Meeting up with Knives on the street, Scott and her look off into the distance where Ramona stands in the street. A silent understanding takes place between Ramona and Scott where each understands that Scott is better suited to be with Knives.
Ramona walks off into the darkness and Scott and Knives share a kiss. The movie comes to an end with the two of them at the arcade laughing, having a good time playing the Ninja DDR game. Apparently the alternate ending and maybe the Knives character info? The unshot alternative ending, which would reveal the whole film to be a dream, has been now confirmed by The Playlist. The Scott Pilgrim game was a miracle by all accounts.
First of all, it is a literal miracle because it was canceled, then came together after a short amount of work following just a few months. Even though it was rushed through development by a small Ubisoft staff, it was praised by fans of the comic on top of video game reviewers.
This is the second surprising thing since most rushed licensed games turn out poorly. Yet the team somehow managed to give every character their own ending.
While short, they are appreciated all the same and easy to accomplish. All one has to do is beat the final boss with a character and their ending will be unlocked.
Do this with the main four Scott, Kim, Stephen, and Ramona and Nega Scott will be unlocked who also has his own ending. In total there are seven playable characters , translating to seven endings but only one true canonical ending.
Soon he was dating Knives, Kim, and Envy all at once. He was the happiest guy in the world…or was he? It shows Scott having no growth as a character at all. The fact that he thinks he can date three girls at once is proof of that, especially with Envy. Comic Ramona voluntarily leaves Scott in volume 5 and does some soul searching.
The 1-up appears in both the comic and the film, but the way Scott uses it is quite different in the comic. Whereas in the film the 1-up is used to take Scott back to a point in time before the fight began, much like a checkpoint in a videogame, the comic 1-up revives Scott immediately after his death.
In the comic, Scott must live with his mistakes rather than getting a do-over like his live-action counterpart. The checkpoint 1-up escapades of the film had an interesting way of showing Scott's character development. The first time around, he fights for Ramona, earning him the "Power of Love," a flaming red katana.
But the second time around he fights for himself, earning him the flaming purple "Power of Self Respect" instead. The comic doesn't have the second sword, instead opting for an entirely different one, the "Power of Understanding," when Scott finally understands Gideon and himself.
After Gideon is defeated in the film, an important character from the comic appears and shows the film's biggest deviation from the comic -- the Nega-Scott. Every ex is depicted as either disillusioned, angry, hurt, bitter, or some combination thereof. It's cathartic, then, to show a relationship end in the healthiest way possible; both parties assume some accountability at the relationship's failure, and walk away having learned something new about themselves.
Although the final ending shows a similarly mutual break-up between Scott and Knives, Scott Pilgrim Vs. Yenny is a freelance contributor for Screen Rant currently residing on the East Coast. When she's not writing about the latest film, game, television show, or comic book, she's writing radio ads or updating her personal blog. Yenny is a self-professed nerd and professional sleeper.
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