Lost: Wherein Sawyer remains shirtless quite a bit

March 18th, 2010 | by | lost

Mar
18

Don’t pretend you didn’t notice.

I liked the twist on Sawyer, and the fact that they gave a nod to it with Sawyer saying he was either gonna become a criminal or a cop. In fact, he was pretty much the same person, just a cop instead of a con man.

His “well, hey there” to Kate when he captures her at the end (who didn’t see it coming that she was the runner?), his sheepish attempt to get Charlotte to forgive him, his anger at Charlotte learning too much – even his buddy relationship with Miles was pretty much the same as on-island.

It made me wonder, though: Was the difference in this timeline that Jacob never touched these folks at whatever point in their lives?

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Lost: Mindfrak

May 13th, 2009 | by | lost

May
13

I keep starting and erasing this blog post because I hardly know what to say. I need to let all this sink in.

Wow.

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(BTW, I cried when you-know-who fell you-know-where and the other you-know-who cried.)

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Lost: He’s Our You & Whatever Happened, Happened

April 2nd, 2009 | by | lost

Apr
02

These two episodes were inextricably entwined and filled in so many gaps, it’s almost impossible to take them separately.

In “He’s Our You,” we found out why Sayid ended up on the plane to Guam (sort of, we still don’t know if it really was Ben who hired the bounty hunter to bring him there or if, perhaps, it was Widmore who was behind it – hmmm, hadn’t thought of that until this moment, actually)…

In “Whatever Happened, Happened,” we found out why Kate changed her mind and decided to go back to the island (sort of) and, more importantly, what the heck happened to Aaron.

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And, perhaps most importantly, we learned how and why Ben became who he was.

The young Ben, as we’d already seen, hated his father and was miserable in Dharma-land because of it. His father was a grade-A a-hole, mean and unforgiving. But we saw that when his son’s life was on the line, he realized how he’d mistreated him. If Ben weren’t taken by the Others, who knows if they’d have been able to repair their relationship.

We’ve seen, however, that you can’t change the future or the past, no matter how hard you try. Maybe you change individual events (you don’t even know if you’re really changing them, because it’s all happening in your own present), but the end result is the same.

The timeline is set. If not, and Ben had died, Hurley was right – it would have created a temporal paradox and they would have vanished in a puff of logic (apologies to Douglas Adams).

But Ben couldn’t die. We knew that, because he was alive in the future. Not the Losties’ future, but Ben’s future. We saw it. It just so happened that was the Losties’ past. And because that had happened, Ben couldn’t die, no matter what Jack decided.

In fact, Jack was supposed to decide not to operate on Ben, ironically, because otherwise there wouldn’t have been a reason to take Ben to Richard and the Others, which led to the purge and Ben’s leadership of the Others, and so on.

Obviously, Richard’s decision not to consult with Widmore (and Ellie) led to Widmore’s eventual expulsion from the island (did Widmore have to jump the island in time at some point? Did Ben trick him into jumping the island in time?) and Desmond ending up on the island and the plane crash and the Oceanic 6, and …

And so everything happened as it was supposed to happen. And whatever Richard does to Ben in the temple, he doesn’t remember, so that (very neatly) explains why he doesn’t remember any of this.

But Richard does, and feels responsible. Which is why he helps Locke out. It’s as if he’s trying to atone to the island for what he did with Ben, by helping Locke take over leadership by letting Locke know that his father is the one who caused Sawyer’s father to kill Sawyer’s mom and himself. Did I just give you a headache there?

I still want to know how Richard gets on and off the island, by the way.

The Jack-Kate-Sawyer-Juliet square is rather interesting, as we basically have Jack totally left out in the cold, with both Kate and Juliet mad at him and in love with Sawyer. But I think that Sawyer does truly love Juliet, and he went to save Ben not because of Kate, but because of Juliet. And Juliet felt so strongly about saving a little boy that she knew it was more important to send Sawyer after Kate than to keep them apart.

You could see the pain in her eyes as she told Jack that.

It’s an interesting dynamic, to see Jack so utterly being left out and considered, basically, useless. He’s boxed himself into this corner, though, and has no one to blame but himself.

The Hurley/Miles conversations were totally the comic relief of the night and I loved the entire conversation between the two of them, with Hurley finally, finally stumping Miles. Until a couple scenes later when we get the answer to the question of why Ben doesn’t remember Sayid shooting him. Though, honestly, how do we know Ben doesn’t remember that? Ben never gives anything away. Maybe he remembers Sayid shooting him and telling him that Ben is right, that he is a killer. Hmm? And so that’s why he says that to Sayid all those years later (or earlier, depending on whether you’re looking at it from Ben’s or Sayid’s perspective).

I was so afraid they were going to kill off Sayid, by the way. Glad they didn’t.

And, by the way, I loved the scene where Sayid tells the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, and they all think he’s insane. Lucky for Sawyer, that.

So what are we left wondering?

• What, exactly, does Richard do to Ben in the temple?

• What, exactly, are the Others/Hostiles?

• What, exactly, is the Incident and why does it lead to the Purge?

• How/why, exactly, does Widmore get expelled from the Island? You’ve gotta assume that Ben is behind it.

• Why, exactly, am I writing “exactly” in each of these questions?

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Lost: LaFleur

March 5th, 2009 | by | lost

Mar
05

First off, I just want to say this: Poor Juliet.

While I fully believed Jim (really? Jim? Sawyer’s so not a Jim) when he was telling Horace how he was over Kate and couldn’t even remember her face, you just knew the episode was ending with him finding out Kate was back on the island and that was all going out the door.

What is so frakkin’ amazing about Kate that makes the men flock to her? Juliet’s totally as badass and not nearly as self-conflicted. Being a brunette myself, I should feel more of a kinship to Kate, but I’m completely on Juliet’s side on this.

I can’t remember who said it (Steph, was it you?), but one of my friends in the past week wondered why Juliet is the woman everyone loves when Kate’s not around.

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Did I mention that spoilers abound? Continue at your own risk.

I loved the whole Three Years Earlier/Three Years Later aspect of tonight’s episode. I’ve grown so used to the back and forth in the episodes, from the flashbacks of the first couple seasons to the flash-forwards last season. And I loved how we got the Oceanic 6 one week, Locke the second week and then the folks still left on the island in this third week.

Speaking of, why the heck do we have to wait two weeks for the next ep? What’s up with that? Grr.

OK, so I’m not gonna recap so much as raise the issues that occurred to me:

• Sawyer was in FULL nickname mode tonight. When he called Faraday “Plato,” I almost fell off the sofa laughing. Brilliant.

• When Reiko Aylesworth was crying over her dead husband, I did, indeed, yell out, “So Tony really IS dead!”

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