The book and movie endings are extremely different.
The most jarring difference in the movie versus the book is how director Martin Scorsese ends it.
Following the trial, the movie cuts to a studio audience watching a live performance being sent out through radio. They, too, had just heard the story of the Osage murders.
Actors are doing difference voices of the characters and a Foley artist is creating background sounds.
At this point in the story, we are being told what happened to all the characters in the aftermath. The very last one mentioned is Mollie. Scorsese comes on camera and reads a part of her obituary, noting that the Osage murders are never mentioned.
Grann ends the book by going back to the Osage Nation in the present day and speaking to family members of those affected. He finds people still coping with loss and discovers chilling new details never found in the FBI files he researched.
For example, a relative of Ernest's recalled that Mollie and her kids were supposed to be in Bill Smith's house the night of the deadly house explosion, which is a major moment in the book and movie.
Mollie and the kids were going to spend the night, but canceled last minute as one of the kids were ill.