Current:Home > reviewsSpoilers! 'Equalizer 3' director explains Denzel Washington's final Robert McCall ending -ProsperityEdge
Spoilers! 'Equalizer 3' director explains Denzel Washington's final Robert McCall ending
View
Date:2025-04-18 00:17:24
Spoiler alert! The following post discusses the ending of“The Equalizer 3,”so beware if you haven’t yet seen Denzel Washington's final film in the franchise.
Now it all makes sense in "The Equalizer 3."
Everything from reluctant vigilante Robert McCall's (Denzel Washington) appearance in southern Italy, far from his normal Boston home, is explained at the end of the third and final "The Equalizer."
Even McCall's mysterious choice to pull in CIA agent Emma Collins (Dakota Fanning) to help crack the case against the regional Italian Mafia (specifically the Camorra) has meaning that extends into the franchise's history. Collins herself kept asking "Why me?" throughout "The Equalizer 3."
So we asked Antoine Fuqua, who directed Washington in all three films starting with 2014's "The Equalizer," to break down the ending.
Who is Emma Collins in 'The Equalizer 3'?
It wasn't chance that McCall dropped a dime to the green CIA analyst Collins to feed details about the Mafia terrorizing the small Italian town he had come to love. The film's ending reveals that Collins is the daughter of McCall's best friend, confidante and one-time intelligence colleague Susan Plummer (Melissa Leo) and her husband Brian (Bill Pullman).
In "Equalizer 2," Susan Plummer's murder propelled McCall onto a vengeful killing spree against the murdering thugs who betrayed her, unleashing a disturbing lust for killing that consumes him into the third film. Tipping off Collins to the Mafia's designer drug ring connection to international terrorists is McCall's way of paying tribute to his lost friend while busting it up.
"He was doing a solid to Susan, his only real friend who knew him intimately," says Fuqua. "He was secretly feeding (Collins) information, to help her move up the career ladder, but also to teach her."
Collins survived a car bombing and was promoted for her work on the case. One of McCall's last lines is uttered to Collins in the hospital: “Your mother would be proud of you.”
There's been rampant "Equalizer 2" online discussion over the fate of Brian, who required McCall's help to save him from an at-home assassination attempt, but was not seen again in the movie or in "Equalizer 3."
Rest assured Brian Plummer lives.
"He's safe and sound," says Fuqua. "Probably living at the house."
What was Robert McCall's first and final 'Equalizer 3' mission?
"Equalizer 3" opens with McCall just after his ruthless killing of a small army of Sicilian mobsters. McCall then adds to the gruesome tally with more killings, without explaining his real reasoning.
"That's part of the mystery, right until the end, why he's there in Italy," says Fuqua.
McCall explains his exotic location change to Collins. When McCall was a Boston Lyft driver in "Equalizer 2," he picked up a passenger, Greg Dyer, who unknowingly relayed how his entire pension of $366,400 was stolen. McCall tracked down the criminals behind the theft in Italy and killed them, uncovering the drug ring.
McCall removed the $366,400 that was stolen from Dyer from the criminal coffers. After the entire ring was broken, McCall directed Collins to return the money, in cash, to the shocked Bostonite ride-sharing app user and his wife.
"Dyer lived on the street (McCall) used to live on, and McCall gave him a lift," says Fuqua. "The money is the final payback after his final masterpiece of violence."
Does Robert McCall die in 'Equalizer 3'?
Against all odds, McCall is still standing in the end of "Equalizer 3." His vigilante days are over as he appears to settle back into the Italian town he restored to peace.
Killing McCall in the final film was not an option for Fuqua. "It would be too disappointing to see a man doing the right thing have a tragic end," he says.
Keeping McCall alive also leaves the door open for a possible movie return, even for the film billed as the last "Equalizer."
“If Denzel called me with a great script he was passionate about, then I’m not going to say no to Denzel Washington," says Fuqua.
What happens to the baddest villain in 'Equalizer 3'?
Italian actor Andrea Scarduzio showed a black heart as menacing crime boss Vincent Quaranta, using brutal deaths to send a message to the Italian town. But the reign ended when McCall came visiting at Vincent's opulent home and dispatched his security one by one. The panicked Vincent shoots off a gun looking like Al Pacino's Tony Montana at the end of "Scarface," an accidental homage, says Scarduzio.
"I didn't think about that when we were shooting the scene," says Scarduzio. "But after the trailer, so many people told me that it reminded them of 'Scarface.' "
McCall definitely made a statement in the prolonged killing of Vincent, filling the drug-dealing crime boss with his own deadly drugs before marching the stumbling man into the public square, barefoot in his pajamas. Scarduzio shot the turbulent barefoot final scenes over 10 nights in the Italian winter, finishing on Christmas Eve. The only time a stunt person was used was for Vincent's death, run over by a car.
"Everything else was me, falling down the stairs and in the streets, I still have scars all over my legs shooting the final agony, those street falls," says Scarduzio. "I wear them proudly."
veryGood! (9)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Indiana seeks first execution since 2009 after acquiring lethal injection drug, governor says
- Phoebe Gates confirms relationship with Paul McCartney's grandson Arthur Donald in new photos
- NASA taps Elon Musk’s SpaceX to bring International Space Station out of orbit in a few more years
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Mega Millions winning numbers for June 25 drawing: Jackpot climbs to $97 million
- Supreme Court admits document was briefly uploaded after Bloomberg says high court poised to allow emergency abortions in Idaho
- Is she a murderer or was she framed? Things to know about the Boston-area trial of Karen Read
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Chaotic Singles Parties are going viral on TikTok. So I went to one.
Ranking
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Infant mortality rate rose 8% in wake of Texas abortion ban, study shows
- Local leaders say election districts dilute Black votes for panel governing Louisiana’s capital
- Boebert will likely fill the House seat vacated by congressman who criticized the GOP’s extremes
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- Christina Applegate's 13-year-old daughter Sadie diagnosed with POTS: 'I was in a lot of pain'
- Judge receives ethics fine after endorsing a primary candidate at a Harris County press conference
- Water-rich Gila River tribe near Phoenix flexes its political muscles in a drying West
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Biden pardons LGBTQ+ service members convicted for sexual orientation
Why Lindsay Lohan's Advice to New Moms Will Be Their Biggest Challenge
Francia Raísa Shares New Reproductive Diagnosis After Health Took a “Serious Turn”
Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
What did Julian Assange do? WikiLeaks' most significant document dumps
Planning on traveling for the Fourth of July holiday? Here’s how to avoid the crush
Protests over Kenya tax hike proposal reportedly turn deadly in Nairobi