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0 Subject: Lost--------Season 6 (Final Season)

Posted by: Bond, James Bond
- Sustainer [04352469] Sun, Jan 31, 2010, 12:49

Anybody else excited about the premeire of Lost's final season? Can't believe it's been on the air since 2004 and finally....FINALLY!!!....we'll get answers to some of our most burning questions.

I doubt we'll get complete satisfaction with all of our queries but I suspect this season will go out with us wishing there was still a whole lot more.
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37C1-NRB
      ID: 401412422
      Wed, Mar 24, 2010, 22:29
Interesting episode.

Learned a lot about Richard, Jacob, and Mr. Evil.
So if Mr. Evil can't leave the island unless the "cork" is dead, why hasn't Mr. Evil as Locke left? If I was Mr. Evil as soon as Jacob was dead I'd be, "Later" and out of there. But since he didn't, it's probably because Jacob's replacement "cork" is there and he doesn't know who it is. That could explain why he isn't just killing all of them. So why isn't he trying to turn them all against each other so they all kill each other? Maybe he is and we can't see it yet. And where did that polar bear come from in Season 1?

So many questions still to be answered.
38katietx
      ID: 2224311
      Wed, Mar 31, 2010, 02:04
And Desmond reappears. Perhaps he is the "cork?"
39katietx
      ID: 2224311
      Wed, Apr 07, 2010, 09:54
Wow...was that unreal? I'm blown away. Still wondering how they are going to tie it all together with the number of episodes remaining. But, I have an idea.

Did anyone else get the reference of "nuclear" instead of "hydrogen?" Interesting.
40boikin
      ID: 532592112
      Wed, Apr 07, 2010, 16:43
What a great episode, then again when are desmond episodes not great? Hopefully they start to pull the characters back together at which point i feel the story will wrap up pretty quickly.
41Bond, James Bond
      Leader
      ID: 04352469
      Tue, May 11, 2010, 22:59
Another great episode of Lost. Finally, we get to see the origins of Jacob and his brother, how the Smoke Monster came into being and the identities of Season 1's "Adam and Eve". Nice.
42MBT
      ID: 191142515
      Wed, May 12, 2010, 15:26
I still don't feel like I know what/who the Smoke Monster is, just where it came from. How did it get into the cave in the first place? How did Jacob's brother end up on that fallen tree after going into the cave? What was that stuff that Jacob and his mother drank when she said "now you're just like me"? More questions without answers.
43Tree
      ID: 248472317
      Wed, May 12, 2010, 15:34
I still don't feel like I know what/who the Smoke Monster is, just where it came from.

the smoke monster is absolute evil. my personal belief is that it was "imprisoned" in the cave, a sort of "solitary confinement" on the island (which is a prison itself, to Smokie), and used the "light" to try and draw people in, because it would need a human body to escape from the cave. that human body eventually came, in the form of the man in black.

How did it get into the cave in the first place?

i don't know that that's important.

How did Jacob's brother end up on that fallen tree after going into the cave?

when Smokey emerged, he dropped the body. i believe we've seen that before in the show, where he picks people up, and drops them off.

What was that stuff that Jacob and his mother drank when she said "now you're just like me"?

why is that even important? i mean, heck, it could have just been ceremonial wine or something.

More questions without answers.

but not terribly important ones.
44boikin
      ID: 532592112
      Thu, May 13, 2010, 10:51
The one question that came to my mind was who finished the putting the wheel into the light? I guess it doesn't really matter MIB could have just showed some later visitors what they needed to do.

I wonder if they will explain how Jacob gets off the island, does he just use the wheel in the well?

I feel the one down fall of the show was they presented too many questions and not enough answers but i guess that is how life is you really don't know everything.
45Bond, James Bond
      Leader
      ID: 04352469
      Thu, May 13, 2010, 23:37
44....Sadly it does indeed look like many questions will go unanswered. The producers knew 2-3 years ago exactly when Lost would end, so I was hopeful that by now the majority of our questions would be answered but I don't think there's anyway now for that to happen.

Season 6 for the most part has not been that enlightening to me. I have to say that I'm more than a little disappointed with how it's turning out but at the end of the day, it's just a television show.

Of course, I'm still angry that the great series John Doe bit the dust so early, so what do I know? LOL
46wazaaap_guy
      ID: 24501323
      Fri, May 14, 2010, 00:50
Re: the stuff they drank... I thought it had something to do with why they didn't seem to age. The mom didn't look too different throughout the episode, and the Jacob we are used to looks like the Jacob that took the drink. Jacob probably gave some of that stuff to Richard also.
47C1-NRB
      ID: 2911103011
      Fri, May 14, 2010, 11:05
Jacob probably gave some of that stuff to Richard also.

