This was the story Damon wanted to tell. He began mapping out the season by deciding what the end would be and worked backward from there. You have the option of believing there was no explanation...
Type: Posts; User: Bev Vincent
This was the story Damon wanted to tell. He began mapping out the season by deciding what the end would be and worked backward from there. You have the option of believing there was no explanation...
This was the story Damon wanted to tell. He began mapping out the season by deciding what the end would be and worked backward from there. You have the option of believing there was no explanation...
I did too. Although bummed the show has ended, I do feel good closure.
Not once did I consider that the departed were, in a parallel world, the ones that stayed and vice versa. Very cool....
I read that. Sorry, I meant planned as in they have known the outcome of the show from Day one. Where Lost... I do not think that they did...[/QUOTE]
I don't think they knew where it was going...
I read that. Sorry, I meant planned as in they have known the outcome of the show from Day one. Where Lost... I do not think that they did...[/QUOTE]
I don't think they knew where it was going...
According to Lindelof, it was organic and not planned at all. In fact, they were nervous about whether Linn-Baker had the dramatic chops to pull off the heavy scene.
The Leftovers showrunner...
In the first season, it was mentioned that the entire cast of Perfect Strangers had been taken. Then, during the second season, it was revealed that Mark Linn-Baker had faked his disappearance and...
That's the third reference to Perfect Strangers in the series.
Not until next year.
Cause has nothing to do with it. It's Lindelof and the author of the novel upon which it's based.
Don't come to this show expecting any answers -- the event will almost certainly never be explained. The show is an exploration of the way people react to something mind-boggling. It's pretty bleak,...