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Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
So... 23 days left. Obama was considering pre-empting it with the State of the Union, but fan pressure got him to straighten out his priorities, and Lost will be starting on February 2 as planned.

I have a feeling this will wind up being the "Hate on Lost" thread as well, when they finish the show and haven't explained all of the mysteries. And they won't explain them all, you know. They've said as much. The weird island is a backdrop for the story; not a plot element itself. Just like they don't explain how phasers work in Star Trek, they aren't going to explain why the Island moves in time and stuff like that.
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
I'm glad to hear that the State of the Union won't conflict with Lost. We've been working through all the previous episodes in preparation.

I don't think there's any room for a middle ground this season. Either they finish it up and it's awesome, or it will be a terrible let down. I'll most likely be happy as long as they address the motivations and history of the big players in a reasonably believable fashion.

--Mel
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by theCrowsWife:
I'll most likely be happy as long as they address the motivations and history of the big players in a reasonably believable fashion.

Agreed--mostly. Some things will annoy me if they're not explained at least a little.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
And they won't explain them all, you know. They've said as much. The weird island is a backdrop for the story; not a plot element itself. Just like they don't explain how phasers work in Star Trek, they aren't going to explain why the Island moves in time and stuff like that.
I think "pocket of exotic matter" is as much explanation as they should give about the island's mysterious behavior. Anything more is either going to end up being too "religious" or scientifically ridiculous.
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
I don't need to know why the island travels in time, any more than I want to know exactly how the TARDIS is bigger on the inside. Some mysteries are better left unsolved (since any explanation would be total handwavium anyway).

I'm currently re-watching the episodes too, and I've been enjoying noticing all those little things that passed me by originally, in light of later events.
I think that my biggest wish is for them to throw lots of those tiny things in so that when I'm re-watching the show in the future there will be lots of new perspectives on events already seen.

My personal wishlist for season 6:
I want to know what Jacob and the other man are.
I want to know why Richard is immortal.
I want to know why these particular people had to be lost at that particular time.
I want to know what happened to Claire.
I want to know what the numbers are all about and why they're cursed.
I'd like to know what would have happened to everyone if they had never crashed at all.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Uprooted:
quote:
Originally posted by theCrowsWife:
I'll most likely be happy as long as they address the motivations and history of the big players in a reasonably believable fashion.

Agreed--mostly. Some things will annoy me if they're not explained at least a little.
Yeah, at the end of the last season I started on a list of questions I thought they needed to answer (at least a little), but I've largely forgotten what they were.

I think it would be interesting to try, as a group, to compile and prioritize such a list before the season starts.

So here's my first contribution.

1. Richard. Where did he come from? Why doesn't he age and what's his relationship to the others and the island?
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
OK, I posted that while Bella Bee was posting her list and I agree with everything on it.

I'm also really curious to find out whether/how the explosion at the the last season changed the course of events.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Also, what's up with the children? Why do pregnant women die on the island? Why is it that the lost children, Aaron, Walt, Sun's baby (I forgot her name), don't need to return with the adults.
 
Posted by Hobbes (Member # 433) on :
 
I know I'm the odd one out on this but I think the less they explain the happier I'll be. I really doubt I'll like any explenation of anything, and I think much of the appeal is the mystery. I'd be much more content seeing a future set-up that continues adventure and mystery. I'm not talking continue the show, but allow for the fictional characters to continue a life that I would find just as interesting.

Hobbes [Smile]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
I want to know why Richard is immortal.
Richard himself said he was that way because Jacob made him that way.

quote:
I want to know what the numbers are all about and why they're cursed.

Since they already addressed the numbers in the lost experience online stuff, I don't think they'll ever address it on the show. I'd check out the lostpedia numbers page if you want to know more. particularly read about the valenzetti equation.

quote:
I'd like to know what would have happened to everyone if they had never crashed at all.
well, you'll never know that since we should all know by now that "whatever happened, happened". [Smile] And seriously, do you really want the last 16 episode of the entire series dealing with an alternate plot line where these characters have never met, have never built these relationships with each other, and don't end up on the Island? What a terrible season that would be.

quote:
1. Richard. Where did he come from? Why doesn't he age and what's his relationship to the others and the island?
my guess is he came on the black rock, and again, all he's said is that Jacob made him the way he is. I'm curious as to what his relationship is with Illana's people and the whole "what lies beneath the shadow of the statue" thing (answer: he who will save us all).

quote:
Why do pregnant women die on the island?
I've always maintained this has something to do with Ben. Ben's mother died during her 6th or 7th month of pregnancy, and now no one on the island makes it past their 6th or 7th month of pregnancy. And we know this wasn't the case before Ben took over. Somehow he is either exerting an influence on the Island(whether consciously or not), or people on the Island are being punished for his leadership.

That's all for now!
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Although, I will say the whole "Ricardus" thing makes me think he's much older. I had a good reason for guessing
black rock, though I can't remember it right now. One of the things I was disappointed with last season(for the most part i loved all of it) was finding out that Richard wasn't that "special". He's only immortal cause Jacob made him that way, and most of his knowledge comes from longetivity or time travelling Losties that tell him things.

The introduction of Jacob and Essau(are we still calling him that?) went a long way towards making me forget about that though.
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
quote:
I want to know what the numbers are all about and why they're cursed.

quote:
Since they already addressed the numbers in the lost experience online stuff, I don't think they'll ever address it on the show. I'd check out the lostpedia numbers page if you want to know more. particularly read about the valenzetti equation.

I always feel like, from a good storytelling point of view, if something's not on screen, it didn't happen.
Maybe it's explained online, somewhere that most people will never think to look, but it needs to be in the show or it doesn't exist for the average viewer.
One of my many, many issues with Heroes is that they keep setting up storylines and characters which are never resolved onscreen, only to put them in their comics instead, where most people will never know about them. It's a cheat.

quote:
I'd like to know what would have happened to everyone if they had never crashed at all.
quote:
well, you'll never know that since we should all know by now that "whatever happened, happened". [Smile] And seriously, do you really want the last 16 episode of the entire series dealing with an alternate plot line where these characters have never met, have never built these relationships with each other, and don't end up on the Island? What a terrible season that would be.

Yes, that would be horrible. But dual timeline storytelling or one episode addressing other possiblities would be interesting. After all, that's what they were suggesting when they dropped the nuke. I don't think anyone expects that plan to actually work out long term, but still...
Besides, we don't actually know that everything is completely set in stone.
Desmond might have been able to change his future if Heloise hadn't come and persuaded him to leave it alone - so she's clearly not sure either.
And Daniel, for all his doom-mongering, must have believed that changing things was at least a possibility, otherwise why try to drop the bomb at all?

quote:
Why do pregnant women die on the island?
quote:
I've always maintained this has something to do with Ben. Ben's mother died during her 6th or 7th month of pregnancy, and now no one on the island makes it past their 6th or 7th month of pregnancy. And we know this wasn't the case before Ben took over. Somehow he is either exerting an influence on the Island(whether consciously or not), or people on the Island are being punished for his leadership
Hey, maybe the fact that the island is now radioactive will have something to do with it. Or maybe Jacob doesn't like babies.
 
Posted by scifibum (Member # 7625) on :
 
"Just like they don't explain how phasers work in Star Trek, they aren't going to explain why the Island moves in time and stuff like that."

AAAAH! Well, maybe I'm glad I haven't watched the last season or two.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
One of the things I was disappointed with last season(for the most part i loved all of it) was finding out that Richard wasn't that "special". He's only immortal cause Jacob made him that way, and most of his knowledge comes from longetivity or time travelling Losties that tell him things.

Funny, that was one of my favorite things.

quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
The introduction of Jacob and Essau(are we still calling him that?) went a long way towards making me forget about that though.

I'm calling him Esau still. Though at this point, I might as well call him Locke.
 
Posted by Christine (Member # 8594) on :
 
I don't plan to watch this season until the season is over, like I've done the last 3 years, but I'll chat until the season starts and the thread fills with spoilers. [Smile]

I do expect to have some explanation for the island. There's a difference between knowing exactly how the TARDIS works, complete with engineering schematics, and knowing that it is a ship that travels in time and space, designed and built by Time Lords.

I expect to learn at least that much about this island or I fear I will be disappointed. The entire show has rested on the question: "What the he** is going on?" And that is precisely what I want to know.

When I read an interview about the show, they said the big questions would be answered. Minor questions might still be hanging, but the big ones would be resolved. So that's what I want.

IMO, the island is not a backdrop, it is the crux of the story.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
I always feel like, from a good storytelling point of view, if something's not on screen, it didn't happen.
Maybe it's explained online, somewhere that most people will never think to look, but it needs to be in the show or it doesn't exist for the average viewer.
One of my many, many issues with Heroes is that they keep setting up storylines and characters which are never resolved onscreen, only to put them in their comics instead, where most people will never know about them. It's a cheat.

I see where you're coming from Bella Bee, but I think you're going to be dissapointed on this one. I may be wrong, they may choose to address it on the show, but I feel like that will be doubling up on exposition they've already done. Yes, the "average viewer" will not get an answer to that question. Lost (and other tv shows and movies) have in recent years been playing around with how they are able to tell stories, and questioning the assumption that a story can only be told in one way, and I don't think there's anything inherently wrong with that. The creators also know that hard core fans will do things that the average viewer won't do.

I think a relatively decent analogy is special features on dvds. Someone might buy a dvd and watch the movie and that's all they care about. Someone else may watch all the deleted scenes, and the director's commentary, etc...and those deleted scenes almost certainly contain dialog and exposition that is important to the story, but was cut out, and those aspects of the story are not made clear to the average viewer. But those wishing to dig deeper, can. I imagine much that has been explained in the Lost Experience is of a similar nature. Those who wish to dig deeper, can get certain questions answered. Those that don't, wont. Others have mentioned that no one expects them to answer ALL the questions (though we all hope for most of them I think!), and this is a way to answer some questions they won't address in the show.

quote:
Yes, that would be horrible. But dual timeline storytelling or one episode addressing other possiblities would be interesting. After all, that's what they were suggesting when they dropped the nuke
quote:
And Daniel, for all his doom-mongering, must have believed that changing things was at least a possibility, otherwise why try to drop the bomb at all?

I think Daniel gave in to his emotions at the last minute. But more importantly, the fact that characters believe dropping the nuke will work, doesn't mean it will actually work. I felt like the show spent a lot of time last season confirming the whatever happened, happened theory. Sawyer shot out the communications in the sub which we know is not functioning years later when the Losties land, Chang loses his arm in the process of the Incident happening which we know from the later Orientation videos, The INCIDENT that was such a huge deal is in actually the Losties dropping the Nuke, Faraday for all his blustering couldn't stop himself from warning Charlotte, which we knew would happen, etc...etc...

Also, Lost have never showed us any "what if" scenarios and I doubt they will go that route.
quote:
Hey, maybe the fact that the island is now radioactive will have something to do with it.
Hmmm...I didn't think about that. It's a much simpler explanation. But I still think the whole 2nd into 3rd trimester thing is too much of a coincidence to not be important.

quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
One of the things I was disappointed with last season(for the most part i loved all of it) was finding out that Richard wasn't that "special". He's only immortal cause Jacob made him that way, and most of his knowledge comes from longetivity or time travelling Losties that tell him things.

Funny, that was one of my favorite things.


I've become more at peace with it, I just loved Richard so much and it was a let down to see how ignorant he actually was about things.
quote:
I'm calling him Esau still. Though at this point, I might as well call him Locke.
That would certainly make things easier if Esau continues to use Locke's body for the rest of the series. And it might make me forget that Locke was in fact murdered by Ben, and died a sad broken man.
 
Posted by J-Put (Member # 11752) on :
 
Judging by the little preview clips they showed last year, they seemed to by saying that the timeline HAD reset. I'm guessing that those on the island will stay how they were, but with doubles of themselves out in the world. Those who died on the island will be back, maybe keeping all their memories, but in their new lives. And anybody off the island will be lost, or reset, into their new lives.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
I would like them to kill of Kate. Early on in the season would be nice. she's constantly making dumb decisions and ruining everything for everyone.

I would like Hurly to have a happy ending where he can lead a life he enjoys.

As far as explaining things, I would've liked to know what happened to Shanon's inhaler, but I actually did find out (on a season 3 dvd) if anyone would like to know.

Now I would like to know where the others came from

Edit: I also wan't another Expose based episode!
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
The INCIDENT that was such a huge deal is in actually the Losties dropping the Nuke,
No, they made it very clear that an incident, a very serious incident, happened before the nuke was detonated and so would have happened without the nuke.

It is also implied that Daniel knew details of the incident, including exactly when it happened. It seems unlikely that he would have known those details so accurately and yet been ignorant of something as major as a nuclear explosion.

Whether or not the nuke was part of the original incident is open for debate, but their is no question that the nuke did not cause the incident. Cause must precede effect.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
When did they do that Rabbit? Can you point me to something? What incident are you referring to? Why would they call the season finale "The Incident" if that's the case?

Also, here's some stuff from lostpedia:

quote:
The Incident, first mentioned by "Dr. Marvin Candle" in the Swan Orientation film ("Orientation"), was an electromagnetic anomaly that caused a catastrophic event at The Swan construction site. The Incident occurred on the fourth day following the Oceanic Six's return to the Island in July of 1977, when a drilling accident at the site of the Swan station unleashed a pocket of electromagnetic energy. While the Swan Station was originally being built to harness this energy, the DHARMA Initiative was forced to construct The Swan to contain the energy with large amounts of concrete, using the protocol to regulate the anomaly.

However, doubt has been cast on an electromagnetic anomaly being the cause of The Incident. It was briefly suggested by Miles that the survivors' plan to detonate the core of a hydrogen bomb (itself a fission bomb) at The Swan construction site might actually be the cause of The Incident, not the anomaly.

quote:
Due to his discovery in Ann Arbor of a photo of the new recruits in 1977 including Jack, Kate, and Hurley, Daniel Faraday returned to the Island, and warned the survivors of a catastrophic event he believed was imminent. He convinced Pierre Chang that he was from the future and had knowledge of the accident, and he revealed to Jack that he believed it could be avoided by detonating a bomb, taken from Jughead's core, at the Swan construction site.

Upon his arrival at the Swan construction site on the fourth day after the survivors arrived in 1977, Chang tried to convince Radzinsky that drilling into the pocket of energy could unleash a catastrophic anomaly, but Radzinsky refused to cooperate. A violent struggle erupted, but Jack, Miles, Juliet, Sawyer and Kate gained the upper hand over Radzinsky's team, allowing Jack to drop the the plutonium core taken from Jughead into the drilling pit at the same time the construction team's drill hit the energy source

I think you're confusing the attempt of Dharma to harness the pocket of energy with the incident itself. Faraday's whole purpose in returning to the island is to attempt to stop the incident from occurring, by dropping the nuke, when in reality (as Miles so humorously points out) the nuke is what causes the incident.

The rest of my points still stand regardless though. Think about Dr. Chang. We know he lost his arm at some point, and in the finale we watched it happen during the struggle surrounding the Nuke. All of season 5 showed us the Losties bringing about the very future they have already experienced, through their actions in the past.
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
Actually, I think Miles says, before anything happens, that he's worried that the nuke might cause the incident.
But then everything goes pear-shaped anyway.

The original incident could have just been the electromagnetism. We saw how serious that could be, without bombs, when the hatch blew.

And Chang would have lost his arm, once he was warned to stop the drilling, whether there was a bomb or not.
I just wonder how Chang and the others are going to survive the blast if they didn't reset time.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
When did they do that Rabbit? Can you point me to something? What incident are you referring to? Why would they call the season finale "The Incident" if that's the case?

Well since the bomb detonated in the final instant of the final episode, everything that happened in the episode happened BEFORE the bomb detonated. Everything, hitting the pocket of energy, stuff being sucked into the drill hole, Chang's arm, everything.

And since it happened before the bomb detonated, we can be confident it would have happened if the bomb had never detonated. i.e. there would have been an incident, a major possibly catastrophically destructive incident even if the bomb had never gone off.

The order of events in the final episode very clearly left both options (original incident with bomb or original incident without bomb) open.

[ January 11, 2010, 08:48 AM: Message edited by: The Rabbit ]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
And Chang would have lost his arm, once he was warned to stop the drilling, whether there was a bomb or not.
I don't know if we can honestly say that Chang would have lost his arm either way, since we don't know how that scene would have played out had the Losties not been there. I mean, the only reason Chang was there trying to shut things down is because Faraday told him to.

quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
When did they do that Rabbit? Can you point me to something? What incident are you referring to? Why would they call the season finale "The Incident" if that's the case?

Well since the bomb detonated in the final instant of the final episode, everything that happened in the episode happened BEFORE the bomb detonated. Everything, hitting the pocket of energy, stuff being sucked into the drill hole, Chang's arm, everything.

And since it happened before the bomb detonated, we can be confident it would have happened if the bomb had never detonated. i.e. there would have been an incident, a major possibly catastrophically destructive incident even if the bomb had never gone off.

The order of events in the final episode very clearly left both options (original incident with bomb or original incident without bomb) open.

Rabbit, you seem to be confusing my labeling of the event with the bomb with the fact of the actual event. Whether you want to call the release of electromagnetic energy through drilling, The Incident, or whether it's really the nuke that is The Incident, my point is that the events as we saw them are what always happened. In a whatever happened, happened universe there is no "first time through", there is just what happened. Since we spent all of season 5 watching the Losties interact with the Island and people on the Island so as to bring about events we know were *always* part of the Island's history, I don't know why the last 5 minutes of the season finale should be any different.

again to reiterate my point, you said:

quote:
Whether or not the nuke was part of the original incident is open for debate, but their is no question that the nuke did not cause the incident. Cause must precede effect.
and what I am saying is that what you are calling the incident is only a cover, for what is in actuality the incident. Or putting it another way, Dharma lies and pretends to cover up the nuke explosion, focusing only on the first part of what happened when talking about the incident. Again, whether you want to call the event with the nuke the incident, doesn't change that the event was always part of the history of the Island. And if it was always part of the history of the Island, it can't very well reset time, since then the Losties would never be able to get to the Island, which is necessary for the event to happen!

You're also focusing only on this one event. What about all those other examples I brought up? Charlotte and Faraday, the communications on the sub. What about the fact that in attempting to kill Ben, Sayid actually helped start a series of events that are what made Ben the way he is? The time traveling Lock/Esau is what prompted Richard to be so faithful in Locke and his destiny on the Island. Ms. Hawking sent her son to the Island knowing a younger version of herself would kill him. etc...

I really thought they drilled this home pretty strongly last season.
 
Posted by Bokonon (Member # 480) on :
 
I think it all depends on if this is the first time the nuke was detonated. In other words, was the nuke always part of the Incident scenario, regardless of Dharma's attempt to cover it up, or is it the case in this one instance that despite all the inevitabilities we saw in Season 5 (which they did drill into us quite a bit last season), the acts leading up to the nuke detonation was actually free will from all, or any, of the participants.

I don't think they've made it clear yet in this case, or maybe all the inevitabilities are a season-long case of "methinks you doth protest too much".
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Well you know my answer. [Smile]

I don't believe in a first time through scenario, I think events happen once and only once in time. Even using the word "always" like I did in a few other posts is misleading, it implies a loop of some sort. Or an event that keeps happening over and over again. Take the compass exchange when Richard helps Locke and gives him the compass. We saw that scene twice on the show. But the event itself didn't happen twice, it's just that we as viewers were shown that scene twice. Richard couldn't have "changed" something that second time we saw the scene, because all that was happening was that the show was showing us a scene we had previously seen, from a different perspective. Why do time traveling Losties make any difference?

but it's worth pointing out that similarly to how religious folk believe god knows everything they will ever do, but that he still gives them free will to choose for themselves, characters(or people) can have free will in a deterministic setting.

I thought that was another thing they drove home pretty well in the season finale, every word out of a characters mouth was "choice". I think they really wanted us to understand that every action that was being taken was a free choice by the individual involved. And yet, all these free choices led to the events we knew were going to happen. It's only a coupling of the fact that these events are taking place out of order for characters experiencing them and the fact that we as viewers are privy to knowledge these characters don't have that we think their actions can "change" anything. Had we been told this story sequentially in time, these questions would have never even been brought up.
 
Posted by Bokonon (Member # 480) on :
 
Except that as also has been discussed on the show, each person is in their own "present", regardless of the shared timeline. While it seems the default behavior of the lost universe is that what happens, has to happen, that doesn't mean that when a persons present occurs at an event that they have already seen/felt effects from, that they don't have free will to choose from different options.

Or maybe that's what is so novel this particular time, that somehow these "chosen" Losties were able to change reality. Which could be useful in interpreting the images of previously dead Losties in some of the promo material for season 6.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I'll point you to the last paragraph in my post above yours. They DO have the free will to choose their course of action. It just so happens that whatever they choose, is what brings about the future we know will occur. Yes, they are each in their own present, even though it's the Island's past, but if we look at these events from the standpoint of an outside observer, watching things sequentially through time, the losties appear at the island in Dharma time, do their thing, disappear from the island, crash land on the island years later, disappear from the island, etc...one time line...nothing to change, since there was not "first time" when things happened differently.

It's like saying that when you get in your car tomorrow morning you can "change" the future by making a decision to drive one way or another. that only works in a very specific definition of change. more accurately, you are "causing" a certain future to develop based on your actions. These losties, through their own free choices are causing a future to occur that we as viewers know will happen, even though the characters making the choices are either attempting to stop it, or attempting to bring it about, or don't care...whatever their each individual reasons are for making their decisions, they are not "changing" anything.

Anyway, i'm beating a dead horse with this one. You all know my views, and we'll see what happens in less than a month!!! Can't wait!

I do think there is a conversation to be had about the numbers, and the valenzetti equation, course correcting, Jacob's touching of all the Losties in their pasts, and Desmond's ability, and how all those things relate to each other. I have some thoughts I wrote up about them a while back, I'll dig them up and post them later. But I fully admit there is room for some of the stuff I am arguing against. I mean, Dharma's whole purpose was to "change" the numbers in the equation to prevent the end of the world from occurring. But what I find really interesting is this line:

quote:
The numbers in actuality are said to represent human and environmental factors in the equation (given numerical form), though their precise meaning is uncertain.
emphasis mine. I think this is related to why Jacob keeps bringing people to the Island, and why he made little interferences in certain people's lives. But I really don't think it's meant to be in a "change reality" context as much as find redemption, embrace goodness, sort of "change".
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Rabbit, you seem to be confusing my labeling of the event with the bomb with the fact of the actual event. Whether you want to call the release of electromagnetic energy through drilling, The Incident, or whether it's really the nuke that is The Incident, my point is that the events as we saw them are what always happened. In a whatever happened, happened universe there is no "first time through", there is just what happened.
You seem to have missed the point of those last two episodes. There are many different variations on time travel fantasies, in some of them there is only one time line that can't be changed and in others traveling to the past allows people to change the time line. At numerous points in those last two episodes, the writers did things to raise the question of whether the time line could or could not be changed. They were really obvious about leaving both options open.

The key thing that makes me favor the second option (the time line changed) is that in the original time line, Chang and Radzinsky survive the incident. It's hard to imagine how they could have survived being at ground zero of a nuclear detonation. I suppose they could always claim that the depth of the drill whole and interaction with the electromagnetic energy resulted in some spectacular handwavium that saved the lives of everyone at the drill site (except Juliette). I just think that would be rather hokey so I prefer the changed timeline option.

I'm also going to predict that even though they changed the timeline, their plane still ends up on the Island. But that's mostly because if the plane never crashes, it won't leave much room for a story this season.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
You seem to have missed the point of those last two episodes.
I would argue that you missed the point of the last two episodes! [Razz]

quote:
At numerous points in those last two episodes, the writers did things to raise the question of whether the time line could or could not be changed.
Can you list some of them? I'm not trying to be difficult, I really didn't see any of these. But I did list a whole bunch of examples of events and decisions that would seem to prove the whatever happened, happened theory. So I'd be interested in A) hearing what you think about things like Sawyer shooting out the communications on the sub, and Sayid shooting Ben and the like and B) seeing examples where the writers raised questions about that(through actual events or actions, not just talk by characters).

It seems to me that if the writers really wanted to espouse a theory that events can be changed, they had plenty of opportunities. As you say, they could kill Radzinsky and Chang, as well as Ben and Horace and Ben's dad. Sawyer could have interrupted Kate while she was helping Claire give birth. Esau, as Locke, could have interacted with the Locke banging away at the Hatch, Faraday could have refrained from warning Charlotte, etc...at any point characters could have done things that would have made significant affects and made scenes that we have seen take place in 2004 impossible to happen. And yet the creators never went there. Anyway, I'm curious as to what events you're talking about that contradict "whatever happened, happened".

The only possible event I can think of that causes a problem is when Faraday talks to Desmond when Desmond is still alone in the hatch. The question is, was the memory implanted in Desmond at the moment we see him wake up on the boat with Penny, or did he just happen to remember it then. Even though the latter seems a bit silly(how could he really forget the kind of experience?), the alternative is even less satisfying and makes less sense. Why would an event that happened sometime in 2002-2004 suddenly be implanted in Desmond on a random day in 2007? The timelines don't match up no matter how you try to figure it. So i'm forced to go with the "remembering" option, even though it's not perfect.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
I would argue that you missed the point of the last two episodes!
No, up until the final two episodes we had a single answer "What happened, happened", a significant point of the last two episode was to suggest that this wasn't certain, that peoples choices (the variables) could in fact change the time line.

The organization of the final episode, where we see all kinds of future features unfolding BEFORE the bomb detonates, was really cleverly designed to leave the question open. If you think the question is closed, you didn't understand the episodes.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Again, can you give me specific examples? If you honestly want to have a conversation about this and help me see your point of view, I need you to do more than repeat the same assertions. I'm open to different possibilities, but I would need my arguments convincingly refuted, I'm not just going to accept your statements that i'm wrong!
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Can you list some of them? I'm not trying to be difficult, I really didn't see any of these
You are ignoring the obvious. Daniel shows up on the island and announces that he was wrong, that it is possible for people to change things, but only through something really major. Then the entire episode revolves around the question of whether he is right and detonating the bomb will change the timeline or detonating the bomb is simply one part of "what happened". They very obviously left that question open.

Consider this, Daniel wants them to detonate the bomb right when the drill hits the anomaly in order to prevent the incident from ever happening. If it had actually gone this way, and the episode had ended with the bomb detonating, we would be in a very different position.

By allowing the Dharma guys to drill into the pocket and showing us all the things happening that happened on the original time line, the authors were very cleverly demonstrating that there would have been an incident even if the bomb had not been detonated. In other words, everything we've seen in the show can be explained with out the bomb. There is no evidence that the bomb did or did not detonate on the original time line. Both options, one time line or two are still open.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
okay, thank you! You make some good points. I have some refutations! But I'll have to post them later tonight. [Smile]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
Again, can you give me specific examples? If you honestly want to have a conversation about this and help me see your point of view, I need you to do more than repeat the same assertions. I'm open to different possibilities, but I would need my arguments convincingly refuted, I'm not just going to accept your statements that i'm wrong!

Look, Daniel's argument is that it is possible to change the timeline but it takes something really really big. If that theory is correct, then there is only one time line until after the bomb explodes.

This isn't like the butterfly theory, where any little change changes everything. Its more a continental divide kind of theory. Time flows like water down a river valley, you can do all kinds of things but the water is still going to end up flowing down the valley. (Like Desmond trying to save Charlie). Unless you can actually do something major enough to shift the things over a divide so it flows down a different valley, no change really matters. Daniel claims that the incident and the nuclear bomb present the possibility of shifting things far enough to send time down a completely different path.

So all the little details you keep pointing out in the episode, only confirm that until the bomb explodes we are on the original time line. They don't say anything at all about whether Daniel was right and exploding the bomb will be enough to move us to another timeline or what that timeline might be like. The creators very cleverly set things up so that question was left wide open.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Actually, can you answer just one question for me rabbit before I respond? Do you beleive that there was an original time through that didn't involve time traveling losties?
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
Actually, can you answer just one question for me rabbit before I respond? Do you beleive that there was an original time through that didn't involve time traveling losties?

I haven't formed an opinion on that question. I'm not sure why its relevant. I think everything we've seen on the show thus far happens on essentially the same time line.

I wouldn't say I believe there is more than one time line at all. I think the show could easily go either way and I'm interested to see which option turns out to be right.

The only evidence I can think of that would really tip the scales one way or another is the fact that people at the drill site (ground zero of a nuclear detonation) are known to have survived the incident. The most plausible explanation for that is that the nuclear bomb did not detonate on that time line. But the authors may easily have a different explanation so I don't think its definitive.

On a vaguely related noted, I'm thinking that perhaps the fail safe key worked by detonating the nuclear bomb and destroying the pocket of energy. Perhaps something about the interaction between the bomb and the energy is why the rules don't apply to Desmond. Maybe now the rules won't apply to anyone that was close enough to detonation.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Maybe now the rules won't apply to anyone that was close enough to detonation.
Ack! Could you imagine a whole bunch of Desmonds running around??

First off, I'll agree the creators left things ambiguous. If everyone knew exactly what was going to happen it would take away from what makes this show so interesting!

I do think my question is relevant though. Examples like the fact that we are told that Faraday warns Charlotte, and then we watch him do it after he time travels, indicate Charlotte experienced a past where Faraday time travels. This would indicate that either there was no "first time through" or that there are multiple iterations, and the characters have all gone through at least one before we are told the story of LOST.

Moving on, yes, the creators demonstrated that there would have been an anomaly regardless of whether the bomb was detonated or not. I agree. But, since all those other things I listed that were done by characters we know have always been part of the history of the Island, I don't really understand why the bomb detonating should be any different. Why is the bomb detonating not part of history like every other event we witnessed? If we know that Sayid always shot ben, and sawyer always shot the communications, and chang always lost his arm during the anomaly(he would have never been there without the warning from Faraday), and faraday always warned charlotte, etc...why should Faraday saying he thinks that things can be changed by a big event and telling jack to use the nuke be any different from all those other events? And I mean that not in the sense of why should a big event allow a change, but why should I assume that that event is different from how the original history went?

What exactly are you arguing that the Losties can change? Doesn't your theory necessarily imply a timeline where this event occurred but no bomb went off? I would argue that for your theory to be correct about changing the time line there would HAVE to be a first time through where the Losties were never present. But I think there are too many facts that contradict this in regards to all the events we witnessed where the Losties did things that we know were part of their subjective past but part of the future from the standpoint of Island time. Unless you want to argue that had the Losties not time traveled back to Dharma time someone else would have harmed Ben forcing him to be brought to Richard, that someone else would have warned Charlotte, etc...and I really don't buy that.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
btw, can someone point me to some season 6 promo stuff. I haven't seen any.
 
Posted by J-Put (Member # 11752) on :
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6IdAb24SnRk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQXuiCge-wI&feature=PlayList&p=A2A40B8C3F02726B&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=28

Both of those seem to imply that the time line DID reset.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
But, since all those other things I listed that were done by characters we know have always been part of the history of the Island, I don't really understand why the bomb detonating should be any different. Why is the bomb detonating not part of history like every other event we witnessed?
Well the obvious answer is 'cause Daniel said so. Daniel said there was only one timeline and whatever happened happened. But after studying it, he changes his mind and says that while this is nearly always true, detonating the bomb at the instant when they drill into the energy pocket will be an exception.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Yes, but where did it reset from? Kate's (step)father sending his assistant to get blown up would have been before the (non)crash of Oceanic 815.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
Yes, but where did it reset from? Kate's (step)father sending his assistant to get blown up would have been before the (non)crash of Oceanic 815.

Assuming that the time line resets, its most reasonable to presume it resets from the point of the explosion, i.e. 1977.

Also, on the original timeline, Kate blows up her Mother's home, not her father's business.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I really wouldn't put my faith in promotitonal video like that. Remember what happened last year with the Chang/Faraday video.
 
Posted by Bokonon (Member # 480) on :
 
I was referring to this poster, which shows previously dead Losties are going to make appearances. As ghosts, or alive, who knows?

http://www.tvovermind.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/LOST_Y6_AdArt_Vert_NoABC.png
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Don't forget flashbacks and Island induced visions!
 
Posted by Bokonon (Member # 480) on :
 
True enough.
 
Posted by Wendybird (Member # 84) on :
 
So someone tell me, how can Juliette die in the past as a result of the whole explosion thing but be alive in the future living the events that happened after the Losties get to the island? Is time just some random series of events that do not happen sequentially any longer?
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
Perhaps someone broke time on the island long long ago, and everything that is happening on the island is time's attempt to find a way to right itself. But it isn't working - it just keeps going through new iterations.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
quote:
So someone tell me, how can Juliette die in the past as a result of the whole explosion thing but be alive in the future living the events that happened after the Losties get to the island? Is time just some random series of events that do not happen sequentially any longer?
It's really pretty simple. A few years after Juliette dies, Juliette's mother and father give birth to her, like they were going to anyway, then she grows up and goes to the island. It's not random at all.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
Don't forget flashbacks and Island induced visions!

And people Esau disguises himself as.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I believe it was Season 2 (may have been 3) in which the timer at the swan did not get reset. Desmond went under the base during all the chaos, and took out a key. There was a "fail-safe" installed in the swan and when Desmond put the key in and turned it.

The reason I bring it up is because what happened when he turned the key was the same white light as the explosion in the past. It threw Desmond and Locke out of the hatch, and there was a crater there when they looked. I think it was a bomb!

Because of this, I think there is one of two possibilites. Either the bomb that exploded in the swan was put there by Dharma after the incident, or it was already there when they salvaged the station. The second scenario would support the losties being in a time loop in which they continually go through the same scenario leading up to "The Incident"

I don't know how Jacob could play into this though. I always looked at Jacob as a "God" like figure, his nemesis as "Lucifer," and Richard as either an angel. Not in the literal sense, but they fit those roles. Jacob obviously knows what will happen in the future (or has happened!) and may have the ability to travel through time. His nemesis however does not seem to have this ability (that we know of) but has the ability to disguise himself.

Richard (and I assume Jacob and Essau) are immortal, though in the latest promo posters Richard looks like he is getting grey as well as some wrinkles. This leads me to believe that Richard has lost his immortality now that Jacob is dead.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Because of this, I think there is one of two possibilites. Either the bomb that exploded in the swan was put there by Dharma after the incident, or it was already there when they salvaged the station. The second scenario would support the losties being in a time loop in which they continually go through the same scenario leading up to "The Incident"
Maybe I'm misunderstanding, but the bomb exploded in 1977, that same bomb can't explode again in 2004 (or whatever year that was). Bombs aren't multiuse. They explode once, then they are gone.

Either one of your scenarios would be consistent with a continuing time loop that could be very slightly different on each iteration, but ultimately lead to the same result. So maybe on the last iteration, the losties never got the bomb to the drill whole, but the Dharma initiative was able to get it after the incident and build it into the hatch. Maybe on the last iteration, the losties got go the bomb to the drill hole, but Juliette wasn't able to get it to detonate. (Is Juliette in the Dharma picture shown to Sun?)
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wendybird:
So someone tell me, how can Juliette die in the past as a result of the whole explosion thing but be alive in the future living the events that happened after the Losties get to the island? Is time just some random series of events that do not happen sequentially any longer?

Juliette comes to the island in ~2000. In 2004 she gets transported back to 1974. In 1977, she dies in a nuclear blast. On her personal timeline, her death comes after the events in 2004. It is all sequential for her.

In 1977, there are two Juliettes. A child living with parents who are getting divorced, and an adult working with the Dharma initiative on the island. The adult is killed, the child is not and lives to come to the island in 2000.
 
Posted by Wendybird (Member # 84) on :
 
So basically its one big loop. She's born, she grows up and ends up on the island, she goes back in time and dies then is born, grows up and ends up on the island which transports her back in time where she dies again?
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
No... forget absolute time. Look at her timeline. She's born, grows up, ends up on the island, goes back in time and dies. Period. That's her timeline.

In our timeline, she comes into existence out of nothing at the age of around 30, lives a few years on the island, and then sets off a hydrogen bomb by hand and dies. A few years later, she's born, grows up and ends up on the island. She's there on the island until the time travel thing happens, at which she ceases to exist in our timeline.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Lisa's right, it's a big mistake to look at it as a loop. There is no loop except for the verbal one you have gotten yourself into.

Which, incidentally is a big problem I have with the compass from last season. The compass has no origin. At least none that we've seen. Locke gives Richard the compass in the 50s, and Richard seems to give the same compass to Locke in 2004, which Locke travels back in time with. The compass was never created. They very easily could have not created this paradox by Richard, either before or after Locke shows up with the compass in the 50s, attaining the "original" compass, giving that one to Locke in 2004, and retaining the one Locke gave him in the 50s.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
*agrees with Lisa*

However I don't want Juliet to be dead at all! she's a good character. I still stand by that they should have killed of Kate, but I guess it wouldn't be believeble for her to sacrifice herself to try and push reality into a new timeline.

The only time loop I've seen is the compass between richard and locke. There is no start to the compass' timeline. Juliet is born. Thats a direct start to her life.

edit: haha strider you just beat me too it! same minute i think
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I win! [Razz]
 
Posted by Dobbie (Member # 3881) on :
 
I've see parts of episodes on two separate occasions, so I have a pretty good idea of what's going on but I need to be filled ino some of the details.
I know there was a plane crash and the survivors ended up on some island somewhere. Then what?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
that's it. The rest of the show is large scale backgammon tournament.
 
Posted by Hobbes (Member # 433) on :
 
Juliet was great (and I liked the couple) but the end of the last season bugged the crap out of me. Every few seconds we get heroic musics and mystical looks as if to suggest she's transcended mere mortal reasoning in her desicions (in which she rarely participates but simply throws her loving husband who she no longer trusts despite all evidence and promise on his side) and then discover she's merely reversing her position once again, and again for no, or bad reasons.

Ugh.

Hobbes [Smile]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Juliet was brilliant in Season 3, but I thought was mostly wasted in Season 4 and 5. Particularly 5.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
In terms of the bomb, that is what I meant Rabbit. Think Pastwatch, but in Lost.

The bomb in the original timeline did not explode, and Dharma installed the bomb as a fail safe in case the "incident" ever happened again. This is why the hatch was detroyed when Desmond turned the key.

When the losties went back in time, they obtained the bomb and took it to the Swan, where they detonated it. The entire point of the bomb detonation WAS to create a paradox.

There is soemthing we do not know though. If the bomb was detonated and everything was "reset" then it completely nullifies everything that happened to the other group still in the future. This obviously would not make sense, so that is going to play into it somehow. Who knows? The bomb may not have reset anything, and perhaps the "incident" combined with the bomb created some space time rift that transports the losties in the past to the future where Jacob just died. Jacob may have been talking about Jack, Sawyer, and the gang when he said "They're coming!" right before he died.

I guess we don't know a lot about Jacob, but if he died in the future, shouldn't he still be alive in the past? Or is his existence constant? (I don't know if that is the right phrase to use)
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
Which, incidentally is a big problem I have with the compass from last season. The compass has no origin. At least none that we've seen. Locke gives Richard the compass in the 50s, and Richard seems to give the same compass to Locke in 2004, which Locke travels back in time with. The compass was never created. They very easily could have not created this paradox by Richard, either before or after Locke shows up with the compass in the 50s, attaining the "original" compass, giving that one to Locke in 2004, and retaining the one Locke gave him in the 50s.
Perhaps the compass is intentionally given as a clue that we are looking at time in the wrong way. What if time in this show is like a coil? If we look at the coil head on it looks like a circle with no beginning or end, but when you look at it from the side you realize that it isn't a single ring, but rather a series of connected rings that are slowly progressing in a certain direction... with a beginning and an end. So maybe the events depicted on the show have not just happened this one time, but are happening over and over again, slightly differently each time, making it slowly progress. At some point in the repeated cycle, a compass was created and was passed back in time into the next cycle, and thus got stuck in the repeat. That would make it appear, if you only look at just one cycle (much like looking at the coil head on), like the compass was a paradox. But once you raise the possibility that the cycle is slightly different each time, then the paradox disappears.
 
Posted by Traceria (Member # 11820) on :
 
My head is starting to hurt. XD

Now that I'm completely caught up on this thread, I just wanted to say that I'm not tossing in my vote for any theory at this point. We'll be rewatching the last season soon (and hopefully will finish before the new one starts airing) and maybe then when it's all fresh I'll have something to contribute. [Smile]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tresopax:
quote:
Which, incidentally is a big problem I have with the compass from last season. The compass has no origin. At least none that we've seen. Locke gives Richard the compass in the 50s, and Richard seems to give the same compass to Locke in 2004, which Locke travels back in time with. The compass was never created. They very easily could have not created this paradox by Richard, either before or after Locke shows up with the compass in the 50s, attaining the "original" compass, giving that one to Locke in 2004, and retaining the one Locke gave him in the 50s.
Perhaps the compass is intentionally given as a clue that we are looking at time in the wrong way. What if time in this show is like a coil? If we look at the coil head on it looks like a circle with no beginning or end, but when you look at it from the side you realize that it isn't a single ring, but rather a series of connected rings that are slowly progressing in a certain direction... with a beginning and an end. So maybe the events depicted on the show have not just happened this one time, but are happening over and over again, slightly differently each time, making it slowly progress. At some point in the repeated cycle, a compass was created and was passed back in time into the next cycle, and thus got stuck in the repeat. That would make it appear, if you only look at just one cycle (much like looking at the coil head on), like the compass was a paradox. But once you raise the possibility that the cycle is slightly different each time, then the paradox disappears.
Tres, that's an interesting theory. I personally hope that that is not the case. In general I'm pretty agreeable to recursion in stories, and find it interesting. I just don't think I would be satisfied with that type of device in this story.

Though, it's worth pointing out the various Stephen King references that have been made over the course of the series. The Dark Tower series in particular has many similar attributes and your theory would fit in perfectly with that, especially the idea of the events repeating in time with no(or only minor) change, but with the hope and possibility for a large change to occur.

Like I said, i hope that's not the case. And I would point to a brief interchange between Jacob and Esau, that I find telling.
quote:
Esau: I don't have to ask. You brought them here. Your still trying to prove me wrong.

Jacob: You are wrong.

Esau: Am I? They come, fight. They corrupt. They destroy. It always ends the same.

Jacob: It only ends once, everything else is just progress.

I really do think this was a nod at the viewers as to what kind of story the creators were telling. I would argue that Jacob espouses the whatever happened, happened theory, though I'm sure some of you will disagree. [Wink] But even if not, it would certainly imply there is no loop the characters are stuck in.
 
Posted by Bokonon (Member # 480) on :
 
Actually, I was thinking that exchange could very easily support a theory like Tres' "spring coil" theory.

The idea is that things are iterating, but that there are side effects that can carry over into a subsequent iteration that will eventually stop the looping. So while in some sense, things loop, each instance of the loop is different. I find that perfectly satisfying as a solution.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
That is how I read Jacob's statement as well. The statement wouldn't make sense otherwise.

Esau: Am I? They come, fight. They corrupt. They destroy. It always ends the same.

Jacob: It only ends once, everything else is just progress.

This to me sounds like there is a loop.

If this is a loop, what role would Jacob and Esau play in all of this?

It wouldn't suprise me if Jacob and Esau have a wager of sorts going on regarding the soul of man. Jacob believes that man is inherently good, and Esau that man is inherently evil. Perhaps this is a judgement of man. I don't know what kind of beings Jacob and Esau are, whether they be gods, aliens, Jesus/Satan, or whatever, but it almost seems like they are setting it up for something like this.

Esau is worried because in this latest iteration of the time line Jacob will finally win their wager or argument. He finds a loophole to dispose of Jacob and in the process proves to him he was wrong.

Ben looks like a Judas, a follower that became angry with the person he was following due to jealousy.

The last episode of the seaon ended with the inverted colors, which I think could respresent a shift in power from Jacob to Esau. With Jacob gone and not able to keep Esau in check he becomes the primary power on the island, free to do as he pleases. Just as Jacob guided each person to the island at some point in time, Esau may now be the one to shape what happens.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Actually, I was thinking that exchange could very easily support a theory like Tres' "spring coil" theory.

Agreed. Which is why we're still having this conversation. [Smile]
quote:
The idea is that things are iterating, but that there are side effects that can carry over into a subsequent iteration that will eventually stop the looping. So while in some sense, things loop, each instance of the loop is different. I find that perfectly satisfying as a solution.
So what resets the loop? Is it the nuke? Or will it be the series finale? will the series end with the crash of flight 815?

I think iterations are neat, but only in certain types of stories, for me this isn't one of them.

Geraine, i agree with what you said about Jacob and Esau's views of humanity. Though I wouldn't couch it in terms of good and evil. Rather, capable of redemption and being at peace, or greedy and corruptible.

[ January 13, 2010, 04:59 PM: Message edited by: Strider ]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Bokonon:
Actually, I was thinking that exchange could very easily support a theory like Tres' "spring coil" theory.

The idea is that things are iterating, but that there are side effects that can carry over into a subsequent iteration that will eventually stop the looping. So while in some sense, things loop, each instance of the loop is different. I find that perfectly satisfying as a solution.

There was a Star Trek TNG like this.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
The thing with the Star Trek Episode however is that the characters slowly started catching on and they were finally able to free themselves of the loop. I haven't seen any indication of this yet. I guess they have 16 episodes to bring that into play, but it would seem a little rushed and out of place. It would make a great series finale however if they all discovered that they were stuck right at the end.

Ah who am I kidding. It may make for great TV, but it would be a HUGE cliffhanger with no resolution, and would make a lot of fans angry. It would be heralded as great TV, but the outrage would probably be worse than those Soprano's fans that got their cliffhanger ending.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
Originally posted by Bokonon:
Actually, I was thinking that exchange could very easily support a theory like Tres' "spring coil" theory.

The idea is that things are iterating, but that there are side effects that can carry over into a subsequent iteration that will eventually stop the looping. So while in some sense, things loop, each instance of the loop is different. I find that perfectly satisfying as a solution.

There was a Star Trek TNG like this.
All of Daybreak was like this.
 
Posted by Orincoro (Member # 8854) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:

Ah who am I kidding. It may make for great TV, but it would be a HUGE cliffhanger with no resolution, and would make a lot of fans angry. It would be heralded as great TV, but the outrage would probably be worse than those Soprano's fans that got their cliffhanger ending.

David Chase had a point though, with the last episode of The Sopranos. Who cares if the fans are angry? It would be over.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
Originally posted by Bokonon:
Actually, I was thinking that exchange could very easily support a theory like Tres' "spring coil" theory.

The idea is that things are iterating, but that there are side effects that can carry over into a subsequent iteration that will eventually stop the looping. So while in some sense, things loop, each instance of the loop is different. I find that perfectly satisfying as a solution.

There was a Star Trek TNG like this.
Not quite, the TNG episode was really different because at end of the loop, they pop back to the beginning with only shadow memories of it. Once they figure out they are looping, they presume they can change the loop if they can figure out what went wrong on the previous loops.

When the Losties are in the 1970s, they know they have moved back in time. They don't need to figure out they are part of a loop, they know they are in the loop. They need to figure out whether or not the loop can be changed.

In the Star Trek episode, its evident that the same conscious beings are being sent through the loop over and over again, which is why they have a shadow memory of it. There is not evidence, yet, that any of the people have actually been through the loop more than once, even though there may have been more than one loop.

Does that make any sense?
 
Posted by Bokonon (Member # 480) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
quote:
Actually, I was thinking that exchange could very easily support a theory like Tres' "spring coil" theory.

Agreed. Which is why we're still having this conversation. [Smile]
quote:
The idea is that things are iterating, but that there are side effects that can carry over into a subsequent iteration that will eventually stop the looping. So while in some sense, things loop, each instance of the loop is different. I find that perfectly satisfying as a solution.
So what resets the loop? Is it the nuke? Or will it be the series finale? will the series end with the crash of flight 815?

I think iterations are neat, but only in certain types of stories, for me this isn't one of them.

Geraine, i agree with what you said about Jacob and Esau's views of humanity. Though I wouldn't couch it in terms of good and evil. Rather, capable of redemption and being at peace, or greedy and corruptible.

There is no reset of the loop. Or even really a loop itself, if you want to take Tres' spring theory more literally. There is merely an exit condition, based on the results of each loop. Esau thinks the exit condition can never be satisfied, Jacob disagrees.

I think the nuke could have created the conditions for the exit condition. This season will be that revelation, as well as dealing with all the side affects. Why assume that stopping the loop inherently makes things better?
 
Posted by Traceria (Member # 11820) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
Geraine, i agree with what you said about Jacob and Esau's views of humanity. Though I wouldn't couch it in terms of good and evil. Rather, capable of redemption and being at peace, or greedy and corruptible.

Can't remember if I've mentioned this here, but my fiance is of the mind that Jacob and Esau are Chaos and Order. I forget which is which at the moment. *sheepish grin*
 
Posted by Bokonon (Member # 480) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
The thing with the Star Trek Episode however is that the characters slowly started catching on and they were finally able to free themselves of the loop. I haven't seen any indication of this yet. I guess they have 16 episodes to bring that into play, but it would seem a little rushed and out of place. It would make a great series finale however if they all discovered that they were stuck right at the end.

Ah who am I kidding. It may make for great TV, but it would be a HUGE cliffhanger with no resolution, and would make a lot of fans angry. It would be heralded as great TV, but the outrage would probably be worse than those Soprano's fans that got their cliffhanger ending.

I'd rather they didn't figure out the loop until it was broken... The whole meta-knowledge angle has been done to death, IMO.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Bokonon:
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
quote:
Actually, I was thinking that exchange could very easily support a theory like Tres' "spring coil" theory.

Agreed. Which is why we're still having this conversation. [Smile]
quote:
The idea is that things are iterating, but that there are side effects that can carry over into a subsequent iteration that will eventually stop the looping. So while in some sense, things loop, each instance of the loop is different. I find that perfectly satisfying as a solution.
So what resets the loop? Is it the nuke? Or will it be the series finale? will the series end with the crash of flight 815?

I think iterations are neat, but only in certain types of stories, for me this isn't one of them.

Geraine, i agree with what you said about Jacob and Esau's views of humanity. Though I wouldn't couch it in terms of good and evil. Rather, capable of redemption and being at peace, or greedy and corruptible.

There is no reset of the loop. Or even really a loop itself, if you want to take Tres' spring theory more literally. There is merely an exit condition, based on the results of each loop. Esau thinks the exit condition can never be satisfied, Jacob disagrees.

I think the nuke could have created the conditions for the exit condition. This season will be that revelation, as well as dealing with all the side affects. Why assume that stopping the loop inherently makes things better?

maybe reset wasn't the best word to use. My question is in regards to what is the time span or set of events that the loop encompasses?
 
Posted by Bokonon (Member # 480) on :
 
None. Each "loop" is unique and distinct. Things seem to happen like they have to, but in reality there are small changes that make each instance unlike previous (or later) loops.

I think the "loops" could go back to when the island was created, or maybe harnessed.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:

When the Losties are in the 1970s, they know they have moved back in time. They don't need to figure out they are part of a loop, they know they are in the loop. They need to figure out whether or not the loop can be changed.

In the Star Trek episode, its evident that the same conscious beings are being sent through the loop over and over again, which is why they have a shadow memory of it. There is not evidence, yet, that any of the people have actually been through the loop more than once, even though there may have been more than one loop.

Does that make any sense?

It makes sense. The only thing I would say though is that even though the Losties knew they traveled back in time, it would be part of the same reiteration of the loop they are stuck in. The time travel to the 70's is simply part of that reiteration, and could still be oblivious to the existence of the loop or coil.

One could argue Sawyer already saw evidence of a loop. While the Losties were time traveling, Sawyer stumbled upon Claire giving birth to Aaron. Any interaction may have changed the course of that time line. This would bring into play the possibility of different timelines, or iterations of the loop, existing.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
or back up the whatever happened, happened theory. [Smile]

As viewers, we know that Sawyer never interacted with Claire and Kate while Claire was giving birth. And when he stumbled up on them, for whatever reason, through his own free will he decided not to interact with them. WE knew it wasn't going to happen because it DIDN'T happen. Sawyer doesn't know anything about that, but his free choice still led to the event occurring the way we knew it would!
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Yes, but Daniel stated later he believed they COULD change the future. So Sawyer didn't make himself known, that's fine, that current timeline doesn't divert at that point. That doesn't mean it couldn't divert at another point.

Here is an example, Sayid shot Ben in the past, and Sawyer and Kate saved him. But in Season 2 after they had captured Ben he showed no sign of recognizing Sawyer, Kate, or Sayid. This would indicate that in the timeline that we have seen throughout the seasons, Ben was never shot.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I think they stated that Ben had amnesia or something after getting healed.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Yeah, Richard something about him "not remembering any of this afterwards".
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I guess we have never seen Ben without his shirt on either, so we can't tell if he has a scar.
 
Posted by Traceria (Member # 11820) on :
 
And even if he did remember, I wouldn't put it past him to act (quite naturally) like he'd never seen them before.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
What if the various ghosts/hallucinations on the island are some kind message being sent from a previous loop.

Christian Shepherd's ghost is there, because he was on the island in a previous loop. Maybe he pulled Claire away to protect her from getting wiped out in the next iteration.

Maybe there are even two different kinds of messages, those from people who want to prevent certain changes and those who want to cause them.

[ January 15, 2010, 09:40 AM: Message edited by: The Rabbit ]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Traceria:
And even if he did remember, I wouldn't put it past him to act (quite naturally) like he'd never seen them before.

It doesn't even seem that odd that he wouldn't remember them. It was over 30 years ago and he was a kid. If I ran into my 6th grade teacher today, and she not only hadn't age a day in 30 years she was a few year younger, I'm not confident I'd recognize her. I'd be more likely to have a nagging feeling I'd seen here somewhere before than remember her.
 
Posted by Orincoro (Member # 8854) on :
 
Really? Your sixth grade teacher? Of all people, you see and observe your primary teacher more even than your parents. I think you'd remember. But anyway, these people were nowhere near as present in Ben's life during the Dharma times, so yeah, I can see him forgetting most of them- except perhaps for "Le Fleur," who was a big wig. Since he ended up recruiting Juliet later, it's safe to assume he probably recognized her and brought her to the island for a purpose related to his memory.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
You know, if I ran into two people on the street that looked just like my parents did in 1977, I'd be more likely to think, "Those people look surprisingly like my parents used to." than "Mom, Dad how did you get here?"
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
edit - In response to Orincoro

Or we take Richard at his word that Ben won't remember any of this.

Though I agree that Richard's statement is vague, and does leave some room for interpretation.

Personally, I would've preferred that Ben DID remember all of them. It makes all his actions so much more interesting!

[ January 15, 2010, 10:31 AM: Message edited by: Strider ]
 
Posted by Orincoro (Member # 8854) on :
 
Rabbit- I see your point, but surely it would turn over in your mind for more than a minute or two. And if you lived in a magical place where time travel was being researched, then you might leap to some interesting theories, if you were so inclined.

What I'm more interested in is how they are plotting all of these time intersections. Do you think they are doing it on a big poster board with time lines and events crisscrossing? Do you think that's how they wrote the thing out so as not to create inconsistencies? And what happens if they want to change something important, do they have to find ways of going back and changing time again to make their new ideas work? It's a pretty twisted puzzle as it is, so I would love to know how it's being conceived- I suppose we'll have to wait for the making-of after the show is done.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Have you ever run into someone who remembers you but who you don't remember (or visa versa) . Have you ever run into someone whose face you remembered but you can't remember when and where you knew them?

Except for Sayid, we don't know how much Ben interacted with any of the losties before he was shot. He was a kid and they were adults so it wouldn't surprise me if their interactions were fairly minimal.

Time travel isn't the only weird thing about the island by far. Look at all the times the Losties brushed shoulders before they boarded flight 316. Ben could have know everything about the island's secrets and still not have suspect that they were time travelers rather than people he'd interacted with in one of his visits off island. Its not like we have any reason to believe he had ever met any other time travelers let alone interacted with them every day.
 
Posted by Hume (Member # 11457) on :
 
Maybe it is just me, but I seem to remember an episode back in season 3 (a Juliette flashback episode) where someone comments that the reason that Ben pays so much attention to Juliette prior to the Oceanic crash is because Juliette reminds him of someone. I had assumed in the past that Juliette reminded him of the little girl that gave him the doll for his birthday, but perhaps it is because he remembers Juliette from the Dharma Initiative.

On a side note, has the show said anything further about that little girl since season 3?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
No, they haven't. But they've not said anything about a lot of things since they were first brought up! [Smile]
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
If Ben DID remember anyone, you would think it would be Sayid. If someone shot you, I think you would remember that. Traumatic experiences like that are not easily forgotten.

Rabbit, I don't know if the "phantoms" that have appeared to certain people are of those from different timelines. I suppose they could be. I was under the impression that they were a product of the smoke monster/Esau. Mr. Ecko comes to mind. He followed his brother's ghost, who told him he was to be judged. He was then killed by the smoke monster. This leads me to believe the phantoms are all Esau attempting to find his "loophole" until he finally is able to obtain it through Locke and Ben.

I'm going to hate it if in the last episode we find out it was all just a dream. Evangelion was like that and I hated it >.<
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
If Ben DID remember anyone, you would think it would be Sayid. If someone shot you, I think you would remember that. Traumatic experiences like that are not easily forgotten.

I've already mentioned this, but we have no reason to distrust what Richard stated about Ben's ability to remember these events after he is taken to the Temple.

I do agree with you though about the smoke monster and the visions. We've been led multiple times to believe that the smoke monster is connected to the Island induced visions. Now that we are aware of the connection between Esau and the smoke monster, we are forced to question everything we thought about the nature of those interactions on the Island due to our understanding of Esau's purpose.

