Friday, May 28, 2010
Lost Finale Re-Airing on Saturday
Thursday, May 27, 2010
More Lost News
Lost may be off the air, but the story isn't over yet.
Michael Emerson who played Ben tells G4's Attack of the Show that a special feature on the DVD collection for the entire series will show an epilogue of what happened to Ben and Hurley once they took over island-protector duties from Jack.
"For those people that want to pony up and buy the complete Lost series, there is a bonus feature, which is... you could call it an epilogue," Emerson said. "A lost scene. It's a lot. It's 12 or 14 minutes that opens a window onto that gap of unknown time between Hurley becoming number one and the end of the series. It's self-contained, although it's a rich period in the show's mythology that's never been explored, so who knows what will come of it."Lost: The Complete Collection hits stores on August 24.
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
The Official Word on the Wreckage Shown During the Closing Credits
Apparently, a great number of viewers were perplexed by the closing credits and the scenes of airplane wreckage, which prompted this official response from an ABC rep:
"The images shown during the end credits of the Lost finale, which included shots of Oceanic 815 on a deserted beach, were not part of the episode but were a visual aid to allow the viewer to decompress before heading into the news." The statement was first acquired by the Los Angeles Times. The images were added by the network, not producers Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse, to soften the transition to the news.
When I read this, I was wracking my brain to remember why we hadn't seen the wreckage of Oceanic 815 since Season 1. Then I found this on-line:About three weeks after the crash, a sudden change in the tide prompted the survivors to move their camp further down the beach. Subsequently, the middle section fuselage wreckage had never been seen since outside flashbacks and then the images during the finale's closing credits.
Note:The real-life behind-the-scenes reason for this was that actual seasonal tides on the North shore of Oahu would have eventually flooded the shooting site for real, thereby submerging the fuselage set and causing an ecological disaster. Therefore, an in-story reason had to be found for the survivors moving their camp to a different location.
I hope this settles the issue. Until tomorrow?
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
More on "The End" and the Re-Airing of the Finale
Secondly, following are more thoughts and info on the finale. If you haven't read my initial post from Monday, you may want to read that first.
- I forgot about what may have been my favorite moment of the Jimmy Kimmel special: Josh Holloway (Sawyer) checking in via satellite from Canada where he was supposedly on location filming "Snakes on a Plane 2: Electric Boogaloo".
- The best line not from the finale occurred on Regis and Kelly the next morning when Regis wondered if "The Lost" had ended yet and happy that his prediction "the real villain is the dinosaur" was accurate.
- The name embroidered on the jumpsuit of the Oceanic Airlines employee who unloaded Christian's casket was Bocklin. Arnold Bocklin was a Swiss symbolist painter. His pictures portray mythological, fantastical figures along classical architecture constructions (revealing often an obsession with death) creating a strange, fantasy world. Bocklin is best known for his five versions of Isle of the Dead. Appropriate name.
- A number of people asked for my thoughts on the wreckage shown during the closing credits. Some thought this was the Ajira flight indicating it didn't make if off the island while others felt the lack of people among the debris meant everyone had died in the initial crash of Oceanic 815. I don't think it was Ajira because Jack's smile at seeing it fly overhead meant he was successful. I also don't believe it was 815 because Christian told Jack that everything that happened was real. I felt it was more symbolic of what was left behind. That and there were no previews to show for next week!
- What happened to Walt is supposed to be addressed in the DVD. Also expected to be included is 20 minutes of answers to questions left unresolved by the finale.
- The actor who portrayed Mr. Eko was asked to make an appearance but apparently he wanted five times the salary he was offered and the producers declined.
- According to the "Across the Sea" script, the baby that became the Man in Black was named Samuel by his adopted mother. The name is Hebrew in origin meaning either "name of God" or "God has heard".
- Now on to the big one - the Sideways world. I believe everything we saw of the Sideways world from the first episode this season when we saw Oceanic 815 survive the turbulence to the final scene at the church occurred at different times in the minds of all the characters but at the moment of each one's death - whether it was before Jack died or long after. As Christian told Jack: There is no now here. However, as viewers, we saw it as a linear time frame with everyone having their moment of enlightenment in one convenient storyline. Whenever one of them died, this was the life each character wished they had lived. It was only upon realizing that the life they had led was worthy and no regrets should be had, did they move on. For the purpose of the show, the death that was focused on was Jack's. The vision of the island underwater is what he wished for so none of the island events would have happened. His son, David, allowed him to be a better father than his own was to him. Restoring the use of Locke's legs resolved his guilt at not believing Locke that they should never have left the island and had to go back. But none of this was real. Much like the movie "Jacob's Ladder", all of this occurred - appropriately enough - in the blink of an eye. The same way Juliet asked Sawyer to have coffee as she died. She was experiencing her life as the ex-Mrs. Jack, working at the hospital, and encountering James.
Monday, May 24, 2010
"The End" (Season 6, Episodes 17 & 18) - Series Finale
Before I get into the finale itself, I wanted to comment on what aired before and after it.
