the_reverend wrote:yeah, i read one comment from someone today that said "so they were all dead all along and it was all just an illusion? crap!" i just sat there scratching my head and had to wonder if they'd actually WATCHED the entire episode, or just walked through a room where the episode was playing a few times throughout the night to get snacks. :p
I don't actually think that's what they were doing, but I'd like to believe it, as it would be a more satisfying ending than what actually happened.
My biggest problem with the season is that I feel like we were lead to believe that there was actually something at stake, when there really didn't seem to be. (As I think someone else mentioned somewhere else, the only time I really felt any dramatic tension at all during the finale was when Locke threatened to kill Rose and Bernard.) I mean, remove the entire sideways universe thing from the season, and aside from Juliet's "it worked" misdirection and maybe Desmond getting a glimpse of the afterlife, did it affect the main storyline at all? And all the fiddle-faddle with Samuel getting off the island or not, or putting out the light or not, that didn't seem to really turn out to be as big a deal as they made it out to be the whole time. "Everything will end", "everyone you ever knew will die", "the light goes out, it goes out in everyone"... none of that seemed to have been true. I mean, sure, the island would sink or whatever - for whatever reason - but it didn't seem to have any effect beyond taking away the boys' superpowers. Which, eh. So, just plain normal Locke is going to escape the island and... do what? A crazy Smokey/SuperJack showdown at the end would have been a million times sweeter than a couple of old white dudes rolling around trying to punch each other to death. But, whatever, there are a hundred little nitpicky nerd details that can be picked at, but overall, I just felt like nothing mattered, and in the end, whatever happened, just happened.