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In the film's climax, Billy stalks Scott Wood to a strip club. He stands on the precipice of a violent act that will send him back to prison forever. But in that moment, he remembers Layla—the only person who has ever truly looked at him and seen someone worth loving.

Billy chooses to let go of his vengeance. He leaves the club, goes to a bakery, and buys a heart-shaped cookie for Layla. The story ends not with a grand cinematic explosion, but with a quiet moment of hope: Billy Brown finally heading back to a motel room where someone is actually waiting for him. Buffalo_66_HD_1998_.mp4

To Billy’s surprise, Layla doesn't fight him. Whether out of fear, curiosity, or a strange empathy for this clearly broken man, she agrees. She doesn't just play along; she excels. She charms his mother, Jan (who is so obsessed with the Buffalo Bills she can't remember Billy's childhood allergies), and his father, Jimmy (a man of few words and violent outbursts). In the film's climax, Billy stalks Scott Wood

Desperate to prove his "success" to his distant, Buffalo Bills-obsessed parents, Billy wanders into a tap dance studio. There, he kidnaps , a quiet young student, at gunpoint. He doesn't want her money; he wants her to play the role of his loving wife, "Wendy," for a dinner at his parents' house. Billy chooses to let go of his vengeance

Billy is a ball of nervous energy and misplaced rage. He hasn't told his parents he was in prison; instead, he lied and said he was working a high-stakes job for the government and had gotten married. The Kidnapping