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Matt Steele
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I don't think this is true. Lars seen drinking a shitload of Diet Coke w/ Lemon in the studio. This comment is the first time I've seen anyone ever point this out, and I've seen the film probably 10 times. I could be wrong, but if you can point out when in the movie this happens I'd be more inclined to believe it.

I'm an unabashed Metallica fan, and have been for almost 20 years. I came away honestly thinking Lars was not as much of a dick as I thought he'd be, and that James Hetfield, my hero for years, the man who inspired me to pick up a guitar, was much, much more of an asshole than I'd ever think. Granted, he had just come

Exactly. I did not know anything about the movie going into it, so for the first half of the movie, I kept thinking "this will be great for Zachary to see when he's older" and it seemed like a really sweet gesture on the part of the filmmaker.

If the ending was supposed to be "life goes on," why the hell wouldn't they just show Meadow entering the restaurant and sitting down at the table, and THEN cut to black? A) Because Chase has a huge ego and needed that "holy shit" moment, and he gave that to everyone by being completely ambiguous. B) Because Tony got

That doppleganger's name? Kevin Finnerty, of course.

Absolutely. "You can go now, brother" is my favorite line in the whole series.

Even though he almost killed Daniel (and urinated all over him), I love the character of Bobby Dean. That moment with Jared was great. You could tell this season that he did not get any satisfaction from the revenge he took against Daniel. The scene where Jared spies on the Dean home and sees Bobby come home to Judy,

He was a little boy, who wanted to be a big boy.

I wish you would have directly asked him how he felt about being referenced in "Lose Yourself" during the 8 Mile question. That must have been flattering, considering that's now probably the most ubiquitous rap song of the past 15 years.

That was the one movie I was really looking forward to hearing him discuss. He did direct it. Of all the mid-90s baseball movies aimed at kids, Rookie of the Year is definitely #2 on my list (behind The Sandlot, obviously).

The first time Locke encounters the monster, he also disguises himself as a bright light of sorts, I'm guessing similar to the light that comes from the "heart of the island". I love when Locke tells Eko what he saw, and Eko's priceless response. "That… is NOT what I saw."

I never had a problem with Nadia finding Sayid either. He's the one who freed her and gave her a chance at having a good life, of course she would want to be there to reconnect with him.

I forgot about that. I loved that line, because that was my theory all along. And in a way, it was correct. I mean, correct in the sense that those people got sent back to 2007 where they "should've" been all along, and it took their 2007 selves out of the past, leading to the events of the past to continue to happen

My only gripe with that is that there was never any good explanation as to why setting off the bomb would send them all back to the day the plane crashed, except it wouldn't actually crash. Time travel hurts my brain, and Faraday and Jack never really explained the logic behind that (and neither did the writers of the

Exactly. Season 6 Jack, after the Lighthouse incident, became the guy people wanted him to be all along, and it was brilliant.

I think Jack also had motivation here to not give up. When Charlie was essentially dead, he kept trying to save him until it finally worked. He thought he could do the same for Boone and achieve the same result, even though it was obvious to everyone else that it was not going to work.

As much as people hated "The End," those emotional moments throughout the episode still get to me. Evangeline Lily's awakening in particular during that scene really gets to me.

I also loved Boone and Hurley's scene in The End, where it's clear their friendship picked up right where it left off on the Island (although I don't remember too many interactions between the two from this season).

And now I'm laughing thinking of the look on his face while he watches Nick rock out on the drums to Rush's "The Spirit of Radio". That cold open to that episode might be my favorite in the history of television.

The whole theme of missed connections and people all affecting one another is there from the very first episode of Lost. Nothing that happened to bring any of those people together was coincidental, it was all orchestrated in one way or another by Jacob, MiB, or the Island itself. So those literal confrontations and