Aftersun Ending Explained: What Happened To Calum?

Summary

  • Aftersun
    ‘s ending is intentionally open to interpretation, hinting at Calum’s fate after a vacation with his daughter Sophie.
  • The film explores themes of depression, guilt, and love through the eyes of young Sophie, with critical acclaim for performances and plot.
  • Using home videos, adult Sophie unravels her father’s hidden pain, ultimately coming to terms with his struggle and tragic end.

Warning: The following article contains mentions of suicide and depression.

The ending of Aftersun may need to be explained, as it leaves the answer to the main question open to viewer interpretation. Aftersun comes from director Charlotte Wells in her feature debut, which earned an Academy Award nomination in 2023 for Best Actor for Paul Mescal, who stars as Calum. The film follows a young Scottish girl named Sophie (Frankie Corio) who holidays with her single father, Calum, at a Turkish resort. Calum has recently separated from his wife and is using this opportunity to bond with his daughter on the eve of his 31st birthday. Interspersed throughout the film are chaotic scenes of a rave and Calum dancing.

Aftersun is an incredibly powerful movie that deals with heavy themes of depression, guilt, memory, and love all through the lens, literally and figuratively, of the young Sophie. Aftersun has received warm critical acclaim for its performances, plot, and unusual storytelling style. It’s heartbreaking, melancholic, and probing into how people often hide important parts of themselves away from loved ones. At the same time, Aftersun is a beautiful vacation movie where the experiences and setting are relatable and awe-inspiring. The ending of Aftersun is intentionally unclear, but there are hints and throughlines in the film that can help explain it.

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Charlotte Wells’ Aftersun shares similarities with other emotional vacation movies, including Call Me By Your Name and The Lost Daughter.

What Happens In The Aftersun Ending

A Dance Across Generations

Towards the end of Aftersun, Calum and Sophie finally dance together on the last night of their vacation. The father and daughter share a loving and happy dance, intercut with scenes of Calum dancing alone at some unknown rave. The next scene is of Calum and Sophie at the airport. Calum waves goodbye to Sophie as she goes back to her mother’s house and the camera spins to show that the scene is a home video that the adult Sophie (Celia Rowlson-Hall) is watching alone. Sophie is shown with a family of her own as she sorts through old videos of her trip with Calum.

The scene then transitions back to young Sophie waving to her father at the airport. This time when the camera pans around, it’s Calum who’s in view, holding the camcorder that Sophie had all trip. Calum seems to break the fourth wall, filming the audience from a bright and antiseptic-looking hallway with halogen lights buzzing. After a pause, he lowers the camera and turns around to head toward two doors at the opposite end of the hall. When he pushes through them, they are shown to lead to the same rave that’s been shown throughout the film. Calum enters the rave and the doors close as the credits roll.

Calum Took His Own Life After The Events Of Aftersun

Deciphering Calum’s Hidden Pain in Aftersun

While it is not explicitly stated in Aftersun, it can be assumed that Calum took his own life after the events of the film. There are multiple scenes in the movie that point to Calum’s deep depression. In an early scene, he casually steps in front of an oncoming bus. Nothing happens, and though he feigns ignorance, it’s an early sign that Calum isn’t thinking clearly and has been behaving recklessly. Calum hides his financial struggles and his smoking from Sophie, does Tai Chi, and reads self-help books incessantly. Clearly, he is trying to find a way through some sort of crisis.


Every character should push you out of your comfort zone in some capacity. But this wasn’t one of those where I was like, ‘I can’t do this. I want to do this, but I can’t.’ I didn’t know what it would look like in the end, but I just had a gut instinct that I knew that man somehow.
” –
Paul Mescal on playing Calum
(via
ScreenDaily
)

Later, Calum admits to a diving instructor that he’s surprised he made it to 30 and doesn’t believe he will ever see 40. The signs that Calum’s depression is leading to suicide are so obvious that when he goes swimming at night alone, viewers wouldn’t be wrong to think that is the last they will see of Calum. Even after making it out of the water alive, Callum breaks down alone in his hotel, crying over letters he has written, addressed to Sophie. Throughout all of these troubling scenes, there is a general tone of indifference and sadness emanating from Calum. Little on this vacation seems to bring him joy.

