Lost Ends 955
Unless you live in a hatch somewhere, you are probably aware that Lost has ended. If you want a simple, clear explanation of exactly how the series resolved, Lost Untangled will do nothing to clarify things for you. For everyone else, I provide this discussion thread for you to complain/revel in the most spoiler-laden manner you desire.
Was Not Impressed at All (Score:4, Insightful)
I've always been bicuriously Lost as the show would sometimes give me a feeling that something more was going on that would eventually be revealed. So, having caught a number of episodes early on, I started watching Season Five religiously in order to prepare myself for the ending. But at the end of Season Five with no end in sight and only more questions and more characters (and a freaking reset button that later turned out to be a multiverse splitting mechanism), I gave up. Until I watched the last episode last night in hopes that the island would have some greater meaning. It didn't. Well, it tried to I guess but everyone's got their own interpretation of what they saw last night.
So many questions I have went completely unanswered. Questions about Walt, why Faraday never recognized Desmond (the guy that unexpectedly gave him the constants to time travel one day) when Faraday landed on the island, the properties of the multiverses (some people seem to care about the futures of the other multiverse even though they shouldn't know about it until they're dead), why the black cloud killed who it did and left others (especially now that we know more about the black cloud), the list goes on and on. The worst of it is if you take each character individually and reassemble their timelines in sequential order that the episodes slowly piecemeal it out to you -- everyone is a goddamn psychotic sociopath. No rhyme or reason to the actions of half the characters. And it's not even Lord of the Flies neurosis
The show started out very concrete, real and physical and slowly absolved into symbolism with last night being such pure symbolism that you cannot say for sure when they died or what the afterlife was or what the church represented or where they went at the end when the doors were opened. It reminded me of a few anime series I watched in this respect where the shows digress into absolving themselves of anything earthly or logical in some sort of ethereal climax of visual and auditory sequence or cues. Problem was that none of Lost's resolutions sat well with me.
I sympathize with the writers as they had no idea how many seasons they would get but in the end I must admit I found the writing to be more or less utter drivel. Designed only to get you to keep watching with little if any satisfactory explanations. Everyone was a chaotic actor in the past, present and alternate multiverse. Writing that many flash sideways [wikia.com] scenes as plot devices is -- quite frankly -- juvenile at best. Also the lead writer had refuted the theory that everyone was dead, in purgatory, in heaven or in hell. Yet, at the end they're clearly in some sort of afterlife.
The series offered closure on what happened eventually to everyone but no closure whatsoever as to what the island was and how its mechanations functioned -- even on a magical fantasy level. I was intrigued with Donnie Darko when the ending was left open to interpretation but Lost takes it to a whole new (unbearable for me) level. I hope other people enjoyed the ending but for me it was a complete indication not to devote anymore time to this series or these writers. Still better than 85% of what you'll find on TV but that isn't saying much.
They could have done a lot of neat things with tying down loose ends, explaining the island and completing their work. Instead they gave us this. And finally I see no further point in discussing it because there's no hope of ever explaining anything. Unlike a finely crafted classic novel, the grand symbolism and allusions are too abstract to nail down. So what's the point? Everyone's going to experience the series differently and for me it was just some guys writing a seria
DC;TS (Score:3, Insightful)
It was ok. (Score:4, Insightful)
Fucking FINALLY (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm tired of hearing you people constantly talk about this steaming pile of ass. Lost is, quite possibly, the most overrated show that has ever been on television.
And yes, I've watched it...a friend of mine convinced me to watch the first two seasons, and even that was almost impossible. How people obsess over this show completely eludes me.
My take (Score:5, Insightful)
I am not much of a TV watcher but a coworker loaned me the DVDs to watch on the bus during my commute in the Fall of 2008 and I kept up with the show ever since. For the first two seasons I was riveted. The cliffhangers, the mystery, etc, etc, etc. With the first half of Season 3 the show started to fall apart. They came back with a clear vision in the second half, supposedly, but I never saw it materialize.
Yesterday I sat down with my wife (who only started watching it in Season 5) and we watched as nothing in the final episode answered any questions. No, the fucking light at the center of the island didn't tell us shit and that stupid fucking ending with some sort of allusion to the afterlife was absolutely stupid. People had been suspecting that all along and knowing that many people did you would have thought the writers, being paid as much as they were, would have come up with something more shocking than that--but they didn't.
I am glad that I only wasted two years of my life watching that show rather than the 6 many others did. It started with a plane wreck and it ended with one. We were all duped. The least they could have done was provide everyone watching with some of that Dharma beer in rusty cans to help ease the pain.
Idiotic (Score:5, Insightful)
Then, over the past two seasons, the show took a sharp turn into religious territory and it became increasingly obvious they were going to take the easy way out and make it all into some ridiculous religious/spiritual allegory of some kind, albeit one so confused that no one would ever be able to make any real sense out of it. It reminded me of the Matrix, where the first movie was more sci-fi and the second and third were all a bunch of confused pseudo-religious nonsense.
