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At the end of Life Is Beautiful, Dora survives the concentration camp. Following the liberation of the camp by American forces, her son Giosué is riding on a tank when he spots her in the crowd of survivors. He jumps down and runs into her arms. They embrace joyfully, and Giosué exclaims, "We won!" referring to the game his father created, to which Dora replies, "Yes, we won!" Her survival and reunion with her son are explicitly shown on screen.
The film Life Is Beautiful (La vita è bella) does not explicitly resolve Dora's fate.
During the chaotic liberation and evacuation of the concentration camp, Dora is separated from Guido and Giosué in the women's barracks. While Guido is captured and executed trying to save Giosué, and Giosué hides and is later rescued by American soldiers, Dora's situation is left ambiguous.
She is not shown reuniting with her son Giosué, who rides away on the American tank believing they have "won the game." Nor is her death confirmed on screen. The film concludes with Giosué's liberation and the adult narrator (Giosué) reflecting on his father's ultimate sacrifice.
Therefore, the specific detail regarding Dora is that her ultimate fate—survival, death, or subsequent reunion—is left entirely unresolved and off-screen by the end of the movie.
The summary fails to mention that Dora survives, which is a key part of the ending.
The summary explicitly denies the reunion, which is the emotional climax of the film.
The summary misses the iconic dialogue between mother and son confirming their survival and the 'victory' of the game.