Fluffhead14
Member
The point wasn't that they needed to DO something. It was to sully the last "pure" place on earth. To show the town that no one was spared.
They probably tied him to a tree or buried him up to his neck in soil and threw sponges at him.Tell that to the innocent guy that got stoned to death.
The point wasn't that they needed to DO something. It was to sully the last "pure" place on earth. To show the town that no one was spared.
Okay, please help me understand this...
You guys had been theorizing about Meg's goal quite a bit before the finale aired. You had been wondering what kind of message she'd be sending and how. How it would "change everything". What kind of role the three missing girls would be playing.
The episode aired, and it turned out Meg's plan was simply to enter the town and vandalize it.
It turned out they planned to do so simply by having one guy use a bolt cutter to open the door. Never mind the security who we know had had to keep an entire village of weirdos at bay for months/years.
It turned out Meg apparently thought causing a bomb scare on the very bridge they intended to cross would be a good idea.
It turned out the three girls actually didn't matter at all. They were just there (really sucks for that one guy who got stoned to death over this).
... And that's fine with you?
Can I just say the answer is "plot contrivance"? Because it really is. A bunch of people could vouch for him being a resident, but oh no, he got into an argument with the most powerful (fire)man in town.She had asked Matt in the previous episode why he hadn't just taken what he wanted? Why he hadn't just gone back in.
And her bolt cutter.The mob could have advanced at any time but didn't as well. She then told him that they're all waiting for her.
And what better way than to bring those three "departed" girls back?On top of wanting to dispel the illusion that the town was "safe"
Well, thanks for pointing that out, Meg. I agree. It really is quite silly, considering how easy it turned out to be.she also showed how silly it was for everyone to not just take it.
A point that they made to a whole bunch of people who clearly didn't care (or they would have stopped camping there a long time ago) and some security guards (who should already know, if they live in that town... unless they were high the whole time, I mean). And even then, that point was only made if that limited audience was paying close attention to the family drama that occurred when one of the girls' mothers showed up within the hour (something that Meg couldn't arrange, right?).The point of using the girls was to show that "safe" was relative. That even though no one just vanished, people still suffered.
A situation the security should obviously have been prepared for, considering they had an entire village of weirdos desperately wanting to get into town for months/years.You're being disingenuous about "one guy with a bolt cutter". He had an entire mob behind pushing through.
A situation the security should obviously have been prepared for, considering they had an entire village of weirdos desperately wanting to get into town for months/years.
I'm sorry, but it's just that ridiculous.
Can I just say the answer is "plot contrivance"? Because it really is. A bunch of people could vouch for him being a resident, but oh no, he got into an argument with the most powerful (fire)man in town.
And her bolt cutter.
And what better way than to bring those three "departed" girls back?
"It was all a prank, there are still no departures in Jarden, you guys!"
Well, thanks for pointing that out, Meg. I agree. It really is quite silly, considering how easy it turned out to be.
A point that they made to a whole bunch of people who clearly didn't care (or they would have stopped camping there a long time ago) and some security guards (who should already know, if they live in that town... unless they were high the whole time, I mean).
Again, it really sucks for that one guy who got stoned to death over this.
A situation the security should obviously have been prepared for, considering they had an entire village of weirdos desperately wanting to get into town for months/years.
I'm sorry, but it's just that ridiculous.
Well, I do find it pretty odd that it never occurred to those campers to pull something like that off (or that it never occurred to the security that that could happen, whichever). There clearly were a lot of desperate/crazy people in there, and I seem to remember the show implying "runners" were a fairly common occurrence.Even weirdos will generally fall in line with authority, and it would take a group action from people willing to be hurt to do pull off Meg's plan
It was more of a "just in case my name gets sullied (i.e. if John tells the rest of the town, and enough people react like him), I guess I'll just stay there", which just felt like yet another contrivance in en episode already filled with those.Matt's answer to why he didn't just go back was more complicated than just because of his argument with John. He was aiming to clear his name and prove he didn't rape his wife.
It may be small, but it's also considered the most special place on Earth, to the point where some are apparently prepared to kill or die to get there, people are routinely checked for wristbands, etc.It's a small town. They would have needed more than just their small police force to contain the mob if it ever mobilized.
I guess it could be a point somewhat worth making to people who don't live anywhere near there and never really thought about it ("huh, now that you mention it, it's only supposed to be special for its lack of departure, so everything else should be the same as anywhere else"), but aside from that...The town wasn't safe. The same hurt people felt outside of the town existed inside regardless of the departures or lack there of.
