andythinkpad
Member
Finally saw it. Shockingly happy ending. Not sure how I feel about it.
I never bought into the whole, "let the mystery be", thing. I find that incredibly annoying, honestly.
Finally saw it. Shockingly happy ending. Not sure how I feel about it.
Yup, bingo. You can still complain that she doesn't have the right to make that choice for everyone, but that's how I read it. She didn't want to put anyone else in the world through the experience of seeing their family having moved completely on.
The series finale of The Leftovers went out on a high note in the ratings. Sundays conclusion of the HBO show delivered its biggest total audience (1.05 million) since the Season 1 finale and tied a season high among adults 18-49 at 0.4.
It's kind of natural to expect things that are set up to eventually get paid off, in a story. Clearly, Lindelof doesn't give a fuck about that, but still.OK, but they said it before episode 1 ever aired. And it's in the theme song.
your annoyance is unjustified. it told you what it was before you started watching.
OK, but they said it before episode 1 ever aired. And it's in the theme song.
your annoyance is unjustified. it told you what it was before you started watching.
I thought I'd try and elaborate a bit regarding that particular point...So, yeah, in this case, outside of the show (which might be considered cheating a little bit, but fine, let's go with it), they basically asked the audience to just accept that the Departure, the mysterious event that set everything off, would never get an explanation.
When people ask "why was Kevin immortal, anyway?", the answer they expect really, really isn't "so we could have this scene where he has an epiphany about his relationship with Nora". That doesn't even begin to address the weirdness of his condition.How could you possibly say that Kevin being immortal during the series had no payoff for character development or helped with the character study when it was one of the core themes with not only Kevin, but Nora as well?
OK, but they said it before episode 1 ever aired. And it's in the theme song.
your annoyance is unjustified. it told you what it was before you started watching.
They said before episode 1 that they would keep adding mysterious over 3 seasons, and never answer anything, and that in season 2 they would add a cheeky song that would make me realize I shouldn't want answers? Okay.
(I'm really wasting my time listing examples, aren't I?)Most of the plots were shown to be bullshit beliefs that weren't real or true. Even the bouts of "other world" by Kevin were shown to just be his imagination. Likely dying mind. We don't know why he never fully died, that's one of the only mysteries left without any plausible answer
Any any show has "mysterious". That's called plot.
(I'm really wasting my time listing examples, aren't I?)
Most shows don't have the main character become Jesus and never explain why. Not really sure why you're hitting me with the finger quotes when you know exactly what types of supernatural mysterious this show has, which go completely answered, that other shows either don't have, or if they do, they actually answer them. So, no, not every show has "mysterious".
Like I said, I never bought into this narrative that we shouldn't expect to know the answers to all the questions they keep posing, you obviously bought into it, heavenly I might add, so I'm not sure what else there is to say on the matter.
They weren't wrong about him being immortal, and being able to go to the afterlife, which is why they thought he was their Jesus-like figure. All things that were never explained, like, at all.
No other show in the world could have such an insane turn of events, never actually explained, and people just go "eh, it doesn't matter". Every show should have Iris DeMent's Let The Mystery Be so when you wonder, "why did this character betray this other character? None of this was set up", people can go, "let the mystery be".
Yeah, they were. It was all in his mind. He didn't actually go there. This was the entire point of episode 3x07
*sigh*your list isn't a list of mysteries.
They drew links between Kevin Sr. and the Dog Man who both talked to mysterious disembodied voices, showed, in that flashback to the day of the Departure, some weird old ladies who acted like they knew what was going to happen, had Kevin Sr. (again) appear in Kevin's Purgatory Hotel and later confirmed that he did experience that on his end as well, etc...
Yeah, they were. It was all in his mind. He didn't actually go there. This was the entire point of episode 3x07
Einchy said:Lindelof said the afterlife wasn't his imagination, so we can stop sweeping everything under the rug with, "it's not real" or "it's all in his head".
Kevin isn't invincible. His constant trips to the "afterlife" and back took a huge toll on his heart.
Speaking of which, has it been already discussed how Kevin is diagnosed with a heart condition sometime after his international assassin counterpart dies after the key to ending the world is extracted from his heart?
Kevin isn't invincible. His constant trips to the "afterlife" and back took a huge toll on his heart.
