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[42] Richard Roeper gave the episode an A+ rating, calling it a "great finale to one of the best TV shows of all time." [43] Not all critics were satisfied with the episode: the British newspapers The Guardian and The Daily Telegraph both reported that "The End" received negative reviews and disappointed its viewers.
Lost, which has just been added to Netflix in the US, has the most misunderstood finale of all time.. Upon its initial broadcast, the divisive two-parter caused a large number of disappointed ...
This episode features the last appearance of Harold Perrineau as a main cast member. The episode features the last appearance of actor Harold Perrineau, whose character Michael dies in an explosion, as a main cast member. The character of Michael was absent for the entire third season of Lost and returned midway through the fourth season in "Ji ...
This episode breaks the tradition of ending with the "LOST" title screen, with the words in white and a black background. Instead, "LOST" is in black, and the background is white. The Swan construction site was built in the same place the Hatch was shown in seasons 1 and 2, in He'eia. Due to being in a state park area, the producers had to get ...
Lost is extremely different from this point onwards and the episode marks the last time all the characters are in one place before they split into team Jack and Locke. Quietly devastating, truth ...
7. "Numbers" (season 1, episode 18) Lost's penchant for dark humor is perhaps best exemplified in "Numbers," the first episode dedicated to Hugo "Hurley" Reyes.The flashback sequences revealed ...
Beginning with the 2007–2008 television season, the final 48 episodes would have been aired as three seasons with 16 episodes each, with Lost concluding in its sixth season. Due to 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike, the fourth season featured 14 episodes, and season 5 had 17 episodes. Season six was planned to have 17 episodes, too. [9]
A featurette called "Lost: On Location" features cast and crew discussing production of select episodes, including "Through the Looking Glass". The episode was rerun for the first time on January 30, 2008, with on-screen text in the lower third of the screen, similar to VH1's Pop-up Video. [50]