Commercials
- The Verizon Final Transmissions that aired during the commercial breaks of the two-hour recap were well done. I thought the way the comments and feelings toward Lost from fans were cleverly presented intercut with scenes from all six seasons where a character was reading something (a note, a computer screen, etc.). And way to go, Lisa M. (whoever you are) for getting Cleveland, OH, in there. To a lesser degree, I also enjoyed the few Target commercials that used aspects of the show to advertise a product (wild boar/barbecue sauce, Desmond's computer/keyboard, and the Smoke Monster/smoke detector).
- Entertaining hour. Cool set, taking a page out of the Survivor handbook by recreating the beach. If you watched closely, young Jacob popped up a couple of times in the background. The three "alternate endings" as I had suspected were comedy bits - a Survivor spoof where Sayid gets voted out in tribal council; the obligatory Sopranos send-up; and of course, a Lost take on one of the best finales of all time: Newhart only this time Bob woke up in bed with Kate while executive producers Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse shared a bed nearby.
- Matthew Fox backed up Jimmy's theory that Jack's island experience was real and actually happened, but the final season (and the Sideways world) was Jack's "test" to determine whether he would go toward the light or. . . not. "There's room for interpretation based on your spiritual beliefs," Matthew said. "I knew that the final image would be [Jack's] eye," Matthew told Kimmel. "And I knew that he would die."
After watching the finale the first time, I was ready to type that I liked the episode but didn't necessarily get it. Having now watched it a second time, I think I do understand it and I like it more than I thought. The reunion scene in the church reminded me of Mitch Albom's The Five People You Met in Heaven. Only for Jack, it's more like The 23 People You Met on the Island. Some may argue that as interesting a concept as it was, it didn't seem to mesh with the first five seasons of the show, at least not in the sense of answering all of our questions. I know the producers said the questions that would be answered would be the ones important to the characters and not necessarily the viewers. In past seasons, the characters experienced flashbacks, flash-forwards, and flash-sideways. Tonight, we witnessed their lives flashing before their eyes, appropriate since it is said this is what happens when you die.
Best Lines (Did you really think there would be only one?)
- "Y'all head to your Heart of the Island and I'll get the magic leprechaun out of that well." Sawyer's plan. I'll miss lines like this now that the show is over.
- "I've got a bad feeling about this." Hurley summing up the situation. And as any good Star Wars fan can tell you, this line was said in every one of the six movies.
- "This would be so sweet if we weren't all about to die." Hurley to Jack and Kate.
- "We built this place in '75 and lived here a couple of years and then the sky lit up again, so God only knows when in the hell we are now." Rose telling it like it is to Desmond.
- "I was shot by a fat man." Charlie to Charlotte, referring to Hugo's taser attack.
- "It looks like you were wrong, too." Jack to UnLocke after actually hurting him.
- "I saved you a bullet." Kate doing her best Dirty Harry after shooting UnLocke, referring to the moment earlier in the episode when she randomly shot at him and he told her to save her bullets since they were not harming him.
- On Christian Shephard’s coffin, the airport code stickers indicated it passed through Hong Kong (HKG) and Guam International Airport(GUM), the intended destination of Ajira 316.
- The church is the same location as Ms. Hawking's Lamppost Station.
- There were numerous lines with deeper meanings once you know the outcome, such as Desmond's "No one can tell you why you're here."
- Kate's comment on the religious overtones to Christian Shephard's name is more resonant now that we've seen the meaning of the "parallel" time line.
- Charlie is staying at the Flightline Motel. This is the same motel Locke found his dad, Anthony Cooper, staying at in “Lockdown." It’s also where Kate stayed in “Born to Run."
- Hugo's comment to Sayid that "if you stick with me, you'll be happy you did" refers to Hugo reuniting Sayid with Shannon.
- I was right in thinking the "concert" would include Drive Shaft. (Since this is the last episode blog entry, I hope you'll indulge me as I point out my correct predictions throughout. As for my theories that never came to pass, let's move on.)
- James Ford wears glasses, something his island self had to do but with makeshift ones.
- James uses the nickname Enos for Miles. He also used this nickname for him in the original time line at the DHARMA Initiative when Saywer was head of security. Enos was Boss Hogg's deputy on TV's Dukes of Hazzard.
- The name of the concert/benefit is Fusion. Appropriate as the two time lines merge in this episode.
- Juliet's last name is Carlson, her maiden name. She apparently changed it back after divorcing her husband, Jack (correct prediction #2). This also suggests she never married Edmund Burke, whose last name she kept in the original time line.
- The Kwons suddenly being able to speak English after remembering the island time line was a nice touch.
- Most of Jack's lines to Locke prior to the surgery were laced with double meaning: "There's always the chance I could kill you", "I"ll see you on the other side", and "If I can fix you, Mister Locke, that's all the peace I need."
- Claire walked under a stuffed shark hanging in the museum while trying to find the restroom. No Dharma logo was visible.
