TheVampire
Banned
Seriously you guys
They never answered why it happens, only that they got teleported to an alternate reality where 98% of people got departed, but we don't even know if that's true.Seriously you guys
Seriously you guys
Damon Lindelof actually talked about this in an interview. It was real, he did die and come back, but at the end of the seventh episode he effectively nuked his afterlife so he could never go back there, thus spelling the end of his "immortality".Kinda missed some details but was Kevin's immortal powers a hoax with him talking about the heart attack or was it just left vague enough to be open ended and unexplained?
"Everybody brings their own baggage to the word "messiah," but all that Kevin really did was die and come back to life. But he didn't do anything else messianic. Messiahs tend to say, "God wants you to do this and God wants you to do that. This is how you should live your lives, and I would like to organize a religion around myself." Kevin didn't want to do any of those things, so the question is more why is it that this guy was able to die and come back to life multiple times, and what's the meaning of that. That isn't the question that the show is really particularly interested in answering.
I think what's more important is that the audience understands that at the end of the seventh episode of Season Threewhen Kevin basically nukes this place that he's been escaping to when he diesthat following that event, he is now mortal. We try to kind of make that clear by the fact that he talks about an undiagnosed heart condition, and that he's given up smoking, and that he's aging like all mortals do. He doesn't have the ability to walk across water or mimic loaves and fishes, etc."
Or each season told different storiesNow I know truly that Lindelof is the biggest hack writer in television.
The first two seasons turned out to be pretty much worthless to the simple story he ended up pretending he was telling.
I honestly don't know why people are still arguing about that. The Leftovers is a weird show that's deeply connected to the supernatural, just like shows like Carnivàle and Twin Peaks. It's never going to make sense and it shouldn't. No one is looking for mundane answers to The Black Lodge in Twin Peaks, so why are people looking for some mundane explanation in a show about 2% of the human population suddenly disappearing?
Now I know truly that Lindelof is the biggest hack writer in television.
The first two seasons turned out to be pretty much worthless to the simple story he ended up pretending he was telling.
What a shit finale. At least I wasn't disappointing since I wasn't expecting much from it. I guess they blew the budget filming in Australia. So instead of actually seeing where Nora went, we just had her describe it at the end of the episode. lol.
Lindelof was trolling hard with this entire series.
Again...I never loved the show. I loved moments of the show and thought some scenes throughout the series were some of the best on TV. But the majority of it all is just a bunch of nonsense and misdirection.
What was the point of all the mysteries from the first two seasons? There was none and they were unnecessary if the story was all just about Kevin and Nora's relationship.
But let's not for a second pretend Lindelof didn't know the draw was all the mystery.
The Guilty Remanant was the biggest wet fart and just got dumped for the third season.
Gonna start it now. Dont want it to end.
Can i get a thumbs up or down about the episode?
Gonna start it now. Dont want it to end.
Can i get a thumbs up or down about the episode?
Three thumbs up if you care for Kevin and Nora as charactersGonna start it now. Dont want it to end.
Can i get a thumbs up or down about the episode?
Hahaha. Judge me, bro. Would you also like to know if I would kill a child if it could cure cancer? I'm told this is important.
Gonna start it now. Dont want it to end.
Can i get a thumbs up or down about the episode?
If you guys believe that Nora was telling the truth, do you guys think it would've been better to have an episode or two spending time in this alternate reality? Does having this alternative reality Nora described left as ambiguous in nature make up for the fact that these conceivable episodes could've been some of the best in the series? Like imagine this was actually a 9 or 10 episode season with 1 or 2 episodes based on Nora's monologue at the end. Doesn't that sound like a stronger season overall? I think you could've shown this alternative reality and still left it ambiguous as it is now. It's a bit of a misstep to skip over it imo
If you guys believe that Nora was telling the truth, do you guys think it would've been better to have an episode or two spending time in this alternate reality? Does having this alternative reality Nora described left as ambiguous in nature make up for the fact that these conceivable episodes could've been some of the best in the series? Like imagine this was actually a 9 or 10 episode season with 1 or 2 episodes based on Nora's monologue at the end. Doesn't that sound like a stronger season overall? I think you could've shown this alternative reality and still left it ambiguous as it is now. It's a bit of a misstep to skip over it imo
What if this was a 10 ep season, and episode 1-7 were as shown but episode 8 is Nora going through the machine. She goes through everything she described, but when she comes back from the other world, she basically 'wakes up' inside the machine she originally departed through, and only a few moments have passed and she's not sure if it was real or not, like Kevin's afterlife adventures.
No, that sounds terrible.
did you find kevin's alternate reality adventures terrible?
I don't think I believe Nora's story. If they had a machine on the other side to bring them back to the 98% world, why not send more people back through? Regardless, that doesn't really matter. What matters is that Kevin believes her. What a great finale!
Only Nora and the other people who came over know it's possible to go to the other side. Of those people who crossed over I assume very few would want to go back and of the very few who would want to go back there's probably very few of them who would know about the guy who made the machine and then very few of those who could actually find him.
If you guys believe that Nora was telling the truth, do you guys think it would've been better to have an episode or two spending time in this alternate reality? Does having this alternative reality Nora described left as ambiguous in nature make up for the fact that these conceivable episodes could've been some of the best in the series? Like imagine this was actually a 9 or 10 episode season with 1 or 2 episodes based on Nora's monologue at the end. Doesn't that sound like a stronger season overall? I think you could've shown this alternative reality and still left it ambiguous as it is now. It's a bit of a misstep to skip over it imo
It's almost as if TV is a collaborative effort that's the sum of many people's contributions and you either listen to the sum of those parts and make a show better like Better Call Saul or you fight against it and make How I Met Your Mother.Man, that's so weird, it's almost like... Lindelof doesn't really know what's going on in his own stories?!