IGN: With Shaw killing the man who killed Root, obviously we've seen the version of that scene where she says, "But I'm not that person now." But I don't think it comes off as Shaw is now some psycho. She is who she's always been. Did it just feel like, yeah, this Shaw is not someone who would turn away in this moment? It would be a definite vengeance all the way to the end for her?
Plageman: I think so.
Nolan: Yeah, I mean, you don't want to be flippant about it there, but the whole point of Shaw, as Root said to her in the finale, she's a f**king straight line. We're not watching the redemptive story of Shaw. We've watched the redemptive story for Root, right? We've watched her go from being immoral to transcending, subliming something different. With Shaw, what we love about Shaw was that she's f**king Shaw. You could detonate a suitcase nuke on her f**king forehead, and she'd still be Shaw, right? There's an unwavering commitment there to her own closely guarded, tiny little moral compass, because she sees and looks at the world differently, right? And you didn't want to betray that. So in that last moment, for her -- and it's terribly satisfying for us -- it isn't a redemptive, "Oh, my friend has taught me the meaning of ..." No. Her friends were, in order of prominence, a f**king hitwoman-turned-f**king acolyte of a transcendent artificial intelligence, a presumed dead and missing special forces f**king hitman, and a man who had been accused of treason. This is not a person who learned to be nice.