I was primarily disappointed with their complete abandonment of any attempt to explain anything scientifically, and instead lean on a literal Deus Ex Machina by making the whole thing into a spiritual "God (or some other spiritual entity) did it". That sort of thing has been done to death. Hell, Battlestar Galactica was explicitly a religious allegory from the very beginning, and even it explained more stuff pseudo-scientifically than Lost did. Regardless of what they may say now, I think the Lost creators started out with a show that would have been much more scientifically based, but ended up having to extend it beyond what they thought they would. After wandering in the wilderness for much of seasons 2 through 4, they were backed into a corner and took the easy way out by waving the magic religion wand to "explain" everything away.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:3, Insightful)
Battlestar Galactica was bad enough for me - they had a decent storyline they were following which had plenty of potential, but it all got spoiled for me when the writers admitted halfway through Season 3 that the entire Final Five thing was an accident. They only started with the Final Five thing when it became obvious that the fans had latched onto it as a 'thing'. Then they revealed that they chose the Final Five in a writers committee meeting only a short while before they were revealed to the viewers!
Lost seems to have gone the same way - lots of potential, lots of hype of a huge story arc and nothing.
Meandering story not going anywhere (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Religious Viewers= $ (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:5, Insightful)
Ok. What happened on the island did happen. It was the real timeline. The 'other' timeline was not created by the bomb going off. It was just a jumping point into purgatory. Those who showed up at the church, became at peace with their 'former' timeine and moved on. So, others who were not there but on the island could have moved on before, after, or not at all (eloeise Hawking for example). Faraday had not had is 'wake up' moment yet with Charlotte. But he may since he just met her there. Then move on later. So the 'sideways' timeline could have been thousands of our timeline years since Hurley could have been guardian for the island for who know's how long before he joined the group at the church. Sawyer could have lived to be 90, but then died and reverted back to the 'sideways' timeline so he could join the group at the point of time for him/them that was the most significant. The show wasn't about the island itself. It never was. It was about the folks who survived the initial crash and moved on. The second flight did leave the island. And Jack did die in the bamboo. But it took them all to die on their own time before they all met back up in the sideways. So Ben had not yet been at peace with his actions to enter the church. It's all very Catholic at it's core. Now if you were looking for what the island was or were it came from, that, I'm afraid is going to be another story. Or you could use your imagination. That is the idea here. Every person enjoying the story at their own level.
Not impressed, but here's my take (Score:5, Insightful)
Many people who have a near-death experience describe comfort and moving toward a white light. This has been explained by science as the brain flooding itself with dopamine and other pleasure chemicals because it knows that it is dying and might as well go out feeling good. I think the series was an interpretation of that phenomenon - realizing that he had but seconds to live, Jack's brain created this vivid melodrama based on the wishful thinking that he'd actually survive the crash. The islands electromagnetic properties explain the crash, and the hope of reversing the crash and sending his life on a more fulfilling path (flash-sideways with Jack finding love, having a son, etc.) provides comfort.
With that being said, I think the writers took the easy way out and I'm quite disappointed having invested a significant amount of time in the series. I'm sure there will be plenty of post-game analysis and people will find tons of symbolism that was intended and even more that wasn't, so at least the discussion and speculation may fill my need for closure.
Too much of a "good thing"? (Score:2, Insightful)
If you have the most awesome story, and make it a TV show, it could be great... until the story is over, but since it was successful "TV", more shows get ordered... but the story was already told, so you have no choice but to make stuff up. (And you have to do it on a schedule, whereas the first one might have taken years to conceive.)
Same reason most movie sequels suck too.
Re:Should I watch it? (Score:4, Insightful)
I have never seen a single episode, it the whole series worth watching, now that it is over?
In a word, no. The show barely made sense watching it over the past 6 years as it was released. We continually got some hints that things might make sense eventually, but they never did. Inconsistencies from vaguely remembered episodes of 2 or 3 years ago kept popping up and giving this little feeling in the back of one's mind that the writers had no idea what they were doing. I suspect if you watched it all back to back it would make even less sense because the inconsistencies and utter nonsense would be that much more obvious.
I watched it from beginning to end, but I have absolutely no desire to watch it again, and I certainly won't be wasting money on the DVDs.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:2, Insightful)
Fortunately, I was not one of them.
Re:5 word summary (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:5, Insightful)
Never watched it. Should I care? Do they have a solution to the oil slick in the Gulf? Do I have MY priorities straight?
No, you don't.
How can you be chatting about the oil spill when there are so many children starving in Africa? Get your priorities straight, man.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:5, Insightful)
They could have done a lot of neat things with tying down loose ends, explaining the island and completing their work. Instead they gave us this. And finally I see no further point in discussing it because there's no hope of ever explaining anything.
