I Am DB

February 28, 2008

LOST S4E4: Eggtown

Filed under: Lost,TV — DB @ 3:09 pm

After watching yet another terrific episode, at least I can say that they answered a few questions…while revealing a bunch more. Whether or not you actually read this recap, I do recommend reading these:

http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20179125,00.html
http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20179357,00.html

Interviews that Lost creators Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse recently gave to Entertainment Weekly. It includes their comments on how soon we can expect resolutions to certain mysteries, such as: who is in the coffin; who/what is Jacob; and why do some 815ers stay on the island. There’s some good stuff in these. Check ‘em out.

On a related subject, have any of you watched the Lost “Missing Pieces?” These are way cool. Damon and Carlton reference them in the interview, calling them “mobisodes.” They were originally created for Verizon Wireless, but now they all live on the official Lost page at ABC.com. They’re like deleted scenes from the first three seasons of the show…except they weren’t deleted. They are newly created – written and shot last fall while the cast and crew were making the current season. One scene, for example, takes place when the Others were holding Michael and Walt prisoner. Juliet goes into Michael’s “cell” and talks to him about his impending departure from the island. And there’s also a mysterious one that involves Jack’s father – on the island. Check out this Wikipedia article about the backstory on these scenes.

Now then…let’s go to Eggtown.

PERJURY!
According to Jack’s testimony at Kate’s trial, only eight people survived the crash of Flight 815; the plane crashed in the water; Kate saved their lives; two survivors didn’t make it; and Jack never spoke to the federal marshal. If the truth ever comes out, and if Jack’s still alive when it does, we might be back in the courtroom for his obstruction of justice trial. His testimony begets a few questions, but we’ll get to those in a minute.

BRIBERY!
Miles and Ben had quite the interesting exchange. Allusions to a mystery boss (Matthew Abbadon?) who is seeking Ben gave way to Miles offering to tell said boss that Ben was dead…if Ben will give him the oddly specific sum of $3.2 million, in cash. When Ben balks at his ability to deliver, Miles points toward Kate and says, “Do not treat me like I’m one of them! Like I don’t know who you are and what you can do.” When Ben asks what Miles plans to do about Charlotte, who has already seen him alive, Miles responds menacingly that he’ll take care of Charlotte. Does that mean he’ll kill her, or just make it worth her while to play along? From what little we’ve gleaned, Charlotte seems more interested in the island itself than she does in Ben…but who knows where her storyline is going. Anyway, Miles initially gives Ben two days to come up with the money, but extends to a week when Ben points out that being held prisoner in a basement might slow him down a tad. Miles leaves satisfied…but I couldn’t help thinking that Ben never explicitly says he’ll deliver. (For what it may be worth, this is the second time we’ve seen Miles show an interest in money above all. Remember his flashback to the slain teenager’s bedroom, where his whole modus operandi seemed to be locating a hidden cash stash? Miles always seems to be looking for the Benjamins).

Get it?!?

CONSPIRACY!
The week’s “Holy Shit!” revelation was that in a post-island world, Kate is claiming to be Aaron’s mother. This bombshell leaves us with a whole new set of questions. How did this come to be? Is Claire dead, or is she being kept from her child? Backstory-wise there doesn’t seem to be much left to do with her, and we know she’s not one of the Oceanic Six…so death seems possible. On the other hand, back in season 1, an anxious and agitated psychic impressed upon Claire the importance of her raising her baby personally rather than giving it up for adoption. Plus, Desmond had a flash of Claire and Aaron getting off the island in a helicopter (though as Desmond is about to find out, getting into a helicopter doesn’t appear to guarantee safety). Neither of these points means Claire can’t be killed off, but they are important nuggets to remember. And though Aaron was not conceived on the island, he is apparently the first baby born there in a long time. Maybe even ever. Also, though I’m afraid I can’t find the original source material, I recall that before Lost even hit the airwaves in 2004, J.J. Abrams said that Claire’s baby would be a key piece of the overall mythology.

Whether Claire is dead or alive, how could Kate be convinced to take the baby and pass it off as her own? It’s all part of the big Oceanic lie, man! Jack’s out there telling the world flat-out falsehoods about the circumstances of the crash and the fight for survival. Jack, who has always been so morally righteous; Jack, who turned in his father for drinking on the job; Jack, who went after Locke with a vengeance for lying about Boone’s injuries. And now Jack is selling the Oceanic fairy tale without blinking an eye. Of course, we know it’s going to catch up with him later and he’ll be quite distraught, but for now he seems content to spout the fiction. Based on his exchange with Kate outside the courthouse, he clearly isn’t comfortable with the Aaron situation, whatever that is. So once again, we’re left wondering about the entire Oceanic 815 fantasy. Who is orchestrating it? Who put the fake plane at the bottom of the ocean? Who coached the Oceanic Six about their story for when they returned to civilization? Why are they playing along? Why have these six people gotten off the island, and what has happened to those who didn’t? And what will transpire to make Hurley, and eventually Jack, so hell-bent on going back?

