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I just finished watching Lost. I didn't watch it in the previous decade, because everyone told me the ending was super bad. Now that I've finished it, I don't get it. What was so bad about it?

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[–] FaceDeer@fedia.io 48 points 18 hours ago (9 children)

As I recall, the main point of contention was that this was one of the first big "there's a big mystery and the whole series is one big story to unravel it and we totally have it all planned out, honest" series. And then it turned out that no, they didn't totally have it planned out, and they were just making crap up as they went and most of the profound "clues" people were trying to cobble together were basically meaningless.

Maybe the show runners managed to cobble something together out of them that was satisfying regardless, but still, it felt like quite the betrayal. History repeated itself with Battlestar Galactica, where the show kept insisting "they have a plan!" When no, they really did not.

[–] Artyom@lemm.ee 2 points 8 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) (1 children)

There was a big mystery from the beginning, they all died in the plane crash, and they were building an afterlife where they were all together. They did reveal it gradually, with a mounting number of conflicting facts.

Battlestar Galactica also had an overarching plan, that they would end up on Earth and restart the cycle.

[–] kokope11i@lemmy.world 3 points 7 hours ago

BSG is an interesting example. I'm in the middle of a rewatch. Yes on the Earth aspect.

But the opening credits always mention that the cylons have a plan. After the show was over Ronald D. Moore, the show runner, admitted they made up that line because it sounded cool. There was no cylon plan. Disappointing as that part of the show's mythology was teased and I would have liked to know more.

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