The final twist was that the show wasn't about the island at all, it was about a bunch of annoying characters. I passed on the first season because I had no interest in a "bunch of people stuck on an island" show (without even a million dollar prize), but decided to watch when it looked like the show was more than that. Surprise, surprise, it wasn't. It was a good show, and the ending was fitting, but it's still frustrating for the creators to basically say that all of the mysteries never really mattered. The numbers? Just numbers. Walt? He's busy trying to live while being officially dead. The rules? Oh, that was just a Jacob thing, he's gone now. The Frozen Donkey Wheel? That's just the magical escape hatch, no big deal. The statue? Just a statue that got hit by a ship a while back. The smoke monster? Hey, Target has smoke detectors for $10.99. And the light? Just leave the key in the ignition and the world won't end. What was the point? As Charlton Heston would say, "It's people. Lost is made out of people."
Sounds like X-files and Twin Peaks (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Religious Viewers= $ (Score:2, Insightful)
generic "mysticism"**
How is it generic, the guy who opened the door for them was "Christian Shepard", for fuck's sake!
Re:What about for those who haven't seen it? (Score:3, Insightful)
Watch season one, and then pretend that it was canceled. Curse the network executives for doing so.
There you go, you got a better Lost experience than most of us who gave up on it later. Watching the rest is like volunteering to watch your neighbor's father as Alzheimer makes him lose his mind, and become a husk of himself.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:5, Insightful)
As lovely as the conclusion was for the characters, it does nothing for the viewers who were sold for 5 seasons on the concept of the mysterious island with shitloads of secrets which give rise to even more questions that would eventually be answered. Unfortunately that is not what we got. It feels like the writers painted themselves into a corner and were unable to come up with a satisfactory wrap up regarding the island's secrets so instead gave us as pseudo-Jacob's Ladder ending. No thanks.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:5, Insightful)
SPOILERS (of course)
Well you're not going to get a complete explanation of the island. What has been explained is that somehow it's the seat of all life on earth. It's something akin to the garden of eden.
Walt: Walt is "special". There's not much more to it than that. Lots of people in the series are special somehow.
Faraday & Desmond: I'm not sure how much of it is an unexplained loose-end. Both Faraday and Desmond had become somewhat unstuck in time, Desmond due to the hatch blowing up, and Faraday as a result of his experiments. We never get a full backstory on Faraday and we're never shown events from his point of view, but it's possible that somehow he's experiencing things out of order. Otherwise, it's just a minor snafu on the writer's part.
"the properties of the multiverses": There were no multiverses. The "universe" where they didn't crash on the island never happened. It was all a sort of purgatory that was taking place long after the rest of the events of the show. It took place after Kate and Sawyer and the rest escapes the island, after Hurley became "the chosen one" or whatever. Everyone is dead. The rest of the events of the show are real, and take place in a single timeline.
"why the black cloud killed who it did and left others": The smoke monster was blocked from killing any of the "candidates" by Jacob. We don't know exactly how Jacob's magic worked, but that's why the smoke monster couldn't kill Jack, Sawyer, Hurley, etc. Anyone else he let live was incidental.
Babylon 5 / Firefly / Star Blazers (Score:5, Insightful)
It seems to me that a series is *so* much better when the writers KNOW what the ending will be BEFORE the series airs. This way, the entire series can work towards the ending, with the result being much more satisfying.
The subject above lists three series I felt were fucking epic, because the ending matched what the series was all about from the very first episode. It wasn't just "make shit up as you go along", and then after you've run out of material stringing your audience along for as long as you can, write up some mish-mash of an ending that really doesn't have anything to do with the rest of the series.
The Star Force got the Cosmo DNA and got back to Earth, The Alliance accidentally created the Reavers by trying to make paradise, and Sheridan kicked some Shadow ass (and paid the ultimate price, twice!).
I've never watched LOST, but I knew from the begining they had no plan to really end the series, so, I never bothered to even try to get into it. I'm sorry if you did. Next time, choose more wisely.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:2, Insightful)
They did answer a lot of the mysteries, though. It's just that they raised new and sometimes bigger mysteries, and those were left open.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:2, Insightful)
Tkanks for that explanation. My decision to not watch this was obviously the right one.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:1, Insightful)
Yes like any good book, questions were left unanswered. The show, from the start, was a thinking man's who. The writers choose names very carefully and wrote little hints as to what is happening. There are reasons that John Locke was named after the philosopher. Before I can tell you what I think about the Walt and Faraday I have to clear some other things up.
I have to say I do not think the show was ever not wrapped in symbolism. But what is really important is that you said “lead writer had refuted the theory that everyone was dead, in purgatory, in heaven or in hell. Yet, at the end they're clearly in some sort of afterlife.” No they said the Island was not purgatory and it was not. The island was real. I would try to explain more to you about the island but since you did not watch the last season that it would really just be a waste of time. I do not mean to flippant about that but what the island is was explained and you chose not to watch it. In the flash sideways time is not a constant, that is the point. They all lived their lives and then came together at the end once all of them were dead, it can be confusing if you keep trying to apply time to the flash side ways. You cannot do that, time is not what you think it was as they were waiting. That is why Ben was not in the church, he was waiting for whom he leaned to love, his child and her mother. Again you missed all that since you did not watch the last season.
In the end you were really supposed to decide what that show meant for you. I think the real issue with people that did not like the ending was that they want to be told everything. They want everything to be explained to them, that is how T.V. works now. I go back to my original point that it was a thinking mans show. The more you have read, especially philosophy the more there was to get out of the show.