I think you're right. I seem to remember something like that.
48katietx
      ID: 2224311
      Mon, May 17, 2010, 15:53
RE: Smoke monster. Remember that it can only inhabit a "dead" body. So when Jacob shoved his brother into the light, he was either dead or was killed in the process.

I, too, am hoping to see how Jacob gets off the island.
49Perm Dude
      ID: 5510572522
      Fri, May 21, 2010, 21:03
50RecycledSpinalFluid
      ID: 544201619
      Fri, May 21, 2010, 23:30
Red is too large...Yellow is too small...and Brown is juuuust right.
52Bond, James Bond
      Leader
      ID: 04352469
      Sun, May 23, 2010, 01:28
Sunday, May 23, 2010 is finally upon us---one of the saddest days ever in TV history. I hate to see Lost come to a close but I really believe that six seasons is plenty. My brain is already fried and scrambled enough as is.

Here's hoping that we'll get complete answers to all of the important questions we've had over the years.

To Jack, Kate, Sawyer, Hurley, Sayid, Jin, Sun, Ben and all the rest of the stellar cast and crew: THANK YOU! I've been entertained beyond measure.
53Tree
      ID: 248472317
      Sun, May 23, 2010, 19:11
What doesn't matter...

what does...
54katietx
      ID: 2224311
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 11:50
Thanks Tree...but even "what does" matter doesn't answer all.

Ah well, Christian answered most of it for me.
55RecycledSpinalFluid
      Dude
      ID: 204401122
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 12:06
Only question I wanted to know was about WAAAAALT. Why was he special? I mean, we went through a full season of hearing Michael scream his name every 108 seconds, but was this ever explained?

Need to review the finale again tonight. Lots of unanswered questions, but I'm alright with that, don't need 'em all...except WAAAALT.
56C1-NRB
      ID: 2911103011
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 12:30
I, too, wondered where Michael and Waaalt were in all this. And Mr. Echo (sp?), too.

Sooo... they were all dead in this season's sideways timeline but didn't know until Desomond hooked them all up. Desmond is some sort of Deader-Death; the Death that lets you know, "Time's up. You really are dead," in Purgatory? It seems that way because he told Eloise he wasn't going to wake/take Daniel yet (or was it "this time"?)

I liked Sawyer giving one last nickname. He called Miles "Enos" when Miles called him from the concert. That made me laugh. He called him it again later when they were getting on the plane, but it seemed too out of context at that point, other than to make a point. Which was... what? A red herring to make us think that the sideways world was simultaneous/real even though it wasn't?

Actual exchange that took place in my house:

"That looks like the opening scene from 'Land of the Lost.' [singing] Locke Monster, Jack, and Desmond; on a routine expedition; met the greeeeatest earthquake ever known! Hiiigh on the rapids..."

"Stop it."

"Watch out for the Sleestack, Desmond."

"Stop."
57Balrog
      Dude
      ID: 02856618
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 12:33
Another Walt question: Was the Walt that talked to Locke when he lay dying in the pit the real Walt, or Smokey? If it was Smokey, does that mean Walt was dead by then since Smokey can only appear as dead people?

My guess is the writers decided to change course and Walt fell by the wayside.
58Balrog
      Dude
      ID: 02856618
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 12:37
RE: 56

My take is that in the Lost version of the afterlife, there is no time system. When you go to "Heaven" everybody you care about is already there whether or not they died before or after you did. Kind of a cool idea.
59Tree
      ID: 248472317
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 12:52
Only question I wanted to know was about WAAAAALT. Why was he special? I mean, we went through a full season of hearing Michael scream his name every 108 seconds, but was this ever explained?

in the grand scheme of things, Walt wasn't that important.

To Michael - a father who had lost custody of his son and now had to keep him alive on a deserted island filled with hostile humans, wild animals, and otherworldly monsters - Will was the most important thing, and Michael's purpose was to get him off the island.

when he did that successfully, for all intents and purposes, Walt's story was over, and when we last saw him, he was attending school like any kid his age should be doing.

Sooo... they were all dead in this season's sideways timeline but didn't know until Desomond hooked them all up. Desmond is some sort of Deader-Death; the Death that lets you know, "Time's up. You really are dead," in Purgatory?

yes, that was purgatory. it also showed the brutality of Lost - life was miserable as $hit for these people, both before the island and on the island.

but in death, they had closure, happiness, and what they wanted the most.

