The documentary ends with a return to the Kibbutz and discussion about how market forces have transformed the community.
The documentary ends with the points that the forms of the reactors were chosen only for business reasons.
The documentary ends with a scene of young people at a dance party in Orsk.
The documentary ends with Eklund being sentenced to prison.
The documentary ends by bringing us up to the present.
The documentary ends with the Yankees losing the seventh game of the 2001 World Series.
The documentary ends with him discussing how he is the only member of the three still in Lowell and not in jail.
The gritty documentary ends with a prediction that the number of parolees will double in the next five years, to 800,000 men and women.
The "shadowy military unit" then patiently waits until the documentary ends to resume its search for Hawkins.
The dream (and the documentary) ends with a vision of how information might be accessed in 2005.