No you do not know when people died. Not all of them. They died at different times as they lived their life. They all met up before going to heaven. In the end they were all part of a great battle that could have been the end of the world. They were changed for the better and they wanted to met before moving on together. That was the flash sides ways in the end that was the fake world, it was only built by them, so they could all be together. It may seem like that was a type or purgatory I think of it as more of a waiting room. I would not say there were suffering, so it would be a stretch to say it is purgatory.
I guess what really bothers me is that this post is rated insightful and it was written by a person that did not even watch the whole series, and the most important season was missed all together. Would we think so much of a book review if the writer had picked random pages to read, and then complained when they said it seems like the books jumps around a lot.
Again I have say it was a thinking mans show. As all mysteries are, if you wanted to just watch a show that has everything explained to you then yes, you were watching the wrong show. If you wanted a show that was more like a well written book and you had to think about it to see how it changed and moved you then this show was for you. I have to say there are not may question that I feel were unanswered. I am sure there will be a number of post that put it all out there for the ones that choose to be told what happened then to work it out themselves. But that is like playing a video game by following the walk-through what is the point? You might as well wait for the movie.
Re:Idiotic (Score:5, Insightful)
It reminded me of the Matrix, where the first movie was more sci-fi and the second and third were all a bunch of confused pseudo-religious nonsense.
Ahh, sorry - you've lost me. There was only ever one Matrix movie.
Don't waste your time (Score:4, Insightful)
No. The show is an empty promise, leading people on without any plan to resolve it. If you watch the first 3 seasons, you'll see weird things that you assume get explained later, but it never happens, and then in the 4th-6th seasons they're clearly just making stuff up as they go, and hoping that you'll forget prior mysteries. The show is all setup and every time you think it has gotten to Act 2 or even Act 3, the writers lose interest in the plot and decide you're in Act 1 again.
Lost is bad.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:5, Insightful)
Intentionally writing story lines which only give the appearance of order but which are actually just random shit happening is smart? I'll freely admit, it was funny when I saw it the first time in Twin Peaks ... but I just can't stomach DEEP any more. It's not smart, it's lazy at best and pandering to the lowest common denominator at worst.
the only thing worse than a lost fan (Score:5, Insightful)
are those who have to show up in a thread about lost and bash the show
i never got the show, but obsession with the show is completely harmless. i don't hold it against anyone
what bother me is people who don't like the show... but have to come in and shit all over someone else's harmless enjoyments
we all have our quirky likes and dislikes that are easy to ridicule or put down. so what? most socially well-adjusted folk don't have an irrational need to pick on others. if you do have such a need, this reveals nothing about lost, it reveals something about yourself: a poverty of character and some sort of unresolved self-hatred and self-loathing. lose your pathetic need to go out of your way to menace other people's harmless hobbies
oh who am i kidding... this is the internet. mindless negativity seems like that's what the internet was created for
carry on then, aggressively ultranegative losers. the internet is yours, unfortunately
Mod parent way up - "succumbed to its own success" (Score:3, Insightful)
Parent is absolutely right. Shows like these succumb to their own success.
This is the problem that faced Lost from season 2 onward. It was never -meant- to be as many seasons long as it ended up being. But when you get such high ratings, the stations pretty much force you to produce more content (read:filler), dragging the story on and on, and eventually you end up having so much going on in the show, that the ending you had envisioned by the time you wrote the pilot, that the ending will no longer work and you've got just a few shows (if being abruptly canceled. Hi, Heroes) to try and tie things up - which is, invariably, a mess.
( Let's see how Heroes fares with their cancellation. )
Sadly, hardly any station would allow you to specify in the contract that the show will be N seasons or episodes long with key plot elements from the pilot to the finale, with little room in other (filler) episodes for the station managers to get their egotripping time. The only way to get -that- is with a miniseries.. 2-4 episodes ..which aren't well-suited for shows designed as a series.
I stopped watching mid-way through season 3.. don't bother telling me it gets better in season 4; after reading the short summary in the top post here, it could be the most brilliant made-for-TV work of our generation.. and I still wouldn't care to see it.
Lazy, lazy writing (Score:5, Insightful)
1. A submerged/sunken version of the island was shown in the flash sideways world.
2. Kima, a murderer that everyone on the island hated, was present in the flash sideways world.
3. In the beginning on the flash sideways, it was implied that it took something like a near-death-experience to catch glimpses of the other timeline. By the end though, apparently any strong emotion was enough.
4. Faraday in the flash sideways specifically thought that the flash sideways was the result of something they had done with a nuclear bomb.
5. When Widmore put Desmond in the magnet shack, the impression was given that Desmond was able to jump between both realities.
6. Some of the Lostaways had pretty harsh and painful lives in the flash sideways which would seem weird for a group created dream world.
