An unknown woman is left seriously injured after being hit by a car in the German woods at night which, in turn, opens up a missing persons case from 13 years before. This is the story of Netflix's latest series, Dear Child.
The gripping German thriller has had everyone talking and we have so many questions! Who was the killer? What happened to Lena, Hannah and Jonathon? So, here is the ending of Netflix's Dear Child explained.
Dear Child ending explained
After recovering from her accident, Jasmin tries to take her own life before going back to her abductor, Lars, to live as Lena, as does Hannah who escapes from her grandparents care.
We learn that Lena Beck was a young woman Lars kidnapped years prior while she was pregnant with her first child, Hannah. She is also Jonathon's biological mother (his father is Lars) and she died after giving birth to her third child, who also passed away. Since then, Lars abducted then killed multiple women who reminded him of Lena.
Netflix
While in captivity, Hannah begs Lars to take them to the seaside where Jasmin needs a bathroom break and Lars walks her out onto the shore, removing the knives he saw she hid in her sleeve on the CCTV.
But, what he doesn’t know is that Jasmin has a shard of glass from the shattered snow globe she used to hit Lars in the first episode that she’d tucked into a sanitary pad.
So, Jasmin pretends to pass out, and when Lars rushes over, she stabs him in the neck. “I’m not Lena, I’m Jasmin," she shouts and policeman Gerd arrives to find Lars dying. In his final breath, he reveals reveals to Gerd the place where he buried the real Lena's body years ago.
At the end of the series, Gerd is packing up his case files, Jasmin is living on her own again, Jonathan is still in the care of the clinic, Hannah is meeting with a therapist, and the Lena's family have reburied her and joined a support group.
Netflix
Dear Child is streaming on Netflix now.
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Furvah Shah is Cosmopolitan UK’s junior entertainment and lifestyle writer. She covers everything from TV and films to music and books, plus lots of celebrity news. Furvah has previously written for , BBC, and and she is super passionate about highlighting diverse talent and projects, having interviewed the likes of Halle Bailey, India Amarteifio, Iman Vellani and more. She's been interviewed for Times Radio and BBC Asian Network, graduated with a First in BA Media and Communications from Goldsmiths University and is an NCTJ-qualified journalist. In her free time, you can find her at an arts or culture event, eating Middle Eastern or Asian food, searching for modest fashion inspiration on Pinterest, binge-watching a Netflix series or cuddling with her cat. You can follow Furvah on , , and .
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