Tuesday, May 25, 2010

LOST: The End


LOST is over. How do we feel? I am satisfied, but sad. I'm not sure I'll completely realize it's over until next January, when in the depths of a cold Minnesota winter, I'll turn on the TV only to realize... all there is to watch is American Idol? Really?

I'll summarize (as briefly as I can) and then theorize later.

On the island: Desmond is seemingly rescued by Rose and Bernard. They "break their rule" (again, with the rules!) and help him out. Jack, Ben, Hurley and Desmond head to "the source" with the Jacob followers so Des can expose himself to that electromagnetic energy and do whatever it is he has to do to, you know, save mankind. He uncorks what's down there, seemingly dies, and all goes dark.

Jack goes after Flocke atop Jacob's cave - a Clint Eastwood showdown if I ever saw one - after Flocke seems to go mortal. Jack gets stabbed, both in the appendix (am I right?) and his neck, which explains why his wound "bleeds" through to the Sideways world all season. Flocke meets his maker, however, after Kate plugs him with a bullet and Jack kicks him off the cliff. Remind me, how many death scenes has Terry O'Quinn done now? He should start a series of Weekend at Locke's movies.

But I digress... Miles, Richard and Lapidus (yes, the latter two are alive!) get the Ajira plane ready for takeoff with a little help from duct tape. Kate and Sawyer (and later, Claire) are summoned to join them, so Kate and Jack have one final goodbye kiss. And, boy, what a kiss. What a moment.

Jack returns to the source, anoints Hurley his successor ("Please enjoy the Eucharist of muddy water in a bottle!") and heads down the waterfall, or whatever it is, and saves Desmond. Ben, so vulnerable by this point, is appointed Hurley's #2. The look on his face when Hurley offers it is priceless.

Jack puts the cork back in, and his job is done. More on his fate in a minute.

In the Sideways world: characters finally have their epiphanies and remember their Island lives. Locke sees his after Jack successfully performs surgery on him. Juliet (David's mother! Yes!) and Sawyer have theirs after handing off an Apollo bar (how fitting). Sun and Jin remember their past lives as Juliet performs their ultrasound. Sayid makes his connection when he encounters Shannon in an alley. Kate and Claire (and later, Charlie) have their flashes as Claire gives birth to Aaron after the concert. And Jack?

In what may be the most poignant images of the series, Jack connects with an empty coffin. He represses his visions after encounters with Kate, but is finally faced dead-on when he enters a church (home of the Dharma station) where Kate tells him they will all "leave." His dad's coffin finally brings back his Island memories. And they pack a wallop.

Then he hears Christian's voice. "But you died," Jack says. Soon he realizes he has died too. This isn't a "we've all been dead the whole time" scenario, Christian implies. This was all simply a means for the Losties - the most important people in each other's lives - to meet again, to "move on."

When Jack enters that church, it's like combination of entering the gates of heaven and sauntering into your high school reunion. There stand all the castaways (well, most of them), hugging each other, reuniting, embracing the substance of their lives, ready to move on. Jack gets it immediately. He hugs a few of them and finds Kate, who has been waiting for him. Christian pats him on the shoulder and opens the doors to reveal a blinding light, a new kind of source.

We flash back and forth between this moment and Jack's death on the island. After the job at the source is done, Jack, bleeding, stumbles through those familiar bamboo plants (even passing Christian's shoe) and rests in the very spot this all started. He smiles as the Ajira plane flies over, hears a familiar bark, and is joined by Vincent, who lies down next to him. The eye closes. Fade out.

My take: Okay, so mythology lovers were probably disappointed by this finale. What answers did we get? Well, not many. We know that the island survives, and doesn't sink after all. We know who takes it over and protects it. But did we get satisfying conclusions regarding the Island's infertility, Walt's "special" qualities, Libby's apparent insanity, Hurley's strange talking bird, or even that big question - what the hell is this island? No, not really.

I give credit to the writers, show runners Damon Lindelof and Carleton Cuse, and the talented director, Jack Bender, that after watching this finale, I didn't really care that I'd been denied those answers. And I think they were denied for a reason. I think they were saying this show was loved because of the characters, because of the people. And no one can deny this was an intensely satisfying finale, emotionally. And why not have more to debate?