7. When fake-Locke cut Jack's neck on the island, his neck in the flash sideways began to bleed as well.
8. Eloise didn't want Desmond messing with things in the flash sideways.
Now, I'm sure if you try hard enough, all of the above can be explained away, but taken as a whole, I think its obvious that the writers created the ending of the flash sideways world completely on the fly, and I would go so far as to say there's good evidence that they didn't even figure out what they were going to do until quite a ways into the finale itself. In fact, it’s entirely possible that even during the concert in the finale the writers still hadn't figured out how they were going to end things. Heck, I wouldn't be surprised if they didn't figure out what to do until the point when they were trying to figure out what Jack would find inside his dad's coffin.
P.S. And I get so sick of people defending the show by saying "Its about the characters." That's like defending a Michael Bay movie by saying "Its about the FX." A good show should be about the story, of which characters, plot, and presentation are all a part.
You knew nothing of the sort (Score:2, Insightful)
I knew from the begining they had no plan to really end the series, so, I never bothered to even try to get into it. I'm sorry if you did. Next time, choose more wisely.
You knew nothing of the sort. We were told time and time again that there was a plan, it was all plotted out, and it would all come together and questions would be answered. We were lied to.
Re:Sounds like X-files and Twin Peaks (Score:1, Insightful)
Joss, and jms (babylon5)
Re:So, my only question regarding Lost is (Score:3, Insightful)
The 'Black Smoke' isn't even given a token explanation, just a 'oh look, heres how hes created - by the magical light', which introduced yet another 'mystery' isntead of answering anything.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:5, Insightful)
J.J. Abrams has a consistent formula which rarely seems to fail from a commercial perspective. From an artistic perspective, it always seems to fall flat on its face leaving everyone completely unsatisfied and confused, like a recent ex-virgin wondering about what the hell just happened.
Formula:
1. Create an excellent concept.
2. Create interesting and varied characters. Usually horridly and obviously flawed.
3. Create an ever growing mystery for the audience; to wit you're sure the character flaws can feed.
4. Continue to build a mystery such that nothing makes logical sense, characters don't feed or develop in any meaningful way. Characters follow no logic and betray their character at every turn. Hopefully the audience will believe this has to do with the ever building mystery rather than a failing of the Abrams. Realistically, it has more to do with the fact there was never a real plan, story arc, or long term development by Abrams.
5. End the story in a completely illogical manner such that it punishes the audience for trusting Abrams beyond the beginning of step four; whereby it becomes very obviously not only is Abrams unable to deliver any substance, its plainly beyond his ability to do so.
6. People walk around scratching head wondering what the fuck just happened while trying to explore their own meaning in a story which never had any meaning from the beginning. All personal meaning is strictly coincidental as Abrams never delivered anything.
So for those who found meaning in Abram's effort, congrats! You found more than was ever provided, intended, or eluded. In short, it means you're more creative than Abrams. And if you didn't find meaning, congrats! You've been bitten yet again by Abrams' epic ability to fail at story telling. Even worse, his epic ability to destroy completely awesome story ideas.
Like nuclear war, the only way to win is to not play - anything in which Abrams participates.
Re:Do you want more religion with your scifi? (Score:2, Insightful)
A good % of the *human race* has "supernatural feelings"
People like to see supernatural stuff in fiction because it makes thinks interesting.
ESP makes you angry but warp engines and teleporters don't? Warp engines and teleporters aren't possible in our understanding of science, so they could be considered supernatural. There is no proof of aliens existing, so put them in the supernatural category too.
Some people like stories about aliens, some people like stories about ESP.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:5, Insightful)
It is *very* simple actually. And those answers came a few episodes early.
The heart of the island is filled with energy. It is the same energy that fuels life. Jacob guarded that energy and used it to protect candidates so they didn't age, and healed miraculously. As a punishment for someone trying to steal that energy, they would be turned into the "smoke monster", which could only wear the faces of dead bodies on the island.
Go back and watch the pilot. The show was always an allegory about good and evil. The island was split time and time again into two groups of conflict, and those conflicts were smaller facets of a larger conflict.
Did you watch Star Wars and complain that the Force was never explained?
The only reason people expect more from Lost is because when there was a reveal, it was so rewarding. It showed how deep the show was, how well thought it was, and how much meaning there laid in so many aspects of the story. People complain that they didn't get more of that instead of celebrating on how many great moments of revelation there were.
Watch JJ Abram's "Alias" some time. The show was predicated on revealing twists, but that show really was made up as they went along and became ludicrous very quick. Instead of having twists for the sake of twists, Lost was amazingly consistent while still surprising.
Season 6 was a complete disapoimtment (Score:5, Insightful)
I too am very dissatisfied with LOST. Some things were just badly written. To me this goes back at least to when Charlie died, even though water physically could not have filled the room above the broken port hole, and continued through the final episode, where suddenly Jack, Kate and the rest were traveling across vast stretches of the island in hours or minutes when it had previously taken days to cover so much ground. And even things that were supposedly explained this season made no sense if you look at the whole story. The smoke monster was revealed to have caused the appearance of several deal people, including Jack's father. But we also know that smokey could not leave the island. Yet Jack also saw his dead father manifested while he was in L.A., before returning to the Island. How can a viewer even hope to figure out anything in a story when they do stuff like that?
