On a side note (although it does relate to the current conversation), io9 writer Beth Elderkin went through the ten biggest questions from the finale and provided some answers, varying from production quotes and her own speculation.
Here's a list of all the casualties from Season 2:
Maeve Millay (Main Character)
Hector Escaton (Main Character)
Armistice (Main Character)
Peter Abernathy (Main Character)
Lawrence (Main Character)
Costa (Main Character)
Karl Strand (Main Character)
Elsie Hughes (Main Character)
Teddy Flood (Main Character)
Emily (Main Character)
Lee Sizemore (Main Character)
Robert Ford (Main Character)
Angela (Main Character)
Now, a list of the people who survived Season 2:
Dolores Abernathy (Main Character)
Bernard Lowe (Main Character)
Charlotte Hale (Main Character)
Ashley Stubbs (Main Character)
William (Main Character)
That's 5 characters, only 3 of whom are Hosts, and one of whom isn't likely to be seen outside of the confines of the Westworld park complex itself.
I'm sorry, that's a laughable and inaccurate list.
I have to ask, again: do you understand anything about how fiction works, at all? About television and movies?
First of all, learn to recognize the difference between a protagonist in narrative and a supporting or recurring character.
Here's your list, corrected:
Series protagonists who are alive at the end of season two:
Bernard
William
Delores
Hosts who can easily return:
Maeve Millay (protagonist, highly likely to remain so)
Hector Escaton (supporting character)
Armistice (supporting character)
Stubbs (supporting character)
Clementine (supporting character)
Hosts who are almost certain not to return:
Teddy Flood (supporting character)
Angela (supporting character)
Akecheta (odd one; briefly a protagonist but only on the show for the span of a few episodes).
Peter Abernathy (supporting character - another odd one; the producers don't rule him out specifically)
Humans who are dead:
Costa (recurring character, season 2)
Karl Strand (recurring character, season 2)
Elsie Hughes (supporting character)
Emily (recurring character, season 2)
Additionally, Charlotte Hale and Robert Ford - Ford was arguably a protagonist in some respects and they are dead. At least Hale is, and the producers say that Ford is now deader than he was when his skull was blown open and brain destroyed by a close-range pistol shot.
Three of the show's four original protagonists are alive at the end of season two, with the fourth almost certain to return. Hale, the chief effective antagonist throughout the series, is easily replaced because of the nature of her role. ( I was about to say that as an actor Thompson would be anything but easy to replace - but I forgot, Thompson is playing a new* Host character who's quite alive and kickin').
Before you jump in and object, take a moment to recall that you already pronounced Maeve Not Only Really Dead But Really Most Sincerely Dead three or four weeks ago. You were characteristically mistaken, which was pretty obvious to quite a few of us at the time.
While you're at it, reflect on the fact that the producers firmly established visually and narratively, via Teddy's suicide, that a Host's Control Unit case completely protects the Marble itself from a close-range gun shot.
*Or more likely not a new Host. We'll find out whose Marble she has. Which brings up the point, of course, that assuming Bernard was one of the Five she smuggled out in her purse and "Charlotte" is carrying a second, at least three other Host characters have made it out. It seems likely that they're Hosts we've already met, but which ones? Pick from the list above, as you please.
Can you provide an actual quote of what they said so we can also interpret their statement instead of taking your word for it?Also, even if we were to see some Host characters (Maeve, Hector, Armistice) return, comments from both Jonah and Lisa heavily suggest that the only way they would have any involvement in Season 3 is if they were taken from the Westworld park complex, and there is no indication that Dolores, Bernard, or "New Hale" have any reason to facilitate that happening.
Can you provide an actual quote of what they said so we can also interpret their statement instead of taking your word for it?
^ I take things at face value until/unless I'm given a reason not to; Sue me.
Clementine's body is probably salvageable, her original mind probably not, though I suppose the state of her original mind may be present in one of the other simulations.
It seems odd that Bernard would resurrect her in Charlotte's image.
And we never got a definitive answer to the MiB's robothood.
Is that an option? Because your track record for predictions is that frickin' bad. But even worse is that it's combined with a completely undeserved arrogance about their accuracy that never falters no matter how many times you're proven spectacularly wrong about plot developments that even casual viewers could see coming from miles away.I take things at face value until/unless I'm given a reason not to; Sue me.
It's not even a big deal that you get the predictions so wildly wrong so often, though it is pretty humorous to watch. It's the constant insufferable lectures and insistence that you are right like you're some kind of big-shot TV insider when you don't even seem to grasp basic foreshadowing and plotting.
They use biometric security systems, so I would imagine that scans of Hale's and every other employee's and guest's retinas and fingerprints and even DNA exist in the database and can be recreated by the nano-assembler thingies (technical term) down to the most minute detail.I know this is a hand-wave on the show, but I guess the host-recreations of living people, like the Charlotte-bot, will have the original's finger prints and retina patterns? That would be essential forms of ID for getting around the modern/future world.
They use biometric security systems, so I would imagine that scans of Hale's and every other employee's and guest's retinas and fingerprints and even DNA exist in the database and can be recreated by the nano-assembler thingies (technical term) down to the most minute detail.
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