They're the leftovers: the preacher's daughter whose faith has been obliterated, and the professional thief who doesn't believe in anything. It actually makes sense that after everything they'd choose to stick together, because the rest of the world no longer makes sense to either of them.
Bless this sentence. THE WORLD NO LONGER MAKES SENSE /o\ Though I think they both come at this from different angles? I think like, in terms of thinking of them as the leftover ones that no one wants, that's important, but I see a big fundamental difference between them in what they've lost, which is--Seth tried to go with his brother at the end and had to be pushed away, while Kate is the one who explicitly pushed her brother away (for like, perfectly understandable reasons, even if they make me sad but still. I suppose you can argue that Kate lost her brother when he became a culebra, but Seth doesn't really seem to feel that way about Richie--initial bad reaction aside--and I don't think show is saying this). So while they've both gone through the same kind of hell, I think they're in different places, mentally. Seth's being rejected while I think Kate is explicitly making the choice to move away from the wreckage and redefine herself in some other way (aka rejecting Freddie's offer). Kate's the one who kills her father; Kate's the one who pushes Scott away; Kate's the one who chooses to go with Seth at the end, while Seth accepts. She's the one making these active choices (like, she's been doing this since the start--Kate makes the active choice to ditch her family and go off with her boyfriend because she wants out on this trip; which is teenagery but I was rooting for her). IDK mainly I bring it up because I actually find that factor really interesting and it's something I don't see other people bring up and it's something I tend I keep in mind.
(though I wouldn't actually say Kate's faith was obliterated? like, I actually really liked her ending, where she yells at her father that God doesn't live in the pages of a book but in them both, and i imagine Kate's taking her idea of what faith is and rethinking it and forming it on her own terms. It's weird, because I found the resolution of her arc really spiritually hopeful and I didn't expect that but I dug it (speaking as like, an atheist but former catholic lol. Sometimes Kate hit personal buttons). Granted we don't know if she changed her mind after that or if she's decided on something else (which she could have, there was a deleted scene cut from the final episode? It's SOMEWHERE. So I always worry about missing material) but I still didn't get that vibe.
Wow I'm really sorry for the length of this comment this is embarrassing I'll show myself out (I swear I tried to cut it down. But I just kept on rambling? /o\)
Part 4 LAST ONE I PROMISE
Date: 2014-12-20 05:10 am (UTC)Bless this sentence. THE WORLD NO LONGER MAKES SENSE /o\ Though I think they both come at this from different angles? I think like, in terms of thinking of them as the leftover ones that no one wants, that's important, but I see a big fundamental difference between them in what they've lost, which is--Seth tried to go with his brother at the end and had to be pushed away, while Kate is the one who explicitly pushed her brother away (for like, perfectly understandable reasons, even if they make me sad but still. I suppose you can argue that Kate lost her brother when he became a culebra, but Seth doesn't really seem to feel that way about Richie--initial bad reaction aside--and I don't think show is saying this). So while they've both gone through the same kind of hell, I think they're in different places, mentally. Seth's being rejected while I think Kate is explicitly making the choice to move away from the wreckage and redefine herself in some other way (aka rejecting Freddie's offer). Kate's the one who kills her father; Kate's the one who pushes Scott away; Kate's the one who chooses to go with Seth at the end, while Seth accepts. She's the one making these active choices (like, she's been doing this since the start--Kate makes the active choice to ditch her family and go off with her boyfriend because she wants out on this trip; which is teenagery but I was rooting for her). IDK mainly I bring it up because I actually find that factor really interesting and it's something I don't see other people bring up and it's something I tend I keep in mind.
(though I wouldn't actually say Kate's faith was obliterated? like, I actually really liked her ending, where she yells at her father that God doesn't live in the pages of a book but in them both, and i imagine Kate's taking her idea of what faith is and rethinking it and forming it on her own terms. It's weird, because I found the resolution of her arc really spiritually hopeful and I didn't expect that but I dug it (speaking as like, an atheist but former catholic lol. Sometimes Kate hit personal buttons). Granted we don't know if she changed her mind after that or if she's decided on something else (which she could have, there was a deleted scene cut from the final episode? It's SOMEWHERE. So I always worry about missing material) but I still didn't get that vibe.
Wow I'm really sorry for the length of this comment this is embarrassing I'll show myself out (I swear I tried to cut it down. But I just kept on rambling? /o\)