There were many many story holes, far too many for me to list here. But one that really needed some sort of explanation was the Darma food drop that happened shortly after the crash and saved Hurley from a much needed diet. Why was there a Darma food drop if all of Darma had been killed years earlier? Who did it, and what else are they doing? How did they even make a food drop on the Island, the mysterious nature of the Island should have made it unreachable by air, Darma had to use a sub to get there other times. But the message to viewers who were trying to actually figure out the story and make some sense of it was "screw you, the writers don't care about such things, we just want to have melodramatic deaths and church scenes with the major cast (but curiously none of the extras who also died).
And the ending made no sense at all taken with the departure of Kate, Sawyer and Clair on the plane. How does Kate end up at the funeral dead if she managed to fly off the island alive? Why even bother to get that group to the plane, if it is meaningless if they reached it or not?
The writers of Lost promised that they had a full story in mind when the series started, that they were not just making it up as they went along. That either wasn't true or they were some of the worst writers in history.
Some shows are just entertainment. The viewer knows not to spend any time trying to figure out much of anything, because it would be time wasted. But Lost presented itself as something different. It claimed to have an underlying logic behind it. Viewers were encouraged to try to understand the riddles of the island. In the end the loyal viewers were betrayed.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Don't understand the hate (Score:3, Insightful)
As I said, you do not like the answers provided. You can complain that the show didn't provide the answers you wanted and remain miserable, or accept them for what they are and be at peace. It's your choice, dude. You can come into the church whenever you're ready. I forgive you.
I'm not miserable, I was expecting them to wave their hands at me, I learned my lesson with Galactica.
But you're right, I don't like the answers provided, since the answers were: "just because" and "because I said so".
Re:the only thing worse than a lost fan (Score:3, Insightful)
Meh. We all had to listen to Lost fans rave on about the show for six years. Yawnorama. Critics may be annoying, but it'd be worse to have a never-ending circle-jerk over the show.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:1, Insightful)
Did you watch Star Wars and complain that the Force was never explained?
No, I watched Star Wars and complained that it was explained...
*mutter* Midi-chlorians
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:3, Insightful)
That's a cop-out and you know it. Initially the writers had no idea how successful Lost may or may not be. They introduced ideas even in the pilot which are still unexplained. For God's sake, why did the smoke monster kill anyone (like the pilot of Oceanic 815)? Why did the smoke monster kill everyone in the temple in Season 6? The writers were reaching. This whole "it's all about the characters" nonsense is just fanboy apologetics.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:3, Insightful)
The mysteries were important.
Both the larger mythology and the individual character stories were equally important.
Some of the details however begin to descend into minutia.
For instance, if you can't enjoy the show because you don't understand how the Dharma food drops continued (even though there is an answer for that) then you're not seeing the forest for the trees.
Another show ruined by focus groups? (Score:2, Insightful)
I once heard that The Unit switched attention away from the military operations of the men to the lives of the women left behind at home, as a result of focus group studies. Soon thereafter, it tanked in ratings and was canceled.
I can't help but feel something similar must have happened to Lost somewhere within the last 6 years. When the show first started out, I got the distinct feeling that the many mysteries had meaning and rational explanations. (I believe that the writers themselves even said so.) Sure, the Dharma Initiative was a peculiar operation, but it explained some things. But this ending, I don't know... It smells as if the ending that was originally planned was scrapped because it offended too many focus groups. Perhaps the original story promoted that all mysteries are only a lack of scientific understanding? (Sufficiently advanced technology, and all that) Perhaps it promoted predestination? I don't know.
All I can say is that with this ending, something changed somewhere. The carpet doesn't match the drapes.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand, is there any explanation that could ever be awesome enough? Even if they had it all intricately planned out ahead of time, explaining things *always* makes them seem rather ordinary. "Who is Jacob?" is a great mystery. Then you get the explanation, "Oh, he's just some kind of a weird mystical all-knowing protector of the island, and therefore protector of the entire world." Now that's not ordinary at all, but once you know it, it's not interesting either.
Very true. For example, the Silmarillion could never be as interesting as The Lord of the Rings, because it spelled out the back story that was only hinted at in LotR.
BUT, you can resolve things LotR-style. Imagine if you saw Frodo sailing away at the end of the movie and you did not know about the knife wound he received, you did not know exactly what that stupid ring did or why it was important, you knew nothing about who survived the war... It's all about the Fellowship bonding and out of that group Frodo is special enough to take a boat off of Middle Earth with Gandalf. That's what Lost did last night.
The secret is to let the explanation fade with distance: They showed us a lot about Jacob and MiB, give us a couple more glimpses of why their "mother" was so murderous, and then a quick glimpse of her predecessor (and a hint at how it all started), and a quick glimpse of Hurley's successor. The Guardianship fades into the mists of time, but it IS anchored there: it is real and continuous and it matters (to the planet and all its current and future inhabitants).
