The Amazing Boy Ending Explained: After professor creates a robot who looks like blue-eyed boy the criminals become very interested in the invention. Directed by Leonid Pekur, this 1971 adventure film stars Nikita Golubentsev (The Boy), alongside Valentin Nikulin as Professor Art, Valentin Gaft as Doctor Kapa, Yuriy Sarantsev as Bubnila. With a 8/10 audience rating, the ending has been widely praised.

What Happens at the End of The Amazing Boy?

After professor creates a robot who looks like blue-eyed boy the criminals become very interested in the invention.

How Does Nikita Golubentsev (The Boy)'s Story End?

  • Nikita Golubentsev: Nikita Golubentsev's arc reaches a definitive conclusion by the final act, with Leonid Pekur delivering a resolution that feels earned after the film's 1h 24m runtime.
  • Valentin Nikulin (Professor Art): Valentin Nikulin's role in the climax proves pivotal to how the central conflict resolves.
  • Valentin Gaft (Doctor Kapa): Valentin Gaft's character undergoes a significant shift in the final act.

What Does the Ending of The Amazing Boy Mean?

The Amazing Boy concludes with Leonid Pekur reinforcing the adventure themes established throughout the film. The final moments with Nikita Golubentsev leave a lasting impression — the ending is both a resolution and a statement about the story's central questions.