'Lost' Star OK With Series Finale
Terry O'Quinn says it suited him and he's moved on
Former "Lost" star Terry O'Quinn tells TMZ he's lost no sleep over the series finale that many fans considered an insult to their loyalty and intelligence.
"I was OK with it," said O'Quinn, who played John Locke, a paraplegic who found himself able to walk once arriving on the island.
Video: Watch full episodes and clips of 'Lost'
It turns out the J.J. Abrams series -- which ran from 2004 to 2010 on ABC -- was good at asking questions, not answering them. The revelation that all the characters were dead, so logic never really applied, allowed the writers to abandon loose ends rather than tie them up -- such as the deal with the numbers, what Walt (Malcolm David Kelley) saw that frightened him enough to want to leave the island, and dozens of others.
Need a refresher? Find out more about the 'Lost' series finale
When asked whether fans still complain, Locke replied, "No, I don't get a lot of stuff about it" and noted that the cast "sort of finished it and walked away."
Here's the video:
Still don't understand how anyone that watched the show from beginning all the way through could think was horrible ending. No, didn't all questions (number thing was curious about, among others)..but was about the characters! To this day have never cared more for tv characters like did them. Still thinking of Jack dying on the island tears me up! & Sun & Jin, poor souls...& Juliet, cried like baby when she died. THAT'S what it was about! No other show has touched me more, still miss them, lol... that's sad.
When asked whether fans still complain, Locke replied, "No, I don't get a lot of stuff about it" and noted that the cast "sort of finished it and walked away."
Umm....I believe "Locke" was his name on the show. How about referring to him at O'Quinn. This is a terribly inaccurate article.
I wonder what Evangeline Austin, Jorge Hurley, and Matthew Shepherd have to say about the finale?
I think there was no way the writers could have ended the show that would have satisfied some of Lost-loyalists. I mean after all, they killed off what, imho, is THE best network show ever. Now we are grieving. And, unfortunately, one way of grieving is to get mad at the deceased As stated earlier, I loved the ending, but even I felt some disappointment, which I soon recognized as being due to a large Lost-shaped hole in my heart. Btw, Alcatraz and Person of Interest are good attempts, worthy of viewing, but will never replace Lost in our hearts.
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Deanna Barnert | Los Angeles, Calif.
Entertainment journalist Deanna "TVDeeva" Barnert visits sets, interviews industry players and critiques the final product. Buzz's daytime TV queen covers it all for MSN TV, but loves her sitcoms, soaps and any juicy drama that doesn't call itself Reality TV.



