John Harker
Definitely doesn't make things up as he goes along.
how about not creating a show or writing a book where 2% of the world disappears anyway?
Why bother responding to him at all?
how about not creating a show or writing a book where 2% of the world disappears anyway?
Did we really need more ambiguity? It would've been more interesting if they, for once, weren't ambiguous.
Even Game of Thrones lets the good guys win now and then.
Had they filmed it, I'm not sure you'd have that.
Based on the fact that people believed that everything Kevin saw in the afterlife was all in his head, I think you'd still have people wondering if everything Nora saw was made up or "in her head". It would've still made for a pretty damn cool episode.
I don't know, did she? All we have is what she's telling Kevin, and we're assuming she's lying, here.She said that she couldn't because it had been to long once she'd made it through whatever she went through. Regardless of the truth of the story, Nora experienced something.
So she couldn't... for some unknown reason? That's it? You're okay with that?And by time it was over, she thought it had been too long a time. It doesn't matter whether she went someplace else or not, she experienced a change, and that affected her ability, willingness, whatever, to return to Kevin.
What return? Again, we're assuming she's lying, there. We don't even know if she was really "thinking about Kevin, wanting to be with Kevin". Clearly, she did nothing to be with him, quite on the contrary.All of the "thinking about Kevin, wanting to be with Kevin," shit occurs after her return, not during.
(Again, it's not a choice if she couldn't, but it is if she could but didn't want to.)Whether she made the choice not to make contact because she literally couldn't or didn't want to doesn't matter.
Sorry if there was a misunderstanding, I didn't mean to say you were.I'm not suggesting that Nora hallucinated anything.
If that was all some bullshit excuse she made up on the spot, I don't know that I would call that illuminating "intense self-reflection", really...I'm saying that Nora's story serves the same function as Kevin's bullshit. They both arrived at a new understanding of themselves via intense self-reflection.
Again: did she? If she lied, we know nothing about what she might have experienced during all those years... save for the fact she was still avoiding Kevin when that segment began, which doesn't exactly hint at some transformation or character growth we were not privy to, quite on the contrary (and neither does that scene where she confronts the nun, for that matter).Nora's journey served her. Nora making up a story about crossing over doesn't mean she sat on her ass for 10 fucking years. She experienced transformation and dressed it up in whatever narrative treated it best.
Well... I don't know that it would have actually been more interesting, but we could definitely do with less of that "it's ambiguous therefore interesting" bullshit, that's for sure.Did we really need more ambiguity? It would've been more interesting if they, for once, weren't ambiguous.
I could see that, sure. But then, she changes her mind during the last episode, and instead of her finally swallowing her pride, or finally forgiving Kevin, or something like that, she gets back with him by making up some outrageous lie.So I was thinking more about Nora, and if there's one thing I know for sure about her it's that she's stubborn as hell. If she didn't go through with it, it makes total sense to me that she would just want to shut down and hide away in shame. Nora has a history of running away. In the first season finale, she was on her way to leave Kevin before she found Lily. In the second season, she took off when Kevin told her about his chats with Patti. When Kevin basically tells her to fuck off and go be with her kids, there was no way she'd consider running back to him, even if she really wanted to, especially if it meant having to admit that she backed out of using the machine. Even in her story, true or not, she runs away from her family without saying a word to them.
What return? Again, we're assuming she's lying, there. We don't even know if she was really "thinking about Kevin, wanting to be with Kevin". Clearly, she did nothing to be with him, quite on the contrary.
I guess I could maybe buy that... but one would also wonder why said scientist only did that for Nora. Did he just not care?After discussing it with my friends, actually Nora's story makes no sense. The few people left on Earth, assuming some must have died like kids and babies, would have made it difficult to get from australia to NY, and then finding that scientist, who would then build a machine it took a team of people to manufacture and build all by himself just to send one person back...
