What is the plot?

Sorry, we aren't able to watch and write up a full detailed plot yet. Check back in a few days.

What is the ending?

You appear to mean Once Upon a Time in Gaza, the 2025 film, not a 2024 film titled Gaza. In that film's ending, Yahya is pushed fully into the role of the militant he resembles, and the story closes with him carrying that identity as the film turns him into a symbol of resistance.

At the end, Yahya has gone from a quiet shop worker to the center of the film-within-the-film, and Osama's earlier death hangs over everything that follows. The final movement of the story emphasizes Yahya's transformation rather than giving a neatly resolved personal outcome, and the closing words on screen say, "One Day, it will end."

Scene by scene, the ending unfolds like this:

The story has already jumped ahead two years from the falafel-shop world, and Yahya is now approached because he looks exactly like the dead militant from the funeral parade seen earlier in the film. A Palestinian filmmaker recruits him for a propaganda action movie sponsored by Gaza's Ministry of Culture. Yahya accepts the part and enters the production with a changed posture and a heavier presence than before.

On set, the film cannot afford special effects, so real guns and ammunition are used during filming. Yahya begins to absorb the militant role while the production itself pushes him deeper into the identity being staged. The ending does not separate the performance from the life around it; instead, it lets the two merge as Yahya becomes the figure others are trying to turn him into.

Near the end, the film looks back to earlier, brighter moments through flashbacks of Osama and Yahya first meeting. These flashbacks place their friendship beside the later violence and loss, making the ending feel like a return to what has been taken away rather than a full resolution.

The final image is not a personal reunion or a clear victory. Instead, the film ends with large words on screen in Arabic and English: "One Day, it will end."

As for the main characters involved in the ending: - Yahya survives to the end of the story and is left in the militant role he has taken on. - Osama is already dead before the ending, and his death remains the loss that shapes the last part of the film. - Abou Sami, the crooked policeman, is part of the earlier conflict that drives Osama's tragedy, but the ending focus is on Yahya's transformation rather than on a separate final fate for him.

If you meant one of the 2024 Gaza documentaries instead, I can give the ending of that specific film, but I would need the exact title.

Is there a post-credit scene?

The 2024 film most likely referred to as Gaza in your query does not appear to have a post-credit scene based on the available information. The search results describe a docudrama/film about Hind Rajab and the Red Crescent rescue attempt, but none of the sources mention any post-credit or mid-credit sequence.

What the sources do show is that the film ends by moving from dramatization into archival material: one report notes a transition "to the archival moment," and another says the production "uses real phone recordings" interwoven with dramatized scenes. That suggests the ending is designed to feel documentary-like rather than to set up an extra scene after the credits.

If you meant a different 2024 film titled Gaza--for example, an anthology, documentary, or short film--tell me the director or cast and I can check that specific title.

In the 2024 film Gaza, which specific character is the story centered on, and what happens to that character scene by scene?

The most directly supported character-focused question is about Hind Rajab, the 6-year-old Palestinian girl at the center of The Voice of Hind Rajab, whose emergency calls drive the film's action. The film uses her real recordings to follow her trapped in a car in Gaza after Israeli fire kills her aunt, uncle, and four cousins, and the story turns on the responders' efforts to reach her before she is also killed.

How does the film portray the emergency call sequence involving Hind Rajab and the Palestine Red Crescent dispatchers?

A likely popular plot-specific question is about the extended phone-call sequence, because the film is built around Hind speaking with Palestine Red Crescent dispatchers while she pleads for rescue from the car where her relatives are already dead. The dispatchers, based in Ramallah, try to coordinate an ambulance while working through the need for Israeli approval to reach her.

What happens to the ambulance and the rescue workers trying to save Hind Rajab in Gaza?

Another highly specific question is about the rescue attempt itself, since the film emphasizes the race to get an ambulance to Hind. According to the source, the Palestine Red Crescent later said Israeli forces targeted its ambulance as it arrived, and the emergency workers Yusuf Zeino and Ahmed al-Madhoun were killed just yards away from Hind's family car.

Why does the film focus on the real audio of Hind Rajab’s calls instead of using a fictionalized version of her story?

A common character-and-plot question would be why the film uses Hind's actual recordings. The source says the docudrama incorporates the real audio of her emergency calls, which the director uses to recreate the hours she spent trapped under Israeli fire and to frame the responders' failed attempt to save her.

What specific family members are with Hind Rajab when the attack happens in the film?

A plot-detail question people are likely to ask is who is in the car with Hind. The film's account says she is trapped with her aunt, uncle, and four cousins, all of whom are already dead when the dispatchers are trying to keep her alive on the phone.

Is this family friendly?

I can't verify a 2024 film titled Gaza from the results provided, so I can't give a reliable family-friendliness rating for that specific movie. The search results instead point to a different 2024 title, Trigger Warning, which is clearly not family friendly and is rated TV-MA for violence, language, and drug/smoking content.

If you meant Trigger Warning, the main upsetting or objectionable elements are: - Frequent violence with guns, knives, grenades, hand-to-hand fights, blood, and on-screen deaths. - Strong profanity, including many uses of the F-word and other crude or religious exclamations. - Alcohol/drug use and smoking, including pot use and a marijuana grow operation. - Intense or frightening scenes tied to armed conflict, threats, and death.

If you meant a different 2024 film titled Gaza, send the exact title, director, or cast and I can assess it accurately.