All of these clues, hints, and plainly laid evidence combine with the end of the film to heavily imply that Calum died soon after his and Sophie’s vacation. The end of Aftersun shows Sophie watching home videos of the trip, suggesting the entire film is a home video. It’s obvious that Sophie is watching these videos for answers. What she’s searching for are signs of her father’s depression, those she was oblivious to as a child.

Sophie Uses The Video Camera To Remember Her Father On The Vacation

Deciphering Fatherhood and Loss through Home Videos

Throughout Aftersun, Sophie is oblivious to signs that her father is struggling. She doesn’t notice him smoking, she doesn’t completely understand why he’s upset when she loses an expensive diving mask, and she doesn’t know why it’s embarrassing for Calum not to be able to afford a rug he likes. Sophie generally acts like a happy, carefree young girl, as any young girl would on a tropical vacation with her father. She also brings a camcorder along on the vacation and many scenes are shot from her point of view. There are many scenes, however, like Calum crying after his night swim, which she couldn’t possibly have seen.

It’s only with the experience and maturity of an adult that Sophie can fill in the blanks of her father’s life and understand that he was in pain underneath a happy exterior.

Sophie is using her home videos as a way to go back and see what signs she missed that would have pointed to her father’s impending suicide. She desperately watches the old videos to understand where she could have saved him. Aftersun makes it clear that there weren’t key moments she missed.

As an 11-year-old, Sophie couldn’t understand her father’s financial troubles, and the scenes where Calum truly breaks down are not ones she was present for. It’s only with the experience and maturity of an adult that she can fill in the blanks of her father’s life and understand that he was in pain underneath a happy exterior.

The Rug In Sophie’s Apartment Was A Gift From Calum

Unveiling the Love Story Hidden in a Rug

Calum lying on a rug in Aftersun

A moment in the ending of Aftersun makes an earlier scene much more meaningful. In adult Sophie’s home, there is a large, ornate rug hanging on the wall. Back in Turkey, Calum and Sophie went to a store where Calum asked Sophie to pick one out.

Though Calum is unable to afford the rug, he later returns without Sophie to purchase it in secret. This same rug is one that hangs on her wall all these years later. It’s a quick moment that points to how much Calum and Sophie loved, and still love, each other.

Why Do Calum And Sophie Dance To “Under Pressure”?

Exploring Calum’s Anguish Through Music

Paul Mescal as Calum and Frankie Corio as Sophie dancing and hugging in Aftersun

Calum refuses to dance or sing multiple times throughout Aftersun. First, he doesn’t join Sophie in karaoke for “Losing My Religion”, then he appears sullen and depressed when Sophie gets a group of tourists to sing him “For He’s a Jolly Good Fellow” for his birthday. However, at the end of their stay, Calum asks Sophie to join him on the dance floor, and they hug and sway to David Bowie and Queen’s “Under Pressure”. The title of the song is a clear allusion to Calum’s current mental state and feelings of being under pressure in his life.

Notably, the outro of “Under Pressure” has the lyrics, “This is our last dance/This is our last dance/This is ourselves under pressure/Under pressure/Under pressure/Pressure,” which are more than a little foreshadowing. Similarly, the first verse of the song contains the lyrics, “Under pressure that burns a building down/Splits a family in two/Puts people on streets“. “Splitting a family in two,” is already applicable to Calum’s life with his divorce, and “Puts people on the streets,” alludes to Calum’s financial woes.

The Rave Sequences Visualize Calum’s Mental State

A Haunting Dive into Calum’s Internal Chaos

Calum dancing at an imagined rave in Aftersun.