Well, yeah. I mean, who gives a fuck about the rest of the world? And it's not like anybody else would volunteer, right?Why would the theoretical Dr. Van Eeghen, not build a machine to come back and say it works? My answer to that would be, hes so happy that he got over onto the other side and was reunited with whoever he wanted to that he was basically like, I know it works, Im not going to go through the trouble and the risk attached to not being able to get back a second time. Why bother? Its sort of like, Ive been to the moon once.
Jeez, you don't think it might possibly have something to do with all the supernatural bullshit you've been adding on top of the departure? Maybe?What do you expect the audience to think? If you had to put a number, like 60 percent think shes telling the truth, 40 dont?
I guess what Im at least learning conversationally as people are starting to watch the finale, or Im getting interviewed about it, is that theres a larger proportion of people who havent even considered the possibility that shes not telling the truth than I anticipated. If I ask if they believed her, they go, What? Thats surprising to me. At the very least, I thought her story would smell fishy and then people would decide whether or not to believe it. The fact that they just take it completely and totally at face value that its the truth has been surprising to me.
She was a ghost in both realities and she could finally be honest about her feelings on her place in the world to Kevin.
Things like that or "I don't lie" are clearly there to make you consider the possibility that she made that story up, sure."it makes for a better story"
- the nun in the last episode
I think that's all the clue we need. Nora told a better (made up) story because the truth (running away in grief) made her too ashamed.
After discussing it with my friends, actually Nora's story makes no sense. The few people left on Earth, assuming some must have died like kids and babies, would have made it difficult to get from australia to NY, and then finding that scientist, who would then build a machine it took a team of people to manufacture and build all by himself just to send one person back...
Jeez, you don't think it might possibly have something to do with all the supernatural bullshit you've been adding on top of the departure? Maybe?
Yeah, the "he built me one" part sounded off. She chose to talk about how long it took her to get around on the other side due to the shortage of people/expertise, but getting a large, sophisticated machine built was like snapping her fingers-- zero details. Not that I feel sure either way but that part specifically didn't sit right with me.
Yeah, and it seems Lindelof had Laurie live in the end because the other writers had a problem with her suicide... *cough*gotta love the Lindelof hate. There are a bunch of writers on the series.
Solo came back.
Erigu doing multiple quotes.
Lindelof is BACK!
I'm totally in the "it doesn't matter of she was telling the truth or not" camp. Kevin believed her, which was good enough for me.
Yeah, and it seems Lindelof had Laurie live in the end because the other writers had a problem with her suicide... *cough*
Is it weird to anyone else that the person who supposedly hated this show from beginning to end seems to be the one most invested in it?
I'm just paying attention, man!Is it weird to anyone else that the person who supposedly hated this show from beginning to end seems to be the one most invested in it?
I'm totally in the "it doesn't matter of she was telling the truth or not" camp. Kevin believed her, which was good enough for me.
whut do the goat and birds mean?
I just wish I were here since day one! I feel awful that I slept on this show until it was almost over. I'd have loved to have been knee deep in the S2 discussion.
I'm not sure what it says about me, or the audience at large (as I assume I'm not the only one), that I so readily believed Nora's story and didn't even consider the idea that she was lying. There's something to unpack there that feels very resonant to the show and especially Nora's character, who is professionally and personally vested in mythbusting these types of stories, that feels like kind of a perfect way to wrap that up.
He's been doing this since 2004 and LOST, if you really want a plot twist. He has devoted countless hours of his existence to critiquing the work of a man he clearly hates. Which, okay, fair enough, far be it for me to tell people how to live their life. But what is so strange to me is that I never see him in other GAF threads for TV shows. I'm not saying he isn't there, perhaps the shows he watches don't overlap with mine, but I've only every seen him in the Lindelof show threads, and he's prolific in them.
