LOST 06.17/18/18.5: "The End" (Everything Else Was Just Progress)

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I imagine, there'll be a postmortem a year from now, on the same day of the finale. We'll all be laughing, smiling and hugging.
 
TheLastFantasy said:
So where did we land on Jacob's cabin?

- Was anyone trapped inside the cabin because of the ashes? It can't be MiB because he's been been wandering as a black smoke the whole time.

- If Ben was putting on a show for John, then who said "Help me" and who was the guy on a chair that appeared for like a split second?
Honestly, now I think no one was trapped inside the cabin, and the ashes were just meant to keep MIB outside (not inside). He found a way to break the circle like he did with Bram and got inside to mess with Locke and Ben's heads. That's it.
It would be the simplest explanation, Occam's razor etc.
 
Yenrot said:
We have to let go

You joke, but its the truth. Ben has already said he is going to do an overall series thread in a few weeks. I think a few weeks off without talking in circles about LOST would do everyone some good.
 
Solo said:
You joke, but its the truth. Ben has already said he is going to do an overall series thread in a few weeks. I think a few weeks off without talking in circles about LOST would do everyone some good.
I'm waiting for the complete box set before watching LOST again.
 
Solo said:
I think a few weeks off without talking in circles about LOST would do everyone some good.
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Can't do that.
 
I was just thinking Claire attacked Kate and was on top of her with a knife on her throat and Flocke saves Kate and in the finale Flocke is on top of Jack with a knife to his throat and Kate saves Jack.

I bet Flocke regrets saving her now
 
Drealmcc0y said:
I was just thinking Claire attacked Kate and was on top of her with a knife on her throat and Flocke saves Kate and in the finale Flocke is on top of Jack with a knife to his throat and Kate saves Jack.

I bet Flocke regrets saving her now
I'm not sure that was his last thought, considering the HOLE IN HIS CHEST. And pain, I'm sure he forgot how that felt, all those years.
 
Plywood said:
I'm not sure that was his last thought, considering the HOLE IN HIS CHEST. And pain, I'm sure he forgot how that felt, all those years.

Im not saying that was his last thought, just that the two scenes were very similar. Obviously it was done on purpse for when you rewatch
 
should i spice the thread up a bit ? :D

what do you think about the actors - Mark Pellegrino and Titus Welliver ?

in my opinion - two of the best supporting actors in all of the US tv shows.

it made my day when i saw them - MiB, and Jacob - War and Lucifer.
 
Igoritza said:
should i spice the thread up a bit ? :D

what do you think about the actors - Mark Pellegrino and Titus Welliver ?

in my opinion - two of the best supporting actors in all of the US tv shows.

it made my day when i saw them - MiB, and Jacob - War and Lucifer.

MIB dude was very good. Jacob, not so much. I thought he was pretty terrible in the last campfire scene.
 
njean777 said:
well if they havent seen it they have no right to hate it, unless they read the books

I read all four books so that I could "legitimately" argue about how terrible it is, but it was far worse than I could have ever imagined. It's the biggest load of fucking crap ever shit out by a human being.

teruterubozu said:
I thought he was pretty terrible in the last campfire scene.

I thought that was his best scene by far, apart from when he finds MIB after the cave shits him out.
 
Drealmcc0y said:
1. The pregnacy issue was created by the A-Bomb
I find it a non-satisfying answer. Atomic bomb radiation that's massive enough to cause ALL pregnancies to end in death without other noticeable side effects. People who have the ability to temporarily leave the island and thus work around the problem, but... don't. People who call in fertility doctors to find a way to... make wombs radiation-resistant, because leaving the island for a few months is such a hassle?
Dead said:
The show has always been far more supernaturally bent. Since Season 1 even.
Yeah. When a friend and I started watching season 1 and talkign about the genres others had given to the show, my feeling was that so many called it "sci-fi" because to say "fantasy" brings up images of knights and hobbits. Though definitely more sci-fi proper came in later.
mattiewheels said:
I kind of wish there was a cheaper version of the complete set that didn't come with the extras. Also wondering how they'll fit that many discs in those slim cases....I guess they're layered in there?
Discs can be fit quite economically when product designers aren't treating it like a dick-measuring contest and trying to waste my shelf space. I got the Farscape series set, and each season comes in a standard size DVD case holding something like 6 discs. No disc layering, but two extra "pages" with discs on both sides.
 