- The conversation between Desmond and Eloise Widmore was very interesting. Why was she concerned that Desmond might take Daniel?
- I liked the knowing smirk Jin and Sun had upon seeing Ford as a detective.
- When James passes Jack in the parallel time line, he calls him “Doc" even though he is not wearing his scrubs. This is Sawyer’s favorite nickname for Jack on the island.
- At the vending machine in the hospital, James gets an Apollo Bar, a candy frequently seen on the show.
- Juliet suggests having coffee (going Dutch) to Ford. These were her last words on the island before she died after the bomb went off in the season premiere.
- Ben, although receiving forgiveness from Locke, feels he must stay and not move on. He apparently feels he has not yet redeemed himself.
- Locke being able to walk is symbolic of the belief that in heaven all your physical ailments will be cured.
- Hugo's comment to Ben that he was a good Number Two implies Ben did assist him on the island after tonight's events.
- The church is symbolic of all religions, as the room Jack visits contains icons from many different religions and the stained glass window features symbols from Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Christianity, Buddhism and Taoism.
- Jack's dad reasserts for the viewer that everyone and everything that occurred on the island is real. Just in case someone thought it was all a dream.
- Christian also confirms all the characters are dead but that's because everyone dies. . . some having died before Jack, some long after. And because there is "no now here", that makes sense.
- What I've been calling the parallel time line, Jack's dad explains is a place the characters have all made together so they could find one another. Does this mean it is each one's ideal life (with all the violence, I think not) or just a way to bring them together when it's time to pass on? Christian also says it allows them to remember and to let go. So are we to believe any or all of what we saw ever happened?
- In the final scene in the church when everyone is ready to move on from the afterlife, all of the characters are settled into romantic pairings except Boone and Locke, who together had a teacher-student relationship on the island. The other final pairings ready to move on are: Sayid and Shannon, Charlie and Claire, Sawyer and Juliet, Rose and Bernard, Jack and Kate, Hurley and Libby, Desmond and Penny, and Jin and Sun. And why these characters and not others (I thought Walt was supposed to make an appearance)? Were these the actors who could make the trip to Hawaii?
- I liked that Christian was wearing the white tennis shoes as he moved to the light.
- Are we to believe that the light that floods the church when Christian opens the doors is the same one from the island? The light that is in all of us?
- As promised, seven minutes into the finale, Hurley makes the Star Wars reference that Jacob was "worse than Yoda" when providing answers.
- I was right when after seeing the exclusive scene last Thursday that Rose and Bernard rescued Desmond.
- Kate says “Nothing is irreversible” to Jack to assure him that he hasn’t screwed up everything in his life. This is the same thing Jack tells Locke in the parallel time line about his spinal condition.
- Correction: Sawyer punches Ben in the face at the well with his fist, not the rifle butt as I previously reported. Sorry I was so excited I couldn't remember all the details.
- A few weeks ago I joked that the staircase leading up to the Ajira plane looked like it was right out of Gilligan's Island. I guess I should have saved that joke for Rose and Bernard's bamboo hut complete with a front porch and patio furniture.
- I knew Ben was not siding with UnLocke as indicated by him keeping in contact with Miles via the walkie-talkie.
- As suspected, Richard is still alive.
- Richard's gray hair indicates he may now be aging. The result of Jacob's ashes finally being burned up? I liked Miles comment "Welcome to the club" referring to his own salt and pepper hair.
- The dead body Miles and Richard find floating in the water is that of the commander of the submarine seen in previous episodes.
- Lapidus is still alive! (Another check in the I Got That One Right column.)
- Of course, we knew Lapidus was being kept around to fly the Ajira plane.
- Sawyer refers to Jacob’s plan to bring back Desmond to be used as a weapon as a long con, referring to his own past as a con artist as well as the specific episode title, “The Long Con."
- Desmond tells Jack that he knows about the parallel time line. While characters in the parallel time line regain memories of the original one, this is the only instance where someone in the original time line has seen glimpses of the other, suggesting that Desmond’s time in the electromagnetism gave him a glimpse of the afterlife.
- Jack repeats the phrase "Whatever happened, happened" often during this final season regarding the importance of events in the original time line and the fact that they cannot be changed, which we now know is actually true.
- So can we consider Richard's promise to Claire that they can get "far, far away" from UnLocke as a Star Wars reference? As in "A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away. . ."
- I liked how the camera shot falling away from UnLocke and Jack at the top of the waterfall mimicked the shot as Locke and Jack peered down into the just-opened hatch in the Season 1 finale.
- We finally find out the identity of the Adam and Eve skeletons and now we have a few more in the Heart of the Island? Apparently, others took the water ride but didn't survive.
- So there actually is a cork like Jacob said! A big stone one, but a cork nonetheless.
- You could hear the same mechanical sounds the Smoke Monster makes when Desmond stepped into the water.
- The water draining, the bright light going out, and the red light coming were accompanied by what sounded like machinery.
