The Serpent’s Final Shot Ending Explained: Decoding the Explosive Ending of Nia Dacosta’s Hedda. The Grand Ball and the Serpent’s Nest, Contextualizing DaCosta’s Hedda.

Nia DaCosta’s cinematic reimagining of Henrik Ibsen’s canonical play, Hedda Gabler, titled simply Hedda, is a masterclass in transposition. By setting the suffocating drama within the opulent yet rigidly controlled confines of 1950s English aristocracy, DaCosta and star Tessa Thompson (American actress who has received nominations for two British Academy Film Awards and a Primetime Emmy Award.) do not merely update a classic; they unleash its latent, feminist rage onto a new, equally restrictive canvas. The film condenses the play’s glacial tension into the chaos of a single, debauched, and ultimately fatal party, making the ending not just a tragic conclusion but an inevitable, spectacular combustion.
To understand the film’s conclusion, we must first appreciate the world DaCosta has built. Hedda, a Black woman of dubious social standing whose only true currency is her late General father’s reputation and her new husband George Tesman’s (Tom Bateman) academic ambitions, is trapped. Her massive, gorgeously appointed country home is less a sanctuary and more a gilded cage, purchased for a life she neither wants nor can truly afford.
Her marriage to George is a pragmatic solution to a social problem—a loss of freedom for a tenuous financial and racial security in a stifling, white, patriarchal society. This emotional suffocation, compounded by the return of her former lover and academic rival, Eileen Lovborg (Nina Hoss), a lesbian academic who embodies the defiant intellectual and sexual freedom Hedda craves but fears, sets the stage for disaster. Hedda’s game of power and manipulation throughout the party is not born of mere malice, but of a deep, existential dread—a desperate attempt to prove she is still alive by controlling the lives of others.
The Burning Manuscript: Destroying the Child of Freedom
The psychological climax, preceding the physical finale, is the destruction of Eileen Lovborg’s magnum opus—a revolutionary manuscript on sexuality. In Ibsen’s original, the manuscript is often read as the ‘child’ of Lovborg and Thea (Imogen Poots), a symbol of the creative, generative union Hedda has been denied both by her marriage and her own sterile, destructive nature. DaCosta’s adaptation retains and amplifies this symbolism.
The manuscript, now a work of radical queer and feminist thought, represents not only Eileen’s professional triumph—which would usurp George’s coveted academic post—but, more profoundly, the possibility of a life lived authentically. It is the concrete, intellectual “beautiful deed” (a phrase from the play) that Hedda yearns to witness and be a part of, yet is too much a coward to create herself.
When Hedda burns the manuscript, whispering, “Now I am burning your child, Thea’s and yours,” the act is devastatingly multi-layered. It is an act of spousal loyalty to George, a cynical attempt to secure her financial position.6 It is an act of supreme jealousy, destroying the creative product of her rival and ex-lover. But most importantly, it is a ritualistic immolation of her own potential freedom. She is extinguishing the beacon of a life she could have chosen—a life of intellect, defiance, and queer love—proving to herself and the world that the only power she can wield is destructive. By destroying Eileen’s hope, she annihilates the most dangerous reflection of her own suppressed self.
The Pistol and the Interrogation: A New Framing of the Inevitable
DaCosta’s film famously opens with a jarring flash-forward: Hedda is being interrogated by the police after a shooting, her glamour and composure already fraying at the edges. This cinematic choice immediately frames the entire film as a confession or a recollection of a disastrous event, adding a noir-like tension and making the audience complicit in awaiting the promised violence. The recurring motif of her late father’s pistols—symbols of masculine power, control, and a freedom of action denied to women—is central to the ending.
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In the final, tense moments, following the revelation of the manuscript’s destruction and the cruel manipulation that led Judge Brack (Nicholas Pinnock) to acquire compromising information on Lovborg, Hedda is entirely cornered. Brack, the opportunistic serpent of the film, attempts to use his knowledge to coerce Hedda into a sexual relationship, effectively trapping her within his own sphere of control.
This moment is the ultimate trigger. Hedda’s entire life—her aristocratic aspirations, her financial stability, her racial security, and her sexual independence—is suddenly held hostage. She has sacrificed every shred of her genuine self for security, and even that security is now dependent on another man’s whim. She is not merely bored; she is erased.
The Final Act of Defiance: The Ultimate Escape
Unlike Ibsen’s play, where Hedda shoots herself privately and the supporting characters are left with a final, chilling confusion, DaCosta’s ending is interpreted by critics as having a slight but profound deviation. While the film may not show the suicide with the sudden, shocking finality of the stage play, the interrogation frame strongly suggests a violent end. The prevailing analysis—and the ultimate dramatic conclusion—is that Hedda’s final choice to use the pistol on herself, rather than be trapped by Brack or succumb to the domestic mediocrity she despises, is her singular, perfect act of self-determination.
It is the final, non-negotiable moment of control.
The shot that rings out—whether directly shown or implied by the narrative frame—is not a surrender; it is a declaration. It’s Hedda choosing the one liberty left to her: the power to exit on her own terms, wielding her own legacy. She refuses to be the controlled, compromised wife of George, the blackmailed plaything of Judge Brack, or the shadow of the vibrant, defiant Eileen. The self-inflicted gunshot is the ultimate performance of a “beautiful deed,” fulfilling the tragedy she had been unconsciously scripting all night. It is a final, loud No to the patriarchal, heteronormative, and racially rigid society that suffocated her spirit.
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In this context, the “ending explained” is less a plot twist and more a powerful thematic statement. Hedda does not lose the game; she terminates it. She sacrifices her life to save her selfhood, trading continued social existence for the only true, uncompromised freedom she believes a woman of her nature can attain in that time: death.
The Echoes of Tragedy: A Feminist Read
DaCosta’s Hedda thrives on its feminist re-framing. By casting a Black actress and emphasizing the gender-swapped rival, the film makes Hedda’s crisis of control a three-pronged struggle against racism, homophobia (her repressed desire for Eileen), and patriarchy. Her final act, while tragic, can be seen as a critique of a society that offers women of her complexity only two options: confinement or self-destruction.
The ultimate tragedy is that a woman of such ferocious intellect and vitality could only find her ‘beautiful deed’ in annihilation. DaCosta leaves us not with sympathy for a villain, but with a searing indictment of the world that created her, a gilded cage where the only escape for the truly defiant spirit is the Serpent’s Final Shot.


