The Shining Ending Explained: Why Jack Is In The Photo

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The ending of Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining revealed Jack’s (Jack Nicholson) connection to the Overlook Hotel by showing him in an old photo with some of the hotel’s guests at the party. Based on Stephen King's novel, The Shining follows Jack Torrance, an aspiring writer and recovering alcoholic who takes a job as the off-season caretaker of the Overlook Hotel.

Jack takes his wife, Wendy (Shelley Duvall), and son Danny (Danny Lloyd) with him, but the Overlook has dark secrets. Triggered by Danny’s psychic abilities, known as “the shine”, the hotel releases some dangerous supernatural forces that break Jack’s sanity. At the end of The Shining, Wendy and Danny have to find a way out of the hotel during a blizzard as Jack goes after them.

Kubrick’s The Shining is very different from the novel, and the famous filmmaker changed the essence of the book and added elements that weren't present in the novel. On top of that, Kubrick deliberately didn't explain The Shining's ending during the film, but later explained why Jack Torrance appears in the old photo at the end.

Why Jack Torrance Is In The Photo At The End Of The Shining

Jack in the photo at the end of The Shining

The Shining ends with a shot of a 1921 photograph showing Jack with other guests in the hotel’s ballroom. This scene has been interpreted in many ways, and one of the most popular explanations is that it represents the hotel “absorbing” Jack’s soul. Although this makes sense, Kubrick himself said the photo suggests Jack is a reincarnation of an earlier official at the hotel.

Reincarnated Jack makes sense when returning to his conversation with Grady in the bathroom, where the butler tells Jack that he has “always been the caretaker.” This explanation for The Shining's ending also fits with the roles of both Grady characters mentioned in the film: the past caretaker and the ghost.

The ghost is Delbert Grady, and the past caretaker is Charles Grady. Jack says he saw Delbert in the newspaper, and thus, he is the reincarnation of Charles Grady. While the explanation that Jack is in the photo at the end of The Shining because he's a reincarnated former employee makes sense, this isn't explained in the movie itself.

Kubrick's explanation for Jack Torrance's appearance in the 1921 ballroom photo may be plausible, but it's also one of the few weaker elements of The Shining, as such a significant plot element could have been further elaborated on and made more apparent.

How Wendy & Danny Escape The Overlook

Wendy scared holding a knife in The Shining

After being freed from the kitchen pantry by Grady’s ghost, Jack, whose sanity was already shattered by that point, goes after Wendy and Danny, ax in hand. Wendy and Danny lock themselves in the bathroom, and Wendy sends Danny through the window. Wendy is trapped when Jack arrives and breaks through the door with the ax — the famous “Here’s Johnny!” scene.

Wendy defends herself with a knife and slashes Jack’s arm, causing him to retreat. The Overlook’s cook, Dick Hallorann, arrives to help Wendy and Danny after the latter reaches out to him through “the shine”, but is ambushed and killed by Jack. Jack then goes after Danny, who runs into the hedge maze — all this during a snowstorm.

Meanwhile, Wendy runs through the hotel, looking for her son. In the hedge maze, Danny manages to escape by laying a false trail to mislead Jack. Wendy and Danny reunite and leave the hotel in a Snowcat, and Jack freezes to death.

The sequel novel and movie, Doctor Sleep, explains what happens to Danny and Wendy after leaving The Overlook Hotel.

That’s the last the audience sees of Wendy and Jack in The Shining, though a deleted scene features them in a hospital, recovering both physically and mentally from everything they just went through.

How The Shining Movie’s Ending Differs From The Book

Jack Nicholson as Jack Torrance in the door in The Shining

After Wendy and Danny’s escape and Jack freezing to death, it’s implied that the Overlook Hotel continues with its cycle of murder by bringing in more reincarnations of past workers. The Shining novel, however, has a very different ending, and one that even made way for the sequel Doctor Sleep.

In the novel, Jack manages to fight the hotel’s possession long enough for him to tell Danny to run for his life. Unlike the film, Hallorann in The Shining book doesn’t die and helps Wendy and Danny escape at the end. The hotel makes one last attempt to possess Hallorann, but he successfully manages to avoid it.

As for Jack, he does die, but not in the snow: a malfunctioning boiler mentioned earlier in the novel explodes and kills Jack while also destroying the hotel. The novel ends with Danny and Wendy spending the summer at a resort in Maine, where Hallorann works as head chef. The three remain close, and Hallorann comforts Danny over the loss of his father.

Interestingly, in the 1997 The Shining miniseries, which King himself wrote, there's a brief epilogue in which a graduating Danny is visited by the ghost of Jack, beaming with pride, suggesting that Jack's spirit was fully freed when the Overlook blew up.

The meaning and topics addressed in the novel are very different from those in The Shining movie Stephen King hates so much, given Kubrick’s many changes to the story to fit his vision. The Shining novel and film work best as separate pieces, with each ending having a different meaning.