Worth mentioning, again, I wouldn't call Esau an evil character. Similarly to how Widmore and Ben both truly seem to have the Island's best interests in mind, those interests are also wrapped around a selfish need to be in control, which sets them up in opposition to each other. Similarly, I think Esau DOES have the Island's interests in mind, and seems to think that Jacob is a negative influence on the Island, and will do whatever is necessary to remove Jacob while protecting the Island.
 
Posted by Hume (Member # 11457) on :
 
While its true that Richard said that Ben would forget everything that happened, it seemed to me that Richard was only referring to the recent occurences such as Jack, Kate, Hurley and Sayid arriving. I highly doubt that he would forget the past three years that Sawyer, Juliette, Miles and Jin have lived in the Dharma village.

Granted a kid of about 12 or 13 won't remember everyone in the Dharma Initiative, but I bet there is a strong possibility that he would remember at least one of them.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
good point Hume, and as we've been discussing, it's up in the air how much contact he had with the other losties during those three years. Your suggestion in regards to Juliet above is a good one, and hopefully we'll find out some more about that(i.e.- get some more information about what happened to is childhood friend).
 
Posted by Dobbie (Member # 3881) on :
 
Does any of this explain why the fat guy is still so fat after all this time?
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
Because he eats a lot.
 
Posted by Dobbie (Member # 3881) on :
 
It all makes sense now.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Are you referring to Hugo?

Keep in mind that he was only on the island for 100 days before he was "rescued."

During that time he kept a large supply of food hidden that he obtained from the Swan station. He finally destroyed it all with Libby's help. A few weeks later he went back to the US and probably kept up his eating habits until he returned to the island.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Geraine, I think they were joking.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
On these forums? IMPOSSIBLE!
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I've been rewaching Lost recently and just watched The Other Woman. Someone earlier in the thread speculated about whether the scene that mentioned that Juliet reminded Ben of "her" was actually referring to a time jumping Juliet from Ben's childhood. After a re-watch I doubt this is the case. It was Goodwin's wife Harper who mentions this, and I seriously doubt she would have any knowledge or memory of Juliet in Dharma time. I think it's much more likely that Harper was referring to Annie as we all originally thought. The question remains...what happened to Annie?
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Ben killed her. Or... her parents ran away from the Dharma Initiative, and changed their last name to Burke. And Annie's name to Juliette.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
hah...that would certainly be a twist.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Rewatching season one. Had totally forgotten about the hairbrush mystery Claire explains at the start of "White Rabbit." Of all the suitcases she searched through, why did no one pack a hairbrush? Was it because of Dharma? Jacob? The smoke monster?

I want answers, dagnabit.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
doc, they answered that in one of the online mystery puzzles. After you decoded a few anagrams, went to a special webpage, called a secret phone number, and set your little Orphan Annie decoder ring to the correct setting, you find out that The Others real purpose on the Island is to collect hairbrushes. It's convoluted, but it's all tied into ancient Egyptian prophecies.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Hairbrushes would create static electricity.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Ancient Egyptian static electricity.

So much makes sense now.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
doc, they answered that in one of the online mystery puzzles. After you decoded a few anagrams, went to a special webpage, called a secret phone number, and set your little Orphan Annie decoder ring to the correct setting, you find out that The Others real purpose on the Island is to collect hairbrushes. It's convoluted, but it's all tied into ancient Egyptian prophecies.

Please tell me this doesn't mean they are going to start playing childrens card games. [Eek!] [Big Grin]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
Hairbrushes would create static electricity.

Amazingly, that's much less of a problem on a humid tropical island.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Here's a pretty cool video I saw today:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MKcKtjrL5bc

It's the 10 minutes leading up to Oceanic 815 crashing on the Island, done in 24 style filming, from everyone's different perspectives.

I didn't realize where it was going at first, but it comes together really well.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
That was amazing!
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Brilliant!
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j1PAB6Sgdp8

A song about the unanswered questions on Lost.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
Hairbrushes would create static electricity.

Amazingly, that's much less of a problem on a humid tropical island.
Oh, great. So now we have more mysteries.

How does the island allow the others to create ancient Egyptian static electricity despite the humidity?

I'm thinking the answer is in the numbers.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Great YouTube links, thanks!
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Hey everyone, below is an exploration of the nature of Jacob and his enemy. Building off of all the information we’ve been given over the years, but mostly from the new information we gained from the season 5 finale, and how it changes our understanding of Jacob and his actions. Warning…this is a LONG post, sorry if that bothers anyone, it’s something I wrote up for a Lost email group I have.

Jacob and Esau

In last year’s season finale we finally meet Jacob! And it turns out he is an actual person (at least of some sort). And that Jacob has an enemy, who we have been calling Esau. Jacob and Esau have been the long awaited personification of something we’ve been told since the very beginning of this series. In the pilot episode way back in season 1, Locke is explaining backgammon to Walt and says, “Two players. Two sides. One is light, one is dark.” Jacob and Esau even wear a white shirt and a black shirt, respectively, to drive this point home.

Right away we're introduced to yet a higher level of the game that is being played. There were immediate parallels with Ben and Widmore with Esau wanting to kill Jacob, but needing to find a loophole. Where did Jacob and Esau come from? How long have they been there? How is it they have the powers that they do? What are the rules they follow? I'll be seriously surprised if all these questions are answered. Here are some things we do know though. Take a look at the conversation they have:

Esau: I don't have to ask. You brought them here. You’re still trying to prove me wrong.

Jacob: You are wrong.

Esau: Am I? They come, fight. They corrupt. They destroy. It always ends the same.

Jacob: It only ends once, everything else is just progress.

We see right away that Jacob and Esau have two different views of humanity. Esau seems to think humanity is irredeemable. That they are not worthy of the Island. And Jacob seems to disagree. Redemption has always been a significant theme throughout this series and it has now been officially tied in to the interests of the characters in control of events on the Island.

Esau

The addition of the Esau character throws a huge monkey wrench into our understanding of events on the Island and everything we thought we knew about Jacob, so it’s worth going on a little exploration of this character before we try to figure out Jacob. The following is an extremely important point, which through various conversations I realized most people haven’t really caught on to, and is worth driving home.

Esau IS the Smoke Monster

How do we know this?

1) We know that the Esau has taken over Locke’s body(or actually, is presenting himself in the visage of Locke).

2) We know from the episode This Place is Death, that when the smoke monster captures a member of Rousseau’s team it proceeds to drag him through the woods towards The Temple where it drags him underneath the Temple through one of the vents which it exits from.

These are the two precursors that set the stage for the Esau=Smoke Monster theory. How does this play out? In the episode Dead is Dead Ben summons the Smoke Monster by means of the secret room within his house and tells Sun he won’t be able to control what comes out of the woods. But the Smoke Monster doesn’t show up. And instead of the monster, John Locke steps out of the woods. He tells Ben that he knows where to find the smoke monster(we now know all of Locke’s special knowledge in these episodes came from him not really being Locke). Locke leads Ben to The Temple(like how the smoke monster drags people it catches towards its home) but they don't go in the main way, they go in through the hole in the ground(the hole that the monster drags people into, i.e.- the french team). Locke knows the real reason Ben needs to be judged without Ben telling him so(the smoke monster judges people), and when Ben finally admits it, it is right after that that he falls through the floor. Locke leaves to go find rope. Ben encounters the smoke monster. Locke shows back up with rope asking what happened. If that isn't a Clark Kent/Superman moment I don't know what is.

Why is this important?

Okay, so Esau is the Smoke Monster…besides being a really cool fact, and opening up a host of questions (At what point did Esau stop taking his normal form? Why did he become the smoke monster? If the smoke monster has been around since ancient hieroglyphic times, has Esau always switched between Smokey and human form? Etc…) there are some other really important issues that stem from this realization. We know that the Smoke Monster is able to take the form of various individuals to communicate with people. At the very least we know that it took the form of Alex when confronting Ben in The Temple. We know it took the form of Yemi before it killed Eko. In both of those situations we saw flashes of light and images presented within the cloud of black smoke, as if it was accessing these character’s memories (to better know what form to take to best serve its purpose? To aid in judging them?).

Ever since we got firm confirmation that the Smoke Monster could present itself in various forms we’ve assumed/speculated that all the other Island induced visions were related to it as well. Are they? Has the form of Christian Shepard always been used by the smoke monster? What about the visions of Boone, or Walt, or Kate’s horse? What about off Island visions that the Losties have of Claire and Charlie and Libby and Ana Lucia, etc…? We know the smoke alarm goes away when Christian appears to Jack in the hospital, but I’d really like the think that’s it’s not the smoke monster using Charlie’s visage who is communicating with Hurley. And Jacob’s conversation with Hurley in the taxi cab would imply to me Hurley IS in fact communicating with the real Charlie.

I don’t want to go on too long here about the Smoke Monster, but it’s worth remembering that Smoke Monster does seem to protect the Island, as well as judge individuals who are on the Island. It also has a tendency to appear as characters who are dead (Alex, Yemi, Boone, Christian), and particularly characters who died on the Island, or whose bodies are on the Island. It’s also worth pointing out the connection this may have to The Whispers which if you’ve read the transcripts have some significant connection to characters which have died. Miles’ ability (as well as Hurley’s newfound one) may tie into these elements of the plot as well.

A Change in Perspective

I’m straying from the point here…which is that given our new found understanding of Esau’s connection to the Smoke Monster, and our understanding of Esau’s purpose in killing Jacob, we have to now question and reinterpret every single Island induced vision that has happened over the five seasons. How much of what we have seen is the Smoke Monster doing its job of protecting the Island, and how much is in service of this plot to find a loophole and kill Jacob? And more than that, this realization that there are actually two forces interacting with Island inhabitants makes us question everything we have been attributing to Jacob this whole time.

While we saw Jacob interacting with many characters off Island, we don't actually have any real indication that he is involved in interacting on Island with anyone. And I have a speculation, a gut feeling really, that Jacob only ever presents himself in his true form, and never takes on the appearance of other people. This leads us to question everything we've been told about Jacob, and whether it was really Esau pretending to be Jacob (a nice flip on the Jacob and Esau story). The cabin is a prime example. I had always speculated that Jacob was somehow trapped inside the cabin due to the lack of technology and the circle of ash surrounding it. But now that seems false.

Was the cabin meant to keep someone in or to keep someone out? And if so, who? Jacob or Esau? We know that the Illana's people go straight to the cabin which implies that they have been led to believe that this is where Jacob resides (yet the cabin was only built in the last 30 years, we know this because we've been told that Horace built it, though if this was a smoke monster induced hallucination, we have to question it's veracity now too). We know that Jacob likes rocking chairs and there is one in there. BUT, they also say that someone else has been using it. And when we heard the voice say "help me" when Locke first visited the cabin, we saw the black smoke rocking in the chair, which we now know is associated with Esau. So was that Esau asking for help? Was he trapped in there by Jacob? Or someone else? Did he break through a barrier he was meant to be kept out of to be able to communicate with Locke through Locke bringing in some sort of power source(the flashlight) that Esau could draw power from? How did the circle of ash surrounding the cabin get broken? Did this allow Esau to escape?

Jacob’s Touch

What do we know about Jacob? And what is purpose on the Island? From that first conversation we’re shown that Jacob has faith in humanity’s ability to be good and find redemption. We saw Jacob show up in all these people's lives at different moments, important moments. And at each of those times he did two things. He gave them some encouraging words, words of advice, and possibly more importantly, he TOUCHED every single one of them. In fact, i'm pretty positive that Locke was actually dead and Jacob brought him back to life. Which finally explains how he was able to survive that fall. For a while we've known that all these people were brought to the Island for a reason, that there was a reason behind all their crisscrossing paths, but those reasons were unknown. We have a small window into that reason now. We know Jacob has orchestrated all this, but we're still not aware of why. Why them? I'd like to know what was important about touching them, what did it do to them?

Is Jacob a Course Corrector?

What exactly is the purpose of Jacob's visits? I started thinking about what Jacob is doing, showing up at pivotal moments and impacting these characters, and I thought about it in relation to Desmond and his ability. Desmond can see the future, and act to try to change it, but the universe course corrects. I think Jacob and Desmond act in similar ways. They can see a "possible" future, and can act to impact events. They didn't "change" the future because there was nothing to change, the events they foresaw never occurred due to their actions. And yet....we have to remember course correcting. So no matter what Desmond did, Charlie was meant to die. And yet, through Desmond’s impact, Charlie's death was pushed back to the point where he was able to have a profound impact on events by being in the looking glass, speaking to Penny, thus allowing Penny and Desmond to be reunited, and have a child.

Is Jacob influencing people in the same way? He seems to tell them something, or do something, that changes the path they would have went down otherwise without his presence. How does this relate to how and why they end up on the Island? What is the Island? Would they have gone down a path that would have led them to their deaths otherwise? And Jacob's interference put that off, and thus they end up on this magical Island, to atone for their sins? For the sins they would have committed otherwise. And why THEM in particular? I have no idea how the show will answer these questions yet, just not enough information about Jacob and what he is and why he does what he does.

Adam and Eve

There’s one tangent I’d like to discuss that’s I think related to Jacob, and it’s about Rose and Bernard. Their scene in The Incident was really integral to the plot as well. They seem to have realized and lived out what Jacob was speaking of at the beginning of the episode. They escaped the cycle that Esau talks about. The Island seems to be a metaphor for heaven/paradise/nirvana/the garden of eden. Esau thinks humans aren't worthy of it because they are by nature corrupt/sinful/evil and always destroy and attempt to control. Jacob has faith they are better than this. And Rose and Bernard are living proof of this fact. They are at peace in the garden. I don't think there can be any doubt any more that Rose and Bernard are Adam & Eve. In light of this, I'm very interested in Bernard's invitation to Juliet to stay and have tea. Being that not only is she the only one not to be visited by Jacob, but she is also the person who makes the decision to set off the bomb. She is the last, and thus most important, chain in that link.

The Balance of good and evil?

Back to Jacob and Esau. It’s easy to talk about these two as good and evil, but i really don't think that's accurate. They seem to be guardians of the Island in some way. And while Jacob is certainly meant to be the good character, he's not ALL good. He doesn't save Nadia when she is run over by the car, when he certainly would have had the power to, given that he saves Sayid. He allows The Natives to kill everyone in the Dharma initiative, when we have to assume he’s the one that brought the Dharma people to the Island in the first place(it seems like no one can find the Island unless Jacob allows it, right?) Though it’s worth remembering that death might not actually be the end of existence on this Island, and so allowing death to happen might not be the worst thing…but this remains to be seen. And While Esau is certainly an evilish manipulator; he doesn't seem to be all evil. The smoke monster does certainly seem to have the Island’s best interests in mind, and protects it accordingly.

Their relationship again very much mirrors Ben and Widmore’s. For seasons we’ve been going back and forth about who is good and who is evil, and this keeps changing each time we are given new information. I think who is good and who is evil is the wrong question to ask. Ben and Widmore both do truly seem to have the Island’s best interests in mind, but this also seems to be wrapped around a selfish need to be the one in control. It is the corruption that Esau talks about.

Manipulations

Now that we’ve brought up the subject of manipulation, let’s talk about Ben for a minute. Ben(but also Charles and Eloise) have been constant manipulators on this show. Manipulating events and people to get what they want. But we finally found out that there has been a supreme manipulator, manipulating all of these people, but particularly Ben, all along. Esau's manipulation is masterful. It also, in the form of Christian Shepard is the one who told Locke to move the Island in the first place, is the one who helped Locke turn the wheel the second time. Got Richard to tell Locke the right thing so he could take Locke's form upon Locke's dead return. We think he’s been using Jacob’s cabin. Which begs the questions, has Ben all this time thought he was serving Jacob, but really been serving Jacob's enemy? Ben admitted Jacob never spoke to him. But did Ben ever see or interact with ANYONE? Or did he make it all up? How did Ben even know to go to Jacob’s cabin? Who led him there in the first place? Since Richard seems to go straight to the statue to see Jacob, where did Richard think Ben had been going all along?

Ben and Jacob

They've done a great job of humanizing Ben over the last year or two, and they managed to go even further this episode. When Esau(as Locke) was talking to Ben and telling him, "he gave you cancer, let your daughter get gunned down in front of you, never let you see him, you followed everything he said, and what did he do, banish you?" I could so sympathize with Ben, I could understand why he was going to kill Jacob, and yet I wished he wouldn't do it. His interchange with Jacob was really interesting too. Ben asks "what about ME?" but when Jacob answers, even though he says the words, "what about you?" back to Ben, it seemed more like he was saying them in the sense of "yes, what ABOUT you? What is it about you that I have never let you see me?"

Esau and The Loophole

So what is this loophole that Esau needed? If he just needed a human to kill Jacob i feel it wouldn't have had to be so difficult. Is it because he needs the current leader to kill Jacob, and technically Ben is still the current leader? Or does he need the current leader(Locke) to order someone to kill Jacob? Does it have to do with Ben's visit to Esau's Temple as a boy, where he was "changed" and lost his innocence? Is that why Jacob never let Ben see him? And is that why Esau manipulated the Losties to come back to the Island(because their actions lead Ben to being brought to The Temple). Esau(as Locke) figured out a way to get Richard to take him to Jacob and bring Ben in, and have manipulated events to make Ben hate Jacob. Did it seem like Esau was genuinely surprised when Richard told him Jacob was inside the statue? Why would he not know that? And what are the reasons behind Jacob being inside the statue, and Esau being in the temple?

Destiny Found

At the very end of the episode, Jacob warns Esau that "they" are coming. Is they the Others, Richard, and Illana’s group? Or is it the time hopping Losties? But what's even more telling about this, is that Jacob knows what's going to happen still. That even with all his manipulation, Esau has maybe not gotten the best of him. But why does Jacob allow all this to happen? And not just allow, but through many of his own actions it almost seems like he helps Esau bring about his demise, by helping certain people get to the Island, etc...Had Jacob foreseen his own death, and is this all still part of a greater plan? Will Jacob leave the humans to their own devices now to try to figure out what to do and how to do it? Will he maybe only come back at the end of the finale season when humanity proves him correct?

Can’t wait to find out!
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j1PAB6Sgdp8

A song about the unanswered questions on Lost.

From 2:52 on, that video is BRILLIANT!
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Great post Strider.

I thought that when Jacob said "What about you?" to Ben, he didn't mean anything bad by it. I thought he was asking Ben to look inside his own heart. He had been accusing Jacob of neglecting him, and I think Jacob was asking Ben to look in himself for the reason.
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
http://worstpreviews.com/headline.php?id=16598&count=0
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Thanks Geraine! that's pretty much what I was saying about Jacob, I was just speculating as to the reasons why...what he wanted Ben to find within himself. A possible reason is Ben's manipulation, and control, and murders. His corruption as Esau would say. But I don't think that's it. Jacob interacts with other people who have pasts that need atoning for. I think it has more to do with Ben's loss of innocence that occurred when he was brought to The Temple. But I could be wrong.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pepek:
http://worstpreviews.com/headline.php?id=16598&count=0

No surprises there.

And Geraine, I disagree. I heard a complete and utter lack of caring. Like Ben was a bug.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
quote:
And Jacob’s conversation with Hurley in the taxi cab would imply to me Hurley IS in fact communicating with the real Charlie.
Remind me -- what did Jacob say to Hurley in the cab? (I'm still in total denial over Charlie being dead.)
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Clearly the folks at Kayak.com are Lost fans:

http://www.kayak.com/r/RC3uyh
 
Posted by Dobbie (Member # 3881) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Uprooted:
quote:
And Jacob’s conversation with Hurley in the taxi cab would imply to me Hurley IS in fact communicating with the real Charlie.
Remind me -- what did Jacob say to Hurley in the cab? (I'm still in total denial over Charlie being dead.)
I think he said something like "Our lives aren't really all that interesting. I can't believe anyone would actually spend an hour of their lives watching us."
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Hates Doctor Who, hates Lost -- we must be approaching the Robot Apocalypse. Next you'll be hating on pizza and kittens.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
I think it has more to do with Ben's loss of innocence that occurred when he was brought to The Temple. But I could be wrong.

If that's true, then it'd be a real shame. It's not like Ben asked to get shot, or be healed. He's going to be "punished" (if not being spoken to or cared about by Jacob is truly a punishment) for the rest of his life because some time-traveling schmucks tried to save his life? I hate the hooeyness of statements like "loss of innocence," anyhow. Pretty sure Ben was already messed in the head before he was healed, and if his "loss" only involves him being healed unnaturally, my sympathy would lie with him.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
I think jacob wanted to die and played ben and even nemesis.

something has changed and jacob's death was part of the "progress"

I hope nothing too major about the timeline was changed.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leonide:
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
I think it has more to do with Ben's loss of innocence that occurred when he was brought to The Temple. But I could be wrong.

If that's true, then it'd be a real shame. It's not like Ben asked to get shot, or be healed. He's going to be "punished" (if not being spoken to or cared about by Jacob is truly a punishment) for the rest of his life because some time-traveling schmucks tried to save his life? I hate the hooeyness of statements like "loss of innocence," anyhow. Pretty sure Ben was already messed in the head before he was healed, and if his "loss" only involves him being healed unnaturally, my sympathy would lie with him.
That's a fair point Leonide, I didn't think about it that way.

I also dislike the term "loss of innocence", but I also assume that it was a phrase that was used that stood for a difficult to explain process/transformation that Ben was to undergo in The Temple.

quote:
Originally posted by Dobbie:
quote:
Originally posted by Uprooted:
quote:
And Jacob’s conversation with Hurley in the taxi cab would imply to me Hurley IS in fact communicating with the real Charlie.
Remind me -- what did Jacob say to Hurley in the cab? (I'm still in total denial over Charlie being dead.)
I think he said something like "Our lives aren't really all that interesting. I can't believe anyone would actually spend an hour of their lives watching us."
Uprooted, Hurley was lamenting the fact that he's cursed because all these dead people come to him, and Jacob said something along the lines of that "maybe it's a blessing, you get to talk to all your friends". And because I think Jacob is generally a benevolent character, and not prone to lying, what I take away from that is that there is more to Hurley's visions than hallucinations or smoke monster induced visions.
 
Posted by Dobbie (Member # 3881) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leonide:
Hates Doctor Who, hates Lost -- we must be approaching the Robot Apocalypse. Next you'll be hating on pizza and kittens.

I never said anything about Doctor Who.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Thanks for the reminder, Strider.

We've never learned why Libby was in the mental institution, have we? I don't suppose we will. *hums, "An-swers. . ."*
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dobbie:
quote:
Originally posted by Leonide:
Hates Doctor Who, hates Lost -- we must be approaching the Robot Apocalypse. Next you'll be hating on pizza and kittens.

I never said anything about Doctor Who.
Not in this thread, no. [Smile]
 
Posted by Hobbes (Member # 433) on :
 
Did no one else feel flashbacks to Narnia durring the Jacob slaying of '09?

Hobbes [Smile]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Why does Jacob allow(and bring about) his own desmise?

Jacob obviously has knowledge of future events. He is there when Locke is thrown out the window. He is there to stop Sayid from crossing the street when Nadia is killed. He is there when Kate gets in trouble as a child. He's waiting for Hurley outside of the prison. And even as he is killed he warns Esau that "they're coming".

So given his foreknowledge of all these events...why does he take so many steps that in the end bring about his own death.

The simplest one is that his saving of Locke's life after Locke has been thrown out the window leads to directly to Esau being able to take Locke's visage after he is killed and brought back to the Island. But more subtly, he helps Sayid get back to the Island, and Sayid ends up shooting Ben leading to Ben needing to be healed by the Island, and helping to create the person that kills Jacob later.

On a side tangent, I find it fascinating how all the Losties pretty much in some way had a hand in creating Ben. Sayid shoots him. Jin, brings him back to the Dharma. Jack refuses to fix him. Sawyer and Kate bring him to the Natives. Each of those actions allowed Ben to be "changed" in the Temple. And each of those people was interacted with by Jacob at some point in their lives.

So what is Jacob's purpose in his actions? When Locke and Ben first enter his dwelling he says something about how it takes a long time to weave a tapestry. Esau has been weaving his own manipulation for many years, but Jacob has also been weaving his own thread. To what purpose?

Rewatching season 5 I was struck by how masterful Esau's manipulation was. So masterful that it turns out Richard is just another pawn in this manipulation. Locke's appearance in the 50s is what originally makes Richard believe he's special. Locke came to that meeting armed with knowledge that Richard from 2007 gave him. And Richard was only able to give him that knowledge because Esau in the visage of Locke gave it to him.

I'm curious though, if Esau knows where Jacob lives in the 1800s(when the Black Rock is coming in), how come he doesn't seem to know where Jacob lives in 2007?
 
Posted by Dobbie (Member # 3881) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leonide:
quote:
Originally posted by Dobbie:
quote:
Originally posted by Leonide:
Hates Doctor Who, hates Lost -- we must be approaching the Robot Apocalypse. Next you'll be hating on pizza and kittens.

I never said anything about Doctor Who.
Not in this thread, no. [Smile]
quote:
Originally posted by Dobbie:
Does Dr. Who have to renew his medical license when he regenerates?

quote:
Originally posted by Dobbie:
quote:
Originally posted by Dobbie:
quote:
Originally posted by Dobbie:
Who's Matt Smith.

Note the lack of a question mark.
Get it?
That's everything I've posted about Doctor Who.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
defensiveness is very un-Dobbie.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dobbie:
That's everything I've posted about Doctor Who.

At hatrack. On sakeriver you called a kiddie show.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Preview of Season 6 just released by ABC

I can't put into words how exciting watching that was!

I'd be curious to hear some thoughts from people who have been arguing for a reset or a loop theory of what would follow Season 5. What do you make of all this then? I can't imagine those theories are still plausible.

[ February 02, 2010, 09:56 AM: Message edited by: Strider ]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
The video is no longer available at that link. Is this the same preview that's here. or a different one?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Hey Rabbit, no, that looks like the footage of the first 4 minutes of tonight's show. The link I had was a season 6 preview that looked to have scenes from season 6 in general, and not specifically the premier.

I fixed the link above to contain the proper link. Not sure why it was changed. Definitely check it out!
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
I still can't get the video. I'll probably have to go through a north american proxy site.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I can't find it on the youtube. I did find the same video on ABC.com, but i'm not sure if you'll be able to access that either:

http://abc.go.com/watch/clip/lost/SH006723620000/165261/249143
 
Posted by Bokonon (Member # 480) on :
 
Is it a true 3 hour premiere, or is it a 1-hour overview show and a 2-hour premiere, like in the past?
 
Posted by solo (Member # 3148) on :
 
1-hour overview and then a 2-hour premiere I believe. There's been a 1-hour overview show available as a free download on iTunes for the last couple weeks (at least in Canada). They've actually put up all 5 recap episodes as well as the original 2 part pilot in HD, all for free.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
A few random tidbits i picked up while rewatching the series:

-Ben says Widmore changed the rules by killing Alex. But did he? Exactly what are the rules?

When Ben confronts Widmore about killing Alex the conversation goes like this:
quote:

Widmore: I didn’t murder her at all, Benjamin. You did.

Ben: No, that’s not true.

Widmore: Yes Benjamin, it is.

Later, when we see the flashback where Ben is supposed to kill Rousseau, Widmore indicates that Alex was supposed to be killed. If that is the case, then was Alex always supposed to die, and thus her death was the universe course correcting? If so, then Widmore really didn't break the rules right?

-When Claire meets with the psychic he tells her a nice couple in LA will raise her baby. She says she doesn't want strangers to raise her baby to which the psychic replies, "they're not strangers". Then later, Jack and Kate end up raising Claire's baby in LA!

-Bernard to Jin: This is all about karma jin. You make bad choices, bad things happen, you make good choices, good things happen.

If Rose and Bernard are Adam and Eve I think we should really pay attention to this sentence as really important to the show.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Except of course, that sometimes the characters make bad decisions and good things happen, and vice versa. [Smile]


Also, this:
quote:
a nice couple in LA
is a dubious description of Jack and Kate. [Big Grin]

[ February 02, 2010, 06:24 PM: Message edited by: Leonide ]
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
*some spoilers from the premier*

I didn't like it so much. There was so much going on with very little explanation or reason to be attatched. My favorite episodes have been the ones like when desmond had to find his constant (penny), and when charlie had his greatest hits and even some of the more touching Sun/Jin episodes. I'm a sucker for the emotional side of the show, and I just felt almost nothing throughout the episode. I'd rather have good writing than many exciting things happening at the same time. Sawyer yelling about killing Jack made it hard for me to even sympathy for him when Juliette died. They keepwriting out all of the people I care about. I didn't even care when Sayid ended up living at the end

I liked the moment Locke and Jack shared in the airport, I liked Richard throwing around Ben a little bit, and I liked when Hurley talked to Jacob.

I think this was my least favorite season premier so far. Hope the whole season isn't like this.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
The show has always had a balance between the emotional, character-driven episodes and the plot-mystery driven ones. Did you know that the creators are quoted as saying the flashbacks are done with for the duration of the show? So no more "where I came from/what made me this way." I guess they figure we should have a handle on the characters by now. [Smile]

A few thoughts I had about tonight:

1)Dead is Dead. The Temple people pronounced Sayid dead and then Jack did, and then...he woke up? Here's my interpretation: the Temple folk said the water had changed colors. I think Jacob's essence had seeped into the water after his death, and when the Temple folk held Sayid's body underneath as Sayid died, Jacob was able to use him as a vessel. So now Smoke Monster/Man in Black = Locke, and Jacob/Man in White = Sayid. [Smile] Just a theory...

2) I think there's an alternate time-line that was created when the bomb detonated (Juliet's "It Worked") and sealed the rift that the original "wheel spin" created. Now everyone is back where they're "supposed" to be, and the paradox has been corrected that came about when the LaLosties et. al. went back in time. So the time-line split in 1977 -- in one line, the Island blew up, the "time travelers" went back, and everyone on the Island perished ---- but everyone who'd been evacuated (Chang, for instance, and Ben and Ben's father, etc.) is safe and alive somewhere, presumably. In the other time-line, well -- everything happened as it always happened. Whatever happened, happened. And now they're on the Island trying to keep LockeMonster away with cigarette ashes and flares. [Smile]

3) Is Desmond timeline jumping? An exciting prospect that I hope becomes realized in an awesome way. I always adore his episodes.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
When Charlie said "I was supposed to die," do you think there was more significance than a death wish?

Island Kate is annoying, but fugitive AltKate is pretty entertaining.

Christian Shepherd is missing. Interesting.

What chains was Richard in that FauxLocke was talking about? And man, FauxLocke so put the smackdown on Richard.

Who are the temple people?

Doc Artz was back! Or AltArtz, anyway. And as annoying as ever. And who was the weedy guy who had the eye mask on in the plane and gave AltKate a hard time about cutting in the taxi line? Was he the guy who got sucked into the jet in the pilot?

Speaking of pilot, that was Greg Grunberg as Captain AltNorris. Bummer that they didn't show him, but his voice was pretty clear.

AltJin is back to being a douche. That's sad.

I guess that could have been real Desmond jumping, but he honestly didn't seem to recognize AltJack, so I don't know.

And the change isn't just that the plane didn't crash. Something changed way earlier. Because AltHurley apparently didn't have the string of bad luck after winning the lottery that Hurley did. Did Jacob cause the bad luck? Was Jacob erased retroactively from the alt timeline?

And how did Juliette know that it worked?

And AltKate and AltClaire. That should be interesting.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
When Charlie said "I was supposed to die," do you think there was more significance than a death wish?

I thought it was waving a red flag of significance.

"Dead is dead" -- that's surely not Sayid who just woke up. Jacob? Could be. But why, if the note said that they were all in trouble if Sayid died, was he allowed (helped) to die?

And what's w/ that conversation with Ben and FauxLocke? Something along the lines of "why me?" and then the answer is "do you know what Locke felt when he died? Confused." Okaaay, I can relate to that confused feeling.

I, too, liked the exchange between Jack and Locke. I was wondering if it was a hint that there was redemption for the altLosties, and what Juliette meant by "it worked." Although, yeah, Jin was being a jerk and Kate was far from evidencing redemption from her past.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
quote:
And the change isn't just that the plane didn't crash. Something changed way earlier. Because AltHurley apparently didn't have the string of bad luck after winning the lottery that Hurley did. Did Jacob cause the bad luck? Was Jacob erased retroactively from the alt timeline?
My guess is, if, in the alt timeline, the big boom killed and destoryed everyone and everything on the island, and possibly sank it to the bottom of the sea, there was no transmission of the numbers going on. So Hugo didn't get the numbers from the crazy guy, because the crazy guy could never have heard the broadcast. (So how did he still win the lottery?) This also means the science team that brought the french woman never went to the island.

Considering who was on the island when the bomb went off, this could also mean that Faraday was never born, and Charles Widmore might be dead. Of course, Faraday's mom might have been underground when it happened--Richard was trying to save her last season, so he might have kept her underground to protect her from the blast. So Richard might be alive as well.

Or some of them might have been knocked through time like the Losties.

All of this is incredible. This is, without a doubt, my favorite episode ever.
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
What chains was Richard in that FauxLocke was talking about?

I took that as confirmation of the theory that Richard came to the island on the Black Rock, a slave ship.

quote:
And who was the weedy guy who had the eye mask on in the plane and gave AltKate a hard time about cutting in the taxi line? Was he the guy who got sucked into the jet in the pilot?
Frogurt!

quote:
And the change isn't just that the plane didn't crash. Something changed way earlier. Because AltHurley apparently didn't have the string of bad luck after winning the lottery that Hurley did. Did Jacob cause the bad luck? Was Jacob erased retroactively from the alt timeline?
Hmm, it seems like we might have a missing chunk of timeline, here. When the French team lands on the Island and pick up the numbers transmission, it sounds like Hurley's voice saying them. Hurley never recorded those numbers in 1977, and now he's been transported back to 2007, so does he go back in time again? Or was that someone else who just happened to sound like Hurley?

--Mel
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
There were other changes to the time line as well:

-charlie swallows his drugs instead of flushing them
-Cindy, the stewardess, gives jack one bottle of liquor instead of two
-Jack is nervous, while Rose is calm
-Boone came back from Australia alone
-Sun may or may not speak English
-Hurley is lucky
-and of course, Desmond is on the plane(though I like Leonide's idea of a timeline hopping Desmond).

No time now, but I'll post actual thoughts later!
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I love that they finally started "flashing sideways." People have been joking about that since the Flash Forwards started. I'm surprised I didn't see that coming - I was worried that I couldn't think of a good way to have the bomb actually do SOMETHING (anything) and still have a good show. Forking the timeline was a good solution.

I actually thought this had a lot of good moments. Normally I DON'T like the season premiers, and it takes me a few episodes to get back into the series, but this was pretty good.
 
Posted by Javert (Member # 3076) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
There were other changes to the time line as well:

-charlie swallows his drugs instead of flushing them
-Cindy, the stewardess, gives jack one bottle of liquor instead of two
-Jack is nervous, while Rose is calm
-Boone came back from Australia alone
-Sun may or may not speak English
-Hurley is lucky
-and of course, Desmond is on the plane(though I like Leonide's idea of a timeline hopping Desmond).

No time now, but I'll post actual thoughts later!

Also...Michael and Walt may not have been on the plane in the alt timeline.

The easy explanation, of course, is that the actor who plays Walt is far too old and too different looking for them to have appeared. But it may also be a relevant plot point. Never can tell with Lost.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I didn't really like the episode. It could have something to do with me being sick as a dog, so I may have to watch it again. It just seemed to be boring. The only interesting parts to me was the "Bizarro" timeline. I wouldn't have minded if the entire episode had been in that time line instead of 2007.

I do wonder who the people at the temple are. They seem to know more about Jacob than the others did. The Japanese man seems to be their leader, which would indicate to me that they are not "Others" but another group. Richard is more than likely someone from this group.

It did seem a little strange that the same ruins that leads to Jacob's temple is the same place the Locke-ness Monster hangs out in. (That's what I've started calling him [Big Grin] )

I was utterly dissapointed in Juliet's death, but I am sure we will somehow see Bizarro Juliet in the alternate timeline.

Was it just me or did it seem like the 2 hour Premier took up only about an hour? It seemed we got 5 minutes of show for every 5 minutes of commercials. Maybe that is what ruined the experience for me.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
Also...Michael and Walt may not have been on the plane in the alt timeline.
Or Eko, Libby, Ana Lucia, or for that matter Nikki and Paulo (wouldn't that be nice...) [Wink]

quote:
But why, if the note said that they were all in trouble if Sayid died, was he allowed (helped) to die?

That's just what the Templies SAID the note said. It may have said something akin to what actually happened, or something completely different -- at the very least, we know it said more than the Templies related because all of their names were on it. I doubt very much it read

quote:
Hello Templies!
Do You See The Following Persons?
(list of names)
If so, good!

Also, if Sayid is dying, heal him.

Ta Very Much,
Jacob



[ February 03, 2010, 01:20 PM: Message edited by: Leonide ]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
One more alternate time line difference. Jin and Sun aren't married. Neither of them have rings and the customs official calls Sun Ms. Paik, instead of Mrs. Kwan!

quote:
"Dead is dead" -- that's surely not Sayid who just woke up. Jacob? Could be. But why, if the note said that they were all in trouble if Sayid died, was he allowed (helped) to die?
If Leonide's theory is correct(and I do think it has a lot going for it) then I imagine it would have gone something like this. Jacob knows he's going to die, and knows Sayid will too. He leaves a note saying to heal Sayid, and that it's really important to do that. His people at this point don't know that Jacob is dead. They attempt to save Sayid, but it doesn't work. Meanwhile, it takes some time for Jacob's essence to fully embody another human body. After a while it does so, and Sayid(now Jacob) wakes up. Now...this is all speculative at this point. But it's worth considering!

Here's what's important to remember. Jacob gave Hurley the guitar case with the note in 2007. It has a list of names and most likely something about healing Sayid. This means that Jacob knew that the Ajira flight would crash on the Island, that the Losties would be split in time, with half of them going to 1977, that they would detonate a nuke at the hatch, and that Sayid would get shot in the process. And presumably that Jacob himself would die and need to be resurrected if this Sayid/Jacob theory is true.

quote:
Originally posted by theCrowsWife:
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
What chains was Richard in that FauxLocke was talking about?

I took that as confirmation of the theory that Richard came to the island on the Black Rock, a slave ship.

--Mel

That's what I took away from it too.

I also always thought the same thing as you, that it was Hurley himself that recorded the numbers. So if that's correct, I see two options. One, Hurley still time jumps again and records the numbers at some point in the past. Two, alternate time line Hurley somehow ends up on The Island in the past and records the numbers.

In general, I loved the episode. Unsurprisingly, I loved every second of the on Island scenes, and was really unhappy with the alternate time line scenes. Interestingly, I actually enjoyed the alttime scenes themselves, I'm just unhappy about their very existence. Besides, from my point of view, being a huge waste of time that could be better spent addressing questions that need to be answered, it also just really rubs me the wrong way. Since the Island is buried under water we have to assume that the nuke destroyed the Island. This would kill Eloise and unborn Faraday, it would kill Widmore and yet to be born Penny, it would kill Chang(who did not evacuate Leonide), and little Ben and Roger, all of Dharma, all the Others...

I'm willing to hold judgment for a bit, and see where Lost goes with this. If they drag this out all season, i think I'll be disappointed. If they manage to close up this story line in 3 or 4 episodes, and do something interesting with it, I think I'll be okay. I've been thinking about how they might tie this all together. Are they going to have the altLosties end up back at the Island anyway? Seems unlikely with the Island buried under water. Another thing I thought about was whether the altTimeline might actually be a flash forward in a sense. That it wasn't just The Incident that created this altTimeline, but that it is also a result of whatever the Losties are doing on the Island now in 2007. I don't really support any of these theories, but it popped into my head. Like I said, I did enjoy the altTimeline scenes though, in and of themselves.

I loved how Jack asks for a pen to help unabstruct Charlie's windpipe, mirroring the scene from the first season pilot episode where Boone asks Jack if he needs a pen while Jack is resuscitating Rose. He doesn't have a pen because his pen was stolen by Kate when she bumped into him, which she uses to escape.

I actually really enjoyed Locke and Jack making friends. It was really interesting given that they have been the two characters set in most opposition to each other(man of science, man of faith).

I've been thinking about Juliet's "it worked" line, and how she would know that. And then I thought about what she says right before that, the lines about going out for a cup of coffee, and going dutch. At first I just looked at that as random babble coming from someone who's dying and lost touch with reality. But now I'm thinking it could be that Juliet's consciousness somehow accessed the alternate time line, and that was actually a bit of dialog from her meeting Sawyer for the first time in altTime. Which is why after that she wants to tell him it worked.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
Since the Island is buried under water we have to assume that the nuke destroyed the Island. This would kill Eloise and unborn Faraday, it would kill Widmore and yet to be born Penny, it would kill Chang(who did not evacuate Leonide), and little Ben and Roger, all of Dharma, all the Others...
I've been thinking about the Island sinking ever since I posted that, and in re-running the scene in my mind where the camera pans over the wreckage in the ocean, and adding in some things I read from Lindelof and Cuse, namely:

quote:
(Damon Lindelof):Should you infer that the detonation of Jughead is what sunk the island? Who knows? But there’s the Foot. What do you get when you see that shot? It looks like New Otherton got built. These little clues [might help you] extrapolate when the Island may have sunk. Start to think about it. A couple of episodes down the road, some of the characters might even discuss it.
italics mine

I've since re-worked my theory. I think that the island did *not* blow-up/sink with the detonation of the nuke. I don't know when it *did* happen, but I think it was afterwards.

Also, does anyone remember, was there a plane in the water in the first moments of that underwater footage? I remember someone I was in the room watching with saying that, but I didn't see it.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I don't know about a plane, but there WAS a shark with the Dharma logo.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
quote:
Unsurprisingly, I loved every second of the on Island scenes, and was really unhappy with the alternate time line scenes. Interestingly, I actually enjoyed the alttime scenes themselves, I'm just unhappy about their very existence.
I love pretty much everything about the altscenes. The reason I didn't like the "reset everything" option (speculated from last season) was that going back to square one seemed really boring. The way they're executing them, I don't mind that they don't have a clear purpose because they're interesting while they're happening, and they don't take up too much time so they don't distract from the interesting things.

I'm *hoping* that the altscenes continue for the entire season, but that Desmond can time-jump between them to create an eventual plot that ties everything together awesomely at the end. (this is contingent on it being awesome at the end. If the altscenes end up being pointless I'd be just as happy for them to end in a few episodes).

But even if they don't add any "plot" I think they add depth to the characters the same way the original flashbacks did. They don't show you what already happened, but they DO show you what kind of person each character is in ways we haven't seen before.

[ February 03, 2010, 04:10 PM: Message edited by: Raymond Arnold ]
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Possible insight into why Ben had to kill Jacob: (RE: Sayid's Healing) If we go with the assumptions that Jacob is connected to the healing pool in some way (whether anyone else grants that he might be using Sayid as a vessel now), presumably the pool's cloudiness has something to do with Jacob's death. So if Jacob's essence is somehow tied to the pool, that might explain why Ben was able to kill him, needed to be the one who killed him, because he was the only one (that we know of) connected to Jacob physically in some way?
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
One question I had about Desmond also though...

Jack seemed to remember him. The question though is....

1) Jack is experiencing Deja Vu and somehow remembers Desmond from the island

or

2) Jack remembers him from the stadium in which he twisted his ankle and Desmond helped him out.

In the Bizarro world, who knows?!?!?!?

The other thing I noticed towards the end of the episode was that right before Sayid woke up the pool seemed to be clear again. At least it looked clear to me.
 
Posted by Orincoro (Member # 8854) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LargeTuna:


I didn't like it so much. There was so much going on with very little explanation or reason to be attached.

This has been the case for the entire run of the show. The difference in the past has been that there were at least some compelling emotional stories and conflicts. The current conflict, or rather lack of any cohesive reason for *anything* is the problem.

It was totally sub-par. The constant harping on self important "mysterious" characters and oblique dialogue mazes has worn through the story to the point that it seems the writers can't help but write every scene as if they were trying to tell a story through overheard phone conversations. It's all a gimmick because there was never any depth or promise in the mythology anyway, but now they've forgotten how to interest the viewers in any of the perill they create. I watched and just thought, "who cares." Not me.
 
Posted by Frisco (Member # 3765) on :
 
The Desmond thing was a little confusing, because when Jack met him in the Swan, he recognized him immediately.

And Shannon isn't on the plane with Boone.

I'm glad we finally got to meet the real Others, and I'm enjoying the new timeline.

And you would think the people who are adopting Claire's baby would at least come pick her up at the airport!
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Frisco, I guess in this timeline Jack never met Desmond at the stadium. It's just one of many differences.
 
Posted by Bokonon (Member # 480) on :
 
Also, what's up with Jack having the blood on his neck when in the bathroom?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Guys, the more I think about it, the more I think my theory about Juliet from above is accurate. Especially if Leonide's theory about Desmond time line jumping is correct. Since it seems like Desmond's experience with the failsafe might be similar to Juliet's experience with the nuke.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
Anyone notice Sayid's accent was different when he woke up?

Good gravy, the premiere had an annoying amount of commercials. I honestly wonder if it was really significantly longer than a "standard" episode.

And I would really like it if occasionally we could run into a group of people that didn't have violent hostility towards apparently unarmed and harmless people as a baseline.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Sterling, that had always been my problem with the Others. If they're really in Jacob's favor, why are they such bastards?
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Is Jacob definitely *not* a bastard? [Smile] (i actually mean this question seriously -- he's still a manipulator, even if he ostensibly has hope for humanity)

Screen Shots of the Underwater Portion

If you look at the shots, there's nothing that necessarily shows that the island lasted past the Jughead -- that is, there's nothing in the images that came into being *after* the Incident. The sonic fence is there, Otherton, the statue leg, even the swingset. The only thing that might give a hint as to how long ago the Island fell into the sea (Atlantis, much?) is that....what, the Dharma shark is still swimming around 20 years later? Maybe a bit far-fetched. Sharks are not that territorial, so even if he had lived that long (possible, but the average life-span is under 25 years for a shark)what's he still doing sticking around? Any of this might be chalked up to the nature of the Dharma Initiative's experiments, but it's at least a thought.

[ February 03, 2010, 11:30 PM: Message edited by: Leonide ]
 
Posted by daventor (Member # 11981) on :
 
I REALLY enjoyed the season premier and love the alt-timeline concept. But, yeah, the only thing that really bugged me were the scenes with the other Others, not so much due to the violent hostility (though I agree with Sterling on that), but moreso because of their refusal to explain anything to anyone. "Why, yes, I suppose I could explain to you that the pool is meant to heal Sayid, and that being underwater is part of the process, or I could tell you Jack why I want to have a conversation with you, but instead I'd rather be silent, wise, mysterious, and REALLY FRIKKIN' ANNOYING!"

That kind of keep-the-suspense going does get to feel really gimmicky after a while.
 
Posted by daventor (Member # 11981) on :
 
Oh, and just a couple of impressions:

I was actually surprised how much fun I had watching Sawyer back in full-on-jerk mode in the alt-time line. As far as the regular Sawyer, I'm really glad the "I'm gonna kill him" didn't become the actual storyline, otherwise, yeah, it'd be hard for me to keep up sympathy for Sawyer. Also, I wonder why Juliet told Sawyer she wanted it to be that he never came to the island. His life was pretty much plain crap before it.

I don't have a whole lot of sympathy for alt-Kate. Girl, you MURDERED a guy. Yeah, he was a bad man, but it was still a MURDER. Face the consequences instead of causing harm to innocent people all the time as you try to avoid arrest (that's the main part that bugs me about her running from the law).

Explanations I hope they'll cover but fear they won't:
-In an earlier season Juliet hinted that she had done something really terrible in her past and didn't deserve sympathy. What was it?
-What was the psychiatrist lady's (who was in the asylum with Hurley, then gave the boat to Desmond, then was murdered in Season 2) story and connection to it all?
-What changed Daniel Farraday's mind about being able to alter time (actually, I think there's still a good chance this will get covered)?

Final thoughts: I REALLY, REALLY hope Ben dies before this season is over. After so many good characters have died really tragic, horrible deaths (though with Lost you can never know for sure if they're dead-dead) I'll be really ticked if that psychopathic rodent is still breathing when it's all done.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Also, I wonder why Juliet told Sawyer she wanted it to be that he never came to the island. His life was pretty much plain crap before it.
Last season Juliet said that if Sawyer never came to the Island it would mean Juliet would never have to go through the pain of losing him.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by daventor:
But, yeah, the only thing that really bugged me were the scenes with the other Others, not so much due to the violent hostility (though I agree with Sterling on that), but moreso because of their refusal to explain anything to anyone.

A tendency which has, at this point, been responsible for at least one death. There comes a point where it becomes glaringly obvious that information is being withheld not because of any credible reasons for the character to do so but merely because the show relies on such contrivances to maintain tension.
 
Posted by Frisco (Member # 3765) on :
 
I like how Hurley's so comfortable talking to dead Jacob.

"I died an hour ago."

"Sorry, dude. That sucks."



Do we have an ID on the book that Kate pulled out of the dead guy's pocket while she was looking for matches?
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Fear and Trembling, by Soren Kierkegaard.

And on the plane, Desmond was reading Hauron and the Sea of Stories by Salman Rushdie -- the defining sentence of which appears to be "What's the use of stories that aren't even true?"
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sterling:
And I would really like it if occasionally we could run into a group of people that didn't have violent hostility towards apparently unarmed and harmless people as a baseline.

It's like the Man in Black said: "Get used to disappointment."

Oops -- wrong Man in Black. [Smile]

What I actually meant to say was: "They come, they fight, they destroy, they corrupt."

Just because they're on Jacob's side doesn't mean they're good people -- Jacob's been trying to prove the MiB wrong for centuries. [Smile]
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Frisco:
I like how Hurley's so comfortable talking to dead Jacob.

"I died an hour ago."

"Sorry, dude. That sucks."



Hurley is one of the few characters I absolutely care about. If Jack or Kate died before the end of the show, I'd get over it pretty quickly, but if Hurley ever died, I would be angry. Hurley has progressed from a guy that thought he had bad luck and mental disabilities to someone who has accepted who he is. Libby helped him in this manner and to a lesser extent Charlie. It almost makes me wonder if Libby knew about Hurley's gift. I think Hurley was not alarmed when Jacob showed up because he has accepted who he is.

I think that since Hurley has the power to see and speak to dead people, Mile's power is just a weak copycat. I foresee his demise in a future episode.

Now Desmond ... That is a little more difficult. I think I agree with Desmond traveling between the different time lines trying fix things.

Does anyone see any similarities between this show and JJ's other show Fringe? Alternate timelines, people that can travel between them trying to fix things(Desmond/Olivia), and some mysterious guy that shows up every once in a while and keeps tabs on people.

I think it would be funny if at some point we find out that the Dharma Initiative became or was funded by Massive Dynamics. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Okay, some new thoughts. For anyone that read that huge post of mine where I talk about Jacob and Esau, you'll remember I talked about Jacob's ability to see the future, his interference in people's lives, and its relationship to course correcting. Also, on this page I talked about the degree of specificity involved in Jacob's knowledge to have that List ready for the Other Others given how many events(including time jumping) occurred before the Losties could arrive there.

So given that, I just had another thought occur to me. Jacob saved Sayid's life when Nadia was run over by the car. Maybe Sayid was "supposed" to die, but Jacob's interference allowed him to live long enough to come back to the Island, and when he was dying again Jacob was able to use his body as a vessel. So the universe course corrected, but Jacob's action was able to make enough of a change that Sayid's death filled a greater purpose, similarly to how the universe kept course correcting for Charlie, but though Desmond's actions Charlie was able to stay alive long enough to fill an important purpose.

Even if Jacob is not Sayid, I do think there is something more to the fact that Jacob saved Sayid's life and Sayid's current situation in the Temple.

Also, Sterling, I just rewatched that end scene, and I think you're right. Sayid DOES seem to have lost his accent.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Oh dear, I love Sayid's accent. I didn't notice it but if he's now going to sound like Jacob, I'll be sad. Esau looks and sounds just like John Locke.

Does anybody remember or has anyone re-watched the scene where Sayid was talking to Hurley outside the van? I think Hurley had been reassuring him that he'd be fine. Sayid then talked about the torturing and murders he'd done and said he didn't think wherever he was going would be a very nice place. But he said something immediately before that which apparently introduced that line of thinking and I didn't catch what it was. Did he ask Hurley to do something for him? Anyone?

I think the whole idea of Jacob interfering with Sayid's death for long enough to get him to the island to die w/ a purpose makes sense. I also think the theory that Juliet was seeing altSawyer and altJuliet makes a lot more sense out of her comments than I was able to come up w/ on my own.

And I love the idea that Hurley has come into a full form of the ability that is only hinted at in Miles.
 
Posted by solo (Member # 3148) on :
 
Am I the only one who thinks that alt-Jack (in the plane didn't crash storyline) remembers everything about the island and crash? Everything about how he behaved on the plane and how he looked at all of the survivors showed recognition. I think Jack is going to be the big link between the time lines, along with Desmond.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
uprooted, I think it was just something along the lines of "where do you think I'll end up".

solo, it does seem like Jack has some sort of recognition, but I don't really think it's quite as much as you say. More like deja-vu, than memory.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
also, Miles' ability and Hurley's are different enough that I think they serve different functions. While Hurley is able to have full conversations with people, he has to wait for them to come and talk to him. Miles is limited in the amount of information he can get, but as long as he is near the body, he seems to be able to access that information at will.

It seems like Miles' ability works along the lines of a mix of consciousness jumping and time jumping. Consciousness because he is able to access their thoughts, and time jumping because it's only at a specific time right before death.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:

Also, Sterling, I just rewatched that end scene, and I think you're right. Sayid DOES seem to have lost his accent.

I think that's just a trick of the nature of the words -- in the Sneak Preview (you might have to watch a promo first) he sounds the same.
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
Why does Desmond have to be traveling between time lines? I might have missed something, but I just assumed since he didn’t get trapped on the island that he was in Sidney from an around the world travel or something.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
Does he have to be? No. Is it way way cooler if he is, providing a mechanism to link the two timelines and create an overarching story? Definitely.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
What Raymond said. Also the fact that he shows up out of nowhere, disappears, and no one else saw him other than Jack is making many of us think there is something more to his presence.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leonide:
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:

Also, Sterling, I just rewatched that end scene, and I think you're right. Sayid DOES seem to have lost his accent.

I think that's just a trick of the nature of the words -- in the Sneak Preview (you might have to watch a promo first) he sounds the same.
I'm with Leonide on this. I listened to it again and I heard the accent. Its simply less evident because of the way the words are drawn out.

[ February 04, 2010, 02:53 PM: Message edited by: The Rabbit ]
 
Posted by solo (Member # 3148) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
solo, it does seem like Jack has some sort of recognition, but I don't really think it's quite as much as you say. More like deja-vu, than memory.

Having thought about it a little more, especially given his interaction with Desmond, I think you could be right. While I was watching it I thought his hesitance was more testing the waters to see if the other people remembered but the conversation with Desmond seems to support a deja-vu possibility more.

I think it's his comment to Rose - "Looks like we made it", and his tension during the turbulence that best support the idea that he remembers the crash.

[ February 04, 2010, 05:37 PM: Message edited by: solo ]
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Well, Desmond's consciousness has already been able to travel through time, but we assume that his travels only took place in a single time line.

Now it seems a new time line has been created. Since it is an off shoot of the existing time line, it is possible that Desmond is able to move his consciousness between these as well.

I am still not convinced Jack has a knowledge of the crash in the bizarro time line. I think it is more like the Star Trek episode with the time loop. Jack has a strange sense of deja vu but not an exact knowledge of why.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
I'd have a hard time buying it if they tried to reveal later that Jack remembers everything. He's too anxious to get his father's funeral over with, like he would have been in the original timeline, but I don't think he'd still have been in as much of a hurry if he remembered the alt timeline, where the funeral already took place and he'd had that closure.

I guess it could be possible that he's talking out of frustration that he doesn't want to have to go through all that again, but it still just doesn't seem to fit for me.

For me, all the big character revelations and twists in this episode were about Locke.

Not only do we find out that MIB played him as much as his Dad did, but there's the possibility that he could have got just as healed by Jack (the guy he's been fighting) as the island healed him, without having to get played.

That is a HUGE punctuation mark at the end of his story arc if it turns out to be true. To me, it was the biggest twist, and most jaw-dropping moment of the premeire. Amidst all the questions about the smoke monster and time travel and who is making the food drops, to me one of the biggest questions of the show has been, "Is Locke's faith going to pay off?"

The way this premiere answered that question with such a resounding "NO" was a bigger shock to me--who had hoped the answer would be yes--than anything that may or may not be going on with Desmond.

All he ever wanted was to be special and loved and important, but it looks like being humble and calling Jack for help is going to be where his real salvation is going to lie.

I think I agree that Juliet will prove to be reality-hopping. Just like Desmond's presence at the destruction of the hatch sent him hopping through a single lifetime, Juliet's proximity to "the incident" will send her reality hopping.

Yeah, like I said. My new favorite episode. I guess I can get that some people don't dig it so much, but it seems to me part of the issue--like with the Locke thing--is that the characters can't be impacted by certain events because they don't know how significant they are. So they're not getting emotionally impacted--we are.
 