When you go to "Heaven" everybody you care about is already there whether or not they died before or after you did.

actually, it was explained they were all dead. as Christian said to Jack (paraphrase here) "some went before you, some went after. but they all died."

there have been lots of good articles written about the finale and the series, and this is one of the best i've read...

in a nutshell, to me, this was the greatest television program in the history of TV. a broad, sweeping epic, filled with depth never seen before on television (and not likely to be seen again anytime soon), using incredible storytelling devices. this was TV's War & Peace.
60RecycledSpinalFluid
      Dude
      ID: 204401122
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 13:07
in the grand scheme of things, Walt wasn't that important.

You spend a full season hearing WAAAALT with the "he's a special boy" continually reinforced...YES it WAS important. As Balrog says, Darlton had to 'course correct' the storyline at somepoint, so they hack something the show WAS heavily invested in.

And don't get me going on the Hurley bird... ;)
61Tree
      ID: 248472317
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 13:57
You spend a full season hearing WAAAALT with the "he's a special boy" continually reinforced...YES it WAS important.

to a dad with a son gone missing, it's important. but other than that, not so much. we had our Walt closure when we saw him in school.

and the hurley bird is high on the list of things that REALLY don't matter. lol
62RecycledSpinalFluid
      Dude
      ID: 204401122
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 14:01
(therefore the wink...)
63RecycledSpinalFluid
      Dude
      ID: 204401122
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 14:03
And the great thing about Lost...I am right and you are right...in regards to the WAAAALT thing. You might be happy with a skipped over resolution, but others won't.
64damoose7474
      Leader
      ID: 181042723
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 14:04
ok forgive me if this sounds stupid, i really didnt watch the last two seasons....so the island was real life and most of them survived getting off the island? they didn't die in the plane crash that got them on the islands?
65damoose7474
      Leader
      ID: 181042723
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 14:07
also who the hell were the others? and what was the dharma initative?
66RecycledSpinalFluid
      Dude
      ID: 204401122
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 14:46
I don't believe in much, but I do believe in duct tape.
67Tree
      ID: 248472317
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 14:53
moose - you really need to go back and watch it. you are asking for a LOT of explanation. lol.

the island was real life, and most of them DIED on that island, but not necessarily on the crash.

the off-island stuff this season was basically Purgatory, as the were waiting for the right time to truly pass into the next world, whatever that may be.

and yes, i believe in duct tape as well.
68boikin
      ID: 532592112
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 14:55
what about the Qwan's child or Arron(was he at the church)?

I have more to say but i need to think for a bit. But basically my impression was that the island was real world and flash sideways was the real world. Basically when they set off the atom bomb it gave everyone a second chance at another life but for those in the church at the end but because of there special connection they got the chance to "live" in both lives. It was all kind of like a sliders episode...

Just relized my all time favorite tv shows don't happen in America....Dr. Who, Magnum PI, Northern Exposure, and now Lost(first show i did not find on cable reruns)....And maybe sienfield but New York or at least their New York might as well have been space.
69damoose7474
      Leader
      ID: 181042723
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 15:01
this is why I stopped watching the show, too many loose ends...but to each their own...

i was also super pissed at the end of the sopranos...
70DWetzel
      ID: 278201415
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 15:06
Re:68-- last I checked, Alaska (Northern Exposure) and Hawaii (Magnum, PI) were still part of the country. :)
71boikin
      ID: 532592112
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 15:12
also who the hell were the others?

people who had stumbled across the island over the years and been allowed to live there.

and what was the dharma initative?
more people that stumbled across the island its special powers, they set up camp there to investigate these powers. how they found the island or how to keep our smokie who knows not really important.

I show kind of threw in a lot of extra stuff probably because they were not sure what parts they were going to use and what parts they where not going to use. I am sure if they could go back they would have cleaned up the complete story line so it came together a little better and some lose ends would have been tied up better.

I don't believe in much, but I do believe in duct tape. great line from last night also did anyone watch PTI last week and notice stat boys notes had "not penny's boat" written on the back?
72C1-NRB
      ID: 2911103011
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 15:35
Re:58

I've sort of kicked around the idea/concept of an "Immediate Afterlife" for a while. One in which at the point of a person's death they are with everyone else, ever. It wouldn't be a simultaneous "everyone dies" event, but one where it would seem, from an individual's perspective, that all life ceased at the same instant.

