Sci-Fi Drama ABC 2004-2010

Lost: The End

Season 6, Episodes 17-18 — "The End" (May 23, 2010)

7.2/10 Finale Rating
1,243 Theories
567 Continuations

Finale Summary

Quick Answer

In the Lost finale "The End," Jack Shephard sacrifices himself to save the Island by re-corking the Source of light, while his friends escape on the Ajira plane. In the flash-sideways timeline, the characters reunite in a church and "move on" together into the afterlife.

What Happens in the Lost Finale

  1. Desmond Hume enters the Source cave, the heart of the Island, believing he can destroy it and end the conflict once and for all.
  2. Desmond removes the stone cork from the Source pool, and the Island immediately begins to collapse — earthquakes rip through the landscape as the light goes out.
  3. With the cork removed, the Man in Black (in Locke's form) becomes mortal and vulnerable for the first time.
  4. Jack and the Man in Black (as Locke) engage in a brutal final fight on the cliffs overlooking the ocean during the Island's destruction.
  5. Kate shoots the Man in Black with a rifle, striking him from behind and wounding him.
  6. Jack kicks the Man in Black off the cliff to his death, ending his centuries-long imprisonment and his threat to leave the Island.
  7. Jack realizes someone must re-cork the Source to save the Island, and that the effort will likely kill him. He passes the role of Island protector to Hugo "Hurley" Reyes.
  8. Ben Linus agrees to serve as Hurley's second-in-command, his "number two," and the two begin a new era of Island guardianship.
  9. Jack descends into the Source cave and re-corks the stone, restoring the light and saving the Island from total destruction.
  10. Frank Lapidus, Claire Littleton, Kate Austen, James "Sawyer" Ford, Miles Straume, and Richard Alpert escape the Island aboard Ajira Flight 316.
  11. Jack, fatally wounded and exhausted, stumbles through the jungle to the bamboo field where he first woke up after the Oceanic 815 crash.
  12. Vincent the dog emerges from the jungle and lies down beside the dying Jack, so he does not have to die alone.
  13. Jack looks up through the bamboo and sees the Ajira plane fly overhead, knowing his friends made it to safety. He smiles.
  14. Jack's eye closes — a direct mirror of the pilot episode's opening shot, where his eye opened in this same bamboo field.
  15. In the flash-sideways timeline, each character experiences emotional triggers that cause them to remember their island lives — moments of love, connection, and sacrifice. They all gather at a church where Christian Shephard opens the doors to a brilliant white light, and together they "move on" into whatever comes next.

Key Emotional Beats

  • Jack and Locke's final confrontation: The series-long "man of science vs. man of faith" conflict reaches its literal and thematic conclusion on the cliffs, with Jack — now a man of faith — destroying the embodiment of Locke's stolen identity.
  • Sun and Jin's flash-sideways reunion: The couple, who drowned together in the submarine, remember their island lives simultaneously during a hospital ultrasound, their love transcending death.
  • Charlie and Claire's remembering: Charlie touches Claire's hand backstage at a concert, and both are flooded with memories of their island love — peanut butter, the baby, and the sacrifice.
  • Jack's death mirroring the pilot: The show's final image, Jack's eye closing in the bamboo field, is a perfect bookend to the series premiere's first image of his eye opening. The story begins and ends in the same place.
  • Vincent lying beside dying Jack: The dog's presence ensures Jack does not die alone, fulfilling the show's thesis: "live together, die alone."

Plot Closures

The Island is saved from destruction when Jack re-corks the Source. Hurley takes over as protector, promising a more compassionate guardianship than Jacob's manipulative reign. Kate, Sawyer, Claire, Lapidus, Miles, and Richard escape and presumably return to civilization. Jack's arc is complete: the broken man who wanted to fix everything finally does, giving his life to save his friends.

What Was Left Unresolved

  • The Numbers' full meaning: 4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42 — tied to the candidates and the Valenzetti Equation, but their deeper cosmic significance was never fully explained.
  • Walt's full significance: Walt Lloyd displayed unique psychic abilities and was "special," but his storyline was largely abandoned due to the actor's aging.
  • The Dharma Initiative's complete history: Many details about the Initiative's full research scope, additional stations, and ultimate goals remain unexplored.
  • The outrigger shooters: During the time-flashes in Season 5, the survivors were shot at from another outrigger. The identity of the shooters was never revealed.
  • The Man in Black's real name: Despite being one of the show's central antagonists across thousands of years, the Smoke Monster's original human name was never spoken.