Igoritza said:
should i spice the thread up a bit ? :D

what do you think about the actors - Mark Pellegrino and Titus Welliver ?

in my opinion - two of the best supporting actors in all of the US tv shows.

it made my day when i saw them - MiB, and Jacob - War and Lucifer.

Both were good, but were mostly wasted in the show meh.
 
Raist said:
I'm not referring to the ending (if they would have done that, woulda been horrible seriously :P) but the way they have very similar constructions.

The first book is not so much about the world, there's just a couple of weird things here and there. It's mostly about Roland's character, and we're introduced with the man in black. Then shit happens. For several books, you get to know about the world, the way it's fucked up, "magic" and all that stuff. Loads of mysteries, and in a way you expect that when Roland reaches his goal, you'll get at least some answers. Then for the last couple of books it completely ditches everything, focuses mainly on characters especially Roland, and you get no answers. Felt very similar to Lost in this way.

What answers? What mysteries? You know the point of the existence of the Dark Tower pretty early on. The Dark Tower never set up any mysteries to keep the reader going. It was all about Roland reaching the tower. You find out all you really needed to know about the history of the world. I can't think of any major loose ends.
You know that well before Roland's time a technologically advanced world existed that forgot all about magic. This civilization brought about it's own destruction which led the world back to a more primitive existence with magic taking a prominent role, yet plenty of their tech lasted. You also learn how it connects to our world: parallel universes.

And there is tons of weird shit in the first book.
A boy from New York dying and coming to mid-world, a man brought back to life, an advanced world destroyed with quite a few relics around, some link to our world (Hey Jude), mutants, Walter's tarot cards.
Roland's world is very well defined, but leaves tons of questions about how it came to be the way it is. Half of what is so cool about the Gunslinger is the world King presents us. Roland is pretty awful human at this point and he turns plenty readers away. It's not a compelling character story yet.

Not to mention you say it starts out being about characters and ends up being about characters.
And you make it seem like books 2-4 aren't completely about character either. Drawing introduces two brand new main characters and spends most of the time developing them. Wastelands is about bringing a character back. 4 is nearly all about Roland's past. If anything 5-7 are more about plot, than the the first 4 books.

It's not really similar to Lost in structure at all. It shares some themes and plots, but it is as much mystery driven as LOTR.
 
VistraNorrez said:
Roland's world is very well defined, but leaves tons of questions about how it came to be the way it is.

That's my main problem with it. I found the world extremely compelling but was disappointed that it wasn't more developped and we didn't get more details about what happened. Same with Lost's island. So I would say that, completely unlike LOTR, both Lost and the DT introduce you to a fascinating world, but at some point completely give up on any lore and explanations, at that is exactly why I'm disappointed.
To be fair, LOTR alone doesn't exactly explain everything either, but at least you had the opportunity to read the rest of Tolkien's work and learn more about his universe. LOTR was just a small but very important part of a whole story.

And there was the totally awkward stuff such as
monsters, parallel universes, that apparently extremely important flower in a junkyard, etc ,etc.

So maybe I took the wrong approach with Lost (and DT) as it turns out their respective universes was not the important bit, but at the same time I don't think you can blame it on readers/viewers only when the authors put so much focus on the world, and eventually drop the ball. That's why I was quite disappointed by the last season, because I wanted to learn more on the "background" and I didn't really give a shit about the character's afterlife.
 
JoshuaJSlone said:
I find it a non-satisfying answer. Atomic bomb radiation that's massive enough to cause ALL pregnancies to end in death without other noticeable side effects. People who have the ability to temporarily leave the island and thus work around the problem, but... don't. People who call in fertility doctors to find a way to... make wombs radiation-resistant, because leaving the island for a few months is such a hassle?

Juliet was telling Ben to let the mothers leave the island, but Ben refused to let anyone go.
 
Raist said:
That's my main problem with it. I found the world extremely compelling but was disappointed that it wasn't more developped and we didn't get more details about what happened. Same with Lost's island. So I would say that, completely unlike LOTR, both Lost and the DT introduce you to a fascinating world, but at some point completely give up on any lore and explanations, at that is exactly why I'm disappointed.
To be fair, LOTR alone doesn't exactly explain everything either, but at least you had the opportunity to read the rest of Tolkien's work and learn more about his universe. LOTR was just a small but very important part of a whole story.

And there was the totally awkward stuff such as
monsters, parallel universes, that apparently extremely important flower in a junkyard, etc ,etc.

So maybe I took the wrong approach with Lost (and DT) as it turns out their respective universes was not the important bit, but at the same time I don't think you can blame it on readers/viewers only when the authors put so much focus on the world, and eventually drop the ball. That's why I was quite disappointed by the last season, because I wanted to learn more on the "background" and I didn't really give a shit about the character's afterlife.