Another question I’m left with at the end of the Jack/Kate scene is that in the first flash-forward episode, when Jack and Kate met at the airport, they seemed estranged by something more than just his difficulty coming by to visit Aaron. She tells him in this episode that whenever he’s ready to see Aaron, he’s welcome to come over. But further out in the future, he has to implore her not to hang up the phone when he calls, and he practically begs to get her to come meet him. Though she agrees, she doesn’t seem particularly happy to be there or to see him. So what happens between the time they meet outside court and the time they meet at the airport?

MEMORY!
With all the baby mama drama, it might be easy to forget about one of the episode’s most curious moments. On the beach, Daniel and Charlotte have a deck of Dharma Initiative playing cards and seem to be testing Daniel’s memory. It appears that he looked at three cards, which Charlotte then turned face down. We don’t know how much time lapsed before Daniel tried to recall the three he’d seen, but however long it had been, he could only remember two. Charlotte tried to be encouraging, but Daniel was not pleased with his results. This scene surely signifies something larger yet to come.

ALBUQUERQUE!
If we can assume that Aaron is the fifth of the Oceanic Six, then who will round out the group? Though we know Ben is off the island and has the means to pass himself off as someone else, it’s doubtful that he is one of the Six, since he’s still got people like Sayid’s girl Elsa trying to find him. The six survivors are too high profile for Ben to be one of them.

Whatever happens to Desmond and Juliet, I’m guessing neither of them is posing as a crash survivor, since passenger lists would be able to disprove their presence easily enough (unless even the manifest has been manipulated). With only one person left to get off, where does that leave Sun and Jin? If Sun doesn’t leave the island soon, she faces death due to her pregnancy. It’s possible that only one of them gets off the island – maybe because the other one dies, or because external forces manage to separate them. And hey, Sun and Jin are not the only couple on the island. What about Rose and Bernard? When last we heard from them, they were firmly in the “Jack” camp, so it’s doubtful that they would remain on the island voluntarily. Could Michael be the sixth member? And if he is, where has he been since departing the island? And where would that leave Walt?

Of course, all of this speculation about couples torn asunder hinges on whether or not Aaron is considered one of the Six…

STUPIDITY!
This is a complaint – a big one – directed at the writers and producers. Do I need to remind you that in the timeline of your show, Charlie died two days ago? Two days. Three at the most, if I’m miscalculating. And here’s Claire, all smiles, living the comfy life in the barracks without so much as a single forlorn stare. Ditto for Hurley, whose brooding has given way to the joys of Gene Kelly and Olivia Newton-John in Xanadu.  What the hell, people? In the premiere episode, Hurley and Claire were shattered by the news of Charlie’s death, and now a couple of days later all is forgotten? This grates on me in a major way. How can these guys – the writers, that is – be so obtuse? I literally do not understand how it is possible to write a scene for Claire – who for the last two-and-a-half seasons has shared the majority of her screen time with Charlie – without it crossing anyone’s mind that maybe his absence would be having some affect on her. Seriously, it offends me.

LASTLY!
The plot thickens. Locke gets crazier. Kate treats Sawyer like crap…again. (Really. That morning after BS you pulled was uncool, Kate. Un. Cool.)  And a helicopter goes missing.

Despite it occasionally upsetting me, I love this show.

By the way, the post strike schedule has been set. Here’s how it will go:

Episode 5 – Tonight, 2/28
Episode 6 – 3/6
Episode 7 – 3/13
Episode 8 – 3/20
Episode 9 – 4/24
Episode 10 – 5/1
Episode 11 – 5/8
Episode 12 – 5/16
Episode 13 – 5/22

Tonight’s episode: The Constant

February 21, 2008

LOST S4E3: The Economist

Filed under: Lost,TV — DB @ 3:19 pm

If you don’t actually want to read this whole thing – and believe me, I understand – skip down to the last two paragraphs for an explanation of what is happening to the rest of this season’s episodes now that the strike is over…if you haven’t heard the plan already, that is.

Now then…

Shortly after 7:00pm last Thursday, the electricity in my neighborhood went out. It came back at about 9:05. DIRECTV rebooted and began recording Lost, having missed everything before the first commercial. In between the lights going out and coming back on, there was a lot of angry, incomprehensible swearing coming from my apartment. Neighbors reported making out phrases such as “goddamn motherfucker” and “any other night” amidst the loud banging of fists on the wall.