Posted by solo (Member # 3148) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by docmagik:
I'd have a hard time buying it if they tried to reveal later that Jack remembers everything. He's too anxious to get his father's funeral over with, like he would have been in the original timeline, but I don't think he'd still have been in as much of a hurry if he remembered the alt timeline, where the funeral already took place and he'd had that closure.

I don't know. His father's body wasn't at that funeral either. If he does remember, then he knows that the casket and body were on the plane in the original time line when it crashed. That, along with wanting everything to go smoothly for the other family members attending the funeral would be enough for him to get anxious about the body in my opinion.

I could go with him not having perfect recollection but I really hope they aren't going to tell us that people's personalities are changed in this other time line. Why is Jack perfectly calm about the turbulence in the crash time line and yet freaking out in the alt time line? I think the only reason Rose wasn't freaking out in the alt time line is because Jack was and so she stayed calm for him.

Charlie taking his drugs in the alt time line could just have more to do with the less severe turbulence - that would explain his different choice.

The biggest problems with this is Hurley not having bad luck in this version of events - this probably because of the island influences and Shannon not being on the plane. I don't think that Locke actually got to go on the walkabout - him telling Boone that he had was just his pride.

I am fully prepared to be wrong about all of this. I've been wrong about lots of stuff regarding Lost but they usually do something cool with it that I enjoy so I'll trust them for now. I don't think they'll explain everything but they have said they will explain the character centric stuff and that should be enough for me.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Yeah, I agree. At this point it's not about being right or wrong. It's just about having fun playing with the mystery.

While I doubt Jack remembers the alt timeline, I don't doubt they want us to be talking about whether or not Jack remembers the alt timeline. This is a big chunk of the fun of the show--just shooting the breeze about whether this or that happened, or about whether this or that is GOING to happen.

The question is how, if they aren't going to use Flashbacks, they're going to show why certain people behaved differently.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
quote:
Not only do we find out that MIB played him as much as his Dad did, but there's the possibility that he could have got just as healed by Jack (the guy he's been fighting) as the island healed him, without having to get played.

That is a HUGE punctuation mark at the end of his story arc if it turns out to be true. To me, it was the biggest twist, and most jaw-dropping moment of the premeire. Amidst all the questions about the smoke monster and time travel and who is making the food drops, to me one of the biggest questions of the show has been, "Is Locke's faith going to pay off?"

I somehow managed to not grasp this while I was watching it the first time, but yeah this strikes me as a big deal. Difference being, I always DID think Locke was being rather naive and silly. I didn't wish him ill because I felt like he did deserve better and I can't blame him for wanting to be special, but in real life I don't think making such important decisions based on blind faith is a good idea at all.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
This is one of the few times I have been completely baffled by Lost. The Island's being underwater is simply stunning. I can't think of any reason that would happen, except Jughead of course. The alternate timeline has my jaw on the floor.

I'm sure this has been mentioned before, but I wonder if the alternate timeline where the plane doesn't crash is the original timeline. I have no way of provong this, and I don't think it's true. If it is, then maybe Juliet has the (possible) ability to cross universes, and will do so to set things right.

The whispers apeared again. In my opinion, they are now the biggest mystery, because they don't even seem to have an origin or explanation.

Smokey is very close to being explained. I used to scoff at this, but it may very well be an alien, and the Island is its ship.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by solo:
Charlie taking his drugs in the alt time line could just have more to do with the less severe turbulence - that would explain his different choice.

He didn't take them. He tried to swallow the baggie, like a drug mule. He may not be an addict at all in the alt-timeline.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Reader:


The whispers apeared again. In my opinion, they are now the biggest mystery, because they don't even seem to have an origin or explanation.


While I agree they're still a huge mystery, reading the transcripts of what's actually said gives some huge clues as to their nature. Go to Lostpedia and search for "whisper transcripts".

quote:
Smokey is very close to being explained. I used to scoff at this, but it may very well be an alien, and the Island is its ship.
I would argue against this unless you assume that Jacob is also an alien. Though even then, I would argue against it. [Smile]

quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
quote:
Originally posted by solo:
Charlie taking his drugs in the alt time line could just have more to do with the less severe turbulence - that would explain his different choice.

He didn't take them. He tried to swallow the baggie, like a drug mule. He may not be an addict at all in the alt-timeline.
I don't know about that.It seems that for whatever reason, in this time line, instead of trying to dump it down the toilet, he tried to swallow it. I'm guessing he wasn't actually trying to commit suicide, just trying to get rid of the evidence, but couldn't bare to throw it all away. But yeah, either way, he wasn't trying to "take" them.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
quote:
While I agree they're still a huge mystery, reading the transcripts of what's actually said gives some huge clues as to their nature. Go to Lostpedia and search for "whisper transcripts".
I've read the whisper transcripts, but not the most recent ones. And they don't make any sense out of context, in my opinion.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I remember that some of them were exact lines that we later learned were said 30 years earlier (or possibly at random moments when the group was time jumping). Implication being that the whispers are just a result of temporal distortion.
 
Posted by Hobbes (Member # 433) on :
 
This seems to have some pretty strong overtones of Christianity to me. Maybe I'm the only one, but having "the one who will save us" killed by his arch-nemisis who seems to represent death and destruction through one of the choosen acolytes ... well it could just be projection of stories but it seems like it's strong theme to me. Made much stronger if Jacob comes back as Sayid, but even if not my guess is he will return at some point (not as a ghost).

Hobbes [Smile]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Many of them seem to be said by character who are dead. A salient example is one of the whisper transcripts that takes place at the beginning of season 2, when Shannon and Sayid are in the jungle. The transcript seems to be Boone talking about how being dead sucks and wanting to talk to his sister.

Many of the other transcripts seem to be characters talking about the person in the woods hearing the whispers. Often times discussing this person's knowledge and whether they should present themselves to them.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Hobbes, there are strong overtones of EVERY religion, not just Christianity, that's whats so great about the show. Though I'd argue that eastern religions are referenced more than western ones. In fact, the heavy references to purpose and karma throughout the series, Sayid's questioning of where he would go because of all the acts he committed, and his subsequent death and rebirth seems to have more significant overtones of Buddhism or Hinduism. And lets not forget references to Shambala or the Tibetan reincarnation test that Richard administers to young Locke as well.

Anyway, my point is that they reference everything from religion to mythology to literature, and I would doubt any one book or religion serves as the base for the entire story. Though, if anything, they've referenced the works Stephen King more than any other single thing on this show.
 
Posted by Hobbes (Member # 433) on :
 
That's a fair point Strider, and I have to say something I've appreciated this show for. Actually, I really like that they treat Christianity as any other religion instead of constantly trying to show how diverse they are by making clever reference to the supremacy of other religions over it. None the less, it seems like this plot line is dominated by Christian themes; and this seems like the 'dominate' plot line. Not in the sense that it gets more air time or is more important for the character's individual journeys but since it deals with the guys with the power, it controls the destinies of the most people.

Hobbes [Smile]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
I am still not convinced Jack has a knowledge of the crash in the bizarro time line. I think it is more like the Star Trek episode with the time loop. Jack has a strange sense of deja vu but not an exact knowledge of why.
I have to agree. Jack's behavior simply isn't consistent with him remembering the original time line, but there was lots of evidence that he had some sort of memory of it at a subconscious level. I think that as the season progresses, those memories are going to start influencing his conscious mind in more and more ways, maybe even resurfacing fully by the end of the season.
 
Posted by Hobbes (Member # 433) on :
 
quote:
I have to agree. Jack's behavior simply isn't consistent with him remembering the original time line, but there was lots of evidence that he had some sort of memory of it at a subconscious level. I think that as the season progresses, those memories are going to start influencing his conscious mind in more and more ways, maybe even resurfacing fully by the end of the season.
I think that's very possible and I kind of like the idea; a complete resetting of the timeline is very similar to ending a show with someone waking up and realizing it was all a dream. All the charecter development and emotion you experienced as challenges were encountered and conquered or failed is wiped away in an instant and you're left feeling cheated.

I'm convinced Jack doesn't remember anything consciously, I can't tell how much of the rest for all the characters is actual subconscious recognition of people or events and how much is the writers being clever. For instance, when Hurley says he's lucky is it because he thinks it, or he's being ironic or trying to accept what everyone was telling him (he won the lotto, all his investments turned out great, etc...). Clearly there were changes to the timeline or the island wouldn't be underwater, but do the characters actually have even a subconscious memory events? I hope so but I'm not convinced yet.

Hobbes [Smile]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Hobbes, I think it's more along the lines of the writers being clever, than subconscious recognition(at least on the parts of the other characters besides Jack). Or, to put it differently, I think they're trying to tell us that all these characters have important connections with each other, and have or will criss cross paths, regardless of whether 815 crashes or not. That there is something holding or bringing them together.

I agree with what you say about the loss of character development and emotion in regards to a reset.
 
Posted by Hobbes (Member # 433) on :
 
quote:
Hobbes, I think it's more along the lines of the writers being clever, than subconscious recognition(at least on the parts of the other characters besides Jack). Or, to put it differently, I think they're trying to tell us that all these characters have important connections with each other, and have or will criss cross paths, regardless of whether 815 crashes or not. That there is something holding or bringing them together.
I agree, though maybe it's because I like this more. The former (subconscious memory) seems more like a trick of physical laws (physical laws made up for the show no less) than a real insight into anything. The latter (that these characters will interact one way or another) speak more to destiny, or inter-personal relationships, or just generally something more important than if the writers decided to have a nuclear blast imprint an alternate timeline on some randomly selected group's memory (as note, everyone's timeline had to change with that event, if nothing else the whole world knew that the flight crashed so shouldn't the same alternate-timeline memory thing work for every other person?)

Hobbes [Smile]
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I could buy the explanation that characters who were actually in the vicinity of the incident (as opposed to everyone affected) got a flash of the original timeline burned into their subconscious, and that it carried over because souls exist outside the timestream or something like that.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
I just realized what the writers did with the premier episode! There were tons of people who were going to be super upset if the timeling was reset, and there were going to be people who were angry if the plane didn't land in LA because then the whole last season could have been viewed as a waste of time and a stupid cliffhanger. The writers know they cannot have their cake and eat it too, so they set up diverging timelines where in one there is no cake, but they would be allowed to have it, and in the other there is cake, but proceeding to have it is impossible. They have solved the age old cake conundrum!
[Wall Bash] I'm going to have to think this one out some more to see if I can put it out more clearly.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I think they're doing more than that (although that is obviously one of the major reasons they went this route). I do think they are going to find a way to connect everything together so that they will have their cake, eat it, and then have it also turn out to be a lie. And then eat some pie for good measure.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
hah, what a brilliant description of Lost.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
I'm in for the long haul but after the premier I'm not optimistic that this final season will be very satisfying to me. But they've surprised me before, and either way it's been a great ride.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Raymond Arnold:
I think...they will have their cake, eat it, and then have it also turn out to be a lie.

...The Island is GLaDOS?
 
Posted by Wendybird (Member # 84) on :
 
So I'm rewatching.... two things I didn't catch the first time:

on the plane just after Jack saves Charlie - Charlie gets mad at Jack and tells him that he (Charlie) was supposed to die and then glares at Jack as he is taken off the plane.

on the island when the group is at the temple - the stewardess lady steps out and tells the guy in charge that she knows them and that they "were on the first plane" so what is the second plane??????
 
Posted by Hobbes (Member # 433) on :
 
The plane Jack and Kate and the others came back on.

Hobbes [Smile]
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
Yeah the second flight is the Ajira flight that Frank landed on the runway that Ben made Kate and Sawyer help build back in season 2. I noticed that Desmond had a wedding ring on when he was talking to Jack on the plane. I hope Desmond and Penny are happily married in the flash-sideways.

It would also be extremely shocking, therefore possible turn of events if Jack killed Locke on the operating table trying to fix his legs/spine.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Season 6 promises to make Lost fans more annoying than ever

edited -- thanks, Strider.

[ February 09, 2010, 06:32 PM: Message edited by: Uprooted ]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Uprooted...it's season "6". [Smile]

but yeah, that clip is hilarious.

LT, I also noticed the runway connection(season 3 though), and thought it was really neat. So did they ever say why they were building it or who told them to? We can only assume Jacob told them to build the runway, correct?
 
Posted by Xann. (Member # 11482) on :
 
My only hope for the upcoming episode is that Faraday is a musician in the flash-sideways.

I was also thinking that Walt could have either not been born or born much earlier to correctly put them into the story.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
Just watched the Kate episode. I disliked her less than usual.

I really want to see Desmond, Richard, Charlie, Libby or Mr. Eko strongly featured in an upcoming epiisoe, but I'm not too hopeful. (I avoid the next week on lost scenes and the episode titles when can 'cause I don't like spoilers)

The whole Claire is the new Russoe surprised me, but the more I think about it, the less it should have. I can't believe I never heard that as a theory.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
A couple thoughts....

First, in the hospital scene of today's episode, there was a very brief line about how Aaron likes to move around and how Claire is going to need to keep an eye on him. Was this foreshadowing something? The whole part of that scene where Aaron shifts positions and Claire panics seems to serve no purpose in the plot arc, except to set up that line. Is it possible Aaron is someone we know on the island (through time travel)?

Secondly, it seems like the "sickness" is back. But how did Sayid contract it? He didn't seem to come in contact with other "sick" islanders, and he didn't contact the Smoke Monster... so how does one get this "infection"? Dogen immediately thought to test for it after Sayid came back to life, so is it possible it has something to do with being near death?
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
And what about his reaction to torture indicated to Dogen that he was infected?
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
Oh yeah and I had a good laugh when Ethan said he didn't want to have to prick Claire with needles.
[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Tres, I think the death of Jacob, and the fact that water wasn't clear indicates that somehow the smoke monster had infected the healing spring, and thus infected Sayid.

I very much disliked this episode. I've never really been a fan of Kate episodes and I was flat out bored most of the time. The only redeeming part of the altTimeline was Ethan's appearance. And his line about not wanting to stick Claire with needles was hilarious.

I thought Miles had some great lines, "we'll be in the food court", "Hurley's the leader now, so that's great".

The infected sub plot is intriguing, and Claire's return is pretty cool. So if Dogen is right, and Claire has been taken by the monster in the same way that Rousseau's team was, why does she save Jin? Are we supposed to be happy to see her or scared? Could it be that Dogen is wrong?

I'm still put off by how easily these Others will resort to violence and murder. I guess that's not Jacob's fault, he wants to have faith in humanity, but doesn't seem to want to force them to be good, but still, it's bothersome. Maybe we'll find out Smokey isn't as bad as we all think.

Really though, overall, I thought this episode was a big waste of time. It could've been 3 minutes long. I'll be psyched for more meat to the story next week, and altTime flashes that don't deal with Kate. Jack and Locke maybe!
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Uprooted, I had the same questions. It reminded me a bit of Dune and the gom jabbar. But yeah, I have no idea what Dogen was looking for or what he saw.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
I think I've figured out the Sayid and Claire thing. I'm so sure of it I don't even dare post it, for fear that it's a spoiler.

But let's just say someone else besides Sayid might remember being shot and have reason to think he needs to be thanking Jack for saving him.

I'm with Strider, though--I think it will be a miracle if they come out of the season finale having explained the connections between Jacob, the others, and the smoke monster in a way that makes every single episode make sense.

The brainwashing room telling people Jacob loves them? And was that set up by the others or was it a holdover from Dharma? Is that room Jacob-sanctioned? If it's not, why would someone NOT working for Jacob make it? Richard telling Locke he had to kill his own father to become an other? The stewardess being totally cool with all of this, even though supposedly only "good" people are on "the list?" Ben being able to summon the smoke monster to kill the mercenaries, even though the smoke monster is the one trying to be in control?

Who is everybody really serving? And who is serving who?

Even if they don't explain minor details, I would like to see the character motivations become clear. Especially the motivations of Dharma and the Others.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
The biggest thing I noted in this episode is that both Kate and Claire have some sort of premonitions or subconscious memories of the original time line. I'm really hoping they are planning to take that somewhere interesting, possibly linking the two timelines.
 
Posted by Wendybird (Member # 84) on :
 
I agree - there were moments when both Claire and Kate seemed to remember something about the other.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wendybird:
I agree - there were moments when both Claire and Kate seemed to remember something about the other.

Well the real biggie was not Claire and Kate seeming to remember each other but when Claire, in a moment of crisis, started calling the baby Aaron. Then to remove any ambiguity she tells Kate "I don't know why I said it, it's like I knew it or something."

It would be hard for them to have been any more clear.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
I think I've figured out the Sayid and Claire thing. I'm so sure of it I don't even dare post it, for fear that it's a spoiler.

But let's just say someone else besides Sayid might remember being shot and have reason to think he needs to be thanking Jack for saving him.

This is similar to what I was thinking too...
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
This is killing me -- i have no idea what the "theory" is. I can't think of a single character who Jack saved from a gunshot wound and/or who *thinks* Jack saved him/her from a gunshot wound. And that person would have to be, what, shot once, survived, and then killed later, and is now possessing Sayid?

Just tell us!
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I agree with Leonide.

quote:
Ben being able to summon the smoke monster to kill the mercenaries, even though the smoke monster is the one trying to be in control?
It seems that when Esau is in the form of the smoke monster he is limited in his ability to act, and constrained by his duty to protect the Island.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
A resource for anyone who's interested: Doc Jensen on EW.com writes these fantastic episode recaps and breakdowns, where he discusses everything from Shamu Whale imagery (not kidding) to the GUTOL (Grand Unifying Theory of Lost) and has some fantastic narrative insights. He's been wrong in his guesses before, which makes him just a fan like the rest of us, working off assumptions and trying to piece together clues. I love reading his theories and his take on the different characters and the "message" of the show. Highly recommended for Lost fans. [Smile]
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
quote:
then killed later
This is the misdirection. Don't think about who's been killed. Think about who else has been in the pool.

And who might have thought Jack saved them when they were shot, even though Jack didn't really want to save them.

I'll just say it--it is just a theory:

I think it's young Ben. Somehow, part of "him" went into the pool, and picked up part of someone else. Now Sayid has gone into the pool, left part of himself behind, and picked up the part of Ben that's been there. That's the part that talked about remembering being shot, and that thanked Jack for saving him, unaware that Jack didn't want to help.

The implications for Claire are obvious.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I think that's really stretching it docmagik. [Razz]
 
Posted by Hobbes (Member # 433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
I think that's really stretching it docmagik. [Razz]

As opposed to the rest of Lost ... [Wink]

Hobbes [Smile]
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Unfortunately, for Lost, nothing's totally crazy. :-) However, since young Ben barely interacted with Jack in the 70's I don't know why he would assume random sub guy was a doctor and would be sent to heal him -- unless you're suggesting that young Ben's consciousness stayed in the pool and has recently been merged with old Ben, thus learning all of old Ben's memories?

I'm not really too on-board with that theory, sorry. [Smile]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
The implications for Claire are obvious.
Not to me. I can't see any possible way to squeeze Claire into your Sayid has somehow become part Ben theory.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
I thought it was crazy when I first came up with it, before Teusday's episode aired. People were talking about whether or not Sayid had an accent and whether he was possessed by Jacob or what, and I got to thinking about who could be in his body. And I decided the most likely choice was young ben.

So then Teusday's episode aired, and it felt like everything kept confirming it. Sayid acting kind of different, Sayid remembering being shot, Sayid thanking Jack for saving him--it was all stuff Ben could have said, too. It all just kept fitting.

As for Claire, the implication is that the French Chick's been in the pool.

We're going to get a couple of weeks of "They took my baby" and wondering why Claire can work a gun all of a sudden, and then we're going to have a moment when she says "Alex" instead of "Aaron" or something, and we realize she's not talking about the baby we thought she was. Or she's talking some kind of jumbled hybrid of both babies.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Again, I'm not understanding how young Ben would know who Jack was, or be at all interested in thanking him. Any thoughts?

Also, it's been three years for Claire, no matter which way you slice it. Plenty of time for Claire (like Rousseau) to acclimate herself to the wilderness and learn to use a gun.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
I looked it up and I was misremembering last season. I thought that Jack was the one who'd been working on him, but then had refused to finish, but it was Juliet and Jack never got involved.

Dang it. Sorry. My bad.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
I thought maybe you were thinking of the spinal surgery in season 3. 'S all good [Smile]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
We haven't seen enough of Sayid to say whether or not he's acting differently or just acting like Sayid recovering from a fatal injury and torture. I didn't see anything in his behavior that seemed the least bit like Ben. His reaction to torture wasn't the least bit like Ben's reaction when Sayid tortured him. His thank you Jack was nothing like Ben's duplicitous thanks when Jack did the spine surgery.

I think its is worth noting that both Ben and Sayid were taken to the temple with gun shot wounds and healed. That's an interesting parallel but certainly doesn't suggest that Sayid is possessed by Ben.

Likewise, there are interesting parallels between Rouseau and Claire. But there is no evidence that either one of them was ever in the temple, let alone the pool.

I expect that these parallels are important and we are going to learn more about them, but possession of one by the other seems way out there even for lost.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Rabbit, I wasn't talking about old Ben, I was talking about young Ben. And if my theory had been correct, the reason old Ben would have acted differently than young Ben would be that Ben "picked up" something in the pool that made him more bitter than the young Ben that Sayid picked up. Ben picked up someone else (a Black Rock person?) and Sayid picked up young Ben.

Let me back up a step.

What connects it (at least in my twisted mind) is Miles's power. It says that there is a "thing" about each person that Miles is able to detect, even after they die. That "thing" is sort of what I feel like is going into the pool.

Think about it--Young Ben DIDN'T remember being shot. He lost that memory. Sayid DID remember being shot. There has to be a reason for the difference.

The obvious explanation is that it didn't affect him like it did young Ben because of whatever made the pool "Dirty." (Presumably Jacob's death, but who knows.) It changed the rules of the pool, so they don't have to have it affect the two of them the same.

The alternate explanation is that Sayid gave up some of his own memories and picked up the ones Ben lost. The pool might be some kind of collective conciousness of a bunch the others, that being why Richard said Ben would always be "one of them" after he went in the pool.

But basically, it's BEN'S memory of being shot that he could remember.

So maybe instead of possession or spirit swapping I'll just soften it to some kind of shared memory or swapped memory.

But misremembering of last season has weakened my faith in my theory quite a bit.

quote:
But there is no evidence that either one of them was ever in the temple, let alone the pool.
I thought it was made completely clear that Claire had been in the pool, since the leader of the Temple said the same thing happened to her that was happening to Sayid. Looking it up, I guess that also is just an assumption on my part--specifically all he said was the same "darkness" was taking her that was taking Sayid. I guess I just assumed the rest in terms of the theory I'd started out the episode with.

But I don't think assuming she got the "darkness" in the same way Sayid did is as big a logical leap as some of the other parts of my theory.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Rousseau's team got the darkness from being dragged under the temple wall by Smokey.

The only reason Sayid got it in the pool is because Jacob had been killed and the water was no longer clear. When young Ben was taken to the Temple he was probably bathed in clear water.

Claire, if she has in fact been Smokified (which isn't a guarantee), could have easily been infected by her interactions with Christian Shepard.
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
I remember there was some speculation a while ago that Claire had actually died when the missile hit her house, and that's why she disappeared later. At the time, I figured that was false because she carried Aaron before she left, but now we have Esau wearing Locke's image and he can interact with the physical world with no problem. So maybe Claire did die then, and was either resurrected by Esau or had her image taken by him. Maybe it was a practice run before becoming Locke. [Wink]

--Mel
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
I thought it was made completely clear that Claire had been in the pool, since the leader of the Temple said the same thing happened to her that was happening to Sayid.
By the same thing happening, Dogen very clearly meant being taken over by darkness. There is absolutely no evidence that he meant that she had been in the pool.
 
Posted by Wendybird (Member # 84) on :
 
Ask Ausiello at msnbc.com had this posted:

[QUOTE]here’s your juicy “Lost” spoiler: Someone has a kid in their flash-sideways. [/QUOTE

Someone in the comments posited that it was Juliet and when she whispered it worked she meant her research on getting pregnant on the island and not dying = Juliet was/is pregnant.....not sure if that works or not since we haven't seen her in a flash sideways but I assume we will eventually
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Maybe "it worked" was Juliet being pregnant before she died in the 1977 timeline. I was so sure that's what she was going to tell Sawyer when I first saw that ep...
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Yeah, I've got a theory on that one, too.

The last couple of seasons, there have been direct connections between plot points in the season finales, season premieres, and the season finales and premieres of the following seasons.

For example:

Season finale: Jack looks in casket.
Season finale: We see Locke is in Casket
Season finale: We find out Locke really is dead after all

So I'm guessing:

Season 5 finale: Juliet dies
Season 6 finale: We see Juliet goes around checking up on everybody in alt timeline, sees it's worked out better for all the losties she knows, maybe she finds Sawyer, but then she comes back into alt self dying, goes to talk to Sawyer, but she just as she dies, she flashes back into her alt self, smiles, and says, "It worked."

End series.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
why would "it worked" have anything to do with being pregnant? The problem isn't that people can't get pregnant on the Island, it's that they die before they can give birth. And we also know she wasn't working on the pregnancy issue in 77, she was busy being an auto mechanic (and given that she helped deliver Ethan we know the pregnancy issue didn't exist in '77), so I doubt it would be referencing that either.

Anyway, I'm sticking to my theory about "it worked" as it's the only explanation that also fits with her two lines directly preceding her death.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
Others drown Sayid. "Your friend is dead."

Others poison Sayid. "Your friend is dead this time."

Others riddle Sayid with bullets. "We're pretty sure your friend is dead."

Jack: "Why do we continue cooperating with you guys in any way...?"
 
Posted by JonnyNotSoBravo (Member # 5715) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by docmagik:

Season 5 finale: Juliet dies

Juliet dies in the Season 6 premiere, not in the Season 5 finale.
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
If you recall, as Charlotte was dying she started saying the same words that she spoke to Daniel as a little girl, almost as if she was that little girl again, half in one time and half in another.
Then she remembers who he was back then.

As Juliet was dying, she asks Sawyer out for coffee, almost as if she was half in one timeline, and half in the other.
Then she remembers where she is and understands that the bomb really did create a new reality.

I thought that scene was a nice call back to what happened with Charlotte, and raises the possibility that when the characters are seconds from death, they are mentally connected to their time-shifted doubles and have an insight that others don't.

I don't really see any connection with pregnancy.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Bella, I thought the same basic thing about Juliet, i.e. - that she was accessing the alternate time line. But I'd say that the mechanism was quite different from what happened with Charlotte. Charlotte wasn't really half in one time and half in the other, she was going through the same thing that happened to Theresa, and what was happening to Desmond and Minkowski. Her consciousness was unstuck in time, but within one timeline, not multiple...anyway...I think later this season we'll see an episode where altSawyer meets altJuliet and we see Juliet say those same lines again.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Sorry to post before the Left Coast has seen it -- but I'm going to bed soon.

So I went into this episode a little bit jaded, wondering if I was going to want to keep watching. But I thought it was great. Things are getting interesting.

Although I have to admit, even though they were climbing down instead of up, the music and everything about that scene reminded me of Vizzini & co. ascending the Cliffs of Insanity while being pursued by the Dread Pirate Roberts.

Who was the kid?
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
New episode! I liked it a lot and the whole Ben Linus in the flashsideways was cool. I still want him to be a confident smart guy, and not some annoying teacher (I'm ok with him being both)

I like Sawyer as a good guy, so I hope he's making a plan against black smoke.
 
Posted by msquared (Member # 4484) on :
 
I think the kid is Jacob. Or Aaron

msquared
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
msquared (squared squared squared), those were the two that occurred to me as well.
 
Posted by Dobbie (Member # 3881) on :
 
BTW, Uprooted latest post made a lot more sense before msquared deleted the 3 duplicates of his last post.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I thought Lost MORE than redeemed itself this week! What a fantastic episode.

I thought the same thing about the kid(Jacob, not Aaron). And that when he said "him", he was talking about Sawyer.

I might actually need to watch it again before i can write up thoughts, there was THAT much info this week.
 
Posted by msquared (Member # 4484) on :
 
Yeah sorry about that. My home internet was acting funny last nigth. I would hit "add reply" and nothing would happen. I hit it a few more times and then refreshed the page and there was my reply, 3-4 times.

Do we all agree that the others, or at least most of them, were slaves on the Black Rock?

msquared
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
No. We don't! Why do you think that?

Certainly Richard was, but I don't think we have any indication of anyone else also being immortal, or being a descendant of black rock people.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Do we all agree that the others, or at least most of them, were slaves on the Black Rock?
Nope. We know that at least some of them were passengers on Oceanic 815, so its certain that not all of them came as slaves on the Black Rock. Also, the slave trade (by sailing vessels) was almost exclusively in Africans and very few of the others are of obvious African ancestry, so unless they are really playing fast and loose with such well known historical facts, there is no way that most of the others came as slaves on the Black Rock or even that most of their others ancestors came as slaves on the Black Rock.

Given that "bait and switch" is the only real constant in this show, I'm unwilling to accept anything that hasn't been established as in the actual aired TV episodes as "fact". Speculate all you want, just be sure to keep in mind the difference between what the writers have actually established as fact and your speculations.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
Certainly Richard was, but I don't think we have any indication of anyone else also being immortal, or being a descendant of black rock people.

That is most certainly not certain. Possible, maybe even likely, but definitely not "certain". Locke/Esau's reference to chains could have many different things, the most likely of which was Richard's servitude to Jacob and not a reference to him being a slave.

Given his race, if Richard came to the island on the Black Rock, it almost certainly wasn't as a slave in chains but as a slave trader.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
fair enough Rabbit, change my certainly to "I think it's likely". [Smile]
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
Ben claimed that he had brought in most of the Others. Now, this is Ben, but I suspect that's probably true of the Others that lived in the old Dharma stations and barracks. The more reclusive Others that hang out with Richard and/or at the Temple are probably made up more of older groups.

--

One thing we noticed was that Kate wasn't on the list of candidates, even though Jacob interacted with her as a child. I have some vague thoughts on possible reasons why, but they haven't coalesced enough to articulate yet.

Also, Ben gets all the best lines. "...and I'm very sorry I murdered him," had us practically rolling on the floor laughing.

--Mel
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Oh, it just occurred to me that the Black Rock could have been prison ship taking convicts to Australia.

If that is the case, then I think its much more likely that Richard and many of the others derive from the Black Rock.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Also, Ben gets all the best lines. "...and I'm very sorry I murdered him," had us practically rolling on the floor laughing.

aww, and I thought that was actually one of Ben's sweeter moments. [Smile]

The look and grunt that Lapidus gives after that moment is priceless.

Miles's name was also on the cave, but crossed out. Why? Is Ilana a candidate? If so, was her name crossed out?

While it's no huge surprise that the number are associated with Losites(the lost experience and valenzetti equation hinted at that strongly), and it tied into Faraday's talk last season of the Losties being the variables in the equations that he hadn't accounted for, I was a bit surprised that each number was literally associated with one person. Which begs the question, how did Jacob choose the numbers and what is the significance of the number associated with each individual? How did Dharma get those six numbers to use? And why are those six people the last candidates?

I'm wondering if Lost backed themselves into a wall with this, by limiting the number of candidates left to those 6 numbers, thus leaving out Miles, Claire, Kate, Illana, etc...did they just fit things to explain a former mystery, or has this been planned out for a while with yet more information that we're not aware of?
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
Did anyone else notice there's seemingly a contradiction in alternate Ben's life? When the nuke went off, Ben was on the island - he had just been healed in the temple when The Incident occurs. Yet he is surviving off the island in modern times in the alternate timeline. So, how was he not blown up?
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tresopax:
Did anyone else notice there's seemingly a contradiction in alternate Ben's life? When the nuke went off, Ben was on the island - he had just been healed in the temple when The Incident occurs. Yet he is surviving off the island in modern times in the alternate timeline. So, how was he not blown up?

We still don't know exactly when the timeline reset.
 
Posted by JonnyNotSoBravo (Member # 5715) on :
 
Could it be something as simple as their seat numbers on the plane? Did any of the names that were crossed out and were of people not on the plane have numbers associated with them?

I feel like Sayid has been infected with Jacob's essence at the pool, which is why Jacob said it was so important for Sayid to stay alive and to take him to the temple. But we'll know more after we see Claire's interactions with people.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Airplane seat numbers have a number and letter.
 
Posted by JonnyNotSoBravo (Member # 5715) on :
 
Passenger number on the manifest?
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Here are the names and associated numbers

4: Locke
8: Reyes
15: Ford
16: Jarrah
23: Shepherd
42: Kwon

On the plane, Jack was sitting in row 23. But row 4 would have been in first class and row 8 would have been in first or business class. Locke and Reyes were definitely not in those rows.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
We still don't know exactly when the timeline reset.
But one would think that the timeline split when the bomb went off, if the bomb was the thing that triggered the alternate reality.

Ben's new life makes it seem like that is not the case, though.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
And there are numbers associated with people who were not on any plane. Like Miles and Charlotte(or their parents). So this theory only would really work for those 6, and not the myriad of other people on that wall. This page shows all the numbers and names visible, and it goes up into the 700s.

Tres, same with Ethan from last episode. He would have been an infant on the Island.

The Rabbit, remember, it's not exactly a reset as much as two diverging time lines. One where whatever happened, happened. And the other, where the nuke works. I think we're meant to assume that the time lines diverged from the point of the nuke. I really hope they don't have it be a reset to an arbitrary point in time. So yes, I think they do need to explain how Ben and Ethan are off the Island.

edit - Tres replied while I was replying!
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I really think we're asking the wrong questions here. The significance of which number is associated with which person might be nothing. It just might be the order in which Jacob wrote these names down. It might even be a LIST that Jacob was given eons ago, with all these names, and he crosses them out one by one.

I really do think the more important question is why are the six candidates left associated with OUR numbers. With the Dharma numbers. My speculation is that answer will also be as simple as something like a time hopping Lostie, possibly Hurley, who gets the numbers into Dharma's hands somehow in the past. Either that, or they'll tie the numbers into the Valenzetti equation and make it a sort of fate/destiny issue, that these six people were always destined to be the final six candidates.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
Well, I was blown away. That was a terrific episode. I don't have anything to offer in the wau of theories because the show has become so dense with mysteries. I did think that it was pretty cool to see things from smokey's POV.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
Another thought: The Smoke Monster seems to think Jacob is looking for someone to protect the island. Yet Jacob's manipulations led to the island being destroyed in the alternate reality. The Smoke Monster seems completely unaware of the alternate reality... but does Jacob know it exists? If he did, his goal must not simply be to find a protector for the island, given his plan sunk the island. Maybe the "candidate" has something more important to do?
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Who says that's what led to the island being destroyed? Maybe Jacob didn't engage in his manipulations in that reality. Maybe it's the lack of Jacob that led to the island falling.

There's an interesting parallel between Jacob and his need to find a replacement and Desmond's need to find a replacement when he was punching in the numbers. It's almost as though the punching in of the numbers was the same as what Jacob does, writ small.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
That is a pretty cool parallel Lisa.

Another one that I found interesting was Locke and Esau in the two different time lines. In altTime when Rose tells Locke that they should find something he CAN do, he learns to accept things, and doesn't say his famous "don't tell me what I can't do" line. But on the Island, when the little boy tells Esau he can't kill him, Esau yells, "don't tell me what I can't do". Which I thought was a nice ironic flip flop on those two characters. Especially given Sawyer's statements about how him and Esau are totally opposite.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Some random thought, questions and opinions in no particular order.

1. Why is Locke's name still on the list? He's dead?

2. Why isn't Kate on the list? She's the only main character from flight 815 who definitely isn't. If they'd wanted to include her, they could have used 108 or since Locke is dead, they could have left him off the list. Why this choice?

3. How did names get crossed off the list? When was the last name crossed off? Now that Jacob is dead, will names continue to be crossed off the lsit?

4. I'm sceptical of everything Locke/Esau/Monster says. I suspect that at least half of it is untrue. I think he's trying to con Sawyer. I'm betting Sawyer knows this and is working on the reverse con.

5. I think we've got as much explanation of the numbers as we are going to get. They've said they aren't going to answer all the questions and I'm betting this one will be left where it is, mostly but not completely explained.

6. I roll my eyes every time some one says "Valenzetti equation". The writers have said that the Lost Experience and other non broadcast stuff isn't particularly important, even though it is "cannon". That easy, you won't need to know anything about the Lost Experience to understand the show. Nothing from the Lost experience has made it into the show in the last couple of seasons and I doubt it will during this final season. The writers may choose to throw the hard core fans a bone with some minor reference, but I really don't think it will be a major part of unraveling the mystery.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Rabbit, I don't think it has to be. I think the explanation of the Losties relation to the numbers works with or without the knowledge from the Lost Experience. But I also think it fits nicely in with that information as well(i.e- if you asked me 3 years ago what the numbers meant I could have told you they stood for the Losties). I think you're right that they won't reference it directly ever, even if further exposition conforms to what we know about it.

[ February 17, 2010, 03:24 PM: Message edited by: Strider ]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
A couple more thoughts.

The writers have said that they aren't going to answer all our questions, so for sometime I've been trying to distill things down to the central questions they have to answer to make it a good story in my eyes. I think Locke/monsters most important question "Why are you on this island?", did that. If they can provide a really complete and satisfying answer to that question, it won't matter to me what other threads they live hanging.

So far we know that Jacob and Esau are locked in some sort of competition/battle and are bound by the "rules of the game". We know that Jacob selects people and brings them to the island. We know the battle has been going on for over a century, possibly through multiple time loops and that all our players have been pawns of one side or the other in this game.

Now they have to flesh that out. What is this battle/game, what are the objectives of each side, what are the rules and how did Jacob and Esau get locked into it? Will our players be able to escape the game? Will that be a good thing or a bad thing?
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
I found it quite startling that antiJacob (or whatever his name is) said the island is just an island. It isn't special and doesn't need defenders. Has the Island really been a ruse all along, and the secret is something else on the island?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Esau is a manipulator. It's hard to know what to believe with him.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Reader:
I found it quite startling that antiJacob (or whatever his name is) said the island is just an island. It isn't special and doesn't need defenders. Has the Island really been a ruse all along, and the secret is something else on the island?

Read my point #4 above. I don't think we can take anything Esau says at face value.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Reader:
I found it quite startling that antiJacob (or whatever his name is) said the island is just an island. It isn't special and doesn't need defenders. Has the Island really been a ruse all along, and the secret is something else on the island?

I agree with Strider and The Rabbit. Plus, I thought it was telling that Sawyer didn't question what Flocke's place was in this whole "Choosing Candidates" business. Sawyer's definitely in for the Long Con -- if the Island's unimportant, what are you doing here all stressed out and kooky, Smokey? Yeah, that's right. Liar.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
Smokey knows Sawyer's abilities. He probably can guess there is a long con going on. I think this is a con on Sawyer, possibly to use him as he used Ben, but for a different reason of course.

I have a bad feeling that Sawyer isn't going to survive. There is no reason to believe that Smokey will let him live, with his past. Smokey has killed others who have done shady, murderous acts.

And yeah, I should have known that Smokey would say the island is nothing special.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
What if the names in the cave are just smokey's COPIES of the real names of candidates, written by smokey, and he crosses them out when he either kills them himself or gets them killed? And Jacob's real list is elsewhere?
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
But on the Island, when the little boy tells Esau he can't kill him, Esau yells, "don't tell me what I can't do". Which I thought was a nice ironic flip flop on those two characters. Especially given Sawyer's statements about how him and Esau are totally opposite.

I also wonder if this bears any relation to Ilana's comment that Smokey is now stuck in the form of Locke (or something like that--anyone know the actual wording?). When Smokey/Esau said Locke's line, it made me wonder if he was somehow starting to take on Locke's characteristics.
 
Posted by kanelock1 (Member # 12230) on :
 
I was thinking the same thing. what if by taking on Lockes form was more than just physical? Could he have taken on some of Lockes personality as well? Could Johns personality be strong enough to start influencing Smokey?
Also, there is a reasonable explanation for Ben and Ethan being off the island in the alt time line. Remember, in The Incident Dharma was starting to evacuate the island.Why would they not take young Ben and Ethan with them?
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
As good a name as Esau is, I have to say that "The Locke-ness Monster" is the best one I've heard so far.
 
Posted by MightyCow (Member # 9253) on :
 
Some of this stuff is starting to remind me of the Mistborn trilogy by Brandon Sanderson. I won't spoil the (excellent) books by pointing out the specifics, but there are some parallels that I find enjoyable.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Raymond Arnold:
As good a name as Esau is, I have to say that "The Locke-ness Monster" is the best one I've heard so far.

Thank you [Smile]

I liked this last episode. I was trying to compare the names of the people in relation to the numbers as well. Then I started replacing the numbers in the show with the names of the people they represent.

I don't know if there is something to it, probably nothing at all. Does anyone know of instances where the numbers are used?

For Example:

Oceanic Flight 815 = Oceanic Flight Reyes Ford (Or Hugo James)

One thing that I did think about was the Hatch. Other than Desmond, I believe every one of the people on that list typed in the code at some point, and no one else. As far as I remember, Kate never did. Desmond may have been a candidate in the past but perhaps not now.

Did anyone see any repeating numbers that had been crossed off?

I also think that the Kwon on the list probably represents Jin. All the rest of the candidates are men, so I just figure the last would keep consistent with the rest of the list.


I think it would be interesting if we saw Ben's name as well as Penny's father there as well. They were the leaders of the others and maybe they were being "groomed" to take Jacob's place? Is this the reason Ben and Penny's father also followed rules to not kill each other?

Was Ben following Esau and Penny's father following Jacob the entire time? Or vice versa?
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
I don't know if there is something to it, probably nothing at all. Does anyone know of instances where the numbers are used?

The only one I can think of is that Jack was sitting in row 23 on the flight.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Neither Jin or Sun ever push the hatch button, at least not that I can recall.

If Jin is the Kwon on the list then all the listies share the following qualities.

1. Male
2. Came on flight 815
3. Traveled back in time.

Unless "male" is important, I can't think of any obvious reasons why Kate isn't on the list.
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
I don't know if there is something to it, probably nothing at all. Does anyone know of instances where the numbers are used?

The only one I can think of is that Jack was sitting in row 23 on the flight.
There were a lot, but I think most, if not all, of them were in the first Hurley episode. For example, there was a whole line of girls in uniforms that each had the number, in sequence.

--Mel
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by theCrowsWife:
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
I don't know if there is something to it, probably nothing at all. Does anyone know of instances where the numbers are used?

The only one I can think of is that Jack was sitting in row 23 on the flight.
There were a lot, but I think most, if not all, of them were in the first Hurley episode. For example, there was a whole line of girls in uniforms that each had the number, in sequence.

--Mel

Mel, I think you misunderstood the question. We all know that there were many many instances where the numbers showed up. The question is whether there been instances prior to the most recent episode in which the numbers were associated with the "candidates". Aside from the one Lisa mentioned, I haven't found any.
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
Oh, gotcha. I can't think of any others, either.

--Mel
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
Neither Jin or Sun ever push the hatch button, at least not that I can recall.

If Jin is the Kwon on the list then all the listies share the following qualities.

1. Male
2. Came on flight 815
3. Traveled back in time.

Unless "male" is important, I can't think of any obvious reasons why Kate isn't on the list.

I guess it isn't clear yet if it can be a woman or only a man. The way it was put, it gave you the impression that there was someone before Jacob, and Jacob was the chosen candidate long ago.

I also think Esau is underestimating Sawyer. Esau tells Sawyer that Jacob must have visited him at some point in his life. Which means Jacob could leave the island. However, Jacob also came back to the island for a purpose. He was protecting it, and Esau tells Sawyer there is nothing special about the island.

I believe Jacob is a sort of warden of the island, and Esau is the prisoner. Though Jacob is dead the responsibilities fall to the next warden. Only the warden can release Esau so he can get off of the island, hence the attempt to con Sawyer.

How that would tie to the alt time line I do not know.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
no talk yet?

I haven't had time yet to write up any thoughts, but I thought last night's episode was fantastic!

Also, last night was the 108th episode of Lost. Fitting.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
It was amazing. The timelines are clearly starting to bleed through even more. Alt-Jack's confusion over the scar in his side, for one thing. And Alt-Dogen! Cool. I wonder who David Shepard's mother is.

I can't wait to see Alt-Rosseau as like a museum docent or something.

Who thinks Claire winds up killing Kate?

It was a bummer that there was no Sawyer this ep, but it was still excellent. I just don't get why Jack doesn't tell Sayid what Dogen said. I know, I know, if people actually communicated, there'd be no drama.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I loved this episode. I haven't been a fan of Jack since midway through season 2. After last night's episode however I think I may have changed my mind.

I thought this season was supposed to answer questions though! Who is Jack's son's mother? He is too old to be his ex wife's (Julie Bowen was the actress, I forgot the character's name).

Also, I am glad they brought Claire back, but I am a little let down at the prospect she may be evil, although she might just be a little crazy since she lost Aaron. The Locke-ness monster is really making me mad, but that may be because he is in control right now, obviously has a plan, and we don't know exactly what it is.

I did think the mirrors in the lighthouse were cool. My question with these though....Do they see into the same timeline? If Jack had kept watching, would he have seen the current or the alt time line ? And what does Jacob have in mind for Jack?

I did have a thought last night though. Maybe the time line is reset at the end of the show, and we find out the alt time lines are actually what happened to them? All of them so far (Kate, Locke, and Jack) have all ended on a fairly positive note. Even though bad things happen to them it seems to turn out alright.

Would you be let down if it turns out that these are the "endings" for each character?
 
Posted by Hume (Member # 11457) on :
 
Geraine, that has been my thought since the season premiere. The only evidence we have for it at this point is that Jack's neck appeared to be freshly wounded in the alternate reality Oceanic flight, and it seemed to me that he didn't remember being injuried.

Its possible that he was injuried right before the alternate reality was created, and that injury carried over to the new timeline.

I'm kind of like the idea of an epilogue that takes place throughout the season. It seems like a good way of wrapping up the character's story lines without having an episode or two explaining how things turned out.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
UnDead Jacob is starting to annoy me. I'd be smashing mirrors if I were Jack, too. Although I did like the bit with Hurley and "I'm a candidate."

Claire was creepy as could be: "My friend" with that insane little smile. I will be sad if she stays crazy, evil, possessed or whatever she is by the end of the show.

So I can't remember if Jacob said that someone or something very bad was going to the temple. I take it he was referring to Locke-ness. Hope he didn't mean Claire. Is it just Sayid and Miles left at the temple? We know Kate, Hurley, Jack and Sawyer are all gone . . . Jin is on his way back. Wonder what will happen?

As usual, I have no theories about the timeline and all that. I'm just happy if I can hold onto the major plot threads from episode to episode.

I do think that the show is and always has been about redemption and that most of the character resolutions will reflect that by the end of the show.

Oh, and is Jack's son Fox's son in real life? Don't know anything about the actor in real life, but that kid sure looks like him.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
I agree that the alt timeline stories might be the endings.

Locke finds peace with his paralysis, Jack has a son and learns to get along with him, Claire has her baby and decides to keep it--It's absolutely possible these are the happy endings for each character, and just like the flash-forwards of seasons yore, we're just seeing the lead up to them.

Also, someone suggested to me something that makes total sense--in the ALT timeline, the timeline doesn't have to diverge in 1977. Since the the ALT timeline, the plane never crashed, that means NONE of the events of the time-jumps happened either. Which means the timeline could have skewed as early as the earliest time-jump was.
 
Posted by JonnyNotSoBravo (Member # 5715) on :
 
The timeline could have skewed as early as Jacob's earliest interference in people's lives, too.

The actor who plays Jack's son is Dylan Minnette. Look him up on IMDB.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
The alternate timeline must be important to the main timeline in some way. I was thinking the alt timeline is going to end up being one of two things:

1) Along the lines as what's been mentioned, the new reality is the end result of Jacob's plan. If that's true then perhaps the whole plan was designed to not just to create a new timeline, but also teach the main characters things that they then subconsciously carry over into the new timeline, which alter the world for the better.

or

2) The characters from the alternate reality are the people, refered to in last night's episode, that Jacob is trying to bring to the original reality (which would explain why he can't just come out and simply give the name of who he's trying to bring.) Perhaps in the same way that people could (just mentally or also physically) jump through time, they could also jump through alternate realities on the island.

It all depends on which reality is the true goal - the one with the island, or the one without.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Also, someone suggested to me something that makes total sense--in the ALT timeline, the timeline doesn't have to diverge in 1977. Since the the ALT timeline, the plane never crashed, that means NONE of the events of the time-jumps happened either. Which means the timeline could have skewed as early as the earliest time-jump was.
It's things like this that make the entire idea of the altTime so ridiculous. Yes, that's true, but for the plane to not crash, the hatch needs to be blown up in 1977, and without any time jumping there is no one to blow it up.

This leads me to believe one of two things.

A)The writers got themselves stuck trying to tell too convoluted a story, and we're just going to have to deal with the repercussions.

B) The whole nuke is a red herring. Whatever happened, DID happen. And this altTime we are watching was in no way caused by the nuke detonation in Dharma time. As others have mentioned, it could be that the on Island events we are watching this season actually lead up to this alternate reality we've been shown.

As docmagik mentions, we've seen these characters learning valuable life lessons in altTime that they never learned on Island.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
quote:
Also, someone suggested to me something that makes total sense--in the ALT timeline, the timeline doesn't have to diverge in 1977. Since the the ALT timeline, the plane never crashed, that means NONE of the events of the time-jumps happened either. Which means the timeline could have skewed as early as the earliest time-jump was.
It's things like this that make the entire idea of the altTime so ridiculous.
No more so than any other story involving time travel. Time travel stories ALWAYS contain irresolvable paradoxes, even those that go with the "what ever happened happened" theory. Its the nature of the beast. To enjoy any time travel story, you have to accept that there will be paradoxes.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
The whole nuke is a red herring. Whatever happened, DID happen.
You keep saying that. I don't think that means what you think it means. The very existence of an ALT time line proves you are wrong. It doesn't matter whether or not the nuke lead to the altTime or some future event leads to the altTime line. The point is that there is more than one alternative. "Whatever happened, happened" is wrong.

quote:
And this altTime we are watching was in no way caused by the nuke detonation in Dharma time.
I'd like to point out that we still have no idea whether or not the nuke detonated. Juliette was hitting the nuke with a rock just before the Losties got transported to the future. We have no evidence that the nuke ever detonated. In fact, the evidence suggests the opposite. Juliette was still lying at the bottom of the drill hole. The drill hole would have been blasted to oblivian anything remaining would have been vitrified.

quote:
As others have mentioned, it could be that the on Island events we are watching this season actually lead up to this alternate reality we've been shown.
Definitely a possibility, but not the only one. Maybe the altTime is what happens if the bomb detonated and the main time line is what happens if the bomb never detonated. It will be interesting to see how they work it out. I try to keep myself from getting to invested in any particular theory. Once you do that, you start to bend everything to make it fit your theory. I prefer just to enjoy the ride hoping the writers still have some good twists up their sleeve to make it interesting.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
You keep saying that. I don't think that means what you think it means.
Actually, I'm pretty sure that since my pre season speculations, that's the first time I've mentioned any such thing. And I only did so after a slew of other posters presented the same idea. I think you were just waiting for me to post because you enjoy contradicting me!
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
quote:
You keep saying that. I don't think that means what you think it means.
Actually, I'm pretty sure that since my pre season speculations, that's the first time I've mentioned any such thing. And I only did so after a slew of other posters presented the same idea. I think you were just waiting for me to post because you enjoy contradicting me!
No, I was just inspired by the Princess Bride thread.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
It's okay, I'm letting it slide because Princess Bride references are ALWAYS apt.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
It's okay, I'm letting it slide because Princess Bride references are ALWAYS apt.

Exactly!
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
As you wish.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
Is it wrong that I watch this show live on a tuesday and then again on a thurday? I would think I should get bored but I don't. I even liked the Lightouse more the second time when I wasn't so sure about it on the first go.

anyone else?
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
LargTuna, I think most episodes of LOST are very rewatchable.

I know a lot of people have fantasies of someday having DVDs that tell each character's story in chronological order from start to finish.

I actually like the idea of watching episodes in any order, like putting the CD on "random" and seeing what track comes up next, and seeing what interesting connections happen between random episodes when you put them next to each other.

So yeah. Watching the new episodes twice in one week makes total sense to me. But I'm an odd duck, so I don't know how much that means to you.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
I was one of those people that quit near the end of season one, then discovered they had the DVD's at my library and was caught up for season 5. A couple of times I watched 5 episodes in a row it got intense with the amount of things I learned.
I was planning on getting the DVD's but I think it would be better if I got them in blue ray so I can watch them in the future. I just need to get a blue ray player and HDTV *grin* I'll get the full set in a few years, hopefully the prices will go down by then. I doubt they'll be able to have something that interactive because that means putting all of the data in one place for someone to upload it to the internet.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
So here's what I'm thinking.

The island- anomalies and all- is a prison for the black smoke monster. It may not always have been such, but that's its primary reason for being right now.

The guardian, previously Jacob, is in charge of maintaining that prison so the black smoke monster doesn't escape.

The black smoke monster can't harm the guardian. Thus "Locke" used Ben Linus to do the job for him.

The guardian's death has created a limited window of opportunity for the BSM to do things like infect Sayid through the wading pool, bully Jacob's followers, and try to use the "candidates" as avenues to escape the island before one of them is chosen to take Jacob's place. The degree to which the BSM must avoid interfering with/harming the "candidates" remains somewhat nebulous, but the possibility that it infected Sayid suggests that Jacob's death has given it opportunities it didn't have before.

I think I'm forseeing a Claire/Sayid/Sawyer vs. Jack/Kate/Hurley/Jin (if he manages not to get himself killed) face-off, with Sawyer as the big wildcard.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
If Jin dies before he meets up with Sun I will not be happy.

I think that's a cool possibility Sterling
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
I'm thinking that both Jacob and the smoke monster are the guardians of the island, and that they were both originally normal human beings (my guess is the kid that appears to Locke is actually Jacob when he was younger) who recieved the powers they have now from the island in order to protect the island, and were bound by a set of rules in the process. I think the smoke monster no longer wants the job, hence he wants to go "home". And then I'm not sure what Jacob's plan ultimately is, but it seems to be more than just to protect the island - he seems to be aiming for some greater good.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
I just thought of a possible explanation for the two time lines.

What if the white flash at the end of last season was the time shift not the bomb blast. The time shift isn't instantaneous, it began a fraction of an instant before the nuclear blast but didn't complete until the bomb detonates. The bomb blast resets the time line but because our losties were being transported through time when the bomb detonated, they split. One set of losties transfers into the original time line where the bomb never detonated. The other set is now on the alt time line. The split is why the alt timeline Losties have some residual memory of the original timeline.

Probably wrong, but its a thought.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Rabbit, that's kind of like a theory that I've heard that goes like this:

There's a line Faraday says somewhere where he talks about throwing a really huge rock in a river. He says, when you throw the rock in, it might dam it up, stop it. That's what Jack was trying to do--dam up the timeline, stop things from continuing on after that point.

But the other thing that could happen is that as the river fills up, it runs around the rock on both sides, making two new rivers, working their way around the rock. They'd run separate for a while, but then they'd join up back together again on the other side in the same riverbed as before.

So what we're seeing happening is the part where the two rivers run around the rock, and eventually we'll see the two rivers run together again.

When I first heard this, they said that Faraday said this in a deleted scene from Season 5. Since then, I've heard he said it in a real scene that aired in Season 5. Not sure which is right, or if either is--I'm only up to around the end of season 2 in my re-watching of the show.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
One thing, I thought it was interesting that Jack and Hurley ended up back at the Cave with skeletons of Adam and Eve.

I remember reading some time back, the producers saying something about the skeletons being important and that they were in the first season as evidence that the writers knew where they were going with this from the beginning. The scene this last episode seemed to be to remind us, in case (like Jack) we'd forgotten this little piece.

Its also worth noting that Jack found a black rock on one skeleton and a white rock on the other. That theme was important in the first season and seems to be resurfacing now and connected to Jacob and Esau.

For some reasonthis triggered another connection in my mind. Rose is black and Bernard is white and that this may not be an unimportant coincidence.

Also, I agree that Lockeness Monster is a more clever name than Esau, but Esau is so much shorter than any of the alternatives that I'm going to keep using for convenience alone.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Rabbit, earlier in this thread I talked about Rose and Bernard being Adam and Eve. They were one of my speculations for some time as to the identity of Adam and Eve, but I thought their appearance in last year's finale sealed the deal. Here's the text of what I wrote:

quote:
There’s one tangent I’d like to discuss that’s I think related to Jacob, and it’s about Rose and Bernard. Their scene in The Incident was really integral to the plot as well. They seem to have realized and lived out what Jacob was speaking of at the beginning of the episode. They escaped the cycle that Esau talks about. The Island seems to be a metaphor for heaven/paradise/nirvana/the garden of eden. Esau thinks humans aren't worthy of it because they are by nature corrupt/sinful/evil and always destroy and attempt to control. Jacob has faith they are better than this. And Rose and Bernard are living proof of this fact. They are at peace in the garden. I don't think there can be any doubt any more that Rose and Bernard are Adam & Eve. In light of this, I'm very interested in Bernard's invitation to Juliet to stay and have tea. Being that not only is she the only one not to be visited by Jacob, but she is also the person who makes the decision to set off the bomb. She is the last, and thus most important, chain in that link.

I agree with what Tres said about about Jacob and Esau and the Island. If the Island were SOLELY a prison for Esau, I would be really let down. With the appearance of the boy(who some of us think is Jacob) and learning definitively that Esau used to be human(if he can be believed) I think Jacob and Esau's origin's will be rooted in a more normal beginning than originally supposed. And further, that Jacob may not have been the first protector of the Island. That Jacob himself inherited this job, possibly from a previous guardian who is the person who gave Jacob the list of 360 names needed to find his successor.

