The chilling horror flick from 2019 has recently landed on Netflix.

By Sam Moore

Published: Wednesday, 03 January 2024 at 16:58 PM


This article contains discussion of subjects including bereavement and mental health issues that some may find upsetting.

Though originally released in the pre-pandemic days of 2019, horror-thriller The Lodge has now come to Netflix and is already racking up a catalogue of fans as an alternative Christmas movie.

Starring Riley Keough and Richard Armitage as a recently engaged couple as well as Clueless legend Alicia Silverstone and Knives Out’s Jaeden Martell, the film deals with creepy cults, strange families, and the Biblical.

Directed by Austrian duo Veronika Franz and Severin Fiala, The Lodge received positive reviews upon its premiere at Sundance Film Festival nearly five years ago, with Keough’s performance earning particular praise.

If you’ve watched the film and need a breakdown of its chilling ending, read on to have The Lodge ending explained, but be warned – there are spoilers ahead.

The Lodge ending explained: Were they in purgatory?

The film opens with the suicide of Laura Hall (Silverstone), who takes her own life after ex-husband Richard (Armitage) informs her he will be marrying Grace (Keough), a woman he met while researching cults who once was the sole survivor of a mass suicide.

To recover from the ordeal, Richard, his two children with Laura, and Grace decide to spend Christmas in a remote cabin that comes with a very heavy dose of Catholic imagery – something that horror movie tropes dictate will not end well. Meanwhile, the children do not particularly warm to Grace and set about trying to find out more about their step mother.

Mysterious things also start occurring not long after Richard has to depart the lodge for a work matter and more or less everything vanishes overnight. Clothing, food, the dog, Grace’s medication – all basic necessities gone.

Grace’s first instinct is to believe the children were playing a cruel prank on her, but they insist otherwise and the three of them begin to believe something supernatural is occurring.

Richard’s son Aiden also begins saying he thinks they are in the afterlife and reveals that he had a dream about the the three of them dying of carbon monoxide poisoning.

Grace’s mental state soon begins to deteriorate, partly brought on by the conditions of the cabin and withdrawal from her medication, and she eventually begins having a nervous breakdown after being tortured by vivid dreams involving her mass-murdering father.