Character Fates

Character Status Fate
Jack Shephard Dead Sacrificed himself to re-cork the Source and save the Island
Kate Austen Alive Escaped the Island on Ajira Flight 316
James "Sawyer" Ford Alive Escaped the Island on Ajira Flight 316
Hugo "Hurley" Reyes Alive Became the new Island protector
Benjamin Linus Alive Became Hurley's advisor and second-in-command
Desmond Hume Alive Survived the Source cave; returned home to Penny
Claire Littleton Alive Escaped the Island; reunited with Aaron
John Locke / MIB Dead Destroyed — kicked off the cliff by Jack after Kate shot him

Finale Review

Writing
7/10
Acting
10/10
Pacing
7/10
Closure
6/10

+ What Worked

  • Emotionally devastating performances from the entire cast, especially Matthew Fox as Jack and Terry O'Quinn as Locke
  • Jack's death in the bamboo field perfectly mirrors the pilot's opening, creating one of television's most poetic bookends
  • The flash-sideways reunion scenes are genuinely tear-jerking — Charlie and Claire, Sun and Jin, Sawyer and Juliet
  • Michael Giacchino's musical score is transcendent, elevating every emotional beat to something operatic and unforgettable
  • Hurley as the new Island protector was a perfect, earned choice — the heart of the show inheriting its soul

- What Didn't

  • Too many mythology questions left unanswered after six years of intricate mystery-building
  • The flash-sideways timeline felt like a detour to some viewers, consuming screentime that could have resolved island mysteries
  • Some character arcs felt rushed or unsatisfying — Sayid's redemption was too quick, Sun and Jin's submarine death felt forced
  • The "it was purgatory" confusion angered fans, made worse by ABC's decision to air empty plane wreckage over the credits
  • The Source and its literal cork mechanism felt too simple and vague for six years of elaborate mythological setup

Best Scene

Jack's death in the bamboo field with Vincent. After saving the Island, Jack stumbles through the jungle, bleeding and broken, to collapse in the exact spot where he first opened his eyes six years earlier. Vincent runs out of the trees and lies down beside him. Jack looks up, sees the Ajira plane soaring overhead, smiles knowing his friends are safe, and closes his eye. It is one of the most perfectly constructed final images in television history.

Best Line

"There are no shortcuts, no do-overs. What happened, happened. All of this matters."

Did It Honor the Show?

The Lost finale is a study in priorities. Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse made a conscious decision to prioritize emotional resolution over mythological closure, and whether that works for you largely determines whether you love or hate "The End." For viewers who came to Lost for the characters — for Jack's broken heroism, for Sawyer's walls, for Locke's faith, for Hurley's heart — the finale delivers a devastating and beautiful conclusion. The flash-sideways reunions are among the most emotionally powerful sequences the show ever produced.

For viewers who came for the puzzle box — for the Numbers, the Dharma Initiative, the whispers, the fertility issues, the time travel mechanics — the finale can feel like a deliberate evasion. The Source, a literal cave with a literal cork, reduces six years of intricate mythology to something frustratingly simple. The show that once made you believe every detail mattered ended by telling you that only the people mattered.

The truth is probably somewhere in the middle. "The End" is a deeply flawed, deeply moving piece of television. It earns its emotional catharsis even as it dodges its mythological debts. Jack's death is perfect. The reunions are perfect. The score is perfect. The answers are not. And depending on which Lost you fell in love with — the character drama or the mystery machine — that either ruins the finale or makes it transcendent.

Ending Explained

Quick Answer

No, the characters on Lost were NOT dead the whole time. Everything that happened on the Island was real. Only the flash-sideways in Season 6 was an afterlife construct — a place the characters created together so they could find each other after death and move on. The Island, the crash, the Others, the Dharma Initiative, the time travel — all of it really happened.

The Literal Ending

The finale resolves two parallel storylines. On the Island, the characters face their final crisis: the Man in Black (wearing Locke's form) plans to use Desmond to destroy the Island and escape. Jack opposes him and they agree to both go to the Source. Desmond removes the cork, which causes the Island to begin collapsing but also makes the Man in Black mortal. Jack fights and kills him, then passes the protector role to Hurley. Jack re-corks the Source, saving the Island, and dies from his injuries in the bamboo field where he first woke up.

Meanwhile, Kate, Sawyer, Claire, Lapidus, Miles, and Richard repair Ajira Flight 316 and fly off the Island to safety. Hurley and Ben remain as the Island's new guardians. Desmond survives and is eventually returned home.

In the flash-sideways timeline (which viewers initially believed was an alternate reality created by the hydrogen bomb), it is revealed that this world is actually a form of afterlife — a collectively-created "waiting room" where the characters exist after their deaths (which occur at different times: some on the Island, some years later off-Island). Through encounters with each other, they "remember" their real lives and their deepest connections. They gather in a church, where Christian Shephard opens the doors to a bright light, and they move on together.