The finale touched on this with a world/experience constructed by "all of them," but probably just Jack, wherein everyone was there but weren't aware of where "there" was until Jack, the "guest of honor," showed up to move things along.
73chode
      ID: 4744089
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 15:35
This blog entry captures a lot of how I felt about the finale:

http://www.slate.com/id/2242745/entry/2254865/

From the article:

"I'm still attempting to sort everything out, but as best I can tell, the upshot of last night's episode was this: The alternate world we'd been watching intently for the past few months—looking for clues, sussing out meanings—took place entirely within some airy consciousness created collectively by the Lost characters after they'd died. So when Sayid snaps necks in the back of a restaurant, or Jack works out issues with his son, or Ben maneuvers to become principal of a high school, or Daniel Widmore (nee Faraday) plays a horrific prog-rock concerto … that was all a dream world. We were watching the neural twitchings of the dearly departed.

Fine, OK. Everyone likes a good Sixth Sense/Jacob's Ladder-style exploration of the restless meanderings of dead souls who've not yet let go. But how does this connect to the intricate plot we've been following for six long seasons? Ultimately, the sideways universe is a world completely apart from the saga of the island, and it illuminates nothing about the island's mythology. It's simply a place where people who've shared a meaningful experience—could be a band of plane crash survivors or could just be some folks who did Outward Bound together—can gather for a final, ethereal hurrah. Presumably, anyone who dies with some issues left to work out enters this dream world along with their friends and loved ones, living a shadow life until it's time to walk into the white light.

That spooky island that so much blood and treasure were spilled over—the one that holds the key to life and transfixed 20 million viewers each week at its peak? Oh, it's still out there. Don't trouble yourself about it. Just join us in this cheesily nondenominational church and let the good times roll."

If you're a writer/producer/actor/fan and through LOST want to lay claim to having watched or been a part of something really profound (or "changed the landscape of TV forever" or whatever overly proud, self-aggrandizing crap the producers, Sun et al. constantly spewed during the 2-hour lead-in), then you'd damned well better have a *point* to all of it, or at least a common thread beyond fantastic (in the most literal meaning of the word) storytelling. People watched the show with the idea that there was a purpose, and would be a payoff, to all the plot-drivers during these six seasons. Lord knows there were plenty of angles they could have taken in getting to last night's punctuation mark.

But it seems to me that the ending wanted to reveal that LOST was truly about peoples' interactions, friendship, and life and death, and NOT the mysteries of the island and the drama surrounding those mysteries. If that's true, then to me the punchline that "hey a lot of weird, inexplicable things happened during this, the story of how a group of people impacted each others' lives and eventually came to love one another during this magical ride" is a real bust.

74Tree
      ID: 248472317
      Mon, May 24, 2010, 15:36
But basically my impression was that the island was real world and flash sideways was the real world.

Christian all but said everyone was dead in the flash-sideways.
75boikin
      ID: 532592112
      Tue, May 25, 2010, 11:56
Christian all but said everyone was dead in the flash-sideways.

he was referring to other world or that was my take.
76Tree
      ID: 248472317
      Tue, May 25, 2010, 12:56
and this still sums up to ME, the finale

This was a thoughtful, ambiguous, fascinating show that functioned at the highest of intellectual levels in a corporate age that’s like something out of “Infinite Jest.” At the same time, I don’t think the “Lost” formula is easily replicated. It’ll be years before another cult hit like this comes along. We’ve all just witnessed something special.

Christian all but said everyone was dead in the flash-sideways.

he was referring to other world or that was my take.


huh? he was very specific. he said everything that happened on the island was real.
77boikin
      ID: 532592112
      Tue, May 25, 2010, 13:59
he was referring to other world or that was my take.

huh? he was very specific. he said everything that happened on the island was real.


see post 68
78Balrog
      Dude
      ID: 02856618
      Tue, May 25, 2010, 14:14
Yeah I think Christian meant everyone in the church was dead. There's reason to believe that the church scene was a separate plane from the sideways and the island.
79Tree
      ID: 248472317
      Tue, May 25, 2010, 14:32
There's reason to believe that the church scene was a separate plane from the sideways and the island.

i dont think so. everything that happened in the flash sideways led directly to the church. Jack's son, once he "realized", no longer existing is the perfect example.
80Balrog
      Dude
      ID: 02856618
      Tue, May 25, 2010, 16:58
Christian said "There is no 'now' here." referring to the church. There was definitely a now in the sideways and on the island. Time passed in both places.

everything that happened in the flash sideways led directly to the church
There was no transition from the concert to the church, other than Kate, who Jack didn't know at the time. No one else at the concert talked about the church. Everything in the sideways led to the concert, not the church.

And, Jack's son's disappearance hints that the sideways and the church were different planes.