How? To who? They only stood on that bridge for an hour or so, in front of a fairly limited audience.Using the girls illustrated that.
Well, I do find it pretty odd that it never occurred to those campers to pull something like that off (or that it never occurred to the security that that could happen, whichever). There clearly were a lot of desperate/crazy people in there, and I seem to remember the show implying "runners" were a fairly common occurrence.
It may be small, but it's also considered the most special place on Earth, to the point where some are apparently prepared to kill or die to get there, people are routinely checked for wristbands, etc.
Their police force shouldn't be that of "a small town".
(... especially if you cause a bomb scare right there beforehand *cough*)Runners are people making an uncoordinated break for it. It's done impulsively and with the knowledge that prison will be the worst of their fears, along with some bruising when they get arrested. Swarming armed guards with a group large enough to overpower them carries a high potential for violence (as you've put the people with guns in a position where they're fearing for their safety)
I still think an organized "kamikaze" assault absolutely is something the security should have been prepared for (there were many religious lunatics in there, right?), but I'll agree that the Guilty Remnants' drone-like nature indeed worked in their favor.and can only be done by an organized group willing to take losses of some sort if violence erupts. That level of commitment is extremely difficult to get out of a group, where people are willing to accept the risk that they'll be the one to fall to overcome the odds.
(... especially if you cause a bomb scare right there beforehand *cough*)
I still think an organized "kamikaze" assault absolutely is something the security should have been prepared for (there were many religious lunatics in there, right?), but I'll agree that the Guilty Remnants' drone-like nature indeed worked in their favor.
... Their extremely convenient and hardly justified drone-like nature. :þ
Also, note that this discussion is now about how even a simplistic "let's open the door with a bolt cutter and swarm them" plan might still work. Can we agree that, after all that buildup, one would have expected a slightly better plan from Meg? Perhaps even one that wouldn't include a bomb scare that could only raise the security and the risks? One that would send a strong message to the world ("change everything" is what they said)?
It was more of a "just in case my name gets sullied (i.e. if John tells the rest of the town, and enough people react like him), I guess I'll just stay there", which just felt like yet another contrivance in en episode already filled with those.
Well, he could have taken care of his wife until then (or until she regained consciousness, which he apparently believed was going to happen) at the very least.His name was going to be sullied when people noticed a bump regardless of what John did.
That she would wake up and testify that she was in fact conscious when they had sex, you mean? How is that the reason he stayed out?Matt's faith that she would come back again while in the town was the reason he stayed out.
Yes, I seem to remember that's how it went, indeed. And I still don't see a good reason for Matt to stay out of town.IIRC John wanted Matt to specifically say that he had a moment of weakness and not play up the spiritual aspects because john didn't believe it was possible (you know ... miracles and shit). Matt pushes back and asked John what happened to him. This sent John of the deep end. Matt's wife stayed in town because that's where her and the baby were safe, (with Matt's sister) while Matt waited for his faith to be vindicated outside the walls.
Yes, I seem to remember that's how it went, indeed. And I still don't see a good reason for Matt to stay out of town.
(Hell, if anything, it makes it look like he's punishing himself.)
Did he? I mean, he even got the wristbands back.No I just think he figured his wife was safe and in good hands and in a safe place. God wanted him elsewhere at the moment
Don't ask me, I didn't write that stuff!Why else go and take that man's spot?
Repent for what though? Didn't he have faith that his wife did indeed briefly regain consciousness, and would again do so, in time to give birth?It could be what you just described though. The (can't think of the name) device that held Matt had "repent" written on it.
Did he? I mean, he even got the wristbands back.
The way I remember it (it's been a little while, so correct me if I'm wrong):
Matt and his wife could get back in town (obviously, people could vouch for them being residents), just not right away, because they needed to be reissued wristbands or something like that (?).
Matt wanted to get back in town right away though, and John was supposed to help with that. But then they got into that argument, and John was like "nope, changed my mind, guess you'll just have to wait after all".
So Matt then tried to get back into town with the help of those weirdos (there was that amusing bit where he was asked to brutalize some guy, and "oh no, that goes against everything I believe, I could never... or not again, at least"), and in the end, he found (by chance) the guy who stole his and his wife's wristbands.
So at that point, he could have gone back in town with his wife, but nope.
