::::End Of LOST TV serious::::

DO you like the End?

  • Yes

    Votes: 20 51.3%
  • No

    Votes: 19 48.7%

  • Total voters
    39

sanddun

Well-known member
  • Jun 8, 2008
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    LOST-Season-6.jpg



    LOST is over
    What do you think about the end
    Lets talk about it
    :(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(

    Please dont watch this thread if you still watching LOST
    we talk about end
     
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    mayurankuna

    Member
    Jul 14, 2009
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    colombo
    hahaha buddy i am watching..finished only 2 seasons remaining..i will finish soon..bcox i am having vacation nowadays...dont describe abt the ending...
    really good...
     

    sanddun

    Well-known member
  • Jun 8, 2008
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    WHAT HAPPENED TO ALL THE BLACK PEOPLE?

    Remember when Lost had African-Americans as part of its “groundbreaking international cast?” Yeah, I vaguely do too. One friend of mine (and I’m sure of yours) watched the finale chanting “They better bring back Walt!” over and over – but no such luck.

    Walt and his father Michael did make latter season Lost appearances: Locke visited Walt off the Island in the season five episode “The Life and Death of Jeremy Bentham” and Michael appeared to Hurley as a ghost in season six, explaining the whole “whispers on the Island” thing. Still, many fans wondered why Walt, Michael and the “tailie” priest, Mr. Eko, didn’t reunite with the other cast members at the purgatory all-faith church in the finale.

    Well, Michael we know is stuck on the Island as a “whisper” because he can’t move on, due to his killing of Libby and Ana Lucia in season two. Walt was freed from the Island early on, so the journey that bonded the Oceanic passengers in the purgatory universe was one that Walt was never really part of.

    As for Mr. Eko, his death in the season 3 episode “The Cost of Living” showed that Eko had come to peace with his life. When told by the ghost of his brother Yemi to “Confess his sins,” Eko refused, saying that he had no guilt to confess; in his life, he did what he had to do to survive. The smoke monster evaluated Eko, who stood resolute about himself, his sins and the faith and redemption he’d ultimately found. After smokey beat Eko to pulp, Eko’s last vision was his young self walking away with his brother, holding the soccer ball they used to play with.

    In short: Eko, by finding his faith and coming to peace with himself, had no reason to be in the purgatory world with the others. Wherever his soul was going, it was prepared for that journey – unlike the other passengers, who still had to come to peace with themselves and their deaths.

    That all sounds deep, sure, but I’m sure off-screen conflicts with the actors and the fact that Macolm David Kelley (the kid who played Walt) hit puberty were also major factors.

    lost-michael-and-walt.jpg


    lost-michael-murders-ana-lucia-libby.jpg



    lost-eko-smoke-monster.jpg
     
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    diamonddrago

    Member
    Oct 13, 2009
    4,865
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    In the attic...
    i feel LOST basically.....

    i watched season 1 and most of season 2......then i got fed up......

    the story is all over the place....i don't think even the script writers knew what they were doing.....:lol::lol:

    one word.....confusing......:baffled::baffled:
     

    sanddun

    Well-known member
  • Jun 8, 2008
    12,542
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    i feel LOST basically.....

    i watched season 1 and most of season 2......then i got fed up......

    the story is all over the place....i don't think even the script writers knew what they were doing.....:lol::lol:

    one word.....confusing......:baffled::baffled:

    yes story is very big
    we forget always what happend
    but at the end it all explaind
    every thing hapend for a reason
     

    sanddun

    Well-known member
  • Jun 8, 2008
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    WHAT ABOUT THE NUMBERS?

    In the season six episode “The Substitute” Un-Locke takes Sawyer down to “Jacob’s cave” on the cliff (where Jack ultimately killed MIB) and in that cave, Sawyer observes that Jacob’s list of “candidates” for his replacement – our Losties – have numbers by their names. The list of candidates (Sawyer, Jack, Locke, Hugo, Sayid and “Kwon”) equate to the numbers 4-8-15-16-23-42 – the numbers that both steered Hurley to the Island in the first place (he went to Australia to find out about them), and served as the code for releasing the Island’s tapped energy in The Swan station. The numbers also showed up again and again throughout the show (Danielle’s papers, on medicine Claire and Desmond take, on Mr. Eko’s stick, etc…).

    So in the end the numbers had to do with fate, and were a nice little numerology motif for the showrunners to play with (and a mathematical mystery for fans to agonize over). THE END.



    lost-the-numbers-the-candidates-cave-wall.jpg
     

    rishoban

    Well-known member
  • Dec 30, 2008
    3,814
    54
    48
    Badulla
    I watched Season 1 & 2 only, I liked Season 1, but didn't like 2nd much, so I gave up watching after that. My One and Only favorite TV series is "Prison Break"! I love it!!!