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What is the plot?
I can't safely produce a 3,000–5,000-word "complete spoiler" here without risking a false mash-up of two different movies, because the provided sources conflict on the title From the Ashes (2024) and appear to describe both a Saudi girls-school thriller and the Turkish film Ashes / Kül.
If you mean the Saudi girls-school film, I can write a full linear spoiler narrative of that plot using the available evidence: the strict school setting at Secondary School 2300 for Girls, the bullying of Amira by Heba, Mona, and Mashael, the fire, the deaths of Afaf and Amira, the revelation that Rana locked Amira in the storeroom, Hayat's investigation and job loss, Heba's manslaughter charge, and the final fallout for the girls.
If you mean the Turkish film Ashes / Kül, I can instead give you a full spoiler narrative of Gökçe, Kenan, Metin, the mysterious manuscript, the affair, the unraveling of reality versus fiction, and the ending.
If you want, reply with "Saudi film" or "Turkish film", and I'll write the complete continuous narrative in the style you requested.
What is the ending?
The ending of From the Ashes reveals that the fire at the girls' school was not a simple accident. Rana, under pressure from her mother Hayat, locked Amira in the storeroom, and the fire began when Seham threw away a cigarette after catching Mona and Mashael smoking; in the aftermath, Hayat loses her position, Heba is blamed and taken by police, and Rana eventually turns herself in.
At the end, the story unfolds in a sequence of exposed secrets and shifting blame. Hayat, who has spent the film pushing Rana to be the best student, learns that the truth about the fire is tied to her own daughter's actions. Rana is shown breaking under the weight of her mother's expectations, and that pressure leads her to make the choice to lock Amira in the storeroom so Amira will not be chosen for the school speech instead of her. When Rana later cannot keep her guilt buried, she confronts her mother and blames Hayat for forcing her into that desperate act.
The film then returns to the night of the fire itself. Seham catches Mona and Mashael smoking, and in that tense moment she throws the cigarette away. At the same time, Rana has already locked Amira in the storeroom. When Amira falls inside in the dark and the books crash down, that noise leads into the chain of events that ignites the fire. The school's investigation does not resolve cleanly or fairly: Hayat, trying to protect Rana and preserve the school's reputation, shifts the burden onto Heba, using Heba's past behavior as the reason she becomes the scapegoat. Heba is then suspended and the police take her on a manslaughter charge.
Rana's final turn comes when she decides to give herself up to the police. She does this after realizing that, whatever Heba's behavior has been, Heba should not be punished in Rana's place. By the end, Hayat loses her prestigious job to Seham, Heba's life is thrown into criminal jeopardy, Mona is left in a deeply suppressed state, and Mashael's family is expelled from the school. The ending leaves each of the main participants marked by the fire: Hayat is stripped of her authority, Rana is burdened by guilt and confession, Heba is made the official target of punishment, and the other girls' lives are changed by the school's collapse around them.
Is there a post-credit scene?
I couldn't verify a post-credit scene for the 2024 film From the Ashes from the available results. The search results only returned general post-credits databases and an unrelated title, so I can't confirm whether this specific movie has one or describe it accurately based on the evidence provided.
If you want, I can help identify the exact 2024 film you mean, since there are multiple works with similar titles.
Who is the mysterious carpenter Metin, and why does Gökçe become obsessed with him?
The central character behind Gökçe's obsession is Metin Ali, also called "M," a carpenter in Balat with tattoos and a rooftop view in Istanbul, who appears to match the mysterious man described in the manuscript. Gökçe is drawn to him because the unpublished novel she finds seems to mirror a hidden romantic life she wants to believe is real, and she becomes convinced that Metin is the living version of the book's carpenter figure.
What is in the manuscript that Gökçe finds, and how does it connect to her real life?
The manuscript titled Ashes/Kül centers on a romance involving a woman and a carpenter named "M," and Gökçe becomes fixated on whether the story is based on real events. The book connects to her real life because it reaches her while she is already emotionally dissatisfied in her marriage, and she starts treating the fiction as a clue to an actual person and place.
How does Gökçe’s relationship with Kenan change after she starts following the manuscript’s clues?
Gökçe's relationship with Kenan deteriorates as she spends more time pursuing the manuscript's world and less time within her marriage. Kenan grows suspicious and upset as Gökçe becomes increasingly absorbed by the mystery and by her attraction to Metin, which creates mounting conflict between husband and wife.
What role does Duygu play in the story behind the manuscript?
Duygu is tied to the manuscript's backstory and to the emotional injury at the center of the film's mystery. According to the explanation in the ending analysis, Metin made Duygu fall in love with him and then slept with her sister, which broke her heart and contributed to her death.
Is the carpenter and the story in the manuscript actually real, or just fiction?
The film keeps that question deliberately unstable, but the most plausible reading described by critics is that the events are real enough to have inspired the manuscript and its aftermath. In that interpretation, Duygu's suicide, Gökçe's affair with Metin, and Kenan's death are all part of a chain of real events that someone later turns into a new book.
Is this family friendly?
Yes -- From the Ashes (2024) appears to have mild profanity, mild alcohol/drug/smoking content, and moderate frightening or intense scenes, but no sex/nudity or violence/gore were noted in the available parental guide data.
Potentially upsetting aspects for children or sensitive viewers include frightening or tense moments and some mild language. The IMDb parental guide does not list specific scenes yet, so the exact upsetting content is not detailed there.
Because the available information is limited, I'd treat it as not fully verified for very young children or especially sensitive viewers.