The End:
Well, here it is. The end of Lost. My what a journey it's been. We've seen a plane crash, a hatch, a smoke monster, the Dharma Initiative, time travel, nuclear warheads, and big glowing lights. All of that led to here. So, is the finale perfect? In a word: no. That's not the real question, though. This finale is a very satisfactory ending to the show. In the end, this show wasn't about hatches, and monsters, and glowy lights. Those mysteries were all pretty much solved. In the final moments, they didn't matter. This show was about the characters. It was their journey that kept me watching episode after episode. It's only appropriate that the bulk of the finale should not be dedicated to the mysteries, but to the characters that I've come to absolutely love over the course of 121 episodes. It's their fates that I was invested in, not what the deal was with that light.
I was wondering all season what the flash-sideways were leasing up to. I couldn't be happier with the explanation. I was moved to tears on no less than five different occasions. Seeing Claire and Charlie come back together, and Sawyer and Juliet. Jin and Sun remembering their lives together, or in the final moments, with everyone back together again, and Jack and Locke coming together for the first time as friends. Then there's Ben. What an amazing character. He can't go into the church. He knows he's not ready. Is redemption something Ben can ever find? Is it even something he deserves? I wonder if he'll ever find it within himself to join the rest of them, or if his fate lies in forever sitting on that bench, wondering. Who knows? He has an eternity to decide. If there's one thing that holds it back slightly, it's Sayid and Shannon. I never bought that relationship, and hate to see it be the thing that wakes Sayid up. It's an eye-rolling moment in what is otherwise an episode full of emotional ones.
I'll admit, the whole stuff with the light, I really don't understand. It just seems to be there as a plot device to put a timer on things. I was almost convinced that they really were going to end the show with the destruction of the island. They really only used it long enough to have a great climactic battle between Jack and Smocke. All it was missing was a "I..have had...enough...of YOU!" Like I said, though, it's not about the light. I'm sure there's some kind of explanation out there if I think hard enough, or read enough. I loved the moment at the top of the cave, where Jack accosts Smocke for using Locke's form, and says that Locke was right about everything. I'm also disappointed that it's Kate that gets to shoot Smocke. If it couldn't be Jack, then it should have been Ben, or even Sawyer. Ben would have been the most poetic, considering how badly he got played by Smokey. Maybe that's just my own dislike of Kate shining through, though.
Finally, it's up to Jack to make the ultimate sacrifice to restore order to the island. Since Jack is going to die, it falls to Hurley to become the new guardian. It's a fate I know he didn't want, but it seems appropriate. Ben becomes his new number two. This is kinda ironic. Of all the major characters on the show, Ben is the only one that truly gets what he's always wanted. He wanted to be special, and to be valued by Jacob. Now that Hurley is the man in charge, Ben's wish is fulfilled.
The very very end, wow. Jack was never my favorite character. I never disliked him, but he never rose to the top for me. Despite that, I felt his death. Then when Vincent come out of the bamboo and lied down next to Jack so that he wouldn't die alone, well, any self control I had left was gone at that moment. I bawled. The final shot, of Jack's closing eye, is about as perfect a final shot as I can think of. The show is now book-ended by such a shot.
I'll miss having more of this show to watch. I'll miss every single one of these characters (yes, even Kate...a bit.) This is not the end of my thread, though. Not by a long shot. I welcome further discussion. I'll also do a post-mortem about the show as a whole, once I've collected my thoughts a bit. For now, discuss away. You don't need to worry about spoiling me anymore.