The Thematic Ending

Lost was always, at its core, a show about damaged people finding connection. The mantra "live together, die alone" was introduced in the first season, and the finale delivers on it completely. The characters who spent six years learning to rely on each other, to love each other despite their brokenness, ultimately choose to wait for each other in the afterlife so they can move on together. No one has to face the unknown alone.

Jack's journey is the show's spine. He arrived on the Island a skeptic, a man of science, a fixer who could not fix himself. By the finale, he has become a man of faith. He accepts that some things are bigger than rational explanation. He stops trying to fix and starts believing. His sacrifice is not reluctant — it is an act of total faith. He does not know if the Island matters, if it is worth dying for. He believes it is. That is enough.

Symbolism

  • Jack's eye closing: The first image of the series was Jack's eye opening in the bamboo field. The last image is that same eye closing in that same field. Birth and death. Beginning and end. The entire show is contained in the opening and closing of one eye.
  • The bamboo field: Jack's journey begins and ends here. It is his personal garden of Eden — the place where he was reborn as a survivor and where he finally rests. The circular return suggests that his entire Island experience was one complete journey.
  • The church: The stained glass window behind Christian Shephard's coffin contains symbols from six major world religions: Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Taoism. The afterlife in Lost belongs to no single faith. It is universal.
  • The light: When Christian opens the church doors, light floods the room. This light mirrors the Source at the heart of the Island. Both represent the same thing: the fundamental mystery of existence, the thing that connects all living beings, the thing that cannot be explained but must be protected.
  • Vincent: The dog represents unconditional loyalty and companionship. His presence at Jack's death ensures that the show's hero does not die alone — the greatest fear Lost ever articulated.

What the Creators Said

"The show is about people who are lost and trying to find themselves. The whole flash-sideways story was about these characters who, after they died — whenever they died, whether it was on the Island or years later — created this place together so they could find each other again."

Damon Lindelof, co-creator and showrunner

"We felt that the heart of the show was always the characters and their relationships. The mythology was the frosting on the cake. The cake was the characters. And the finale reflects that priority. We knew some people would be frustrated by unanswered questions, but we felt strongly that the emotional ending was the right ending."

Carlton Cuse, co-showrunner

"I will say, regarding the footage of the plane wreckage that played over the credits — that was put there by ABC. It was not part of the show. It was not a statement about the show. It was intended as a transitional buffer, and it unfortunately led many people to believe the Island was not real. It was real. Everything on the Island happened."

Damon Lindelof, clarifying the credit sequence controversy

Theory Vault

Lost generated more fan theories than perhaps any other television series in history. Here are the most significant, with their final status.

Debunked
Lost

"They Were Dead the Whole Time"

The most persistent (and incorrect) Lost theory. Many viewers believed the crash of Oceanic 815 killed everyone and the Island was purgatory or limbo. This was fueled by the finale's flash-sideways afterlife reveal and, critically, by ABC's decision to air footage of empty plane wreckage over the closing credits — footage that was not part of the show.

Click to reveal full analysis

Evidence people cite: Too many coincidences connecting the passengers, the Numbers appearing everywhere, miraculous healings (Locke walking, Rose's cancer), the Island's impossible geography, and the final church scene.

Why it's wrong: The showrunners have explicitly and repeatedly confirmed that the Island events were real. Christian Shephard tells Jack directly in the finale: "Everything that ever happened to you is real. All those people in the church — they're real too." Only the flash-sideways in Season 6 was an afterlife construct. The characters lived, struggled, and some died on a very real Island. The ABC credits wreckage was a network decision, not a creative one, and it caused massive, lasting misunderstanding.

Confirmed
Lost

"The Island Is a Literal Cork Between Good and Evil"

The Island sits atop a source of electromagnetic and spiritual energy. If the cork is removed, this energy — interpreted as evil, chaos, or entropy — floods the world. Mother told this to Jacob, who told it to Richard. The finale literally showed a cork being removed and replaced.

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The evidence: Jacob used a wine bottle and cork as a metaphor when explaining the Island's purpose to Richard in "Ab Aeterno." The finale made the metaphor literal: the Source cave contains an actual stone cork over a pool of light. When Desmond removes it, destruction begins. When Jack replaces it, the Island is saved.

The debate: Is this too literal? Many fans felt the show reduced its most profound mystery to a simple plug. Is the "evil" being contained scientific (electromagnetic energy) or supernatural (pure malevolence)? Does the electromagnetism connect to the Valenzetti Equation and the Numbers? The show deliberately leaves the nature of the Source ambiguous, which is either its greatest strength or its greatest frustration.