This is how I took it:
Birds returning = love returning
Goat trapped on fence = Nora trapped in the bathroom, victim of her own self-imposed isolation, struggling to break free
He's been doing this since 2004 and LOST, if you really want a plot twist. He has devoted countless hours of his existence to critiquing the work of a man he clearly hates. Which, okay, fair enough, far be it for me to tell people how to live their life. But what is so strange to me is that I never see him in other GAF threads for TV shows. I'm not saying he isn't there, perhaps the shows he watches don't overlap with mine, but I've only every seen him in the Lindelof show threads, and he's prolific in them.
After discussing it with my friends, actually Nora's story makes no sense. The few people left on Earth, assuming some must have died like kids and babies, would have made it difficult to get from australia to NY, and then finding that scientist, who would then build a machine it took a team of people to manufacture and build all by himself just to send one person back...
And then it begs the question of why did she yell something right as the water reached her chin, there's literally no other explanation than calling out for them to stop.
So yeah, although the idea of there being a parallel reality where the opposite happened is an awesome idea, her story unfortunately is too farfetched even for The Leftovers.
I'm going to bungle this paraphrasing horrendously, so my apologies, but in arguing with the nun about the missing birds, Nora says something to the effect that they are trained to do one thing, which is come home.
S1 ends with Kevin coming home to Nora. S2 ends with Kevin coming home to Nora. S3 ends with Kevin finally finding Nora, them finally being able to love each other completely and move past the departure and their baggage and be together. The doves are gone until Kevin returns, confesses everything, Nora tells her tale, they reconcile and can finally move forward. In effect, Kevin has come home again. And then the doves return to symbolize that. Because Kevin, like the doves, was trained to do one thing: go home. It's how I took it, anyway.
What a brilliant show.
Yeah, and it seems Lindelof had Laurie live in the end because the other writers had a problem with her suicide... *cough*
I'm going to bungle this paraphrasing horrendously, so my apologies, but in arguing with the nun about the missing birds, Nora says something to the effect that they are trained to do one thing, which is come home.
S1 ends with Kevin coming home to Nora. S2 ends with Kevin coming home to Nora. S3 ends with Kevin finally finding Nora, them finally being able to love each other completely and move past the departure and their baggage and be together. The doves are gone until Kevin returns, confesses everything, Nora tells her tale, they reconcile and can finally move forward. In effect, Kevin has come home again. And then the doves return to symbolize that. Because Kevin, like the doves, was trained to do one thing: go home. It's how I took it, anyway.
What a brilliant show.
Yeah, and it seems Lindelof had Laurie live in the end because the other writers had a problem with her suicide... *cough*
I just find it amusing that it looks like the other writers were frustrated with Lindelof's "grenade", as the article put it. I empathize.Who cares what the behind-the-scenes reasoning is?
Well... My exact words:You were one of the people criticizing Laurie's suicide because it seemed unearned. Frankly you should be pleased with her being alive.
So, yeah, it makes a tiny bit more sense to me that way. Now, the scene merely feels ridiculously manipulative in retrospect, yay!
I'm going to bungle this paraphrasing horrendously, so my apologies, but in arguing with the nun about the missing birds, Nora says something to the effect that they are trained to do one thing, which is come home.
S1 ends with Kevin coming home to Nora. S2 ends with Kevin coming home to Nora. S3 ends with Kevin finally finding Nora, them finally being able to love each other completely and move past the departure and their baggage and be together. The doves are gone until Kevin returns, confesses everything, Nora tells her tale, they reconcile and can finally move forward. In effect, Kevin has come home again. And then the doves return to symbolize that. Because Kevin, like the doves, was trained to do one thing: go home. It's how I took it, anyway.
What a brilliant show.
He's been doing this since 2004 and LOST, if you really want a plot twist. He has devoted countless hours of his existence to critiquing the work of a man he clearly hates. Which, okay, fair enough, far be it for me to tell people how to live their life. But what is so strange to me is that I never see him in other GAF threads for TV shows. I'm not saying he isn't there, perhaps the shows he watches don't overlap with mine, but I've only every seen him in the Lindelof show threads, and he's prolific in them.