So I missed the opening, pre-credits sequence of the show. I’ve gathered the following online and from friends: Sayid closed Naomi’s eyes, and removed from her wrist a bracelet with the inscription, “N — I’ll always be with you — RG.” (How very J.K. Rowling of you, Lost…) Apparently there was some discussion with the freighter folks in which Frank said the helicopter wouldn’t leave without Charlotte, so Sayid volunteered to go convince Locke to release her. And somewhere in there, a flash-forward revealed Sayid as one of the Oceanic Six, on a golf course. He was approached by a guy who thought he looked familiar. Sayid said he was one of the Oceanic Six. The guy kinda freaked out. And then Sayid shot him. Did I leave out anything?

Friggin’ PG&E.

The writers and producers of Lost have kicked the “What the hell is going on?” factor up a notch or two this season. The questions are flying fast and furious, and the answers feel like they’re a long way off. So how did the mystery deepen this week? Let’s see what we’ve got.

MOBILE HOME
Jacob’s cabin remains on the move, as Locke discovered when he returned to the site and saw nothing there…except for that line of sand-like granules marking the spot. I knew last season when Locke crouched down and took note of that demarcation that we were meant to remember it. I also thought at the time that the substance might be gunpowder, though we have no reason to suspect that for now. The question remains – where is Jacob’s cabin? And who the hell is Jacob, anyway?

PICTURE THIS
Sayid wants to ascertain why Naomi was carrying a picture of Desmond and Penny, so Juliet leaves the helicopter site to fetch the time-leaping Irishman from the beach. When she returns with him, he begins questioning Frank, who insists that whatever Naomi’s reasons for having that picture were, they were unknown to him. Unsatisfied, Desmond demands that Frank look him in the eye and tell him that he and his crew have never heard of Penelope Widmore. Frank looks toward Daniel, who despite being engrossed in an experiment, manages to offer a shifty look in return…one that suggests the name Penelope Widmore is not at all unfamiliar to them. Frank remains mum, so Desmond announces that when the chopper leaves the island, he’ll be on it. Maybe on the freighter he can find somebody who has answers. Am I reading too much into Daniel’s look, or is there still a connection between this team and Penny?

WARNINGS
Daniel and Frank have two other brief but intriguing exchanges. The first comes when Daniel asks Frank to borrow the satellite phone so that he can call Regina on the freighter and get her help with his experiment. Frank hands Daniel the phone, but warns him to hang up immediately if Minkowski gets on the line. What does that warning mean? Minkowski is the still-unseen freighter member who took Jack’s call for rescue. Last week, Miles tried to contact him, but was told by Regina that he was unavailable. Miles wasn’t happy, and insisted that Minkowski call him back as soon as possible. So what’s the story with this Minkowski fellow? When will we meet him? Where was he when Miles called? And why does Frank not seem to trust him? Could Minkowski possibly be Ben’s spy? And while we’re at it, who’s Regina??

Intriguing Exchange #2 between Daniel and Frank comes later, when Frank is about to take off with the copter. Daniel pulls him aside and warns him that no matter what happens, he must follow the EXACT same bearing that they came in on. Frank gets the message; I wish we could say the same. Why is it necessary to be so precise and what might happen if Frank veers slightly off-course? In her recap (no longer available online) E! News columnist Kristin dos Santos theorizes that the bearing Daniel refers to is 325 – the bearing Ben instructed Michael to follow when he set him and Walt free. And I also caught a fan’s comment online suggesting that without using that bearing, one can not leave the island’s pull – hence Desmond’s inability to sail away after abandoning the hatch. Interesting idea…and probably accurate.

TIME LAPSE
The experiment about which Daniel contacts Regina has to do with her launching a device onto the island, which should be guided right to Daniel by a beacon that he sets up with some equipment he had on the chopper. Communicating with Regina via the satellite phone, Daniel watches the sky and listens as she counts down the moment to impact. But the sky stays clear, even after she reaches zero. Whatever she had launched, it didn’t land. Until it did, that is…31 minutes later. Daniel compares the clock on the beacon to the clock from the “payload,” and is definitely concerned about the difference in time. What larger implications does this have for the island?

MILES AWAY
Sayid, Kate and Miles arrive at the Others’ barracks, where Locke and Co. are awaiting them with a trap. Before the two groups meet however, Sayid makes an interesting discovery. In Ben’s home, he finds a secret room filled with suits, luggage and a drawer full of international currency as well as passports and identification. He opens one passport and finds Ben’s picture. I couldn’t make out the name on the page, but something tells me it’s not Benjamin Linus. (Entertainment Weekly‘s recapper says the name was Dean Moriarty – which has multiple literary origins. Here’s his full article. I don’t know whether to be annoyed by his constant references to literature or impressed that maybe his references really were intended by the writers of the show. Either way, his article is always an interesting read). Does this hidden room suggest that Ben leaves the island regularly on “business?”

