What is the plot?

I can't write a fabricated "complete spoiler" with invented scene-by-scene details, dialogue, deaths, or twists when the available sources only support a high-level synopsis. The film's documented story is that Corinne Tan is a 13-year-old ski enthusiast in Aspen, Colorado coping with her parents' recent divorce and a blended family, while finding purpose by training the rambunctious puppy Flurry as a search-and-rescue dog.

What the sources do support is that Corinne is the more unsettled member of the family, while her younger sister Gwynn adapts more easily to the new arrangement; the plot also includes themes of family change, friendship, socioeconomic status, and anti-Asian racism. The film's central emotional movement is Corinne's shift from feeling displaced and defined by family upheaval to building confidence through her relationship with Flurry and her growing sense of purpose.

The sources do not report any deaths, and they do not provide enough detail to verify a true end-to-end narrative with complete confrontations, exact dialogue, or all final-scene beats. If you want, I can still do one of two accurate alternatives: a source-grounded plot summary of the film's full known story, or a clearly labeled inferred scene-by-scene reconstruction based on the premise and character information available.

What is the ending?

Corinne ends the movie by finding a place where she feels useful again, and her family ends on better terms than when the story began. Her younger sister Gwynn is still the more naturally gifted one, but by the end Corinne has gained confidence through her new responsibility and the family's relationships are more settled.

In the ending, the story closes after Corinne has spent the movie struggling with her parents' divorce, the move into a blended family, and her feeling that everyone around her has already found their role except her. The movie's final movement brings her back to the idea that she can matter through effort and care, not just through being the best at a sport or having a natural talent.

Corinne's father's side of the family and her stepfamily are already adapting to the new household by the time the film reaches its end, while Corinne herself is the one who has had the hardest time accepting the change. The ending resolves that tension by showing Corinne stepping into her own sense of purpose rather than staying stuck in the disappointment and confusion that dominated the earlier part of the story.

Gwynn's fate at the end is that she remains the talented younger sister who has already embraced her place in the new family structure, especially through her ice-skating ability. Corinne's fate is that she leaves the story with more confidence and a clearer identity, having discovered meaning in the new responsibility that gave her a way to contribute.

If you want, I can also give you a much more scene-by-scene ending narration, but the available plot summaries do not provide a full minute-by-minute ending breakdown.

Is there a post-credit scene?

There is no widely documented post-credit scene for American Girl: Corinne Tan (2023) in the available source material, and the film is described in sources as a roughly 61-minute TV movie rather than a theatrical release that would typically include one.

The sources I found summarize the plot and runtime, but none mention any extra scene after the credits. Based on that absence, the safest answer is that the movie does not have a confirmed post-credit scene, or at minimum it is not noted by the available references.

What is Corinne’s relationship with her younger sister Gwynn like in the movie?

Corinne and Gwynn are sisters who are close but often clash, with the movie emphasizing how Corinne compares herself to Gwynn and feels overshadowed by her sister's skating talent. Their bond is a major emotional thread, and the story shows both rivalry and affection as they navigate the family changes together.

How does Corinne handle her parents’ divorce and the move to a new home?

The movie centers on Corinne coping with her parents' recent divorce while adjusting to a new home and a blended family setup. Her emotional struggle is tied to hearing her parents argue and feeling disoriented as everyone else seems to have adapted more quickly than she has.

Who is Flurry, and how does the puppy affect Corinne’s story?

Flurry is the rescue dog Corinne is allowed to train, and the puppy becomes a major turning point in her storyline. Training Flurry gives Corinne a sense of purpose and helps connect her personal growth to something concrete and active in the world around her.

What special skill does Gwynn have, and how does that affect Corinne?

Gwynn is portrayed as an ice skating prodigy, which makes Corinne feel like she does not have an equally standout talent. That contrast is important because Corinne's insecurity about not having a special skill shapes much of her self-doubt and her need to find her own purpose.

How does Arne fit into Corinne’s family situation?

Arne is part of the new family structure after Corinne's parents' divorce, and Corinne has to adjust to living with him in the new home. His role matters because the film focuses on Corinne's experience of being in a household that feels different from the one she had before.

Is this family friendly?

Yes--by most family-movie standards, American Girl: Corinne Tan is generally family friendly. It is a short, PG-rated-style drama centered on family change, friendship, and a puppy, but it does include a few potentially upsetting topics for younger or more sensitive viewers, especially around divorce and anti-Asian racism.

Potentially objectionable or upsetting aspects: - Parents' divorce / blended-family tension: the story focuses on Corinne adjusting to her parents' divorce and a new family structure. - Racist comments / anti-Asian bias: the film's source material includes Corinne facing comments like "kung flu," so there is racial bullying and pandemic-era prejudice as part of the character's world. - Emotional distress around change: Corinne is portrayed as struggling with family transitions and feeling unsettled, which may be emotionally heavy for some children. - Potential sadness involving the puppy story: the movie involves training a rambunctious puppy, which can include frustration or stressful scenes, though available descriptions present it as positive overall.

What the available descriptions suggest: - The film is aimed at younger viewers and is described as handling divorce without making it too traumatic. - It emphasizes positive themes such as family adjustment, resilience, and Chinese American representation.

If you want, I can also give a very short "best age range" recommendation based on these content factors.