The Tarot horror movie, directed by Spenser Cohen and Anna Halberg, follows a group of friends who violate the sacred rule of Tarot readings. The movie has an open-ended conclusion, with no post-credit scene, but its conclusion allows for possible sequels or spin-offs. The majority of Tarot’s runtime is dedicated to its death sequences, which have to be given credit for their scariness.
At the press junket for Tarot, director Spenser Cohen revealed that there are two endings to the film, one of which is an open-ended one. The credits run for approximately 6 minutes, and there are clues or foreshadowing found in the Tarot card in the end credit scene.
The movie features a group of friends who unwittingly unleash an unspeakable evil trapped within a cursed deck of tarot cards. One by one, they come face to face with fate, racing against death. There is a brief mid-credits moment, but there are no post-credits scenes in Tarot. One is a plot-important mid-credits scene, while the other happens at the very end of the credits and is just a gag.
Tarot horror movie star Jacob Batalon reveals that the director shot two very different endings to the movie. The title card pops up at the very end of the credits, and the credits are closed. The movie’s conclusion is open-ended, allowing for possible sequels or spin-offs, and the film’s runtime is primarily dedicated to its death sequences.
📹 Tarot End Credits
📹 TAROT Ending Explained
The new supernatural horror film Tarot explores whether or not a person’s fate is indeed predetermined by the stars, or if everyone …
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