I also had another thought recently in regards to Jacob's cabin. So we now know that it wasn't Jacob who had been using the cabin, but Esau. We know this because when Locke went there with Ben and everything started going crazy, we saw a puff of black smoke rocking in the chair. This along with the fact that Christian Shepard was using it. So the idea is that the Smoke Monster was trapped within the cabin by the circle of ash surrounding it. Now, I have two alternate ideas about this.

1) Esau's soul or essence was trapped in the cabin, but he was free to roam around the Island as the smoke monster, sort of like a chicken with his head cut off, no real intelligence, only able to do its duties. When the ash was broken, they were able to reunite and he was now able to fully take the form of a human and use his full powers.

2) Esau's entrapment in the cabin meant he couldn't interact in all his various ways, except for the smoke monster, in which form he was free to roam anywhere.

Minor variations, but I think they're both relatively likely.

Anyway, none of this was my point. The thought I had was that I think it was Claire who broke the circle of ash, freeing Esau. Now that we know about Esau's nature, and Christian Shepard's connection to all of this, I'm assuming she did this under his direction, as he was probably not able to interact with the ash himself.
 
Posted by JonnyNotSoBravo (Member # 5715) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sterling:
The guardian's death has created a limited window of opportunity for the BSM to do things like infect Sayid through the wading pool, bully Jacob's followers, and try to use the "candidates" as avenues to escape the island before one of them is chosen to take Jacob's place. The degree to which the BSM must avoid interfering with/harming the "candidates" remains somewhat nebulous, but the possibility that it infected Sayid suggests that Jacob's death has given it opportunities it didn't have before.

The BSM has already infected Claire, and, IMO, the people who came with Rousseau. So I'm wondering how it infects people. Did the BSM chase Rousseau's people to the spring and then they drank and got infected? Or did it infect them by their presence in the temple? Why hasn't it infected candidates before Sayid? Perhaps because they never got to the spring until now. Why didn't it infect Ben (who probably got healed by the spring)?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I think it was only able to infiltrate the spring after Jacob's death. But you do bring up interesting points about the nature of infection. Rousseau's team interacted with smokey under the temple and soon were changed that way. Sayid was infected by the spring. Claire...we don't know? Was it just proximity?

Is there a cure for the infection? Is Sayid screwed? Can we get Claire back? In general Claire doesn't seem "infected" as much as looney from being alone for so long and being lied to by Esau and the visage of Christian Shepard.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Interesting theory.

Just one question, when did you mean when you said "we know about Esau's nature and Christian Shephards connection to all of this this?

i guess we know that Christian Shephard is connected to Esau and he's connected to Claire's disappearance. But I don't think we have any clear idea what his connection is or how it works.

Your theory about Esau being trapped in the cabin has some problems because we know the smoke monster and Christian Shephard are able to move freely about the island and much of that movement has clear purpose. Christian is instrumental in getting both Ben and John off the island and therefore series of events that allow him to take John's physical form and kill Jacob.
Presuming that all the ghost's we've seen on the island are Esau, that would also include Horace, so there is even more evidence that of purposeful action. Still, I think you are on to something even if it isn't perfect.

Have all the ghost's we've seen on the island been of people whose corpses were on the island? If so I wonder what made Locke's corpse different. I'm thinking it may be that this was the first corpse of someone who was a candidate.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Okay, this a really outlandish idea, but what if MIB wasn't always the smoke monster?

Maybe his intial power was just that he could take the form of people who had died on the island.

What if, like the dead people on the island, the smoke monster was a separate creature, and MIB was only able to take the appearance of after it was killed?

I think the recent statment that MIB can't take other forms now discounts this, since it can still be a smoke monster but not a person. It would be a stretch that it could only take the form of one dead human but still be able to take the form of the one dead smoke monster.

But it's a fun idea, I think, to at least toss out there, total hogwash or not.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
I think it was only able to infiltrate the spring after Jacob's death. But you do bring up interesting points about the nature of infection. Rousseau's team interacted with smokey under the temple and soon were changed that way. Sayid was infected by the spring. Claire...we don't know? Was it just proximity?

Is there a cure for the infection? Is Sayid screwed? Can we get Claire back? In general Claire doesn't seem "infected" as much as looney from being alone for so long and being lied to by Esau and the visage of Christian Shepard.

Perhaps it was Rousseau and not her team that were infected. Its true that they were trying to kill her, but the others wanted Jack to kill Sayid as well.

Do you suppose Dogen wanted Jack to give Sayid the pill because the "rules" prevent him from killing Sayid? If so, then maybe they also had to get Rouseau's team to try to kill her. After they were killed, they had to get Ben to do it, suggesting he wasn't (yet) fully one of the others either.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
One more connection.


Smoke, Ashes and Fire.

I don't know what it means, but the connection is interesting.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Yeah, it is. Good thinking. Have to mull that over.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Rabbit, I guess I sort of breezed over some important things there in an attempt to get to my thought about Claire being the one who broke the ash. So let me back up, and do a more detailed account of what we know about Jacob's cabin.

Okay...so, last year's season finale significantly changed our perspective on what has been going on on the Island. Though I don't know that any of us thought that Jacob and the smoke monster were one and the same, I don't think any of us thought that they were enemies. What does this mean for us?

Here's what we know about the cabin. We know that Horace built the cabin(though the fact that Locke is told this in a vision makes it suspect, the fact that he finds the plans to it in Horace's jumpsuit lends credence to it's veracity). We know that Jacob at some point either resided in the cabin, or led Illana to believe that he did, as she and her people go straight there when looking for Jacob.

In our first introduction to Jacob's cabin we saw a couple important things. There was a circle of ash surrounding the cabin, which we now know is able to create a barrier that the smoke monster can't cross. On the surface this would imply Jacob had layed it there to protect him inside the cabin, but

1) given the rules does jacob really need protection from smokey?

2) When things started to go crazy in the cabin we saw a puff of black smoke rocking back and forth in the chair.

Given what we know now(the function of the ash and Esau's relationship to the black smoke), we have to assume that Esau was actually trapped inside of the cabin. But we also know that Esau, as the smoke monster was also freely roaming the Island at this same time. So how do we explain this? I offered two suggestions.

1) Because Esau's "essence" is trapped in the cabin he is only able to roam the Island as the smoke monster. This allows him to roam the island as smokey and due his protection duties, as well as present himself as the visage of people that people on the Island know. Both in the scene with Yemi and Eko, Ben and Alex, and Juliet and Kate, the smoke monster very much seemed to be interfacing with people's memories and accessing important information. But it seems that during all this time Esau was not able to take a real human form like we saw him during the 1800s and like he now has with Locke.

2) Similar to the first idea, but in this one, Esau's "essence" is so thoroughly trapped within the cabin that the smoke monster sort of functions like a body without a brain.

We know that at some point the circle of ash was broken. If this is a significant piece of information, what exactly is significant about it? My speculation is that this act either reunited Esau's essence with the smoke monster, or in general, freed Esau from his bondage. In answer to your question about what made Locke's corpse different Rabbit, I think it has more to do with the status of Esau being free, than because Locke was a candidate. If you look at the list of Candidate names on lostpedia, it indicates there have been other candidates who have died on the Island, which doesn't invalidate your theory, but begs the question of why Esau didn't use any of their bodies.

The reason I think it is Claire that did this(to the ash) is because of her communications with Christian Shepard, who we know has been lying to her to get her to do what he(or Esau) wants. Since we know that the smoke monster has been known to present itself in the visage of people(this was made explicit when it presented itself to Eko as Yemi), and given Esau's opposition to Jacob, we now have to question every vision we've seen on the Island and what purpose that vision was serving. If we're assuming that Christian Shepard is connected to Esau somehow(the fact that he's been lying to Claire about Aaron, and the fact that he was instrumental in bringing about Locke's death would support this), then it makes sense to me that he told Claire to break the circle of ash. I'm assuming he couldn't do this either because if his visage is being used by Esau then he can't get near the barrier, or because if he's ghost like he can't interact with matter in that way(his unwillingness to help Locke up after he's injured at the bottom of the well back this up, but his holding of Aaron in his hands contradicts it(though he is related to Aaron, which may mean something)).

It's not perfect, and there's a whole host of questions that get brought up. Is Christian Shepard really Christian Shepard or just an apparition? Though we initially thought we had to question all the Island induced visions, now that we've seen Esau witness his own vision, it seems to imply visions can happen in other ways. Hurley's communications with dead losties off Island would seem to back this up too, since I'd like to think that those were not Smokey induced visions(Jacob's dialog in the cab would seem to back that up).

Okay, that's way longer than I meant to write! Sorry.
 
Posted by JonnyNotSoBravo (Member # 5715) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
Interesting theory.


Your theory about Esau being trapped in the cabin has some problems because we know the smoke monster and Christian Shephard are able to move freely about the island and much of that movement has clear purpose. Christian is instrumental in getting both Ben and John off the island and therefore series of events that allow him to take John's physical form and kill Jacob.
Presuming that all the ghost's we've seen on the island are Esau, that would also include Horace, so there is even more evidence that of purposeful action. Still, I think you are on to something even if it isn't perfect.

Have all the ghost's we've seen on the island been of people whose corpses were on the island? If so I wonder what made Locke's corpse different. I'm thinking it may be that this was the first corpse of someone who was a candidate.

1) The BSM cannot cross ash (as we saw when the BSM killed Illana's crew). Therefore it cannot have been out roaming around and trapped in the cabin in the same general time frame.

2) We've seen Walt as a "ghost" and he never had a corpse on the island.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Johnny, depends on the nature of Esau. If part of him, his essence, can be separated from the black smoke, then his soul so to speak could be trapped within the cabin, and his body could be free to roam around the rest of the Island. But neither of them can cross the ash to reunite themselves and become whole.

Yes, there are a lot of assumptions going on here, but we know the smoke monster travels freely around the Island, and we saw the black smoke inside the cabin as well. This either means something like my speculation above is correct, or that the circle of ash was ALREADY broken when Locke and Ben first went there. I'm not sure how likely I find that, but it's certainly a possibility I guess.
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
quote:
Is it wrong that I watch this show live on a tuesday and then again on a thurday?

anyone else?

Me. I watch the new episode of 'Lost' in English at the weekend when I have time. Then I watch the same episode of 'Perdidos' in Spanish on Tuesday when it's on TV here.
It's the best language study aide ever.
(Speaking of which - almost all the promo stuff they showed here for this season was with Hugo and Richard, because the actors can speak some Spanish).

Did anyone think that little David might be Jack and Juliet's? The ages work, and he has very stunning blue eyes...
 
Posted by daventor (Member # 11981) on :
 
Yeah, I read that theory of David as Juliet's son on another website. It sounds pretty credible to me; I could definitely see them taking that route. The other interesting question (which was posed by the same person I read earlier who put for the Juliet/Jack/David theory) would be if Juliet's current boyfriend in alt-universe is Sawyer.

I really wonder if Daniel Farraday's going to pop up again this season. He and Locke had the crappiest life-and-death-stories in regular Lost-verse; it'd be nice to see him having some good times.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
http://www.docarzt.com/lost/lost-recaps/through-a-glass-darkly-6-05-lighthouse/

If you page way down (search the term sunhat to go directly there), there's a picture of a mirror on the wall, with sunhats hung all around it. Followed by a photo of Juliet's house in Otherton, with the same sort of setup. So maybe Juliet really is David's mother.
 
Posted by solo (Member # 3148) on :
 
I've been thinking about the possibility that Jacob is a creature very similar to MIB. Perhaps he can also take the smoke monster form and possibly have the same limitations as the MIB. Is there a reason that there has been no speculation in this direction? I can't think of anything from the show that discounts it out of hand. This could explain why the smoke monster has been roaming free all along while the black smoke was in the cabin.

I'm not sold on this theory but I won't be surprised if it happens either.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
I have an Idea of why we have seen some people who seem like they would have died in the bomb blast in 1977 in the sideways X universe. It's possible that because the plane never crashed, our losties never made it to the island, and nobody was able to tell the other to put the H bomb under ground in the 1950's when one of the losties time traveled (I forget which). What if the bomb went off in the 1950's and the island was submerged under water then?

I can't find any flaws that can prove so far that this didn't happen that way. I'm not convinced, but I'm liking it.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
We saw that New Otherton(The Barracks) was built and submerged under water in altTime. This means Dharma came to the Island and built their barracks. Which means the Island was around till at least the 70s.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
Do we know exactly what year Dharma came to the island?

I don't think we have any confirmation of how long New Otherton has actually been standing. It would be a stretch for it to at least mostly have been built by the 1950's, but is it impossible?

The massive Dharma migration in the 70's could have been the second wave or something.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Either way, the idea that Faraday wasn't there to tell them to bury it does give the timeline some play. The fundamental idea that the bomb didn't get buried and was still available to the Others leaves it there through whenever New Otherton got built.

The detonation could have replaced the Purge. Or replaced the Truce. Or happened at any other point in the island's history, since Faraday wasn't there to take it out of play.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Faraday is only not there to tell them to bury it based on a certain assumption about the way alt time works. Whether two timelines diverged at the point of the nuke, or whether this is a completely independent time line, or whatever...
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
More and more I'm starting to believe the time reset will happen, but has not happened yet. I think all of the flash sideways stories are the epilogue of the series, but that they are just showing it to us throughout the season.

As for Jughead, there would have had to have been some sort of evacuation at some point, as Dogen, Ben, and Ethan are all off of the island. It could be argued that they never were on the island, but Ethan was born on the island and it is believed that Dogen has been on the island as long as Richard has.
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
quote:
It could be argued that they never were on the island, but Ethan was born on the island and it is believed that Dogen has been on the island as long as Richard has.
Ethan could have been born somewhere else - certainly he seems a lot more normal in the other universe.

I haven't noticed any clues so far about Dogen's immortality - he's an interesting, quirky character, but apart from Hurley's lines about him being a samurai (I don't think Hurley has any great insight into these matters) he seems like another mortal group leader.
He hasn't turned up in any of the past time-travelling or flashbacks yet.

I think Ethan would have been off the island for the bomb in 1977, or in the 1950s not born yet, and Dogan might not have arrived yet.
It's Ben having been evacuated that suggests that Sayid never travelled back to shoot him.

I quite like the epilogue idea, but somehow, I also feel like it would render everything that had happened somewhat irrelevant.
They might as well have stepped out of the shower.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
quote:
As for Jughead, there would have had to have been some sort of evacuation at some point, as Dogen, Ben, and Ethan are all off of the island. It could be argued that they never were on the island, but Ethan was born on the island and it is believed that Dogen has been on the island as long as Richard has.
I'm not sure what the explanation for this is, but I am sincerely hoping it will involve lots of scenes with Ethan's mom.

I miss Michelle. 24 stinks on ice this season.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Weirdest. Lost. Ever.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
Yeah, and that says something.
 
Posted by kanelock1 (Member # 12230) on :
 
I have a theory. when Sayid killed Dogan, where did he do it at? The spring. Why? Maybe He is hoping that Dogan will be brought back by the water, and that he is really working an angle on Flocke? Any thoughts?
 
Posted by Wendybird (Member # 84) on :
 
It was a really bizarre episode and one that I will have to watch several times I think to even figure out what happened! Its almost too weird. I feel like we aren't getting a story anymore but rather some randomly strung together events.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
I think it will make more sense when we know why FLocke is gaming everyone. He should have killed Kate because she was in the temple, but she hid well. He seemed displeased to see her when she exited the temple with FLocke's crew. She's an insider now and can compromise him.

I'm thinking that Jack is more important than ever now, and will work with the person who is coming to the island. The lighthouse isn't as important as getting Jack to understand what he needs to do, but it needs to be his choice.

The old Losties are all still meeting each other by chance in the flashsideways. I don't think it's an epilogue. I think they are still destined to meet, and the two timelines will converge at some point. Of course, meetings at the airport are expected, but Sayid and Jin at Keamy's Bar and Grill? I wouldn't be surprised to see Jacob show up in the altline.

BTW, it was pretty cool to see Keamy and Omar back, even though they probably aren't going to be in any more episodes.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
I think this is meant to be the episode where we start doubting the flash-sideways stories might be a happy ending for everybody. Sure, things are working out with Jack and Locke, but Nadia's married to Sayid's brother? Jin in mortal peril, from Sayid, no less?

I think setting off the bomb was the Losties painting with a VERY broad brush, and while we started with little deviations in the premeire, we're going to see that the implications went WAY outside the lines they'd intented, with serious consequences.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
Anyone else notice that, counting only the "candidates", it is now 3 vs. 3? Locke, Sawyer, and Sayid are on the dark side, while Jack, Sun/Jin, and Hurley are on Jacob's side.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tresopax:
Anyone else notice that, counting only the "candidates", it is now 3 vs. 3? Locke, Sawyer, and Sayid are on the dark side, while Jack, Sun/Jin, and Hurley are on Jacob's side.

No. Locke's dead not on the dark side, so there are only 5 candidates left. Sun and Jin are still totally unknown. Jack's still on the fence. I'm still betting that Sawyer is conning Esau, but we shall see.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Since the Lighthouse episode we now have confirmation that Kate is also a candidate. She was number fiftysomething(i think 51) and her name was not crossed out on the lighthouse dial.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I actually liked this episode a lot. It didn't offer a concrete explanation of anything but it sure as hell moved the plot forward.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by docmagik:Sure, things are working out with Jack and Locke, but Nadia's married to Sayid's brother?
Big Problem. Omar was one of the mercenaries on Widmore's boat. He helped Sayid and others board the ship. It seems strange Sayid wouldn't have recognized his brother then. And having people who weren't brothers be brothers on an alt time line stretches believability too far.


quote:
Jin in mortal peril, from Sayid, no less?
I saw it as Jin being rescued from mortal peril by Sayid. We shall see. This one has me very curious. How did Jin get from being detained by customs and immigration to being held captive by mafia characters. But since next weeks episode is titled "Dr Linus", we may have to wait a few more weeks for the answer.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I am finding myself less satisfied with the alt-time sections. They seem to be less about a believable alt-time and more about a "let's see how many characters we can mash together for fun." I hope that they have a satisfying explanation about what it is, if it isn't actually an alternate timeline.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Rabbit, I think Omar and Omer are two different people. I think Omar was one of the guys with Keamy in the kitchen.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by docmagik:
Rabbit, I think Omar and Omer are two different people. I think Omar was one of the guys with Keamy in the kitchen.

Yup, My bad.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Lost characters explain how to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.

Link.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
It's a little dated, but still funny. Particularly the one for Desmond.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
My favorite is claire. "Hmmmm.... peanut butter!"
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Jack should have given the ingredients a pep talk.

"You can either be eaten together, or go moldy and rancid alone!"
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Presumably, Jacob brings everyone to the Island but its interesting that there are people like Dogen and Illana who Jacob meets and "persuades" to come to the Island and those like our Losties and Rousseau who are brought to the island against their will.

I wonder if anyone on flight 815 had made a deal with Jacob before coming to the island. That might explain why the kidnapped losties were so content staying with the others.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Its too bad that Faraday didn't show up in the music conservatory. I like the idea of an alt timeline where he become a musician and that would have been the perfect place do it.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Raymond Arnold:
My favorite is claire. "Hmmmm.... peanut butter!"

That's actually the main one I thought was dated. A more current Claire would be, "WHERE IS MY PEANUT BUTTER?!!! GIVE ME MY PEANUT BUTTER OR I'LL KILL YOU!!!"
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
Hmm, Locke is now a substitute teacher in a high school in the altline. Arzt is a high school teacher. What are the chances Arzt teaches in the same school?
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
But since next weeks episode is titled "Dr Linus", we may have to wait a few more weeks for the answer.

Can I request spoiler alerts on the names of titles of episodes not yet aired?
It's thrilling to be completely spoiler free (avoiding promos and titles) and I suggest everyone else do the same who have the self control and think it would be fun. Knowing less going into each episode of the final season ensures more enjoyment during discoveries possibley revealed.
*I forgive you guys for letting me know this one title without an alert since I never asked before*

I guess I should have put a spoiler alert on my own post! [Embarrassed]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
LargeTuna, I don't mean to give you any trouble, but I don't think posters should be required to put spoiler alerts when speculating on future episodes based off of tv commercials and officially released stuff from ABC. Names of titles might be easy to do, but to properly label every speculation based off content from a commercial could be extremely difficult.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
It's easy for me to avoid actually knowing if what everyone says is based on the promos or just speculation, so I'm not worried. And I usually skim a post because if someone says "I saw in the preview" then I can skip it. I didn't even think about asking for alerts for those since that would be a hassle.

It's a risk I take by going on a forum.

I'm generally just talking about labeling title names with spoilers [Big Grin] (I hope that would be easy? I'm not sure)
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
sure, I have no problem labeling episode title names. I think you're protecting yourself a little TOO much, but the effort required for me to comply is minimal. [Smile]
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
So it would be a bad idea to mention here that the Series Finale is being titled "It was all just Locke's dream: There is no island"?

Okay... just kidding.... maybe....
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I thought the season finale would be called

"Our Cash Cow is coming to an end"
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
I thought it was going to be titled, "You're were right, we have been making it up as we go all along."
 
Posted by JonnyNotSoBravo (Member # 5715) on :
 
I saw the cast list for the final episode and Patrick Duffy and Victoria Principal are in it...
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
quote:
sure, I have no problem labeling episode title names. I think you're protecting yourself a little TOO much, but the effort required for me to comply is minimal.
I actually think that in many cases, the "officially spoilered" stuff is more than enough to ruin the show. I screwed up the last 6 episodes of Avatar for myself this way.

I don't think "Doctor Linus" is a particularly spoilertastic name (I don't mind knowing which characters are going to be the focus of an episode), but things like the "On the next episode of LOST!" clips can be pretty detrimental to my enjoyment of a show. (On "Flash Forward," they pretty gave away the surprise of the next episode every time).
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Yeah, the marketing department has a very different job than the writers, directors and actors.

I remember the jacket copy for the hardback of Treasure Box by Orson Scott Card giving away pretty much every single twist in the book.

And don't get me started about previews for Robert Zemekis movies--and he HAS control.

I will warn everyone, though, that spoilers for the last couple of episodes are out there, and you're going to want to start being careful.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Uprooted:
I thought it was going to be titled, "You're were right, we have been making it up as we go all along."

They may have been at the beginning, but I don't think there's any doubt that they've known exactly where they're going for all of this season, and probably the previous one.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
The "trapped in cages" story line from season three was certainly made up to fill time when the writers didn't know where they were going. Not coincidentally, that was probably the most boring part of the show.
 
Posted by zgator (Member # 3833) on :
 
quote:
I saw the cast list for the final episode and Patrick Duffy and Victoria Principal are in it...
Well, Patrick Duffy was the Man from Atlantis.
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
I was perturbed when they brought in a 'second island'..

I feel like they knew what the full concept of the show was, and how they wanted stuff to go down in the end, and they already knew some of the stuff they were going to approach (with the whole time jumping thing) - but then they go to a point where they had to start wrapping things up or start making filler episodes/seasons, and they tried the 'filler' thing and didn't like how it took away from the integrity of the show so they started planning an exit strategy- and are obviously delivering.

Filler episode I hate the most:
The one where Sawyer enlists Hugo to help him catch the noisy frog.

What the last episode's title should be:
Land Of String Theory (LOST)
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
I was perturbed when they brought in a 'second island'..

I feel like they knew what the full concept of the show was, and how they wanted stuff to go down in the end, and they already knew some of the stuff they were going to approach (with the whole time jumping thing) - but then they go to a point where they had to start wrapping things up or start making filler episodes/seasons, and they tried the 'filler' thing and didn't like how it took away from the integrity of the show so they started planning an exit strategy- and are obviously delivering.

Filler episode I hate the most:
The one where Sawyer enlists Hugo to help him catch the noisy frog.

What the last episode's title should be:
Land Of String Theory (LOST)
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
quote:
What the last episode's title should be:
Land Of String Theory (LOST)

[ROFL]
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
I don't think I'm alone when I say that the filler episode I hate the most is the one with Niki and Paolo.

A close second was the stupid flash forward/flashback when Sun has her baby.

--Mel
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I liked the Sun episode until I figured out that the flashback was just a flashback with no relation to the flash forward, and with no particular cleverness attached to it. (Afterwards I didn't DISLIKE it, there's episodes I hate far more, but I wasn't as impressed).

The episode I dislike the most is the one where Charlie lights some stuff on fire or something (can't remember exactly what, but it was dumb of him). It was just painful to watch.

I had no problem with the Niki and Paolo episode on account of it was hilarious.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by theCrowsWife:
I don't think I'm alone when I say that the filler episode I hate the most is the one with Niki and Paolo.

I heard that they're bringing Nikki and Paolo back, and that they have a crucial role in figuring out what the Island is.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
I know it's cliche to hate it, but I hate the flashback with Jack's tatoos.

And I totally agree about the flashforward/flashback with the Kwons. That was a total cheat of a pointless twist.

Niki and Paolo I didn't mind so much. I only caught up on the DVDs in time for season 4, so I totally missed out on being part of the online hate for them.

I think also, though, that all of us has a character or two we're not as interetsed in, so episodes about them sometimes feel like "filler" for us, personally, while we're waiting to get back to "our" people.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
I had no problem with the Niki and Paolo episode on account of it was hilarious.
I agree with Raymond. And my sense is that it wasn't the Nikki and Paolo episode that people were unhappy with, as much as NIKKI AND PAOLO who people were unhappy with.

The episode where they're killed off was actually a really good episode I thought. I thought it was really interesting to have these two sort of present for all the important stuff on the Island(or discovering it themselves earlier) but being so wrapped up in themselves that they don't care about anything else. I thought Artz's lines in that episode were hilarious(The PIGS are WALKING!). The twilight zoneish ending was masterful. And in general, the narrative structure of the episode, following two individuals subjective experience of the Island from start to finish, I thought was really engaging.

I usually dislike Kate episodes, particularly post Island Kate episodes. Some of my least favorite episodes of the last few years were Kate episodes(eggtown and this year's Kate episode come to mind).
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Did anyone else think that Sayid going off and doing just what Dogen told him to was not very Sayid-like at all? I mean, he knew Dogen wanted him dead and then he's just going to go and kill not-Locke because Dogen tells him that's how he can prove he's really a good person? Huh? Sayid?

I have no idea what his motivations were in killing Dogen. Revenge? Convinced/brainwashed/possessed by Man in Black? Is he really Sayid anymore at all?
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
yeah. the end of Niki and Paulo was fantastic.

it's the perfect 'love to hate' episode.
---

And yeah, Sayid seemed a bit hasty, but SmLockey the Bear was suppose to be a corpse. I may've stabbed him out of fear myself.

I think on island Sayid and AltFlash-Sayid both came to the same conclusion, that they don't deserve 'redemption' because they are who they are, and they are killers.
 
Posted by Traceria (Member # 11820) on :
 
What does it say that I had to go and look up Niki and Paulo?
Possibly that they were really THAT annoying.

I don't know that it was totally out of character for Sayid to follow his orders.

I mean, what did he do when they got back to the mainland? Followed Ben's orders for part of the three years they were back. He didn't ask very many questions.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Hey Traceria! Good to see you. How's married life?
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
For the record, I liked Nikki and Paulo. I watched season 3 on DVD though, so I could watch the episodes more rapidly and didn't mind that they were new and unimportant. Generally, I don't enjoy Kate, Claire and Said episodes so much. Give me an Eko, Desmond or Jin/Sun episode any day.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Uprooted:
Did anyone else think that Sayid going off and doing just what Dogen told him to was not very Sayid-like at all?

Well yes and no. Sayid has this almost bipolar personality. On the one hand, half the time he has this almost supernatural ability to see past deception and sense a lie. On the other hand, he's incredibly easy to manipulate once you know his weaknesses.

[ March 09, 2010, 08:21 AM: Message edited by: The Rabbit ]
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
Rabbit, that's what made Sayid such an effective torturer.

IMO, his desperate search for redemption is what lead him to follow FLocke, because he gave up on redemption when he realized what he desired couldn't be obtained. But that's ultimately his flaw. His desires consumed him, and have lead to his destruction.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
I'd forgotten about Sayid following Ben for 3 years. I can't keep all these threads going in my head. But I'm not so sure his story is over and redemption is lost. I'm interested to see what ends up happening with alt-Jin and alt-Sayid.

I loved last night's episode. I really thought Ben was going to do the wrong thing in alt-world, and was glad when he didn't. Michael Emerson's a great actor. I actually felt sorry for poor sniveling, conniving, murderous Ben when he said, "No one else will have me." That "I'll have you" line got to me. Even though . . . really, who the heck is Ilana anyway?

The touchy-feely ending scene on the beach was very Season 1. Well, almost ending. Before the sub with Widmore on it.
 
Posted by msquared (Member # 4484) on :
 
Who have we not seen in the sideways time line? Especially those who are candidates? Have we seen Sun? If not would that make her the one that takes over for Jacob?

I would love to gets Iliana's back story. We need a flashback. [Smile]

msquared
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
We have seen Sun. She and Jin were at the airport being questioned.

I like that maybe Ben has turned around.
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
We saw Sun on the plane and in the airport, although the customs agent referred to her as Ms. Paik. So that could either be a red herring or a clue that Jin was the Kwon on Jacob's list.

--Mel
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
It just means that Sun and Jin aren't married in altTime, I don't know how safe we are extrapolating anything else.

Last night was great. Ben is such a wonderful character.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I was only able to watch the first half of last nights episode this morning before work, but so far it is probably my favorite episode this season.

The last scene I watched before I had to come to work was the confrontation between Ben and the principle. Even though he broke Alex' trust, I hope he does the right thing and backs off for Alex' sake. He can always blackmail the principle once Alex is in Yale.

Even though I have not finished the episode, I found myself feeling sorry for Ben. He really has had a difficult life, and has always done what he feels is right, even though it seems evil to everyone else. I think he realizes now that he shouldn't have killed Jacob.

One thing I wanted to point out in this episode is a change in Jack. He has made a transition from a man of science to a man of faith. When he was sitting there with Richard in the Blackrock with the dynamite fuse burning away, Jack looked absolutely convinced that it would not go off. The line at the end, "Want to try another stick?" made me giggle. I think Jack has accepted that he is there for a reason, even though that reason is not clear to him yet.

Jack and Locke have butt heads throughout the entire series. I have a hunch that Jack will be Jacob's replacement.

We haven't seen Sawyer in weeks. Locke is out gathering people, what is Sawyer doing? Sudoku puzzles? Did he find a good book to read?
 
Posted by JonnyNotSoBravo (Member # 5715) on :
 
I thought it was great, except...there was a false choice that Principal Reynolds gave Ben. Ben had all the power, so all Ben had to do was say, no, if you don't resign, recommend me as your replacement AND write the recommendation for Alex then your wife finds out you were cheating and the school board does, too. The REAL Ben, the conniving one who was so smart and infiltrated the Losties and ran the Others would have realized that in a second. I understand why the writers wrote it the way they did - so Ben would have a selfless chance at redemption in his alt-life. But it rings hollow when you examine the logic.
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
great episode.

next week can't get here any sooner.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Jonny, one thing to remember is that Ben in altTime is not the experienced manipulator that he is on the Island. While you may be right that he didn't handle his extortion perfectly, I think it's reasonable that he didn't know how to.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I do love how we did find out that alt-Ben was on the island at one point, and since Uncle Rico was still around the purge probably didn't happen, or they left before it did.

I wonder if Ben was shot while on the island in the alt-time line?
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I would like to find out WHY things in the alt time are turning out so different. And having Alex show up in Ben's class is really straining credibility.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
if the epilogue theory of altTime turns out to be right, it would explain why things are happening the way they are in altTime.

as for Alex, I think they're just pushing the idea that all these people were meant to cross paths no matter what.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I get that, but frankly that's just dumb. Using "Destiny" as a plot device is only not-dumb when there's some actual reason for the people to end up together. They all ended up in the island together because the Island was constantly manipulating them from Day 1. If the Island is removed from the equation, there's no reason for them to naturally gravitate towards each other.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
again, it all depends on the nature of altTime. If altTime is not in fact just a timeline where there was no Island(though we know there was) then there could be a plausible explanation for this.

Hey, I'm not happy at all with the very existence of altTime! But many things that have happened this season have made me question altTime's role in this story. If as some have speculated, altTime is an epilogue, and events on the Island now are actually leading up to the events we're watching in altTime, then they could conceivably have an explanation for all the connections.
 
Posted by Fitz (Member # 4803) on :
 
Last night's episode was a perfect example of why I love Lost. Great character interactions, cool human stories, and awesome performances. I've long since given up trying to follow all the theories or to guess what's going to happen. Don't get me wrong, I love the fantastical elements and the crazy plot hi-jinks, but at this point I'm perfectly content to just watch things unfold from week to week.

Ben: Because he's the only one who'll have me.
Ilana: I'll have you...
Me: Nice!
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
I do love how we did find out that alt-Ben was on the island at one point, and since Uncle Rico was still around the purge probably didn't happen, or they left before it did.

Who is Uncle Rico?

quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
I wonder if Ben was shot while on the island in the alt-time line?

By whom?
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
Who is Uncle Rico?

The actor who plays Ben's father also played Uncle Rico on Napoleon Dynamite.

I didn't get it right away either.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Jacob is ak-Haru Kenaustin Ardenol, with a few changes. For one thing, Ben clearly isn't going to replace him. But other than that, I see a number of similarities.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
I do love how we did find out that alt-Ben was on the island at one point, and since Uncle Rico was still around the purge probably didn't happen, or they left before it did.

Who is Uncle Rico?

quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
I wonder if Ben was shot while on the island in the alt-time line?

By whom?

1) Yeah, Napolean Dynamite reference. Sorry [Razz]

2) By Sayid. In the original timeline Sayid shot Ben. Ben was then taken to Richard who took him to (presumably) the temple and saved his life.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
I wonder if Ben was shot while on the island in the alt-time line?

quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
By whom?

By Sayid. In the original timeline Sayid shot Ben. Ben was then taken to Richard who took him to (presumably) the temple and saved his life.

Except that Sayid's only motive for shooting young Ben was what adult Ben had done to him. Since adult Ben never did that, why would Sayid have shot him? More to the point, since Oceanic 815 never crashed, how would Sayid have been on the island in order to shoot Ben?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I've mentioned this a few times, but everyone here is making very specific assumptions about how time travel/altTime/causality work, and I don't know that ANY of us have any base to make these assumptions from.

I think it's equally likely that two time lines diverged at T0, the time of the nuke explosion, and that up until that point it was all one time line. This would necessarily include time traveling Losties in the 50s, 70s, and way back in the past when Sawyer held onto the rope from the well, bringing it with him and marking the spot for future generations to discover and dig at...

The other option is that somehow the nuke explosion created an alternate time line, but not one that diverged at the time of the nuke, one that is completely different due to the fact that the Losties never landed on the Island, never time traveled, never shot Ben, and never set off a nuke(begging the question of what exactly happened to the Island to put it under water, and how a time line that necessarily is different from hundreds or even thousands of years in the past can be created by an event in 1977).

And I don't think these are our only two options. There might be an infinite amount of altTimes, ala a quantum mechanical many worlds type of things, and we are just being shown two of them. Two of them that must connect in some significant way, or else why show us them? The Island in this scenario may serve as some sort of nexus of time, where many universes converge. Ala The Dark Tower and the myriad of Steven King references in this series.

Or maybe altTime is really an epilogue. altTime wasn't caused by the nuke at all, and the events we are watching now on the Island actually lead up to and cause/create what we are seeing now in altTime.

Both of the first two options have their own problems with logistics and causality, and pointing out to Geraine that Sayid wouldn't have shot Ben in altTime is just as much of an assumption as any others.
 
Posted by jeniwren (Member # 2002) on :
 
I think the flashsideways time is what would have happened had Jacob not interfered in their lives.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I'm still waiting for Walter Bishop to have a cameo appearance in the alt-time line.

Jack: "Get this guy into surgery!"

Walter: "Oooooh! Afterwards can we get some Butter-Pecan Ice Cream??"
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Both of the first two options have their own problems with logistics and causality, and pointing out to Geraine that Sayid wouldn't have shot Ben in altTime is just as much of an assumption as any others.
ALL time travel stories (at least all time travel stories involving travel to the past) have problems with causality. One of the fundamental laws of physics is that cause must precede effect. If you allow travel backwards in time, that law does not apply which effectively destroys the concept of causality as we understand it. Its an inescapable fact. There is no way around it. To enjoy any time travel story, you have to let that go.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
I'm still wondering if perhaps, just like time travel was possible, travel from altTime to the original timeline is also possible.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Oooooo. We could have an Alt-Locke vs Faux-Locke smackdown. Or a Crazy-Claire holding Alt-Claire hostage.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Bad news....Looks like Julie Bowen is heading to Hawaii to shoot an episode of her new show and will probably be stopping by the Lost set on one of the days....I REALLY hope that doesn't mean she is Jack's baby mama.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
Crazy episode, but at least we know what Sawyer is up to. The FS seemed way too soapy, even more than usual.

I won't spoil, but I'll say I liked the teaser for next week's episode. It looks awesome
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
FS?
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Flash Sideways.
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
I thought this last episode was pretty boring. Usually Sawyer is pretty fun, but not this time. Alt-Sawyer is really tedious, and I haven't liked Kate in years. I'm really looking forward to next week's episode, though!

--Mel
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
Sawyer and Kate are the only reasons I watch any longer. Even Hurly isn't as fun this season.
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
The fact that Hurly is not fun this season is, IMO, the real reason this show sucks rotten dinosaur eggs now.
 
Posted by Bokonon (Member # 480) on :
 
The problem is they've already split the Losties up, so you only see half of them in any given episode. I think Hurley was pretty funny when he and Jack followed Richard Alpert into the old ship, and also when he told off Dogen.

The biggest hint they gave us this episode was about handshakes/touching. Kate still hasn't been touched by Fake Locke or Jacob.

But yeah, a pretty hum-drum episode. The next one ought to be fun.
 
Posted by Wendybird (Member # 84) on :
 
I love Sawyer so I loved seeing more of him this epi. I loved his flash sideways [Smile]

See something for everyone just not all of us on any given night [Wink]
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I thought it was boring as well. The only interesting part is how Sawyer is playing both sides. I do think it was pretty dumb how fast Sawyer has moved on from losing Juliet and now seems to be ok with Kate again. It has been what, 4 days? Plenty of time to get over the woman you loved and spent 3 years with.

I was really hoping the person Miles was trying to set Sawyer up with was Juliet. It puzzled me why they even brought Charlotte into the whole storyline. It seems the writers are just trying to do everything they can to give screen time to every single character that has ever been on the show. Still no sign of Faraday though >.<
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Definitely thought the same about Charlotte, Geraine. Although, if I wanted to stick up for the writers, Sawyer and Charlotte (as least, how Charlotte was on the Island with the Freighter People) have some striking similarities. But I don't know that I should give them that much credit. [Smile]
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
Still no sign of Faraday though >.<

His father is back, so maybe he'll be along as well. I wonder what's up with AltWidmore.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I may be wrong, but I got the impression that Faraday was like Desmond, and could travel through time as well. It has been a while, but did anyone else think this as well?
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
I don't think so. Otherwise, why would he have had Des give himself a message? His knowledge of time came (apparently) from his future self (as the worm eats its own tail...)
 
Posted by Armoth (Member # 4752) on :
 
I'm glad the show is returning to its roots about real life choices. So far we have Jack in both time lines choosing good. Ben in both choosing good. Sayid in both chosing evil. Kate and Sawyer have not really resolved yet. I guess we can throw Locke into the not resolved bin as well.
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
Isn't Locke in the dead bin?
 
Posted by Armoth (Member # 4752) on :
 
I dunno. AltLocke isn't dead. They flash sideways to him. That's significant.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Ben in both choosing good. Sayid in both chosing evil.
I think that's seriously over simplified. If someone has shot your brother, threatened his wife and children and kidnapped you, I wouldn't call it evil to kill them. I'm not sure I'd call it good either, but it definitely isn't evil.

Of all the characters in the show, Sayid raises the most interesting questions about good and evil. He is clearly more capable of ruthlessness than any other major character, but unlike Kate, Sawyer and even Jack his ruthless actions never seem to be selfishly motivated and unlike Keemy and Ben he does not enjoy it.

[ March 17, 2010, 04:20 PM: Message edited by: The Rabbit ]
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
I think that's seriously over simplified. If someone has shot your brother, threatened his wife and children and kidnapped you, I wouldn't call it [i]evil to kill them. I'm not sure I'd call it good either, but it definitely isn't evil.

Of all the characters in the show, Sayid raises the most interesting questions about good and evil. He is clearly more capable of ruthlessness than any other major character, but unlike Kate, Sawyer and even Jack his ruthless actions never seem to be selfishly motivated and unlike Keemy and Ben he does not enjoy it.

QFT
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Did anyone feel that Sayid was somehow...detached?

He didn't seem like he was all there when Kate spoke to him, and he looked confused when Claire attacked her, almost like he didn't care.

Something more is up with him. Perhaps he is slowly losing his mind like Claire did? Is it just an act?
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Completely. He was dissociating.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Rabbit, I agree about Sayid. I find him more fascinating than any other character on the show. I can't imagine anyone who has been that ruthless having so much gentleness and compassion remaining in his nature, but having never actually met a torturer (that I'm aware of) I'm not sure if the character rings true or not.

Sayid, Sawyer and Hurley are the most interesting characters on the show to me. Ben's interesting too, but hard to like. And yes, Sawyer does seem strange and detached, and Sayid's just a mess now. When Claire was hugging Kate I kept wondering if she was going to go for the gun.

False Locke was pretty creepy telling Kate a crazy mama story - then justifying lying to Claire, like giving her something to hate was a good thing.
 
Posted by Armoth (Member # 4752) on :
 
I dunno, I feel like these specific characters are brought back to correct their own very personal flaws. Despite the difficulty of Sayid's choices, I'd say that he's chosen the dark side in both realities.

There are a limited amount of episodes left. Now is the time for the writers to be tying things up in simple little bows for us. I definitely feel closure in the case of Ben, and possibly Jack as well - in terms of the struggle of their moral development. Perhaps we are meant to feel that way about Sayid as well. Especially when he watched Kate and Claire. I mean, it wasn't even Sayid anymore. It was like the last 5 min of Revenge of the Sith...
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
I really liked Sayid, but I'm bored with his story now. The man's got two settings-- big-eyed sensitive Arabian hunk, or reluctant torturer/murderer.

But Sawyer is rich in both conundrum and irony. He's also hunky, if you like that kind of thing. Hands down-- best character in the series next to Hurley.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
That is what is so sad about Sayid. I feel like he's gone. But then Claire appeared to be a lost cause, but wasn't; she had been manipulated.

Sometimes it seems that Jacob is a bad guy, and FLocke is the good guy, but I still believe that FLocke is bad. He ultimately damages people to meet his own ends. Jacob hasn't done that, even though it seems that he removed free will, which is not the worst that he could have done. IMO, Jacob tries to make people realize their purpose with as little pushing as possible.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Scott R:
The fact that Hurly is not fun this season is, IMO, the real reason this show sucks rotten dinosaur eggs now.

I'm with Bok on this one. I think Hurley is fantastic this season. He's not only funny(when he's on screen), but he's also taking a leadership role which I'm very psyched about.

quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
I was really hoping the person Miles was trying to set Sawyer up with was Juliet. It puzzled me why they even brought Charlotte into the whole storyline. It seems the writers are just trying to do everything they can to give screen time to every single character that has ever been on the show. Still no sign of Faraday though >.<

Agreed about Charlotte as well. It seems like just another way for them to cram in a familiar face. I GET IT...they're all meant to cross paths, I don't need to be beaten over the head with it. I think Sawyer WILL meet Juliet, but that it won't happen for a while, and that it will be a random meeting. Her last lines when she died, which I still think will be said by her to Sawyer in altTime, seemed to imply it wasn't anything like a blind date.

I'm hoping that Faraday is a professional musician, and plays at the conservatory that Jack's son auditioned at, and that next time there is a Jack episode they might all meet up.

quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
I think that's seriously over simplified. If someone has shot your brother, threatened his wife and children and kidnapped you, I wouldn't call it [i]evil to kill them. I'm not sure I'd call it good either, but it definitely isn't evil.

Of all the characters in the show, Sayid raises the most interesting questions about good and evil. He is clearly more capable of ruthlessness than any other major character, but unlike Kate, Sawyer and even Jack his ruthless actions never seem to be selfishly motivated and unlike Keemy and Ben he does not enjoy it.

QFT
That's a good way to put it, and I agree, but I do think there is something to what Armoth says. I wouldn't put it in terms of evil, but I would say that Sayid, in both time lines, gave in to the temptation to engage in or embrace his violent nature. And it fits with a pattern of these characters choosing the same path in altTime as they do on the Island(currently in season 6 i mean).

[ March 18, 2010, 02:34 AM: Message edited by: Strider ]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
oh, Bok, Jacob DOES touch Kate. In last year's season finale, when he appears in the convenience store, he touches her on the nose when he tells her to be good.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
Prediction: before the season is over, Ben Linus gets to make a Redemptive Self-Sacrifice (tm) at the cost of his life.
 
Posted by Armoth (Member # 4752) on :
 
oh oh Prediction: Once we get the theme that the flash sideways parallel the regular time-line, we'll meet a character that BREAKS the mold of destiny and they will be the key to resolving the rip in time!
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Desmond maybe?

I predict that Sawyer is going to bite it this season. Most likely sacrificing himself for someone, probably Kate, and that this will be a result of his long con failing against Esau (you don't con a con man).
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
Agreed about Charlotte as well. It seems like just another way for them to cram in a familiar face. I GET IT...they're all meant to cross paths, I don't need to be beaten over the head with it.
There also may be a more practical reason for it: The writers intend to show us what each character is like in this reality, and since they can't give each character their own separate flash-sideways episode, they have to make most of the lesser characters show up in the flash-sideways episodes of the main characters.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Reader:
That is what is so sad about Sayid. I feel like he's gone. But then Claire appeared to be a lost cause, but wasn't; she had been manipulated.

Jury's not out on Claire. I honestly thought Kate was going to get a knife in her back when they hugged.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
I predict that Sawyer is going to bite it this season. Most likely sacrificing himself for someone, probably Kate, and that this will be a result of his long con failing against Esau (you don't con a con man).

I've been predicting Sawyer's demise since Season One. Wrong-O. [Smile] I don't have any reason to believe that they'll "finally" kill him off. He's too beloved, and as much as they have killed off a few shocking characters, they've never really put the audience through the ringer -- Sawyer's death would be a BIG one. I don't think they have the cajones. Lindelof's no Joss Whedon. [Smile]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Your post gives me even MORE reason to believe I'm right. [Razz]
 
Posted by JonnyNotSoBravo (Member # 5715) on :
 
I think it's not about beating people over the head when you have all these previous characters cross paths. That's just a Reason to bring back all these actors. Think of it in terms of a writer: when you bring a character back, you get a known quantity whose backstory you don't have to explain. The audience identifies and has emotions about the character immediately. You also get an actor to play the part who's worked with you before and you know can do well. The Charlotte fans' feelings are somewhat ameliorated (I mean, Miles gets such a large part, so why doesn't Charlotte?). Also, you can make the characters entirely disposable. I don't think we'll see Charlotte in alt-time again because people want Sawyer to be with Kate or Juliet.

=====

I wonder if Miles has the power to know the dead's last thoughts in alt-time.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
They are starting to stretch the everyone is connected thing too far. It almost makes me wonder if in the Lost universe, the world has only a few hundred "real" people in it so no matter what changes, those same few "real" people keep running into each other, kind of like a small town.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
Yeah, that's how I feel.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
In my opinion, the last couple of episodes have been disappointing and not really because of any particular faults in the episodes themselves. They are just fine as stand alone episodes, but they've done very little to advance the plot. We've had 5 years of mysteriousness and character development, its time to stop mucking around and start resolving things. And I'm not just talking about the big questions, I'm talking about the characters. A lot of them have stopped being interesting because they've stop going any where. Watching the same neurosis play out over and over again isn't interesting.

Sometime I just want to shout at the producers "GET ON WITH IT ALREADY!!!"
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
The creators are on record stating (as has been quoted previously in this topic) that basically they're resolving Characters, not Mysteries. Watching the same neuroses play out over and over again is probably all we're going to get! [Smile]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leonide:
The creators are on record stating (as has been quoted previously in this topic) that basically they're resolving Characters, not Mysteries. Watching the same neuroses play out over and over again is probably all we're going to get! [Smile]

I thought I made myself clear that I was talking about resolving the characters and the last two episodes haven't made any progress in doing that. "Resolving characters" is not synonymous with showing the same neurosis playing out over and over again, it the opposite.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
I thought my jovial tone was more obvious than it apparently was [Smile]
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I got that the tone was jovial, but not that it was sarcastic.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
What, no comments on last nights episode?
 
Posted by msquared (Member # 4484) on :
 
I was surprisingly unmoved by it.

When the boys and I saw the preview last week we were all excited. By the end, I was just blah.

msquared
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 

 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Not only this, but I think it is important to take into account the following:

1) Jacob says he can't bring the dead back, but can grant eternal life

2) Esau promises to bring the dead back to life (whether this is a lie or not is unknown, unless he tricks people into believing this by changing his form)

3) When Esau was trying to get Richard to kill Jacob, he used the exact same words that Dogen did when he tried to get Sayid to kill Esau.

4) Loved the wine bottle analogy. It makes me wonder though.... If the island is the cork, and the island is under water in the alt timeline, does that mean Esau is loose? Is the island some sort of Pandora's Box?

I loved this episode, possibly more than the Ben Linus episode. Richard has always been a mysterious character, and I felt bad for him. He has had a hard life. Hurley made me remember why he is my favorite character. The guy has a heart of gold, and whenever you see him you just wish he was your friend.
 
Posted by msquared (Member # 4484) on :
 
I seemed to have lost count.

Who are the six candidates now?

Jack
Hurley
Jin/Sun
Kate?
Sawyer?

Who am I missing?

msquared
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
http://lostpedia.wikia.com/wiki/Candidates

Jack
Hurley
Kwon (Sun or Jin)
Sawyer
Sayid
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
4) Loved the wine bottle analogy. It makes me wonder though.... If the island is the cork, and the island is under water in the alt timeline, does that mean Esau is loose? Is the island some sort of Pandora's Box?

I was thinking something similar. If the Island is a cork for holding in pure evil, and in altTime we know that the Island is buried under water, does that meant that altTime is a universe where evil has escaped and was let loose on the world? Could it be that the Losties end up making some sort of deal with Esau to live in this universe, free of Jacob's interferences in their lives?

I haven't thought that through, and it wouldn't exactly be the happiest of endings, but it struck me as plausible.
 
Posted by msquared (Member # 4484) on :
 
Sayid is still in the running? That still only makes 5 and they talk about 6. How about Kate?

msquared
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I think any of the candidates that are alive are still in the running. i.e- anyone who's not crossed out on the list. So add Sayid to your list and you have it msquared.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Kate was not crossed out in the lighthouse, but from interviews with the producers they stated that Kates name was in the cave, and it was crossed off. Originally there was a shot of it but it was not included in the final cut.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
producers must of changed their minds! i said right of the bat that they dug themselves into a hole by associating the losties with the dharma numbers, because it limited them to six.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
Did anyone feel that Sayid was somehow...detached?

And notice last night when he said that he wasn't feeling anything? Actually, when he told Locke that, I half expected Locke to say "You're welcome".
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
Esau promises to bring the dead back to life (whether this is a lie or not is unknown, unless he tricks people into believing this by changing his form)

Does he actually promise that? Usually, he says, "What if I were to tell you that I could bring so-and-so back to life?"

quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
3) When Esau was trying to get Richard to kill Jacob, he used the exact same words that Dogen did when he tried to get Sayid to kill Esau.

Or rather, Dogen used the same words that Esau did.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Locke was one of the six. Now there are five, because Locke is dead.
 
Posted by Hume (Member # 11457) on :
 
Esau crossed out Locke's name as a candidate, but given that someone, Esau, is still walking around in a Locke shell, I'm not willing to eliminate "Locke" as a candidate.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
[list]
[*]I think Esau is honest. Evil, but honest. I think he really thinks he's okay.

Esau lied to Richard, out right. He told Richard that Jacob had taken his wife. He says he saw it happen. He says she was running from Jacob. All clear lies.

I think that scene established that Esau is absolutely not honest.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Lisa, in the lighthouse scene we saw Kate's name on the dial. It was not crossed out.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
Esau promises to bring the dead back to life (whether this is a lie or not is unknown, unless he tricks people into believing this by changing his form)

Does he actually promise that? Usually, he says, "What if I were to tell you that I could bring so-and-so back to life?"


I remember it being even more vague, "what if i told you you could be together".
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Esau said to Richard:

"The devil has your wife and you are going to have to kill him if you ever want to get her back."

To Sayid he said only: "What if you could?"

So he never actually promises either of them they will get their wives back. He does however directly lie to Richard about Jacob taking her.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
I think its interesting that the knife Dogen gives to Sayid is apparently the exact same knife that Esau gave Richard.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
[list]
[*]I think Esau is honest. Evil, but honest. I think he really thinks he's okay.

Esau lied to Richard, out right. He told Richard that Jacob had taken his wife. He says he saw it happen. He says she was running from Jacob. All clear lies.

I think that scene established that Esau is absolutely not honest.

Unless Jacob is a Christ like figure, and did take Richard's wife. To heaven maybe?
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
I liked the episode. I awwwed at Ricardo and Isabella. They were sweet.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
[list]
[*]I think Esau is honest. Evil, but honest. I think he really thinks he's okay.

Esau lied to Richard, out right. He told Richard that Jacob had taken his wife. He says he saw it happen. He says she was running from Jacob. All clear lies.

I think that scene established that Esau is absolutely not honest.

Unless Jacob is a Christ like figure, and did take Richard's wife. To heaven maybe?
I considered that possibility but even that doesn't work. Ricardo says "My wife Isabelle, she was running from you". Esau responds "She was running from him. I'm sorry. I saw him take her but I couldn't do anything to stop it."
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sterling:
So here's what I'm thinking.

The island- anomalies and all- is a prison for the black smoke monster. It may not always have been such, but that's its primary reason for being right now.

The guardian, previously Jacob, is in charge of maintaining that prison so the black smoke monster doesn't escape.

I seem to be doing pretty well on predictions so far. [Smile]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
[list]
[*]I think Esau is honest. Evil, but honest. I think he really thinks he's okay.

Esau lied to Richard, out right. He told Richard that Jacob had taken his wife. He says he saw it happen. He says she was running from Jacob. All clear lies.

I think that scene established that Esau is absolutely not honest.

His wording was very interesting though. He talked about her not running from the smoke monster but form the devil. that the devil has her. that the devil betrayed him, stole his body and his humanity, etc...could it be that he's sort of talking in the third person there? That Esau is in as much conflict with himself as he is with Jacob, that he really betrayed himself. And thus when he talks about the devil doing these things, he's really talking about himself, but saying these things in such a way to get Richard to kill Jacob?

It fits with a lot of dialog:

quote:
I considered that possibility but even that doesn't work. Ricardo says "My wife Isabelle, she was running from you". Esau responds "She was running from him. I'm sorry. I saw him take her but I couldn't do anything to stop it."
Almost like he saw it happening from the outside but was powerless to stop it, powerless to stop himself from giving in to his evil desires...
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
I think last night's episode raised a lot of interesting questions about the nature of the Smoke Monster. Some Questions I was pondering:

1) Why did Smokey kill every, but leave Richard? Did he have to? Was their a rule, some barriers in place? If the first mate hadn't stabbed the other slaves, would they have been spared too?

2) Why did Jacob bring the ship if the only survivor was Richard, whom Jacob didn't seem to have any plans for until he met him? Everyone else Died!

3) Why is Smokey "allowed" to kill some, and not others? If he killed the "sinful" slaveship crew, why did he also (in the first season) kill the apparently blameless pilot of 815 and a handful of the other castaways?

4) If Smokey could have killed Richard, but didn't, why? If he planned to mess with him all along, why didn't he pull a longer con? More time getting Richard to trust him might have allowed for more fight in Richard during the confrontation with the "Devil".
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
And thus when he talks about the devil doing these things, he's really talking about himself, but saying these things in such a way to get Richard to kill Jacob?

It fits with a lot of dialog:

But not all the dialog.

It fits only parts of the dialog if you stretch it a really long way and I'm not sure what the point would be in stretching it at all. Lisa said she thought Esau was honest. Esau tells Richard that the devil took his wife, that the devil is not the black smoke, he is, and that the devil is the man under the statue. That's pretty obviously dishonest any way you twist it.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
When we first saw the black rock, at the end of last season, it was daylight and calm seas. But in this last episode, the black rock shipwrecks in a giant storm at night. It seems rather incongruous to me. I suppose the boat might have been further out than it looked, waited there until night fell and a storm came up but it still seems like a stretch. It was clever device to explain why the boat was so far inland and how the statue was destroyed in one blow, but it really seemed like it was something they just came up with and decided to use even though it didn't match up with last season.

Any way you slice it, there isn't any clear reason why a boat headed from the Canary islands to the new world, would have been anywhere in the Pacific Ocean to begin with. It would have made so much more sense if the boat had been a convict ship heading to Australia, unless of course the Island was in the Atlantic in 1867 rather than the Pacific.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
The Island can move, so it didn't have to be in the Pacific at all.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
After watching the episode again, I am convinced Esau had taken the form of Richard's wife as an attempt to play him.

