OK, the latest rumors are pretty known. The rumors of the capsule reentering the wrong way have their origins from Interfax, which quote an "anonymous spaceflight engineer", who in turn says that the antenna must have failed because of that reason.
If the other rumors are more correct (which sounds more realistic as other indications of a bad reentry attitude are missing), the antenna failed during OM separation already and was not scorched away.
The antenna in question is a UHF antenna and is located inside the connection between Orbital Module (OM) and the descent module (DM). It usually gets activated and unfolded on OM separation and is the only way of communicating with the crew until the parachutes deploy.
On the photos, I can't find any indication of excessive reentry damage on the front hatch, the only unusual damage are the cracks on the pitch thruster housing, which are more likely caused by the capsule falling on it's side. The other side of the capsule would be more interesting to see, as it is more exposed to the air flow and contains the parachute containers. The photos posted by siberian tiger show only the "bottom" of the capsule, with the pitch thrusters, the umbilical connections and the periscope opening (periscope got jettisoned before reentry).
The theory of the capsule reentering the wrong way can already be rejected by just one important aspect visible in the photos: The patterns on the capsule. The airflow was in the critical phase from aft to front (heat shield to hatch), as the residuals of the ablative heatshield gathered leeward any feature on the hull.
If it would have flown in any different orientation, or was maybe even oscillating wildly, the patterns would have had different orientations and/or would have been more unclear to see. In this case, the capsule had a very stable airflow for at least the final part of the reentry - no sign of any severe misorientation.
On Soyuz-5 for example, the capsule was tumbling so strong after the hot phase of reentry, that the parachutes had problems opening properly. They just opened in the very last moment, but the landing speed had been too high anyway. The astronaut lost some teeth on a much harder than normal landing, 29 years ago. He was also unfit for flight for some years afterwards. But he did fly again - he reacted very calm and professional in the face of his possible death (the most emotional quote from flight recorder: "no panic"). He stored the pages of the flight log book behind him in his seat and spoke to the flight recorder about what happened during reentry. If such events would have taken place this time, the Korean singing bird would have told us already, that flight had been a much closer call than Apollo 13: The rubber gaskets of the hatch burned away and smoke filled the capsule, an explosion of the tanks of the still attached propulsion module cause the front hatch to buckle inside (but it remained intact). It was a good choice to use titanium for the front hatch framework.
I look for some photos as direct comparison after a nominal reentry, maybe it is easier to see if something is wrong.
EDIT: Nominal landing:
Who finds less scorched regions on this one, as on the TMA-11 capsule?
