'White Collar' Final Episode Spoilers: Matt Bomer, Tim DeKay Reveal Details About Episode 6, 'Au Revoir' [VIDEO]
Neal Caffrey and Peter Burke's bromance is coming to an end. The final episode of USA Network's "White Collar" Season 6 airs on Thursday, Dec. 18. It is expected that the final episode will have an open end, not everything will be tied up in a nice, neat bow. The final episode of "White Collar" final season is titled "Au Revoir," which means goodbye.
Tim DeKay, who plays Peter Burke in the show, has told TV Line that the final episode of "White Collar" has some "great twists and turns, and some wonderful moment between everybody." He asked the viewers to not walk away till the final second of the episode.
"Au Revoir" is set to answer "many questions that the people have had throughout the seasons," according to DeKay. The hour long episode also features the "wonderful heist" that the Pink Panthers are planning. They are planning to steal half a billion dollars from the Federal Reserve's shipment of international funds.
The penultimate episode of "White Collar" Season 6, "Whack-A-Mole," ended with the Pink Panthers' Woodford pointing a gun at Peter who Neal brought in as his man who will help them with the heist. In the episode, Woodford killed Luc and one of his loyal Panthers, as Keller put his Interpol tracking chip on him and framed him as the mole.
According to the extended synopsis of the episode, "with Peter undercover in the Panthers now as well, the stakes couldn't be higher." The episode will see Neal, Mozzie and Keller working together, though Mozzie and Neal know that Keller is likely to double cross them. The synopsis reveals that they have planned for "every contingency."
"If the plan works, the Panthers will be taken down, they'll have $30 million of the Federal Reserve heist and Neal will have his freedom -- whether the FBI is ready or not," according to the extended synopsis of the episode.
Matt Bomer, who plays the suave con-man, has said that the final episode will have a cliffhanger. He told TV Line that, the episode offers the audience something to "chew on." It does not look like "White Collar" ending on a note that says, "And, they lived happily ever after like one big, con family."
[Youtube/ WhiteCollaronUSA's channel]