- Ben continues his redemption by saving Hurley during the island's upheaval.
- Presumably, whatever Desmond did to the island prevented UnLocke from reverting to his smoky appearance. Otherwise, Jack should not have been able to inflict damage to him.
- The piercing of Jack's side by UnLocke was in the part of his body where Christ was speared while in agony on the crucifying cross.
- As I once again correctly guessed, the mark on Jack's neck in the parallel time line was a cut from UnLocke's knife.
- UnLocke's fall to the rocks which undoubtedly broke his bones coincided with Locke's successful surgery.
- I'm curious how Ben was able to get out from under the fallen tree?
- Jack's knife wound was also where his appendix had been removed. I have the same scar. From an appendectomy, not a knife fight.
- Jack says "Find me some thread and I can count to five" to Kate after UnLocke stabs him, referring to the scene in the series pilot when Jack had Kate sew him up with thread and told her about his secret to avoiding fear by counting to five.
- The debate of who Kate will choose is finally settled with the kiss and the "I love you's" exchanged by her and Jack.
- Yet another correct prediction: Jack sacrifices himself for the island and Hurley becomes the protector.
- To pass the torch of Island Protector, Jack performs the same ritual Jacob performed for him, making him drink some water and telling him “Now you’re like me." Jack does not however speak any Latin as Jacob did.
- Although the water in the stream is extremely muddy, what Jack captures in the bottle is very clear. Pure, you might say.
- The Heart of the Island took on a very Hell-ish appearance with the red light and billows of steam.
- Jack says "See you in another life, brother" to Desmond at the bottom of the cave, mirroring what Desmond told him when they first met. It has an additional meaning since the two meet again in the afterlife of the parallel time line.
- Similar to the Oceanic 6, the Ajira flight leaves the island with six people: Lapidus, Miles, Richard, Sawyer, Kate, and Claire.
- Ben's perception of Hurley as someone who "takes care of people" makes him the perfect candidate. It's also interesting that how Jacob ran things does not mean Hurley has to do the same.
- Jack is deposited on the rocks similar to how the Man in Black was after his journey into the Heart of the Island. The difference being that Jack survived. For a little while.
- As Jack moves through the jungle, he passes a sneaker tangled up in a tree. This was there in the pilot after the plane crash as well.
- The final scene of the series take place with Jack lying down in the middle of the bamboo on the island, the same place and set-up as the first scene of the series.
- I became the most emotional when Vincent laid down next to the dying Jack. So often as animal lovers, we have to make the difficult decision of putting our pets out of their misery (I've had to do it twice) and we often hold them or lie next to them as the end is near. It was very moving to see this reversal of the situation.
- The series ends with a close-up of Jack’s eye closing as he dies. The series opened with a close-up of Jack’s eye as it opened. This was the scene the producers had envisioned as the final image from early on in the series.
- When Sawyer said he didn't know what was happening, Jack said that makes 2 of us.
- Richard asked Miles if he still had the C-4.
- Miles told Ford that Jarrah had "popped" 4 people.
- UnLocke told Jack and Desmond that it would just be the 3 of them going to the cave of light.
- Locke's surgery took place in OR 3.
- Desmond, Kate, Claire, and David were seated at table 23 at the benefit concert.
- Kate counted to 3 before telling Claire to push.
- Lapidus said it would take 5 hours, maybe 6 to get the Ajira plane up in the air.
- Jack joked with Kate about sewing him up and counting to 5 after his encounter with UnLocke.
- The Apollo candy bar is in G23 in the hospital vending machine.
- Hugo told Ben that he was a good Number 2.
People have asked me what TV show my next blog will showcase. I'm not sure any other show will ever inspire me the way Lost did or require my analyzing each and every detail. For now, I plan on just watching the new shows for what they are. But never say never!
I have found a website, blog2print.com, that allows me to convert the four years of postings from my blog into a hardcover book. That's my next project. It'll be fun to curl up with it and read through my thoughts once all is said and done.
Finally, I wanted to thank each and every one of you who visited my blog weekly to read what crazy thoughts were going through my head after a new episode aired. Many of you are my co-workers who were often my sounding board before I posted my recap while others I have never met. But for all of us, Lost made an impact. I know that the next time I step on a plane, I will wonder where - or when - I might end up. The sight of black smoke will now always have a malicious undertone to it. And I'll never be able to look at an animal-skulled fake baby the same way. Namaste! And I'll see you in another life, bruthas and sistas. Remember: We're not really leaving but moving on. Where to? Let's go find out.
Friday, May 21, 2010
"Lost Live" Event Recap
The event primarily featured a live interview with Lost producers Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindelof, who were both very funny. Questions were also asked from e-mail submissions from fans as well as ones from the New York audience with most being answered but with some "You'll just have to watch on Sunday" responses. There were also surprise appearances by the actors who play Ben and Hurley. Three clips from past episodes were shown and discussed: Locke convincing Jack to push the button, Desmond finally reaching Penny by phone from the freighter, and Hurley and Miles discussing time travel. It was so cool to see these scenes on the big screen.
