Putting all of that in a movie might not be possible or might not make a good movie, but the "alternate" ending for this one goes just about as far as it could in one scene: ![]() The book's character's realization of their perspective is the whole point of the book. He discovers at the end that, while he was thinking of the monsters as some kind of myth/legend in real life, like vampires, they thought the same thing of him: he had been killing and capturing and experimenting on them, and their minds were intact enough for them to know it and think of him as the monster/vampire/legend. In the book it's based on, he doesn't blow himself up to protect other humans while they escape. In his search for a cure before that, he had been capturing the monsters for medical tests, between episodes of being attacked by them, so he's killed a bunch in combat or in failed tests. By the end, he meets a couple of others like him, and sacrifices himself in an explosion to kill their pursuers so they can escape to a town where they believe there is a whole living population of regular humans. Civilization was wiped out, and one man who's completely immune seems to be the last unaltered human in the world, looking for others and for a cure to return the altered victims to their original normal human state. In the theaters, it's not much more than a standard monster movie, except that the monsters are altered survivors of a plague that killed most people, altered a few, and completely doesn't touch even fewer. you wouldn't understand the alternate ending unless you know the setup that comes before it and the ending that was in the theaters. For those who didn't know, here's the basic story, which means SPOILERS.
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