A Man in Full's Shocking Ending Explained - Netflix Tudum

  • Explainer

    A Man in Full Ending Explained: Anatomy of a Rage-Filled Conclusion 

    Showrunner David E. Kelley warns, “Beware the male ego.”
    May 9, 2024
This article contains major character or plot details.

The opening frame of A Man in Full shows the body of Atlanta businessman Charlie Croker (Jeff Daniels) lying lifeless on the floor. But even in death, he has a flair for confrontation: In voice-over, he asks a question of the viewer: “When you die, will people notice?”

Charlie’s brashness remains on full display as the story flashes back to 10 days prior, at his 60th birthday party. He confidently — arrogantly — makes the rounds, asking his ex-wife’s best friend Joyce (Lucy Liu) if she’s had cosmetic work done and forcefully greeting a banker, Raymond Peepgrass (Tom Pelphrey), with a hand tightly (and uncomfortably) clasped around the back of his collar — a moment that foreshadows the final scene, where Charlie’s hand once again finds its way around Raymond’s neck. But how exactly does Charlie’s hubris lead to his downfall? It’s time to dive into the many moving parts of A Man in Full, starting with its origin.

Evan Roe as Wally Croker, Jeff Daniels as Charlie Croker, Josh Pais as Herb Richman, and Sarah Jones as Serena Croker stand together at a barn in ‘A Man in Full.’
Daniel Delgado Jr./Netflix

Is A Man in Full based on a novel?

The series is an adaptation of the Tom Wolfe novel of the same title. The book was published in 1998, but the show’s creator, David E. Kelley, tells Tudum that it wasn’t difficult to modernize the story. He credits the author for that, saying, “I think [Wolfe] was always gifted that way. He could see things as they were and as they were going to continue to be. The themes, whether it be racial and class disparities, the vanity of man, or the criteria that mankind seems to use to take measure of themselves, were as ripe as ever — especially with Conrad’s story and his unfair shake [at the hand] of the judicial system.”

Conrad (Jon Michael Hill) is the husband of Jill Hensley (Chanté Adams), Charlie Croker’s assistant, who also happens to be pregnant as the story begins. Conrad and his wife’s boss live very different lives, but their stories fatefully intertwine, in ways that reveal the disparities Kelley describes. After Conrad tries to stop his car from being towed, he’s assaulted by a police officer and jailed after fighting back — and the consequences of these events echo throughout the season. 

After merciless Judge Taylor (Anthony Heald) sets Conrad’s bail at $1 million, Jill seeks Charlie’s help. He vows to get Conrad a lawyer, revealing a previously unseen sympathetic side to his character. Charlie’s general ruthlessness, interrupted by moments of sincere generosity, can make it difficult to know how to feel about him, a moral ambiguity that Kelley says he admired in the book.

“My experience reading Tom Wolfe’s Charlie Croker was like, “ ‘Man, this guy is repugnant and pompous and I can condemn him on so many different levels. Why am I pulling for him?’ ”

It was important to Kelley to re-create that experience for viewers. “How do we make this guy contagious, repulsive, [and] offensive? How can we cheer for him as he offends us simultaneously? We wanted it to be complicated and compelling. We could condemn him, but also feel for him and sympathize with him at the same time. That’s where I think Regina King and Jeff Daniels really tapped into him. That’s what appealed to Jeff about the character. It struck a chord with him when he read the book.”

King (Shirley, The Harder They Fall) directed A Man in Full’s premiere, penultimate, and final episodes. The finale, appropriately titled “Judgement Day,” resolves the characters’ individual yet interlaced dilemmas and shows us Conrad’s final day in court.

Anthony Heald as Judge Taylor sits at a court room while Jon Michael Hill as Conrad is escorted away in ‘A Man in Full.’
Mark Hill/Netflix

Does Conrad go to prison?

When Charlie instructs his top legal adviser, Roger White (Aml Ameen), to find a way to free Conrad, there are still several bumps in the road before one final, intense hearing before Judge Taylor. After showing the court video footage of Conrad’s violent confrontation with the police, White finally convinces the judge to dismiss all charges, putting an end to Conrad and Jill’s ordeal.

While Conrad’s moment of truth comes in a small courtroom, Charlie’s arrives in front of a phalanx of reporters during a press conference at his alma mater, Georgia Tech, where he’s being honored for his time as a college football star. Charlie faces a dilemma: He’s teetering on the brink of bankruptcy, with his creditors, led by Raymond, about to call in an $800 million debt. Atlanta’s charismatic mayor, Wes Jordan (William Jackson Harper), locked in a tight reelection campaign, has offered to intercede with the bank on Charlie’s behalf — on the condition that Charlie uses his press conference to air an accusation of sexual assault against Jordan’s opponent, Norman Bagovitch (John Lacy). Why Charlie? Because Joyce is one of Bagovitch’s rumored victims.

Ultimately, with his son Wally (Evan Roe) in attendance, and in line with Joyce’s wishes, Charlie decides not to heed Jordan’s request. “I’m proud of you,” Wally tells him, in a moment of harmony between father and son.

Lucy Liu as Joyce sits in a car looking at a shadowy figure in ‘A Man in Full.’
Mark Hill/Netflix

What really happened between Joyce and Norman Bagovich? 

Joyce and Bagovitch did have a sexual encounter, but Joyce’s memories of the night are blurry. She asks Charlie to keep her story private so she can move on without subjecting herself to painful public scrutiny.