Esau turns into Richards wife, tells him they are in hell. She goes up, screams, then is gone. Then Esau comes in and tells him that Jacob took her. He then tells Richard he should go kill Jacob.

We know Esau can change forms, as he appeared to numerous characters already. Mr. Ecko saw his brother and was judged and killed. Esau also took the form of Alex and told Ben to follow Flocke.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
1) Why did Smokey kill every, but leave Richard? Did he have to? Was their a rule, some barriers in place? If the first mate hadn't stabbed the other slaves, would they have been spared too?

2) Why did Jacob bring the ship if the only survivor was Richard, whom Jacob didn't seem to have any plans for until he met him? Everyone else Died!

3) Why is Smokey "allowed" to kill some, and not others? If he killed the "sinful" slaveship crew, why did he also (in the first season) kill the apparently blameless pilot of 815 and a handful of the other castaways?

4) If Smokey could have killed Richard, but didn't, why? If he planned to mess with him all along, why didn't he pull a longer con? More time getting Richard to trust him might have allowed for more fight in Richard during the confrontation with the "Devil".

I think the answer to all of these is that this particular incident was a major character development point for both Jacob and the Man in Black.

In the case of the MiB, this is the first time he attempted to kill Jacob it seems. It is possible he didn't really think it through extensively, and believed he could make it happen simply by only allowing one person to live and using that one person to kill Jacob. Only after this fails, and Jacob points out that someone will take his place when he dies, that the MiB realizes that he's going to need a much better, much more complicated plan.

In the case of Jacob, it seems like he didn't realize the need to make "plans" for the people he brought to the island until Richard points out that if Jacob doesn't interfere, the MiB will. It is at that particular moment that Jacob changes his way of thinking, and decides to come up with a plan rather than simply leaving the people to their own devices to choose good over evil. And it is at that point that the entire plan involving all the Others, and the Dharma Initiative, and the Losties, and the Candidates really begins.

I see the moment Richard tries to kill Jacob and asks that question as the moment the island goes from a static state of balance between good and evil to a dynamic battle with both sides aiming for an endgame. Prior to Richard arriving, both Jacob and the MiB seem frustrated at the stalemate of things. Compare that to the moment of Jacob's death, when both of them seem to think they have almost accomplished their respective goals.
 
Posted by swbarnes2 (Member # 10225) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tresopax:
I see the moment Richard tries to kill Jacob and asks that question as the moment the island goes from a static state of balance between good and evil to a dynamic battle with both sides aiming for an endgame.

Does no one remember the Shadow War from Babylon 5?

From beginning to end, the show has been about these characters (and the audience) being lied to and told next to nothing and being manipulated. So of course Jacob and the other guy are doing the same thing. We've seen it happen already! Jacob lied to Hurley to get Jack to the lighthouse, there are probably more examples I can't think of. Why on earth would anyone take anything any of these characters say at face value?
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
I finally watched the Richard Alpert episode last night. I thought we were done w/ flashbacks.

The more I watch the more I think the candidates are in line for a crappy job. Who would want to be Jacob? Can you imagine any kind of ending where any of them end up taking on Jacob's role of keeping MiB trapped on the island? Is he gonna get defeated somehow at the end so it's not necessary?

It's not like there's no evil in the world w/o MiB at large. Of course, as some of you have said, it hasn't been proven that he is evil and Jacob is/was good or that Jacob has been telling the truth.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
When we first saw the black rock, at the end of last season, it was daylight and calm seas. But in this last episode, the black rock shipwrecks in a giant storm at night. It seems rather incongruous to me. I suppose the boat might have been further out than it looked, waited there until night fell and a storm came up but it still seems like a stretch. It was clever device to explain why the boat was so far inland and how the statue was destroyed in one blow, but it really seemed like it was something they just came up with and decided to use even though it didn't match up with last season.

Any way you slice it, there isn't any clear reason why a boat headed from the Canary islands to the new world, would have been anywhere in the Pacific Ocean to begin with. It would have made so much more sense if the boat had been a convict ship heading to Australia, unless of course the Island was in the Atlantic in 1867 rather than the Pacific.

Ah, but are we sure that was the Blackrock? Jacob told Richard that he has brought others to the island before Richard, it may be possible that this was another boat. I don't remember seeing the back of the boat, nor the name "Blackrock" on it.

Or to put another twist on it...Could that have been our first glimpse of the alt-time lone?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tresopax:
quote:
1) Why did Smokey kill every, but leave Richard? Did he have to? Was their a rule, some barriers in place? If the first mate hadn't stabbed the other slaves, would they have been spared too?

2) Why did Jacob bring the ship if the only survivor was Richard, whom Jacob didn't seem to have any plans for until he met him? Everyone else Died!

3) Why is Smokey "allowed" to kill some, and not others? If he killed the "sinful" slaveship crew, why did he also (in the first season) kill the apparently blameless pilot of 815 and a handful of the other castaways?

4) If Smokey could have killed Richard, but didn't, why? If he planned to mess with him all along, why didn't he pull a longer con? More time getting Richard to trust him might have allowed for more fight in Richard during the confrontation with the "Devil".

I think the answer to all of these is that this particular incident was a major character development point for both Jacob and the Man in Black.

In the case of the MiB, this is the first time he attempted to kill Jacob it seems. It is possible he didn't really think it through extensively, and believed he could make it happen simply by only allowing one person to live and using that one person to kill Jacob. Only after this fails, and Jacob points out that someone will take his place when he dies, that the MiB realizes that he's going to need a much better, much more complicated plan.

In the case of Jacob, it seems like he didn't realize the need to make "plans" for the people he brought to the island until Richard points out that if Jacob doesn't interfere, the MiB will. It is at that particular moment that Jacob changes his way of thinking, and decides to come up with a plan rather than simply leaving the people to their own devices to choose good over evil. And it is at that point that the entire plan involving all the Others, and the Dharma Initiative, and the Losties, and the Candidates really begins.

I see the moment Richard tries to kill Jacob and asks that question as the moment the island goes from a static state of balance between good and evil to a dynamic battle with both sides aiming for an endgame. Prior to Richard arriving, both Jacob and the MiB seem frustrated at the stalemate of things. Compare that to the moment of Jacob's death, when both of them seem to think they have almost accomplished their respective goals.

I think Tres was absolutely spot on with this assessment.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Who was that that Sayid saw at the very end? Desmond?
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
Yes, it was. He was addressed as "Mr. Hume" by one of his captors.

I have a good idea that he is the man Jacob said would find his way to island.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
It was an average episode. Nothing compared to last week.

I'm happy Desmond will be back next week though. I've missed him. Now that we have him back, I can now hope that Faraday will return.

I read that next week will be a Jacob/Esau centric episode, complete with flashbacks and their back story! Jacob has a mother, and the smoke monster is somewhat explained.

There are only 6 episodes left and I have no idea how they are going to end it. If they keep doing these alt time lines I fear there will not be enough show left to explain a thing.

Next week should answer some things about Jacob and Esau, then the week after is an episode called "Everybody Loves Hugo." I guess we get to see Hurley's alt time line. Here's hoping that he is happily married to Libby.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Or to put another twist on it...Could that have been our first glimpse of the alt-time lone?
That seems highly unlikely since we know the Dharma initiative existed on the island and New Otherton was built on the alt time line.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
I agree with Geraine. This was not the greatest episode; there was't much plot development. And I still do not understand the point of the alt lines.

Do those spoilers come from DarkUFO?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Geraine, spoiler warnings please.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
*glad I accidentally completely skipped the post with spoiilers*

I really was dissappointed with the past episode. I generally really like Jin/Sun episodes, and I don't mean a bit of character development over plot development. But nothing they ntroduced in that episode was resloved at all!
I don't need every question answered, I just want an episode to have a storyline to follow. Not build up for a future episode to possibley answer or ignore what happened.
I do really like any Keemy moment though, and there were a few lines that made me laugh. (Illana not believing Ben and the standard sarcastic remarks from Miles/Sawyer)
I would like a spin off cop show with those two as partners.
Let's hope that this was the last silly build up episode of the show. I hate build up episodes more than the filler episodes of season 3.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
I'm liking that this episode hinted that they might get back to explaining some of the electromagnetic weirdness on the island. I'm thinking Widmore has some sort of plan involving time-travel or moving the island that requires Desmond, perhaps because of his unique time-jumping qualities. So even though Desmond was perfectly happy with Penny off the island, they kidnapped him to use him. Maybe it will help explain why pushing the button was so important? Or maybe it could even involve Desmond jumping back and forth from alt-time?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I was thinking something similar Tres. That Widmore wants to put Desmond together with the pockets of electromagnetism for some reason, and that this might cause Desmond to time line jump.

They also hinted at another theme this season that has been prevalent. Mirrors. Lots of characters in altTime have spent inordinate amounts of time looking at themselves curiously in a mirror. Like what they're seeing isn't right. Coupled with Sun's aphasia on Island at roughly the same time, I'm thinking that it's not JUST a really cheap plot device by Lost, but a hint at the timelines spilling over and into each other(i.e. - Sun doesn't know english in altTime, and forgets it partially on the Island).

I'm so glad Desmond is back, I hope he's not wasted.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
Geraine, spoiler warnings please.

What did I spoil? If you look at TV guide or your DVR you can see the episode titles and the synopsis of the next episode. Saying an episode is going to be centric to a character is hardly a spoiler...
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LargeTuna:
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
But since next weeks episode is titled "Dr Linus", we may have to wait a few more weeks for the answer.

Can I request spoiler alerts on the names of titles of episodes not yet aired?
It's thrilling to be completely spoiler free (avoiding promos and titles) and I suggest everyone else do the same who have the self control and think it would be fun. Knowing less going into each episode of the final season ensures more enjoyment during discoveries possibley revealed.
*I forgive you guys for letting me know this one title without an alert since I never asked before*

I guess I should have put a spoiler alert on my own post! [Embarrassed]

Geraine, While I agree with you that episode titles that are widely available and hardly real spoilers, Tuna has asked that we label them as spoilers.

Personally, I think Tuna's request is a bit over the top but its easy enough to comply with once you know how he feels. I suspect you didn't see this original exchange, so you really couldn't be expected to know. Thats the real problem with the request in the first place. It isn't reasonable to expect that everyone who participates in this thread will have either read the exchange or share Tuna's definition of what constitutes a spoiler.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Yes, there was Tuna's request about episode titles, but also, I didn't realize they had released synopses talking about the kind of detail you contained in your post Geraine. The preview after the episode hinted at nothing of the sort.
 
Posted by Traceria (Member # 11820) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by swbarnes2:
Why on earth would anyone take anything any of these characters say at face value?

While I think a lot of what they say should be taken with a grain of salt, I think at least their conversations with one another are majority above board.

We were just watching the end of the Richard episode, and I have to wonder if what Hurley says after Richard's wife leaves really originated from her. I love Hurley, but he could have said the spiel about stopping the man in black and going to hell on Jacob's orders. Just maybe, anyhow.
 
Posted by Xann. (Member # 11482) on :
 
This has been one of my favorite episodes so far. The first signs of the combining of Desmond's two selves.

That and Charlie, Desmond, and Faraday(I guess Daniel now) in one episode, all my favorite characters!

I also would like to hypothesize that charlie saw Claire is his death vision.

I thought it was cool how Desmond kind of took up the role of trying to keep Charlie alive again.
And the episodes not even over!
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
IMO, that was this season's best episode. Desmond nevers disappoints, especially when imitating Dr. Manhattan.

Finally, plot development in the FS!
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Excellent stuff. I remember someone here was hoping Faraday would be a musician as a grown up in Alt-World.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
You know, I think at this point we can definitively say that calling it flash sideways or altTime isn't accurate. Part of me wants to call it Matrix Time, but I guess for this post I'll continue to call it altTime!

I loved every bit of this episode. We got a Desmond episode, and Penny, and Ms. Hawking(or Mrs. Widmore) who even at one point said something along the lines of "whatever happened, happened", and we had Charlie. It was like a big cast reunion!

We also got so much great exposition that confirmed what a lot of us have been thinking about the nature of altTime. The idea that the nuke caused altTime really WAS just a red herring. The nuke had nothing to do with altTime and that altTime is the result of things happening on the Island right now. I don't think the "altTime as epilogue" theory will turn out right either. Given some of the stuff that happened this week I think it's much more likely that while the events happening on Island now lead up to altTime, that altTime and realTime will merge once again before the season ends. I'm guessing it will yet again come down to our main characters having to make some sort of choice. Probably after Desmond starts bringing them all together and showing them the true nature of things.

After the Richard episode I talked about my worries regarding altTime.

quote:
If the Island is a cork for holding in pure evil, and in altTime we know that the Island is buried under water, does that meant that altTime is a universe where evil has escaped and was let loose on the world? Could it be that the Losties end up making some sort of deal with Esau to live in this universe, free of Jacob's interferences in their lives?
I'm thinking this is very much something that is going in altTime. I think either they all made a choice to be here, and this is some sort of Esau induced mass vision, or Esau has trapped them all here. I'm speculating that this has something to do with his freedom. Esau doesn't seem to be able to kill these people because of the rules the visage of the little boy reminded him about. But by imprisoning them in this fake reality, he can take away their ability to threaten his freedom as candidates and protectors of the Island. Maybe he just needs to wait out their deaths of natural causes in fakeTime(how's that?) and then he's fully free? Maybe they really are all sitting in chairs with jack's in the back of their necks, a la Matrix style. I really have no idea how the mechanism of fakeReality will end up working, but I really do think it's either a deal struck with Esau, or something forced on them by Esau.

I said from the beginning that I was withholding judgment on altTime till we understood its nature better. Well, I can finally say I love everything about this show again. The idea that Whatever Happened, DIDN'T Happen was just too awful for me to stand. I was so happy tonight.

That's all for now. I could probably keep writing for pages after tonight!
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Uprooted:
Excellent stuff. I remember someone here was hoping Faraday would be a musician as a grown up in Alt-World.

Uprooted, I was one of those people, but I think there were a few. I was so psyched to see that.

except now that I know more about the nature of altTime, it's sort of bittersweet.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Daniel's scenario involved setting off a bomb to reset a time-line. Then he says he thinks he already did so. So why do you think the nuke had nothing to do with anything anymore?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
well, to be fair, I never thought the nuke had anything to do with anything(besides sending the Losties back to 2007), I just didn't have an alternate explanation.

I didn't get that from Daniel and Desmond's conversation at all. Daniel seems to remember something about a nuke, and seemed to think that this nuke and his actions had something to do with this fake reality they're all in. But I don't remember him saying that his setting off a bomb reset any time lines or anything like that. Remember, they're all getting these flashes of their true reality, Faraday is just grasping at straws as much as anyone else, trying to figure out what's going on. He may simply be wrong about what caused what. But again, I didn't get that from the conversation. I'm probably going to rewatch this episode though since so much happened, so I'll pay closer attention to that convo next time.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
It was a phenomenal episode. I hadn't realized how much I'd missed Daniel, Charlie, and Desmond until I saw them all together again, being awesome and crazy. It's funny how much Desmond is NOT Desmond unless he's lovin' him some Penny. [Smile] Desmond-as-Widmore-lackey was really disconcerting. When Eloise sounded off about him finally having everything he wanted I was just about screaming at the TV. A very satisfying episode, all around.

I guess I'm mis-remembering the interaction, but I left with the impression that Daniel was insinuating he felt things had happened differently "before" or "elsewhere" for them -- and that something "big" could serve to alter these set existences...except that then he said he thought he "already did" do something big to change things. Resetting a time-line was just a poor choice of words on my part...I definitely got the sense that Daniel felt there was a "before" and a "now" -- whether those two were happening concurrently or consecutively I wasn't sure. [Smile]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
ahhh, gotchya. I'll agree with the way you put it there.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Okay, Penny was Penny Milton. So who is the Milton that's her mother? That might be significant.

It looks to me like Esau is stuck underwater (along with Jacob) in the Alt-Timeline. Which means that Jacob can't meddle with the lives of our Losties, and Esau simply can't escape, because he can't find anyone to help him (Arthur Curry? Mark Harris? Nemo?). Maybe that's why things are good.

But it looks like it's fragile. Not meant to be. Very sad.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I would disagree Lisa. Things are only good on the surface, and that's probably because this reality is really a facade. I'm guessing it will start crumbling more and more with each new episode.

Have I talked about the mirror symbolism in this thread yet? Almost every episode some character looks at themselves in a mirror in altTime in an odd way. Each time like something is wrong, or something doesn't belong. Sawyer even broke his mirror. I think those are moments of these characters catching a glimpse of the true nature of things, or at least realizing the wrongness of this one.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
You know, I think at this point we can definitively say that calling it flash sideways or altTime isn't accurate. Part of me wants to call it Matrix Time, but I guess for this post I'll continue to call it altTime!

I loved every bit of this episode. We got a Desmond episode, and Penny, and Ms. Hawking(or Mrs. Widmore) who even at one point said something along the lines of "whatever happened, happened", and we had Charlie. It was like a big cast reunion!

We also got so much great exposition that confirmed what a lot of us have been thinking about the nature of altTime. The idea that the nuke caused altTime really WAS just a red herring. The nuke had nothing to do with altTime and that altTime is the result of things happening on the Island right now.

Wow Strider, I don't see how you could have gotten any of that from this episode. Since the start of the season, we've had lots of clues that there was some sort of bleed over from the original time-line into the alt-time. This episode confirms that. It also confirms the speculation that this bleed over would become increasingly important. But if anything, this episode confirms that the alt-time line was in fact caused by the nuclear blast.

We have Dan in the past saying setting off the bomb will shift the time line, we have an alt time line with some strange connection to the original time line and we have Dan in the alt time line speculating that this entire time-line happened because he set off a nuclear bomb. What part of the that confirms that the bomb was a red herring? To me it seems exactly the opposite. Granted I've always believed the bomb was important, but you haven't given me any sound reason at all to believe this episode confirmed the bombs irrelevance.

As I said before, we've had clues since the season opened that the Losties in the alt-timeline have some sort of buried memory of the original timeline and this confirms that. But it still gave no explanation of what the alt-timeline is or how and why it is connected to the original except that it was very strongly implied that the nuclear blast, electro-magnetic fields and trauma were strongly connected to the things that are happening.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Oh, I should add that there has been speculation that Desmond was/would be able to "hop" back and forth between the time lines. There was some suggestion in this episode that this is happening and that exposure to strong magnetic fields triggers it. I think there is a pretty good chance that Widmore's plan is to control this phenomenon in order to communicate between the two time lines.

I also expect to see a merger of the two time lines by the end of the show and agree that the Losties are going to have to make some difficult choices and sacrifices. But I'm really curious about how that will happen because, at this point, alt-time is 3 years behind.

Personally, I think it will be really hokie if the alt-time line turns out to be some sort of fancy matrix style illusion to show the losties how their lives might have been without Jacob. It would trivialize any choices our Losties will ultimately make if its all destiny and there are no real alternatives.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
What if they are given the choice to stay there or not? To stay in this time where they "changed" things or to live in the reality where things happened the way they did. What if they decide to stay in the Matrix as it were? Is that still hokie and trivializing their choices? What if they get to choose their own destiny?

The only difference is that it's not really a universe where things were "changed" but one created by Esau for them.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
What if they are given the choice to stay there or not? To stay in this time where they "changed" things or to live in the reality where things happened the way they did. What if they decide to stay in the Matrix as it were? Is that still hokie and trivializing their choices? What if they get to choose their own destiny?

If the alt-time line is just an elaborate illusion and they are given a choice between life in the illusion and living in reality then yes I would consider it hokie. That may be what they have in store, but if they do, I'm very unlikely to be satisfied.

quote:
The only difference is that it's not really a universe where things were "changed" but one created by Esau for them.
That's a pretty huge difference, at least from my perspective. The matrix world only works as long as people believe its real. Once they've recognized that its an illusion, there is no going back. Its not a viable choice any more.

If you knew that your job, your home, most of the people you interacted with and the things you did were just an elaborate video game, how long could you keep living the way you do?

Turn it the other way, what if it turns out that the island is the matrix, that nothing that happened on the island was real. Wouldn't you consider that hokie? Its not that those types of solutions always make for hokie stories so much as that in the context of this particular story, after 5+ years of build up, that would seem like a cheap bailout.

I feel the same way about the alt time line. Free will vs. destiny has been a central question in this show since its inception. An answer that boils down to nothing you do makes a difference but demi-gods can create the illusion that you change things -- well thats lame.

[ April 07, 2010, 12:34 PM: Message edited by: The Rabbit ]
 
Posted by Xann. (Member # 11482) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Uprooted:
Excellent stuff. I remember someone here was hoping Faraday would be a musician as a grown up in Alt-World.

I think I was the one who explicitly stated that I wanted him to be a musician in the alt time line.Every episode I have been saying to my girlfriend that this has to be the one he comes back in. I said a few weeks ago "My only hope for the upcoming episode is that Faraday is a musician in the flash-sideways. "
It took a few but I got my wish.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
When Eloise spoke to Desmond I truly believe she knew what was going on. She almost had a look of fear or reluctance on her face when Desmond was asking about Penny.

Do you think this is the reality or life that Esau has promised everyone so far? Esau asked Sayid if he wanted to see Nadia again, it happened. He told Claire she would be with her son, and it looks like that will happen too.

Perhaps Esau is the one that actually creates the alternate reality, and Eloise knows this. If the losties find out that their lives should have been a different way and discover the truth, Esau may come after them.

I think it may be important to note that Charlie and Desmond both had visions of the girls they fall in love with in the alt time line, but Daniel actually saw Charlotte, though later that night he wrote the formula.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
If the two timelines truly did split when the bomb went off, Eloise would know what was going on because she was in on the bomb plot and had seen Faraday's journal. (What ended up happening to that journal anyway? Did Eloise end up with it, and is that why she can figure out so many things that will happen before they happen?)

It's possible she believes the entire plan had worked, and that her sacrifice of her son had been worth it, and doesn't want memories from the past to come back and ruin the fruits of that sacrifice. From her perspective, she may be thinking "Oh no, is Desmond going to come in and undo everything?"
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
1- Desmond asks Penny out for coffee.

2- Juliet's last words involved random 'lets do coffee.. we can go dutch.'

1+2= Desmond and Penny go on a double date with Sawyer and Juliet, maybe maybe?
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Xann.:
quote:
Originally posted by Uprooted:
Excellent stuff. I remember someone here was hoping Faraday would be a musician as a grown up in Alt-World.

I think I was the one who explicitly stated that I wanted him to be a musician in the alt time line.Every episode I have been saying to my girlfriend that this has to be the one he comes back in. I said a few weeks ago "My only hope for the upcoming episode is that Faraday is a musician in the flash-sideways. "
It took a few but I got my wish.

I think several of us have made a similar comment.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
Well, we all agree this episode was awesome. I'm amused at the huge difference in ways we're interpreting it though. Honestly Strider I have no idea how you got "Esau matrix time." That is not remotely implied here.

quote:
It's possible she believes the entire plan had worked, and that her sacrifice of her son had been worth it, and doesn't want memories from the past to come back and ruin the fruits of that sacrifice. From her perspective, she may be thinking "Oh no, is Desmond going to come in and undo everything?"
I'm in this general camp. I think the bomb caused alt-time, but it was more than just the bomb. I think Eloise had several pieces of a plan in motion to create a "perfect" altTime, and that the bomb was part of that plan. I love this theory because it explains how people keep meeting in the alternate universe. It's not just World minus Island, it's a carefully crafted world, and each "variable" (i.e. numbers i.e. character) must do certain things to maintain the perfection. I thin Tres is spot on that Desmond is liable to screw that up and Eloise is freaking out about it.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
I said from the beginning that I was withholding judgment on altTime till we understood its nature better. Well, I can finally say I love everything about this show again. The idea that Whatever Happened, DIDN'T Happen was just too awful for me to stand. I was so happy tonight.
Strider, I think you are seriously twisting what happened in this episode because "The idea that Whatever Happened, DIDN'T Happen was just too awful for me to stand." I warned you before the season started that being so emotionally devoted to any particular theory would ultimately lead to disappointment.

Let them tell the story, don't try to twist things to fit the story you would have told.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Eloise is still a big mystery. She is definitely a manipulator and she definitely has some sixth sense about what's going on. Remember her manipulating Desmond in the episode where he jumps back to the past. She knew how things would happen and told Desmond about time "correcting" itself. Wasn't her picture on the desk in the monastery or somewhere?

This reminds me of a question that's been nagging me. Have they ever told us why Desmond was in jail and what he did to be dishonorably discharged from the armed services?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
actually Rabbit, it'd be more accurate to say that I'm intellectually invested in "whatever happened, happened". But I think you're just as invested in your theory.

We are all guilty of some selection bias in what parts we pay more attention to. I see last night's episode, coupled with the many hints along the way, and I hear Eloise say something like "whatever happened, happened" and I interpret it one way. You see a conversation between Desmond and Faraday and interpret it as Faraday saying he caused this alternate time by setting off a nuke. I see it as Faraday struggling to put the pieces together and all he knows is that some nuke was involved, and here he is. I see it as the creators throwing you off the scent.

Here's the way I see it. There have been questions from the very beginning as to the nature of altTime. How exactly can one event with a nuke create two separate time lines? Why is the Island buried under water? Why do characters have these weird senses of deja-vu. Why doesn't Jack remember getting his appendix out? I don't think that "the nuke created an alternate time line" is a very satisfying answer to those questions. That's when many people, not just me, started theorizing that maybe altTime isn't really a parallel time line, but is in fact some sort of epilogue to the story. This could explain some of the weird differences and elements, for instance, the cut on Jack's neck at the beginning of the season.

Then more stuff started happening. Each character started going through an interesting arc. Hugo was lucky, Locke was happy, Jack developed a good relationship with his son, etc...and it made some of us think yet again, that the importance of altTime was not as simple as a parallel time line.

Then some people started noticing the mirror connections. Lots of characters looking at themselves in a mirror like what they see on the other side is wrong in some way. We now know that this must have been hints of them realizing subconsciously that they don't belong here.

After the Richard episode I started thinking about the nature of the Island as a cork and what it meant that the Island was submerged in altTime. That's when i posted the theory that maybe the events on Island will result in altTime, and it will come about as some sort of deal the Losties make with Esau. He will give them existence in this universe where they never came to the Island and are free from Jacob's influence, in exchange for letting Esau be free.

For the last few weeks I've also been thinking about Phillip K. Dick and his connection to Lost. Lost has referenced as least one PKD book throughout the series. And anyone familiar with PKD and his stories should immediately see the connection here. PKD believed, like for real believed, that reality was an illusion. That we really existed in the time of Jesus, and all of this year 2000 world around was an elaborate hallucination, a veil, meant to keep us from seeing the true world around us. This was also a theme in some of his stories, where the characters realize that the reality that they think is real is just a facade, a mass hallucination.*

These connections got me to thinking about whether there was something like this going on with altTime. And I started putting that together with all the other stuff I talked about above. Then this week happens and you have characters like Charlie talking about how none of this is real. You have Eloise say something like "what happened, happened", do you really think that's just a mistake or not important?

Anyway Rabbit, even I turn out to be wrong, I won't be as disappointed as you think I will. And I still will think last night's episode was awesome.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
For the last few weeks I've also been thinking about Phillip K. Dick and his connection to Lost. Lost has referenced as least one PKD book throughout the series. And anyone familiar with PKD and his stories should immediately see the connection here. PKD believed, like for real believed, that reality was an illusion. That we really existed in the time of Jesus, and all of this year 2000 world around was an elaborate hallucination, a veil, meant to keep us from seeing the true world around us. This was also a theme in some of his stories, where the characters realize that the reality that they think is real is just a facade, a mass hallucination.*

I thought of Ubik back in the first season, but it doesn't seem feasable.

Did he really seriously believe that? Even on the few days that he wasn't stoned?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:

Do you think this is the reality or life that Esau has promised everyone so far? Esau asked Sayid if he wanted to see Nadia again, it happened. He told Claire she would be with her son, and it looks like that will happen too.

Perhaps Esau is the one that actually creates the alternate reality, and Eloise knows this. If the losties find out that their lives should have been a different way and discover the truth, Esau may come after them.

Yes Geraine, this is roughly what I was saying above. Though I'm struggling a bit to figure out exactly how and why Eloise would be in on a plan with Esau.

Tres, that's an interesting analysis about Eloise. That her sacrifice was part of a greater plan to bring them back together in this alternate reality. But I feel it begs the question, why not just never send him to the Island in the first place, and you get the same result? But I do agree in general, Eloise is certainly threatened by Desmond's knowledge of things and his ability to mess up this "perfect" life she has for herself.

quote:
I love this theory because it explains how people keep meeting in the alternate universe. It's not just World minus Island, it's a carefully crafted world, and each "variable" (i.e. numbers i.e. character) must do certain things to maintain the perfection.
I was also thinking about all the connections recently and thought that if something like my theory ends up being right it could explain all the connections by way of having this alternate reality be sort of a snow globe type universe.

Rabbit, no, they've never explicitly stated what got Desmond in jail. I thought it might have something to do with him leaving and going to see Penny during The Constant episode, but I have no idea really.

I've always wondered whether that was REALLY Eloise in Desmond's time jumping episode. Did he really travel in time or was that an Island induced vision? Was Eloise really there, or was that the Island speaking through her? Same with this current episode. Was that really her? Assuming it was, her powers/abilities rival anything we've seen from Desmond.

To answer your question from above, yes, if the Island turned out to be a matrix style hallucination I'd think it was hokey, but I don't think the same thing about altTime, mostly because I don't have five seasons invested in altTime.

I disagree with your statement that this would make it so that it "boils down to nothing you do makes a difference but demi-gods can create the illusion that you change things". Maybe i'm more at peace with this because I don't believe in the concept of free will anyway, and yet still value and find meaning in life. But I also see no problem with the idea of free will existing within a deterministic setting. Those characters all made many free choices, and their choices obviously had a real "affect" on the world and directed the events happening in a certain direction. But couldn't it be possible that the creators chose to espouse a theory of time travel where things can't be "changed"? Not a Back to the Future theory of time travel, but a Time Traveler's Wife theory of time travel? Where even though all the choices and acts done by the characters were free, because time travel was thrown into the mix, their free actions were already part of a time line that we knew had to work out one way and only one way. Sure, I may be wrong, but I don't think I'm stretching things to fit my preconceived notions more than anyone else here.
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
Eloise = Smokey's Mom.

I got money on it.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
But couldn't it be possible that the creators chose to espouse a theory of time travel where things can't be "changed"? Not a Back to the Future theory of time travel, but a Time Traveler's Wife theory of time travel? Where even though all the choices and acts done by the characters were free, because time travel was thrown into the mix, their free actions were already part of a time line that we knew had to work out one way and only one way. Sure, I may be wrong, but I don't think I'm stretching things to fit my preconceived notions more than anyone else here.
Its certainly possible, but it begs a number of questions. If the the creators espouse the "what ever happened, happened" theory of time travel, then why did they introduce the idea that the bomb could change what happened? Why did they then proceed to show us an alternate reality where "What happened, didn't happen?" Why do they have a character, Desmond, to whom, we are told, the rule "whatever happened, happened" does not apply? The only answer you've come up with so far is that its all a reuse to throw us off track. If that is the answer, then its simply bad story telling to invest that much time in something that's ultimately a just a red herring. Which is why I keep saying its hokie and I'll be disappointed if it turns out that way.

I'm perfectly willing to entertain the idea that the authors have a better answer to those questions than you or I can come up with even though they espouse the what ever happened happened theory. I'm just saying that if that's what their aiming for, I can't see how they will acheive it.

I strongly suspect that there is a lot more which influenced the alt time line than the bomb alone, but they've put way too much time into it for the bomb not to be relevant.

quote:
Sure, I may be wrong, but I don't think I'm stretching things to fit my preconceived notions more than anyone else here.
All I can say is that no one else who has posted here saw this last episode in the same light you did. In fact, you had to completely ignore a pivital conversation to even begin to think it the episode confirmed that the bomb was irrelevant. That exchange between Daniel and Desmond at a minimum kept the bomb changed the timeline theory in play. Of course if you believe Daniel was wrong in the original time line, you will likely suspect he's wrong in this time line as well so the question hasn't been resoundingly answered but that conversation pointed in exactly the opposite direction of your conclusion.

Furthermore, there was nothing whatsoever in the episode to suggest that Esau had anything to do with the alt-time or that some sort of "matrix" was in play.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
If the bomb doesn't matter, why do the memories of the original IslandTimeTraveling!Losties hinge around that incident? What happens after the bomb that sends them back to the present, if it's not splitting time-lines?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Pepek, that would be difficult since we saw Smokey in the 1800s, and we saw Eloise as a young woman in the 1950s.

Lisa, apparently! I have an essay he wrote about it.

Rabbit, I don't think it's bad story telling to introduce plot points that are enacted by characters who are wrong. Or to show us things that are deceiving or ambiguous to keep us guessing about the true nature of things. This has been common in movies and books for a long time. It's been common in Lost for six years! Though I certainly agree there are problematic aspects with my theory. There are problematic aspects with all theories. As we've learned slowly throughout this season, altTime is far from (just) being "an alternate time line created by the nuke". I happen to think it's FAR from that. But at the very least it's MUCH more complicated than that statement.

As for Esau having to do with it, yes, nothing in the episode suggested it. My brain did that all on it's own! [Smile] I've been thinking along these lines for a few weeks now, since the Richard episode, and it congealed more fully last night.

Leonide, only Faraday's memory seems to hinge around that incident. Who else's has? I'm not sure I get your second question. In my theory, the bomb just serves to flash them to 2007, and has no relationship with altTime beyond the fact that it enabled it to happen by flashing the Losties back to 2007, thus allowing for the events of this season on Island, which somehow lead to the existence of altTime.

Anyway, this conversation is co-opting what was a fantastic episodes regardless of who is right about this.

....

What exactly was Widmore's plan for Desmond? What was his sacrifice?

Why did Desmond go so willingly with Sayid? Why was he so quick to do what Widmore asked? Does he fully remember the events of altTime? Or...better yet, how about this...The two Desmond's have switched places. The one on the Island, who so willingly agreed to help Widmore, is the one from altTime who is Widmore's best bud. And the one in altTime, who asked for the flight manifest, knows all the Losties, and knows exactly who to find. That'd be kind of neat.

What does Esau have planned for Desmond?

How does Eloise know everything she knows?
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Okay, how about this wacky theory.

You know how Desmond seemed really compliant and laid back at the end of the episode? Like he'd lost his passion?

What if the reason Sayid isn't feeling anything, the reason Desmond's passion seems to go away, and the reason that people kind of remember stuff from both timelines is that their conciousness is somehow split between the two timelines.

In Sayid's case, he's gone over. MIB somehow let so much of him go over to the other side that he's lost all feeling in this timeline. All his "feeling" is in the other timeline.

Sun has gotten a little bleedthrough back, causing her to forget how to speak English.

But that might be the sacrifice the island is demanding--that Desmond choose the other timeline, let himself cross over.

But each lostie may end up having to choose which timeline to commit to.

But they "lose" some of their self in one timeline or the other as they become more invested or something in one or the other.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
I know it doesn't seem like that. He seems more "happy" than Sayid-like. I'm more just tossing it out there.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
n my theory, the bomb just serves to flash them to 2007, and has no relationship with altTime beyond the fact that it enabled it to happen by flashing the Losties back to 2007, thus allowing for the events of this season on Island, which somehow lead to the existence of altTime.
WHY does the bomb transport them back, and nothing else? Why doesn't it, for instance, KILL THEM?

The conversation got a bit heated, but I don't see how it distracts from the awesomeness of the episode. Nothing BUT such an amazing episode could have produced this kind of passionate debate.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
Strider Argument (indented for easy skipping for the people who don't care that much)


The part of Strider's theory that I think IS accurate is that the altTime is a kind of trap. It's not an illusion, but it's a carefully constructed universe set in motion by Eloise. The bomb was just part of it.Possibly in allegiance with Smokey... I'm not willing to commit to anything there because there's zero evidence. But I would not be surprised if Eloise turned out to be the Big Bad™ at the end.

In season 5, towards the end, Faraday is talking about "whatever happened, happened" theory that it only makes sense if you assume that people always make the same choices. Generally speaking, people DO always make the same choices because people have particular personalities and will do the same thing in the same situation. But if free will exists (and despite the fact that I think free will is nonsensical, I don't expect a TV show to claim that it doesn't), there is always the chance that one of the variables in the equation (i.e. people) will choose something different.

Couple that with Jacob/Esau's line:

"It always ends the same."
"It only ends once. Everything else is progress."

Eloise is the one who told Desmond you can't change fate. She obviously had good reason to believe she's right. But by trying to save Charlie, he eventually kept him alive long enough to make a pretty big difference. She's the one saying "Whatever happened, happened." I bet Faraday believed that for so long largely due to her influence. I think the show is setting her up to be extremely Right™, but at a higher level than we are here-to-fore aware of, or extremely wrong, and therefore one of the final masterminds the characters have to deal with. I am leaning towards the latter right now, and I think that her "Whatever happened, happened" was merely her reassuring herself that everything was going according to plan.

And then Desmond is like "hey who's Penny?" And she's like "Oh f#@#$."
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Raymond, I can't answer your question about why Desmond, because I don't really have any specific theories regarding the mechanism of how this "illusion" if you want to call it that works. I do know that Desmond has a very significant connection to electromagnetism, and I was right there with the first people who proposed the Desmond as time line jumper theory(especially as it fit in nicely with my theory of Juliet accessing her altTime consciousness).

quote:
This is the final season. Assuming the storytelling is good, now is when all the elements we have been show from the entire show should be coming together to form a satisfying whole. Now is not the time to have an entire season's worth of red herrings just to have it turn out to be a dream at the end.
I would also say that a season's worth of a completely new plot element(altTime), is just as bad as a season's worth of red herrings when what we want are answers and resolution.

quote:
It's not an illusion, but it's a carefully constructed universe set in motion by Eloise.
What's the difference between an illusion and a carefully constructed universe? Isn't that sort of semantic?

quote:
In season 5, towards the end, Faraday is talking about "whatever happened, happened" theory that it only makes sense if you assume that people always make the same choices. Generally speaking, people DO always make the same choices because people have particular personalities and will do the same thing in the same situation. But if free will exists (and despite the fact that I think free will is nonsensical, I don't expect a TV show to claim that it doesn't), there is always the chance that one of the variables in the equation (i.e. people) will choose something different.
I question your use of "choose something different". This is fundamentally where the divide comes down with a lot of us. Some people seem to look at events as having a first time through, where the characters chose one thing, and then do to time travel, a second time through where things can change. I don't see it that way. These characters chose their actions once and only once. There is nothing to change. It is only a trick of how we as viewers are told the story that makes it seem like things can change. This is what I keep saying about free will and choice able to exist within a deterministic settings(like how religious folk say that we have free will yet God knows what we're going to do). These characters make free choices, which are important, and affect others around them, and have meaning, but still fit within a setting where the story can only go one way.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
quote:
I would also say that a season's worth of a completely new plot element(altTime), is just as bad as a season's worth of red herrings when what we want are answers and resolution.
quote:
What's the difference between an illusion and a carefully constructed universe? Isn't that sort of semantic?
altTime is something that follows logically out of time travel. It's a perfectly valid idea on how time travel could actually work. A carefully constructed universe might be functionally similar to a dream, but one of them follows rules and hints the show has already established, the other is something completely new that doesn't follow any rules at all. If you considered altTime and dream to be a semantic difference, I don't think we'd be having the argument in the first place. A carefully constructed universe violates "Whatever happened happened" which is the theory you want to maintain in the first place.

Also, introducing one final plot element (especially when it's a variation of earlier plot elements) at the BEGINNING of the last season is very different from introducing an unrelated plot element at the very end of the show.

quote:
I question your use of "choose something different"
Bear in mind that I DON'T believe in free will at all. I'm am merely repeating what Faraday himself already said. In addition to Faraday saying "we are the variables, we have free will," there's the fact that people in general like to believe in free will and television usually ends up playing into that. Most people would consider an ending without free will to be a depressing ending. I'd actually love it if there was a show that ended up showcasing that free will is an illusion, but the chances of that happening here (or any other given show) are slim.

It is certainly possible Faraday is wrong, but then essentially the show ended a year ago and we have two seasons that are not only built entirely of red herrings, but are effectively a waste of time.

On top of all the meta-storytelling-analysis, I frankly just don't think "whatever happened, happened," makes intellectual sense. The only time travel story I've seen that actually made sense was Pastwatch. Causality was pretty straightforward - you go back in time. Then you exist back in time, and can do whatever you want, erasing the previous iteration of events. "You can only make choices that will, millions of events later, turn out to produce a specific outcome" is an extremely arbitrary rule in comparison. I get that in WWH theory there's only one fixed universe as opposed to an endlessly cycling one, but that doesn't make it any more sensical to me.

I think Lost is going to be more like most Time Travel stories, that involve a few cutesy paradoxes that don't actually make sense and I'm just going to have to ignore them. But the WHH theory makes that worse, not better.

[ April 08, 2010, 02:01 AM: Message edited by: Raymond Arnold ]
 
Posted by msquared (Member # 4484) on :
 
I think the combination of the bomb and the EM flash at the same time caused something "different" to happen.

I think the sacrifice Widmore is telling Desmond about will be losing Penny to save Penny.

msquared
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
Rabbit, I don't think it's bad story telling to introduce plot points that are enacted by characters who are wrong.

Its only bad story telling if the author doesn't have purpose for doing it beyond misleading the reader.

quote:
Or to show us things that are deceiving or ambiguous to keep us guessing about the true nature of things.
Once again, whether or not this is bad story telling depends on whether it fits and serves some purpose in the broader picture.

Its bad story telling to introduce a lot of stuff that's ultimately irrelevant to the central story.

I think that's why people disliked the Nicki and Paolo episode so much. There is nothing wrong with it as a stand alone story. The problem is that it was was totally irrelevant(at least thus far) to the bigger story. Its not good story telling to include a lot of stuff that's irrelevant to the story. And while I don't expect every single bit to be part of the larger puzzle, the bomb, the alt-time line and the question of whether the Losties choices make any difference aren't little bits or isolated episodes in an early season.

I don't see any problem with the alt-time line being more than it seems, or the bomb being only part of story. But if they turn out to be irrelevant or some cheap trick (which seems to be your theory), it is indeed bad story telling.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leonide:
quote:
n my theory, the bomb just serves to flash them to 2007, and has no relationship with altTime beyond the fact that it enabled it to happen by flashing the Losties back to 2007, thus allowing for the events of this season on Island, which somehow lead to the existence of altTime.
WHY does the bomb transport them back, and nothing else? Why doesn't it, for instance, KILL THEM?

The conversation got a bit heated, but I don't see how it distracts from the awesomeness of the episode. Nothing BUT such an amazing episode could have produced this kind of passionate debate.

It only distracts from the awesomeness in the sense that I've been a big proponent of this theory from the beginning(i checked and I offered the altTime as epilogue hypothesis right after episode 1) and it has not served to change anyone's mind as of yet. To me, the events of the last few episodes just further serve to confirm and direct that theory, but obviously they haven't been interpreted by others in the same way! [Smile] I don't mind talking about all this and debating it, and I don't mind being in the minority, but there reaches a point where I can't say anything new! This isn't a slight at anyone, just that in a very practical sense this conversation is turning into a distraction from other Lost related conversation. That said...

Raymond said:

quote:
On top of all the meta-storytelling-analysis, I frankly just don't think "whatever happened, happened," makes intellectual sense.
ahhh...well here it is. I happen to think that whatever happened, happened is the only kind of time travel story that DOES make intellectual sense. so following from that, altTime is no way the logical outcome of these events.

You guys keep drawing on Faraday's conversations to back up that things can change, and say to have it not work out that way would be contradicting everything he said and hokie and all that. But even Faraday's own stance is a TOTAL contradiction to what he spent many episodes drilling into our heads. Was it hokie or a waste of time that Lost decided to have Faraday change his mind?

Faraday in altTime isn't all knowing, he's struggling with the truth as much as anyone else. Why should I take anything he says on authority. He remembers a nuke and thinks it was important and has something to do with where they all are now. That's great. He's confused. He only grasps part of the truth.

I really don't understand why altTime as not a "real parallel universe" would be hokie. Just think about some of the sources Lost has drawn from and been inspired by. Phillip K. Dick, Alice in Wonderland, The Wizard of Oz. Do you see a common theme throughout them? Were they all hokey or a waste of time? Whether you want to call them illusions or fantasy worlds IS semantic to me. They are not the REAL world. And whatever the mechanism that created altTime, all i am saying is that it is NOT an alternate time line created from the nuke being set off.

Okay, some new thoughts. I was thinking about the new importance of love in this past episode as being the thing that causes these characters to start questioning the nature of this world they find themselves in(Faraday-Charlotte, Desmond-Penny, Charlie-Claire). I, obviously, think this fits in nicely with my Esau as creator of altTime theory. Esau believes in the corruptibility of man, and was somehow able to corrupt them into agreeing to live in this universe. Well, love can be viewed as one of the most potent forces to battle it (real love, not love of money or something like that). And so it's love that ends up helping these characters see through the facade of the world they're living in. I'm even starting to think that this is why Jacob spent so much time bringing all these characters together and criss crossing all their paths. Like Jacob has been working to connect everyone in this web of empathy and love and friendship so that their memories and connections could protect them against, or help them to get out, of this fake world.

Or something along those lines. Haven't thought it all through yet. But Eloise's comments about "someone has affected the way you see things. this is a problem. it is, in fact, a violation." and her questioning of why Desmond is causing trouble because he "has everything he wants" very much leads me to believe that this world is a facade, created for a very specific purpose. It is surface happiness, but not real happiness. Or simply just not real, and these characters are starting to realize it.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
quote:
But even Faraday's own stance is a TOTAL contradiction to what he spent many episodes drilling into our heads. Was it hokie or a waste of time that Lost decided to have Faraday change his mind?
I actually did think it was a little hokie then, mostly because Faraday was like "oh snap, I totally forgot about Free Will™! That changes EVERYTHING!!" And I was like "... you never thought to consider that in your 20 someodd years of research? Seriously?" If he had come up with a reason for WHH theory to change that was cleverer and the sort of thing he shouldn't have already considered, I'd have had less problem with it.

because those episodes built up one particular set of rules which were then subverted.

quote:
I happen to think that whatever happened, happened is the only kind of time travel story that DOES make intellectual sense.
I know you've attempted to explain this before, but seriously I do not get it. Is there a link you can provide to any kind of actual scientific backing here, or is this just something that happens to click for you? Because in terms of logical-coherence, Pastwatch time travel really works just fine.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
quote:
But even Faraday's own stance is a TOTAL contradiction to what he spent many episodes drilling into our heads. Was it hokie or a waste of time that Lost decided to have Faraday change his mind?
I actually did think it was a little hokie then, mostly because Faraday was like "oh snap, I totally forgot about Free Will™! That changes EVERYTHING!!" And I was like "... you never thought to consider that in your 20 someodd years of research? Seriously?" If he had come up with a reason for WHH theory to change that was cleverer and the sort of thing he shouldn't have already considered, I'd have had less problem with it.

But in either case, it is even MORE Hokie for the brilliant physicist to go "Oh snap I forgot free will!" and build this entire climax around it... and go "oh wait nevermind my bad."

As for Wizard of Oz and what-not... I'm not familiar with all of those, but most of them are less hokie because they didn't deliberately build themselves up as a mystery to be solved rather than as a random adventure. And as far as philosophical references go... those are nice for adding depth to a story, but if you're actually going to make them a key part of the mythology you need to include them in the main story for general audiences to understand.

And again... seriously, Desmond. Faraday could easily have been wrong and I have no attachment to any of his theories. But Desmond clearly points to your theory being wrong and I don't get how you can ignore that.

quote:
I happen to think that whatever happened, happened is the only kind of time travel story that DOES make intellectual sense.
I know you've attempted to explain this before, but I do not get it in the slightest. Is there a link you can provide to any kind of actual scientific backing here, or is this just something that happens to click for you? Because in terms of logical-coherence, Pastwatch time travel really works just fine.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
But Eloise's comments about "someone has affected the way you see things. this is a problem. it is, in fact, a violation." and her questioning of why Desmond is causing trouble because he "has everything he wants" very much leads me to believe that this world is a facade, created for a very specific purpose. It is surface happiness, but not real happiness. Or simply just not real, and these characters are starting to realize it.
I know you said you're just tinkering with ideas, but many of the main characters do have a "real" happiness in altworld, aka Locke and Helen, Jack and his son, etc. We've seen them sacrifice in different ways and also come to terms with real, deep-seated issues that were a looooong time in being resolved -- many people here have commented on how content the various characters seem, and how nice it is to see them coming to terms with their limitations and issues...not everything is pat and perfect, as a Fake Made Up World would suggest(e.g. Sayid doesn't have Nadia, Kate is on the run, Sawyer is still held up on his parents) -- so even if it Does turn out that this was a chosen, constructed timeline, I don't think it's going to hinge on the fact that the characters aren't experiencing real change or real happiness.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Raymond, can you explain what is it about Desmond that invalidates my theory? I'm not seeing it. Desmond has traveled back in time(maybe) when he bought the ring from Ms. Hawking. He's consciousness jumped back and forth between two times in The Constant. What about this last episode was so different from that. If I'm right, and altTime isn't an alternate time line, but a fake reality, then the question can be "when" is it happening, and if that's the question, there's nothing stopping Desmond from jumping back and forth to it the same way he did in The Constant.

quote:
I know you've attempted to explain this before, but I do not get it in the slightest. Is there a link you can provide to any kind of actual scientific backing here, or is this just something that happens to click for you? Because in terms of logical-coherence, Pastwatch time travel really works just fine.
I don't know if this a particularly fair question to ask me! If I asked you to provide scientific backing for alternate time line scenarios of time travel, would you be able to do it?

I've read a lot of different time travel stories, all of which used many different theories of how time travel works. The whatever happened, happened style really hit home with me when I read The Time Travelers Wife. Which, btw, if you haven't read, is a really amazing book, I know many people at Hatrack have read it and I'm sure most would recommend it. The whole story revolves around a whatever happened, happened approach to time travel. One time line. No multiple times through. No changing things. And it just made absolutely perfect sense to me.

I can also point you to The Constant episode and pretty much all of Season 5. Every action and event and yes...choice...that took place in season 5 conformed to a whatever happened, happened theory of time travel. The only exceptions are (possibly) when Faraday knocks on the hatch and talks to Desmond, and the nuke. But neither of those are confirmed. The Desmond meeting is odd, but nothing has been stated definitely as to whether that changed something. Yes, there is a huge glaring question of why Desmond didn't remember Faraday after this event in WHH, and I have no real good answer for that. But the alternative is just as ridiculous. Faraday inserted a memory into Desmond's head in Faradays subjective 2004(just a few hours after time jumping began), and in Desmond's 2001-2004 while he was on the Island alone. Why would this event insert a memory into Desmond's head at some random time in 2007? It doesn't make sense...there's no correlation between those time periods. So both alternatives, that Desmond forgot and suddenly remembered 3-5 years later during a dream or that the memory just planted itself in his head at this completely random time unrelated to anything, are lacking. But i prefer the "he forgot" as the lesser of two evils. The nuke is I think still up in the air. Until we really know 100% the true nature of altTime, none of us can definitely say whether the nuke was a change. I think it wasn't obviously. Most of you think it was.

But besides these two examples, every single event we saw in season 5 conformed to whatever happened happened. Charlotte talked about Faraday warning her as a child, then he time traveled and did it. Richard gave Locke a compass and then later we saw a time traveling Locke give it to Richard in the 50s. The existence of Adam and Eve (the skeletons in the cave), which hasn't really been definitely answered for us, but most people think it's likely that they're time travelling Losties, my theory has been Rose and Bernard (the presence of the skeletons when the Losties first land implies that their time traveling, and subsequent deaths always occured), Cheng had a prosthetic arm in at least one orientation video and in The Incident we watched his hand get destroyed. These are all events that conformed to plot elements we had already been privy too, and finally gave us the explanation for how they happened.

But there's more. There are countless times during season 5 where the action could have blatantly broken WHH. Sayid could have succeeded in killing Ben. When Sawyer came upon Kate helping Claire give birth he could have interacted with them, thus creating an event we know is different from the first time we saw it(i'm refraining from saying "first time through" because there was no first time through. the first time through Sawyer WAS there, we just didn't see him). Jin could have not stopped Rousseau from going down into The Temple, thus getting her infected. At ANY point any number of characters could have been killed that we know were alive longer, they could have killed Cheng or Radzinsky, Ben's father or Horace. Any of these events would have obviously contradicted WHH, because they would have contradicted story that had already been shown to us, but none of them ever happened. But I think the former paragraph is really the better paragraph at explaining WHH, given that it involved knowledge we had in previous seasons or episodes, that came to fruition through time traveling. Their actions CAUSED events we knew were part of history. It's important to note, that at each and every point along the way characters used their free will to make choices. The time traveling Losties didn't know what was going to happen, they had never subjectively gone through those events, only we as viewers knew what would happen, or were able to predict it due to the nature of WHH(and if you look through last year's threads you'll see my point). The setting was deterministic, but the choices were free. It's just the nature of how we were told this story, and the unusual way cause and effect work when introducing time travel that makes it seem like they should be able to "change" something. there's nothing to "change" because there was never a first time through when the time travelers weren't there.

Why this event with the nuke should be different than every other moment in season 5 is beyond me (yes, i know the theory espoused by Faraday that small pebbles don't make a difference but a big boulder can split the stream).

Here's some stuff I found on wikipedia:

quote:
A predestination paradox (also called causal loop, causality loop, and (less frequently) closed loop or closed time loop) is a paradox of time travel that is often used as a convention in science fiction. It exists when a time traveller is caught in a loop of events that "predestines" or "predates" them to travel back in time. Because of the possibility of influencing the past while time traveling, one way of explaining why history does not change is by saying that whatever has happened must happen. A time traveler attempting to alter the past in this model, intentionally or not, would only be fulfilling their role in creating history as we know it, not changing it. Or that the time-traveler's personal knowledge of history already includes their future travels to their own experience of the past.

In layman's terms, it means this: the time traveller is in the past, which means they were in the past before. Therefore, their presence is vital to the future, and they do something that causes the future to occur in the same way that their knowledge of the future has already happened. It is very closely related to the ontological paradox and usually occurs at the same time.

Predestination Paradox

There are a whole load of typical examples of this in action, one of them is even from Lost! But it includes many others.

Someone, maybe it was you, asked about Desmond's visions and saving Charlie. So I should address that too. When Desmond sees his flashes, and acts to save Charlie's life is he "changing" the future? I would argue no. His actions could really only be said to change the future if we had seen Charlie actually die in a scene where Desmond wasn't able to see the future, and then we saw that same scene again with Desmond saving Charlie. Then yes...Desmond changed something. But since these possible futures only exist in Desmond's mind, he acts to prevent a "possible" future from happening. I think Jacob acts in a similar vain btw. WHH and the idea of course correcting don't have to be mutually exclusive.

That's all I got in me. Hope it clears up my support for WHH.

[ April 08, 2010, 11:36 PM: Message edited by: Strider ]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leonide:
quote:
But Eloise's comments about "someone has affected the way you see things. this is a problem. it is, in fact, a violation." and her questioning of why Desmond is causing trouble because he "has everything he wants" very much leads me to believe that this world is a facade, created for a very specific purpose. It is surface happiness, but not real happiness. Or simply just not real, and these characters are starting to realize it.
I know you said you're just tinkering with ideas, but many of the main characters do have a "real" happiness in altworld, aka Locke and Helen, Jack and his son, etc. We've seen them sacrifice in different ways and also come to terms with real, deep-seated issues that were a looooong time in being resolved -- many people here have commented on how content the various characters seem, and how nice it is to see them coming to terms with their limitations and issues...not everything is pat and perfect, as a Fake Made Up World would suggest(e.g. Sayid doesn't have Nadia, Kate is on the run, Sawyer is still held up on his parents) -- so even if it Does turn out that this was a chosen, constructed timeline, I don't think it's going to hinge on the fact that the characters aren't experiencing real change or real happiness.
Fair point Leonide. I was even one of the first people to mention that some characters seem to be learning very valuable lessons that they never learned on the Island. I'm not sure how it all fits in!

I do rattle off a lot of theories, and while all of them can't be right, I do have a pretty good track record. I think my prediction of Locke being the Smoke Monster came pretty early on last season! [Smile]
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
quote:
Raymond, can you explain what is it about Desmond that invalidates my theory? I'm not seeing it
The Desmond issue doesn't NECESSARILY prove that WHH is wrong. But it proves pretty conclusively that altTime is a real universe that Desmond travels to the same way he always does when jumping through time. This semantic difference IS important. If altTime is "a carefully constructed universe" as opposed to an illusion, that has implications on what timeTravel/universeModel we're using. It's one in which alternate versions of reality can exist, one way or another. You mention something about not knowing "when" the altTime is, I guess implying that it could be in the far future or past, with the entire Oceanic Flight perfectly recreated. I guess that's possible, but it seems pretty ludicrous to me. Alternate universe is by far the most obvious and likely explanation, and if alternate universes can exist then the entire elegance of the WWH universe (a single, 4 dimensional universe that doesn't change) is thrown out the window and I'm not sure why you'd still find it more appealing than other time travel theories.

quote:
If I asked you to provide scientific backing for alternate time line scenarios of time travel, would you be able to do it?
No, but I am not claiming that any particular variation of time travel is more intellectually sound than any other. I think it's perfectly reasonable to have a version of time travel that just appeals to you more than others, but to claim that it is an intellectual appeal as opposed to an emotional one is (at least partially) inaccurate.

