the daughter.

It appears Johnno comes to the rescue as a marksman but assumes a position shown twice previously to be incorrect, unable to rest his rifle on something solid. Not unusual for this Statham/Neeson genre, the good guy wipes out all the bad guys, such poor shots that Jay can drive off without so much as a hole in his radiator.

Off-base again, I assume, as I thought that when Jay drove to his ex-wife's neighborhood to find the mother and daughter on the side of the road, we had a Hollywood ending where the two errant family members had seen the light and wanted to re-join our hero and his ways. Fade to black.

The common thought in my post? "Assume". As the OP stated, there was no 'resolution of the plot'. Just the same, I've yawned my way through a lot worse.

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Thanks for this. So why does his ex-wife's house get ransacked too? We see her sitting outside it, despondent and with a beer bottle after Jay explores it. I naturally assumed that this was where he later found the drugs (rather than the coincidence of two houses getting ransacked!)

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I saw this movie today, at the cinema, and I was confused about some of the same things. I missed some of the dialogue, especially at the beginning, because of the Australian accents. Wikipedia has a detailed plot synopsis that explains a few things: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mystery_Road&oldid=63482 4347
I guess that Johnno (Hugo Weaving) and Robbo (the cop revealed to have been the hockey mask guy) had a falling out, with Johnno deciding to do the right thing in the end. But the earlier scene, on the street, was Johnno essentially confessing that he was the one who killed Julie Mason, albeit accidentally?

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Another thread suggested that Jonno was referring to the other officer who had been killed a year earlier-which is why he was intent t to save Jay. Jonno was from the outside, a legitimate officer but undercover trying to catch the bad cop and bad guys.

It appears that the girls stole the drugs, then were tracked and tortured by the dealers trucking to get it back.

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Oh, hoh........... that would make sense. The girl/girls stole the drugs, one was tortured to death to get it back, maybe the other, too ... don't forget they died due to having their necks slit with fine-grade, hard, serrated steel as that of a hunting knife, if I remember correctly (iirc). Yeah, I couldn't figure what their relationship to the plot was much either. I had thought maybe they were just another of the bad dealings whoever was doing those dealings was into.

One thing that confused me was the similarity of some of the characters' looks. For instance, when we find Bailey dead in the back seat, I was thinking he was Sarge ... I kept expecting Sarge to be dirty. The guy on the ground who was Robbo, I thought he was Johnno's informant Wayne and that maybe the handoff of him was all for Jay's benefit and Wayne was really in on everything. We never did find out what happened to Wayne.

Nevertheless, I really liked the film, possibly for emotional reasons such as an aboriginal given a chance to solve a mystery ... and, in real life, be the lead in a detective thriller. Pretty cute guy, although he looks almost white. Amazing the Australian's could tell he was different. If you are interested, by the way, there is a film called Rabbit-Proof Fence about Australia's attempts nearly 100 years ago to assimiliate the Aborigines by marrying them with whites. The idea was that within two generations, the Aboriginal genes would be masked and everybody would look white. Not sure why they wanted to do that, but according to the film they did.

Also, I liked the way that with very little to go on the detective kept coming upon new stuff to run down. I, too, though, don't have much of an idea what dogs have to do with anything. Supposedly there was a super-dog? That set us up to meet him but we never did. I'll have to read the rest of the posts, someone said it's spelled out elsewhere. Maybe that guy Pete was into bad breeding.

P.S. The second girl that was found ... she was not the missing girl, was she? I thought that that girl had been gone for a long time. I thought maybe she was the other friend of Jay's daughter Crystal, the other girl being named Tarni. Phew that Crystal was all right.

Maybe the movie was called Mystery Road partly because there were and maybe still are a lot of mysteries surrounding it lol

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I doubt even the screenwriter knows what was going on.



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Wasn't the guy with the hockey mask the cop that got out of the cop car when Johnno first speaks to Jay when he pulled him over....?

Swing away, Merrill....Merrill, swing away...

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Here's my take on it - CONTAINS SPOILERS!

Like a lot of noir films the plot contains a lot of twists and often requires a bit of thought at the end to finally connect all the pieces of the jigsaw or even a second viewing.

I see a corrupt police drug squad which the officer who had died prior to the start of the film had suspicions about and the man in charge (the Sarge) content to look the other way.
The guys death was referenced at the retiring cop's leaving do, in hindsight by Johno when he asked Swan if he'd ever killed someone and later on the dead cops wife said it was another cop who had called him on the night of his death.

Then you have the drugs theft and double theft by first Wayne and then the three girls with Swan eventually finding the "drugs/McGuffin" at Julie's house, thus setting up a final showdown and taking the gamble that Johno wants to right the wrong of the year before - which in noir tradition will require his death.

I suppose you have to ascribe Crystal's survival to Swan wearing the white hat - although I don't forsee a family reunion...........

There were still a few unasnswered questions (to me anyway)
1 Wayne - presumably killed offscreen
2 The wild dog motiff was never really answered
3 Could Swann really just drive off with presumably half a dozen bodies to account for?

Having said that I really enjoyed the film and wouldn't mind seeing the charachter reprised........

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There were still a few unasnswered questions (to me anyway)
1 Wayne - presumably killed offscreen
2 The wild dog motiff was never really answered
3 Could Swann really just drive off with presumably half a dozen bodies to account for?


1) He was.
2) Red Herring to make us think the old man killed the girl in the culvert.
3) Well, he did, didn't he?  Who's to say he was actually there? no one would know what actually happened.

Swing away, Merrill....Merrill, swing away...

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3) Well, he did, didn't he? Who's to say he was actually there? no one would know what actually happened.


Presumably some of the bodies would contain bullets of the same calibre as the pistol & rifle he was known to possess.

Nitpicking really, but it'd have been tidier (in my anally retentive opinion anyway) to have seen him walking out of the police station before swanning (sic) off.........

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It's been a while, but didn't he use his father's gun?

Swing away, Merrill....Merrill, swing away...

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It's been a while, but didn't he use his father's gun?


Swan used the pistol for the close range shooting and the rifle to shoot Pete at long range.

It was mentioned that his father was dead, so I guess the rifle was an heirloom & Swan was known to be in possession of it and had bought bullets in town.

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Changing topic I read that there is to be another Jay Swan fillum, probably.............


Mystery Road to get a spin-off

Writer-director Ivan Sen won plenty of fans with Mystery Road two years ago. While the outback murder mystery had only a limited run in cinemas, it was well received at international festivals and drew a solid audience on ABC TV. Now Short Cuts hears that Sen is planning to follow up Mystery Road with another film featuring indigenous detective Jay Swan, played by Aaron Pedersen. Producer David Jowsey is in the final stages of financing Goldstone with Screen Australia and Screen Queensland. He calls it a spin-off rather than a sequel, which has Swan teaming up with another detective in a new town. "It's a straight-on thriller, with more action," Jowsey says. "It's a people-trafficking story."

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3) We don't know the the bodies were accounted for. I assumed one of the two things happened.
a) He headed by his wife/daughters house to check to see that they were ok, before going back to the police stations.
b) He went back to the station (maybe the hospital?) and the meeting with his wife and daughter was later / a different day.

He went out to the hill without any official capacity, so he may have come back and dealt with his personal issues before his official duties.

Either way, there is nothing that makes one assume that he ran off and did not go back to the station and fill out a report -- eventually.

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Either way you've got to make an assumption.........

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The ending was the only thing killing me. After watching it and going back and forth. Where the ex wife and child at wasn't their house.

So they must had been waiting for him , in front of his house. That's why the puppy faces.

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