The event ended with an exclusive scene from Sunday's finale, which was the icing on my birthday cake. Following are some revelations that were provided and a summary of the scene.
- Damon said that there would be a Star Wars reference about 7 minutes into the finale. (For us Star Wars fans, that's a big deal!)
- Walt will make an appearance in the finale. Damon joked that Walt had to be shipped off the series the minute the actor was taller than him.
- When asked about the significance of Desmond's comment to Jack at the stadium to "lift it up" in Season 2, this question received the "you'll find out on Sunday" response. Makes me wonder if that was actually future Desmond giving Jack an instruction that will come into play when Jack faces down UnLocke. Will Jack need to physically lift something up? Maybe overturn the outrigger canoe and dump UnLocke in the water where he will become vulnerable? I'm still theorizing right 'til the bitter end.
- The producers explained that prior to the filming of the final scene, they asked the actors participating in it if they had any questions about what was happening and not one did. Jorge Garcia who plays Hurley also said that as a fan of the show he really had no questions of the producers once the final scene was filmed. In other words, he got the ending and understood what the writers wanted to convey. Damon had a big smile and gave a thumbs-up.
- Now for the exclusive scene - Damon prefaced it by saying it wasn't too spoilery so read on. My guess is if it's not the first scene of the finale, it's probably one of the earliest we'll see set on the island during Sunday's finale. It opens during the day with UnLocke alone by the well, coiling up the rope presumably used to rescue Desmond. We see hiding in the nearby bushes Sawyer, who before he can do anything is surprised by Ben with a rifle. Ben marches him at gunpoint to UnLocke. Sawyer peers into the well to see Desmond is not there. (So if Jack's group didn't get Desmond out, then who did?) Just as this past Tuesday's episode ended, UnLocke again says he's going to destroy the island at which point Sawyer wrestles the gun from Ben and rifle-butts him in his face and escapes. UnLocke tells Ben to let him go. Ben questions him that he's actually going to destroy the island and he wasn't just speaking metaphorically? UnLocke says he has a boat and Ben is more than welcome to join him as he watches this island sink! (Remember in the opening of this season's premiere that the island was underwater in the parallel time line of 2004. Is this event in 2007 going to finally merge the two time lines?) Before they head off, UnLocke notices something about the ground around the well. Upon closer examination, UnLocke says that it looks like there was a dog around here and the scene ends. I kid you not almost everyone in the entire theater as a whole all excitedly whispered "Vincent." My immediate thought was that Vincent, doing his best Lassie impersonation, pulled Timmy - I mean Desmond - out of the well. It wasn't until two hours later as I was getting ready for bed that I remembered when we last saw Vincent and with whom. He ran out of the jungle when the time-jumping survivors ended up at the beach camp and was immediately followed out by. . .Rose and Bernard! I think we've found Desmond's rescuers.
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
"What They Died For" (Season 6, Episode 16)
Best Line
- "Don't be ridiculous. It's in my secret room behind the bookcase." Ben's response to Miles' comment that he keeps the explosives in his cookie jar.
- Once again a close-up of an eye (Jack's) begins this episode.
- In his bathroom mirror, Jack notices the same cut on his neck that he discovered in the season premiere in the airline bathroom aboard Oceanic 815. I predict Island Jack will be held at knife point by UnLocke and this wound is somehow "bleeding" over into this universe.
- My money is still on Juliet being David's mother.
- So is the concert Jack and David's mother attending a recital that their son is in or something else? Maybe a performance by Driveshaft?
- What was the significance of Desmond's call to Jack about the airline finding his father's coffin? In the finale, will we see a meeting between Jack and Desmond?
- Desmond's attack against Ben triggers Ben's memory of Desmond beating him at the marina when Ben tried to kill Penny. Apparently either love (like Hurley and Libby) or violence (Locke's hit-and-run or Sun being shot) brings back the memories of the original time line. While filming this scene, the actor who plays Desmond accidentally punched the actor who plays Ben and left him with a black eye! That wasn't make-up.
- The school nurse who takes care of Ben after Desmond beats him up is named Ms. Kondracki. This is the same nurse who the principal had an affair with, as Ben learned in “Dr. Linus." The actress previously played a doctor in Season 5's "The Variable".
- Ben has a mirror moment in the nurse's office.
- I'm guessing the benefit concert at the museum that Miles, his dad, and Charlotte are attending will turn out to be the same one as Jack, his ex-wife, and David.
- Alex refers to Ben with his arm in a sling as "Napoleon". Ben was previously seen teaching his class about this historical figure.
- I loved Danielle's light-hearted remark that she would kidnap Ben to get him to come to dinner. In the original time line, Ben had essentially kidnapped Alex from Rousseau.
- I'm not sure why but I was so happy to see Danielle Rousseau looking so sane and well put together and leading a normal life.