Now, Lost clearly HAS done a lot to suggest that WWH is the norm. 90% of season 5 reinforces that. But the remaining 10% just as clearly suggest the opposite. It is definitely still up in the air. Even altTime does nothing to suggest that the original timeline is not still a WHH universe. It may be that the nuke was nothing but the "Incident," but that Incident always has and always will also produce the altTime universe. But so far the most recent stuff we've seen pretty clearly suggests a mutable/divergent timeline and I think if'd behoove you to look for ways to accept that as possibility that you can actually be happy with.

I'd like to clarify that I would NOT be disappointed if WHH turned out to be correct, just with a final resolution we haven't seen yet (the theory I listed above seems fairly workable). But I would be very disappointed if the altTime turned out to be a dream.

[ April 09, 2010, 12:20 AM: Message edited by: Raymond Arnold ]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Raymond, what if I called altTime a carefully constructed universe...constructed by Esau. Would that change the way you're viewing it?

quote:
I think it's perfectly reasonable to have a version of time travel that just appeals to you more than others, but to claim that it is an intellectual appeal as opposed to an emotional one is (at least partially) inaccurate.
Sure, and we can have a whole separate conversation about the relationship between intellect and emotions, and our ability to use logic separated from emotions(i even wrote a paper on this!)...but it's worth saying that I was originally very against the idea of WHH. Leonide may or may not remember this, but when I first started reading The Time Traveler's Wife, I was really put off by the idea, found it implausible.* But as the book went on the idea just made so much sense. Now, i'm not saying this is the way time travel actually works. I'm saying that Lost has espoused this idea. And that the only plot point since time travel got brought into the story, that may violate this rule, is an elaborate ruse by the creators. They've done it before.

*I love that we're arguing about time travel.

quote:
It is definitely still up in the air. Even altTime does nothing to suggest that the original timeline is not still a WHH universe. It may be that the nuke was nothing but the "Incident," but that Incident always has and always will also produce the altTime universe.
That's actually an interesting point that I had never thought of before. I'll think that one over, but I'm inclined to say it won't change my mind.

quote:
But so far the most recent stuff we've seen pretty clearly suggests a mutable/divergent timeline and I think you're better off looking for ways to accept that as possibility that you can actually be happy with.
I hope you haven't taken any of this conversation the wrong way, I'm LOVING this season of Lost. And even if I'm wrong, I'll be happy. I have faith that the creators of this show know what the're doing. They've been too smart all along. And I know they're on the ball because I've read quotes from them that are heartening, that show they know what's going on.

quote:
LINDELOF: Right out of the gate, in the first five minutes of the premiere, you get hit over the head with two things that you’re not expecting. The first is that Desmond is on the plane. The second thing that we do is we drop out of the plane and we go below the water and we see that the Island is submerged. What we’re trying to do there is basically say to you, “God bless the survivors of Oceanic 815, because they’re so self-centered, they thought the only effect [of detonating the bomb] was going to be that their plane never crashes.” But they don’t stop to think, “If we do this in 1977, what else is going to affected by this?” So that their entire lives can be changed radically. In fact, it would appear that they’ve sunken the Island. That’s our way of saying, “Keep your eyes peeled for the differences that you’re not expecting.” Some of these characters were still in Australia, but some weren’t. Shannon’s not there. Boone actually says that he tried to get her back. There are all sorts of other people that we don’t see. Where’s Libby? Where’s Ana Lucia? Where’s Eko? These are all the things that you’re supposed to be thinking about. When our characters posited the “What if?” scenario, they neglected to think about what the other effects of potentially changing time might be and we’re embracing those things.

That said, are you saying definitively that detonating Jughead was the event that created this new timeline? Or is that a mystery which the season 6 story will reveal?
LINDELOF: It’s a mystery. A big one.

quote:
Is there a relationship between Island reality and sideways reality? Will they run parallel for the remainder of the season? Will they fuse together? Might one fade away?
LINDELOF: For us, the big risk that we’re taking in the final season of the show is basically this very question. This is the critical mystery of the season, which is, “What is the relationship between these two shows?” And we don’t use the phrase “alternate reality,” because to call one of them an “alternate reality” is to infer that one of them isn’t real, or one of them is real and the other is the alternate to being real.
CUSE: But the questions you’re asking are exactly the right questions. What are we to make of the fact that they’re showing us two different timelines? Are they going to resolve? Are they going to connect? Are they going to co-exist in parallel fashion? Are they going to cross? Do they intersect? Does one prove to be viable and the other one not? I think those are all the kind of speculations that are the right speculations to be having at this point in the season.

quote:
Did Jughead really sink the Island? And is it possible that the Sideways characters are now caught in a time loop in which they might have to go back in time and fulfill the obligation to continuity by detonating the bomb?
LINDELOF: These questions will be dealt with on the show. Should you infer that the detonation of Jughead is what sunk the island? Who knows? But there’s the Foot. What do you get when you see that shot? It looks like New Otherton got built. These little clues [might help you] extrapolate when the Island may have sunk. Start to think about it.

My theory may not be right, but these statements tell me these guys know what the important questions are and have thought of ways to answer them in a satisfactory manner!
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
Those are very encouraging interviews. I've had faith in Lost ever since the end of Season 2, when the Hatch was revealed to be the cause of the crash. But this is nice to know.

quote:
I hope you haven't taken any of this conversation the wrong way, I'm LOVING this season of Lost. And even if I'm wrong, I'll be happy. I have faith that the creators of this show know what the're doing. They've been too smart all along. And I know they're on the ball because I've read quotes from them that are heartening, that show they know what's going on.
In that case all the power to you. You mentioned earlier that a non-WHH solution would make you "profoundly unhappy," which was what I was worried about.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Let me turn some of this on it's head and get some answers from those that espouse the "altTime was created by the nuke" theory. I've been on the defensive with my theory, but I think there are some pretty significant things that need to be answered from your end.

Why would a nuke bury an Island underwater?

Why does Jack have that cut on his neck in LA X, on the plane?

Why do these characters seem to have dejavu of their other lives? If this is a *real* separate time line created when the nuke went off, these characters should have absolutely no access or connection to their other selves.

I mean...in a universe where they never crash on the Island, they're also not there to set off the nuke in 1977.* They're supposed to now be in a universe where none of that ever happened, and they grew up normal and had nothing to do with some other universe. So why the connections?

*Which just begs the question, if they weren't there to set off the nuke, wouldn't Desmond still come, and they still crash land? It's questions like this that make multiple time lines and changing things not make sense to me.

Why does Jack not remember getting his appendix out? hmmm...almost like a false history was given to him.

I'm sure I have others. But I'm spent. And been thinking about Lost too much now!
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
In that case all the power to you. You mentioned earlier that a non-WHH solution would make you "profoundly unhappy," which was what I was worried about.
I'd be lying if I said I wouldn't be somewhat disappointed. But I can be disappointed and really happy and entertained at the same time. I loved almost every bit of last season, and yet still went off some of the ontological paradoxes that were created at a few points.

[start matrix tangent]I'll use the Matrix movies as an example. I absolutely adore the first Matrix. But I still REALLY enjoy the next two movies. I'll rewatch them happily and think they have a lot of really awesome aspects, and a satisfying ending. But I still criticize them for what I see as a lack of vision with what they could've done. They could have made better movies. Personally, I think they should've combined the two and trimmed the fat. Two had some great philosophy and conversations I thought, but the action was boring. I wasn't worried for the characters(now that Neo's invincible) and they artificially limited what he should've been able to do. Three had some great action (now that it was brought to the "real world" it felt more immediate and more engaging and I worried for the characters) and closed up the story really well I thought, but easily could've been cut shorter two combine the two movies. I can criticize it to no end, yet I'll still unabashedly say I love it. Skill or flaw? You be the judge[/end matrix tangent]
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I do not believe the nuke is solely responsible for the island sinking. (I think there's pretty solid evidence that that is impossible, and the interviews you just listed confirm we are supposed to be looking at that evidence and analyzing it, not hand-waving it as a continuity error). I believe the nuke/energy-pocket collectively provided the energy required to fork the timeline, but that the actual forking of that timeline requires a large number of manipulations that were executed by Eloise.

quote:
I mean...in a universe where they never crash on the Island, they're also not there to set off the nuke in 1977.* They're supposed to now be in a universe where none of that ever happened, and they grew up normal and had nothing to do with some other universe. So why the connections?
Well, this actually isn't necessary to worry about because I believe there were a variety of forces at work, and all that was needed to produce the altTime was the nuke/pocket coinciding in one universe. Once that happened, the second universe existed, period.

But even ignoring that possibility, if we were seeing a universe where the timeline went:

1960ish? - Dharma comes to the island
1970ish - Losties appear on the island via time travel
1970-something - Losties cause the nuke, which somehow sinks the island.
1980-present, things procede normally after the destruction of the island.

The fact that there were never a new group of Losties to go back in time and cause the nuke is IRRELEVANT. In this version of the universe, the Losties appeared in the past. Once they appeared in the past, they were in the past. Period. There is no reason to assume that people are contingent on causes when time travel is involved. (Have you read Pastwatch? It seriously is a good book that explains this pretty well).

Now, there are several reasons why the above doesn't necessarily make sense in the Lost universe. A) we know enough things that couldn't possibly have been changed ONLY by the island sinking, and we know the island didn't sink at the time of the nuke. B) We've gotten some pretty clear hints that the Lostverse doesn't quite work like that. There was a theory a while back that I liked that the island's inherent nature included a means to correct paradoxes, and the reason everyone had all these weird connections was because the special-nature of the island warped time to produce a set of events that would resolve a particular paradox.

That ended up not being so likely, now that we know Jacob was responsible for most of their connections. But we've still seen in Desmond that the timeline has a somewhat self correcting mechanism (i.e. Charlie eventually dies no matter what).

There's a terminator novel with a section describing timelines having "inertia," and multiple timelines being superimposed on each other until they finally resolved themselves. It was a pretty good explanation that I think is similar to how they're handling Lost. I'm trying to find the paragraph in question (I saw it linked online once, not sure if I can find it again).
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Raymond, yes, read Pastwatch and loved it!

I'd say that you're not necessarily in the majority with how you view these events.

Yes, one explanation is that the time traveling Losties were on the Island before the nuke. Which means they were their in the 50s. They were there in that random time when they saw the statue, and they were there in 1977 and set off the nuke and the two time lines diverged at that point.

An EQUALLY valid theory is that since the Losties never landed, they also couldn't be present during all these other times on the Island. This theory at least goes some way toward explaining why there are other differences. For instance, Ben's dad in altTime said something about how they should have stayed on the Island. Which is a weird thing to say about an Island that you left because a nuke went off on.

Anyway, I've seen people put forth both scenarios.
 
Posted by J-Put (Member # 11752) on :
 
quote:
"The Desmond issue doesn't NECESSARILY prove that WHH is wrong. But it proves pretty conclusively that altTime is a real universe that Desmond travels to the same way he always does when jumping through time."
This part I disagree with. Most of the other things I don't really have a solid opinion on, but I see no reason to think that Desmond "travels" anywhere at all. When he was jumping around in time, it was an issue with him not having a constant. He wasn't anchored, and was drifting.

What happened here was electromagnetism. Last time he was exposed to that, he didn't hop around in time, he had visions of the future. Why assume that anything different is happening now? When he was in the alternate time line, he didn't appear to have any more memory of the original time line than any other character. It seemed to me more like he was just observing his alt-self. Which implied to me that the alternate universe is something that will happen in his relative "future".
 
Posted by J-Put (Member # 11752) on :
 
Can't wait to find out who's right...if anybody.

And, I can't believe I watched this show for 6 seasons just to leave for boot camp and miss the last 5 episodes. LOL
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by J-Put:
Can't wait to find out who's right...if anybody.

And, I can't believe I watched this show for 6 seasons just to leave for boot camp and miss the last 5 episodes. LOL

Holy crow. Can't you get a deferral or something?
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
"Sir, I was hoping to wait a little bit on serving my country... I kinda need to finish Lost." lol

quote:
When he was in the alternate time line, he didn't appear to have any more memory of the original time line than any other character.
He didn't UNTIL the moment he faints in front of Penny. Afterwards he's suddenly all "let's get this list and mess with some people's lives." I don't know if they have a good reason for why it was that moment where they synced up with each other (similar to how I don't think they have a good reason for Desmond suddenly remembering that message years later). But all of Desmond's abilities have always revolved around temporal leaping ("vision of the future" and "suddenly living in a different stage of time until you randomly are back" are effectively identical).
 
Posted by J-Put (Member # 11752) on :
 
quote:
He didn't UNTIL the moment he faints in front of Penny. Afterwards he's suddenly all "let's get this list and mess with some people's lives." I don't know if they have a good reason for why it was that moment where they synced up with each other (similar to how I don't think they have a good reason for Desmond suddenly remembering that message years later). But all of Desmond's abilities have always revolved around temporal leaping ("vision of the future" and "suddenly living in a different stage of time until you randomly are back" are effectively identical).
I still don't see how that implies that it was anything other than a vision. That seemed like a perfectly reasonable thing for alt-Desmond to do with the information he had. Actually I think it proves that "real" Desmond wasn't in control. Why would he need to see the names of everybody on the plane, he already knows all of them? Alt-Desmond seemed to be in exactly the same situation as every other alt character. They all seem to be able to unlock some amount of "memory", Desmond could have just gotten more by actually meeting Penny.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
altTime characters are implied to have all gotten visions, but Desmond a) seems implied to have gotten more information (and not just because he met Penny - other people met their realLovers and didn't get anything other than flashes from realTime. For that matter, Penny didn't flash in the way Desmond did) B) Desmond so far is the only character other than Juliet to have, in realTime, gotten a vision of altTime. (And Juliet was right next to the nuke/energy pocket, so it makes sense for her to have gotten something similar).
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I don't think J-Put is arguing it wasn't caused by the electromagnetism, just questioning the nature of what happened. I think it's a valid question.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
My point is so far, we have only seen electromagnetism cause phenomena related to timeline distortion, so it makes sense to assume that if it can cause people to interact with altTime, there is some kind of timeline issue at work.

I guess (and maybe this is what you were trying to say earlier) that if everyone enters MatrixTime at a particular point in the future that electromagnetism could bring people in touch with their future, enMatrixed selves... I dunno. Maybe. But so far there is really zero evidence of that.

Of, also:

quote:
An EQUALLY valid theory is that since the Losties never landed, they also couldn't be present during all these other times on the Island. This theory at least goes some way toward explaining why there are other differences. For instance, Ben's dad in altTime said something about how they should have stayed on the Island. Which is a weird thing to say about an Island that you left because a nuke went off on.
I actually think that this IS the likely scenario. I had a disclaimer saying my scenario wasn't accurate because we knew certain things about it (such as when the island sunk) that couldn't be true. I was just saying your question of Grandfather-paradox-ism wasn't a question that necessarily needed answering.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
Also:

quote:
Raymond, what if I called altTime a carefully constructed universe...constructed by Esau. Would that change the way you're viewing it?
It might... but right now the only evidence we have is that it was constructed or heavily influenced by Eloise. I'm going to hold off on speculating here until we get any evidence one way or another about Eloise' relationship with smokey.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
I guess (and maybe this is what you were trying to say earlier) that if everyone enters MatrixTime at a particular point in the future that electromagnetism could bring people in touch with their future, enMatrixed selves... I dunno. Maybe. But so far there is really zero evidence of that.
I would say its less that zero evidence. That theory doesn't fit with the fact that the island, complete with Dharma buildings and shark, is underwater in the alt-time. There is no reason the island would be enMatrix and since no one on the plane saw the island underwater, there is no easy explanation for having an underwater island in the Matrix.

I don't think the bomb caused the time shift to 2007 theory fits the data either. If it was the bomb, why did it shift all the Losties to 2007, (including those that were at the bomb site and those that were not) but none of the Dharma people.

I think Jacob brought them to the future at the instant before the bomb went offer, so they are in a future where the bomb didn't detonate. Alt-time is the time-line where the bomb did detonate. I'm probably wrong, but at least it fits the data.

The primary thing we know about the time shifts is that they are selective. Only select people started to time jump when Ben turned the wheel (Richard and the others did not). Only select people from the second plane got transported back in time. Only select people from the the incident got transport to 2007. That suggests to me that someone (either Esau or Jacob) is controlling the time travel, it isn't simply exposure to EM that does it.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Rabbit, I'd like to see some of my questions from above addressed. I fully admit there are problems with my theory. I don't have all the info. But I see just as many problems with yours. To say that I have less than zero evidence for anything I'm proposing is to ignore every one of the posts I made on this page; pointing out the problems with altTime, and discussing how things like the deja-vu, and the mirrors, and even Jacob's bringing together all of these characters can fit into my theory. There does seem to be very much a monkey's paw type of effect in altTime. Desmond has Widmore's respect, but lost Penny, Charlie is alive but never had Claire, Locke has a good relationship with his dad, but is still wheelchair bound, Nadia is alive, but married to someone else, etc...

Anyway, to ignore all the problems I bring up about altTime, and focus only on the problems with my theory is disingenuous. I also think that many of the side points I'm bringing up are very valid, and even if the crux of my theory turns out to be incorrect, I don't think you should throw the baby out with the bathwater.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by J-Put:
Can't wait to find out who's right...if anybody.

And, I can't believe I watched this show for 6 seasons just to leave for boot camp and miss the last 5 episodes. LOL

Yow, that does suck. At least when I went through Basic it was between seasons 4 and 5. Now I know I get to see it through to the end.

Which branch and what job?
 
Posted by J-Put (Member # 11752) on :
 
Air Force, and I don't know the job yet, just general electronics field. I'm leaving on Monday, and it seems like every show I watch regularly has some huge cliffhanger with a supposedly amazing resolution coming next week.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
Have someone record the shows, then watch them all on liberty weekend. Believe me, watching TV after all that can be an exceptionally invigorating release.

I have never believed that alt-time was fully a result of the bomb. It never seemed right, like a bizzarro universe, and I don't mean the differences between that one and the original time (i.e. lucky Hurley, wimpy Ben...). Something like a puppet show represents how everyone acts. Now with the return of Eloise in alt-time, that feeling makes more sense.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Strider, Sorry if I've been ignoring your questions. I'm snowed under right now and won't be able to respond for another week. I'm chairing a workshop this week with 38 people from around the world.

I'm don't actually have a real theory about what's going on, at least not one I'm committed to. I just think your theory doesn't fit the existing data in too many places.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Strider: I do remember your initial reaction to The Time Traveler's Wife. But since I'm awesome and only like awesome books, I knew you'd come around. [Smile]

Also, RE: the Nuke, I do NOT believe the Nuke sunk the Island. I just don't know what the Nuke *actually* did. Don't we have conclusive proof that the Nuke did no such thing? Ben, Chang, and Ben's Dad being alive completely blow that theory out of the water (pun intended?). Chang was AT THE SWAN when the Nuke detonated, but Miles references him in his conversation with Sawyer in Re-Con, so we know the bomb didn't transport the time travelers, then sink the Island. In AltTIme, The Island sunk at another point, another time. Definitively. Plus, a lot of other cuh-razy stuff happened leading up to the nuke detonation (Ben's healing being one of the biggest) that we would be seeing repercussions of in altTime, had the nuke detonated in that line. My theory is the nuke didn't happen at all in AltTime. The question is, what did it effect, and how, in the original story, TimeLine Prime?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Rabbit, no worries. I don't necessarily need you to answer all my questions, mostly just an acknowledgment that those questions need just as much answering as the ones that are problematic for my theory. [Smile]

Leonide, it's worth pointing out that we don't actually have any definitive proof that the nuke EVER went off. Do we? Juliet's final hit, when everything flashed white could have *just* been a time jump right? I'm not saying it definitely didn't blow up, but we don't know that it definitely did either!

[ April 10, 2010, 10:45 PM: Message edited by: Strider ]
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
A valid, previously considered point. But that begs the question that if the nuke didn't detonate, what did send them forward in time? Someone messing with the wheel again?
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
A large electromagnetic discharge perhaps? Maybe it works on Desmond in one way and others in another way.

Or maybe it was just their mind that traveled, and they are also still living back in the 70's.

Perhaps the bomb didn't go off. Dharma then calls it the incident and builds the Swan station over the top of it, with the bomb as a fail safe. This is what then explodes when Desmond turns the key and destroys the hatch.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
I just have to say wow. I like how the writers have addressed what's going on, and they are actually managing to make me care about most of our losties flashforwards. After some extremely weak episodes I'm enjoying the past Richard and Desmond episodes immensely. And I wont get too spoilery because the episode hasn't aired everywhere, but they didn't just ignore all of the story lines from the last episode like most episodes do. That makes me soooooo happy, because I hate it when they build something interesting up, then wait 2 or 3 episodes for it to be concluded. I don't mind it when they ignore the unimportant boring plot lines.

I hate Lockemonster. I really do. And not in a fun way like I used to hate Ben or Keemy. He's not a fun villain for me. But almost every scene not involving him of the past few eps have been very enjoyable for me.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
What the hell. I do not understand what Desmond thinks he's doing.

But the title is true. Hurley totally rocks.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Desmond's action made sense to me, but only in the light of the larger picture of my theory. If I'm right about altTime being an epilogue or fake universe or whatever...the important point being that the events on Island this season are what in actuality lead up to altTime...then I'm thinking that Desmond went there with Locke's name to do something similar as he did with Hurley, but upon seeing Locke had a flash/memory/whatever of Locke throwing him into the well and trying to kill him (again, this only works if this isn't a true altTime, but is actually taking place at some point in these characters subjective future). This leads him to a sort of crime of passion where he gets the uncontrollable urge to kill Locke.

I'm betting Locke ends up in the care of Jack at the hospital.

This episode I was also thinking about the nature of the people who seem to pick up on the wrongness/fakeness of altTime first. Charlie, Faraday, and Libbie were the first people to see through the facade (Desmond was prompted by Charlie), and they are also all characters who died on the Island. Like maybe for some reason they have more reason to pick up on the fact that something is wrong with this world, because somewhere deep down they know they died already.

I wonder how much of altTime will tie into the fact that we now have real confirmation that characters survive death on the Island (assuming the people who have been showing up to Hurley are actually the people we think they are, and not Jacob induced visions or something). Can altTime be some sort of afterlife?

The whispers reveal was a bit of a letdown. I mean, I think for people who haven't ever read the whisper transcripts it was probably pretty cool. But for those of us that have, we knew that the whispers were in some significant way connected to individuals who had died. But it just begs the question of who gets stuck on the Island and who "moves on". Are they stuck forever or can they do something to leave? Why can certain people who didn't die on the Island (Ben's mom, Isabella) appear on the Island? What is the nature of their afterlife? Will we get these answers? Are they integral to the future plot of Lost or is this the end of the whispers explanation?
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
At this point, I'm operating under the assumption that people we've seen dead who didn't die on the island were MIB.

My question is why so many people appeared to Hurley off the island--Charlie, Eko, Ana Lucia--who died on the island.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
So you think Isabella was MIB when she was talking to Hurley and later to Richard? I think that's highly doubtful given her desire to stop MIB.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I was so happy Hurley was able to see Libby again. If I remember correctly, Libby was in the mental institution when Hurley was there in the "real" timeline. We never found out why. I wonder if she had other problems or if she was there for the same reason. It would be interesting if in the "real" timeline she had flashes or memories of yet another timeline, and remembers Hurley from that one.

I really pleased with this episode. though I was hoping it would have been about 5 minutes longer. I wanted to see Jack talk to Claire now that he knows she is his sister. He hasn't been able to do that since he found out. Maybe next episode.

I actually laughed when Ben started talking to Desmond. Desmond was acting kind of strange, and Ben probably thought he was a predator.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
quote:
(again, this only works if this isn't a true altTime, but is actually taking place at some point in these characters subjective future)
I think it makes sense either way. Regardless of altTime's nature, people get to have flashes between altTime and realTime.

I was actually wondering if for some reason he did it specifically to get Locke into the hospital to meet Jack. I'm not sure why you'd do that instead of just talking to Locke like a normal person, but since a) I'm pretty positive that the result of this WILL be Locke ending up meeting Jack and getting his spine fixed, b) Desmond might have all kinds of crazy insights as to how the timeline fits together, and he might just know that running over Locke is the best way to make that happen... dunno. It's feasible.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I just realized....The Christian Shepherd appearences cannot be the smoke monster. In Season 4 or 5 (I can't remember which one) Jack is in his home and sees his father.

The smoke monster is stuck on the island, so it would not have been able to make it off to go visit Jack.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
btw, Geraine, I found your suggestion about Desmond, the nuke, and the failsafe above oddly compelling. Very interesting theory.

I am still constantly confused about the nature of visions on the Island. Between the idea that they could be smokey induced visions, Jacob induced visions, or actually the people they look like they are, I'm really at a loss of figuring out which is which. Christian Shepard is a prime example.
 
Posted by msquared (Member # 4484) on :
 
Is the young boy Jacob? Or maybe Aaron?

msquared
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I thought the original young boy was Jacob. But this one was different. Seemed a bit older. But not JUST older. My initial reaction is that it was a young Esau. But i'm not sure how that would work out exactly.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
I think it has to be the same person at different ages... I'm still thinking young Jacob.
 
Posted by Hobbes (Member # 433) on :
 
This is the first episode where I felt they'd actually moved us closer to a conclusion instead of just dragging out the drama. Which makes it my favorite episode of the season.

I also like the Desmond inclusions, it feels like he's actually taking meaningful initiative which is rare for characters in the show now days. Normally they seem to stumble about, make a bold decision, and then reverse it in about 10 minutes of show time.

Hobbes [Smile]
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Okay, this probably won't turn out to be true, but right now it could, and it's fun, so I'll share:

Okay, so we've been seeing the "original timeline" start to affect the alternate timeline. Jack's scar, things like that. Now two weeks ago, it started going full boar, with people remembering the alternate timeline, starting with the people who died AND were in love, then to people who were one or the other. Same pattern this week, Libby remembers, then Hurley.

What we've only been seeing a little is that going the other way. The only sign we've seen is that Sun is forgetting english. That seems to be a sign of the alternate universe bleeding back into the universe we know. So I was trying to think if there were any other signs of the alternate universe "bleeding back" into the original timeline.

And I got to thinking . . . now that Locke has been hit by Desmonds car, hes going to be taken to the hospital. And at the hospital, he's going to meet Jack again. And Jack could just possibly do not only lifesaving surgery, but fix his spine so he can walk again.

This made me think . . . what if all the crazy stuff that's happened on the island, like Locke being able to walk, wasn't "the island" alone, but is bleedback from the alternate universe? Locke was able to walk because, in the alternate universe, Jack healed him, and the realities started to overlap that soon?

We know Sun is pregnant in the Alt timeline, which means Jin isn't impotent in the alt timeline. So maybe he was healed on the island because of bleed-through from the other timeline.

And now Desmond is the new Jacob, going around doing the things that will make everything right. He hit Locke with his car not out of revenge, but because of the actions he knows it will set in motion.
 
Posted by Bokonon (Member # 480) on :
 
Or more to the point, what if Locke temporarily losing the ability to walk several season's back was due to Desmond hitting Locke in the alt-timeline... Since the alt-timeline is in 2004, and the canonical timeline is in 2007.

Hmm.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Thing is, I don't think Desmond is a candidate.

Over the past few episodes Jack has change immensly. He knew Hurley was lying but still put his faith in him. The way he acts and speaks is different has changed. I still think that Jack is going to be Jack's replacement.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
quote:
I still think that Jack is going to be Jack's replacement.
Unlikely.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I see what I did there. I meant Jacob's replacement. [Razz]
 
Posted by JonnyNotSoBravo (Member # 5715) on :
 
They have told us who/what the whispers are, which is cool. And apparently certain people, like Walt, can tap into that, like calling the Psychic Friends Network. And certain people, like John Locke, can dream the future, like he did with Boone ("Teresa falls up the stairs, Teresa falls down the stairs").

I'm rewatching the series from Season 1 on the ABC website, and it's fascinating, although not nearly as thrilling as the first time through,
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Okay, I'm looking forward to reading what everyone has to say.

Interesting symmetry -- last time Sawyer jumped out of the plane when Jack was the leader, now roles are reversed.

Where was Sayid when Jack returned to the island? I didn't see him with the others there on the beach (or should I say Others)?

Loved the question Desmond asked Sayid. Loved alt-Desmond too.
 
Posted by daventor (Member # 11981) on :
 
I don't care what F-Locke, Smokey, Lockeness Monster whatever-the-heck-you-call-him or crazy Claire says, that was Jack's genuine Ghost-Dad back in the first season.

And since they've still not shown sideways Jack's ex-wife, I'm definitely on board with the theory that says it must be Juliette.

I can't remember if Sayid was there with Locke and Jack at the end, but the others definitely were there (and are probably now all little piles of ash on the beach).
 
Posted by msquared (Member # 4484) on :
 
I missed the last minute of the show (damn vcr tape). Widmores group had just had them get down on their knees.

What happened then?

msquared
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
SPOILERS, OBVIOUSLY

Widmore's second (what was her name?) told them that the deal was off, and then she gave the order to attack Locke over the walkie. Back at the beach, Jack stumbles out of the water and is met by Locke and the rest of his group. Locke asks if Sawyer stole his boat and Jack confirms it. Then the explosions start and Jack is thrown to the sand and is dazed. Locke picks him up and takes him into the jungle and says something along the lines of "You'll be ok. You're with me now."
 
Posted by Tammy (Member # 4119) on :
 
"...she's been drinking Locke's Kool-aid"

I do love Sawyer's one liners. I'm getting a little more depressed after each show. What am I going to do without Sawyer and Hurley?
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
I loved seeing Sawyer taking charge again. That three years running security for Dharma really did him a world of good. He's a better leader than Jack, in my opinion.

So Sayid lied to FakeLocke, right? Soulless or not, I don't think he actually shot him.

I teared up a little when Sun and Jin reunited. About time, too.

So... did Desmond run Locke down for the sole purpose of restoring his ability to walk? Since Locke wasn't going to go to Jack on his own, I mean. He really is out to fix everything, isn't he.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
whistled.

Real thoughts to come shortly!
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Wait a second.... Maybe .. Just maybe.. Juliette is an FBI agent in the alt timeline.. And David's middle name is Tyler and the V's come and he falls in love with a V!

On a more serious note... I don't think Jack is with Locke. He was adamant about staying on the island, and he isn't going to let Locke off the island.

I like how we saw that Sayid still seems to have some thoughts of his own, and hasn't turned completely.

I also hope that Widmore's #2 girl dies. I REALLY don't like the character. For some reason she annoys me so much I can't stand listening to her. The last time I felt that way was Keanny (However you spell it) when he was on the island. More so after he killed Alex.

I also still think that Locke was lying to Jack about his father. Locke hesitated when he told Jack it was him. That and we also have Jack's father appearing to him back in LA once Jack was off the island. If Locke was trapped he would not have been able to do that.
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
I teared up a little when Sun and Jin reunited. About time, too.

That was really nice, but I was more than half expecting them both to get fried by that sonic fence as they ran to each other. Really glad that didn't happen!

--Mel
 
Posted by Tammy (Member # 4119) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:


I also still think that Locke was lying to Jack about his father. Locke hesitated when he told Jack it was him. That and we also have Jack's father appearing to him back in LA once Jack was off the island. If Locke was trapped he would not have been able to do that.

Oooh, good thought! I'd forgotten about that.
 
Posted by Tammy (Member # 4119) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by theCrowsWife:
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
I teared up a little when Sun and Jin reunited. About time, too.

That was really nice, but I was more than half expecting them both to get fried by that sonic fence as they ran to each other. Really glad that didn't happen!

--Mel

TOO funny...I was thinking the same thing. It just shows that the producers have us all confused and jumpy.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Someone I was watching with actually YELLED out to them to stop running because of the fence!
 
Posted by Craig Childs (Member # 5382) on :
 
quote:
Yeah, at the end of the last season I started on a list of questions I thought they needed to answer (at least a little), but I've largely forgotten what they were.

I think it would be interesting to try, as a group, to compile and prioritize such a list before the season starts.

With 4 episodes to go, I think it is now obvious that most questions won't be answered, not even the ones I consider MAJOR questions. Here are the BIG ONES on my list (I've left off several minor questions that probably have no significant bearing on the story):

Walt
• What are Walt’s powers? Can he see the future? (He warned Locke not to open the hatch)
• Why did the Others want to study him? What did they learn?

Claire
• Why did she Claire abandon Aaron in the woods (S4)? Why did she join with with Christian Shepherd/MIB?

Locke
• How did Locke’s father get to the island? Was it really his father? (“The Man From Tallahassee”)

Hurley
• What is the meaning behind Hurley’s cursed numbers?
o Why are the numbers engraved on Swan Hatch?
o Why do the numbers show up in unexpected places – on medicine bottles or as computer passwords

[OK. Partially answered by Valenzetti Equation and Jacob's numbers, but those are weak explanations IMO]

Charlie
• Charlie sacrificed his life because Desmond saw a future in which Claire and Aaron boarded a helicopter to get off the island. Will Desmond’s vision come true?

Charles Widmore
• Was it coincidence that Desmond landed on the same island his would-be father-in-law was trying to find?
• What are/were the “rules” of Widmore’s war with Ben? (When Alex is murdered, Ben says in disbelief “He changed the rules”)
• Did Widmore kill Sayid’s wife Nadia? If so, why? If not, did Ben do it as a ploy to recruit Sayid as his assassin?
• Why did Eloise and Charles send their son back in time to die? (“The Variable”) Have they been manipulating events all this time just to make sure the timeline doesn’t get altered? Or perhaps are they trying to alter a timeline that should never have occurred?

Miscelleanous
• Who controls the food drops? How do they occur, if Dharma has been defunct for 20 years?

• What is the “magic box” that Ben referred to? (“Man from Tallahassee”) Can it really make ‘anything you imagine’ appear on the island?

• Did the Others know about Swan Hatch? If so, why didn’t they kill the Dharma scientists Radzynski & Inman?

• What is the criteria between the “Good” people and the “Bad” people on Jacob’s list? For that matter, were they really Jacob's lists?

• Can Jacob cure cancer? Did he really cure Juliet’s sister of cancer? If so, why didn’t he cure Ben’s cancer?

• What is the altUniverse? Will this become the "new" reality for our characters?

• Who is Jacob? MIB? Why are they fighting? What are the rules of engagement? Why does MIB need the survivors in order to leave the island?
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Craig Childs:
Claire
Why did she join with with Christian Shepherd/MIB?

She said why. He was the only one who didn't abandon her. Of course, that isn't true. He drew her away from everyone and tricked her into thinking that everyone had abandoned her, but that's her reason anyway.
 
Posted by Craig Childs (Member # 5382) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
quote:
Originally posted by Craig Childs:
Claire
Why did she join with with Christian Shepherd/MIB?

She said why. He was the only one who didn't abandon her. Of course, that isn't true. He drew her away from everyone and tricked her into thinking that everyone had abandoned her, but that's her reason anyway.
I took her abandonment comment to mean that everyone left the island without her. She was stuck there for 3 years with no one but MIB.

It's been a while since S4, but I seem to remember Claire just walked off one night while everyone was sleeping. No explanation why. No evidence she was tricked. It was totally out of character for her. IMO, the writers owe a flashback or some reasonable explanation of how/why this happened.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Craig, she saw the visage of the man who was very recently introduce to her as her father. She followed him. The MIB, in this visage, then began to exert its influence on her so that when Locke saw her in the cabin with him some time later, she was already "on his side". I really doubt we need, or will ever get, any more explanation than this.

In fact, I imagine the vast majority of your questions will not be addressed (or have been addressed already). I think your last two questions will be the only ones specifically addressed.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
Am I the only one that dosn't want all of the quetions answered? I like the mystery. I be happy with a few explanations, but most things I'd rather them not address. Just please tell me a story. That's what I want, a good story enhanced with mystery and science fiction. Really, what is the island, why people changed, what causes everything isn't my main concerns. I'm just along for the ride. I want in the Finale, a moment that will make me smile, and a moment that will bring me to tears. We'll see if they manage to do that.

If Zombie Nikki and Paulo were the ones in charge I would actually like to know that. (and enjoy that ending) [Wink]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
It's been a while since S4, but I seem to remember Claire just walked off one night while everyone was sleeping. No explanation why. No evidence she was tricked. It was totally out of character for her. IMO, the writers owe a flashback or some reasonable explanation of how/why this happened.
If I remember correctly, she'd just survived a bomb blast that knocked her unconscious. She was very likely suffereing from a concussion and disoriented which made it easy for the MIB to draw her away.

The part the needs to be explained (in my opinion) is why the MIB wanted to separate her from Aaron and the other losties. Is that somehow connected with the warning Claire got not to let Aaron be raised by another?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
You know what I'm finding really interesting? The similarities between Desmond and Jacob. Desmond has a list of names and he travels around to people on his list and interacts with them in such a way as to change the course of their lives. He even has similar air about him as Jacob. Sort of cocky and arrogant, sort of good natured, seemingly knowledgeable and concerned for others.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
Strider,

I was wondering that too. I also wondered... what if Desmond is the candidate to replace Jacob? He's not one of the six magic numbers on the cave wall, but it wouldn't be the first time we've been tricked, and he'd make a lot of sense in that role.

(Otherwise, I'm guessing it'll be Jack.)
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Maybe its too obvious to mention, but I think its' interesting how l the strong loving bonds between people keep popping up as important links between the two realities. Desmond and Penny, Charlie and Claire, John and Helen, Jin and Sun, Sayid and Nadia, Daniel and Charlotte, Hurley and Libby and likely more to come. But it isn't just romantic love, we have parent/child relationships showing up all over the place as well. I'm pretty sure that these strong bonds between people are going to be the key to resolving the story. I'm just not sure how.

[ April 22, 2010, 12:30 PM: Message edited by: The Rabbit ]
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
Maybe its too obvious to mention, but I think its' interesting how l the strong loving bonds between people keep popping up as important links between the two realities. Desmond and Penny, Charlie and Claire, John and Helen, Jin and Sun, Sayid and Nadia, Daniel and Charlotte, Hurley and Libby and likely more to come. But it isn't just romantic love, we have parent/child relationships showing up all over the place as well. I'm pretty sure that these strong bonds between people are going to be the key to resolving the story. I'm just not sure how.

I don't think this counts as a spoiler, but the show creators confirmed to Kristen Dos Santos on E Online that the show is ultimately about love.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
I'm curious what effect, if any, parallel-timeline Locke's "remembering" might have on BSM Locke.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
Maybe its too obvious to mention, but I think its' interesting how l the strong loving bonds between people keep popping up as important links between the two realities. Desmond and Penny, Charlie and Claire, John and Helen, Jin and Sun, Sayid and Nadia, Daniel and Charlotte, Hurley and Libby and likely more to come. But it isn't just romantic love, we have parent/child relationships showing up all over the place as well. I'm pretty sure that these strong bonds between people are going to be the key to resolving the story. I'm just not sure how.

I don't think this counts as a spoiler, but the show creators confirmed to Kristen Dos Santos on E Online that the show is ultimately about love.
I think that works in nicely with what I said a few weeks back about Jacob's plan. I think that, in large part prompted by his interaction with Richard, Jacob began realizing he needed a much more involved plan to win out against Esau in the end. And I think all the criss crossing paths and connections between these characters that we've always wanted an explanation for has been to specifically create a web of friendship, love, and empathy between these individuals to better battle the corrupting power of Esau. It is this web that is helping them see through the falseness/wrongness of altTime.

It also fits in nicely with Rose and Bernard finding peace on the Island and escaping the cycle of fighting and corruption.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tammy:
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:


I also still think that Locke was lying to Jack about his father. Locke hesitated when he told Jack it was him. That and we also have Jack's father appearing to him back in LA once Jack was off the island. If Locke was trapped he would not have been able to do that.

Oooh, good thought! I'd forgotten about that.
Actually, I thought about this a little more and went back and watched the episode where Jack sees his father at the hospital.

Interestingly enough, there is a smoke alarm that goes off that gets Jack's attention. When he goes out to take a look, there is his father. I don't know if the smoke detector sound has any significance, but did make me think.

Earlier in the season Claire said that she had spoke to her father AND her friend. She referred to Locke as her friend. This leads me to believe that they are two different personages.

And I had the same thought with the sonic fence...Its funny how we all thought the same thing, but Lost makes you think that way. Illana's death last week? Yeah, never saw that one coming.
 
Posted by Darth_Mauve (Member # 4709) on :
 
Love is stronger than a sonic fence. Entire point of all 6 seasons.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
So we have at least one time when the Christian Shepard Jack saw was probably the real Christian Shepard, as a ghost like the ones Hurley sees.

And apparently these ghosts can come and go from the island, because Hugo has seen Ana Lucia, Charlie and Eko all off the island.

And now we know these ghosts are the whispers, so they're all over the island.

So here's my thought: I think the dead who roam the island will play a big part in how this gets resolved. I imagine Jacob, Locke, Eko, Charlie, Christian, Michael, and maybe the crew of the Black Rock, and maybe some other people the smoke monster has done in or used over the years all coming to help the losties beat the smoke monster.

I imagine them all helping drag smokie down into whatever "hell" the island is keeping corked.

Maybe THAT's their unfinished business.

I think smokie vs. the whispers would be awesome.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
quote:
I don't think this counts as a spoiler, but the show creators confirmed to Kristen Dos Santos on E Online that the show is ultimately about love.
Honestly, while that's good and all, there's gotta be more to it than that for me to find it ultimately satisfying. There have been approximately 1,264,343 stories about love told in the history of ever. It works nicely as a theme, but you gotta have something else to tie it in with.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Who are Adam and Eve? Right now, I'm going for Kate and Sawyer, but who knows?
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
quote:
Why does MIB need the survivors in order to leave the island?
Here's my guess:

He doesn't. He only needs "the" candidate to leave. But he can only be sure he has the right one if he takes them all.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
I agree.
 
Posted by Craig Childs (Member # 5382) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
In fact, I imagine the vast majority of your questions will not be addressed (or have been addressed already). I think your last two questions will be the only ones specifically addressed.

That's what I'm afraid of. (Warning: Lost diatribe coming!)

Look: I don't need every question answered. (For instance, I've always wondered how Kelvin Inman got recruited, since he would have left Iraq in 1992, after the Purge. Did the Others recruit him to push the button? But I realize this isn't really germane to the overall story).

But certain questions are key plot points. How did Claire get lured away from Aaron? Why did she follow Christian? How did MIB turn her crazy? I mean, these are gaping holes in the story for the writers to just say... fill in the blanks yourself.

Same thing with Walt. His special powers and his kidnapping were one of the major storylines of Season 1. Nothing ever came of them. Nothing was explained, nothing resolved. There wasn't even any passing mention of the potential ramifications of sending a boy with those kinds of gifts back to the "real world" off the island.

And don't even get me started about Charlie's sacrifice, which apparently meant nothing, since it did not lead to the future seen by Desmond. Charlie's death led to the coming of the freighter, some of the losties went back home for a while, then they came back. So what?

Even the answers we are getting are not very compelling. So MIB=Christian Shepherd. OK, but that leads to continuity errors. Last season MIB (as Locke) was on Hydra Island with Ben, while MIB (as Christian) was on main island with Jin and Frank. Oops!

I realize there are still 5 hours of storytelling left, and I still enjoy the individual episodes, but at this point it is hard to deny that the story (the mythology, the mysteries, etc.) is not coming together in a logical, coherent manner. It's not tight. It feels make-it-up-as-you-go-along.

Even the actors have made comments as such. Michael Emerson stated in an interview last month he was shocked that Widmore returned to the island and there was no Ben/Widmore face-off. After all, last time we saw them together, Ben and Sayid did wipe out Widmore's entire organization.

I think the real problem is that for many viewers the mystery of the Island, Dharma, Others, Jacob, MIB, etc. has taken over the story. It's not just an action-adventure story set in a strange, mysterious place. The writers oversold the mythology. The show has become a Mystery where the characters are secondary to finding Answers. & the Answers so far aren't all that good.

That's my $0.02, anyway.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
I have to say I think there's really only one question they need to answer: What is the point of it all - the deaths, the suffering, the intricate plots, etc.?

If they answer that question well, all other questions are secondary. If they fail to answer that question well then the show will not have been a success, regardless of how many other things they explain.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
For instance, I've always wondered how Kelvin Inman got recruited, since he would have left Iraq in 1992, after the Purge. Did the Others recruit him to push the button? But I realize this isn't really germane to the overall story.
You have your dates mixed up. The gulf war ended in 1991 and the purge was in 1992 so there is not a problem.

quote:
I have to say I think there's really only one question they need to answer: What is the point of it all - the deaths, the suffering, the intricate plots, etc.?
I said this earlier but I think its worth repeating. I think F-Locke summed up the central quesion they have to answer very well. "Why are you on this Island?". If they can answer that question satisfyingly for all the key players from Jacob and Esau to Dharma to the Candidates, it will be enough.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
I've posted this before, but the only think I want, and think is neccesary is to, upon rewatching, understand all the character motivations.

I think what a story IS is "Who does what and why." There have been a lot of moments on Lost when we knew who was doing what, but didn't know why. Especially with Ben and the Others.

And now I'd include Smokey and Jacob in that.

Upon rewatching, I want there to be as few moments as possible where we go, "Wait, if Richard is basically a good guy who murdered a guy once a long time ago, why is so keen on getting Locke to kill his dad? In fact, if the others are so convinced they're the good guys, why would they all be hip to killing as a rite of passage for Locke in the first place?"

As few questions as that as possible once it's all said and done.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
I will add, after a day of no comments, that I'm not a Nazi about it. For example, if the monster's saying it can only leave if all the candidates leave, I'll accept that. I won't get upset and say, "Well it looked to me from the finale last season that Jacob left the island all the TIME, and him leaving never allowed smokie to leave. Why will the new Jacob leaving allow the island to leave?"

I'm pretty laid back about just accepting stuff at face value once the reason's given. I have a VERY liberal willing suspension of disbelief.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I think having a bunch of CANDIDATES leave (who are not actual guardians yet) without a Jacob to manipulate them back, makes for a reasonable leave-time. Especially since without a guardian to stop him from doing whatever he does, he can probably also kill Eloise and whoever else would possibly be able to get back to the island.

Also, lump me in with the people who isn't terribly worried about why Claire left, except insofar as "if her father isn't the same person as LockMonster, then we need some resolution on that plot point." I'm fine with her just having gotten manipulated somehow. Knowing exactly what he said to push her buttons doesn't concern me much at this point.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
I was under the impression for a while, and still am, that AntiLocke doesn't want the candidates to leave the island at all. He wants all of them to die together, but in a way that's not "against the rules". I forget which episode, where there was a good bit of dialogue between him and Jacob where he pretty much just said he would kill al of the replacements so nobody would stop hm from leavng. (I do understand he could have thought of a different plan by npw)

I was a bit puzzled on why he ssaved Jack at the end of the last episode. But from what he said to him, it looks like to me that FakeLocke is going to try to use and manipulate him to get everyone killed.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
I think the reason Jacob leaving before didn't effect Smokey on the Island was because Jacob wasn't dead yet. Or maybe Smokey is the only one who's ever traveled off-Island and meddled in lives. Maybe the only reason he's "trapped" now is because he's stuck in Locke. Maybe there never were two opposing forces, just two sides of the same coin, or one cuh-razy side.

Maybe there *is* no Jacob. Only Zuul.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
ABC is airing a repeat of Ab Aeterno this week. I don't know if I can handle it. With my schedule, lost is one a few things that keeps me sane throughout the week.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
I'm with you, Reader.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Just watched 3:10 to Yuma last night. The actor who plays Martin Keamy is in the movie -- he sure is good at playing a jerk. And there is another spoilerish parallel I won't post here but of course it is already pointed out on Lostpedia.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
I watched "Supernatural" the other night for the first time (doubling it's total viewship, I think) and the guy who plays Jacob plays Lucifer on that show. It was kind of weird watching Jacob talking to Gabriel.

So I looked him up on IMDB and he's done a bunch of shows.

It made me think it would be hilarious to go through and find a bunch of his guest appearences and edit them together in a way that made it look like Jacob had been influencing people on half the shows on TV.

I'd totally do it if I weren't lazy and unmotivated and skill-less.
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
'God loves you as he loved Jacob' (from Ben's creepy brainwashing room 101).

Yes, when the same actor shows up on Supernatural it freaks me out too.
You just know that Sam and Dean would have sorted the whole smoke monster problem out three years ago, and would now be lounging about on the beach drinking beers.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Damon Lindelof: LOST Finale 'Will Generate A Tremendous Amount Of Theorizing!!'
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Here's my Lost series finale prediction:

Either Rabbit and I will still be having the same argument forever, or we'll be having a completely new conversation that we are still on opposing sides of! [Wink]
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Here is my Lost series finale prediction:

There will not be a season 7

That's pretty much the only prediction I can make that I am 100% sure will actually come true.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
100%? You might want to drop that down, at least to 99%. You can never know anything in life with 100% certainty, doubly so for Lost!
 
Posted by msquared (Member # 4484) on :
 
Well that was a blood bath.

msquared
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
Yeah, that's one way to reduce storylines to a manageable number.

--Mel
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LargeTuna:
I was under the impression for a while, and still am, that AntiLocke doesn't want the candidates to leave the island at all. He wants all of them to die together, but in a way that's not "against the rules".

Looks like we have a winner!! Good Call Tuna.

I'm not clear why Locke didn't simply let them all die on the plane. Is he still planning to use the plane to escape the island?

It wasn't clear to me whether Frank was dead or alive. I wonder if they left that deliberately ambiguous.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Spoilers and all that jazz if you haven't seen it yet..

This episode made me angry.

First Sayid, then Jin and Sun... The entire time Jin was trying to get Sun out I was screaming "Get out of there Jin! You have a daughter to care for!"

Sayid did say something significant though before he blew up. He told Jack "You are the one."

My prediction: Kate is going to die, and perhaps Sawyer as well.

I think Locke is going to get Kate there on the beach and hold a gun or knife to her, and tell Sawyer and Jack they must fight and kill each other if they want to save her. I don't think Jack will play along, but Sawyer will make the decision to kill Jack. Before he can do it something will happen and Sawyer will die, (Maybe Hurley will do it to save Jack) Locke will kill Kate anyways.
 
Posted by msquared (Member # 4484) on :
 
I think Frank is dead. The bulk head door that hit him is extremely heavy. He was knocked to the ground and would have drowned. He was not a candidate, so he was expendable.

We might still see Sun and Jin in Alt time and they might come back when everything is tied up. But maybe not.

I wonder what would have happened if Sawyer had not pulled the wires on the bomb? If the Island can stop the bomb from going off on the normal timer, which is what Jack was counting on, why couldn't it stop the timer when it went at fast speed? Because Sawyer did something? Made a choice and had to live, or die, with the results?

msquared
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
I thin'k Frank is dead. The bulk head door that hit him is extremely heavy. He was knocked to the ground and would have drowned. He was not a candidate, so he was expendable.
He was expendible UNLESS he is needed to fly the plane. That's why I started thinking about it. If Frank is dead, the submarine is gone and the plane is useless, so there is no way for anyone to get off the island. We've had a fair number of surprises when we thought people like Jin or eye-patch guy were certainly dead, but then they weren't. We also don't know what happened to Miles or Richard. They could still be around.

Since everyone is still alive in Alt-time, I don't think we've eliminated any of the story lines yet.

quote:
Sayid did say something significant though before he blew up. He told Jack "You are the one."
Not exactly, he said "Because it's going to be you Jack." He did however erase any question about whether or not he killed Desmond. He didn't.
 
Posted by Tammy (Member # 4119) on :
 
[Wall Bash]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tammy:
[Wall Bash]

[Confused]
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
I didn't like that last episode at all! Kate manages to survive after being shot, and Jin and Sun die for no reason! I wish Kate would have just died, she's useless compared to everyone else. I liked the little speach Jack gave on the sub. He pretty much said everything I've been saying since early on in the season.
 
Posted by Tammy (Member # 4119) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
Originally posted by Tammy:
[Wall Bash]

[Confused]
The whole episode just left me very frustrated.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
I'm not clear why Locke didn't simply let them all die on the plane. Is he still planning to use the plane to escape the island?

Wasn't Jack's theory that for some reason he wanted them to kill each other? Seems like that goes along with the Jacob/Esau debate, they keep coming to the island and it always ends the same way. Although keeping the plane for his own escape does sound plausible.

I thought Jack was great in this episode, in both storylines. And yet again we heard, "What happened, happened" Seems like they are hammering that home every episode now.

Not suprised that Sayid was a self-sacrifice, that seemed like the only way to resolve his turmoil over the things he'd done in the past, not to mention to get out of whatever zombie hold the Locke monster had over him. Although, Rabbit, I think I'm missing something. Where was it resolved that he didn't kill Desmond? I never thought he did, but just wondering what you meant or if I didn't catch something.

I also kept waiting for Sun to come out and say "go home and raise our daughter," but she never did.

In Locke's previous alt-story his fiancee didn't want him to contact Jack because that would building up false hopes and to accept his fate as it was now. Seemed like his decision not to do so resolved something that we'd seen all along in Locke's character, an inability to accept or deal with reality. But in this episode, they implied that he was not letting himself think about recovery due to guilt/self-punishment. Did that seem like a contradiction to anyone else?

I liked the episode. Does seem like it's heading for a "last man standing" scenario, and that the last man will be Jack. I hope not, though. I have to admit, I didn't feel nearly the emotion over Sun & Jin that I did when they killed off Charlie. I can't imagine them offing Hurley.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
I'm not clear why Locke didn't simply let them all die on the plane. Is he still planning to use the plane to escape the island?

We were discussing the same thing Rabbit. Which devolved into a discussion of who really set the bomb, and why Widmore would wire a plane to blow up, which could potentially kill all the candidates he was trying to protect, instead of just blowing up the plane in the first place before anyone could get to it We didn't really come up with any great answers, as we don't have any other suggestions as to who could have wired it. Esau almost certainly did it. We thought about Richard and friends, but they would've just destroyed it as well.

quote:
Originally posted by msquared:
I wonder what would have happened if Sawyer had not pulled the wires on the bomb? If the Island can stop the bomb from going off on the normal timer, which is what Jack was counting on, why couldn't it stop the timer when it went at fast speed? Because Sawyer did something?

I think Jack was absolutely right in his analysis of the situation. I think what happened was that the act of pulling out the pins from the bomb was in fact THE TRIGGER that sets off the bomb. When if it had just run down naturally nothing would have happened. This was the loophole Esau needed to get the Losties to kill themselves.

Last night was pretty brutal, but in true Lost fashion, as soon as Sun and Jin's character arc was done, so were their characters. They did this with Faraday, had him gone a whole season, and when he finally comes back we get him for one episode and than boom...dead.

Sayid had a good death though. After his conversation with Desmond the other episode we could tell that he had changed in his heart (Desmond's question about Nadia really got to him), and this episode he was finally able to prove it with action. I was kind of in shock after he died, so much so that I didn't really feel the force of Sun and Jin's death till after the episode was over.

Best line of Lost ever, "There is no Sayid." Woah... [Smile]
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Wasn't Jack's theory that for some reason he wanted them to kill each other?
it all has to do with rules and loopholes.

Remember what the vision of the little boy said to him, "you can't kill him, the rules". He needs all the candidates to be dead. but he can't kill them himself. he needs to set things up so they kill each other, or are killed by other people.

quote:
Although, Rabbit, I think I'm missing something. Where was it resolved that he didn't kill Desmond? I never thought he did, but just wondering what you meant or if I didn't catch something.
right before he ran off with the bomb he said that desmond was in a well and that locke wants him dead. or something like that.

quote:
I liked the episode. Does seem like it's heading for a "last man standing" scenario, and that the last man will be Jack. I hope not, though. I have to admit, I didn't feel nearly the emotion over Sun & Jin that I did when they killed off Charlie. I can't imagine them offing Hurley.
QFT, nothing will ever hit me like Charlie's death.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
right before he ran off with the bomb he said that desmond was in a well and that locke wants him dead. or something like that.

Ah, I knew I missed something Sayid said -- I really need DVR. Wanted to rewind that scene so badly!
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Although, Rabbit, I think I'm missing something. Where was it resolved that he didn't kill Desmond? I never thought he did, but just wondering what you meant or if I didn't catch something.
Right before he grabs the bomb, he says to Jack "Listen carefully, there is a well on the other island, a half mile south of the camp we just left. Desmond is inside it. Locke wants him dead which means you're going to need him." Jack responds "Why are you telling me this." Desmond replies "Because its going to be you Jack."
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
quote:
I'm not clear why Locke didn't simply let them all die on the plane. Is he still planning to use the plane to escape the island?

We were discussing the same thing Rabbit. Which devolved into a discussion of who really set the bomb, and why Widmore would wire a plane to blow up, which could potentially kill all the candidates he was trying to protect, instead of just blowing up the plane in the first place before anyone could get to it We didn't really come up with any great answers, as we don't have any other suggestions as to who could have wired it. Esau almost certainly did it. We thought about Richard and friends, but they would've just destroyed it as well.
Maybe that's how Esau can be killed. Maybe if he's killed together with Jacob (or with Jacob gone, with all the candidates), he'll actually die. Maybe Widmore was trying to finish Esau off for good.

And if Esau hadn't gotten on the plane, the rest of them would have been very suspicious.
 
Posted by Tammy (Member # 4119) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Uprooted:
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
right before he ran off with the bomb he said that desmond was in a well and that locke wants him dead. or something like that.