Seriously, I don't know what to say. You sound like you're willing to give one series a pass while another not. What didn't King explain well in the book? He developed his world almost exactly like Tolkien. He admits that straight up. Both are journeys to a destination, both to save the world. Along the way you learn more and more about the worlds. Not everything's origin is explained because a story has to be told. Pacing is important, there just can't be diversions because you want to know the origin of something that has little to do with progressing the story.

Give me an explanation for everything in LOTR, without looking up supplemental books. How were Trolls created? Tom Bombadil? Ents? The Watcher in the Water? Where exactly do the ring's powers come from?

The answer for all of these, is because thats just the way it is.

Name the major loose threads in the Dark Tower. I mean how do you explain some things? Magic explicitly exists in The Dark Tower from book one.
The monsters come from other universes, or are native creatures. The parallel universes exist the same way they do in our reality. The thinnies allow for crossover because of the weak fabric of time and space. The rose is the manifestation of the Dark Tower in that universe. It needs to exist for that universe to exist.

What more needs to be explained?

And what crap about LOTR. No one would give a shit about Tolkien's world if LOTR wasn't a great story. Most people who read LOTR don't read the supplemental material. That stuff should have no baring on the enjoyment of a self contained story.
 
Solo is very much in his final stages of denial.

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The thread won't let you leave, Solo. You haven't completely double the 2nd highest post count yet.

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You can deny it all you want, but this is who you are, Solo.
 
TheGreatDave said:
S5 and S6 are both structured in such a way I think a rewatch improves them.
After they realize they couldn't get cancelled with the S4 season, they just said "fuck it". Especially this season, where the reveal that makes the whole season better (or for some I guess, worse) is at the end.:lol
 
the character of the tom bombadil in LOTR, and any knowledge about him are vague. Tolkien himself stated that it should be left to mystery.

as i gathered from reading tolkiens books - he is a MoFo, and most possibly Eru Ilúvatar himself.

i have a really big theory on that, but it's not for this thread, just wanted to point out that no character in lost should be compared.
 
VistraNorrez said:

You said it yourself, it leaves tons of questions. You don't get any answers about the rules, how stuff works, nothing, it's completely left on the side. All these elements played an extremely important part in the story, as they all are means that have been used by the characters to fulfill their goal.

And you're comparing that to a few races in LOTR, or why the major rings had powers (while this is flat out explained in the first few minutes of the movie, and quite well in the books). Tom Bombadil is the only character that remains a complete mystery, although Elrond did give an answer after all. It's not like no one ever talked about him. Still, it was like one chapter in a 1200 pages book, it's not like the whole plot was built around him.

Regarding the remaining of Tolkien's work, yes you didn't need it to enjoy LOTR and yes, most people probably never read anything past the main trilogy, but that doesn't mean that the world hasn't been well documented and developed by its author, giving you an opportunity to learn more. That didn't happen with DT, and probably won't with Lost.

I just don't like the trend of purposedly building an intriguing world and forget about it afterwards when tons of major questions are left. King certainly wanted to do something like LOTR, calling the Dark Tower his Magnum Opus or whatever, but to me he used way too many shortcuts and dead-end answers, such as "it's parallel universes, problem solved". We know almost nothing about the main world, what happened to it, how some managed to build "doors" between worlds, etc.

So the whole universe and its rules, while being a central part of the plot, is left to a "background" status that feels completely under-developed. I won't have any more precise questions in mind, granted that I read the series 8 years ago, but I do clearly remember being left with so many questions and the feeling that it was a completely missed opportunity.
 
Sayid don't play:

We weeped when Sayid and Shannon reunited in the series finale of Lost, but life isn't imitating art for Naveen Andrews.

Andrews and his girlfriend of 12 years, actress Barbara Hershey, have called it quits according to People. His manager says the amicable split happened six months ago.

Hershey, 62, and Andrews, 41, met in 1998 on a filmset. Barbara is best known for her roles in Beaches and Hannah and Her Sisters.

The two briefly separated in 2005, during which Naveen fathered a son, Naveen Joshua, with another woman. In 2009, Naveen was granted legal and physical custody of his son.

I wonder why they broke up...
 
gdt5016 said:
Sayid don't play:



I wonder why they broke up...
The two briefly separated in 2005, during which Naveen fathered a son, Naveen Joshua, with another woman. In 2009, Naveen was granted legal and physical custody of his son.
barbara_hershey17.jpg

The guy definitely knew he could get MUCH better.
 