- Jack tells Locke that he’s mistaking coincidence for fate when Locke explains why he wants the surgery. Mr. Eko accused Locke of the same thing when he brought Locke the missing piece of the Swan Orientation film and Locke repeated the phrase while talking to Desmond in Season 3.
- The conversation in the back of the police van between Desmond, Sayid, and Kate was another highlight for me.
- If ever there was going to be a bad cop on the take, I can't think of anyone better than Ana Lucia. When I saw Michelle Rodriguez's name in the opening credits, I was afraid she was going to turn out to be Jack's ex!
- Hurley drives up in his yellow Hummer, seen previously in both the parallel time line and the original time line. He also brings his Camaro for Desmond, the car he and his father restored in the original time line.
- It's obvious Hurley has all his memories of the original time line when he recognizes Ana Lucia.
- More attendees for "the concert": Desmond and Kate in her slinky black dress. Now if the Widmores are involved, we can expect Penny too.
- Kate's makeshift surgery by Jack on the beach is reminiscent of her sewing him up in the Season 1 pilot after the crash. We've come full circle.
- When Kate leaned her head against Sawyer as they gazed at the sea, did you get the feeling she's made her choice?
- Was Miles' extreme reaction to New Otherton simply due to Alex being buried there or was it residue from the Dharma Purge? Richard, who had a hand in the killing of them along with Ben, was quick to attribute it to Alex.
- Miles had some good lines last night: "30 years ago or last week to you" and "the secret-er room".
- Based on Ben's comment “I thought I was summoning the Monster. . . little did I know he was summoning me” makes me believe the entity in the cabin that Ben took to be Jacob was actually the Monster.
- Another great scene was the conversation between Ben and Widmore. Makes you wonder whether Widmore was doing what he did for the good of mankind and not for his own needs after all.
- I wonder why Jacob first appeared as his younger self to Hurley but then as adult?
- We know now that the bag Hurley took from Ilana's belongings were Jacob's ashes.
- I'm thinking we haven't seen the last of Richard Alpert. Maybe he and Lapidus will charge in like the cavalry when most needed.
- Yet more great moments were Ben's and UnLocke's conversations. And I'm not completely sold that Ben is now UnLocke's right-hand man.
- I was surprised at the graphic nature of Zoe's death. Yikes!
- I thought for sure UnLocke was going to stab Widmore as he leaned in to whisper to him but Ben was too fast for him.
- Did Jacob's burning of his final ashes allow the others to see him?
- For anyone who wasn't sure if Jacob's brother hadn't transformed into the Smoke Monster last week, I think Jacob's comments settle that question.
- Another question answered is that the candidates were all chosen because they were "flawed" and "alone". Apparently, Jacob knew this would be the case even as early as their childhood in the cases of Kate and Sawyer. And do you think Jacob was the driver of the Mystery Car of Death that seemed to invade all the candidates' lives at some point?
- I know I was one of the people who voted in my survey that Jack would be the next protector of the island but at this point, I would not be surprised if he sacrifices himself to take out UnLocke. Would this mean another would need to step up? Maybe Hurley was premature in thinking he dodged the bullet.
- According to the close-captioning, Jacob was speaking Latin when he "blessed" the cup of water.
- Just what comes with Jacob's pronouncement to Jack that "Now you're like me"?
- I find it interesting that the Smoke Monster tells Ben he retains his Locke persona because he likes the feel of his feet on the ground at the same time parallel Locke has decided he wants Jack to fix him so he can walk again. Also, UnLocke's comment that he was human further confirms this was once Jacob's brother and not a separate evil entity.
- I presume Jack and friends rescued Desmond from the well.
- Widmore's description of Desmond as a "fail-safe" reminds me of the fail-safe key Desmond had at the Swan Station.
- Ben explains to Richard that he has more than enough explosives to destroy the plane 10 times over.
- The explosive Ben has is C-4.
- Widmore tells Ben that as usual, he is 3 steps ahead of him.
- Danielle says Alex's dad died when she was 2.
For me, the series finale event begins tomorrow when I will be attending the live Lost broadcast at my local movie theater. On Friday night, I'll post any tidbits I learn. Saturday from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. ET is an enhanced version of the original Season 1 pilot with the subtitles. Then, this is it, my fellow Lost and Founders. Sunday (or should we call it Lost-day?) is the two-hour series retrospective at 7 p.m. ET, the 2 1/2 hour finale at 9 p.m. ET, and Jimmy Kimmel's special at midnight. You'll be happy to know I am taking Monday off so I can re-watch the finale and type my last episode blog so you can read it as soon as possible. My prediction for the final scene that the creators claim to have envisioned since early in the season: All the characters once again boarding a plane. Their destination? Who knows?
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
"Across the Sea" (Season 6, Episode 15)
Best Line
- "Every question will lead to another question." Woman to Claudia. The writers of this episode are co-creators Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindelof and I got the feeling they put this line in so we the viewers would just let some things go already.
- The shipwreck is one of many themes that reoccur throughout the series. Pregnancy is another.