Okay, okay: I know there's frustration out there, and I totally get it. Some people probably feel let down. Questions were raised, and they weren't answered. That's not particularly cool. But I don't really feel that way. Here's why: this was a beautifully crafted episode. It was a beautifully filmed anything.

The flashes when characters realized what was happening - that they had already died and had experienced a whole 'nother life on the Island - were perfect. The actors' reactions were just right. They were emotional, not too sappy, and honest. They lived up to the material. Who wouldn't be moved by Juliet and Sawyer's reunion, or Charlie and Claire's?

What moved me the most was that this finale proved to be about needing people. Needing each other. The Sideways flash was, in fact, a world created so that these people could find each other and someday reunite when they died. Some people would call that purgatory. I don't know if I'd call it that, but I'd say it's an afterlife of sorts.

Is that a cop-out, when the creators had said this series was not about purgatory? I don't think so. What happened on the island, happened. What's done is done. That was all real. When Jin and Sun drowned on the sub, they really died. When Jack really died at the end, he died. And I think, to an extent, the Sideways world was "real" too. It was, as some people have said, a "soul cluster." It was a gathering of souls to "move on" - to re-visit the people they needed in the most difficult and crucial time of their lives. Kate and Sawyer may have each lived to be 90 years old, but that doesn't mean these people weren't the most crucial in their long lives. We don't necessarily know the characters' extended stories. We just know they're reuniting to move on after meeting again.

I think, for a show frequently depicting gunshot deaths and slit throats, that's a very hopeful outcome that says a lot about humanity. We don't want to "do it alone," as Christian says. We need people. That's what this series was about: helping each other out. Relying on others when they felt the most alone. Seeking approval after living a flawed life. It's all there.

Tidbits/lingering questions:

-Interesting that Ben won't go into the church. Like Ana Lucia (and presumably, unseen characters, like Mr. Eko) he just wasn't ready for that sort of redemption.

-What would Claire's life be like when returning to the "real" world off-Island? If she was indeed "infected" like Sayid, would she revert to her "normal" self, sans squirrel wig? Does that mean she never really "died" in the first place?

-I wonder how it was decided who would end up in the church at the end. Clearly it's not just plane crash survivors, because Penny and Juliet are there. Aaron has reverted back to a baby. But many people are absent, including the freighter folk. Miles, Charlotte, Daniel and Lapidus are missing.

-I was expecting Walt to show up. But it makes sense that he doesn't since Michael doesn't, who, as explained, is stuck on the island, in his own sort of purgatory. Also missing from this episode? Ilana. Now what was her deal?

-Mrs. Hawking mentions that she doesn't want to let Daniel go, to let him move on. This begs the question: who are the secondary people in the Sideways World? Do they exist? Locke mentions that Jack doesn't have a son (David). But I feel that, somehow, these characters are real, too.

There's a lot left unsaid, a lot to answer. Writing about this show is difficult, because it's hard to describe, even emotionally. Just know that is has been a rewarding experience to watch and to re-visit, and I hope LOST will be remembered for the debate it sparred, for the curiosity, for the inspiration.

The finale: A

Friday, May 21, 2010

LOST: What They Died For

"They" refers to Jin, Sun and Sayid, of course. In an outing full of expected and unexpected deaths, remorse, explanations and very dark humor, the penultimate episode delivered - but mostly as a prologue to "The End," possibly the most anticipated finale since... I don't know, Seinfeld? Cheers? M*A*S*H?

The action kicks off where 'The Candidate' ends up - with a wounded Kate, Jack, Sawyer and Hurley scrambling to figure out what to do next. They decide to locate Desmond in the well. Along the way, Hurley encounters a young boy (whom we now know is Young Jacob), who boldly asks for Ilana's ashes.

The boy swipes them, and by the time Hurley can locate him, Adult Jacob is waiting by a fire, ready to do some splainin'. He tells the group why they were - or weren't chosen as candiates. They were lonely, lost, you see. Kate's name was crossed off simply because she had become a mother to Aaron. (This is an interesting bit. It would imply Jin was the "Kwon" candidate because Sun had become a mother, but why wouldn't Jin be exempt because he was also a parent?)

In the end, Jack volunteers to be the Island's protector, the keeper of the source. Hurley mumbles something like, "I'm glad it's not me," which makes me suspect he will be the selected candidate before long.