Open
Lost

"Hurley Created a New Golden Age"

After becoming protector, Hurley (with Ben's help) ran the Island completely differently from Jacob. He let people come and go freely, was transparent instead of manipulative, and potentially found ways to use the Island's healing properties for good. The "new rules" Hurley made could have fixed everything Jacob broke.

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Evidence: Hurley's conversation with Ben about doing things differently than Jacob did. Ben's line in the flash-sideways, "You were a great number one," implies Hurley's tenure was successful and lasted a significant time. Hurley's empathetic, compassionate nature — his defining trait throughout the series — suggests he would lead with transparency and kindness rather than manipulation and secrecy.

Speculation: Could Hurley have used the Island's healing properties to help people? Could he have invited people to the Island rather than trapping them? Did he eventually find a way to neutralize the Source's dangers while preserving its benefits? The show leaves this story untold — one of its most tantalizing "what ifs."

Debunked
Lost

"The Flash-Sideways Was Created by the Nuclear Bomb"

When Juliet detonated the hydrogen bomb Jughead in the Season 5 finale, many theorized it literally created an alternate timeline — the flash-sideways. The show seemed to confirm this in Season 6's opening with the Island underwater. The truth was very different.

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What people thought: The bomb split the timeline. One timeline continued on the Island (the "original" timeline), while another branched off where Oceanic 815 never crashed and the Island was submerged. This would make Lost a story about parallel universes and quantum mechanics — a fitting conclusion for a show built on science fiction.

The truth: The flash-sideways was a collectively-created afterlife waiting room, not an alternate timeline. The bomb did not create a new universe. It actually caused the Incident it was meant to prevent, sending the characters back to the present day. "Whatever happened, happened" — the show's time travel rule was never broken. Juliet's dying words, "It worked," referred not to the bomb but to her flash-sideways awareness that the vending machine trick would work (her last conscious thought bridged both worlds).

Open
Lost

"Walt Was the Island's True Chosen One"

Walt Lloyd displayed unique abilities that no other character possessed: appearing in places he should not be, psychic projections, birds dying around him, and the Others' extreme interest in studying him. The show largely dropped his storyline due to actor Malcolm David Kelley's rapid aging.

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Evidence: Walt's powers were established early and consistently — the bird crashing into the window, appearing to Shannon and Sayid while still captive, projecting himself across space, the polar bear on the comic book seemingly manifesting. Tom Friendly's comment, "He's more than we bargained for," suggests the Others discovered abilities beyond anything they expected. The Room 23 brainwashing facility was used on Walt specifically. The 2010 epilogue "The New Man in Charge" featured Hurley and Ben recruiting Walt to return to the Island, suggesting his story was meant to continue.

Theory: Walt was supposed to be the ultimate protector — more powerful than any candidate, perhaps the person the Island was truly waiting for. The narrative constraints of real-time television (the actor aged years while the show's timeline covered months) forced the writers to pivot. Had the show been produced differently, Walt's arc may have culminated in him becoming the Island's guardian, not Hurley. His abilities — crossing between worlds, manifesting thoughts into reality — mirror the Island's own nature more closely than any other character's.

Fan Continuations

The story of the Island did not end with Jack's eye closing. These fan-written continuations explore what came next.

Fan Continuation

Hurley's Island: Season 7

By the TVLast Community

How does Hugo "Hurley" Reyes reinvent the Island's purpose? With Ben at his side and a fundamentally different philosophy from Jacob, Hurley opens the Island to those who need healing — both physical and spiritual. But the Island has its own will, and not every visitor comes in peace. When a group of scientists discovers the Island's coordinates, Hurley must decide: protect the secret or share the miracle with the world.

Fan Continuation

Walt Returns

By the TVLast Community

Years after leaving the Island, Walt Lloyd's dormant powers reawaken with terrifying intensity. Dreams of the Island consume him. Birds die in his presence again. When Hurley reaches out with an invitation to return — echoing "The New Man in Charge" — Walt discovers that his abilities are not just gifts but a responsibility. The Island needs him, and this time, he is old enough to understand why.

Fan Continuation

The Dharma Resurgence

By the TVLast Community

A new generation of Dharma Initiative researchers, funded by the Hanso Foundation's surviving board members, discover the Island under Hurley's watch. Armed with modern technology and decades of declassified research, they arrive not as explorers but as claimants — asserting legal ownership over every station, every experiment, every secret. Hurley faces a threat Jacob never imagined: a corporation with lawyers.