Eventually, Locke and Sayid have a perfectly civil conversation in which Sayid insists that by returning with Charlotte, he can get a ride on the chopper to the freighter and look for answers. He offers Miles in exchange for Charlotte. I didn’t understand why it would be acceptable to Frank for Sayid to return with Charlotte and not Miles. I would think the idea was that Frank wouldn’t take off until all of his team was safe and accounted for. Maybe in the opening sequence that I missed, Sayid asked Frank for his word that he would transport him to the freighter if he returned with Charlotte. If this is the case, then Sayid could leave Miles behind thanks to the Law of Semantics. This would explain Frank saying, “You cheated” when Sayid brings Charlotte back. Whatever the case, Frank does pilot the chopper off the island, with Sayid, Desmond and Naomi’s body onboard. Charlotte chooses to remain on the island, saying that she has work to do. Daniel stays as well. So after Michael and Walt, Sayid becomes the third survivor of Flight 815 to leave the island. Will he be back again before returning home as one of the Oceanic Six?

By the way, with the absence from this episode of Matthew Abbadon, the creepiest (and coolest) moment of the night goes to Miles, who answers Hurley’s question about whether the freighter folk are here to kill them with an ass-kicking delivery of the line, “Not yet.”

“EVERYBODY HAS A BOSS”
So says Sayid to Elsa, the woman whose employer, a supposed “economist,” he has been tasked with killing. The episode’s big shocking reveal is that Sayid’s post-island boss, who has assigned him this execution, is Ben. (Or appears to be Ben…more on that in moment). When Sayid tries to tell Elsa, who he seems to have fallen for, that he is going to kill her boss because his name is on a list he was given (hmm, a list…why does this sound familiar?), she shoots him. Turns out she was just as interested in finding Sayid’s puppet master as he was in finding hers. Sayid seems caught in the middle of quite a fight – with Ben leading one side…and who on the other? Internet speculation is that Matthew Abbadon is the other key figure here. And if that’s true, maybe Ben really is one of “the good guys,” because this Abbadon dude seems evil to the core.

But how did Sayid get here? How could he be working for Ben? Back on the island, he told Locke, “The day I begin trusting him is the day I would have sold my soul.” It would appear that day has come for Sayid Jarrah. After being shot by Elsa (who he kills moments later), Sayid makes his way to what seems to be an animal hospital, where his bullet wound is tended to by Ben. Sayid is emotional over the night’s events, but Ben remains cold. What follows is the episode’s most fascinating exchange – even more so than anything spoken earlier between Daniel and Frank. Ben tells Sayid, “These people don’t deserve our sympathies. Need I remind you what happened the last time you thought with your heart instead of your gun?”

Sayid answers, “You used her to recruit me into killing for you.”

“Do you want to protect your friends or not, Sayid?” Ben asks him.

Whoa. So it seems that Sayid has been working for Ben for a while. How long is this list naming people that have been marked for termination? And what did happen the last time Sayid thought with his heart instead of his gun? Did he lose another love? Could it have been Nadia, the woman from his pre-island life who he still loves (despite the beach fling with Shannon)? How did Ben use Nadia, or whoever the woman in question is, to recruit Sayid? Hopefully his next flash-forward will fill in the gaps. And how are his actions protecting his friends? Which friends is he protecting? The other five members of the Oceanic Six? People still on the island?

One last thought on this scene. I couldn’t help but wonder when we saw Ben treating Sayid if it was, in fact, Ben. I’m sure it is…but there was just something about him that made the word “clone” pop into my head very briefly. I’m just sayin’…

FINAL THOUGHTS
Another mind-boggling episode that featured good material all around (including some great Hurley lines and a cool scene between Kate and Sawyer that led to a surprising turn of events) but deepened the mystery considerably. If I have one complaint about the season so far, it’s that new questions are coming at us like machine gun fire. I don’t mind waiting for the answers; it’s keeping track of all the questions that bothers me. Working on these write-ups helps me keep it all straight.

Tonight’s Episode: Eggtown.  If my power goes out again, mark my words: there will be blood.

POST-STRIKE NOTE:
Tonight’s episode is the fourth of eight that were shot before the strike. Originally, another eight episodes were supposed to be made, for a season total of 16. But the strike knocked that plan out of commission. Here’s the new plan: five more episodes, instead of eight, will be filmed for this season. The writers will figure out how to condense their original plan so that all the key story points that were left to play out this year will still be addressed. Supposedly, the missing three episodes will be worked into the next two seasons so that the show will wind up having the same total number of episodes as was planned. The remaining five episodes will begin airing on April 24th, at yet another new time: 10:00pm on Thursdays (a mistake, if you ask me, but they didn’t).

So that means there will be about a month between the end of this current slate of episodes and the beginning of the post-strike ones. I had also heard that ABC might possibly hold off airing episode eight for that month, and put it on instead the week before the five new shows start up. The reason for this is that apparently the end of episode seven is a more logical and less frustrating point to stop for four weeks than the end of episode eight, which is supposed to be something of a shocker. So says the rumor mill.