Similarly, give us a glimpse into the special people (Desmond, Walt, Faraday and his mom) and some of their differences. Maybe Faraday was special because of his experiments, his mom, though, might've been special by birth and we could see a glimpse that there had been others like her who "watched" (though that's not the proper word) time, but she had failed her duty because she killed her own son and thus wanted to lock people in to Purgatory for eternity while she experiended being his mother. Why not drop a hint that it is these mysterious people who guided the first Guardian to the island, and it was they who intertwined people's lives pre-Island and the Guardian could only see who WOULD come to the island, and could not actually call anyone. Leave loose ends, but have them fade into the mists of time and space.
You don't have to explain the special people. They simply operate outside of the normal rules of time and space and have some unexplained tie to the heart of the island. They hover at the margins, doing work that may have a higher purpose than the island or this planet -- who knows -- while the Guardian is a non-special person who sets rules (though imply that the some of the special people have veto power) and actively manages the island. Explain this Jacob who we've longed to know about since his name was first mentioned, but leave some mystery as to his role in the BIG picture.
Similarly, they made a point of having everyone on the island be totally confused and wrong most of the time. Desmond thought he'd see his wife when he went down into the heart. Jack thought he was a weapon. MiB thought he'd destroy the island and he (MiB) could then escape, though he did not apparently understand it would de-smokify him. So they need to SHOW us a few things so that we KNOW they're true, not just hear them from confused people (including the non-omniscient Jacob). When the heart of the island went out, we could have seen people start to get nosebleeds, animals dying, perhaps flash to San Francisco and see an earthquake. Let us know that the island's heart IS important, and it's not a matter of Jacob being confused in this, as he was in other things.
As it is, the island seems absolutely unimportant. Recorking it was simply the thing that Jack needed to do to get full marks on his test, and it's not clear if anything would have happened other than the island sinking due to earthquake if he had not recapped it.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:2, Insightful)
The smoke monster had one consistent motivation: eliminate anyone it couldn't use.
For the vast majority of the show, the smoke monster was looking for one thing: a way to eliminate Jacob. It knows it can't harm Jacob directly; it has to convince someone else to do it. It tries with Richard, but Jacob survives and converts Richard to his side. So it bides its time. It tries to find someone susceptible to corruption, someone it can warp into a threat to Jacob.
Jacob, through Richard, maintains a group of followers on the island (the Others). They behave in much the same way that Jacob's "mother" did: be prepared to eliminate anyone on the island who gets too close to discovering its secret. When the Man in Black discovered "the source" (with the help of the other island denizens), his "mother" eliminated them. When the Dharma initiative was running their experiments, Ben (effectively an Other at that point) eliminated them. Jacob's group protected the island by eliminating anyone who might have posed a threat to the source, and replenishing its numbers from any new groups that arrive. To do this, it used its pipeline to the main world to quickly and easily research each new arrival, as well as observation from its "agents" implanted with each group. The group decided who could be assimilated and who could be ignored. What criteria it used is a mystery, but not an important one to solve.
The smoke monster has a similar MO: examine each new arrival to the island, looking for its own "candidate": someone who can be tricked into killing Jacob. It's been working on warping Ben for a long time now, but it needs as many backup plans as it can get. It probably kills the pilot to eliminate any chance of the pilot being able to signal for help using the plane's radio equipment. Maybe this is an unnecessary precaution, but wrecking the plane's instrumentation and killing its pilot is the sort of thing the smoke monster would do in order to keep the new arrivals trapped.
Note the scene just before the finale, where the smoke monster (as Locke) cuts the throat of Widmore's assistant and justifies it by saying "You told her not to talk to me, so she was of no use to me any more". That's its motivation for everything it does. Once a person has outlived its usefulness, it can be discarded or eliminated. It spared Ben, it spared Locke, it was prevented from killing the candidates by Jacob's touch... but it killed Eko after evaluating that he was of absolutely no use to it. The people in the temple, Jacob's followers, were unimportant to whether it could remain on the island... but they might have been able to explain things to the candidates, and protect them within the temple. So they were eliminated. While Jacob lived, eliminating them would only decrease the pool of potential candidates (for eliminating Jacob); with Jacob dead, they were useless, possibly dangerous to its plans, and so they were killed.
The smoke monster's motivations, now that they're revealed, are far more consistent than Jacob's. If Jacob knew that Ben was getting ready to turn on him, why not pacify him? Why antagonize him? The only answer the writers hint at is that Jacob has grown weary of being the island's protector, like his "mother" before him. She knew that eliminating the island's inhabitants would provoke the Man in Black to kill her; she was ready to pass on the defender role to Jacob. Similarly, Jacob may have been ready to pass on the defender role to someone else, so he allows Ben to kill him, even provokes it. It's an explanation, but perhaps a thin one... for someone in charge of defending the island, he left an awful lot to chance by not setting up the new protector before letting himself get killed.
Re:Season 6 was a complete disapoimtment (Score:2, Insightful)
And the ending made no sense at all taken with the departure of Kate, Sawyer and Clair on the plane. How does Kate end up at the funeral dead if she managed to fly off the island alive? Why even bother to get that group to the plane, if it is meaningless if they reached it or not?
