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There's a difference between leaving things a mystery and being incoherent. The show itself isn't hard to follow if you pay at least a little attention.
Yeah I'm disappointed they didn't answer some of these things. It could be because the writers were lazy and didn't really have any answers, it could be because they just wanted to let the audience have fun with them, it could be because they're saving stuff for some kind of spinoff. |
The question I most want answered is why there were so few Australians on a plane coming from Australia. :p:
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Jacob was a racist. I don't think he likes black people either.
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fluff.
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I finally got around to catching up on the Lost eps after 6x13 and watching the finale. It was more spiritual and emotional than I expected, but without being maudlin. I think they wrapped it up nicely and I don't mind that there remain unanswered questions but like some of you, I'm wondering what happened to Walt. And I'm amused that they kept the Jack/Kate/Sawyer/Juliet love rectangle going until the end.
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I found it kinda odd that Jack was cool with his wife and Sawyer making out and sh*t, and Kate was cool with it too. Man those 4 really trade it up a lot, even in the afterlife.
And why was Sayid with Shannon and not with Nadia? Wtf. He spent a good portion of his life trying to find this woman and he gives it up for a chick he shagged once? I never bought into the Sayid/Shannon love angle. |
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Yeah, I wasn't really sure about why they chose Shannon but I suppose there are a few possible explanations.
The likely explanation is that the Sayid/Shannon relationship and final scene provided a useful device for Hurley to show Sayid that he wasn't inherently evil and that he'd truly helped someone. Regardless of the fact that Sayid's love for Nadia may (or not) have been infinitely deeper than his brief fling with Shannon, it was indubitably bound to his blood stained past; there's no erasing the fact that he was her torturer and was required to kill many in order to be with her and keep her safe. Whereas with Shannon, Sayid could wipe the slate clean and IIRC, he was a "good man" throughout the duration and didn't commit any of the kinds of atrocities of his past of which he is so ashamed. From Shannon's point of view, their relationship had a large impact on her character - she seemed to mature a bit and stopped acting like such a spoiled cow. So that was a period of Sayid's life in which he'd been a worthy man. Or maybe the writers just wanted an excuse to resurrect Shannon's character so to speak? Anyway, I got the impression that Sayid and Nadia were never meant to be together and that Sayid had perhaps come to terms with this. When Sayid was dealing with the Man in Black, didn't he say that the last thing he wanted had died in his arms? I think he was referring to Shannon. Maybe a more devout Lost fan (or someone with better memory) can offer a good analysis :D |
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