LOST..... How do you think it will end

It's not going to be a sci-fi resolution, it's all about spirituality and ancient civilizations etc. As I said, that will probably branch off with there being different realms, higher and lower, and the axis mundi, remember The Lamp Post station, the big map on the floor with all of the markings, some of those were representative of where people think the axis mundi is in real life.
 
That almost just blew my mind, apart from its pretty poorly done and I swear their roles swapped over a few times!

EDIT: Actually it appears they're the wrong way round throughout. It depicts Jack as MiB and Locke as Jacob, which thus far is wrong. It would be quite a major twist If they were to switch sides soon (assuming Jacob can also take the appearance of dead people on the island). I guess the guy who made the video just did it wrong for lolz.


he did that vid last oct so showed some foresight there I guess. Maybe matches the whole candidate thing quite well, since Jacob says he'll be replaced if killed


Not sure this latest episode was any great explanation but lost generally does the flashback thing best. trying to make the present plot seem logical is a lost cause :p

I'm waiting for desmond to make an appearance, I think they said they'll have most characters return briefly


http://www.caffeine-headache.net/weblog/blastDoorMapOverlay.jpg
 
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Awesome episode :) Been waiting to find out about Richard for a very... long.. time. There were so many theories about him. It was just such a beautiful episode as well.

Black Rock smashing the statue to pieces was a very strange explanation as well :confused: Surely something that is smaller, hollow, made of weaker material and held together by nails would be the first to smash to pieces rather than a big stone statue.

I now await to hear more about whats with all the Egyptian hieroglyphics and architecture. And how old Jacob is, how many years has he kept the MIB bottled and were there others before him.
 
Awesome episode :) Been waiting to find out about Richard for a very... long.. time. There were so many theories about him. It was just such a beautiful episode as well.

Black Rock smashing the statue to pieces was a very strange explanation as well :confused: Surely something that is smaller, hollow, made of weaker material and held together by nails would be the first to smash to pieces rather than a big stone statue.

- as has been said before..tidal waves. Also the fact that the statue has probably been there for hundreds if not thousands of years so its probably been weakened somewhat.

I now await to hear more about whats with all the Egyptian hieroglyphics and architecture. And how old Jacob is, how many years has he kept the MIB bottled and were there others before him.

Indeed this is the part im most interested in, where all the heiroglyphs and ancient ruins play into things. As for the MIB/Jacob story, episode 15 'Across the sea' will be entirely centric to those two characters with no other series regulars appearing in that episode, according to Michael Emerson (Ben Linus).
 
Sigh.
These is just no pleasing some people :)

I think the point everyone is missing is this:

Richard got shipwrecked on The Island sailing from the Canaries to America via The Atlantic. Oceanic 815 flew from Sydney to L.A. via The Pacific.

Therefor, unless it's a massive continuity error, The Island must have been moved at least once between The Black Rock getting shipwrecked and the fairly recent past (circa 1970s).
 
I think the point everyone is missing is this:

Richard got shipwrecked on The Island sailing from the Canaries to America via The Atlantic. Oceanic 815 flew from Sydney to L.A. via The Pacific.

Therefor, unless it's a massive continuity error, The Island must have been moved at least once between The Black Rock getting shipwrecked and the fairly recent past (circa 1970s).

I thought they said in one episode that the Island moves around
 
It doesn't say there going to america. they say new world. Which could easily be Australia.

I very much doubt that. it is possible but very unlikely. The usual route for trade in 1867 would have been The Clipper Route. Down the west coast of Africa, around The Cape of Good Hope and into the Southern Ocean. This would have taken advantage of the persistent Westerly winds around the equator. It makes much more sense to do this rather than sailing across the Atlantic then having to cross into the Pacific and then down to OZ.

The return journey from Australia would have taken them across the pacific and around Cape Horn then into the Atlantic but not the 'outward bound' journey.

I thought they said in one episode that the Island moves around

Yes but it was quite a big undertaking when Ben did it and The Island ended up under the ocean. I got the impression that moving The Island was a pretty big feat and usually only happened when something drastic was going on, hence me saying that it must have been moved at least once in the last 100 years. I was sort of speculating as to why it would have been moved and whether we'd find out.
 
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I think the point everyone is missing is this:

Richard got shipwrecked on The Island sailing from the Canaries to America via The Atlantic. Oceanic 815 flew from Sydney to L.A. via The Pacific.

Therefor, unless it's a massive continuity error, The Island must have been moved at least once between The Black Rock getting shipwrecked and the fairly recent past (circa 1970s).

We already know the island moves, Eloise Hawking told us this in the Lamppost.
 
I very much doubt that. it is possible but very unlikely. The usual route for trade in 1867 would have been The Clipper Route. Down the west coast of Africa, around The Cape of Good Hope and into the Southern Ocean. This would have taken advantage of the persistent Westerly winds around the equator. It makes much more sense to do this rather than sailing across the Atlantic then having to cross into the Pacific and then down to OZ.

The return journey from Australia would have taken them across the pacific and around Cape Horn then into the Atlantic but not the 'outward bound' journey.



Yes but it was quite a big undertaking when Ben did it and The Island ended up under the ocean. I got the impression that moving The Island was a pretty big feat and usually only happened when something drastic was going on, hence me saying that it must have been moved at least once in the last 100 years. I was sort of speculating as to why it would have been moved and whether we'd find out.

The island moves geographically of its own accord, as Eloise said. It moves temporally (which is what Ben did) only if someone plays with its funny wheel.
 
the Black Rock disappeared in 1881, on a return voyage from a gold mining operation in the South Indian Ocean. Perhaps more interesting than the fact the ship was lost were the circumstances preceding and following its disappearance. According to traders on Papua New Guinea, the ship sailed away from port in an Easterly direction, rather than West to Africa, where it would exchange gold from the mines in Indonesia and Papua New Guinea for more slaves. According to the ship's manifest that was discovered,
 
We already know the island moves, Eloise Hawking told us this in the Lamppost.

I know this. that's why I said The Island must have moved.

The island moves geographically of its own accord, as Eloise said. It moves temporally (which is what Ben did) only if someone plays with its funny wheel.

I did not know this. I though The Island had to be moved geographically as well.


As with everything in LOST, nothing is ever simple is it? :p

If they were in the South Indian Ocean and sailing East then they still wouldn't have gone near The Pacific. So we can surmise that at some point between The Black Rock being wrecked and The Darma Initiative turning up, that The Island was in The Southern Ocean or in the South Indian Ocean.
 
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