![Image 1 — Theory] Soul and Coco share the same universe: The "Final Death" is Reincarnation (And why Coco's logic actually proves it)](https://preview.redd.it/xan7bhyzuc2h1.jpg?width=372&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=b4cb98ed440bbc69c480a8af7db76b0e49c5c273)
![Image 2 — Theory] Soul and Coco share the same universe: The "Final Death" is Reincarnation (And why Coco's logic actually proves it)](https://preview.redd.it/6oty3t00vc2h1.jpg?width=1058&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=3b3dfcf99d4cd63fba32c11e9628902a53f55b0a)
Theory] Soul and Coco share the same universe: The "Final Death" is Reincarnation (And why Coco's logic actually proves it)
[Theory] Soul and Coco share the same universe: The "Final Death" is Reincarnation (And why Coco's logic actually proves it)
Hey everyone, I’ve been thinking a lot about Coco and Soul, and I’m convinced they take place in the exact same spiritual universe. This theory actually solves a huge, heartbreaking plot hole in Coco that the movie's own rules accidentally create.
The Core Theory:
In Coco, we are told that when nobody on Earth remembers you anymore, you suffer the "Final Death" and disappear into golden dust. But where do you go? My theory is: You go to The Great Before from Soul to be recycled and reborn.
The Land of the Dead in Coco isn't an eternal afterlife—it’s just a beautiful transition station, much like Valhalla in Norse mythology. It’s a temporary place where souls can celebrate and stay connected with their living relatives for as long as they are needed on Earth. Once the living are ready to let go and the memories fade, the soul turns to dust, gets its memory wiped, and is reborn as a new soul in Soul.
Why this fixes a depressing Pixar plot hole:
If the "Final Death" just means permanent non-existence, then the Pixar universe is incredibly cruel and bleak for anyone who dies without a family or gets forgotten. Reincarnation gives these forgotten souls a beautiful second chance at life.
The Ultimate Proof (The Movie's Own Contradiction):
For those who argue that this theory "ruins the movie" because memories are supposed to hold souls back out of love, think about the strict rules Coco establishes:
The movie explicitly states that you can only exist in the Land of the Dead as long as someone who actually knew you in real life remembers you. That is why Hector was fading—because Mama Coco was the last living person with a personal, first-hand memory of him.
This means a family cannot hold a soul captive forever through generations of photos. The Land of the Dead is built with an automatic expiration date. Once the generation that actually knew you alive passes away, you will fade, no matter how many great-great-grandchildren look at your picture on the ofrenda.
Therefore, the afterlife in Coco is undeniably temporary. It is not a permanent cage; it’s a cosmic waiting room. Just like Valhalla ends with Ragnarök and a rebirth of the world, the Land of the Dead ends for a soul when the personal connection naturally dissolves. The soul turns to dust and must move on to the next stage of the universe—The Great Before.
Change my mind!