Every Shining Book, Series, & Film

Year

The Shining (novel)

1977

The Shining (film)

1980

The Shining (miniseries)

1997

Doctor Sleep (novel)

2013

Doctor Sleep (film)

2019

Overlook (TV series)

Canceled In Development

Redrum & The Elevator Blood Explained

The elevator blood scene from The Shining

In The Shining, Danny and Hallorann are the two characters with “shining” abilities, which allow them to communicate with each other even when miles apart. Danny’s “shine” reaches its peak at the Overlook Hotel, which, mixed with the hotel’s spirits and its own evil, unleashes some real horrors.

Danny has visions of the hotel right after Jack gets the job and during his time at the hotel, and has a traumatizing experience when drawn into the “forbidden” room 237. When the hotel’s forces get hold of Jack, Danny starts chanting and drawing the word “REDRUM,” which Wendy later sees reversed in the mirror, revealing the word “MURDER.”

Danny was warned by the Grady twins that something terrible was going to happen, and “REDRUM” was the warning passed on to Danny and Wendy through Danny. In addition to this, one of the most memorable scenes from The Shining is the blood coming out of the elevator.

This is one of the film's unique scenes (along with the Grady twins), and there are a number of ways to explain it. The elevator blood scene first appears as a vision to Danny and materializes near the end of the film when Wendy is looking for him.

Because the movie's Overlook Hotel was built on an "Indian burial ground", the blood coming out of the elevator has been interpreted as that of the Indigenous people buried there. Others believe it’s the blood of all the lives claimed by the forces of the hotel, which might be the most convincing explanation.

The Shining’s Real Meaning

Jack and Danny in The Shining

Kubrick may not have been fully faithful to the source material when adapting Stephen King’s book, but he succeeded in making a film full of metaphors and symbolism that have made way for countless interpretations of its true meaning.

Of course, there are some more convincing (and coherent) than others, but The Shining is explained as, at its core, a story about violence and abuse and how these are often cyclical. Jack had a history of anger issues and violence, mainly against his family.

When Wendy finds Danny after he enters room 237, he’s in shock and physically injured, and Wendy immediately blames Jack for it, as he has hurt their son before. Jack is a recovering alcoholic and relapses at the hotel, so he might have had his anger under control for a while before taking the job, but he went back to it there.

The Shining's Overlook Hotel itself also has a history of cyclical violence: it was built over a Native American burial ground, and its existence is a testament to the violence of colonization. Charles Grady killed his family with an ax, and Jack was on track to replicate that.

The abuse part of the story is both physical and psychological: both Wendy and Danny are clearly scared of Jack, even before the hotel’s influence takes control of him, and yet they stay with him. The Shining is not so much a ghost story in a literal sense, but a story about the “ghosts” of violence and abuse, and how these can come back to continue the cycle.

How Stephen King's Latest TV Adaptation Connected To The Shining

Chris Chalk as Dick Hallorann in It Welcome to Derry

Welcome to Derry is more than a prequel to Andy Muschietti’s It novels, as it also has a key connection to The Shining. One of Welcome to Derry’s adult characters is a young Dick Hallorann (Chris Chalk), who, at the time of the events of the series, is in the army, and his “shining” abilities are being used to find Pennywise’s lair.

However, this leads to Hallorann losing control over the ghosts that have haunted him for years, almost driving him insane. At the end of Welcome to Derry, Hallorann manages to overcome these ghosts and trauma, and decides to leave the army to work at a hotel as a chef, and the rest is history.

What The Shining Producer And Screenwriter Say About The Ending

Danny Lloyd in The Shining

Stanley Kubrick had a couple of different endings in mind for The Shining, each of them very different. Kubrick was never into the idea of making a typical horror film, with executive producer Jan Harlan and screenwriter Diane Johnson telling EW that Kubrick found it a “cliché to just blow everything up.”

Despite all the changes Stanley Kubrick made to the ending, one of the director's visions remained in place throughout all of it: The Shining picture at the end, as the topiary animals from the novel were "too goofy and cute" to Kubrick's eyes.

The maze in The Shining went over better than the hedge animals would've in Kubrick's vision. It's certainly an impactful moment that brings the movie full circle, seeing Jack become a part of the famous Overlook hotel ghosts once and for all. While it may not work for Stephen King, Kubrick's The Shining ending can be explained as perfectly fitting the film he created.

What Happened After The Shining Ended

Ewan McGregor in Doctor Sleep

Thanks to Doctor Sleep, there are now canon details of what happened to Danny, Wendy, and the Overlook Hotel after The Shining ended. Danny, who goes by “Dan” as an adult, is plagued by hauntings from the spirits of the Overlook for the rest of his life, with Doctor Sleep focusing on his attempts to capture them and put an end to his torment.

Stephen King published Doctor Sleep in 2013, 36 years after The Shining.

Doctor Sleep revealed that The Overlook was abandoned after the events of The Shining. However, this is another change from the original Stephen King narrative, in which the Overlook was destroyed at the end of The Shining novel when the boiler exploded.

