Quick answer: the ending of Princess Mononoke does not say that nature and humans suddenly live in perfect harmony. It says the old balance has been broken, the forest can regrow in a changed form, and Ashitaka and San must choose a harder kind of hope: living close enough to keep trying, but honest enough not to pretend the damage never happened.

What actually happens at the end?
By the final act, Iron Town, the forest gods, the samurai, the boars, Eboshi, Ashitaka and San are all trapped inside the same disaster. Lady Eboshi shoots off the Forest Spirit’s head because the Emperor’s men want it as a prize. The Night-Walker, separated from its head, becomes a spreading force of death. Plants wither, bodies collapse, and the forest that everyone was fighting over starts to disappear beneath them.
Ashitaka and San return the head to the Forest Spirit. The great god dies as the sun rises, but its death releases a wave of life. Grass returns. The Kodama are not gone forever. Iron Town’s people survive. Eboshi, badly wounded, says they will build a better town. San cannot forgive humans, but she accepts that Ashitaka will visit her. Ashitaka chooses to live in Iron Town while remaining connected to San and the forest.
The Forest Spirit is not just “nature”
The Forest Spirit is easy to read as a symbol for nature, but the film makes it stranger and more unsettling than a simple forest mascot. It gives life and takes life. It heals Ashitaka’s wound, but it also lets creatures die. At night it becomes the enormous Night-Walker, a god so vast that humans can only look at it with fear, greed or awe.
That matters because Princess Mononoke is not arguing that nature is gentle and humans are cruel. The forest has beauty, violence, pride and terror. The humans have greed and destruction, but also hunger, disability, community and survival. The Forest Spirit sits above those categories. It is life as a whole system, not life as a comforting decoration.
Why does the Forest Spirit die?
The Forest Spirit dies because the world of the film has already crossed a line. The old gods are fading. Human weapons have become strong enough to wound what used to feel untouchable. Iron Town is not a temporary accident. It represents industry, trade, organised labour and political pressure. The forest cannot simply return to the exact world that existed before humans cut into it.
That is why the ending is bittersweet rather than triumphant. Returning the head stops the immediate catastrophe, but it does not restore the giant god in its old form. The death of the Forest Spirit suggests that some losses cannot be neatly reversed. The question left behind is not “can everything go back?” It is “what do people do after they realise it cannot?”
Ashitaka’s role: seeing with eyes unclouded
Ashitaka is not the strongest warrior in the story because he defeats everyone. He matters because he refuses the easy comfort of choosing one side and hating the other. His curse comes from hatred made physical, and his journey forces him to see why that hatred exists. San is right about human destruction. Eboshi is right that her people need protection and dignity. The boars are brave and doomed. The Emperor’s hunters are opportunistic, but they are also part of a wider human system that rewards conquest.
“Eyes unclouded” does not mean neutral in a lazy way. Ashitaka takes action. He saves people, returns the head, challenges Eboshi and protects San. But he does not reduce anyone to a slogan. That makes him the bridge figure the ending needs. He cannot erase the conflict, but he can keep a relationship alive across it.
San’s ending is not a romance fix
One of the smartest choices in the ending is that San does not move to Iron Town, smile, and become proof that everything is fine. She still hates humans. She has lost gods, family and a version of the forest that will never exist in the same way again. If the film forced her into an easy romantic resolution, it would betray her grief.
Instead, San and Ashitaka choose connection without pretending they are the same. Ashitaka says he will live in Iron Town and visit her. That is a complicated compromise, but it fits the movie. Love does not solve the political and ecological conflict. It creates a reason to keep crossing the distance.
Lady Eboshi’s “better town” line
Eboshi’s final promise is important because the film never treats her as a cartoon villain. She destroys the forest and kills a god, but she also shelters lepers, gives women economic power, and builds a town where vulnerable people have purpose. Her flaw is not that she cares about humans. It is that her care narrows until the forest becomes only an obstacle.
When she says they will build a better town, the line is not a full redemption certificate. It is a possibility. She has seen the cost of treating the living world as an enemy to be conquered. Whether Iron Town really changes is left open, which is exactly why the ending still feels alive after the credits.
So is the ending hopeful or tragic?
It is both. The tragedy is that the old forest and its gods have been wounded beyond repair. The hope is that life returns anyway. New grass grows. A Kodama appears. People who were enemies are still breathing in the same world, and some of them have learned enough to make different choices.
That kind of hope is more demanding than a happy ending. It asks viewers to accept grief without giving up responsibility. Princess Mononoke does not end by saying humans should vanish or nature should submit. It ends by saying coexistence is uncomfortable, unfinished work.
FAQ
Does San forgive Ashitaka?
San does not need to forgive Ashitaka in the same way she might need to forgive Iron Town. She cares for him, but she cannot accept the human world he chooses to live in. Their ending is mutual affection with a boundary, not a clean fairy-tale union.
Why does a Kodama appear at the end?
The Kodama suggests the forest’s spirit is not completely gone. The old god has died, but life continues in smaller, quieter forms. It is one of the film’s clearest signs of renewal.
Is Lady Eboshi redeemed?
Not fully. She is given a chance to change. The film respects the good she has done for her people while making the damage she caused impossible to ignore.
Related reading: start with the site’s beginner-friendly Studio Ghibli watch guide, then explore more film guides and character explainers.
Images: official Studio Ghibli stills from ghibli.jp, used in line with Studio Ghibli’s common-sense image notice.























