The Death of Bunny Munro ending explained: Bunny dies by suicide and frees Junior from the cycle

A still from the show (Image via Apple TV)
A still from the show (Image via Apple TV)

The Death of Bunny Munro concludes with a devastating yet crucial end. Bunny's last choice transforms everything for his kid. The beauty expo turns into his previous stop. He sits in the cafeteria, and reality crashes down on him. Every mistake floods his mind and compels him to introspect on that. Every person he hurts comes to his thoughts. Libby's demise haunts him, and Junior's lost childhood weighs heavily on him.

Bunny realizes something important and learns that he is the cause of the problem. Junior's escape would become impossible as long as Bunny is alive. Three generations of Bunny men have already fallen apart, and Bunny senior passed down his toxic traits. Bunny became just like him, and now Junior stands at the edge. One wrong move can lead him to fall into the same pattern.

The Death of Bunny Munro doesn't offer redemption through transformation. Bunny can not fix himself. He tried and failed too many times. Instead, the series asks a difficult question. What if the only way to save Junior is to eliminate him?

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The difficult decision in The Death of Bunny Munro

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Bunny walks out of the expo building with his mind made up. He spots a truck on the street, which is exactly like the one that killed Poodle. Throughout the show, the horned devil subplot runs parallel to Bunny's narrative. A killer roams free, and women die. The news reports capture, but the receptionist warns Bunny. The real devil is still out there, and Bunny understands this as he also sees himself as that devil. Not literally but spiritually. He caused as much pain as any monster could.

At that moment, he steps in front of the truck, and the impact is brutal. The Death of Bunny Munro does not shy away from the devastation. Bunny's body breaks, and he crawls back toward the building. Blood trails behind him, and he needs to see Junior one last time. As death arrives, his mind fractures, and the hallucination starts.

Bunny stands on stage, and the light shines down. He performs Elvis's Always On My Mind. The viewers include everyone he wronged. Libby sits in the front row, and the ghost watches him. Other women fill the seats. Even Nick Cave appears, and Bunny sings with desperation. He thinks the performance will mean anything. That somehow, in death, he will get forgiveness.

But The Death of Bunny Munro denies that comfort. The hallucination offers no peace. Even in his own ending fantasy, redemption escapes him. The illusion falls apart, and the junior appears. The boy looks down at his father, and hope seems to shine in his eyes. There is a small chance that Bunny may survive.

Maybe things can shift, but Bunny knows better. He uses his last breath for something crucial:

"You're a terrible salesman."

The words cut through Junior's hope, and they sounded cruel. But they are calculated. Bunny spent weeks grooming Junior for the family business. The boy learned several techniques.

By telling Junior he is worthless at it, Bunny ends that path. Junior will no longer chase his father's approval and won't try to become a salesman. The door slams shut, and The Death of Bunny Munor makes this moment crucial. A terrible father finds a decent act. He lies to protect his son.

The ending moves forward, and Junior lives with a new family. His appearance has also changed, and he wears proper glasses. His school clothes fit him well, and his face reveals a great deal of contentment. The chaos over his head is gone, and there are no more hotel rooms, and there are no more watching his father destroy himself. Junior gets a normal life and a chance at a real childhood.

The Death of Bunny Munro suggests Junior will grow up with a new identity. The Bunny lineage will no longer define him. The cycle breaks with his father's demise in The Death of Bunny Munro. Bunny's suicide opens access to Junior's freedom. His final lie saved the boy from following three generations of failure.


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Edited by Amey Mirashi