February 14, 2008

LOST S4E2: Confirmed Dead

Filed under: Lost,TV — DB @ 1:27 pm

FANTASTIC FOUR
Let me get right into it, and say that I’m immediately digging the new characters. Since the episode revealed that they have come to the island in search of Ben, the tip of the iceberg question is: why? Why do they want Ben, and why does Ben fear that every living person on the island will die when they arrive? Perhaps we’ll get more clarity on those questions this week (yeah right). In the meantime, let’s take a look at our team:

Daniel – He’s introduced crying at the TV announcement that Oceanic 815 has been discovered, but he can’t explain why he’s so emotional. Or so he says. Does he have a connection to someone on the plane, which he’s hiding from the woman he’s with? There didn’t seem to be anything disingenuous about his response, and yet…

And who is the woman? It’s probably nothing, but I feel like it’s not an accident that we never see her face.

Miles – Don’t really have much to say about him yet, other than that he’s kinda awesome and he seems the most anxious to find Ben. In fact, he just seems the most anxious in general. Maybe that’s what happens to people who spend too much time exercising (or exorcising) their sixth sense.

Charlotte – Her flashback is the most puzzling, seeing as she found the remains of a Dharma Initiative polar bear…in Tunisia. More than that, she seemed to be expecting the Dharma insignia. And more than that, she seemed quite excited about it. (Side note: this film geek couldn’t help see Charlotte’s intro as a bit of a Star Wars tribute. First she’s in Tunisia, where much of the saga was filmed; and then she’s hanging from a tree upside down, in exactly the same position Luke was stuck in when the Wampa captured him in The Empire Strikes Back). Moving on…

Frank – A former Oceanic pilot, who was almost at the controls of Flight 815. Why didn’t he wind up flying the plane? We know that he’s right about the pilot, of course. The pilot didn’t drown; he was killed by the black smoke. And I couldn’t tell for the life of me if the photo shown of the pilot was in fact a photo of Greg Grunberg, the actor who played him way back in the first episode. He doesn’t usually have a mustache, and the presence of that hairy lip in the photo was enough to make me uncertain. I suppose we can believe that the photo is accurate; otherwise Frank would have been complaining about the picture being wrong, rather than just the corpse missing a wedding ring. Anyway, Frank is established as the only one of the four with a known connection to the flight, the castaways, or the island. Does the fact that he escaped death that day foreshadow his demise this time around? (Jeff Fahey, the actor playing him, is credited as a guest star, while the other three are regulars. Hmm…)

By the way, in the interest of full disclosure, my allusion to the rescue team as the Fantastic Four is borrowed. The resident Lost expert for Entertainment Weekly does a recap on the website after each episode, and believe me, they’re waaaaay more detailed and obsessive than these write-ups. He can be a little annoying sometimes, but some of the theories and ideas he puts forth are pretty interesting, so he’s worth checking out. Here’s the link to this week’s, in which he explains the Fantastic Four connection, and also throws out an intriguing thought about Charlotte, which has to do with Chronicles of Narnia author C.S. Lewis.

Also, if you’re so inclined, check out this little feature from TV Guide introducing the four new cast members and offering a tease about what might be in store for them.

MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE
We learn that the rescue team was assembled by our creepy friend Abbadon, who also recruited Naomi to lead them. Despite her hesitations about their qualifications, Abbadon insists that every member of the team was selected for a specific purpose. He tells her, “Everything relies on you getting them in, getting them out and preventing anyone from getting killed.” Well that plan is moot now, isn’t it? RIP Naomi. So…what is this whole operation about? Why do they want Ben? Was the photo they had of him taken on or off the island? Why have these particular people been chosen? Are they connected to the Dharma Initiative? Are they looking for possible survivors of the Dharma Initiative? Why does Naomi expect that they might find survivors of 815 on the island, since supposedly there are no survivors? That last question, and the fact that a seemingly dummy plane has been planted at the bottom of the ocean, makes it clear that there’s a group of people who know exactly where this island is; who know that the plane went down there; and who know that there are survivors. And once some of the survivors have returned home, Abbadon is still after something – hence his insidious visit to Hurley. So since Naomi’s mission failed to go as Abbadon planned, how will it end?

PENNY FOR YOUR THOUGHTS
While Naomi’s boat may have nothing to do with Desmond’s girl Penny, she does have a boat out looking for him…doesn’t she? I take you back to the bewildering last scene of the season 2 finale. After we see Michael and Walt sail off, after we see bags pulled over the heads of Jack, Kate and Sawyer, and after Charlie emerges from the hatch acting strangely, we see a boat in what looks like arctic waters. A couple of guys are onboard playing chess and speaking Russian. One of their instruments alerts them to an “electromagnetic anomaly,” which we know to be the result of Desmond turning the failsafe key in the hatch. They start flipping through papers, they type things on their computer, and then they call Penny and say, “Miss Widmore, I think we found it.” The camera lingers on her astonished face and then…boom: L O S T.

