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'The Umbrella Academy' Season 3: Ending Explained, Every Lingering Question Answered

Let's dive into that huge finale and the biggest lingering questions from the Netflix show.

Jennifer Bisset Former Senior Editor / Culture
Jennifer Bisset was a senior editor for CNET. She covered film and TV news and reviews. The movie that inspired her to want a career in film is Lost in Translation. She won Best New Journalist in 2019 at the Australian IT Journalism Awards.
Expertise Film and TV Credentials
  • Best New Journalist 2019 Australian IT Journalism Awards
Jennifer Bisset
7 min read
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A lot happened in season 3 of The Umbrella Academy.

Christos Kalohoridis/Netflix

Done binging season 3 of The Umbrella Academy on  Netflix ? It was another round of saving the world, but this time the approach -- and stakes -- were a little different. The Hargreeves siblings seem to be successful in preventing the collapse of the entire universe. But the results? They're understandably complicated.

Here's where things stand after the Hargreeves battle the rival Sparrow Academy, a universe-destroying black hole and vicious warriors known as the Guardians. Did they successfully reset the universe or just make things worse? Let's dive into the knotty details.

Read more: Netflix's Answer to X-Men Is Just as Good as Marvel

(L to R) Justin H. Min as Ben Hargreeves, Cazzie David as Jayme, Jake Epstein as Alphonso, Justin Cornwell as Marcus, Britne Oldford as Fei, Genesis Rodriguez as Sloane in episode 301 of The Umbrella Academy

Is the Sparrow Academy sticking around for only one season?

Netflix

What's in store for season 4?

Season 4 has been officially greenlit by Netflix! Creator and showrunner Steve Blackman has ideas for what could come next. Unfortunately, it sounds like season 4 would be the last.

"I think inevitably if we got a season 4, it's going towards an endgame," Blackman told TheWrap. "I think at a certain point, I'm not sure where we'd go after season 4. We have to be careful. My plan for next year is not to continually tread on the same ground we have before. It's a challenge to come up with a new way to subvert this storyline, and I think we have an idea how to do that."

"But I think if we got to season 4, it would be a great ending for the run of the show. I'm not saying I couldn't do more, but you know, I think that would be very satisfying for the audience, four seasons."

What's the Kugelblitz (and how do you spell it)?

Episode 5 is where you'll find the full explanation of this season's equivalent of a big bad (not counting the initial antagonism from the Sparrow Academy and the trio of Guardians at the end). In a nutshell, the Kugelblitz -- what looks like an orange ball of energy -- randomly collapses matter across time and space until all existence turns black. This black hole is the universe's response to a Grandfather Paradox created by Harlan, Sissy's superpowered son.

In season 2, Viktor met Sissy in Dallas, 1963, and the pair fell in love. While saving Harlan from drowning, Viktor accidentally imparted some of his powers to him. In the season 2 finale, Viktor believed he'd saved Harlan from exploding by absorbing his powers, but an altered Harlan retained them for the rest of his life.

On Oct. 1, 1989, Sissy died of cancer, the same day the Hargreeves siblings were all inexplicably born. Harlan's grief connected him with Viktor, whom he'd always wished would return to them. This connection caused Harlan to release an energy burst that found the closest association with Viktor at the time: his mother. Harlan accidentally killed her, along with the mothers of the other Hargreeves siblings. This resulted in a Grandfather Paradox -- in this altered timeline, the siblings were never born. When they jump forward in time from the '60s, they land in an altered 2019, where their pasts have been erased and the Sparrow Academy is the main superhero show in town.

Luther and Klaus are sacrificed (but that won't keep them down)

Oh, father Reginald. You seemed to have changed your ways (thanks to the Sparrow Academy's Pogo secretly drugging you to become more docile), but nope! The adoptive father of the Hargreeves (and the Sparrows) gave Klaus hope that he would treat the siblings with more love and care. He literally revealed a new layer in season 2: Underneath that austere exterior lies a lizardlike blue alien.

(L to R) Emmy Raver-Lampman as Allison Hargreeves, David Castañeda as Diego Hargreeves, Robert Sheehan as Klaus Hargreeves in The Umbrella Academy.

Allison, Diego and Klaus.

Netflix

In the penultimate episode of season 3, we see that this alien possesses a sharp-as-a-blade arm, which he uses to stab Luther to death. This is part of a tactic he's used before to bring the siblings together. Then, as the Kugelblitz swarms Hotel Obsidian (later revealed to be Hotel Oblivion), he sacrifices Klaus, closing the door on him as the remaining seven siblings escape. So much for changing his ways: The cold-hearted Reginald cares only about the correct number of siblings he needs to reset the universe.

Thankfully, after some persuasion, Klaus returns from the after life to rescue the siblings in battle with the Guardians, using his powers to briefly summon Luther at the ideal save-the-day moment.

Lila is pregnant -- for real this time

When Lila drops Stanley onto Diego's doorstep, we see Diego grow and eventually embrace looking after his newfound son. Only later does Lila reveal that Stanley isn't in fact his son, but her mate Trudy's (unfortunately, Stan ends up Kugelblitzed). She "borrowed" him to test Diego on whether he'd be up for the job of looking after his real son. That's right -- Lila is currently pregnant with Diego's unborn son, who they can save only if they defeat the Guardians and reset the universe.