We also finally catch up with Ben, Richard and Miles. Richard is quickly head-butted by Smokey, Miles takes off, and Ben, after encountering Widmore and Dirty Tina Fey (aka Zoe), hides them in his secret room. He tips Flocke off of their whereabouts, however, and before long Zoe's throat is slashed and Ben - after allowing Widmore to whisper to Locke his true intention for coming back to the island - plugs Widmore full of lead. It would seem discovering Alex's grave (thanks to Miles and Richard) has turned him back to the dark side.

In the Sideways universe, there's a lot going on. Desmond beats Ben in the face after returning to the school (seriously, how does Ben not have more visible scars?); John finds Jack and agrees to the operation after hearing Desmond's advice of "letting go"; Ben meets Alex's mother, a glammed-up Rousseau, and the two hit it off; and Desmond arranges (via Ana Lucia) a breakout for Sayid and Kate.

The concert coming up - with meet ups arranged almost solely by Desmond - promises to be a reunion. But what will happen?


Tidbits:

-So nice to see Danielle again! And so nice to see her not crazy! The scene with her and Ben was surprisingly touching.

-After dating Libby, Hurley seems to fully remember his island life. Hence, Desmond tells him Ana Lucia is "not ready" to go the distance of remembering her fate.

-Who all will we see at that benefit concert? My best guess: our castaways, plus Charlie, Eloise and Widmore (wasn't Driveshaft playing?), Penny, Juliet, Daniel, Charlotte, and maybe some surprises?

-I think Ben's sole goal - aside from possibly become the Island guardian - is to kill Flocke. And something tells me he will succeed.

-We're still unsure of the fate of Lapidus (is he really dead?) and now Richard. I think both are alive.

-The only characters we haven't seen return are Walt, Eko and Shannon. I know the latter will probably be in the finale; Eko won't; but will Walt? And how old would he be? 26? WAAAAALT!



It's almost The End. How do you feel? B+

Friday, May 14, 2010

NBC Cancels 'Law & Order'


NBC has canceled the stalwart crime drama Law & Order after 20 seasons on the air. Creator Dick Wolf had apparently been aiming to break Gunsmoke's record of 20 seasons by airing a 21st season of 16 episodes. Reports indicated NBC countered with an offer of six to ten episodes, and no deal could be worked out. The last episode airs May 24.

For the record, the number of seasons aside, Gunsmoke broadcast 633 episodes between 1955 and 1975, while Law & Order has aired 452 episodes since 1990.

The spinoffs Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and Law & Order: Criminal Intent, were renewed, and NBC also picked up a new series, Law & Order: Los Angeles (to be affectionately called LOLA).

LOST: Across the Sea


This much awaited episode – distinctive for its back story and lack of any regular characters – was a mixed bag. Did we get answers? Yes, including one big one, but as guest star Allison Janney notes, "Every question I answer will simply lead to another question."

Janney plays the "mother" of Jacob and the MIB. When a pregnant woman named Claudia washes on shore after a shipwreck, Mama Janney (who, like MIB, doesn't seem to have a name) aids her in giving birth to the twins. Then she kills her without hesitation. ("Welcome to the island! Please enjoy a helping of our post-birth delicacy, which I call HeavyRockInTheFace!")

Faux Mama raises the twins to be completely oblivious to the outside world. She tells them there is nothing across the sea, and that any people they encounter on the island will only want to hurt them. Jacob blindly accepts what she says and seems to be a follower. MIB (or, perhaps we should call him BIB) is curious and restless, feeling he doesn't belong on the island.

She also blindfolds them and leads them to what apparently needs protecting – the light, the source, which she says is full of life, death, rebirth. (It also looks like something out of "Tuck Everlasting," but I digress.) She warns them to never, ever go into the cave of light, or they will suffer a fate worse than death.

After a vision of Claudia tells BIB the real truth about his "mother," he packs up and makes camp with some mysterious otherpeople, leaving Jacob to grow up alone with Mama to weave ugly blankets and drink aged (heh, get it?) wine.

When the light/dark twins are approximately 43, Jacob discovers MIB and his people are concocting some sort of donkey wheel to escape the island with the help of a combo of water and electromagnetic energy. When Mama finds out, she knocks MIB out, plugs the well and burns and kills everyone in the village. In revenge, MIB plunges a dagger through her heart. She thanks him upon dying.

Speaking of revenge, Jacob tosses MIB into that cave of light (oh yeah, they weren't supposed to go in there, were they?) and Smokey is born. The physical form of MIB, it seems, has died, and Jacob buries him and Mama in a cave – our very own Adam and Eve.