Interspersed throughout Aftersun are sequences of Calum dancing at a rave as an adult Sophie tries and fails to reach out to him. These scenes are not real but are used to represent how the adult Sophie now understands Calum’s mental anguish at the time of the Turkey trip. Calum is not dancing happily in these scenes. His dancing is frenzied and his face is contorted. Calum was in pain on this trip and his mind was working in overdrive, as represented by the sensory overload of the rave.

When Sophie filmed the vacation as a child, she had no idea what was really going on with Calum. As an adult, she now has an understanding. At the end of Aftersun, when Calum turns and reenters the rave, it’s a sign that he can’t escape the inner turmoil in his head, leading to his death.

The Real Meaning Of Aftersun’s Ending

Aftersun’s Ending Explores Unseen Suffering

Sophie and Calum posing for a picture against the ocean in Aftersun

Aftersun does not hand-hold when it comes to explaining what the audience should think or feel. Themes of misery, grief, and nostalgia are intertwined with the film as much as the rave scenes are. What Aftersun does make clear, and is the major theme of the film’s ending, is that it can be impossible to understand what others are going through without years of reflection.

Calum gave no signs to Sophie, at least no signs an 11-year-old would understand, that he was extremely depressed. Only the audience knows of Calum’s pain and even with understanding the intimate details of his suffering, Calum’s end is not perfectly clear.

Aftersun makes it abundantly clear that depression and misery can be so internal that even those closest can miss the signs. There is power in revisiting moments as Sophie does, even if those memories now bring up sorrowful feelings. As Aftersun shows, Sophie did have a wonderful time on her trip. Her father gave that to her, along with a rug to remember it by.

She can take solace in those memories and the happiness she shared with her father. It still may take time for Sophie to accept that she could not have foreseen her father’s fate, but in Aftersun, like in life, grieving is often a lifelong process.

The Aftersun Ending Is What Makes It Truly Special

Director Charlotte Wells Showed Her Mastery Of Storytelling

Spike Fearn looks distraught while bathed in red light in Aftersun

2022’s Aftersun was a critical success, winning over scores of reviewers when it debuted. Writer-director Charlotte Wells made an incredible feature-film debut, with Aftersun still sitting at 96% on Rotten Tomatoes. While many elements of the story, not to mention the performance of Frankie Corio in particular, have made up a bulk of the movie’s praise, the Aftersun ending has been mentioned time and time again as a key reason the film is such an engaging watch.

Many critics have praised the ending of Aftersun for how it brings all the elements of the generation-spanning story together neatly. The final shot in particular comes up time and time again in the positive responses to Aftersun, with it being considered nothing short of masterful with how it ties up the three timeframes of the movie. Not only does it manage to incorporate Sophie’s past and present, but also the ambiguity of the future.

The fact that the final thing viewers hear in Aftersun is Sophie’s child saying “Mama” is especially significant. It shows that, during the implied present of the movie (the point from which Sophie is remembering both her holiday with Calum and her memories of her father), Sophie is gaining her own understanding of what it means to be a present. What’s more, she’s roughly the same age as Calum. It’s a genius stroke of storytelling that recontextualizes the entire movie without undermining any of it.

All in all, there are many reasons why Aftersun is regarded as one of the most intriguing movies of the 2020s so far, but it’s the final moments that make it so special. Whatever Charlotte Wells moves on to next, she’s set up great foundations for her career as a director and storyteller.

Aftersun Movie Poster
Aftersun

Aftersun is a 2022 drama directed by Charlotte Wells. The film follows a young girl named Sophie who reflects on a vacation she took with her father, Calum, twenty years earlier. Through a series of memories, Sophie attempts to reconcile the loving father she knew with the unresolved aspects of their relationship. Paul Mescal and Frankie Corio star in this introspective exploration of memory and familial connection.

Director
Charlotte Wells
Release Date
November 18, 2022

Cast
Paul Mescal , Frankie Corio , Celia Rowlson-Hall , Sally Messham

Runtime
96 minutes

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