So the setting and the plot are integral to the story that was told, but the story isn't about them? If the setting and the plot are all that make the characters worth watching, aren't they just as important as the characters, and shouldn't they be treated with as much care and gravity? Otherwise all you have is a bunch of well-drawn (or not) characters reacting to random, meaningless events ... an emotional mime show with invisible boxes and ropes.So if the same characters had made the same emotional journey somewhere else -- say, in a perfectly ordinary McDonald's franchise -- would you have watched the show for six years?
It's a nonsensical question. This story was about a group of characters who landed on a magical island. It's hard to tell that story in a McDonalds. It was not, however, a story about the magical island (as some seem to wish that it was, for whatever reason). To reiterate, Hugo's belief in the cursed numbers, and ultimate growth as a result of overcoming that belief, was vital to the character. It doesn't matter if the numbers were actually cursed. It was his belief that was important to the character.
Except that they were on a magical island, and I kinda do want to know more about that. I appreciate the character driven nature of the show, but I wouldn't mind some answers about the Island too.
That's what they did for half of season six. The alt universe was the characters without the mythology, and it was pretty boring. The characters just aren't very interesting unless they're exploring the island mythology. Watching them weep about their fathers or make out to Michael Giacchino's score is satisfying at very visceral level, but does not engage intellectually.If it was the characters all along then just make a soap opera.
If it was the characters all along then just make a soap opera.
That's what they did for half of season six. The alt universe was the characters without the mythology, and it was pretty boring. The characters just aren't very interesting unless they're exploring the island mythology. Watching them weep about their fathers or make out to Michael Giacchino's score is satisfying at very visceral level, but does not engage intellectually.
I'm sorry you never found it engaging.Nothing about the island engages intellectually. Never has.
Given that so many of the characters were unexplainably psychotic, zombified, or ciphers, I agree with you. They didn't spend enough time enough time exploring the characters in season six. I would have cut out huge chunks of the interminable temple arc to make time for that.And season six certainly isn't the worst offender in that respect.
The flashbacks got repetitive some time in season two or three. Many saw them as filler, and I am not inclined to disagree. How many times did we need to see John Locke being a putz, or Kate running away from something?Nearly half of the first three seasons was devoted telling the character's life stories before even arriving on the island. Did you find that equally boring?
How exactly would you end a show of this scale that would please everybody anyway? Even if they had given us everything everybody wanted, there would still be those that would complain it was too predicable.I will not say "I told you so" but, let's just say "Lost" is for this generation(what a friend of mine calls "Generation Stupid")what Twin Peaks was twenty years ago.
It's just today's kids weren't around to experience the incredible demise of such an interesting show, so today they have "Lost".
I KNEW the ending would suck - there was NO WAY they could get themselves out of it without pissing millions of people off. The producers' "Remember, not all your questions will be answered and this was ALWAYS a show about the characters!!!" was a lame attempt at bait and switch before they basically took the money and ran.
INCREDIBLE EPIC FAIL.
I would not have watched six seasons about Kate running, Jack brooding and drinking, Sawyer brooding and stalking, Michael losing and regaining Walt, etc. Would you have watched that?
They defined the people who built the camp, fled from the Monster, and confronted the Others, and always invited the viewer to consider what they meant for the characters in real time. The flash sideways, which I called boring, were not connected to the island in any real way. Up until people start waking up, they were simply a soap opera about clicheed personalities (busy dad, maverick detective, violent loner) going through the motions.
For me this is the biggest televisual kick in the nuts - ever.
The ending works if you watch it with your heart and not your head. If you've been watching it the other way - well no wonder you're pissed!![]()
I wouldn't watch it just for the characters, but I'd watch it if it were interesting, too. I don't think the characters and the lives they led before the island were that interesting. It's the link between the before and after that made them interesting. I don't think either alone would have worked in the first season, but the island arc became nearly self-supporting in the second.I'd watch it if it were interesting. Well, all but the Michael bit. I never liked that guy.
I think the character revelations in the flashsidewaysverse were just as revealing about the characters. Instead of giving us the characters' pasts, we got to see what they carried with them at the time of their deaths, or overcame at the moments of death.
<snip>In the flashsidewaysverse (which is really more of a purgatory, I just like calling it that),
we got to see Jack overcoming his own self doubts and limitations caused by the relationship with his father through a relationship with a fictional son. It doesn't matter that the son wasn't real, because Jack was real and his feelings were real. We also saw Jack as the man of faith, fighting to re-instill the faith which Locke had lost. Sayid, as Hurley pointed out, was never able to believe that he wasn't a bad man. We saw this represented with the flashsidewaysverse Sayid trying to go straight, but ultimately being pulled back into his old ways and finally being caught- set to receive the punishment he felt that he had always deserved for his crimes. Was this how he viewed his time on the island and ultimate sacrifice on the sub?
I see the flashsidewaysverse lives as representative of the characters' ultimate journeys throughout the series, but like I said, I haven't re-watched them since last night's finale to study them in closer detail. And I likely won't have the chance until the DVDs are released.
Kudos to you and Brent, btw, for intelligently articulating your thoughts without resorting to personal comments or obtuse non sequiturs. If only everyone in this thread was able to do so...
What didn't we find out?
During season 1 we didn't know anything. We had a bunch of people stranded on a strange island where mysterious things happened.
Now we know what was going on all the time, the picture having gradually become clearer and clearer during 6 seasons. The island turned out to be a mystical source of spiritual energy that is manifested mainly as electromagnetism in the physical world. During history there have been many who have tried to gain control of this energy for their ends, but they have always been stopped by a line of protectors who are in tune with the source
That's the story really. That and the characters, who were lost in their lives, but found meaning in the island and each other. What else do you need to know? The fundamental nature of the heart of the island? It's been made clear that this is mystical/religious, so they could either come up with a whole new specific cosmology for the show's universe or tie it with and existing world view or religion but I'd say it makes a lot more sense to leave it open to interpretation.
Other than that there are just insignificant details that people obsess over. As a whole the story of Lost works perfectly well. They told the story they wanted to tell, and very competently. There's no cop out.
Other than that there are just insignificant details that people obsess over.
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