Seeing as we had met Penny for the first time in that episode, it was a bold choice to leave her face as the last thing we’d see for the summer hiatus. So she’s trying to find Desmond, and there is a boat that she’s in contact with. She told Desmond at one point, “With enough money and determination, anyone can be found.” But what clue was she looking for out there in the arctic? How does she know to have people looking for odd electromagnetic behavior? And reader David E. raised the excellent question, what was she doing on the monitor that Charlie saw in the Looking Glass? After he flipped the switch to allow the flow of communication, there was an immediate incoming call, almost as if it had been waiting to get through and now was finally able to. Charlie took the call, and there was Penny. But how? Where did she think she was calling? What led her there?

THE SHINING
Let’s talk about Walt for a minute. We saw him appear, taller, above Locke and say, “You’ve got work to do.” Now we learn that Walt told him to take care of Naomi, and also to go back to Jacob’s cabin. So can we just back the fuck up here for a second? Walt has the Shining; this we know. His gifts were introduced in season 1, most notably when Locke touched his arm and the boy recoiled, warning, “Don’t open that thing!” “That thing” being the hatch…which Walt had never seen and had no knowledge of whatsoever. Later, he confessed to Michael that he burned the first raft because he didn’t want to leave the island. Michael told him that they didn’t have to leave…to which Walt ominously replied, “Yes we do.”

Soon after, Walt is kidnapped by the Others. Only after they’ve taken him do they discover his talents. When they have Michael prisoner as well, Miss Klugh tries to ask him about Walt’s gift. And when Michael delivers Jack, Kate, Sawyer and Hurley to the Others, Ben tells him that they got more than they bargained for with Walt. What did they get? What did Walt tell them, and how did they get him to do so? Did he perhaps warn them that people might soon be coming to the island, spurring Ben to investigate just who might be coming and why, and maybe even leading him to arrange for a spy on the boat? If Walt knew of the people coming, he might know their motives, and therefore might have been able to warn Locke…though how he appeared on the island looking like puberty’s newest catch is a whole other mystery.

Is this all one big chain of events that was set in motion when Locke blew open the hatch, and Walt knew all along where it would go? And what does Walt know about Jacob? Why does Walt want Locke to return to the cabin? What is Locke supposed to do there?

NOTES OF INTEREST
While we’re on the subject of the cabin, Locke and Ben both seemed taken aback that Hurley mentioned the place. Though he tried to cover his tracks, did either of them believe him? We still don’t understand what Hurley saw in there…or what Locke saw, for that matter. Jacob, you tease…

And finally, let’s not forget that the other Others are still on the island somewhere. The group that was with Ben when he and Alex left for the radio tower and Tom and Co. left for the beach. Most of the Others that we’ve become familiar with are dead now, but there’s still Cindy the flight attendant, the two kids, and of course the mysterious Richard Alpert, owner of the world’s best rejuvenating skin cream. And whatever happened to The Sheriff? Remember her? She only appeared in one episode – season three’s Stranger in a Strange Land – overseeing Juliet’s trial and quizzing Jack about the meaning of his tattoos. She seemed like an important Other, so what ever happened to her? When and how will the remaining Others come into play?

FINAL THOUGHTS
Excellent episode with a lot of compelling moments. I would like to see a little more ongoing mourning for Charlie, whose death is still just hours fresh. Claire and Hurley, especially, need to continue reacting to that. Sawyer and Locke had some great moments in this episode, and it seems the show is keeping Sawyer in a dark place, which is good. One of the nice things about these first two episodes is that nearly everybody in the cast is getting some face time. Let’s keep that up…and give a little more to Sun, Jin and Desmond.

Tonight’s episode: The Economist

February 7, 2008

LOST S4E1: The Beginning of the End

Filed under: Lost,TV — DB @ 2:11 pm

Alright fellow Losties:

Because I am mildly obsessed with the show and often feel the need to collect my thoughts in writing, I’ll be sharing my reaction to any episodes that leave me with something to say. It may take almost a week, but hey, obsession is a time commitment. It also may seem like a waste of time but this is the kind of crap I think about.

Read on if you’re interested, and be aware that spoilers abound…

CREDIT WHERE CREDIT IS DUE
If you’re good with names, the list of cast members in the show’s opening credits can provide some interesting clues about what’s to come. Most of us know, for example – at least, I hope we know – that Matthew Fox is Jack, or Emile de Ravin is Claire. But perhaps less well-known are recurring names like Mira Furlan and L. Scott Caldwell, who play Rousseau and Rose, respectively. If you see the name Frederic Lane in the opening credits, you can expect an appearance by Edward Mars, the FBI agent who chased Kate all over the world…and then died from a crash-related head wound. Nestor Carbonell’s name means we’re going to see Richard Alpert, the mega-mysterious Other who seems not to have aged since Ben was a kid. And one of the most frequently seen guest star names is John Terry, who plays Jack’s father, Dr. Christian Shephard. You might have noticed Terry’s name appear in the season premiere credits, but did you see Jack’s father anywhere in the episode? I didn’t. Or so I thought. I checked out a few websites afterwards and all of them indicated that the briefly glimpsed man in the rocking chair, whom Hurley spied in the mystery cabin, was in fact the good Doctor Shephard Senior.