Speaking of which, has it been already discussed how Kevin is diagnosed with a heart condition sometime after his international assassin counterpart dies after the key to ending the world is extracted from his heart?
Can we agree that confirms Kevin's experience was a supernatural one?He didn't actually say that. He said it was something between Kevin's imagination and the afterlife. He also talked about Senior being in dreamtime when he communicates with Kevin at the hotel, which leads me to believe that that's also where Kevin is, and not the literal afterlife.
I mean, Kevin killed, by literally cutting its heart out, the part of him that was born to run. And in doing so, he also gave up the ability to come back from the dead. So I think him developing a heart problem afterwards is fitting. The next time Kevin dies is the last time, and he knows that and is at peace with it.
I take Kevin's trips to the other side to be a kind of limbo. It isn't "in his head", but nor is it the afterlife. It's a unique space and time where one transitions between being alive and dead.
Well, what are we calling the afterlife? Because I would call that the afterlife, anywhere you go to after dying, I say is an afterlife. I mean, I don't think he was in heaven, but he was in a place after his life ended.
I'm with you there - it's 100% not in his head and it's 100% real - I just don't know if "afterlife" is a word I feel is apt for it. That's why I was using limbo or purgatory. But it sure as hell isn't a dream or a mental state. I'm 100% with you on that.
I mean, we can play with semantics all day, and the whole notion is a little foggy to begin with, but I guess for me I liken it to someone who has undergone serious physical trauma and is no longer lucid or conscious. Like, say after a major car crash. Some die and some survive. For me, where Kevin goes after the poison/gunshot/drowning is to those precarious touch-and-go moments before a person either succumbs to their wounds or pulls through, and Kevin pulled through three times.
Way more than three? He was poisoned, he was shot, and he was drowned....what am I missing? Unless you're presuming he died of asphyxiation every time he put the plastic bag on? The only other one I could think of is the cinder block suicide attempt, but the earthquake saved him there.
Way more than three? He was poisoned, he was shot, and he was drowned....what am I missing? Unless you're presuming he died of asphyxiation every time he put the plastic bag on? The only other one I could think of is the cinder block suicide attempt, but the earthquake saved him there.
I feel like a lot of what he's experiencing is still brought about by his own mind. Like it's specific to him and informed by his thoughts. Not imagining it specifically but the space is unique to him.I'm with you there - it's 100% not in his head and it's 100% real - I just don't know if "afterlife" is a word I feel is apt for it. That's why I was using limbo or purgatory. But it sure as hell isn't a dream or a mental state. I'm 100% with you on that.
Incredible ending that reminded me of the one from The Last of Us. It doesn't matter if the things that Nora/Joel said to Kevin/Ellie were true or not, that was exactly the point of the last moments that left the answers up to interpretation.
There's an interview with Damon where he discusses the drop from 10 to 8 episodes, and what was dropped by losing 2 episodes - we'd have gotten a Murphy-centric episode in Texas (which would have slotted in as Episode 4) and a Tommy/Jill episode. I'd have loved to have seen those episodes, but, in the context of the season, dropping those 2 episodes was probably the right decision. Tommy and Jill really had no bearing on final season, and the Murphy men were active participants in Kevin's story line.
If you don't believe Nora's monologue then you believe Nora abandoned her dying brother and cut all relationship ties (the ties which precisely would have been what made her change her mind and abort the travel) and secluded herself away for no reason and out of the blue, despite her desire to reunite with Kevin (the desire which people here argue lead Nora to make-up this story XX years later -- why not find Kevin 5 minutes after she aborted the travel...?).
Out of the many interpretations you can come up with for this episode, choosing that Nora is lying is to choose to see the 'The Leftovers' in its weakest, poorest and worst creative light.
I disagree. It's not the lying that is out of Nora's character. It's what it means if she is indeed lying: abandoning her brother when he needs her the most. Not even attending his funeral. It flies in the face of the bonding we've seen the two share the past 2 episodes. It's pretending she's switching off any feelings for the people she knows (your example with Lily is perfect to illustrate how unlike Nora it would have been if she had cut all ties). We see it further with Nora being the only one to remember Erika and paying her a visit. Heck, even in her so-called 'exile' she has weekly phone calls with Laurie..Whether she was telling the truth or not, both options make complete sense and are true to her character