I just finished watching the film on DVD and I too felt that the ending was not consistent with the feel of the rest of the film. It certainly had that look of studio editing without directorial input that afflicted Orson Welles' "The Magnificent Ambersons." The brief shot of Garance in the carriage lacked the finesse of the editing of the rest of the film.
Compare the ending of the second part with the ending of the first part, to see what I mean. The dramatic tempo at the end of the first part was impeccable. At the end of the second part, the tempo was choppy.
I also noticed that the film ended nearly exactly on 3 hours. I was expecting 186 minutes from the DVD case. The last six minutes were filled with trailers, and a blank stretch. This is consistent with another poster's argument that there was some sort of regulation restricting films to 90 minutes in Occupied France.
Still, I think most of the story was told by that point. There wouldn't have been much left of the film anyway, but a neater ending would have been less jarring. It wouldn't have taken much, say something along the lines of the end of Casablanca. Baptiste and Frederick together, or something like that.
Oh well.
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