As for what happened to Wendy Torrance after The Shining, Doctor Sleep reveals that she passed away from lung cancer in 1999, at the age of 53, when Dan was 20. This is only alluded to in the Doctor Sleep movie, but the book version gives a few more details about her life after The Shining ended.

Following the ending of The Shining, Wendy and Danny move to Florida after receiving a settlement from the Overlook's board of directors. In the book, she looks after Danny for the remainder of his childhood and maintains contact with Dick Halloran.

Halloran helps Wendy understand and manage Danny's troubles at the hands of the spirits of the Overlook. Wendy’s death, combined with being haunted by trauma and the Overlook’s ghost, drives Danny to alcohol abuse.

What Doctor Sleep Revealed About Jack's Fate

Jack laughing at the bar in The Shining

The Doctor Sleep movie adaptation managed to walk a delicate tightrope between adapting King's Shining sequel book and being a follow-up to Kubrick's Shining movie. Directed by Mike Flanagan, Doctor Sleep offered an unexpected treat in the form of an extended cameo by none other than Jack Torrance himself, now played by Henry Thomas.

This appearance doesn't clear up the question about why Jack is seen in the 1921 photo at the Overlook, but it does suggest that the theory about his soul being somehow absorbed by the haunted hotel is true.

In Doctor Sleep, Dan is forced to head to the Overlook to unleash a greater evil on villain Rose the Hat. While there, Dan encounters the ghost of his father – yet, this isn't Jack, but Lloyd the bartender, albeit not the same Lloyd that Jack encountered years earlier.

Some believe this suggests Lloyd the bartender was never a real person, and instead just a role the Overlook assigns to one of the souls it owns. While Dan's barbs do eventually seem to wake up part of Jack's consciousness from inside his Lloyd identity, whatever good he had left in him was clearly erased once Jack was fully taken over.

There's An Unseen Alternate Ending To The Shining

Jack Nicholson looking crazy as Jack in The Shining

The alternate ending to The Shining included a deleted scene that saw the return of Stuart Ullman (Barry Nelson), the man who hired Jack to visit the Overlook hotel at the beginning of the movie. While not connected to the Overlook, Ullman had a similarly strange vibe to him, and the deleted scene in The Shining explained why to an extent.

The alternate ending saw Ullman visit Wendy and Danny while they were in the hospital, where, much to their shock, he explains the police found nothing untoward when searching the hotel, including Jack's body.

Ullman also has a gift for Danny: the red ball Jack had been throwing against the wall. This strongly implied that Ullman himself was part of the hotel, and that Jack and his family had been pre-selected and summoned there by the strong spiritual forces possessing it.

While the alternate The Shining ending didn't remove much of the ambiguity Kubrick had carefully crafted, the director did feel that it diminished the nuance of his vision. What's more, test audiences seemed to agree with the infamous perfectionist, and since the scene wasn't responded to well in early screenings, Kubrick had it removed.

The Real Hotel Stephen King Visited That Inspired The Overlook

The Overlook Hotel in the snow in The Shining

One of the most chilling details about both the novel and film versions of The Shining’s Overlook Hotel is based on a real, and quite possibly haunted, location that Stephen King once visited. The Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, Colorado, made a strong impression on King thanks to its long, eerily empty corridors during his stay right before the hotel closed for the winter.

The Stanley Hotel is still open to guests, and even hosts seances, embracing its haunted reputation.

What's more, while staying at the Stanley Hotel, King reports having caught glimpses of a young boy roaming the halls even though he and his wife were the only registered guests at the time. Like The Shining's Overlook Hotel, the Stanley Hotel also has a haunted history, even possessing a particularly haunted room (number 217) just like the Overlook's room 237.

How The Shining Ending Was Received

Wendy Danny and Jack in the car at the beginning of The Shining

The Shining splits Stephen King movie fans and horror fans down the middle in terms of its story and ending. In King's novel, the villain is the hotel, which corrupts Jack and turns him against his family. In Kubrick's movie, the villain is Jack, who is influenced by the hotel and is mostly a bad person from the movie's start.

The ending of the book and the movie are different because King wanted to stop the hotel, and Kubrick wanted to stop Jack. In the book, the ending comes when Jack recovers for a moment and tells his son to run before starting to bash himself with the mallet so he can't relieve the unstable boiler pressure.

This causes the hotel to explode, killing the evil. In the movie, Jack never recovers and freezes to death, chasing Danny through the maze. Some fans feel that the movie did a good job of showing the hotel overtaking Jack, which explains that it might have absorbed him into the photograph at the end.

Overall, The Shining remains a beloved horror movie, even if it isn't a beloved Stephen King adaptation, and it has been well-received despite its many changes to the source novel.

Source: EW.

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Release Date June 13, 1980

Runtime 144 minutes

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Release Date November 8, 2019

Runtime 152 minutes

Producers Trevor Macy

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