I’ve re-watched the scene a few times, and I couldn’t tell, even when I paused the image. The figure, though obscured in shadow, is apparently Jack’s dad…or at least, it’s John Terry (the picture below – clearly tweaked to make the figure more discernible – does appear to show Terry). More on this scene later.

Other things that interested me about the opening credits:

-Dominic Monaghan’s name was still listed among the regular cast, rather than as a guest star. I’ll be anxious to see if his name is still in there this week. If it is, does that mean that Charlie’s beyond-the-grave appearances are going to be a frequent occurrence? Perhaps to other castaways besides Hurley?

-You may have noticed that Harold Perrineau’s name was back in the credits, even though Michael will not be reappearing for a while yet. Also, three new names were listed among the main cast credits: Rebecca Mader, Ken Leung (neither of whom were seen in the premiere), and Jeremy Davies, who we met at the episode’s end when he parachuted onto the island.  There is also a fourth new regular, although I’m not sure why his name was missing; he’ll be played by B-movie legend Jeff Fahey. These new cast members comprise part of the alleged rescue team. (Another rescue team member was listed in the guest star credits: Fisher Stevens, who was heard but not seen as the voice on the other end of Naomi’s satellite phone).

-In other guest star news, Lance Reddick will be a recurring figure as that shady “Oceanic attorney” Matthew Abbadon, who visited Hurley in the institution. What’s up with that guy? He definitely scores an 8 on the Creepy Scale. From what I read online, “Abbadon” has some none-too-sunny connotations. Whatever that guy is up to, it can’t be good.


CABIN FEVER
Back to the cabin. Remember that really weird scene last year when Ben brought Locke to Jacob’s cabin? Well things just got really weirder. So there’s Hurley, walking through the jungle, not far behind Sawyer, Desmond, Sayid and Juliet, when all of a sudden he’s not anymore. They’re somehow far out of earshot, and Hurley comes upon Jacob’s cabin…in an entirely different location than it was when Ben took Locke there. Hurley goes to investigate, peeking through an open window. He sees a man sitting in a chair – played by John Terry, it seems – rocking back and forth. Suddenly, an eye pops up right in front of the hole Hurley is gazing through, scaring the big dude half to death. He retreats from the cabin, which disappears…and then resurfaces behind him.

File this under “WTF?!?!”

It’s worth noting here, since I was dwelling on the importance of credits, that John Terry was not listed in the credits for the episode last season when Ben took Locke to the cabin, so whoever briefly appeared as Jacob in that scene, it was someone else. But there is a bizarre connection between the two cabin sightings. When Ben and Locke were in the cabin and Jacob started to go crazy – shaking the joint, smashing glass, and tossing Ben against the wall – there was a quick cut to an extreme close-up of an eye. I thought that the eye was Locke’s, since the next shot was a wider view of his face, before he got up and ran out of the cabin. But now I think that the eye we saw in the Locke/Ben scene is the same eye that pops up in front of Hurley. I freeze-framed both of them, and they look the same. Don’t ask me how or why…it was something unique about the arch of the eyebrow, and a vague “crazy-guy” glint. I can’t put my finger on it, but I think they belong to the same person. And if I’m right…whose fucking eye is that?!?!? Is it Jacob’s? Is there someone else there, with Jacob?

THE OCEANIC SIX
People are assuming, based on what we know so far of post-island life, that Jack, Kate and Hurley make up half of the Oceanic Six. But do they? The Oceanic Six must be survivors who got off the island in a very public manner with lots of press. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that only six people got off, does it? Or that Kate and Jack are part of the Six? Okay, Jack probably is – there were references to his newfound fame – signing autographs and such. But Kate is still a fugitive, as far as we know. If she had any control over the situation – which she probably didn’t, but if – she would likely not have returned in a flash of publicity. On the other hand, in last season’s finale, Jack talks about the golden pass for unlimited free flights that Oceanic gave them, mentioning it as though Kate had one too. So okay, she probably is one of the Six, but I think there’s a shade of reasonable doubt.

