The ending of Midnight Cowboy is haunting: a broken dream, a dying friend, and a bus moving toward nowhere. For decades, viewers have debated one unsettling detail that seems to blur the line between tragedy and ambiguity.
In the film’s final moments, Joe Buck sits beside Ratso Rizzo, who appears to have died on the bus as they travel away from New York. The emotional weight of the scene is built on Joe’s realization that his only real connection is gone.
Midnight Cowboy is driven by the powerful performances at its center, especially Dustin Hoffman as Ratso Rizzo. Hoffman fully committed to the role, adopting a limp, coughing, and physical frailty to portray a man already in decline.
His preparation reportedly included uncomfortable methods to maintain Ratso’s broken posture and gait, helping sell the illusion of a man barely surviving. The performance became one of the most iconic in film history.
Yet the final bus scene has sparked debate among fans for years. Some viewers believe they notice Ratso’s chest subtly rising after his supposed death, suggesting a faint sign of life.
Others point to a small eyelid movement when Joe gently closes his eyes, arguing it could be a continuity error or a natural reflex captured on camera.
For many, these details are simply imperfections in filming—tiny, unintended movements that slipped through editing in an otherwise carefully crafted scene.
But for others, they add an eerie ambiguity, making the ending feel even more unsettling, as if Ratso exists in a fragile space between life and death.
Regardless of interpretation, the moment remains one of cinema’s most powerful endings, cementing Midnight Cowboy as a raw and unforgettable classic.