It was padded, and really, the only question that got answered was who brought the comic book to the island.
Oh, I don't know. In the simplest possible terms, one question this season was "Will they get the hatch open?" Yup. And we even got a peek inside. At least now we know it's *not* a handy air raid shelter equipped with provisions.
We also got a little more insight into why Jin went so ballistic about the watch, and was protective of Sun.
And, lame as it may sound, we also got a funny little illustration of Locke's whole destiny theory, by way of Hurley. As others have said, if ever fate was telling someone, Hey, listen up! Stay off the frickin' plane, it was evident with Hurley. So was it fate that he actually got on, or did he control his own destiny by making that plane?
AnthonyDe also asked why the black smoke, i.e. why would the Others make it known they were coming? Which is a good fucking question. Unless it's something as simple as a marker *for* the Others, i.e. we're heading out in the Incredibly! Convenient! Boat, we'll make a fire on the beach, and we'll know where to land when we get back.
The more I think about it, of course, the more the Others are bothering me. Because, hell, they had guns, and whatever was in that bottle that blew up the raft. They couldn't have stormed the beach and taken Walt whenever they wanted? Especially since every night, most people were sleeping?
Also, their whole shoot-and-explode-stuff M.O. doesn't so much jibe with the complicated "security system" on the island. Last night they looked more like the stand-guard-and-shoot variety instead of the sneaky, build-weird-traps type.
DX, you also said there should have been more. I guess it depends why you watch. No question, I want some resolution to the island's mysteries, too, eventually, but for now I'm just as interested in these people. I like the backstories. I like watching how a group of people who wouldn't necessarily have interacted otherwise are shown to have crossed paths before, and how their lives affect their behavior on the island.
Of course, I also watched The X-Files for eight seasons before giving up on the mythology making any kind of sense. (Signed, Big Fat Sucker)
Plus, Daniel Dae Kim with that longer, curlier hair? Rrowr.
At the DLA party Allyson and Kristen et all put on, he was very curly headed, and just too hot for words.
I thought it was a cruddy, disappointing finale and further proof that Abrams and the writers are more lost than the fans. But, then again, I thought that the Thin Red Line was a brilliant movie, so what do I know?
Kalshane, I've bookmarked your list post, thanks. (I was hoping someone would take the bait.)
What turned the smoke black? It looked like a simple fire to me.
How come everyone is so sure those Deliverance boat-folk were the Others? Did I miss something last night?
Maybe the Others are just as much trapped as any one else by the "security system" -- maybe they can only go so far before they end up being taken back to shore. The island is protecting itself from being discovered by the out side world.
And the Others think that Walt can get them away with his creepy mind powers.
Unless it's something as simple as a marker *for* the Others, i.e. we're heading out in the Incredibly! Convenient! Boat, we'll make a fire on the beach, and we'll know where to land when we get back.
I had postulated upthread that perhaps it was to send a signal to various tribes of Others that it was time to make their move.
I have to admit, the dynamite scenes bothered me too, and not just because they went on too long.
Dudes, you just watched someone who supposedly knew what he was doing blow himself up. Don't make us spend the next hour watching both the primary hunter/protector and the only doctor on the island fighting over it.
Find a measuring tape, pull down your pants and be done with it.
I had postulated upthread that perhaps it was to send a signal to various tribes of Others that it was time to make their move.
Ooops. Sorry. That's what I get for skimming. And skimming while a toddler is hanging on my leg, at that.
Question--do we know that the boat people who took Walt are really the Others? Maybe they're just working for the Others/listening to the voices that belong to The Others/just plain old pirates sailing the South Sea.
I also read Hurley's thumbs up to Walt as just general good will to anyone who would engage with him. However, that we were shown it means, to me, that they are one of the dichotomous pairs on the island (Jack and Locke being the other).
I think the people on the boat are the Others, and I don't think they want to get off the island. I think they drank the koolaid, and are the keepers of the island. However, I don't think it's their baby (or, at least, the people we saw aren't the ones in charge). There may be a Great and Powerful Oz. If so, I don't know whether Jack or Locke would be Dorothy. I don't see Walt joining the cult, unless JJ is really in love with the idea of child-as-mouthpiece-of-Eeeeevil.
There have been too many people who seem like they weren't supposed to be on that flight for me to think that anyone was actually not supposed to be.