It feels like a redemption arc might be in order for Charlie, but the good vibes are short-lived; a restless alpha dog at heart, Charlie has business to attend to. He learns that Raymond is heading a partnership that will take over a controlling interest in Charlie’s business holdings by acquiring the stake held by his ex-wife, Martha (Diane Lane). Charlie snaps, rushing to Martha’s home and barging in to find her and Raymond mid-hookup — they’re lovers as well as business partners, and the double blow to his ego hits him with a staggering effect.

When Martha leaves the room to call the police, Charlie locks the door and stands face-to-face with his nemesis. The tables have turned: After years of enduring Charlie’s bullying and mockery, Raymond has antagonized him throughout the series, and now controls his fate.

Raymond’s feelings toward Charlie can be difficult to interpret — sometimes he seems to hate him, other times he seems to envy him. But prior to this final confrontation, Raymond tells Martha he “admires” Charlie, adding, “He’s lived on his own terms and I’ve just drafted. My entire life. In his wake and the wake of others. And I’m feeling very much like the nothing that he cracked me up to be. And now I realize that I don’t just want to leave my mark, I want to leave it on him.” When Charlie dies, people will certainly notice.

Kelley reflects on Charlie and Raymond’s volatile relationship: 

“I think the seed of the disdain both have for each other was self-loathing. The measuring sticks they use to take value of themselves are such folly. It’s about who you’re seen with, who you’re sleeping with, how much money you have, how much power you have. I mean, Charlie’s jumping through the right hoops. He has a son, he has a family, he goes to work, he’s good at his job, but that’s not what drives him. It’s a greed and an envy and a lack of esteem, a hole he’s trying to fill.

“And Raymond Peepgrass, similarly, is trying to somehow fill this void that Charlie serves to excavate. On the one hand, he is envious and jealous of Charlie Croker. On the other hand, that’s the ghost he’s chasing. He wants to be him. That ferments a compounding of his contempt, that the very person that he loathes, he finds himself wanting to be.”

That toxic swirl of emotions ultimately leads to a fatal confrontation.

Tom Pelphrey as Raymond Peepgrass sits across from Jeff Daniels as Charlie Croker at a small table in ‘A Man in Full.’
Mark Hill/Netflix

Are Charlie and Raymond dead?

Charlie once again wraps a hand around Raymond’s neck, this time to choke him. At first he’s filled with rage, but then his expression becomes suddenly panicked as he realizes that he can’t break his grip on Raymond’s throat. With his wide eyes gleaming even as he gasps for air, Raymond seems to exult in Charlie’s madness — at least for the moment, before Charlie clutches at his own heart and the two collapse to the floor, Charlie stricken by an apparent coronary, Raymond by asphyxiation.

Roger arrives shortly after, watching as the coroners carry Raymond out in a body bag and consoling a hysterical Martha before heading upstairs to close Charlie’s eyelids.

Kelley allows that Raymond, ironically, may have felt at peace in his violent final moments: “There’s a look on Raymond’s face — his last act in life was to bring Charlie Croker down, and there was some satisfaction in that. It’s very perverse.”

That’s hardly a happy ending, as Kelley points out. He chose to end the series with a warning: “Beware the male ego,” he cautions. “If it’s not checked, it’s capable of all kinds of havoc.”

Shop A Man in Full

GO TO NETFLIX SHOP

Discover More Explainer

  • Explainer
    Climb the Aristocratic Family Trees of Bridgerton
    Your comprehensive guide to the ton’s most illustrious families.
    By Ariana Romero
    June 21
  • Explainer
    Nicola Coughlan, Luke Newton, and showrunner Jess Brownell reveal more.
    By Ariana Romero
    June 17
  • Explainer
    In this fin-filled Parisian thriller from Xavier Gens, it’s kill or be killed.
    By Ingrid Ostby
    June 14
  • Explainer
    A yellow umbrella, a blue French horn, and the end of a very long story.
    By Maggie Fremont
    June 3
  • Explainer
    Top tips to help you find companionship and community in the beloved California town.  
    By Matt Cabral
    May 31
  • Explainer
    “baby rein, thot u were rid of me??”
    By Christopher Hudspeth
    May 17
  • Explainer
    Everything you need to know to become a diamond of the first water.
    By Jean Bentley
    May 16
  • Explainer
    Et voilà! Find out what happened to Assane Diop.
    By Jean Bentley
    May 15

Discover More Drama

  • News
    Billie Boullet joins the A.J. Quinnell adaptation.
    By Ariana Romero
    7:00 pm
  • News
    The Vikings are embarking on one last voyage July 11, 2024.
    By Phillipe Thao and Drew Tewksbury
    5:21 pm
  • What To Watch
    Action, romance, and escapist getaways ahead — no sunglasses needed.
    By Allie Baker
    5:00 pm
  • News
    The Pogues just wrapped production on Season 4.
    By Tara Bitran
    4:45 pm
  • Deep Dive
    A new coming-of-age sports drama about Native American basketball is on its way.
    By John DiLillo
    4:00 pm
  • Deep Dive
    The new drama from Azazel Jacobs follows a family preparing for a loss.
    By John DiLillo
    3:00 pm
  • Deep Dive
    All eight seasons are streaming soon.
    By Derek Lawrence
    Yesterday 2:00 pm
  • News
    Save the dates.
    By Tudum Staff
    Yesterday 3:25 am

Latest News

Popular Now

  • News
    All the Season 4 details fit to print in Lady Whistledown’s Society Pages.
    By Ariana Romero
    June 18
  • Deep Dive
    The film about the woman and her nonverbal student explores disability rights.
    By Ingrid Ostby
    5:36 pm
  • News
    The first 2 locations will be in Dallas and King of Prussia, Penn.
    By Henry Goldblatt
    June 18
  • Who’s Who
    Don’t get back with your ex … unless it’s Netflix.
    By Cole Delbyck
    June 17