Tru Calling - Conclusion
Aug. 30th, 2010 10:43 amBecause the show never "ended," and the writer comments don't actually shed any light on a final storyline (probably because they didn't have one), I was musing on how the story would turn out.
The thing is, there are only two real conclusions (beyond the "no ending / they continue this way forever" cop-out): Tru/her backer are right and fate should be changed, or Jack/his backer are correct and fate must stick to the original script. Now, Tru was winning when the series ended, as she'd been going for six months before Jack caught up with her--fate had already been changed, as tens (or possibly hundreds) of people had been saved who shouldn't have been. But okay, fine, we established that this universe is very hard to alter in big ways, so maybe each of those is only a small step off the beaten path and you need those and more to add up to something massive, so the continuing struggle matters.
The thing is, if keeping fate in-line is Jack's goal, then he's a total hypocrite. He does things that change fate (on rewind days) all the time--winning money, rearranging players, giving people information they shouldn't have. It's fairly obvious that these should have almost, if not more, impact on fate in the long term than people dying, but that doesn't matter to him or, apparently, to the power that backs him.
Also, while they keep talking about the "consequences" of Tru saving people, and the Jensen storyline was obviously set up to explore the consequences of saving someone who doesn't ask for help, we never see any short-term consequences between the preferred timelines of Tru's backer and Jack's. Especially since the timeline the characters will eventually see will be somewhere in-between the two.
So if you get right down to "Fate should be changed" versus "Fate should not be changed", Tru has already won. If she never saves another person, fate has already been changed. The universe is off the rails, even if only in a tiny way. If I were ending the series, I'd write a speech where someone explains that--and his hypocracy--in clear terms to Jack. As long as Tru and her Calling exist, as long as days rewind, his work is for naught. Jack then has two choices: Accept that fate can be changed and that's okay, or kill Tru. And we know how Tru's father dealt with this problem, so the answer, and the series finale, is clear.
The thing is, there are only two real conclusions (beyond the "no ending / they continue this way forever" cop-out): Tru/her backer are right and fate should be changed, or Jack/his backer are correct and fate must stick to the original script. Now, Tru was winning when the series ended, as she'd been going for six months before Jack caught up with her--fate had already been changed, as tens (or possibly hundreds) of people had been saved who shouldn't have been. But okay, fine, we established that this universe is very hard to alter in big ways, so maybe each of those is only a small step off the beaten path and you need those and more to add up to something massive, so the continuing struggle matters.
The thing is, if keeping fate in-line is Jack's goal, then he's a total hypocrite. He does things that change fate (on rewind days) all the time--winning money, rearranging players, giving people information they shouldn't have. It's fairly obvious that these should have almost, if not more, impact on fate in the long term than people dying, but that doesn't matter to him or, apparently, to the power that backs him.
Also, while they keep talking about the "consequences" of Tru saving people, and the Jensen storyline was obviously set up to explore the consequences of saving someone who doesn't ask for help, we never see any short-term consequences between the preferred timelines of Tru's backer and Jack's. Especially since the timeline the characters will eventually see will be somewhere in-between the two.
So if you get right down to "Fate should be changed" versus "Fate should not be changed", Tru has already won. If she never saves another person, fate has already been changed. The universe is off the rails, even if only in a tiny way. If I were ending the series, I'd write a speech where someone explains that--and his hypocracy--in clear terms to Jack. As long as Tru and her Calling exist, as long as days rewind, his work is for naught. Jack then has two choices: Accept that fate can be changed and that's okay, or kill Tru. And we know how Tru's father dealt with this problem, so the answer, and the series finale, is clear.
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Date: 2010-08-30 04:19 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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