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Rafa
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True, but when you start introducing new mysteries and giving clues of possible answers, the narrative starts indicating that the paranormal stuff will get more stakes.

I have a feeling that the disappearance and the ghostly apparitions are somehow connected; the idea that there’re special places such as Miracle or Australia promises that the show won’t hesitate in getting deeper with the paranormal stuff- which is totally cool with me.

I know that Damon Lindelof has repeatedly assured in interviews that there will be no resolution to the mysteries that appear in the show. But I can’t stop thinking that it's just a way to take away the pressure he had in Lost and do whatever the fuck he wants with all the paranormal stuff.

I see a lot of resemblance between the Patty that Kevin sees and the Caprica Six angel that Gaius Baltar saw in Battlestar Galactica.

I LOVE how attached this season is to current events; making the Syrian conflict the main plot gives a lot more transcendence to the show than when they just invented horrible villains that no one could identify with.

Carrie is off her meds and starts doing crazy bipolar things.

How fucking awesome was that murder scene? These guys really know how to top themselves.

I love how every season of the show sticks with events that are currently happening in real life; it makes the plot so much compelling and interesting.

I really liked season 1, but the first couple of episodes of S2 didn’t really work. The idea of having 4 points of view is good in theory, but for now is just making even slower a narrative that already had its problems last season.

I'm the only one that thinks that Quinn should be the main lead of the series?

Carrie and Saul aren't talking at the beginning of the season but end up being best friends.

The thing with this show is that you never end up really knowing the characters, because you just see different points of view about them; never the whole truth.

Who the fuck are those Mexicans? Why everybody starts shooting and dying?

I hope that the revelation of the 'Fight club- Tyler doesn't exist!' arc comes soon, because it seems too obvious to treat it as a real surprise.

I would put 6 before 2, but the rest is exactly as I think

I've always thought the same! He had time enough to survive, because the hole in the glass wasn’t too big and they had plenty of time to go out before it flooded.

Seeing this scene in context, Walt’s apparition seems to be
an Island representation, an aspect of the mythology of the show that the final season didn’t address as much as I would have liked.

Sawyer killing Ton is not out of character at all; remember that he had already killed a person in Australia and had recently culminated his revenge to
Anthony Cooper. So it fits that in this episode we see the darker side of
Sawyer, although in future seasons he’ll mature and end up living behind all
his darkness.

The obviousness of this surprise seen in retrospect reminds me of ‘Walkabout’, were no one anticipated Locke’s situation in the first place, but seeing the episode again you can see all the seeds the writers planted.

HAHAHA that was my initial reaction too! I passed from being
really pissed by the idea that Jack and Kate knew before the crash to being totally amused after acknowledging that it was a fucking flash-forward.