Lost blogging: What They Died For
[updated]
I’ve been terribly remiss in my Lost blogging. Unfortunately, my schedule and my lack of a television make it hard for me to blog about TV shows – even shows like Lost which I am, for lack of a better word, obsessed with.
This season has been, in my opinion, one of the best in the show. I liked last week’s “Across the Sea” which many people seemed to hate. But Tuesday’s “What They Died For” was amazing, and really sets us up for the grand finale.
I’m still not sure how the sideways world ties in to the ‘real world’ yet. At the beginning of the season, the island is underwater. From what we now know about the heart of the island and the light, does this mean that the light has gone out? From what we now know about Smoke-Locke’s intention to either get off of or destroy the island, does this mean that the nuke actually did what Locke couldn’t do? Does this mean that in the sideways world, Locke is free? Or did the nuke never go off and in fact the sideways world is a result of the island being destroyed by Locke himself?
Other thoughts:
Is Richard Alpert dead? I thought he was immortal, but maybe not.
I love the part where Jack is stitching up Kate on the beach. Talk about full circle.
What are the rules governing who Locke can and cannot kill? Once Jack takes on the top job and Jacob is gone forever, is his ‘protection’ gone too? Does that protection lift when they are no longer candidates, i.e. now that Jack is Jacob, essentially, is Locke able to kill whomever he pleases?
I get the sense that Desmond is much more than either Widmore or Smokey knew – unless their whispered conversation reveals that they do know his potential. I don’t think so. I think Desmond has a far more important role to play than merely resisting the electromagnetism of the island. We’ll find out what that is as he gathers everyone together for the concert in the finale. In any case, I think he’s somehow beyond either the strings of Jacob or Smokey, or anything else.
Going back to “Across the Sea” for a moment: was Jacob and Smokey’s “mother” also a smoke-monster? Was she the smoke monster and when she died her bad spirit went back into the cave only to be resurrected by the fratricide Jacob commits? How else did she kill all those people? But if she was the monster, then why didn’t she want to leave the island herself? Maybe she couldn’t for some reason? Why did she favor the other brother over Jacob?
I’m not surprised it’s Jack taking over for Jacob – as the great doubter becomes a man of faith – but I wonder if there’s more to the real Locke, the dead Locke, who seemed a much more perfect fit. What does Desmond mean by wanting sideways Locke to “let go”? There’s more to this.
I don’t think Linus has gone over to the dark side. I think he’s trying to con the smoke monster, and got to take out Widmore in the process.
What is the cut on sideways Jack’s neck? This is more significant than merely a marker that his is not the real world. Locke did cut open that lady’s throat – and here we have this image of Jack with a cut on his neck…coincidence?
Will everyone be at the concert? Will Jack’s son play alongside Daniel Faraday? I imagine there will be some major revelation, but will there also be a choice? Will they have to decide whether to go back to the island…again?
Do I have too many questions to be properly wrapped up in 100 minutes of television this Sunday? And does anyone know if it’s possible to get a network channel like ABC now if you don’t subscribe to any cable package? I’d rather not wait until Monday this time to watch it on Hulu….
Also – for the best takes on Lost episodes, read Alan Sepinwall. His thoughts on Lost are always the most clear and interesting ones on the net.
It will be a shame to come to the end of this show, but I’m excited at the same time. Like the end of a good book or long series where you know you’re about to wrap it up, say good-bye to all your favorite characters and there is anticipation and dread all at once….
Thoughts?
Update.
Do you think Desmond can enter the Light? He seems resistant to all the islands effects and can transport between realities (or is forced between them by the island?) – does this mean he is impervious to the effects of the Light, those same effects that turned Jacob’s brother into Smokey? What are the implications of this?
I decided a couple of weeks ago to stop trying to think through it and to just let it happen. I just hope the merging of the two realities is one smartly.Report
Is Richard Alpert dead? I thought he was immortal, but maybe not.
Alpert seems to be under the impression that there are circumstances in which he can die, it just won’t happen naturally and he can’t kill himself. That being said, I doubt he’s dead.
Once Jack takes on the top job and Jacob is gone forever, is his ‘protection’ gone too?
I doubt it, since Locke couldn’t kill Jacob. I imagine the same rules will apply to Jack.