This one's easy; clearly you didn't "get" the ending. The "funeral scene" was outside of time and space. Call it purgatory, call it the afterlife, whatever. If we were to try to affix it to the timeline, it would be at some point possibly MILLIONS of years after the events of the island. For Kate and the rest to escape had meaning. They got off the island and continued their lives, and someday they kicked the bucket, maybe dying in their sleep at 80 years old, or getting hit by a bus, or whatever. Their lives had whatever meaning you attach to a human life. Though for all we know, the plane ran out of fuel and the six of them crashed and died. The point is, it doesn't "matter" from the perspective of the main story arc, which chronologically ends with Jack's death. And it doesn't "matter" from the perspective of the "flash-sideways" timeline, which was really a "flash-never" timeline, because those events aren't "real" in the sense that we think of "real". They were experiences of a world that doesn't exist, a place where the souls of the dead go to experience some form of existence that prepares them to "move on" into the remainder of the afterlife.
Of course, the existence of such a place, though posited by many of the world's most prominent religions, is just as much "science fiction" as the existing of a magical electromagnetic energy source that can heal wounds, trap the souls of the deceased, turn men into smoke, and manipulate time and space when conjoined with a simple wooden wheel. Either you can accept that the show provides a mystical explanation of the events which transpired, or you can't. Those in the latter camp were doomed to be disappointed by any finale which didn't involve a physicist sitting in a room and lecturing the audience for an hour about how electromagnetism could totally allow time travel, etc. etc. Which for 99.9% of the audience would have been pretty boring.
The writers produced 121 hours of content and 1000 mysteries. Most of the central ones either got direct answers (which may or may not have been satisfying to you) or implied answers (which may or may not be evident to you). A few were overlooked or inadequately explained (the dead father in LA is a good one, though we can posit that Jacob's protector status has conferred him with mystical powers (protective touch, anti-aging cream, etc.), and this might allow him to manipulate the lives of the candidates even while they're not on the island, perhaps by directly causing Jack to hallucinate his father).
Was the ending perfect? No. Did we get all the answers? Not really, nor should we have.
Was it good TV?
Yes.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:2, Insightful)
That's not really fair. Twin Peaks made A LOT more sense.
Re:Was Not Impressed at All (Score:3, Insightful)
While I totally agree that the end result was unsatisfactory, any novel would be unsatisfactory if the author was writing the entire time knowing that he may run out of pages or his characters might suddenly be unavailable at any time. While they certainly could have done better, they also could have done a lot worse. Honestly I think they were just too ambitious, it seems like the most successful shows have always had several smaller story arcs that span a month or a season at most.
Re:Lazy, lazy writing (Score:3, Insightful)
6. Some of the Lostaways had pretty harsh and painful lives in the flash sideways which would seem weird for a group created dream world.
You just nailed the whole point of the flash-sideways world. The entire point.
The characters of the show, in some stage of their afterlife, were given the opportunity to experience what life without the island would have been like. How and why this happens is left unexplained, though it's pretty consistent with a number of religious beliefs about the nature of the afterlife and the re-examination of your own life as a part of that. It wasn't "heaven". It wasn't some fantasy world where everyone gets everything they ever want and nothing ever goes wrong. It was a place where the souls of the dead got to see what things would have been like if their one big wish ("I wish we had never crashed on that damn island") had come true.
And you know what? No one was happy. Not one of the characters had a happier existence without the island.
Gradually, as the characters began to encounter each other, they began to receive their awakening, remembering the events of the island, of their past lives. And with the perspective of their life in the "islandless world" of the afterlife, they came to realize that while the island was brutal and hard and in some cases deadly, it made their lives better, happier in the long run. With that enlightenment, they were ready to move on to the next stage of the afterlife, also left undefined.
Are you willing to go along with the writers of the show and accept this as the nature of the afterlife in the Lost world? Feel free to object based on your personal beliefs; after all, no one knows the answer for certain. But for this story, that's how it works. Either that's satisfying to you, or it isn't. But it certainly didn't seem like it was all "made up at the last minute".
Faraday remembers attempting to detonate the nuclear bomb because he's started along the path to enlightenment, to remembrance, but he only has a tiny piece of the puzzle.
Eloise has apparently had full enlightenment, but she's not ready to move on, instead selfishly trying to keep her son around. She fears Desmond will take him away from this existence, where she doesn't have to constantly confront the reality that she sent him to his death.
Jack's neck bleeding and Desmond's awakening corresponding with events of the real timeline is just artistic license. Jack's neck bleeding is part of his remembrance process; Desmond's remembrance occurs and he takes it upon himself to speed along the remembrance of the others by pushing them into situations with each other.
Did they make up the whole thing at the start of season six? Quite possibly. I don't know why everyone puts such weight behind the notion of knowing every detail of the end of a story before you begin to tell it. Yes, many storytellers have gotten so far off-track that they couldn't possibly make it back on. I don't think Lost reached that point. Some details were left unexplained, but the majority were answered, even if those answers don't satisfy everyone who was looking for an entirely non-mystical explanation.