Ah, I knew I missed something Sayid said -- I really need DVR. Wanted to rewind that scene so badly!
I played that scene back three times and just gave up on it. I didn't want to turn the volume up, because everyone in the house was sleeping. I don't know why he had to whisper like that. Geesh! Glad to know what he might have said.

[ May 05, 2010, 02:33 PM: Message edited by: Tammy ]
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
My prediction, based on the fact that they said the ending will "encourage speculation," as now:

There will NOT be an explanation of what exactly altTime is. The show will have two endings, one in which Jack becomes caretaker of the island, probably with everyone else dead, and another one in altTime in which everyone lives happily ever. My interpretation of that, assuming it works out that way, will be that either "whatever happened, happened" was true up until one interation came in which they used the nuke, OR that "whatever happened, happend" ALWAYS resulting in the two timelines, on which goes in a slight loop, diverges, both ending the way I already described.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
I don't think it can end that way. They've made too big a deal of the characters in alt time coming to realize that there is something wrong with their "reality."
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
I don't think they can do that - they've already set up the question as being central to Season 6, so I think they need to answer what altTime is. Somehow they have to answer what caused it.... I'm guessing that quote from Miles from deceased Juliet that "it worked" will come into play.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I'm still sticking by my theory that Juliet was accessing altTime, and that those lines she said about going out for coffee and going dutch will be uttered by her, to either Jack or Sawyer, before Series end. But I also think, that similar to how the characters in altTime are picking up on the wrongness of what's happening, they're also dealing with incomplete information and making educated guesses about what is going on. I think that while Juliet was able to access this, she said "it worked" without really understanding the full nature of what she was accessing.

So, I agree that it will come into play, I just don't know if it will in the way you're indicating.
 
Posted by Wendybird (Member # 84) on :
 
I was sad about Sun and Jim - but nothing can compare to the death of Charlie. Although I did cry when Shannon was killed.
 
Posted by Hobbes (Member # 433) on :
 
I almost turned it off when they all agreed to storm the submarine together because of the heavy resitance. Everyone knows Locke can kill whoever he wants whenever he wants (minus the canidates of course) and he just did it seconds before they had a discussion about all going down and having a pitched battle! It's nice for Locke since it played out just how he wanted but, honestly, I really couldn't believe that there wouldn't have been a single charecter that raised their hand and pointed out that instead of risking getting everyone killed to check out the Sub Locke just turn into the smoke monster and take care of it. Or walk around all bullet-proof (including his clothes, btw, a little strange I thought).

Hobbes [Smile]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
I'm still sticking by my theory that Juliet was accessing altTime, and that those lines she said about going out for coffee and going dutch will be uttered by her, to either Jack or Sawyer, before Series end.

Agreed, except I'm confident she will say it to Sawyer not Jack.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I go back and forth Rabbit. Part of me thinks Sawyer makes complete sense. The other part remembers her reason for doing what she did was so "that if they never met, she'd never have to lose him".

Though, there is also the similarities that have been pointed out between the mirror surrounded by hats in Juliet's home in Dharmaville, and the mirror surrounded by hats in the home of Jack's son's mother. This would imply Juliet is Jack's ex-wife, which would either imply it's not Jack she says those lines to, since those phrases sound more like first meeting flirtation, or that Jack and Juliet rekindle something....anyway, i'm not so tied to either one!
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Hobbes:
I almost turned it off when they all agreed to storm the submarine together because of the heavy resitance. Everyone knows Locke can kill whoever he wants whenever he wants (minus the canidates of course) and he just did it seconds before they had a discussion about all going down and having a pitched battle! It's nice for Locke since it played out just how he wanted but, honestly, I really couldn't believe that there wouldn't have been a single charecter that raised their hand and pointed out that instead of risking getting everyone killed to check out the Sub Locke just turn into the smoke monster and take care of it. Or walk around all bullet-proof (including his clothes, btw, a little strange I thought).

Locke doesn't have his abilities over water. That's why he can't cross from island to island as smoke. They all know that, so it stands to reason that he wouldn't be able to smoke into the sub and kill everyone.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I didn't remember that, although I also didn't think about it at the time one way or another. But I do think it'd have been a good time for Hurley to say "wait, dude, can't you just do X?" and have Locke say "Nope! Insert technobabble"
 
Posted by Xann. (Member # 11482) on :
 
My Official Guess: In the finale The man in black will escape,into the Alt-time, and start causing unhappiness through out all the characters. This will go on until Hugo decides to take up the mantle of protecting the island, which he will do in the company of every single other candidate in ghost form. The Man in Black will be stranded on a very small island surrounded by water than more land where a small tree is growing, thus giving him hope that someday he can get off by making a bridge. I also assume that water is some kind of barrier to him, like he can't enter it willingly.

And for the the big twist ending....... I'm going price is right rules, the winner is whoever guess closest without going over. I have no idea of the twist.
 
Posted by daventor (Member # 11981) on :
 
Well, I really, REALLY enjoyed the episode, probably cause I'm a big fan of stuff actually happening. It was suspenseful, moving, I felt the characters were true to themselves (except that it would have been nice for Sun to mention her's and Jin's daughter when she's trying to convince him to leave; other than that though, I bought everybody's decisions and actions). I really liked how Sayid ended up. His death was not played up or made melodramatic [no slow-mo montage), but was nonetheless still very noble and moving.

I hope Lapidus somehow miraculously survives, though; I was hoping at least one not-major-just-supporting character might make it to the end. Dang, they sure have shrunk the number of characters regular-island side, haven't they.

I'm also really happy to have Jack seemingly back in true hero form. He was my favorite character in the first season, but in later seasons he got pretty psycho and less likable. I really like that his character truly has evolved (from man of science to man of faith) and that it's shaping up for him to be the main dude again (though I still think somehow alt-Locke's gonna have to come to the island).
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
I think Deadlocke is going to inherit the island.

Jack is going to save him. and maybe even the monster.

(not that I think it'll happen, or that I want it to happen, but it would be cool to see Smokey escape the island and wreak havoc in LA or Newyork or somethin'.)
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by daventor:
I was hoping at least one not-major-just-supporting character might make it to the end.

Miles is still alive and kicking.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
And Zoe.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
And Kate.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
As the finale looms near, my hopes of an Ethan's Mom-centric episode grow slim.

Although with the finale extended to two and a half hours, my hopes that it will be the Ethan's Mom-centric episode grow . . .
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by docmagik:
And Kate.

She isn't a candidate, but you can't say she isn't a major character.

Btw, did you know that the actress who plays Zoe is married to Richard Schiff?
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I thought "and Kate" was a joke, about how boring and inconsequential she's become.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
It was.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
Although with the finale extended to two and a half hours, my hopes that it will be the Ethan's Mom-centric episode grow . . .
SPOILER...

...

...

Sorry, but I'm pretty sure it's going to be all about the dog. (In fact, I'm betting if you look carefully at that cave, Vincent's name is not crossed off...)
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
I think I know exactly why Sun didn't tell Jin to go back to their daughter. It's because none of our losties are getting off the island, at least not to original time. It would be pointless for her to say you have a daughter to take care of and him never make it to see her. It would render that emotional scene useless.

Having them both die is a way for the writers to avoid that problem. And after a re-watch with my sister, I can say I still hate this episode.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I'm not sure why people are hating on the episode so much. Stuff actually HAPPENED. A major plot point we've been building towards was reached, and the final plot point set up rather nicely.
 
Posted by Orincoro (Member # 8854) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Raymond Arnold:
I thought "and Kate" was a joke, about how boring and inconsequential she's become.

The only characters that have ever been able to hold my interest for long were Desmond, Miles, Ben, and Locke. Richard could have been good, but they cut his balls of this season, apparently.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Raymond, I really enjoyed the episode. And on a rewatch enjoyed it even more.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Question: Why didn't Locke just kill Desmond? If he wanted him dead, he could have just killed him on his own. Why get Sayid involved?

Is Desmond a secret candidate?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
that's a good question Geraine. We know it's only candidates that he has to follow certain rules about not killing. Why Desmond?
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
We don't know it's only candidates he can't kill... He hasn't killed Kate after all. Or Ben, or Richard, or many of the Losties from Seasons 1-5 that he could have.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
By the way, do you remember the seemingly pointless episode where Paulo and Nikki are killed by the medusa spider? In that episode the spider bites both of them and paralyzes them... but they aren't killed until the other Losties bury them alive. What was strange at the time of that episode was that we heard the Smoke Monster noises when the spiders bit them, suggesting that somehow the monster was behind the spider attacks.

Looking back now at that episode, I wonder if that was the first time the Smoke Monster tricked the Losties into killing two of their own. I always thought that episode was kind of a waste, but maybe it was intended to foreshadow the trickery of MiB.

[ May 11, 2010, 09:58 AM: Message edited by: Tresopax ]
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Interesting thought, Tresopax!
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Spoiler:

Tonights episode is entitle "What they died for". You don't suppose "They" could mean Niki and Paulo. After all, they had the most pointless deaths in the show.

I think its much more likely that it refers to Sun and Jin, or all the main characters (Charlie, Libby, Boone, Shannon, Juliette . . . .) who've died. But maybe Niki and Paulo will show up too and we'll get an answer to why the writers stuck in that pointless episode.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Rabbit, tonight's episode is called "Across the Sea". "What they died for" is next week's episode!

quote:
Originally posted by Tresopax:
We don't know it's only candidates he can't kill... He hasn't killed Kate after all. Or Ben, or Richard, or many of the Losties from Seasons 1-5 that he could have.

True, but the difference is that we don't have any indicators he wanted those other people dead, where as here, we know he wants Desmond dead, but left the work to someone else.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
I'm thinking "What They Died For" might refer to everyone who died so far this series... Maybe it will reveal what Jacob's goal has been? Or maybe what the point of AltTime is?
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tresopax:
We don't know it's only candidates he can't kill... He hasn't killed Kate after all. Or Ben, or Richard, or many of the Losties from Seasons 1-5 that he could have.

Right, but he HAS killed people that were not candidates. He killed Mr. Ecko (Such a waste, he was actually my favorite character after Hugo), the pilot, and many many others throughout the years.

I still think he is keeping Kate around to use as leverage. If he cannot kill Jack and Sawyer, why not hold Kate hostage and tell them to fight to the death to save her?

Afterall, she is the only non-candidate left. Well..... Besides Desmond. (I still think there is something more to him)

Though...MIB cannot kill Richard because it is against the rules as well... So maybe there is another type of person that he cannot kill. Richard is not a candidate but was granted immortality by Jacob. Perhaps those that have been "blessed" by Jacob cannot be killed by MIB?
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
quote:
Originally posted by Tresopax:
We don't know it's only candidates he can't kill... He hasn't killed Kate after all. Or Ben, or Richard, or many of the Losties from Seasons 1-5 that he could have.

Right, but he HAS killed people that were not candidates. He killed Mr. Ecko (Such a waste, he was actually my favorite character after Hugo), the pilot, and many many others throughout the years.

I still think he is keeping Kate around to use as leverage. If he cannot kill Jack and Sawyer, why not hold Kate hostage and tell them to fight to the death to save her?

Afterall, she is the only non-candidate left. Well..... Besides Desmond. (I still think there is something more to him)

Though...MIB cannot kill Richard because it is against the rules as well... So maybe there is another type of person that he cannot kill. Richard is not a candidate but was granted immortality by Jacob. Perhaps those that have been "blessed" by Jacob cannot be killed by MIB?

There is unquestionably something more to Desmond. No speculation necessary. We've been told "the rules don't apply to him" (Daniel), he is "the only person whose survived high level EM radiation (Widmore)", and "You're going to need him" (Sayid). Plus we've know that he has consciousness has been able to time jump, Penny is his constant, and that he has a clearer understanding of the two time lines than anyone else.

Given that we know there are rule which keep Esau from killing some people and that Esau didn't kill Desmond but instead ordered Sayid to do it, I think its reasonable to presume the rules won't allow Esau to kill Desmond.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
The more I think about it I don't know if I should even be calling them rules. Rules can be broken, often with a consequence.

I don't think MIB even has the ability to kill a candidate. If he does but is following a rule, the consequence must be so severe that he is scared of doing it.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
When we talk about rules, it makes me think of the Ben Linus vs Charles Widmore fight. Ben thought Keamy couldn't kill Alex because it was against the rules. He told Widmore he'd broken the rules.

And there are other rules, or requirements. Like all of them needing to go back to the island, or none of them, remember? And it was Daniel's mother who seemed to know all those rules. How did she know them?

Jacob wouldn't talk to people directly: only through Richard. At least once they got to the island. But Richard, as we've seen, really didn't know much. So how did Daniel's parents and Ben find out all the information they've had?
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
If you think back to Season four, Ben had that gong in his house that called the smoke monster. Who is to say they weren't sometimes guided or taught by the MIB what the rules were?
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
Whoa ...
 
Posted by Xann. (Member # 11482) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LargeTuna:
Whoa ...

Kinda what I was thinking, I haven't officially decided what happened there. What I do know is that I was impressed with how much the child and baby actors looked like Jacob and his brother.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
I thought tonight was a waste of an episode. I wouldn't have minded it if it had come earlier in the season, but with it being so close to the end now (and after last week) I can't believe they wasted so much time with the Jacob/MIB beginnings. That could have easily been a jump-cut flashback episode, with things actually Progressing on the Island while we found out (more quickly!!) that they were brothers destined to guard a light in a cave that turns dead people into Smoke Monsters.

All I learned from this episode is that Jacob is a doofus and the MIB is like a parody of early Sawyer: far angrier and more vengeful than his circumstances warrant.
 
Posted by daventor (Member # 11981) on :
 
Yeah, jury's out for me on this episode: it all depends on the follow-up. I still don't have any real hard feelings against Jacob (or MIB, for that matter; it did manage to make him much more sympathetic), but dang it I want a reason for it all! I know the writers like to keep things mysterious and that not all questions will be answered by the end of the season, but in watching this show I've seen a lot of suffering, a lot of death, and lots of supposedly innocent/good/just-trying-their-best-with-the-info-they-got people constantly manipulating, hurting, or even killing each other (this episode being a prime example). I want there to actually be a satisfying reason for all this suffering than just a crazy homicidal lady who did a really crappy parenting job and wouldn't explain anything to her two adopted children outside really vague/cliche mystic mumbo jumbo.

I'm still hoping the end of this series will satisfy, but this episode didn't exactly reassure me at all.

That said, I liked all the performances (even the kids) fine.
 
Posted by daventor (Member # 11981) on :
 
I was looking at comments on another site and actually am going to quote of the guys there because I think he summed up my feelings better than I actually can:

"While I appreciate the big reveal of Adam & Eve's origin, I think the showrunners are really streching the patience of most of the audience. I've been hanging on and hoping that everything would pan out in the end, but with only 3 1/2 hours left for this series, I'm dreading the worst. This entire season seems to be a rushed hodge podge of non-answers. Week after week, I wonder if this is the story that the creators really wanted to tell or if they didn't really have any idea what they were doing. This season has felt like a dramatic departure, both in tone and focus, from what was built over the past 5 seasons. I can't help but wonder what the subject matter of this season really has to do with most of the mysteries that were created over the course of the series. I also feel like the interjection of Jacob/MIB's mother as the equivalent of an anti-deus ex machina does nothing for closure to the purpose and value of this island. I've always been a huge "Lost" apologist, but now I'm not sure I can buy what is being sold to me. Maybe you can rationalize how a bright light that lies inside us all is also the heart of the island, turns people into giant smoke monsters, and with the combined power of water, can be attached to a giant donkey wheel to transport people off the island. I'm starting to think that the island is the missing element to form Captain Planet."

On the bright side, the next episode is entitled "What they died for." So if they actually deliver on that title and explain what the point of all this madness has been, I think I'll be good. If not...
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by daventor:
"...Maybe you can rationalize how a bright light that lies inside us all is also the heart of the island, turns people into giant smoke monsters, and with the combined power of water, can be attached to a giant donkey wheel to transport people off the island. I'm starting to think that the island is the missing element to form Captain Planet."

Awesome.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
By your powers combined!

I liked this episode. I did enjoy the twist at the end.

What language was Jacob's mother speaking at the beginning? Was it Hebrew? It makes it sound like they were on the island for thousands of years.

So the real MIB is dead. I don't think Jacob killed him at all. When he went into the light, he released the smoke monster, who threw him away and took his form. The real MIB was judged by the smoke monster and was killed. The BSM absorbed some memories, just as it did when it took Locke's form.

I remember in Season 1 when Locke said he "Looked into the eye of the island, and it was beautiful." Later when he was speaking to Mr. Eko he said that he had seen a "light". So who knows what the bsm really is.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
I liked this episode. I hated the one before it.

I don't care in the slightest if things do or do not progress on the island. It's all about the motivations and emotonal stories for me. (I'm also very biased abou which characters I like watching and don't like watching)

I'm of the opinion that the black smoke monster has a whole lot of Jacob's brother influencing and driving it. He may be the sole reason it even wants to leave the island.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
And since he talked to Claire the other episode about his crazy mother and their messed up relationship and all the other stuff we've gotten from him about his relatively "normal" origins, I think it's safe to assume that Esau's "soul" is indeed merged with the essence of the smoke monster.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
I took the cave to be Jacob's version of the "loophole" - he didn't kill MIB (MIB lives on as the Smoke Monster, even if his body is gone) so he didn't break the rule about no killing, yet he gave MIB what their "mother" called a fate worse than death.

I have to wonder how much of what happened was intended by their "mother" the whole time. She did say thank you at the end, after all, similar to how Jacob died. Did she intend for MIB to kill her? Did she intend for him to be Jacob's rival? She must've known Jacob would not be happy, but also knew he couldn't ever kill him.

...

I'm guessing this cave/light is what Widmore's electromagnetic research team is looking for, and what Desmond's job is going to involve.

...

Also, does this all now mean that when the Losties nuked the island, they blew up the light that is within all living things?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Tres, I thought the same thing about the cave/light and Desmond.

I also thought about what would happen if the person who is in the role of the protector of the Island went into that hole in the cave? Since the protector and the smoke monster very much seem to be opposing sides, yin and yang, etc...what would happen if they were joined into one?

So yeah, basically, I thought that by the end of the season we'd either see Desmond go in there, or whoever the final candidate is go in there.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Didn't seem like guarding the "light" was all that cool a position, in the end. Especially in light of the mother's "Thank you." Such an honor to guard it, and it's mystically and mysteriously imperative, but she welcomes release from it?

What exactly is her job? Crazy Mama never seemed to actually DO any guarding, unless you count knocking out MIB and re-filling the hole. She's trapped on this island, fated to guard a cave until she finds (raises) a successor, but what is she Doing, exactly? Just waiting until someone tries to use the energy, and then thwarting them? Is that it? One person on an island, a female with nothing but her bare hands to guard "the light that's in everyone"? She lets her adopted son live with the "bad" people for thirty years, never realizing that their digging wells to the energy source? Only at the last minute does she stop them? Why?
And what is the deal with Jacob, then? He obviously allowed many, many "bad" people to come to the Island, to dig or re-dig wells, set up the frozen donkey wheel, to USE IT (at least twice that we know of) -- and the energy wasn't "snuffed out" or released onto the world as promised. I just don't buy this mythology.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
What language was Jacob's mother speaking at the beginning? Was it Hebrew? It makes it sound like they were on the island for thousands of years.

It was Latin. Which makes sense, considering the centurian looking uniforms the men had on.

quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
So the real MIB is dead. I don't think Jacob killed him at all. When he went into the light, he released the smoke monster, who threw him away and took his form. The real MIB was judged by the smoke monster and was killed. The BSM absorbed some memories, just as it did when it took Locke's form.

I don't know. Smokie said that he was once human, and that he had a crazy mother. So he at least thinks he's Esau.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
The one thing I can definitely say after seeing last night's ep is that Jacob is a schmuck, and Esau seems completely reasonable to me. Esau acted like a human being should act. Inquisitive, where Jacob is merely accepting. Adventurous, where Jacob is a wuss. Demanding of truth and principles, where Jacob goes along with whatever Mama says. Someone who sees the value in striving and innovation and coming up with new ideas. While Jacob is all about the status quo.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Okay... those of you with poor impulse control are just going to have to take responsibility for yourselves. No complaints.

The Doc Arzt site has two Sneak Peaks for the next episode, which ABC released. For those of you who haven't seen Sneak Peaks before, they're simply about a minute of footage from an upcoming episode, and they're meant to whet your appetite. There've been eps where they released 3 or 4 Sneak Peaks. This time, there are two (so far).

Some would call these spoilers. But they aren't, really. They don't reveal major plot points, but they do contain show content. So spoiler alert, and like I said, no complaints if you don't have the intestinal fortitude to refrain.

Linky
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Something else I've been thinking about is the whole parent issues theme that has been prevalent throughout this show.

Originally it was mostly "daddy issues", with Claire, Kate, Jack, Sawyer, Locke, Jin, Sun, Hurley, etc...all having serious relationship issues with their dads. Then some mommy issues started sneaking it, particularly with Eloise and Faraday. This last episode featured what I'll call the Prime parent issue. Both Jacob and Esau had issues with their adoptive mom.

Esau had issues with her lying and control. And Jacob had issues with her greater love for Esau.

What I find interesting is that as adults, it's Esau who was the one who embraced his mother's philosophy, "they come, they fight, they destroy, the corrupt, it always ends the same". And it is Jacob who has turned away from his mother's philosophy. Jacob is not only a big proponent of man's ability to redeem himself, but of the idea that we have the free will to choose (and make the right choice). Why i find this interesting is that Jacob was to a certain degree forced into his role, his mother laid it out to him in terms that "he didn't have a choice in the matter".

So here, I think we're finding an explanation for how the Candidates are chosen. My initial speculations were that Jacob was provided a list of Candidates by his predecessor, obviously not true. What if in fact, Jacob chose his candidates BECAUSE of their parent issues. Because he wanted to prove that in the end we ARE free to make choices, regardless of the messed up influences our parents had on us.

What do you think? It helps explain why so many people on the Island had parent issues...because those are the types of people Jacob drew towards the Island.

[ May 12, 2010, 05:03 PM: Message edited by: Strider ]
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Strider, I suspect that is exactly the type of question LOST followers will be continuing to debate forever, because I don't think they're going to tell us. But thinking of it that way makes the episode potentially more interesting for me, because like Lisa I really did lose interest in Jacob. He turned into Tommy Smothers: "Mom always liked you best."

I didn't like the insertion of the footage of Jack and Kate and Locke. It seemed so awkward and contrived, not to mention unnecessary. If they think we can't put two and two together, why not at least put it in at the beginning as a "previously on LOST" clip? But who Adam and Eve were has never been one of the questions I cared about anyway, so it was a serious anticlimax as an ending as far as I was concerned.

And why can't Locke/Esau/Smokie have a name? Seriously, did Mother and Jacob just call him Son or Brother his whole life because Claudia didn't know she was having twins? What do the writers gain by not naming the character, or, more probably, withholding his name from the viewers?

Nope, not a big fan of this episode overall. Raised more questions in my mind than answers -- like why could Boy in Black see his dead mother and not Jacob, and does that matter?
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:


I also thought about what would happen if the person who is in the role of the protector of the Island went into that hole in the cave? Since the protector and the smoke monster very much seem to be opposing sides, yin and yang, etc...what would happen if they were joined into one?


What would happen?

Probably something like this:

http://www.wearysloth.com/Gallery/ActorsO/13026-4397.gif

That's right. I went there. May Jim Henson rest in peace.
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
The one thing I can definitely say after seeing last night's ep is that Jacob is a schmuck, and Esau seems completely reasonable to me. Esau acted like a human being should act. Inquisitive, where Jacob is merely accepting. Adventurous, where Jacob is a wuss. Demanding of truth and principles, where Jacob goes along with whatever Mama says. Someone who sees the value in striving and innovation and coming up with new ideas. While Jacob is all about the status quo.

The thought has been in the back of my mind for quite a few episodes now that at the end of the series Jacob might be shown as the one to be opposed, after all. It's not something I necessarily think will happen, but if it does I will be completely unsurprised. This episode made the possibility a little stronger, I think.

--Mel
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Interview w/ the writers

Best line (after interviewer pummels them w/ questions from readers):

DL: Are there any readers who actually like the show?
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Hee. Jacob and Esau Lost Game on Jimmy Kimmel.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
The one thing I can definitely say after seeing last night's ep is that Jacob is a schmuck, and Esau seems completely reasonable to me. Esau acted like a human being should act. Inquisitive, where Jacob is merely accepting. Adventurous, where Jacob is a wuss. Demanding of truth and principles, where Jacob goes along with whatever Mama says. Someone who sees the value in striving and innovation and coming up with new ideas. While Jacob is all about the status quo.
I think it's important to point out that this was thousands of years in the past though - Jacob seems to have gone through some character development in the meanwhile. Like Strider pointed out, he has essentially rejected his mother's beliefs about other human beings as being inherently corrupt. And I think that scene with Richard was a turning point in which he changed from accepting the status quo to working towards progress. They revealed his story backwards, but I think we can now see how he was a dynamic character, sort or mirroring the progress he's trying to make with the Losties.

I have to think he's going to end up being the "right" side in the end - he does represent faith that this whole island was worth protecting, and if it ends up being not worth protecting, the writers would be essentially admitting the whole show was pointless! Jacob represents the viewpoint of all those fans who say watching all these years will be worth it, because it will all come together in the end.

[ May 13, 2010, 10:15 AM: Message edited by: Tresopax ]
 
Posted by Xaposert (Member # 1612) on :
 
quote:
I have to think he's going to end up being the "right" side in the end - he does represent faith that this whole island was worth protecting, and if it end's up being not worth protecting, the writers would be essentially admitting the whole show was pointless!
I disagree... This show is about the characters, not the island. Maybe MiB was right all along when he said the island really isn't worth protecting, and maybe "Mother" was wrong. And maybe that's the whole point of the alternate reality - showing that the island is destroyed, yet the world goes on, and the characters still resolve their problems without it. Maybe that's the timeline where MiB has won.

And because of the bleeding over between the timelines, the writers avoid the idea that Seasons 1-5 were a waste because what happened in that timeline ends up changing the new timeline.

So, yeah... I liked this episode! [Wink]
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
I have a feeing MiB and "Mother" are both wrong.

Jacob and Jack are close to right, because I don't see either one of them of the exact same opinion or taking even similar actions to "mother" They just appear to be on the same side right now, when in reality they will turn out very different, because there are more than two sides. The way mother thnks and manipulates reminds me more of MiB than Jacob.

But that's what I'm hoping for anyway.
 
Posted by Armoth (Member # 4752) on :
 
1) I dunno about the whole time thing. Sure there are ships and everything, and the Roman thing, but what about all the Egyptian influences? The temples, the statue, etc.

Two gods warring seemed more appropriate than two dudes that were raised in purity. Which makes me think that CJ (yea, I'm calling her CJ) might be some sort of goddess figure.

Let's keep in mind that Esau is "special", he knows things. He knew to create a ridiculous wheel just because he feels them out. So I feel like there must be more to him and Jacob than the fact that they were raised in purity.

2) I don't get it. We have so much story, and so little purpose. We get these little glimpses - CJ's and Esau's little rant about how humans are bad and they never change - and Jacob's quip about how everything else is progress.

Lemme just rebut Lisa for a minute - Lisa said that Esau is normable, relatable, how you'd expect a human being to act, and that Jacob is a wuss. I disagree. I think that Jacob understands that the people are evil. Even Esau sees that the people are evil. Jacob and Esau were raised pure, away from greed and selfishness. What motivates Esau isn't a sense of good - it is the type of curiousness where you shirk your obligations and you try to break free just so that you can see what else is out there.

I see the nobility in Jacob. Loyalty to his mother and the never-ending sense of obligation. He can't lie. He can't do wrong. Someone has to protect the light, and he knows he has to do it. That scene with the wine - I mean, he couldnt drink, I wouldnt drink - he has no idea what the light even is - but his overwhelming sense of obligation is what made him drink. And that sense of obligation is what makes him so good.

We have to connect this episode to the history we know. Why does Jacob bring people to the island? He is trying to prove that people can do good - and he is also trying to find a candidate.

One thing I've noticed is that almost everyone who has died has died in sacrifice. I think that is the huge theme that the show is building to. The fact that the candidates (or other major losties) lay down their lives, is the epitome of selflessness, and is the sort of good that can perhaps change the perspective of Esau.

We have Juliet's sacrifice, Jin for Sun, Sayid for the rest of them, Charlie, - I'm sure there are others - but I think this is a huge theme, especially in light of the upcoming episode "what they died for."

In the years since this episode to the Jacob we now know, Jacob grew a personality and he is out there with something to prove.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
Hmm. I agree somewhat with Lisa (insofar as old school Jacob is a wuss whose only "goodness" comes from Blind Devotion, which is not a trait I respect at all). I do think that Esau (I like how they deliberately leave him nameless, so that we are free to keep calling him Esau and not be wrong), has several good and relatable characteristics (a desire to "shirk" your responsibilities is pretty understandable when the person who gave you those responsibilities killed your real mother and has demonstrated no particular good reason for said responsibilities).

But even back then, it's clear that he sees other humans only as things to be manipulated. I think it's somewhat justified by the fact that all he has seen of humans leads him to believe they DESERVE to be manipulated. Two thousand years later he hasn't changed a bit. Whereas Jacob seems to have gained some perspective.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Armoth:
One thing I've noticed is that almost everyone who has died has died in sacrifice. I think that is the huge theme that the show is building to. The fact that the candidates (or other major losties) lay down their lives, is the epitome of selflessness, and is the sort of good that can perhaps change the perspective of Esau.

I don't see that sort of selflessness as a good thing. Not in any way.
 
Posted by Xaposert (Member # 1612) on :
 
quote:
Jacob and Jack are close to right, because I don't see either one of them of the exact same opinion or taking even similar actions to "mother" They just appear to be on the same side right now, when in reality they will turn out very different, because there are more than two sides. The way mother thnks and manipulates reminds me more of MiB than Jacob.
Jacob is quite manipulative and loose with the lives of other humans too, though. Remember how he saves Jack and Hurley from the Temple before the Monster attack, but seems to have an almost indifferent attitude about the hundred or so people left behind who will die? He seems to be okay with casualties, as long as they serve his greater plan.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
The "mom" is, like, the worst of everything in Lost. Violence is her primary solution to everything. She's needlessly cryptic, and withholds information from the people who need it most for no obvious reason. In the moment that Jacob threw Esau into the cavern, he acted the most like her that we've seen- refusing to accept new information that might change his course, violent in spite of all consequences. And, yes, I know she raised them as their mother yatta yatta, but his loyalty to her is truly baffling.

Esau is still a despicable monster, but at least he has a reason for being the way that he is. Jacob seems to be the one who's screwing everyone's life up. And the alternate timeline seems to be making a good case that everyone would be better off without his presence in their lives.

So what precisely happens when the Light That Burns Within Us All is nuked, anyway?
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
I think the altVerse isn't a matter of "reality minus Jacob," it's "reality minus Jacob PLUS Eloise."
 
Posted by Xaposert (Member # 1612) on :
 
"So what precisely happens when the Light That Burns Within Us All is nuked, anyway?"

It is questions like this that make Lost awesome.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
I think that Mother doesn't know what the Light is, and has made up something to explain it, or she knows exactly what it is and has to lie to keep the secret.

Esau seemed to be trying to do the right thing by finding out what it is, but Jacob and Mother were close-minded and hostile to his curiousity. Esau must have found out something about it if he knew that a wheel would work on it.
 
Posted by swbarnes2 (Member # 10225) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Armoth:
One thing I've noticed is that almost everyone who has died has died in sacrifice.

Wait, what?

Charlie and Saiyd died that way, maybe Jin, but everyone else?

Anna-Lucia? Libby? The marshall? The guy who got his neck broken guarding the camp? Frogurt? Arst? Shannon? Locke? Nikki and Paolo? The co-pilot? Ilana?

I find it hard to argue that any of those are sacrifices, and that list is hardly complete.
 
Posted by Armoth (Member # 4752) on :
 
Fine. Lemme rephrase.

Anyone who has died ever since the writers have been writing toward a telos...

And you can make a good argument that Ilana died in sacrifice.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
How? Ilana got blowed up accidentally.
 
Posted by Armoth (Member # 4752) on :
 
Meh, she put her life on the line. She knew the dynamite risks.
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
I have been re-watching the series from the beginning and so found this episode hilarious (In a good way - I liked it very much, actually).

First Season: We assume that the Lostlets will find out the answers to all the mysteries once they get the hatch open. John Locke is going to figure it all out.

Then:
Maybe Desmond... no, Mr Eko is the one who will work out what... oh, no wait, it's got to be He-Who-Isn't-Henry-Gale. He's an Other. He was born on the Island. He talks to Jacob.
He'll know the answers.
Or maybe some remaining Dharma folks will tell us.

Then:
What do you mean Ben wasn't born on the Island, doesn't talk to Jacob and doesn't know anything?
And Dharma are all dead and didn't know anything anyway?

Okay, but Richard is ancient. Maybe he's an ancient Egyptian, or a Roman, or something. He actually does talk to Jacob.
He'll give us answers...
We finally spend some time with Richard. He turns out to be a normal guy who's just really confused.

Fine. But Smokey and Jacob have all the answers...
Wait.

But their mad other-mother...
Nope.

All these characters have been doing everything they did for faith in something that they don't understand.
They're all John Locke, bravely throwing themselves away on a half-felt suspicion, never understanding anything at all.
As are we, for watching this show - giving our time, our thoughts and emotions to something that may never have an answer or a resolution.
They're us.

It's all rather lovely. Unless it annoys you.
In which case, never watch 'The Prisoner' - they're not numbers, they're free men, but they don't understand what the numbers are for and neither do we...
I like it.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
So, this has been one long, complicated practical joke? Like life?
 
Posted by Armoth (Member # 4752) on :
 
Cat's Cradle
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
Like life. You always have to hope everything works out in the end or you would go crazy.
Maybe you're just seeing patterns and squinting to find the meaning. Or maybe, this time, everything will become clear.

Everyone hopes, at some point, that someone, somewhere, has all the answers and can tell them why. Only, sometimes the answer turns out to be 'because'.
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
the answer to why? is always because.

and some people make their own rules, while others follow other people's rules.

right and wrong. good and evil.

Nope.

there's only this way and that way, black and white.

it's all relative to our own personal selves.

we are Lost on an island floating around in space called Earth. no one seems to have any legitimate answers and the one (maybe)solid thing in all the uncertainty in this life is hope. and that's why we keep watching. and that's why we make sacrifices. trying to keep that hope alive until one day, maybe, the dharma initiative will discover the answers and then we can live in a world where Death is a choice we make when we're ready to let go and not something that haunts us or just shows up on our doorstep.

Glad to be on the island with you folks.
 
Posted by kanelock1 (Member # 12230) on :
 
Dude, that was deep.
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
*Lights the incense and gets out the finger cymbals*. Om.

I can't believe that this lovely nonsense all going to be over by next Monday morning.
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
haha, thanks.
 
Posted by daventor (Member # 11981) on :
 
I really enjoyed this episode actually, and I did appreciate the last episode more now with Jacob referencing his past in the "fireside explanation" scene in this one. I like all the setup and feeling of everybody coming together; Violent Zen Desmond is always entertaining. I'm back to being really stoked for the finale.

One minor gripe, though: is that really the end of Richard's story!? Really!? I know he'd already been pretty demystified, changed from cool, mysterious all-knowing one to frantic I-have-no-clue-what-I'm-doing guy, but I really wanted a better ending for him. We had a whole flippin' episode devoted to his back story this season for him to just get dismissed in a second by Smokey. Couldn't he have at least accomplished one meaningful thing this season before being dispatched? I'm going crazy and suicidal-no wait, I'm off to join Smokey- no, wait, now I'm determined to blow up the plane- no, wait, now I'm going to get killed after doing little more than looking confused and upset for a whole season. While I'm still excited and holding out in hope for a satisfying ending, the show's writers really have dropped the ball on a lot of things. I wanted a much better resolution for Richard (if this is truly his end). Just not a satisfying character arc.

They did give a lot of awesome moments to Michael Emerson/Ben; I'm really excited to see how his storyline plays out. I'm also impressed by the writer's restraint in not showing us Juliet until the finale, apparently. Fingers crossed that this doesn't end up being one of the biggest let-downs of my life.
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
fingers crossed here too.

I sorta feel like they had some cool concepts, ideas, storylines planned- but then they thought they could fit it all in this final season, when I could totally see this season being expanded with polished intricacies.
I feel like all the answers are being rushed. I want them to spend more time on them. spend more time with jacob talking about everything that's happened.
but instead it's like "bullet points with Jacob"

Don't be so quick to become a slave to the island Jack, throw another log on the fire and get to know the circumstances a little better.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Hmm, well that was a perfectly obvious no-brainer but it just hadn't occurred to me before; Jacob just wanted a candidate who didn't have that much to lose in the world outside. I'm a bit more tolerant of last week's hour-long flashback after last night's. Although if I ever rewatch all of LOST I will still probably skip it. I would have preferred it woven into the other episodes; an hour was a bit much. And Strider, of course you got it right with choice being paramount for Jacob.

I'm w/ daventor on Richard's seeming demise. And a bit saddened by Ben reverting to slimeball mode after seeing "nice Ben" in sideways world, as well as the whole "no one else will have me" thing w/ Ilana. Assuming that he really does intend to kill whoever Locke tells him to now, that is. Perfectly understandable that he still wanted revenge on Widmore.

"bullet points with Jacob" - perfect, Pepek!
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
I don't think Ben is really in slimeball mode... I think he has decided he needs to con the Man in Black in order to stop him. He killed Widmore in an attempt to prevent Widmore from revealing too much about Desmond's purpose to the MIB. Ben is the ultimate liar, so his final purpose on the Island will be to trick the MIB, this time for the greater good.

I also bet Richard is not dead. This is the man given immortality by Jacob after all - and if the MIB could simply kill him under the "rules", it seems like he would have done it long long ago.
 
Posted by msquared (Member # 4484) on :
 
I agree with Tres about Ben and Richard.

Also, the actor playing Saywer (don't remember his name) was great last night. You could tell he was almost on the verge of tears when he realized that he was the cause of Sun/Jin and Sayed's deaths.

Kate is still an candidate. That might throw a wrench in Lockes plan.

msquared
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
The line about Desmond as a "fail-safe" has me thinking... What if the whole button-pushing thing is an analogy for the island? A lonely individual is told he must keep pushing the button or energy will be released to destroy the world - and if he dies, someone has to take his spot. A lonely individual is told he must keep protecting The Light or something will happen and the world will be destroyed - and once again, when he dies, someone has to take his spot. Eventually Locke destroys the button, but Desmond uses the fail-safe, and causes something unknown to happen that seems to allow everyone to survive and the cycle ends. Now is Locke going to destroy the Light, but have Desmond be a fail-safe, causing something unknown to happen that allows everyone to survive, ending the cycle? Does Light/Island = Button?

You could take the comparison even further. We were given evidence leading us to believe that the Button may have just been a psychological experiment, with Dharma people from another station observing the button-pushers. There were two camps debating whether it really was just a psychological experiment or whether the button really had significance. Similarly, we viewers are a bit like the Dharma folks observing the button-pushers. Maybe the finale is going to leave us with the question - was this really just about the characters' development as human beings, or does the island and the Light really have some significance to the greater world beyond that?
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I do not think Richard is dead. Richard mentioned earlier in the season that it was against the rules for Locke to kill him.
I also agree about Ben. I don't think he is with Locke at all. I think he is playing him just like he has played other people on the show. Ben is a survivor. He does whatever it takes to ensure his own safety. He knew the only way he was going to be able to survive was to stick with Locke. The flash sideways with him was great. When Ben learned that Alex looks at him as a father like figure, he looked like he was going to cry.

As far as Sawyer, Hurley, and Kate are concerned, I don't think they are candidates anymore. Jack took the job, so the others are not really needed anymore. Like Ben said: "What happens when the island is done with us."

Desmond can destroy the island eh?

My prediction: The "light" in the island causes electromagnetism, and Desmond can withstand it. Locke gives him the C4, somehow finds the cave where the heart of the island lays, and throws Desmond in there and has him detonate it. Viola, no more island.
 
Posted by msquared (Member # 4484) on :
 
Can Desmond enter the place with the light?

msquared
 
Posted by BryanP (Member # 7772) on :
 
I think this season would have been pretty good on it's own, or perhaps if it had come a few seasons ago with some added context. But as an ending it just feels tacked on, cause the writers needed to end it somehow. But where does it tie in to the overall series? What was the point of leaving the island and coming back, and getting unstuck in time and going back into the '70s, etc.? None of it ties together, it all happened randomly cause the writers needed something to write. This thing with Jacob and his brother has nothing to do with anything that happened before this season.

I also have a big problem with the fundamental premise that someone is needed to protect the island. Cause it's impossible to find the light cave. So impossible that no one who's been searching for it for 30 years can find it. And yet someone needs to stay on the island to protect it. What? It doesn't need protecting!

So, basically, the island serves 2 purposes: 1) to contain Smokey, someone who was perfectly nice, whose only crime was wanting to leave the island and taking retribution on the woman who killed his mother and everyone else he knew, until his own brother killed him by sending him into the cave of light; and 2) the home of the cave of light which is evidently the place where birth, life and rebirth occur. And, of course, the creation of smoke monsters. And for as big a deal as they have made about containing Locke, there's no reason to think the world is doomed should he escape the island, cause all he's ever wanted, after all, was to leave.
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
Bryan I agree. I’ve been wondering about Jacob and if he is really good. Smokey lately has been pretty nasty with killing people yes, but you can for sure say he’s been forced into it. He seemed good when he was human. Rather Anakin Skywalker like you could almost say. Notice they still have never said Smokey’s name.
 
Posted by Ryoko (Member # 4947) on :
 
I haven't read the entire thread, so forgive me if this has already been brought up and dismissed...

I can't help thinking that Jack's son (in the alternate reality) is the smoke monster.

Where did he come from otherwise? It would make sense to me that since smokey lost his parents that his one "true wish" is to have parents again and live in an idyllic version of the "real world".

Maybe Desmond was gathering the people to go to that concert in order to set things right somehow. ?
 
Posted by swbarnes2 (Member # 10225) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by BryanP:
So, basically, the island serves 2 purposes: ... 2) the home of the cave of light which is evidently the place where birth, life and rebirth occur.

The writers don't seem to realize that when you make the supposed authorities of the island manipulative killers, then the viewers don't actually know anything, because we can't believe any of these people.

And Jacob's "I wanted you to have a choice" rings rather hollow in the face of the dozens of innocent people who died before Jacob made his offer to his chosen band. Jacob didn't think much of their free will.

And why were the Others kidnapping people? And why did Locke's legs suddenly give out on him at the plane crash site where Boone was fatally injured? And why do pregnant women die if their children are concieved on the island?

There are no answers. There never were.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ryoko:
I haven't read the entire thread, so forgive me if this has already been brought up and dismissed...

I can't help thinking that Jack's son (in the alternate reality) is the smoke monster.

Where did he come from otherwise? It would make sense to me that since smokey lost his parents that his one "true wish" is to have parents again and live in an idyllic version of the "real world".

Maybe Desmond was gathering the people to go to that concert in order to set things right somehow. ?

If you watched last week's episode you learn that the BSM was Jacob's twin brother. They were born hundreds, if not thousands of years ago. The child actor that plays Jacob's twin is different than the one that plays Jack's son as well.
 
Posted by BryanP (Member # 7772) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
If you watched last week's episode you learn that the BSM was Jacob's twin brother. They were born hundreds, if not thousands of years ago. The child actor that plays Jacob's twin is different than the one that plays Jack's son as well. [/QB]

Given that their mom (their real mom) spoke Spanish, I'm gonna lean towards hundreds rather than thousands of years.
 
Posted by Ryoko (Member # 4947) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
If you watched last week's episode you learn that the BSM was Jacob's twin brother. They were born hundreds, if not thousands of years ago. The child actor that plays Jacob's twin is different than the one that plays Jack's son as well.

This is all true, but if they used the same child actor for both parts, it would have given too much away (assuming that this theory is true, which it probably isn't. [Smile] )

It just seems so strange to have Jack's son come out of nowhere this season.

Who else could he be?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Ryoko, if altTime is indeed an "alternate time line" created at the moment of the nuke explosion in 1977 and branching in a different direction from the original time line, then the answer to your question is simply, it's his son. he came from his mother's womb. he's been alive 12 years and you're only questioning his existence because you came into the story 12 years after his birth.

now, i don't think it is an alternate time line as i've mentioned many times, in which case your question is actually valid. What is the nature of the "souls" in altTime? Where did this being come from?
 
Posted by Ryoko (Member # 4947) on :
 
From a dramatic point of view, a concert is a useful setting for a finale.

It gives a built in excuse for a LARGE number of people to gather in one place. Throw in some bittersweet music in the background and you've got a ending scene with plenty of slow panning throughout the audience.

Since the son is playing in the concert, it seems likely that he will be a big focal point.

Plus, they can continue riffing on the black/white theme using the piano keys... [Smile]
 
Posted by solo (Member # 3148) on :
 
I think Faraday is going to have a more prominent role in the concert than Jack's son.

I don't think nearly everything will be explained (the pregnancy problems, the time travel) or at least not in a way that is satisfactory to me but despite this, I've really been enjoying the last couple of episodes and I think I'm going to enjoy the finale.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by BryanP:
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
If you watched last week's episode you learn that the BSM was Jacob's twin brother. They were born hundreds, if not thousands of years ago. The child actor that plays Jacob's twin is different than the one that plays Jack's son as well.

Given that their mom (their real mom) spoke Spanish, I'm gonna lean towards hundreds rather than thousands of years. [/QB]
I'm pretty sure she was speaking Latin not Spanish but he only to things she said "Thank You" and "My name is Claudia" are extremely similar in both languages.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I thought it was Latin as well.
 
Posted by BryanP (Member # 7772) on :
 
Oh okay. I thought it would be Latin as well but when I recognized some words I figured it was Spanish [Smile]
 
Posted by Xann. (Member # 11482) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by BryanP:
Oh okay. I thought it would be Latin as well but when I recognized some words I figured it was Spanish [Smile]

That's funny, I recognized some words and figured it was Latin. I think everyone just breeds biases based on what language they took in high school.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
I have a bunch of thoughts to share. They're not very well formed. They started with Rokyo's questioning of David's(Jack's son) existence in altTime. And also had to do with the fact that Jack is now the Guardian of the Light.

If my theory is right that altTime isn't really an altTime, but that the events on the Island are leading up to altTime, and that altTime is a facade of a universe, what does that mean for all the characters who exist in this universe that aren't characters we know from the Island? In an altTime it'd be as simple as "well, it's another universe, and all these characters exist here separately". But if I'm right, then the Jack and Kate and Locke and so on in altTime are OUR Jack and Kate and Locke. And if so, who the hell is everyone else? And since there's only one of all these people in the universe that's played a main role, who the hell is Jack's son? Where did he come from? In essence, does he have a "soul"?

I'm just going to babble now about some things with no particular clear goal in mind. I'm going to speak as if some of my assumptions are in fact true just to make this easier, though I acknowledge i could be wrong and many of you disagree with me. Jack is now the guardian of the light. And altTime is a facade. And altTime is a universe where the Island is buried under water, where Jacob never interfered with these characters lives. And yet we know to some degree it's a facade because Desmond is going around showing them the truth of their other existences. And characters have trouble remembering events from their altTime past(Jack and his appendix, Locke and how he got in the wheel chair). Eloise knows about this facade and is actively trying to protect it (which, btw, not only is this a universe where Daniel is alive(a reason to protect the facade), but it is also one where Widmore, now dead on the Island, is also alive).

So the question is, how and why was it created? I'm pretty sure the answer to this comes down to Jack, Esau, and Desmond, or some combination there of. And some significant aspect of it will be one of those three characters entering the light. I'm guessing Desmond, with Jack as a second possibility, and Esau as a third.

What happens if the smoke monster goes back in there? Does he cease to be the smoke monster, or is he free?

What happens when the person in the role of guardian of the Island goes in there? Does he negate his self? Existence as we know it?

What happens when someone who once turned the "failsafe" and was subjected to mass amounts of special Lost Island electromagnetic radiation goes into this pocket of energy?

I'm thinking that this is what creates altTime. This is the failsafe Widmore was talking about, that Jacob told him about (why he doesn't tell Jack and the Losties is beyond me). Maybe this failsafe is a matrix like facade of a universe to trap Esau in. Trap him in such a way that he doesn't WANT to leave (inside the body of a dark haired boy who has had a huge breakthrough in his relationship with his parent maybe?). But, if that's the case, Desmond actively working to reveal the truth of this might fee Esau again. So i'm torn. My thoughts this whole season were that altTime is a trap/prison for the Losties. One that was either forced on them, or one that they actually chose, given the option by Esau. And yet, these ideas about a prison for Esau seem to work too. But there's also the idea that many of these characters are really making personal breakthroughs in altTime. Ben is good. Alex is alive. He's connecting with Rousseau. Jack made a huge breakthrough in a parent/child relationship. Locke is letting go. Hurley is happy. Characters who were dead are now alive. Charlie and Claire can be together...

Maybe Desmond's purpose isn't to get all these characters out of altTime, but to bring them all together. And let them live out their lives in this universe.

Or maybe the show will end with Jack and Locke sitting on a beach together, with Locke saying to Jack, "do you know how much I want to kill you?".

Sorry for the ramble!
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Not that I don't enjoy the theorizing about Jack's son, but if Smokey was really going to be stuck in a facade-world working out his parent issues, wouldn't he be doing it with a Mother, not a Father? His beef with authority was pretty specific and directed.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
eh, my thoughts don't necessarily all hinge on Ryoko's theory being correct. It just happened to fit with some other thoughts I was having. the main idea was that altTime is the result of Desmond's role as the failsafe which I'm speculating is the act of him entering the light. And even that is in flux!
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
If we apply Occum's razor to the analysis, by far the simplest explanation for Jack's son and all the dead people who are alive in alt-time is that it is in fact an alternative time line and not some illusion.

Under this assumption, all we need is an explanation for the connection between the two time lines and we all ready have a somewhat plausible explanation -- its an effect of the island's mysterious EM properties that have already caused at least 2 different types of time anomalies.

Now, I'll freely admit that there is no reason to expect Occum's razor will apply to lost, I'm just saying that the "alt-time is an illusion" theory leaves a whole lot more to be explained in the roughly 90 minutes remaining of the show than the obvious alternative.
 
Posted by Ryoko (Member # 4947) on :
 
I had been thinking along the same lines that this alt-reality was some sort of matrix-like illusory world where your dreams come true, only limited by your own personal baggage (ala Sayid, Kate, etc.).

I guess the million dollar question still remains...

who is this kid's mom?

Maybe that is the kid's only function...to give a reason for Jack and the mother to meet up at the concert (presuming they will) for the dramatic reveal.

Still, they've given the kid just enough material (story-wise) to make it seem like his character is more pivotal. Whatever it is, he creeps me out a little. [Smile]
 
Posted by Ryoko (Member # 4947) on :
 
quote:
Not that I don't enjoy the theorizing about Jack's son, but if Smokey was really going to be stuck in a facade-world working out his parent issues, wouldn't he be doing it with a Mother, not a Father? His beef with authority was pretty specific and directed.
My only idea in response to this is that since he did have a "mother figure" for a long time, you would expect that he would have a lot of fantasies about what his father must have been like.

Maybe Jack struck him as a good "candidate" ( [Wink] ) to step in as a father figure?

This makes sense to me because I'm sure that in addition to the fantasies, there would be a lot of resentment as well (i.e. Where were you dad?).
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
How then do you explain all the dead people (Charlie, Locke, Sun, Jin, Sayid, Daniel, Charlotte, Libby, Ana Lucia, Alex, Boone, Anthony Cooper, Arzt, Keemy, Nadia, and probably others) who are in the alt-time line. Are they all illusions or zombies or some sort?
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
My official guess is that the island is a Pandoras Box. By detonating the atomic bomb, they let hope loose in the world. So even though the alt-time line isn't an ideal dream world, in alt-time there is hope. if for no other reason, there is hope because they are all still alive. There is hope for Charlie and Claire, Hugo and Libby, Locke and Helen, Sayid and Nadia, Daniel and Charlotte because they are all still alive.
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
Check this cartoon out:
Smoke Monster
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Ryoko, I'll bet anything that david's mom is Juliet. And that in this final episode we'll hear her say "let's go out for coffee some time. We can go dutch".

Most likely to Sawyer. But possibly to jack.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
Ryoko, I'll bet anything that david's mom is Juliet. And that in this final episode we'll hear her say "let's go out for coffee some time. We can go dutch".

Most likely to Sawyer. But possibly to jack.

I think so too. She is really the only main character that we have not seen in the alt time line. That and her cryptic last words make me think that it has to be her to tie everything up.

I guess we haven't seen Michael in the alt time line either though.

Am I the only one let down that they didn't bring Tom back for at least a cameo appearance? I liked that character.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
How then do you explain all the dead people (Charlie, Locke, Sun, Jin, Sayid, Daniel, Charlotte, Libby, Ana Lucia, Alex, Boone, Anthony Cooper, Arzt, Keemy, Nadia, and probably others) who are in the alt-time line. Are they all illusions or zombies or some sort?

We know that to a certain degree, dead is NOT dead, since lots of characters interact on the Island after they've died. Maybe altTime is the place you go after you die and are free of the Island. But in general, I don't think we should be surprised to see dead people walking around.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
We know that to a certain degree, dead is NOT dead, since lots of characters interact on the Island after they've died. Maybe altTime is the place you go after you die and are free of the Island. But in general, I don't think we should be surprised to see dead people walking around.
With the exception of Sayid, dead has always been dead. In alt-time, Charlie, Locke, Sun, Jin Daniel etc are pretty clearly not ghosts. If alt-time is some sort of a facade, we need an explanation of why all the dead are alive in alt-time. If the dead are just part of the "program" that is maintaining the facade, then why are at least some of them (Charlie and Libbie for example) an active force in bringing down the facade?

Once again, there maybe perfectly good answers to those questions but it seems unnecessarily complicated. If alt-time is just an illusion, they are going to have a very hard time explaining enough to make it seem plausible with only 90 minutes of show time remaining.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Rabbit, we have 150 minutes!

What I mean by dead is not dead is in the sense that Jacob, Michael, Richard's wife, Eko, Ana Lucia, Charlie, and others have all interacted after their deaths, mostly with Hurley. Michael confirmed that the whispers were characters who had died who had not been able to be free of the Island yet. So while dead might be dead, dead is not the end of existence.

So it's not so much of a stretch to see these characters with some sort of existence, whatever the nature of altTime ends up being. I don't think they're ghosts or programs, I think the Ana Lucia in altTime is the same Ana Lucia that pulled Hurley's car over in season 4.

This whole season I've been espousing this theory, and this whole season you've been against. I've admitted it's complicated, that I don't understand it all, and that there are problems with it. But I've also brought up a whole host of problems with altTime as "an alternate reality where they never crash on the Island created by the detonation of the nuke". I've asked why a nuke explosion would bury an Island under water, how all the characters in close proximity to a nuke explosion could survive and exist in altTime, where Jack's cut on his neck comes from, why they are having trouble remembering their altTime pasts, why they keep looking into mirrors as if something is wrong with what they're seeing, how and why they're able to partly access IslandTime and these other existences, how Eloise knows about all this, etc...none of these have ever been fully answered by standard altTime theories. And even at one point you conceded there were problems with this standard theory of altTime.

I keep using illusion and facade, I think those are bad words to use as they imply something I might not necessarily mean. I've other times used "elaborately constructed universe". There is nothing more "fake" about altTime then there is about the idea that I actually perceive the world around me as it really is. It's all just sensory information being interpreted by my brain in the end. Call it what you will!

Anyway, I stick by my prediction that you and I will still be arguing about this after Sunday night. [Smile]
 
Posted by BryanP (Member # 7772) on :
 
I like Strider's theory a lot, but in all honesty I don't think the writers of the show have ever had that good of an idea. It would be totally shocking to me if the ending was that good (I stick with my earlier post about it still having NOTHING to do with pre-season-5-finale-Lost, but at this point I think they've screwed the pooch on the series as a whole, so a good end to whatever they've made this season will have to be good enough).

My guess is that it's a true alternate timeline created by the detonation of the nuke (regardless of whether that makes sense, since there are many things that have happened on this show that don't make sense) and that the altTime people will somehow merge with the island folk, defeat Smokey once and for all and maybe destroy the island, too, so that Jack doesn't have to twiddle his thumbs on it for all eternity. I don't think the island is a Pandora's Box, and it seems to be that Desmond's goal is to get everyone together so he can somehow get them back in their other lives. He thinks his life in altTime doesn't have any meaning, so even though everyone else is happy/alive, they're not going to be able to escape their fates of being involved with the island.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Rabbit, we have 150 minutes!
You aren't considering commercials. A typical 1 hour show, averages 45 minutes long. Two hours, would be around 90 minutes of actual show time. The 2 hour season premier was only 86 minutes. I'd missed that the finale would be 2 1/2 hours, that might give them as much as 115 minutes, depending on how many commercials they show. I'm betting on a massive commercial overload myself.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
My prediction: The "light" in the island causes electromagnetism, and Desmond can withstand it. Locke gives him the C4, somehow finds the cave where the heart of the island lays, and throws Desmond in there and has him detonate it. Viola, no more island.
If the island and the light within it survived a hydrogen bomb at the drill site, Its implausible that it could be taken out with a few blocks of C4.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
This whole season I've been espousing this theory, and this whole season you've been against. I've admitted it's complicated, that I don't understand it all, and that there are problems with it. But I've also brought up a whole host of problems with altTime as "an alternate reality where they never crash on the Island created by the detonation of the nuke". I've asked why a nuke explosion would bury an Island under water/[quote]

Well, I can't think of any physically realistic mechanism of any kind that would bury and island under water without destroying the buildings and structures on the island. Can you? If you accept that the island is on some sort of pocket of energy that has all kinds of magic properties like healing sick people and facilitating travel through time and space, the idea that a nuclear bomb that counter acts this energy might sink the island isn't at all far out. Its the least of the problems. I could speculate something like "The island was floating on the pocket of energy, when the nuke neutralized the energy, the island sunk." I think its kind of a silly question to begin with so I don't think answering it deserves much thought. There are all kinds of fantastic elements of this show that are far more difficult to explain.

