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What is the plot?
I can't reliably write a complete, exhaustive spoiler narrative with "every death," "all confrontations," and the exact ending scene for Freedom (2024) from the provided material alone, because the available sources only support a broad plot outline rather than full scene-by-scene detail.
What is supported is that the film follows Bruno Sulak, a non-violent French robber in the 1980s, as he carries out calm, orderly heists, becomes pursued by Commissioner George Moréas, and repeatedly escapes custody to reunite with his lover and accomplice Annie/Thalie. One source also establishes that Bruno works with Drago, Marika, Patrick, Jean-Louis, and later Steve, and that one robbery turns deadly when Patrick shoots an old woman, which enrages Bruno. Another source says Bruno later escapes from prison with help from Jean-Louis, returns with Steve to free Jean-Louis, and ultimately makes a final escape attempt by jumping, sustaining fatal injuries rather than surrendering.
A faithful long-form spoiler would require details that the sources do not provide, such as the opening date and time, the complete sequence of heists, the prison layout, every confrontation, and the full final chain of events. If you want, I can still do one of these two things right away:
- write a best-effort reconstructed spoiler narrative that fills in the missing parts using the known true-story framework, while clearly marking inferred material as inference; or
- write a concise but complete-leaning spoiler summary that stays strictly inside what the sources support.
If you want the reconstructed version, I can produce it in the continuous story style you requested.
What is the ending?
Bruno's final escape fails, and the police corner him. Rather than be taken back into captivity, he jumps in a desperate bid for freedom, and the jump leaves him fatally injured; Steve is already gone, and Annie is left behind, holding onto his memory and the life they shared.
Bruno Sulak's ending unfolds as a chain of tightening moments, each one pushing him closer to the edge.
Bruno is hiding in a closet, trying to stay unseen while the police search the room. The danger closes in fast. Two officers enter, and then a radio call comes through Bruno's walkie-talkie, exposing exactly where he is. At that moment, the room stops being a place to hide and becomes a trap. Bruno realizes the escape he had been hoping for is collapsing around him.
He resists instead of surrendering. That resistance makes the officers more aggressive, and the confrontation sharpens into a final standoff. Bruno then looks out and sees the night sky through the window. The sight hits him at the worst possible moment: he is still inside, still cornered, still facing the system he has spent his life defying. The stars briefly pull his mind outward, back toward the freedom he has always chased.
He chooses to jump. The film presents that leap as his last act of refusal, because returning to confinement is something he cannot accept. The jump does not save him. It ends in fatal injuries, and Bruno dies still clinging to the idea of freedom rather than submission.
Steve's fate is separate but directly tied to Bruno's collapse. Steve dies earlier, and his death is described as a devastating blow to Bruno because it removes both a partner and a true friend. By the time Bruno reaches his final moments, Steve is already gone, and Bruno is carrying that loss with him.
Annie's ending is quieter. According to the ending explanation, Bruno likely leaves a large part of his wealth to her, and she is shown later holding his lighter and spending her days in reflective silence. Her fate is not framed as dramatic action but as endurance: she remains behind, preserving the memory of Bruno and the life they shared.
Is there a post-credit scene?
I couldn't verify a post-credit scene for the 2024 film titled Freedom from the search results provided. The only directly relevant result mentions end-credit extras for Sound of Freedom, not a 2024 film simply titled Freedom.
If you mean a different movie called Freedom from 2024, I'd need the director, country, or cast to identify it accurately.
Who is Bruno Sulak, and why is he called the Arsène Lupin of the 20th century?
Bruno Sulak is the film's central figure, a flamboyant robber portrayed as a real-life criminal legend whose non-violent jewelry-store heists made him famous. The title's comparison to Arsène Lupin points to his reputation for style, cleverness, and escape artistry rather than brute force.
Who is Thalie, and what is her relationship to Bruno Sulak?
Thalie is Bruno Sulak's lover and accomplice, and his repeated prison escapes are driven by his desire to reunite with her. The film presents their relationship as both romantic and operational, with Thalie tied directly to his life of crime.
Who is George Moréas, and how does he pursue Bruno Sulak?
George Moréas is the police commissioner assigned to track Sulak, described as unconventional, astute, and tough. He serves as the chief law-enforcement opponent trying to stop Sulak's robberies and repeated escapes.
What kinds of robberies does Bruno Sulak commit in the film?
The film focuses on Sulak's non-violent heists at multiple jewelry stores, which are part of what made him notorious. His crimes are presented as calculated robberies rather than violent assaults.
How does Bruno Sulak keep escaping prison, and why does he do it?
According to the film's premise, Sulak manages to escape from prison several times. He does so to reunite with Thalie, making his escapes a recurring plot element tied to personal loyalty as much as criminal daring.
Is this family friendly?
No--based on parent guides and viewer reports, Freedom (2024) is not family friendly for young children and is better suited to teens or adults because it includes sexual content, nudity, drug use, and some violence.
Potentially objectionable or upsetting elements for children or sensitive viewers include: - Sex/nudity: topless nudity and sex scenes, including explicit breast nudity in some reports. - Drug use: heroin injection, cocaine use, smoking, and frequent alcohol use. - Violence: people being threatened with guns, rare shootings/killing, and a suicide scene noted by IMDb users. - Frightening/intense moments: crime-chase tension, prison escape danger, and generally mature, suspenseful material. - Language: some reports mention strong profanity, though IMDb users describe it as minimal or absent.
If you mean the 2024 film about Bruno Sulak, I'd treat it as not appropriate for younger kids and only cautiously appropriate for older teens depending on your comfort with sexual content and drug use.