- The language initially being spoken by Claudia and the Woman was Latin. Latin fell out of popular use after the fall of the Roman Empire in the 5th century and was largely out of common everyday use a few centuries later, suggesting that the events of this episode most likely took place long, long before Richard Alpert came to the Island. It was interesting that after Claudia took the drink (with an accompanying musical trill), the conversation continued in English. Liquid translator?
- Claudia was a common name in Roman times. There was a Vestal Virgin by that name, Nero's first wife and his infant daughter by his second wife had this name, as did Pontius Pilate's wife.
- The twins birth is a rarity on the island since Rousseau and Claire are the only other women to have successfully done so.
- Jacob and the Man in Black are twin brothers. Bad Twin was the book written by Gary Troup (one of the survivors on Oceanic 815). The author survived the crash, but was the first person to die on the island when he was sucked into the still-running jet engine, causing it to explode. A manuscript of Bad Twin was found and read by Hurley in Season 2.
- Baby Jacob is clothed in light swaddling while his brother is in dark. These identifying colors carry through the clothes worn by the boys and later their adult selves.
- Mother can be added to the list of crazy island women that includes Rousseau and Fake Baby Claire.
- We now know that the boy seen repeatedly in the jungle by UnLocke in past episodes is young Jacob.
- The game the Boy in Black finds on the beach is Senet, one of the oldest known board games. It is originally from ancient Egypt and because of the luck involved to win, it was often placed with people in their graves to help with the journey through the afterlife.
- We previously saw Jacob weaving in the base of the statue.
- Mother tells the Boy in Black he is "special". This has been said about Walt and Locke.
- The men hunting the boar seemed different from the shipwrecked villagers we see later. Are they the island's inhabitants?
- Mother tells Jacob and the Boy in Black about people by saying “They come. They fight. They destroy. They corrupt. It always ends the same." This is the exact same thing the Man in Black tells Jacob in their scene at the start of the Season 5 finale, “The Incident."
- So Mother made it possible that Jacob and his brother could never hurt each other. Apparently, this didn't include Jacob beating his brother senseless and throwing his body into the Light. This also explains why the Man in Black needed Ben to kill Jacob.
- What is the Light? It's in everyone but we want more of it. Love? Goodness?
- Why is the Boy in Black able to see dead people but Jacob cannot? This would explain why UnLocke spotted his brother throughout the jungle in other episodes.
- The dagger carried by the Man in Black looks very much like the one Dogen gave Sayid to kill UnLocke.
- The wells are once again referenced. Previously, Locke went down into one to turn the donkey wheel and Desmond remains in one.
- Another answer revealed was the origin of the donkey wheel that both Ben and Locke used in past episodes.
- What was Mother's intent in attacking the Man in Black? Simply to knock him unconscious while she destroyed the well? And how was this woman able to do that and destroy the village and its inhabitants? Could it be she once went into the Light and is a smoke monster herself?
- Mother tells Jacob the Light is the "heart of the island" and is connected to life, death, and rebirth. So is it symbolic of love?
- The corked jug that Mother has is the same one Jacob had and the Man in Black smashed in an earlier episode.
- You almost come away from this episode with sympathy for the Man in Black. With the lies and manipulation by his "mother" and his brother's aggressive behavior, it's no wonder he's the way he is.
- The manner in which the Man in Black killed Mother with the dagger followed Dogen's directions of stabbing the person in the chest (albeit through her back) and not allowing the person to speak.
- Both young and adult Jacob certainly was the violent one of the twins.
- The Man in Black's transformation into the Smoke Monster confirms Mother's earlier statement to Jacob that going down into the cave of light is worse than dying. Again, was she speaking from experience?
- The Boy in Black told Mother there were 3 men hunting boar.
Next week's "What They Died For" is the last Tuesday episode before the finale. The previews included many of the mirror moments from the parallel time line.
Wednesday, May 05, 2010
"The Candidate" (Season 6, Episode 14)
R.I.P. Sun
R.I.P. Jin
R.I.P. Lapidus?
The last episode before the finale is titled "What They Died For". I think we now know to whom the "They" refers. Those final fifteen minutes had to be some of the most intense, nerve-wracking, emotional moments this season. When Jin spoke to Sun in Korean, I lost it. When Hurley broke down on the beach, I lost it. And when Jack realized he could no longer save everyone and fix everything and he lost it, I did as well. I just have to keep telling myself only the Island versions are dead; the parallel time line versions are alive and well. That and this is only a TV show.
Best Line
- "There is no Sayid!" Jack to Hurley after Sayid's sacrifice on the sub.
- This episode's title initially applies to Locke as a candidate for a new procedure to restore the use of his legs.
- Bernard the happy dentist seems almost aware of the more-than-coincidental happenings of the passengers of Flight 815.
- I wonder if James Ford the detective will find Anthony Cooper in the nursing home and if so, will his need for revenge be unfulfilled?