[quote]How all the characters in close proximity to a nuke explosion could survive and exist in altTime.

I think I've answered this one before, but I'll do it again. In alt-time, none of those people were at the blast site. The best theory I can come up with is that the nuclear blast fractured the time line. The original time line losties time jumped to the future a micro-second before the bomb blast so they are in a time line where the nuke never detonated. The other losties are in a timeline where the island sank in the 70s, so they never crashed on the island and were never at the bomb site. Jacob and Esau and the island weren't around to interfere in their lives and so lots of things turned out different.

That leaves the Dharma people and the others who show up in alt time. Since the buildings on the Island weren't destroyed, I'll speculate that the energy of the bomb was neutralized by the Island's energy pocket so people and buildings survived. The island began to sink slowly into the sea and they all evacuated.

quote:
where Jack's cut on his neck comes from
This one has me baffled. Particularly since the cut seems to appear and disappear. What's your theory?

quote:
why they are having trouble remembering their altTime pasts
If alt-time is an alternate time line, they have no pasts on the island to remember. The question becomes, why are they remembering things from the island at all if those things didn't happen.

quote:
why they keep looking into mirrors as if something is wrong with what they're seeing, how and why they're able to partly access Island
I've said a number of times that its obvious that there is a connection between the two time lines. That much we've always agreed on, we simply disagree about the nature of the connection. You think they are happening sequentially on one time line and I think parallel is time lines are more plausible. I think suspect the connection is one more manifestation of islands mysterious powers that cause things like healing and time travel. It seems like a variant of stuff we've already seen happen to Desmond.

quote:
Time and these other existences, how Eloise knows about all this, etc...none of these have ever been fully answered by standard altTime theories.
We are only speculating that Eloise knows stuff. Remember how we thought Richard knew all kinds of stuff and it turned out he didn't. The explanation for Eloise could be just as unremarkable as the explanation for Richard.

quote:
And even at one point you conceded there were problems with this standard theory of altTime.
I think you misunderstood me then and are still misunderstanding me. I don't have a theory about what's going on. I suspect everything I've speculate above is wrong. I'm just hoping that the writers have answers that don't seem too terribly contrived.

My argument with you is not an attempt to advance a particular theory. My argument is that your theory doesn't fit the data we've got very well. I'm not trying to advance a particular alternative to your theory, I'm just rejecting your theory. Your theory requires introducing a major plot device that is very different from anything we've seen so far.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
That leaves the Dharma people and the others who show up in alt time. Since the buildings on the Island weren't destroyed, I'll speculate that the energy of the bomb was neutralized by the Island's energy pocket so people and buildings survived. The island began to sink slowly into the sea and they all evacuated.
Ben's dad said something about how they should've stayed on the Island, their lives might have been so different.

quote:

This one has me baffled. Particularly since the cut seems to appear and disappear. What's your theory?

No idea, but obviously my theory is that it's the result of something that is yet to happen on the Island in 2007.

quote:
If alt-time is an alternate time line, they have no pasts on the island to remember. The question becomes, why are they remembering things from the island at all if those things didn't happen.

No, I mean why don't altTime characters remember events from their altTime past. Why doesn't Jack remember getting his appendix out? Why doesn't Locke seem to remember the details of his accident? My theory is because these are basically fake memories. They don't HAVE an altTime past since this is an illusion/constructed universe.

quote:
We are only speculating that Eloise knows stuff. Remember how we thought Richard knew all kinds of stuff and it turned out he didn't. The explanation for Eloise could be just as unremarkable as the explanation for Richard.

maybe, but the fact that she wanted to keep desmond from asking questions, indicating he wasn't ready yet or that it wasn't time yet, leads me to believe she at least knows something relatively important about altTime.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
No, I mean why don't altTime characters remember events from their altTime past. Why doesn't Jack remember getting his appendix out? Why doesn't Locke seem to remember the details of his accident? My theory is because these are basically fake memories. They don't HAVE an altTime past since this is an illusion/constructed universe.
Locke remembers a great deal of the details from his accident. He just doesn't remember what exactly went wrong that caused the crash. That's completely normal, considering that he was seriously injured in the accident. When I've crashed my bike, I very rarely have a clear idea about what went wrong and I've never even had a serious injury.

We have only one real data point where someone in alt-time didn't remember something they should have, Jack's appendix. I'm don't think that one point justifies your theory. It's much easier to rationalize that as part of a general bleed over between the two realities than it is to explain dozens of dead people now having meaningful lives that contribute to breaking down the illusion.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Strider, I think you are still misunderstanding me. I don't have a theory about what's going on. I can come up with half a dozen that may be on the right track, but I'm not committed to any of them. I'm sure they're all wrong but they may have a bit of truth to them. Asking me how I explain things with my theory, is just missing the point. I'm not proposing one alternative to your theory, I'm just arguing that your theory does not fit the existing data without some major retrofitting.

I'm curious, how do you imagine the series ending if your theory is correct? I can only come up with two general possibilities and both of them are horribly unappealing to me.

1. After the characters in the alt-reality uncover the true nature of things, the alt-reality collapses and they all go back to being dead or stranded forever on the island guarding the light in the cave.

2. The characters in the alt-reality discover the real nature of the lie they are living but choose to keep living it because it beats the hell out of being dead or stranded forever on the island.

Do you have a better option?
 
Posted by daventor (Member # 11981) on :
 
I'm just going to throw out my predictions for the finale:

1) Christian is gonna reappear and it will be revealed that Smokey was lying about being Jack's Dad; Christian will somehow play a key role in the endgame (at least I really hope so; I think it will be really lame if they still go with Smokey's explanation; plus it's inconsistent, with Christian appearing to Michael on the boat OFF the island).

2) Ben will turn against Smokey to help save the others, dying but redeeming himself in the process.

3) Whoever does die, it is NOT going to be Hurley (he's just the one character I could never see the writers killing off).

4) That mirror-box that was given to Claire in alt-time is also going be something really important.
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
The finale is being shown at 6 AM (or 5 in GMT+1 regions) on Monday morning all across Europe, so that we get to see it the same time you guys do.

But I don't honestly think I can cope with the end of all things (and probably a whole heap of emotion) right before I have to go to work.

I think I'll just give myself a total media blackout for the day and watch it when I get home. I'm sure there will be wine and tears involved.

My random predictions: Ben will do something either shockingly horrible or shockingly redemptive.
Richard will die so he can be with Isabel.
Desmond in the alt is trying to undo what he will be forced to do when Locke made him destroy the island (oh, the tenses involved in this show give me a headache).
Aaron will be born again.

Someone (Hugo) better end up happy, or I am going to be very cross.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Okay, they've already said they aren't going to answer all the questions. All the Rambaldi-ish spooky stuff is just the backdrop for the story, which is about people, and they've made it clear that they aren't going to explain how it works.

And there are things that have been forgotten along the way that I don't expect them to explain. How Cooper wound up in Ben's "magic box", for example. How Faraday's mom knew so much.

But there are things that happened just this season that I do expect an answer to:
I'm not really looking for much more than that. I don't expect as satisfying an ending as I got last night from Ashes to Ashes.

It's interesting, though. I think this may be the first show dedicated to a multi-season story arc, which has reached the end without being damaged by a network.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Good list of questions Lisa.

I wouldn't be so sure about Juliette, this show has never gone with the "obvious" answer yet.

The only question I'd add to your list, is what happened to Rose and Bernard in the original time line. They've showed up a couple of times in alt-time but they've been left hanging in the original time line. Did they make the time jump and are still happily retired on the island but now in 2007 or did they stay in the 70s. Did they go down with the island, get killed, escape like Ben and his father or yet some other option.
 
Posted by Marlozhan (Member # 2422) on :
 
So I'm confused. When does the actual episode start? I am in Pacific Time, and ABC is currently showing The Final Journey, which is just a recap of the series. How long does that last and when does the real episode start, and how long is the final episode?
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Satisfactory in every way. I'm wicked impressed.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
*spoilers from finale beware*

I enjoyed it. I think I understand what happened. I liked the character development. I was happy with the fact they left most questions unanswered.

I would have been happier if they weren't in limbo in the entire flash-sideways.

It was still good enough for me to say bravo lost, bravo.

The slow motion jack punching locke while jumping through mid air was awesome.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Juliet's lines from the first episode being repeated to Saywer: check
altTime as epilogue: check
altTime as facade/elaborately constructed universe: check
altTime as afterlife (Maybe altTime is the place you go after you die and are free of the Island.): check!

I was certainly off about many of the details, but most of it played out how I imagined. Very satisfying ending. I found the first hour or so way more exciting than the second half, but the payoff was still worth it.

I loved Hurley and Ben's interchange, "you were a great number 2" "you were a great number one".

I also absolutely loved the ending of Jack in the same spot, with Vincent, watching the plane leave as his eye closed.

Sure, they left many questions unanswered, and there were some inconsistencies, but I don't think I'm gonna let those bother me.

Great job Lost!
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
sighwow.
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
I certainly enjoyed it while I watched it, but I was uncertain if it would stand up to much thought after the spell wore off. I've been mulling over it much of the night, though, and I still like it, so I'll count that as a win.

Man, there were a lot of great moments sprinkled in it, too.

--Mel
 
Posted by Elmer's Glue (Member # 9313) on :
 
The entire alTime story seems like a waste of time. Bleh.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
When Jack's father said "how are you here?" I yelled at the TV "don't say that!"

I was starting to really like the flash-sideways. But even with that dissappointment there were so many wonderful moments.
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
So no explanation of what the island is or why it needs protected.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Elmer's Glue:
The entire alTime story seems like a waste of time. Bleh.

Closure? People finally ending up with those they love? That's a waste of time?
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LargeTuna:
When Jack's father said "how are you here?" I yelled at the TV "don't say that!"

When Jack said, "How are you here?" I looked at the TV and said, "Same way you are, Jack." I'm not sure if I finally got it when Kate dropped Jack off at the church or when Ben and Hugo said goodbye, but all of a sudden, "we're going to leave" made perfect sense.

Wild coincidence that two of my favorite shows ended inside of a week with more or less the same ending.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jay:
So no explanation of what the island is or why it needs protected.

Other than the basic idea that it's where the light that's the source of life is, and that that light needs to be protected, no.

But they said they weren't going to explain stuff like that. The show wasn't about the magical stuff; it was about the people. The magical stuff was just a backdrop for the people.

In six years, we saw people who, as Jacob said, were pretty much broken, come together and grow as people. Hurley got over his fear and depression about being cursed. Jack learned that he didn't have to be in control all the time. Kate learned that she could open up and trust people again. Sawyer probably changed the most. He learned that he could be a hero. That he could take charge, make necessary sacrifices, and love honestly. Sun and Jin learned that they could be open and honest with one another. Sayid learned that he could be good.

They all found love. In some cases, they got to live with their loves, and in some cases, they didn't, because of one tragedy or another. Sounds like real life, no? And with the alt-world, every wonderful love, whether it lasted like Rose and Bernard, whether it ended tragically together like Sun and Jin, whether it was broken apart like Sawyer and Juliet or Charlie and Claire or Hurley and Libby... they all got back with their loves at the end. That's beautiful.
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
Goodbye Losties, I'll miss you! Hated the ending last night, am coming back around this morning after sleeping on it and starting to see that it was a good ending after all.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
I think the ending was appropriate. The message seems to be "You can't always get the answers to your questions in life, but that's not what matters. What matters is what you do and who you do it with."
 
Posted by Javert (Member # 3076) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
But they said they weren't going to explain stuff like that.

When did they say that?

I know they said that some questions weren't going to be answered. I assumed it would be things like the nature of Walt, as the actor has now outgrown the role. Or the magic room that brought Locke's father to the island.

Those things, fine, I can live without answers. But the nature of the island itself!? C'mon!

I enjoyed the ending, and I loved seeing the couples get back together, but I'm much more interested in the questions than the happy afterlife end.

After 6 years, I'm still a man of science. The ending seemed only geared towards men or women of faith.
 
Posted by Tammy (Member # 4119) on :
 
I'm okay with the ending.

Oh sweet Hurley, the look on his face when Jack told him that it was up to him to protect the island...was precious.

I'm glad they're in a happy place, now I can move on.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Javert:
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
But they said they weren't going to explain stuff like that.

When did they say that?
I saw an interview with them at the beginning of the season. Sorry, I don't remember where.

Btw, there are some answers here to some questions. For example, the Man in Black was not named Esau. His name in the scripts was Samuel. Jin and not Sun was the remaining Kwon candidate (Sun was taken off the list for the same reason as Kate).

For my part, I think they were fairly clear about what the island was. But what it was isn't explainable in scientific terms. Only mythological ones. Where did the light come from? Who knows. God, maybe. How did pressing the button keep the energy from getting loose? Presumably it had something to do with proto-matter getting into the Genesis matrix.

I'd actually be more interested in finding out how Desmond survived for 3 years without a single night's sleep. And how Eloise knew stuff. But those are about people, and not about the stage. The stage is what it is. Why can Superman catch Lois Lane falling from the top of a building without snapping her in two like a twig? How can Samantha Stevens just wiggle her nose and make things happen? How can Mary Poppins fly with a friggin' umbrella?

It's magic.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I loved the ending. I am still a little confused about the nature of the made up purgatory world they somehow created with their collective minds, but whatever.

This grown man teared up when Sawyer and Juliet , Charlie and Claire, and Sayid and Shannon were reunited.

Juliet saying "Lets do coffee sometime" in the hospital was the same line she said as she was dying in Sawyer's arms. In retrospect that was a clue as to the nature of the alt universe.

I loved the interaction between Hurley and Ben near the end.
 
Posted by MightyCow (Member # 9253) on :
 
It was enjoyable, but it was a complete cop out. They just threw us every emotional bone they could find so we'd be so happy that everything turned out for the best, we'd be OK that they didn't explain anything.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
It worked. At least it worked for me.

I'm with Lisa, I think they did answer what the nature of the island was. It was the source of light in all life. Its a pseudo mythological/religious answer but what other kind of explanation did people expect? There isn't any science that could explain the island. This was fiction. It was fantasy. Some technobabble pseudo scientific explanation for the island would have been just a different kind of mythology with no more substance to it than the answer they gave.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
I'd actually be more interested in finding out how Desmond survived for 3 years without a single night's sleep.
He didn't. Kelvin died 44 days before the Losties open the hatch.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
I'd actually be more interested in finding out how Desmond survived for 3 years without a single night's sleep.
He didn't. Kelvin died 44 days before the Losties open the hatch.
That and if you've been doing it long enough you can probably learn to sleep in hour chunks. All you need is enough time each sleep period to get into REM right?

quote:
Juliet saying "Lets do coffee sometime" in the hospital was the same line she said as she was dying in Sawyer's arms. In retrospect that was a clue as to the nature of the alt universe.

I'm actually a bit disappointed I didn't figure this one out earlier. I had speculated right from the beginning that we'd hear her say those lines in altTime, and that it'd most likely be to Sawyer. But I was thinking it had to do with the time flash and consciousness jumping similar to Desmond. When in reality it had more to do with a near death experience type access to what was going on in purgatoryTime or whatever we want to call it.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
Rabbit, we have 150 minutes!
You aren't considering commercials. A typical 1 hour show, averages 45 minutes long. Two hours, would be around 90 minutes of actual show time. The 2 hour season premier was only 86 minutes. I'd missed that the finale would be 2 1/2 hours, that might give them as much as 115 minutes, depending on how many commercials they show. I'm betting on a massive commercial overload myself.
I called it. The final episode was 105 minutes actual episode, 45 minutes commercials.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
It worked. At least it worked for me.

I'm with Lisa, I think they did answer what the nature of the island was. It was the source of light in all life. Its a pseudo mythological/religious answer but what other kind of explanation did people expect? There isn't any science that could explain the island. This was fiction. It was fantasy. Some technobabble pseudo scientific explanation for the island would have been just a different kind of mythology with no more substance to it than the answer they gave.

If this were the case, what would the BSM be? Is this a lesson on "You can't have light without darkness?" Was the light of the island the light in each person, and did the BSM represent the darkness that also resides in all of us?
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
I called it. The final episode was 105 minutes actual episode, 45 minutes commercials.
I'm disappointed it wasn't 108 minutes actual episode, 42 minutes commercials.....
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
It worked. At least it worked for me.

I'm with Lisa, I think they did answer what the nature of the island was. It was the source of light in all life. Its a pseudo mythological/religious answer but what other kind of explanation did people expect? There isn't any science that could explain the island. This was fiction. It was fantasy. Some technobabble pseudo scientific explanation for the island would have been just a different kind of mythology with no more substance to it than the answer they gave.

If this were the case,
First, I'm not sure what you mean by "if this were the case". Are you disputing that they said the light in the cave was the the light in all life (because they did, straight out on more than one occasion), are you suggesting the light in the cave wasn't the source of the islands mysterious properties (because they said that too) or are you suggesting they had another answer and just didn't t tell us? Or maybe I'm over reacting and it was just a poor choice of words.

quote:
what would the BSM be? Is this a lesson on "You can't have light without darkness?" Was the light of the island the light in each person, and did the BSM represent the darkness that also resides in all of us?
Make up any answer you like. I'll go with the one they gave. The BSM was Jacob's brother. I think if he was a counterpart to something, it wasn't the light it was Jacob. Jacob was the protector of the light, the BSM was the thing it needed to be protected from.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
I don't think the island specifically needed protection from Esau (I'm still calling him Esau) until he became the smoke monster. Which happened when Jacob knocked him out or killed him and pushed him over the waterfall into the pool of the light. Apparently, Desmond is more resistant to electromagnetism than Esau was.

Up until then, and even later, the island's protector was to protect the island from those who would try and get/control the light. That's what Claudia said, and just because she was nutty as a fruitcake doesn't mean she was wrong about it. Hurley still served as the island's protector even after Esau was dead, after all.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
I don't think the island specifically needed protection from Esau (I'm still calling him Esau) until he became the smoke monster. Which happened when Jacob knocked him out or killed him and pushed him over the waterfall into the pool of the light. Apparently, Desmond is more resistant to electromagnetism than Esau was.

Up until then, and even later, the island's protector was to protect the island from those who would try and get/control the light. That's what Claudia said, and just because she was nutty as a fruitcake doesn't mean she was wrong about it. Hurley still served as the island's protector even after Esau was dead, after all.

No disagreement here. I was just asked to speculate on what (if anything) the BSM symbolized. I think its significant that Jacob made the BSM. He was Jacob's mistake.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
I don't think the island specifically needed protection from Esau (I'm still calling him Esau) until he became the smoke monster. Which happened when Jacob knocked him out or killed him and pushed him over the waterfall into the pool of the light. Apparently, Desmond is more resistant to electromagnetism than Esau was.

Up until then, and even later, the island's protector was to protect the island from those who would try and get/control the light. That's what Claudia said, and just because she was nutty as a fruitcake doesn't mean she was wrong about it. Hurley still served as the island's protector even after Esau was dead, after all.

No disagreement here. I was just asked to speculate on what (if anything) the BSM symbolized. I think its significant that Jacob made the BSM. He was Jacob's mistake.
That's very true.
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
It's all about the 'rules'. some people, like Walt, are more in sync with the island, and they're able to manifest their reality.
Claudia was under the assumption that no one could go down into the light or it would be 'worse than hell' or whatever. And Jacob, who was newly sync'd with the island believed that as well. So when he threw his brother in there his beliefs manifested into a reality- creating the smoke monster which could never do the one thing it wanted to do, which was to leave. - But when Jack let go of the science and became 'in tune' with hope, and fate, and all the other possibilities outside of the science, the world around him started to manifest based on his beliefs, like the dynamite fuse stopping.
And once Jacob was gone, the old rules that were in affect started to fade away, and Jack, who was more openminded, perhaps, than Jacob, was sure everything was going to be okay, even if he did let Smokey get to the light. (sorta mirroring when he was sure that everything would be fine if they stopped pressing the button)

So I guess when the stone was moved and the island was falling apart, it was like the button wasnt being pressed anymore. -- but then he went down there and replaced the stone again, giving in I guess? -- and I think he realized it, and that's why he was smiling and laughing a bit when the light came back on, and then he finally realized he was able to let go of his fear and need to control. or something. haha.

oh lost.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
I loved the ending. I am still a little confused about the nature of the made up purgatory world they somehow created with their collective minds, but whatever.

Yup, that is a big question left totally unanswered. Here's my theory.

Desmond knows something about the purgatory and he provides a vision for it. Hurley can talk to the dead so he may be able to communicate with all the losties who were dead at the end of the show. Plus, he's a demigod now and may have all kinds of extra powers like Jacob did. His job is to take care of people. He and Desmond aren't just partners in bringing the characters together in alt-reality -- they are partners in putting it together.

Of course, the show is over now and so barring comments from the authors, we'll never know if this is what they had in mind or if they had anything in mind. Nonetheless, I like the idea that the alt-Time was Hugo's doing. He was the only character in the show I thought qualified as genuinely good. He was a kind of innocent.
 
Posted by Armoth (Member # 4752) on :
 
I enjoyed all the people-related aspects. Hated all the rest. Thought the show was one giant mess.

In general, the show was good. But compared to what it could have been? Giant mess. I'll still look back fondly and remember all the characters, and I absolutely loved what alt-time turned out to be - it's what I think a lot of people hope after-life is, and it reminds us about what is important in life.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
I loved the ending. I am still a little confused about the nature of the made up purgatory world they somehow created with their collective minds, but whatever.

Yup, that is a big question left totally unanswered. Here's my theory.

Desmond knows something about the purgatory and he provides a vision for it. Hurley can talk to the dead so he may be able to communicate with all the losties who were dead at the end of the show. Plus, he's a demigod now and may have all kinds of extra powers like Jacob did. His job is to take care of people. He and Desmond aren't just partners in bringing the characters together in alt-reality -- they are partners in putting it together.

Of course, the show is over now and so barring comments from the authors, we'll never know if this is what they had in mind or if they had anything in mind. Nonetheless, I like the idea that the alt-Time was Hugo's doing. He was the only character in the show I thought qualified as genuinely good. He was a kind of innocent.

Well, Christian definitely said that they all made the alt-world. So without some rationale for dismissing what he said, I'm not sure how we can say it was just Hugo's doing.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
Hugo may have been able to talk to them all however after they had passed. Since he can see dead people, he may have been able to communicate with all of them to help them organize the imagiworld.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Well, Christian definitely said that they all made the alt-world. So without some rationale for dismissing what he said, I'm not sure how we can say it was just Hugo's doing.
You added a "just". It was never my intent to suggest it was "just" Hugo's doing.

Christian said that the all made the alt-world SO that they could find each other. Stating a purpose indicates it was something done purposefully but since they were all separated before the idea was conceived, I had to ask how they devised and implemented such a plan.

Since Hugo could talk to dead people, he offers the most obvious solution to the problem. I don't think Hugo being the instigator and facilitator of the alt-world precludes all of them working together to make it.
 
Posted by Pepek (Member # 3773) on :
 
Island? Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory? - Same thing.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Like most of you, I appreciated the emotional closure we got on the majority of the Big Romantic Relationships. I cried boatloads over Charlie/Claire and Juliet/Sawyer. But, ultimately, this show just did not do it for me. And I do mean the whole show.

I have so many issues with this ending. It was too pat and, I think, patronizingly sweet and perfect. The flashbacks/forwards in the early seasons had purpose, and meaning within a narrative we'd come to understand and buy into. The Flashways/Ahead-Into-PerfectHappyWorld had none of that.

A couple of you have said that it was so nice to see that everyone ended up with their true loves in the end, in this constructed universe not unlike Heaven. But if we're to assume that Lapidus, Miles, Sawyer, Kate, Richard, and Claire actually flew that plane right off the Island and into the sunset, then we're to assume they lived the rest of their lives. Maybe not to a ripe old age, but they continued on past the Island story-arc. Now, I'll accept that the Island was the most important thing for the majority of the people in The Church at the end (especially those, obviously, who died/were killed there) but did Claire, Kate and Sawyer really never love again in their entire lives? Was nothing so important in their entire existences that it overshadowed the Island for them, or the loves lost there? Kate even says "I've been waiting for you for so long" (even though there's no concept of the passage of time in the HeavenWorld) which presumes she lived pretty long, and was waiting the whole time to see Jack again. Guess none of the lessons from her time on the Island sunk in all that much, since she spent the rest of her life tied to the past, the exact OPPOSITE of the moral the show tried to impart.

And if they created this reality in order for them all to meet again when it was "time to leave" (which kind of shoots down any assumptions of the reunited couples living together forever, since the moment of realization (or at least Jack's) coincided with it being time to vamoose on to the next stage...) why the repetitive narratives? Why, in this world that they've created, are they still acting out the same old patterns until they Die/Wake Up? Wasn't that the purpose of the Island in the first place? They learn their lessons, and then through a metaphysical crack in time/space they all reconnect again at the collective yet separate moments of their deaths?

What is alt-time?! The incidents "before" they wake up (aka the preparations for the concert, Desmond's machinations, Sawyer arresting Kate/Sayid, the shootings, etc.) shouldn't even exist, as they indicate a passage of time after death, but before "waking up" which shouldn't exist in the pseudo-explanation that was given at the end by Christian. There is no Now, there is no Before or Since, just everything at once. If that's accurate, then why would they all create a scenario where they replay all their old issues, even temporarily? It was just confusing, and misleading, almost as if this entire season was just a drawn out re-enactment of the Sun Giving Birth to Ji Yeon episode, with alt-time being Jin searching frantically for a stuffed animal. What ultimately mattered was Sun's emotional connection to someone she'd loved and lost, and what didn't matter at all and, in fact, what was insulting to the audience and completely erroneous, was that one time Jin tried to impress his boss with a toy.
 
Posted by Craig Childs (Member # 5382) on :
 
Count me in the group that feels angry and let-down.

Perhaps the problem is that, to the writers and a certain segment of fans, it was all about the characters and their redemption arcs (although even that was done poorly, imo, with a trite "they-finally-get-it-right-in-Heaven" plot twist).

But I know for me, my family, and friends who watched the show, the characters became secondary to the mysteries of the Island somewhere in Season 3. For one, the show began to unceremoniously dump certain characters like Walt and Libby, which taught the audience that characters were expendable in this universe. Don't fall in love with them. They die regularly to advance the storyline.

Second, the mythology became so vast and complex (Dharma, time travel, Ben/Widmore feud, Smoke Monster, Jacob's cabin, etc.) that it overwhelmed the characters. Who cares if Jack ends up with Kate or Juliet? Or if Sawyer finds peace? Or if Hurley ever gets his mojo back? Not when you have time travel paradoxes, mythological immortals battling for 2000 years, unlucky numbers, ties to ancient lost civilizations, and children with psychic powers.

Let's face it. Without the island, Lost was just another soap opera. It was the mysteries and the mythology that made the show stand apart. Maybe that's not what the writers wanted the show to be about, but it's what it became. Perhaps the writers just oversold the mileau when they didn't mean to.

The Sideways Universe was a bad idea-- and not just because it turned out to be Heaven. The characters in the SIdeways world were so different than the characters on the island--Sawyer a cop? Hurley a confident businessman?-- it was almost like watching the actors play different people on another tv show. Like seeing "Juliet" on V or "Penny" on Flashforward. I heard all my friends say over and over this year "I love the island story, but who cares about the boring sideways universe."

Season 6 should have shown "flashbacks" that detiled important events throughout the history of the island from MIB or Jacob's perspective. Something that could have given us a unified theory that at least tried to make sense and perhaps lent subtext and irony to everything that was happening/had happened to our main characters.
 
Posted by Craig Childs (Member # 5382) on :
 
Count me in the group that feels angry and let-down.

Perhaps the problem is that, to the writers and a certain segment of fans, it was all about the characters and their redemption arcs (although even that was done poorly, imo, with a trite "they-finally-get-it-right-in-Heaven" plot twist).

But I know for me, my family, and friends who watched the show, the characters became secondary to the mysteries of the Island somewhere in Season 3. For one, the show began to unceremoniously dump certain characters like Walt and Libby, which taught the audience that characters were expendable in this universe. Don't fall in love with them. They die regularly to advance the storyline.

Second, the mythology became so vast and complex (Dharma, time travel, Ben/Widmore feud, Smoke Monster, Jacob's cabin, etc.) that it overwhelmed the characters. Who cares if Jack ends up with Kate or Juliet? Or if Sawyer finds peace? Or if Hurley ever gets his mojo back? Not when you have time travel paradoxes, mythological immortals battling for 2000 years, unlucky numbers, ties to ancient lost civilizations, and children with psychic powers.

Let's face it. Without the island, Lost was just another soap opera. It was the mysteries and the mythology that made the show stand apart. Maybe that's not what the writers wanted the show to be about, but it's what it became. Perhaps the writers just oversold the mileau when they didn't mean to.

The Sideways Universe was a bad idea-- and not just because it turned out to be Heaven. The characters in the SIdeways world were so different than the characters on the island--Sawyer a cop? Hurley a confident businessman?-- it was almost like watching the actors play different people on another tv show. Like seeing "Juliet" on V or "Penny" on Flashforward. I heard all my friends say over and over this year "I love the island story, but who cares about the boring sideways universe."

Season 6 should have shown "flashbacks" that detiled important events throughout the history of the island from MIB or Jacob's perspective. Something that could have given us a unified theory that at least tried to make sense and perhaps lent subtext and irony to everything that was happening/had happened to our main characters.
 
Posted by Tammy (Member # 4119) on :
 
I'm okay with the ending...because it ended. It's over. It's done. It has no hold on me now.


I can forget about it now.

It's done.

Over.
 
Posted by Armoth (Member # 4752) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Craig Childs:

Second, the mythology became so vast and complex (Dharma, time travel, Ben/Widmore feud, Smoke Monster, Jacob's cabin, etc.) that it overwhelmed the characters. Who cares if Jack ends up with Kate or Juliet? Or if Sawyer finds peace? Or if Hurley ever gets his mojo back? Not when you have time travel paradoxes, mythological immortals battling for 2000 years, unlucky numbers, ties to ancient lost civilizations, and children with psychic powers.


Great job articulating exactly what I felt. I feel unfulfilled about all those great epic parts of the storyline. What are all the glyphs? Temples? Statues and gods?
 
Posted by Herblay (Member # 11834) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Craig Childs:

Season 6 should have shown "flashbacks" that detiled important events throughout the history of the island from MIB or Jacob's perspective. Something that could have given us a unified theory that at least tried to make sense and perhaps lent subtext and irony to everything that was happening/had happened to our main characters.

Good argument. Certainly Heroes was a success by having plot become more important than character development.

Cuse and Lindelof understand the most important thing about good drama, something that masters like J.J. Abrams, Bryan Fuller, Bryan Singer, Joss Whedon, and Rob Thomas all understand -- character comes first.

When a creator lets the "milieu" become more important than the people living in the world, people (the audience) won't care. Heroes is the penultimate example. And Lost is a great example of a well rounded show -- characters as the foundation, intriguing and (relatively) consistent mythology, and vision unrestricted by bureaucrats in the network.

To give away the "magic" of the island would have cheapened it. Like BSG, giving away the mystique would seem silly (Eden, Atlantis, egyptian magic, aliens, whatever). Keeping the mystery allowed the dignity to remain.

Great finale!
 
Posted by Launchywiggin (Member # 9116) on :
 
Loved it--and I LOVE the internet age, which allows me to watch my shows on hulu, so I don't have to be tied to a TV schedule. I'm glad I never thought too deeply about this show, otherwise I'd probably be in the "angry/disappointed" camp.
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Leonide and Craig Childs, I agree with what you guys said above almost 100%. I've had the same exact thoughts.

But on the other hand, I just re-watched the final 20 minutes of the show, and you know what I realized. I don't care. In the moment, watching that ending, it's all totally and completely satisfying. As much as I care about all the mysteries, after spending six years with these characters, and watching them connect and struggle and love and die, I don't know how I would've felt about an ending only focused on a few characters that went action action exposition action END. As sappy and saccharin as it was, it was worth it.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
I just saw it tonight. And I think I'm feeling what a lot of my friends did. Emotionally, it was great... But you really don't want to think about it too much. Even from a "character" standpoint, there are a lot of loose ends, and more than a few things that probably wouldn't make one very happy to draw one's own conclusions about.

Only one I'm going to bring up without prodding, and maybe it's petty of me, but if "alt-time" is what they say it is, the "sunken island" shot at the beginning of the "flashes-sideways" is more than a red herring. It's more like a red whale.
 
Posted by daventor (Member # 11981) on :
 
Well, most of my predictions were wrong (though a lot of predictions I've read by other people turned out correct).

My final verdict: I really liked it. It was a highly entertaining 105 minutes. Looking back at the show, it's still highly flawed in many ways (sure writers, you can say the mysteries don't matter and make up whatever crap you want along the way, but if you're expecting us to care about characters, shouldn't we also care about WHAT the characters care about, which is all the mystery-stuff; building up things as seeming major plot points and then dropping them just ain't good storytelling), but in the end it's clear to me this show had me emotionally hooked and attached to characters in a way very few stories ever have. I was moved again and again and again. I was actually surprised at how happy-happy-joy-joy the whole ending was, but I was glad; it was very emotionally satisfying to see almost every major character rewarded with what they most wanted after so much suffering and disappointment. And, religious soul that I am, I did appreciate the afterlife/heaven aspect of the whole thing. So, yeah, the resolution of most of the characters outweighed the flaws and bumps and "REALLY!?"s along the way for me. I'm glad I watched it all.

Other little thoughts:

- Yeah, the slow-mo-Jack-in-the-air-punch is probably one of the coolest shots I've ever seen on TV.

- I am really glad they put Hurley in as man-in-charge in the end with Ben as #2; it seemed to me like a great call-back to one of the earlier seasons (I can't remember which one) where Hurley and Ben are sitting next to each other and Hurley gives him part of the candy bar.

- In light of Ben's arc, Michael seems kind of shafted in the eternities; I know Ben said he wasn't going into the church just then, but it looked like the possibility was open; so a mass-murdering psychopath gets forgiveness while a just-killed-two-people-in-order-to-save son (as much as it pissed me off at the time) is sentenced to eternal whispering in people's ears on the island? Yeah, I ended up liking Ben more than I ever really liked Michael, but morally it makes no sense.

-Also really liked how they suggest Jacob's own flaws: "Hey, Hurley, you don't have to run things like Jacob did." I think in the future when people end up on the island things are actually totally crazysexyawesome. Hurley will greet them, give them a bucked of fried chicken, and explain right off the bat what the heck is going on instead of throwing cryptic nonsense at them and letting them go tribal and kill each other.

- Loved the early Star Wars shout outs on the part of Hurley: "He's worse than Yoda" and "I've got a bad feeling about this."

- Hurray! Lapidus and Richard actually lived. Thank you writers for not letting their stories end lame!

- I was very happy with Jack's ending (moreso him just smiling and laughing as light filled the cave); he finally got to do something right and have his proper hero moment.

-Nice twist with Kate shooting Smokey; glad they found something useful for her character to do. And oh it was satisfying to have Jack kick him off the cliff.

Someday I think I might embark on rewatching the whole thing; it'll be an interesting experience, mixed with looking at cool foreshadowings (or just what I read into stuff as foreshadowings) as well as plot lines where I'll be like "Oh, yeah, this goes absolutely nowhere and was just filler crap." But for now, I'm a happy, satisfied fan.

Oh, one last thing: Michael Giaccino is a GENIUS! I think his scores added so much to show throughout its whole run.

[ May 25, 2010, 06:46 AM: Message edited by: daventor ]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Unless I'm remembering incorrectly, Richard never showed up in alt-time. Does this imply Richard never dies?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Rabbit, I don't want to harp on this, but I want to quote something you said and get your thoughts on it. I'm not trying to trap you, I'm genuinely curious about your enjoyment of the final episode and the series in light of the nature of altTime. This was in response to me talking about altTime as epilogue and nuke as red herring.

quote:
Its certainly possible, but it begs a number of questions. If the the creators espouse the "what ever happened, happened" theory of time travel, then why did they introduce the idea that the bomb could change what happened? Why did they then proceed to show us an alternate reality where "What happened, didn't happen?" Why do they have a character, Desmond, to whom, we are told, the rule "whatever happened, happened" does not apply? The only answer you've come up with so far is that its all a reuse to throw us off track. If that is the answer, then its simply bad story telling to invest that much time in something that's ultimately a just a red herring. Which is why I keep saying its hokie and I'll be disappointed if it turns out that way.

I'm perfectly willing to entertain the idea that the authors have a better answer to those questions than you or I can come up with even though they espouse the what ever happened happened theory. I'm just saying that if that's what their aiming for, I can't see how they will acheive it.

I strongly suspect that there is a lot more which influenced the alt time line than the bomb alone, but they've put way too much time into it for the bomb not to be relevant.

You seemed to really enjoy the finale, but does it change your enjoyment of the series knowing that the whole subplot of being able to change things turned out to not be realizable? Do you still think it was bad storytelling by using the nuke and altTime to throw us off track of what was really going on?

I thought the show actually handled this part really well. It was in Desmond's exchange with Jack. Desmond, who has accessed purgatoryTime, but didn't truly understand it's nature, wanting to go there, not realizing you have to die first says, "none of this matters. there's another place. we can go there. you're there..." and Jack answers back to him, "no, i tried that, there are no short cuts, no do overs, whatever happened, happened. All of this matters."

I also think that to a certain extent, the way they handled the finale, and all the reveals, people forgot about the whole nuke/altTime idea, there was just too much else to think about!

Anyway, thoughts?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
Unless I'm remembering incorrectly, Richard never showed up in alt-time. Does this imply Richard never dies?

You're right, he never showed up. I'm thinking it's more likely that he's just not part of their circle of friends, and had his own purgatory world to go to.

This sort of brings up what we were talking about the other day, about the nature of the souls in altTime. Is everyone in altTime a real soul? Or are our Losties the only real people in alTime? Was that really Keamy, and was his soul really killed? And if these people are all real, why are they in this little world the Losties created for them? Or are they illusions, or "programs in the matrix" as i put it the other day?

Anyway, just more questions i'm going to try not to think too hard about... [Smile]

[ May 25, 2010, 12:10 PM: Message edited by: Strider ]
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I like to think that Richard is with his wife.

She did not die on the island , though she appeared to him on the island. I don't think she is trapped there. So maybe the two of them already moved on together.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
You seemed to really enjoy the finale, but does it change your enjoyment of the series knowing that the whole subplot of being able to change things turned out to not be realizable? Do you still think it was bad storytelling by using the nuke and altTime to throw us off track of what was really going on?
Well yes as a critic, I think the nuke is just one of many things that detracted rather than added to the story. I generally try to avoid viewing, listening or reading as a critic but the nature of this show, with a story arc that lasted for 6 years, numerous mysterious and long breaks where we were left to speculate endlessly about things, drew me in to the critic role.

The show had simply too many plot devices that were dropped, never explained or included just to mislead people. Take for example the footage of the sunken island. Why would there even have been a sunken island in alt-reality since no one ever saw it? Its only purpose was to mislead the viewers and I don't think that's particularly good story telling. Same thing with the nuke. It just got dropped. They never actually told us whether or not the nuke detonated when Juliette hit is with the rock. They never told us how the Dharma initiative came to the island, why there was a battle between Ben and Widmore, or who made the rules. They never explained Eloise Hawking, why the BSM took Claire, why Jack had to put his father's shoes on Locke, why some but not all of the characters on the plane got flashed back to 1975, and a hundred other things. The story gets worse rather than better when you try to dissect all the details.

Nonetheless, I think the story worked well enough on a variety of levels to have been fun and enjoyable and they concluded it in a way that worked on several levels even if it didn't work on all levels. If it had been a book, I'd expect it would have made the best seller list but would never have won any awards or become a classic of English literature.

But it wasn't a book, it was a TV show so the standards are different. They had to deal with networks, advertisers, and ratings. At the outset, even though (if) they had a vision of where the story was heading, they had no idea how long they would have to tell the story or if they would even get the chance to finish it. They had to deal with staff that didn't know the complete story arc and actors that quit the show or outgrew their rolls. As Lisa put it, this is the first network television story with a multi-season story arc that didn't get ruined by the networks. That alone is an accomplishment for which this show will be remembered.

[ May 25, 2010, 01:11 PM: Message edited by: The Rabbit ]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
I've been thinking about the alt-reality story line. Even though its not a perfect world, many of the characters are given the chance to change the things they most regretted -- Locke was going to marry Helen and had a loving relationship with his father, Hugo was the luckiest man in the world, Sayid was able to see Nadia again, Jack had a good relationship with his own son, Desmond had Widmore's respect, Charlie's band was still playing together. But for all of them, when they were given the choice between the that life, and the real life they'd lived and the relationships they'd formed on the island, they chose the island. Perhaps these people couldn't move on because they couldn't let go of their regrets and appreciate the life they'd lead.

That explanation doesn't quite work for everyone. Kate, Claire, Sawyer and Miles don't fit that pattern but maybe that's because they were able to leave the island, continue living and perhaps come to move beyond their regrets while they were still alive. Perhaps Ben and Daniel didn't move on with the rest of them because they had not yet reached the point where they were ready to accept their real lives.
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I think Ben wanted to stay for a few reasons.

1) He was able to have Alex back in his life. When he remembered everything that happened to him on the island he probably wanted to spend more time with her.

2) Because he remembered everything, he probably remembered all of the pain he caused to many of the Losties. Perhaps he does not feel that he had redeemed himself enough to deserve to move on.

As for Daniel, I don't know. Maybe it is because he is reconciling with his mother. I believe I saw Charlotte int he church, so I am confused as to why Daniel would not go with her since he was so in love with her.
 
Posted by Armoth (Member # 4752) on :
 
I think Ben stayed back because the writers thought it inappropriate for him to join the rest of the losties, because the last scenes we saw him in, he had been evil. (I thought that was ridiculous btw, because Ben had already redeemed himself a few episodes ago, his turn back to evil kinda got on my nerves).

Either way, although he had an off-camera repentance and led a good life as a #2, we didn't get to see that and he just would not have fit in that church.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
I'm pretty sure I saw Daniel and Charlotte together in the final scene.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
I don't think I'd count killing Widmore who, after all, did order the murder of Ben's adopted daughter, as "evil". Cruel and ruthless, yes, but not evil. Widmore killed Alex so that Ben would comply. Hardly fair or good.

Also, I didn't think Daniel and Charlotte were there at the end -- didn't Desmond say to Eloise that he wouldn't be taking Daniel?
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
I just studied the final scene. Neither Daniel nor Charlotte are in it.

There is a scene 1:47 before the end where all the characters are seated in the pews. They include (from front to back, left to right)

Locke, Jack, Kate, Sayid, Shannon, Bernard, Rose, Charlie, Claire, Aaron, Sun, Jin, Boone, Juliette, James, Desmond, Penny, Hugo and Libby.

Interestingly, Miles definitely isn't there either.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
I'd like to suggest we call it Limbo instead of Purgatory. I didn't see it as some sort of helish place to be moved on from. Just an inbetween place.

And I demand a re-shoot of the Finale with Nikky and Paulo in that church!
 
Posted by Armoth (Member # 4752) on :
 
What was Faraday saying in an earlier episode about how they should never have blown up the bomb?
 
Posted by Geraine (Member # 9913) on :
 
I don't think he said that, he said he thought he had already blown up a bomb.

Rabbit, thanks for the list. Something I noticed is that while there were a few people there that were not on the plane, none of the people there were associated with Widmore. Every character that started out as part of Widmore's faction (or that came on the boat) was left out.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
In the DVD, there's apparently going to be a clip they cut which showed that Nikki and Paolo were sent back in time and were the ones who chose Jacob's crazy adopted mother to be protectors of the island. Ultimately, the show turns out to be all about Nikki and Paolo.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geraine:
Rabbit, thanks for the list. Something I noticed is that while there were a few people there that were not on the plane, none of the people there were associated with Widmore. Every character that started out as part of Widmore's faction (or that came on the boat) was left out.

Unless, of course, you consider Penny and Desmond associated with Widmore. It works if we say "employed by" rather than associated with.

With the exception of Penny, who was there as Desmond's other half, everyone in the final scene was either on the plane or on the island when the plane crashed.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
In light of Ben's arc, Michael seems kind of shafted in the eternities; I know Ben said he wasn't going into the church just then, but it looked like the possibility was open; so a mass-murdering psychopath gets forgiveness while a just-killed-two-people-in-order-to-save son (as much as it pissed me off at the time) is sentenced to eternal whispering in people's ears on the island? Yeah, I ended up liking Ben more than I ever really liked Michael, but morally it makes no sense.
There is no reason to believe that Michael won't ever move on just because he didn't move on with the rest of the losties or appear in their Limbo. Certainly this is not the only route into "heaven".

I think one can rationalize with in the story why Michael wasn't there. This particular purgatory was created so these people who had strong bonds to each other could find each other before moving on. Michael didn't have strong ties to any of the people, in fact just the opposite. Ben evidently built a bond with Hugo as his number 2, so it made some sense for him to be there even though he didn't belong with the rest of the group. but there was no relationship to bring Michael there.

From a more practical writers perspective, bringing in Michael would have caused all kinds of trouble. Michael hasn't been a main character since the 2nd season. Bringing him back would have required some sort of reconciliation between him and the rest of the Losties. They would have had to find away for to come to the epiphany that he had known these people in another life that wouldn't have been solely a recognition that he betrayed them? That would all have required a good chunk of time that would have detracted rather than added to the warm fuzzy happy ending. I think they chose to bring Michael in as ghost a few episodes back because it presented so many fewer difficulties than bringing him in for the finale. He got his final appearance on the show, that appearance foreshadowed the ending, and it advanced the plot rather than diverting them from it. It was a pretty good solution.

The one person I missed seeing one last time was Mr. Eko, but I understand that unlike the other actors, the actor who played Mr Eko wanted to leave the show. They probably couldn't (or didn't want to) get him to come back for one last bit.
 
Posted by Herblay (Member # 11834) on :
 
It seems to me, that the nuke proved that things can't be changed. They were in an alternate past. The nuke destroyed any possibility of that alternate past continuing, therefore time "popped" back to the present.

It was a clever use of story as a red herring, but it wasn't inherently cheating. The only real "cheat" that I've seen was the shot of the island underwater.

I don't know if the ending could have been such a surprise, though, if they hadn't cheated.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
It seems to me, that the nuke proved that things can't be changed. They were in an alternate past. The nuke destroyed any possibility of that alternate past continuing, therefore time "popped" back to the present.
Possibly, but they didn't say that. That's my point. One can come up with bits like that to rationalize most parts of the story, my complaint is that you have to come up with way way too many of them. There are just too many plot devices, like the bomb, which they just dropped.
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
When I watched the pilot episode of Lost, when it was first shown, before it was massively successful or anything, I thought - they're in Purgatory. They're chosen to live on the island because they're more messed up than the other people on the plane.
And the last scene of this show, whether it lasts six weeks or six years, is all of them solving their issues and moving on.
And when they killed Shannon, right after she solved all her issues, I was sure.

So, I didn't get my answers (any more than with Battlestar). And I really wanted them to LIVE happily ever after.
But I got the ending that I felt that the show was leading to from the beginning. It was the right ending, even if there should have been more life before death. Most people die without really knowing why they were alive - we live with that.
The Island was real, but it was also the place they needed to go to become the people they needed to be in order to live and die at peace.
The alt-universe was just a waiting room where they came to understand who it was they had become, and what they had learnt.

I liked that they all came to a church of all religions and of none - each person's beliefs, from Desmond's Catholicism to Sayid's Islam to Jack's Atheism were all okay.
They all go to the same place, heaven or earth.
I hated the end of Narnia, which is similar. But this was less judgemental.

And I'm glad that Kate, Sawyer, Claire, Miles, Frank and a happy, hopeful Richard, got off that darn rock.
I was left imagining that Hurley spent the next nine thousand years doing sweet things to cheer Ben and the ghosts up (he helped them solve their issues so they could move on if they wanted to), and playing golf with Michael and Mr. Eko.
And Desmond got to go home, and Hurley could still visit the mainland whenever he liked, the way Jacob could - which he enjoyed more once we built the robots and spaceships and discovered alien life.
And that Kate and Claire co-raised Aaron as his two Mommies, and Miles, Sawyer, Richard and Frank set up some sort of brilliantly snarky supernatural detective service.
 
Posted by Craig Childs (Member # 5382) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
Leonide and Craig Childs, I agree with what you guys said above almost 100%. I've had the same exact thoughts.

But on the other hand, I just re-watched the final 20 minutes of the show, and you know what I realized. I don't care. In the moment, watching that ending, it's all totally and completely satisfying. As much as I care about all the mysteries, after spending six years with these characters, and watching them connect and struggle and love and die, I don't know how I would've felt about an ending only focused on a few characters that went action action exposition action END. As sappy and saccharin as it was, it was worth it.

I agree the finale had to focus on the characters' redemptive arc. But all of Season 6 should have been geared toward revealing answers, and not just three or four isolated questions (i.e., what are the whispers), but explaining a "unified theory" that would tie everything together.
 
Posted by The Reader (Member # 3636) on :
 
I too am disappointed that a Grand Unified Theory of Lost (GULT) does not exist. I like how the show ended, but the mysteries were what made Lost. It isn't Lost without Dharma, the ancient Egyptian stuff, and magnetism. Without that, it's Dallas. What I cared about more than characters was the epic weirdness of the Island.

But there are always ways to tie up the story. I am, for one, hoping that books (good ones!) and other such things come out to help this.
 
Posted by Herblay (Member # 11834) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
It seems to me, that the nuke proved that things can't be changed. They were in an alternate past. The nuke destroyed any possibility of that alternate past continuing, therefore time "popped" back to the present.
Possibly, but they didn't say that. That's my point. One can come up with bits like that to rationalize most parts of the story, my complaint is that you have to come up with way way too many of them. There are just too many plot devices, like the bomb, which they just dropped.
Ehhh, the one big rule of storytelling is "show, don't tell". As you said, they didn't tell you what happened . . . they made you think for yourself. Isn't that why you fell in love with Lost to begin with?
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
Herblay, I agree that they showed things can't be changed. But I disagree that they were in an "alternate past". They were in the very real past. There is only one history of the Island, and that history included Losties mingling with Dharma folk in the 70s.
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
Finally got to watch it. I went in assuming they would answer no questions, so I was not disappointed on that end. I appreciated all the happy closure. The only question I am frustrated they didn't answer is "What's the deal with Eloise," since that was a current question as opposed to one they had forgotten about 4 years ago.

I think it would have been cooler if altTime had been an actual altTime and that Eloise was some diabolical mastermind that was constructing it for some weird purpose, but honestly I can't think of what that purpose would be. I'm actually okay with Purgatory, because even though it makes the nuke a giant useless red herring, it DOES fit in with the rest of the show. I think I'd consider it a fine ending if they had just given a bit more explanation as to how Purgatory was created. I think a cool "altClimax" would have been a showdown between Hurley, Desmond and Eloise, where is revealed that Hurley and Eloise had worked together to craft Purgatory, but that Eloise had ultimately tried to subvert it so she could keep her son.

In any case, I love that Hurley ended up becoming the new guardian. Three weeks ago I was like "okay, it's either Jack or Hurley, everyone else is too boring a choice." Then it was Jack, and I was like "eh, okay." Then Jack says "Okay Hugo you're turn," and I literally turned off the recording and went SQUEEEE!!!! for like 5 minutes.

I also love Ben's line: "Maybe we can do it better than Jacob." I have this vision of a hovercar crashin on the island in 2050, and Hugo walks up to the people on the beach sipping a lemonade and says "Okay dudes, so here's the deal. You are gonna see stuff on this island that is going to freak you the hell out. There will be visions of dead relatives. There will be polar bears. There will be weird magnetic fluxes. I promise, trying to figure out what any of this means is going to make you seriously unhappy. I have a boat coming in a few days, you guys can leave then. For now, have some lemonade and fried chicken."
 
Posted by Raymond Arnold (Member # 11712) on :
 
Also, I'd fully a support a spin-off series that explored the Walt-Has-Powers and the "Children can't be born" questions in more depth. They ultimately weren't relevant to this particular story but they were still cool questions.
 
Posted by Armoth (Member # 4752) on :
 
I still liked the idea of Jacob using the island to bring out the best in people. Hence his dialogue with MiB in the beginning of the season.

That's kinda what I envision Hurley doing.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
That's kinda what I envision Hurley doing.
I can see the sequel now: "Fantasy Island" with Mr Rayes instead of Mr Roarke.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
quote:
That's kinda what I envision Hurley doing.
I can see the sequel now: "Fantasy Island" with Mr Reyes instead of Mr Roarke.
Fixed that for you.
 
Posted by swbarnes2 (Member # 10225) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Armoth:
I still liked the idea of Jacob using the island to bring out the best in people.

By "people", You mean "in a handful of people who survived a plane crash that he claims to have orchestrated"? I'm not sure how else to interpret "I brought you all to the island" other than that he is partially responsible for the plane crash, and all that resulted from that.
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
Speaking of names:

BENJAMIN
Benjamin in the Old Testament was the youngest son of Jacob. He was originally named (Ben-'oniy) meaning "son of my sorrow" by his mother Rachel, who died shortly after childbirth, but it was later changed by his father.

HUGO
From the Germanic element hug, meaning "heart, mind, spirit".

Never thought to look those up before.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
A Finale Explanation from a Supposed Bad Robot Employee

I don't know. This makes perfect sense to me. Maybe it's legit and maybe not, but I'm taking it as authoritative.
 
Posted by Herblay (Member # 11834) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lisa:
A Finale Explanation from a Supposed Bad Robot Employee

I don't know. This makes perfect sense to me. Maybe it's legit and maybe not, but I'm taking it as authoritative.

Well written (and a logical summary), but they couldn't seem to spell the names of secondary characters correctly (Ana Lucia, Lapidus, etc).
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
]But, from a more “behind the scenes” note: the reason Ben’s not in the church, and the reason no one is in the church but for Season 1 people is because they wrote the ending to the show after writing the pilot. And never changed it.
It sounds good but Bernard, Penny and Juliette were not in season 1 and they were in the church.
 
Posted by LargeTuna (Member # 10512) on :
 
The main spin off I want is a James, Miles buddy cop show.

Also they need to make Expose for real! we have to stop the Cobra.
 
Posted by Traceria (Member # 11820) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Craig Childs:
quote:
Originally posted by Strider:
Leonide and Craig Childs, I agree with what you guys said above almost 100%. I've had the same exact thoughts.

But on the other hand, I just re-watched the final 20 minutes of the show, and you know what I realized. I don't care. In the moment, watching that ending, it's all totally and completely satisfying. As much as I care about all the mysteries, after spending six years with these characters, and watching them connect and struggle and love and die, I don't know how I would've felt about an ending only focused on a few characters that went action action exposition action END. As sappy and saccharin as it was, it was worth it.

I agree the finale had to focus on the characters' redemptive arc. But all of Season 6 should have been geared toward revealing answers, and not just three or four isolated questions (i.e., what are the whispers), but explaining a "unified theory" that would tie everything together.
What you said in your earlier comment I also agree with, and yet, I also teared up some when Jin and Sun worked out and Sawyer and Juliet found one another, etc. That aside, my husband and I were disappointed. We weren't expecting all our questions to be answered, but we were also hoping to get more about the overlying mythology.

Maybe we've both just seen too many anime series that hinge on a mythos but then have an ending that is completely ambiguous. Neon Genesis Evangelion is my hubby's favorite series. It DOES has an ambiguous ending, but the series and its creators make a point to not tease you about the mythos. They make clear their intentions that the show is really about the characters and that you're not going to get any explanation about the angels or why everyone in the world save two people die (and so on). They never even try to explain those, just how man is reacting/fighting them.

Lost, on the other hand, teased us with all the questions of the Island and the occasional answer to one of them. It was about the characters, too, but they did end up just using the Island as a backdrop for a "soap opera" when, I agree, they should have been a least providing an overarching explanation behind it. Give us a NAME if only that for the magic glowing waterfall place. Or, at least tell us what its power is in some fashion. How can it be the "light" (implied good) if it somehow ends up contributing to the creation of the evil smoke monster?!

Yeah, I was happy to see the characters' reunions, but I feel gipped as to an explanation. As I said, I wasn't expecting the answer to life, the universe and everything, but even a simple 42 would have done it for me.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
I liked this article. I don't agree with all of it, but I liked it:

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/showtracker/2010/05/one-lost-tuesday-all-of-this-matters.html
 
Posted by Uprooted (Member # 8353) on :
 
I don't have anything to say except that I really loved that link, docmagik, thanks. (as well as the author's earlier article linked to just above the picture of Jack and Vincent). And that I'm not ready for this thread to disappear yet. *sniffle*
 


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