But we're gilding the lily here. Any way you look at it, it was great. Probably because there are so many ways you can look at it.
81Tree
      ID: 248472317
      Tue, May 25, 2010, 17:04
Christian said "There is no 'now' here." referring to the church. There was definitely a now in the sideways and on the island.

exactly. because one in the church, they had accepted that it was time to move on. the flash sideways was a sort of purgatory, as their restless souls from their fairly miserable lives (and let's face facts - nearly every major adult character from flight 815 had a miserable life) finally had found solace.

There was no transition from the concert to the church, other than Kate, who Jack didn't know at the time. No one else at the concert talked about the church. Everything in the sideways led to the concert, not the church.

right - because at the concert, they were still in purgatory. they hadn't accepted that they would move on until they walked through the church door - that's why Ben opted not to move on - he wasn't ready yet.

And, Jack's son's disappearance hints that the sideways and the church were different planes.

hence, purgatory to the life beyond.
82Razor
      ID: 57854118
      Tue, May 25, 2010, 17:49
The reason Christian said there was no here or now in the sideways flash was because that place was outside reality. Some people died much earlier, and some died much later as he said, but they all created that place together so that they could ascend together. The sideways flashes were not reality. The island was definitely reality and Christian said as much.
83Addicted
      ID: 55452518
      Tue, May 25, 2010, 19:06
All The Answers To Lost

--Addicted--

84Perm Dude
      ID: 5510572522
      Tue, May 25, 2010, 20:06
Some questions...
85Balrog
      Dude
      ID: 02856618
      Fri, May 28, 2010, 13:53
Lost epilogue coming soon: linky.
86Bond, James Bond
      Leader
      ID: 04352469
      Wed, Jun 02, 2010, 23:12
More reflections on this great series:

Lost, as I saw it, was a story about people making good or bad decisions. It was a story of how people are divided by faith oriented beliefs and scientific oriented beliefs. It was a story of how two opposing bodies of prinicples seek resolution and order between each other. We see this in the beginning of the series as Jack and John become more and more divided in how they wish to lead; or live life day by day in peace and achieving their goals. The Dharma Initiative and Jacob's followers were simply an extension of the debate between Jack and John. We saw how Jacob's followers could fall from grace and how the DI people fell from grace. In the end it wasn't about good people vs bad people. It was about good intentions (selflessness) vs bad intentions (selfish). Ultimately there needs to be a balance with the element of compassion and love for the survivors of this unrelenting world. Jacob and the MiB were the physical manifestations of what is in the capacity of man. They were essentially the same person: Jacob the light or good and the MiB the darkness or bad. They were both Jacob but the MiB sought answers and could not rely on faith in the woman who raised and took care of him (sure she murdered his birth mother, but in the end she had good intentions and it is impossible to see this from the MiB's perspective). Jacob on the otherhand knew that he couldn't get answers to those tough questions so he relied on what he saw before him and what he believed in his heart: that this woman though she killed my birth mother HAS taken care of me and yada yada. It was never easy for Jacob but he made a decision on faith and compassion. Some things are simply out of our sphere of comprehension.

Alas, in the end, Lost was never about science. It was a story about life and living life. We can't all be Daniel Faradays. We are more often Jack, John, Kate, Sawyer, Sayid, Hurley etc. We can't understand what Faraday talks about so how can we begin to make decisions within that realm? They had to have FAITH in him and do what he planned and HOPED that it worked. The MiB would stir the pot by tempting people with selfish promises. That's always how the devil gets us, right? No matter what we have intended to do... when we get power, position or pride we can be corrupted whether we are a man of science or a man of faith. Both Jack and Locke on their own could not achieve what was needed of them, but with Locke's unwavering faith he influenced Jack--the man of science, to operate with both. Jack buried his good intent and purpose into his heart and used his mind to achieve his goals, never allowing his own interests to obstruct him because that's just the way he was.

Lost was simply a fanastic story and it ended as appropriately. Bob Dylan says the highest form of art is inspiration. That is what Lost did. If everyone can identify themselves with Lost it can be no easily done than with Hurley. The passive viewer with goodness in his heart. The one character who would say, "Dude this is like that time in Star Wars when..." Hurley is one of us! The Island is the world! We are the next Jacobs! We make the rules! Maybe we can do it a little better than Jacob did. Let's not get caught up in judging Lost for not following up on this theory or that and applying it to a life situation. Lost was a one-in-a-lifetime series and even though I didn't get all the answers to my questions, I immensely enjoyed it year after year. It'll be missed!




87boikin
      ID: 532592112
      Fri, Aug 06, 2010, 14:54
And now the official Epilogue
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