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What is the plot?
What is the ending?
I can give you a reliable ending summary only at a high level, because the search results available here do not include a full scene-by-scene plot breakdown of the film's final act. The ending is described as downbeat, with Rebecca and her father Lawrence trapped inside the conflict over the Indigenous land and the illegal loggers' invasion, but the available sources do not spell out every final event in detail.
In short: the film ends with the conflict tightening around Rebecca, Lawrence, and the people around them, and it closes on an unhappy, ծանր, unresolved note rather than a clean victory or rescue.
Here is the fullest factual account that can be supported from the available material:
Rebecca's story begins with her childhood survival, which made her a local "miracle," and that identity continues to shape how others treat her as an adult. She grows into a healer whose fame helps sustain her father's mission, while also placing her at the center of the community's hopes and conflicts.
As the illegal loggers move into the area, the land dispute becomes more dangerous, and Rebecca's sympathies increasingly shift toward the Indigenous people and the local protesters resisting the invasion. The Film Verdict notes that her moral position is tested by family loyalty, white European power, and the growing violence around the mission.
Jilvan, one of the protesters, is wounded and brought to recover in Rebecca and Lawrence's home, and this pushes Rebecca even further into the conflict. The same source says that when Rebecca is later pressed to perform a miracle in exchange for the Iriarte family's freedom, the film is making the exchange of power and survival explicit.
The film then moves toward its downbeat end, but the accessible sources stop short of giving a precise final sequence for every character. Based on the sources available, Rebecca remains caught between her role as healer, her connection to her father, and her sympathy for the Indigenous resistance, while Lawrence remains entangled in the mission and the conflict he has helped intensify.
If you want, I can also give you: - a spoiler-light ending explanation - a character-by-character fate breakdown limited to what is publicly documented - or a best-effort scene reconstruction from reviews and synopsis material
Is there a post-credit scene?
There is no evidence in the available sources that Transamazonia includes a post-credit scene, and none of the plot listings or film descriptions mention any extra scene after the credits.
Because the search results provided are general film listings and synopses rather than end-credits reports, the safest answer is that a post-credit scene has not been documented in these sources. If you want, I can also help determine whether any festival screenings or viewer reports specifically confirm the end-credits contents.
How did Rebecca survive the plane crash as a child, and who found her in the Amazon?
Rebecca survives a plane crash in the Amazon rainforest as a young child, and an Indigenous man from a nearby tribe rescues her from the jungle after the crash.
Why does Rebecca become known as a faith healer or miracle child?
Years after the crash, Rebecca is publicly presented by her father, missionary Lawrence Byrne, as a miracle and faith healer, and her reputation grows as part of the mission's public image.
Who is Rebecca’s father, and how does he use her reputation in the mission?
Rebecca's father is American missionary Lawrence Byrne, who actively promotes her as a miracle healer and uses her fame to support and sustain the mission.
Who is Denise, and what does she learn about Rebecca’s past?
Denise is a new nurse who arrives in the area and begins questioning the details Rebecca knows about her own past, becoming a catalyst for Rebecca's doubts about her identity.
Who are the loggers, and how do they affect Rebecca and her father’s situation?
Illegal loggers invade the land of the Indigenous people connected to the mission, escalating tensions and drawing Rebecca and Lawrence into a direct conflict over the territory.