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They have one chance to kill the Omega, and they will most certainly die trying. Because Cage lost his ability to reset the day, due to a blood transfusion, he and Rita know that there's no way they are going to walk away from this. Also, this might be obvious but MAJOR EDGE OF TOMORROW SPOILERS AHEAD!Įdge of Tomorrow ends with Rita (Emily Blunt) and Cage (Tom Cruise) diving head first toward their own deaths as they attempt to destroy the "Omega," which is the being that's at the center of everything, particularly as it relates to resetting the day. We will be discussing All You Need Is Kill here with spoilers, especially as it relates to the book's ending, so if you haven't read the book but plan to and don't want the ending spoiled, read no further.
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And it's the ending we want to talk about here, mainly as it compares to All You Need Is Kill. Basically, what Doug Liman's film has done is take the concept and characters from the book, change some of the rules and a lot of other major details (character specifics, locations, etc) and made its own similar story, with a very different ending. To say that the film takes liberties with the original story would be an understatement and that's ok, because in the end, while Edge of Tomorrow is by no means a page-for-page adaptation, it holds up nicely as its own movie. With that in mind, I'm not here to pick apart Edge of Tomorrow as it relates to its source material, Hiroshi Sakurazaka's All You Need Is Kill (opens in new tab).