- Locke's sleep mumblings were "Push the button" from his days in the Swan Station and "I wish you had believed me" from his suicide note to Jack.
- Jack gets an Apollo candy bar from the hospital vending machine. He previously got one when Jacob encountered him and these were also in the hatch's pantry.
- “Catch a Falling Star” is the song played by the music box Christian left Claire. This is also the song he used to sing to her as a child and one Claire asked the baby’s adoptive parents to sing to her son.
- This week's mirror moment was shared between Claire and Jack in the music box lid like our last mirror moment was shared by Locke and Jack during the surgery.
- Locke seems to have a moment of recognition upon seeing Jin in the hospital corridor.
- You have to wonder if Locke hadn't crashed the plane with his dad on board, would Anthony have conned his son as he did in the original time line?
- Jack's comment to Locke of "what happened, happened" is a common one on the series.
- Jack's plea of "I wish you believed me" seems to trigger the memory of his suicide note for Locke before he leaves the hospital.
- Sawyer's resistance to return to the cages goes back to his and Kate's imprisonment there by Ben.
- Was Widmore's confinement of the people in the cages and his comment that he was "doing this for your own good" an indication that his plan was to blow up only UnLocke on the plane?
- I don't believe UnLocke could kill them anytime he wanted to as this is "against the rules".
- Once again, UnLocke demonstrates his bullet-proof nature.
- I knew as soon as UnLocke swiped the watch from the dead man that it would be used for a timer on a bomb.
- So was the Professor from Gilligan's Island part of Widmore's team? Because I don't know anyone else who could have built such an elaborate staircase to the plane out of sticks than him. They bring guns, sonic fence pylons, but no ladder?
- Why did Sawyer suggest Jack throw UnLocke in the water to stop him? He had questioned UnLocke in a past episode why he didn't just turn into smoke to venture over to Hydra Island. Did Sawyer notice something on the kayak trip over that made him suspect UnLocke was somehow vulnerable to water? And did UnLocke seem somewhat shaken by his unplanned dip?
- I also knew when UnLocke handed Jack the backpack that he had switched it on him.
- Although Hurley could not find a first aid kit on the sub, there was one clearly behind Lapidus in the control room.
- Sawyer's inability to trust Jack goes back to Jack's last scheme of detonating the bomb that cost Juliet her life. It is no wonder he can't go along with doing nothing and hoping for the best.
- Sayid seems to confirm that Desmond is still alive in the well and that he did not kill him as he previously told UnLocke.
- Sayid's comment to Jack that "it's going to be you" is our second reference to the episode's title "The Candidate".
- Sayid appears to have had a change of heart since his encounter with Desmond, sacrificing himself for the others.
- I think the jury is still out on whether we've seen the last of Lapidus.
- Sun's insistence that Jin leave her is contrasted with her scene on the helicopter in the Season 4 finale where she was devastated at his apparent death in Widmore's freighter explosion.
- And did anyone else think Sun should have convinced Jin to go by mentioning that their daughter should have at least one living parent?
- Did UnLocke realize that they were not all dead because nothing changed with the submarine's sinking? What would have happened had they all been killed? Would he have been free of the Island?
- Jack tells Bernard that Locke had oral surgery about 3 years back.
- Sayid tells Jack that there are only the 3 of them (Sayid, Jack, and UnLocke) left after Widmore's attack on the beach.
- At the nursing home, housekeeping is asked to dial extension 23 over the P.A. system.
- UnLocke says there were 4 bricks of C-4 on the plane.
- Over the hospital P.A. system, a tech is asked to report to Trauma 3.
- The first time we see on the bomb's countdown watch timer is 3:54, then 3:45 after the commercial break.
- Lapidus says it will take 5 minutes before the sub surfaces.
- Jin tells Sawyer and Jack to try and left the locker pinning Sun on the count of 3.
From eonline.com: Next week's "Across the Sea" is unlike anything we've seen on Lost before. And though we've all been told that none of the series regulars appear in this the second-to the-last episode before the finale, that is actually not true. Spoiler Alert: You will see three of the main leads in a very surprising throwback moment that lets you know that the producers totally knew what they were doing as of Season One. Allison Janney (The West Wing) guest stars, along with two other actors you know, and a few others you don't. We'll learn much, much more about the history of the island and the evil and light within. Pay close attention to every line Allison's character says. Oh, and DVR it 'cause you'll need to watch it twice.
Finale News
Lost's goodbye has expanded yet again, this time by 30 minutes, according to The Hollywood Reporter. The series finale will now run two-and-a-half hours. The episode, scheduled to air Sunday, May 23, at 9 p.m. ET, will push the local news back a half-hour, followed by the previously announced post-finale special, Jimmy Kimmel Live: Aloha to Lost, at 12:05 a.m. ET. This adds to the two-hour retrospective scheduled to air immediately before the series finale, at 7 p.m. ET, and ABC's planned rebroadcast of the 2004 pilot on Saturday, May 22. Get ready to OD on Lost!