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What Happens in Lord of the Flies? The Ending to the BBC Drama Explained

After burying Piggy, Ralph returns to find Sam and Eric, but Jack and his group begin to hunt him. They set the woods on fire in an attempt to smoke him out.

And so, Ralph emerges from the woods dazed, injured and bloody. He is shocked to find a boat on shore along with two naval officers – it turns out, they saw the smoke from the fire.

At first, the lead naval officer doesn’t fully understand what he’s looking at and writes it off as boys’ “fun and games.”

“What have you boys been doing?” the officer asks Ralph with a smile. “Having a war or something?”

However, when Ralph tells him two people died – and “probably more,” the officer begins to realise just how serious the situation really is.

The officer says he’ll take them off the island then asks Ralph how many boys are on the island.

Ralph replies that he doesn’t know.

“Who’s boss here?” the officer asks Ralph. After looking back at Jack, he takes responsibility.

“I am,” Ralph says.

“And you don’t know how many of you there are? Poor show,” he says. “I should have thought a pack of British boys could put on a better show than that.”

“It was like that at first, before things…” Ralph replies welling up. “We were together then.”

The officer looks at Ralph for a moment before saying, “Let’s get you boys out to the boat. Find you some clothes.” And with that, the boys all drop their weapons, leave the island and return to civilisation. Jack lingers behind and is the last to go. The show ends with the shot of a bird swooping through the air over the island.

Lord of the Flies ending explained

And so, just like that, the boys are found and their violent, animalistic war is cut short. Will the boys ever confess to what they did? How will they readjust to society? We have questions! But perhaps the lack of discussion about it all is kind of the point.

After all, how often are boys’ violent, tribalistic tendencies written off as “fun and games”? And how often are they never really spoken about again by the adults in their lives?

As Thorne explained to the BBC, he hopes his adaptation forces all of us to think a little more deeply about boyhood and masculinity in our world today.

As he put it, “The world’s still full of those confused little boys creating chaos in the world in the guise of men and hopefully this is a little microcosm of that which helps us understand that.”

LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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