Going back to “Across the Sea” for a moment: was Jacob and Smokey’s “mother” also a smoke-monster
It’s not impossible, but I think it unlikely. I think she killed the folks the old fashioned way. The smoke nature of Esau (smoke-Locke) seems to be specific to him by virtue of Jacob’s sending him into the cave.
What does Desmond mean by wanting sideways Locke to “let go”?
I take the pretty straightforward meaning on this. The same thing Jack meant. Whatever is holding Locke back, he needs to move past it. I get the feeling that Desmond has discovered that most people have something holding them back.
Will everyone be at the concert?
This one leads to the most interesting question that you didn’t ask… who is Jack’s ex-wife? Sarah is the most obvious candidate, but for some reason I discounted that possibility. I can’t remember why, so that might be a mistake. I think it’s Juliet. But that’s nothing more than a guess.
And does anyone know if it’s possible to get a network channel like ABC now if you don’t subscribe to any cable package? I’d rather not wait until Monday this time to watch it on Hulu….
Amen, brother. I don’t have cable or satellite and I am scratching my head trying to figure out what to do. However, I am too far in the boonies to get antennae unlike most people. Are you?
There are some people that stream what they watch on the Internet. I saw a few football games through this last season. Surely one of them will be watching Lost. The video quality tends not to be great, however. And I think it’s mostly a sports thing, so maybe one of them isn’t watching Lost.Report
I feel like Across the Sea gave us some incidentally interesting concepts and semi-demi-hemi-answers, but nothing I think the series is any less complete without. I personally could have been happy, and would have preferred, watching another episode fleshing out the story like What They Died For and not missed the contents of Across the Sea much at all. (It is of course possible I’m saying that not accounting for how Across the Sea is now enhancing my enjoyment of what I’m seeing. But I still didn’t much enjoy the process.)
I’d like to have had that extra ‘regular’ episode, because I feel like they’ve run out of time at just the wrong time – now that the story is really on track with Super-Jack ready to take on MIB. It seems like they could have gotten here half way through the season without breaking a sweat. Now, I’m ready for some cliffangers in the finale and to watch the big fight play out next season. Ah, well.
Incidentally, I tend to agree that Jack, despite now having been set up for it now for so long, seems an odd choice to take over as protector. I was always a big fan of Jack (rare, I know), but what I liked was his unrelenting rationalism and drivenness to get off the Island. That made his need to “go back!” very intriguing, but somehow I just can’t gat all the way around to where he abandons his previous life persona to become the mystical protector. (Same for a number of other characters. I guess I just don’t buy into the whole ‘fundamental change in character’ concept.) I agree Locke or perhaps Ben was a more believable choice. Additionally, it’s kinda lame to just go ahead and do what you’ve been telegraphing for the whole season. Maybe there’s another bombshell coming. I always thought the reason for Jack to go back that matched his character would have been to help fight off the MIB to set right the balance on (“fix”) the Island, but then to hand the protectorship off to a character more suited to it. I’m a continuity guy, and I think Jack remains a man of science, and one with a lot of reason to get back to a life that had the fundamentals in place to be pretty sweet – not least because he seems to have found someone to share it with, if he can just figure out a way to park a few issues. (BTW, my favorite character/actor on the show, is hands down Christian Shepard and the actor who plays him.) I think you’re right, though, E.D., the “real” Locke always seemed just about tailor-made for the role they’ve carved out as Island protector.Report
@Michael Drew, I think they could really come out of nowhere by making Sawyer the protector. He was ‘humanized’ when he was with Juliet and we saw he could care about something. He had that great moment on Tuesday where he realized he was responsible for killing the folks on the sub. What if Jack sacrafices himself in the finale to kill Locke and Sawyer takes the job? Of course – with the possible merging of the two realities, that opens up a whole slew of characters who could take the job.
And this is why I quit trying to figure it out…Report
@Mike at The Big Stick, Sawyer was the next most logical possibility, or maybe third after real Locke and Ben. I actually think Ben would be the best at it.Report
@Michael Drew, Ben and Real Locke certainly seemed to have the most affinity for the island.Report
@Mike at The Big Stick, It seems like a really good reason to bring Ben around to the light side of the force – to lock him and Flocke into the new roles. Otherwise, I don’t see much reason to have made him boring and good and deprive fans of his awesome treachery this whole season.Report
@Michael Drew, It’s an interesting dynamic with those two. Assuming Ben is manipulating Locke now, those two have been pulling each other’s strings all season.Report