I really hate articles that paint Lost fans as being mislead into a finale filled with disappointment. I won't link to any articles because I don't want to give them the hits they're going for, but seriously man, broad generalizations to justify shaky conclusions are such a crock of shit.
 
SpeedingUptoStop said:
I really hate articles that paint Lost fans as being mislead into a finale filled with disappointment. I won't link to any articles because I don't want to give them the hits they're going for, but seriously man, broad generalizations to justify shaky conclusions are such a crock of shit.

yeah im arguing with an idiot right now about it
 
SpeedingUptoStop said:
I really hate articles that paint Lost fans as being mislead into a finale filled with disappointment. I won't link to any articles because I don't want to give them the hits they're going for, but seriously man, broad generalizations to justify shaky conclusions are such a crock of shit.

Like I said some pages back, seems like the media has decided that the "storyline" is going to be that this was a hot show that faded....

Fucked up in a way, because I feel as though this could throw a wrench into Emmy noms/wins (Which I usually don't care about, but would like to see Lost win something for once).
 
Just read this theory on the monster:

So it’s definitely true that the Man in Black is the smoke monster, yet him actually becoming this entity is questionable. Jacob throws him down into the light of the island, and out pops the smoke….what? There are a few theories about this, although I like mine the best, and that sounds extremely arrogant. Pretty much, Jacob tosses his brother down into this cave of light, and he’s exposed to this extreme energy and when this happens it rips his soul from his body. The man in black is no happy individual though. In fact, he’s very much a man of constant sorrow. Through the years, he’s suffered so much frustration and anger, and we saw how that morphed into hatred and heartbreak near the end. I think that he was so full of all these dark emotions, that was all that was left of him. Jacob said a sorrowful goodbye to his brother, and he was right. The man who used to be his brother is dead and gone, and all that remains is a physical embodiment of pain, suffering, and darkness. “Evil Incarnate”.
 
Liara T'Soni said:
Like I said some pages back, seems like the media has decided that the "storyline" is going to be that this was a hot show that faded....

Fucked up in a way, because I feel as though this could throw a wrench into Emmy noms/wins (Which I usually don't care about, but would like to see Lost win something for once).

You mean besides its win for Best Drama Series and its two wins for Supporting Actor?

I don't see it beating Mad Men in Drama Series this year, but Emerson/O'Quinn are frontrunners in Supporting Actor, and it's possible that Matthew Fox sneaks in depending on how much the final season love comes through. But it's not like the show has been absent at the Emmys or anything: it just hasn't been winning, which isn't really a travesty.
 
Memles said:
You mean besides its win for Best Drama Series and its two wins for Supporting Actor?

I don't see it beating Mad Men in Drama Series this year, but Emerson/O'Quinn are frontrunners in Supporting Actor, and it's possible that Matthew Fox sneaks in depending on how much the final season love comes through. But it's not like the show has been absent at the Emmys or anything: it just hasn't been winning, which isn't really a travesty.

I'm talking collective awards, not the individual ones, which they haven't won since like season 2.

And the past seasons don't seem to have been as divisive as this one.
 
Also, Season 5 on rewatch is so much more tragic. Because let's be honest, no one here fully processed Locke being dead until the finale was completely over because, who knows, he could have taken over Smokey's consciousness or some shit, whatever.

But now that Dead Is Dead, him running around trying to protect everyone (even Widmore as "one of his people") and then trying to get everyone back to the island is so fucking tragic.

We miss you, Pep Pep.
 
I don't care much for awards for the show. This TV season has had so many outstanding performances, it's really a flip of a coin as to who really is better. Same goes for individual episodes. It's all a toss up. Nominations would be nice, but the fields are so crowded with deserving winners, it doesn't even matter all that much to me.
 
SpeedingUptoStop said:
I don't care much for awards for the show. This TV season has had so many outstanding performances, it's really a flip of a coin as to who really is better. Same goes for individual episodes. It's all a toss up. Nominations would be nice, but the fields are so crowded with deserving winners, it doesn't even matter all that much to me.

If anything, I sorta just wanna see the whole cast show up for something for one last time. A big emmy nomination would do that....:lol
 
Yeah, Lost has been in Emmy circles for awhile, so it's not like it's been out in the cold the past few years.

Mad Men has really hit the sweet spot in many, many different ways. I don't know if anything is gonna stop it's Emmy streak anytime soon.
 
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