I remember that when I watched that scene, it looked like Matt suddenly prioritized the idea of showing John how great a guy he really was. "I could go along with your story, but I'm choosing not to, just like I could get back in town right now, but I'm choosing not to. I'll be staying in that horrible place instead. Also, there, please take care of that one child. Ah-ha! You thought I was a rapist, so I bet you didn't see that coming, huh?!"
I was like, "dude, what? are you staying out of town (and letting somebody else take care of your catatonic wife) in order to win an argument with that one asshole?"
I thought he let the kid take his place. So Mary got one wristband and the child got the other. The three of them couldn't get in? Maybe I'm wrong on that though.
But that's not how it works, is it? You can't just give whomever your wristband, and there you go, that person is now free to live there.I thought he let the kid take his place.
But that's not how it works, is it? You can't just give whomever your wristband, and there you go, that person is now free to live there.
So it seems they agreed to take the kid in, yes, but that shouldn't keep Matt out. He had every right to go back, he just... chose not to?
Not for cursory, routine checks, no. Which, I guess, is why the kid's father decided to steal those: they can have their use, in some cases. If they got their names checked, I don't imagine stolen wristbands would do them any good though.They never seemed to check the wristbands too closely.
Heh. I guess John can do pretty much anything he wants, in that town...That child was probably ok for a while at least assuming John found somewhere for him. And John seems resourceful enough at that kind of stuff.
Liza Richardson has racked up an incredible number of credits over the past 20 years for her music supervision on such shows as Narcos, Parenthood, and Friday Night Lights. On Friday Night Lights, she worked alongside director Peter Berg, with whom she also works on The Leftovers, Damon Lindelof and Tom Perrottas often bleak adaptation of Perrottas 2011 novel. The second season moves the action from upstate New York to Jarden, Texas, the only town spared from a global phenomenon in which millions of people inexplicably vanished, a reshuffling that gave Richardson new challenges in choosing the shows pop music cues. This interview covers the music from season two, and it discusses major plot points in detail.
WELP. Thanks for nothing, Golden Globes.
RENEWED FOR SEASON 3!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Fucking thank god!
http://link.hollywoodreporter.com/c...WwtODQ1NzI0/5230c802191b2a646d8c0eafB3cc15667
"3rd and Final"
Okay I'm good with that then. I like how it ended, but I guess there is still a few things they could do.
The show hails from Warner Bros. Television, which is both home to Lindelof (he has an overall deal there through 2018) and HBO's first outside studio buy. Although the cabler typically owns all of its original programming, it will see its other WBTV show, Westworld, premiere sometime next year.
Honestly, that "Third and Final" season is the thing that's going to push me to watch seasons 1 and 2.
Also, wait:
HBO and WBTV both have the same parent company. It's not like Hello Ladies, which was ABCS/Disney.
Dude.
DUDE.
Watch The Leftovers. S2 is the best TV I've watched all year.
I was able to get ahold of Lindelof to ask him a couple of questions about the renewal, first about how difficult it was to persuade HBO to keep the show going.
"I'm in Jersey helping my mom move," he said. "I was afraid I'd have to sing for my supper when I got back to L.A next week... I didn't. Mike Lombardo called with the good news and it was a done deal."
And why is Lindelof who previously had to push ABC to end "Lost" much earlier than the executives there wanted him and Carlton Cuse to ready for the third season to be the last? (In the press release announcing renewal, he wrote that the end would be definitive, "And by definitive, we mean wildly ambiguous but hopefully mega-emotional, as all things related to this show are destined to be.")
"It's a gut instinct," he said. "I feel like there's more story, but not MUCH more. And I don't want to drag it out unnecessarily. Lots of fans and critics understandably had a sense that we could have ended after season two... That was a strong indication we were closer to the end than the beginning."
RENEWED FOR SEASON 3!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Fucking thank god!
http://link.hollywoodreporter.com/c...WwtODQ1NzI0/5230c802191b2a646d8c0eafB3cc15667
That it's Damon's decision to end it, and that it seems like he knows where he's going with it, is awesome. Can't wait.
RENEWED FOR SEASON 3!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Fucking thank god!
http://link.hollywoodreporter.com/c...WwtODQ1NzI0/5230c802191b2a646d8c0eafB3cc15667
Lost has a defined end and still fucked it upThis is SOOOO much more exciting than if it was given an indefinite renewal like Lost. When shows have a defined end they are generally much improved.
Lost has a defined end and still fucked it up