Colm Feore as Reginald Hargreeves in The Umbrella Academy.

Reginald Hargreeves never fails to exploit his adoptive children.

Christos Kalohoridis/Netflix

Allison goes rogue for once

Allison's arc this season saw her lose patience with being the nice one all the time, especially after the racial discrimination she suffered during the 1960s American civil rights movement. After losing her husband Raymond Chestnut in the past, she discovers her daughter Claire no longer exists in the altered present. Fed up with the hand she's been dealt, she leans into the full extent of her powers, finding (with an assist from Harlan's residual energy) that she can influence people without having to say, "I heard a rumor..."

She takes another step out of character by striking a deal with Reginald to do whatever it takes to bring Claire (and potentially Raymond) back. Mainly, this involves attempting to persuade the other siblings to fight the dangerous Guardians and reset the universe.

The seven bells to reset the universe

This time, to save the world, all it takes is for one of the siblings to hit a literal reset button. In the lobby of Hotel Obsidian -- later revealed to be Hotel Oblivion, a giant machine built by whoever created the universe in the first place -- seven stars can be seen across the floor. The seven remaining siblings, aside from Allison, stand on these "bells" to create a sigil, which use the particles inside their bodies as fuel. Meanwhile, Reginald appears to change the settings of the machine, which might explain why the universe doesn't reset to the expected norm. To stop the siblings from being drained to death, Allison kills Reginald, then decides to press the big red reset button anyway.

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The Hargreeves forming the sigil.

Netflix

What the hell happened to everyone?

With the universe back to "normal," Allison gets exactly what she wanted: Claire and, inexplicably, Raymond. Is he just a figment of her imagination? She interacted with him while under high stress before. Or has he actually traveled to 2019 from 1963?

Luther returns, but he's not the same either -- he's no longer part ape. None of the siblings have their powers anymore. One thing that doesn't change: Ben is still the Sparrows' asshole version. Luther desperately runs off to find his love Sloane, who could still potentially exist out in the reset world somewhere, just not as part of the Sparrow Academy. The rest of the siblings go their separate ways.

Reginald also gets what he wanted. He appears to own every high-rise building in the city, all brandishing the Hargreeves name. In a Tony Stark-like tower, marked by huge "H E" letters (or "H" and three horizontal lines floating parallel over one another), old Reg overlooks the city with the same ethereal woman revealed to be living on the moon in a restricted area at the same time Luther was. Her name is Abigail Hargreeves, and according to the label on her cryogenic tube, she was dead. Reginald told Luther his mission on the moon had a purpose, to "guard the most precious thing in the universe." The way Reggie and Abigail look lovingly at each other suggests they're an item.

Who's Abigail Hargreeves?

Surprisingly, Abigail Hargeeves was first introduced all the way back at the beginning of the season 1 finale. The mysterious scene takes place "long ago" on what appears to be a farm on a different planet, where several rockets launch into the sky. It suggests Abigail and Reginald are husband and wife -- and both aliens. On Abigail's deathbed, she asks Reginald to take her violin with him and give it to someone else to cherish (of course, Viktor ends up being the recipient). "The world needs you, Reggie," she says. Did Reginald and Abigail's planet die? Was Reginald's plan all along to create The Umbrella Academy and use his children as an energy source for the universe-resetting machine to bring Abigail and their original planet back? Maybe season 4 will have those answers.

Justin H. Min as Ben Hargreeves in episode 301 of The Umbrella Academy.

The man who shall be known as Asshole Ben.

Netflix

That midcredits scene

Season 3 isn't done with teases for the future -- in a midcredits scene, we jump over to South Korea, the camera snaking through a train until a familiar face appears. Another Ben! This one looks super suave, wearing a trim suit and reading a book as he travels to Yeouido Station in Seoul. So in this reset universe, not one, but two Bens exist.

Here's what creator and showrunner Steve Blackman had to say about the scene.

"Let's be clear -- that is Sparrow Ben," Blackman told Netflix Tudum. "The question you should really be asking yourself is what the f--k is he doing on a Korean subway train reading a book about pottery? Odd, right? Of course, it is! This is the Umbrella Academy. As every good Umbrella fan knows, no moment in the show exists in isolation. Everything we see has meaning. And this moment is no exception. Ben has a reason to be there… but you'll have to wait until season 4 to understand why."

Wait, backup. Five is the founder of the Commission?

Surprisingly, one of the biggest reveals of this season doesn't seem to be of too much concern by the end. In episode 4, Five meets himself from the future in the Commission's Grandfather Paradox-proof bunker, belonging to the founder. That's right -- Five was the founder of the Commission this whole time! The company causing him so much trouble was his own creation. Judging by Old Five's one arm and tattoo of the sigil, it appears this version of Five came from a timeline where the Hargreeves stop Reginald before he resets the universe. Will we get confirmation of what exactly happened in that timeline? Maybe, if season 4 has enough time to explain...

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