So who else? Well, according to Desmond’s flashes last year, Claire and Aaron got off the island, so are they among the Six? What about Bernard and Rose? When the castaways split into two groups, Rose said that she wasn’t going anywhere with Locke (despite them sharing a connection we learned about back in season 2). But this raises another question: you would think that the people who went with Locke would be the ones not leaving the island with Naomi’s crew, but Hurley obviously leaves, so… how does that happen? In addition, I didn’t see Sun and Jin pick a side when the group split. Hurley, Claire, and Sawyer clearly went with Locke (as did non-Oceanic folk Rousseau, Ben, Alex and Carl), while Kate, Juliet, Rose, Bernard, Sayid and Desmond all visibly stayed with Jack. But what of the Korean lovebirds? And Desmond remaining with Jack is interesting, since he returned from the Looking Glass convinced that Charlie’s final warning was true and that Naomi’s people were not who they claimed to be. So why didn’t he go with Locke? And where exactly do the non-815 people fit into the rescue? Even if Juliet or Desmond leave the island, they wouldn’t be counted among the Oceanic Six, would they? These are questions that keep me up nights.

SECRETS & LIES
It would seem a conspiracy is afoot. Bearded-Jack told Kate when they met at the airport that he’s sick of lying. Institutionalized-Hurley thinks Future-But-Not-Yet-Bearded-Jack only comes to visit him to find out if he’s going to tell the truth about something. The truth about what?? What have the Oceanic Six lied about? Does their lie connect to the fact that Flight 815 was supposedly found already, with all of its passengers deceased and accounted for? Have they been bought off somehow? Offered something in exchange for playing along with a fiction? And if so, who’s writing the story of Flight 815 and the Oceanic Six?

KEEP IN MIND…
As a new season gets underway and the plot moves forward, here are some things introduced last season that the writers will hopefully not suddenly forget to follow-through on. These aren’t questions so much as character points.

-Charlie’s “Greatest Hits” note, which he told Desmond to give to Claire. Hopefully it didn’t drift away or smudge when Desmond swam to and from the Looking Glass. Let’s make sure she gets that, and also finds his ring that he left for her in the crib, yes?

-Speaking of which, now that Desmond will no longer be having flashes involving Charlie’s death, let’s not forget that imminent demises are not the only thing the flashes show him. Keep playing up his new “gift.”

-Alex has finally met her mother, Rousseau. So now what happens with them, and where does Ben fit in? (There’s a cool deleted scene on the season 3 DVD set in which Ben and Locke, en route to see Jacob, talk about Alex and Rousseau.)

-Tensions between Ben and Locke pretty much boiled over when Ben… you know…shot him. Taking a bullet to the gut at close range tends to cause a ripple even in the best of friendships, and this bond was tenuous to begin with. Now that the castaways are divided and Ben has gone with Locke, let’s not suddenly forget that those two have some unresolved issues, to say the least.

-In the season 3 finale, Kate pointed out that Sawyer hadn’t been the same since he returned with the recording of Juliet – that is, since he returned from killing Locke’s father, the real Sawyer who he’d been seeking for most of his life. Here’s hoping this detail isn’t dropped, and that the show explores the impact that this complicated resolution might continue to have on our friend James Ford.

-Love Quadrangles – Jack’s kissing Juliet but telling Kate he loves her. Kate’s sleeping with Sawyer but getting jealous of Jack and Juliet. Sawyer’s making his way through all the island ladies (remember his romp with Ana Lucia?) Where are we, Melrose Island? I predict that he will next seduce a grieving, vulnerable Claire. (No. Not really.) Wherever these relationships are going, they’ll only get trickier.

MINOR QUESTIONS
-Before Naomi died, she asked her pal on the other end of the phone to tell her sister that she loves her. Who is Naomi’s sister? C’mon people, this is Lost. There’s no way that was an innocent line…

-Jack accused Locke of blowing up every chance they’ve had of getting off the island. Locke countered that he’s never done anything that wasn’t in the best interest of the group. Okay, so let’s say he was justified when he chucked a knife into Naomi’s back, and really was acting in everyone’s best interests because Naomi and her people aren’t who they claim to be. Still, how does he justify blowing up the submarine? Or the communications barnhouse with the satellite dish? Or destroying the computer in the hatch, for that matter? Locke has made a lot of bad decisions lately – even he admitted he was wrong when he stopped pushing the button and smashed the computer. I’d like to see him follow through on his statement that he’s got a lot of explaining to do.

Also, when Jeremy Davies’ Bearded Rescue Guy parachutes onto the island at the end and removes his helmet, why were Jack and Kate looking at him like they were nervous, or surprised to see him? They were expecting someone, right? Maybe it was just played up as a big dramatic moment – Rescue Finally Arrives! – but the way they looked at  him seemed odd to me.

FINAL THOUGHTS
Great start to the season, with an excellent – dare I say heartbreaking – performance from Jorge Garcia. And I loved seeing Charlie again. By the time we were ¾ of the way through season 1, all I wanted was for Charlie and Claire to survive, get off the island, and go make little British-Australian babies. I took his death hard, so seeing him again provided a bit of consolation. Also, I would have liked to see one loaded glance between Juliet and Ben when everyone met up in the jungle – after all, she totally betrayed his ass – but that’s a small detail. Can’t wait to see where things go from here.


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