Continuity mistake: In the scene where Winnie and Jessie are going swimming, when Winnie takes off her dress, you see that her right foot was not completely out of the dress. Then in the next shot, you see Winnie jump in without moving her dress at all, and it is far away from her on the rock.
Tuck Everlasting (2002)
Ending / spoiler
Directed by: Jay Russell
Starring: Ben Kingsley, William Hurt, Sissy Spacek, Alexis Bledel, Jonathan Jackson
The Tucks escape the city. Jesse tells Winnie to drink from the fountain so that she will be immortal and they can be together forever. He promises to come back for her. It turns into present day where Jesse comes back to Winnie's house expecting to find her but instead finds her grave saying "Loving Wife and Mother." Winnie poured the water onto a toad instead. The Tucks are sad, Jesse Tuck especially, but Angus Tuck is happy that she chose to live a normal life, and die. The same toad is still alive nearby.
Riley Finn
Jesse Tuck: Winnie Foster...I will love you till the day I die!
Question: Winnie (Alexis Bledel) runs away from her family and stays with Mae Tuck (Sissy Spacek) and the Tuck family. Winnie's family organise a search party to look for Winnie. Ben Kingsley (The Stranger/Man In Yellow Suit) also seeks Winnie and the Tucks, as they have secret information he wishes to acquire. Ben Kingsley finds Winnie and the Tucks. He threatens and intimidates them with a loaded revolver, even manhandling Winnie and holding the revolver barrel at Winnie's head. Sissy Spacek is standing behind Ben Kingsley. She hits him on the head with a rifle butt, killing him. At this point the search party converge on the Tucks' home. They see Sissy Spacek kill Ben Kingsley, so she is arrested for murder and sentenced to be hanged. Would any court find Sissy Spacek guilty of murder? She was obviously acting to defend her family and Winnie from an evil man with a loaded gun.
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Answer: It depends on the court. If the court believed killing the man was not necessary to save Winnie (ie. if a judge thought he was outnumbered and the men could and should have wrestled the gun away from him); then yes. A court could still find Mae Tuck guilty if they believe death was an excessive use of force in defending Winnie.