Tidbits:

-Interesting that Mama Janney doesn't have a name. She seems a bit like some sort of cuckoo Mother Earth. I suspect she is the earlier form of Smokey – how else could she have single-handedly destroyed that village? Or know what going in the light cave caused?

-When MIB kills her, it is with the same dagger we've seen all season, and per instructions we have heard in earlier episodes, he does not let her speak first. It would seem she wanted to die, to be released from this hell of protection. And in a way, it seems he knows this, and it's possibly a mercy killing.

-If it is a mercy killing, could that be Flocke's intention all along? Are the candidates – and anyone on the island – really prisoners, and will killing them somehow set them free in the Sideways world? That's my theory.

-And yes, that means I think Flocke might be the good guy, even though he's still doing everything in order to get his own ass off the island. But I'm not entirely sure Jacob is evil, either.

-It would seem that Mama, Jacob and Richard all drank from the same cup of eternal wine, no? Richard is now the only one of them still alive. What does that mean for his future?


One more episode to go before the finale. I'm just not sure how many answers are forthcoming. B

Thursday, May 6, 2010

LOST: The Candidate

This was the episode we've been waiting for. No, it didn't answer a ton of questions. But it did propel the action forward with the sacrifice of not one, but three major characters. It was mini-movie LOST with a surprise tragic ending.

Widmore, who continues to pass himself off as some sort of hero (and he might be right) puts the Losties in the Hydra bear cages - surely bringing back memories for Sawyer and Kate. But Smokey (it would seem) zaps the sonic fence, and then Jack breaks them out.

After Flocke inspects the Ajira plane, finding some C4 (courtesy of Richard & Co.?) he convinces the others to take the sub. Sawyer and Jack have other ideas, knocking Flocke in the water, knowing his apparent cat-like dislike for H20.

Flocke doesn't seem too perturbed, and after some goons shoot Kate, the others take off in the sub, leaving Flocke and Claire (poor Claire) behind. Unfortunately, as Jack later says, this is exactly what Flocke had wanted. Pulling a Flocke bomb out of a backpack, Jack realizes they are all in one place, ready to be blown up.

But wait, he says, remembering his incident with Richard: nothing will happen. Flocke can't really kill them; they can only kill themselves. Sawyer smells bullshit and de-wires the bomb - causing the timer to speed up.

Sayid, seeming to snap out of his zombie coma courtesy of Desmond, quickly grabs the C4 and tells Jack to go get the Scottie at the bottom of that well - and also notes Jack is "the one." Then Mr. Jarrah went kablammy.

In a Titanic-esque requiem of images, Jack rescues Sawyer while Hurley rescues Kate. Lapidus is knocked unconscious. Jin just can't save Sun, though - her legs are trapped in some pipe. She tells him to go, but he just can't leave her again - apparently not even for their daughter. And so the two hold hands bravely, waiting for their inevitable watery grave. It definitely was reminiscent of Charlie's poetic death, and it was no coincidence the sequence was well directed by Jack Bender, the same helmer of Charlie's sad demise.

Off island, Jack just has to find out why Locke won't agree to a surgical procedure that could restore his ability to walk. He visits Bernard the dentist and is led to John's father, Anthony Cooper, who is shockingly a vegetable in a nursing home.

John later explains that he took his father up in a plane shortly after getting his pilot's license - only to crash, not remembering what he did wrong. As if Terry O'Quinn didn't have that Emmy in the bag, he brought it home in this scene, barely able to get out the words regarding the accident that left his father diminished. It's perfectly ironic that in this world, he has caused his father's plight, and not the other way around.

Tidbits:

-What else did Desmond tell Sayid? Just before his death, did Sayid know about his Sideways life?

-In that last scene on the beach, when Jack gets up off the sand, one half of him is perfectly coated in the sand. He appears half dark and half white. Telling, I think.

-Jin is still alive in the Sideways universe, and so is, presumably, Sun. Maybe they will get a happy ending after all.

-Flocke is pretty manipulative, eh? All this time, he's been lying about not needing to kill the candidates. There's not much question now that he's pure evil, is there?

-Where's Lapidus? Dead or alive? Since there was nothing definitive, I'm going to say alive. 'Cause he's, you know, a pilot and all.


Up next week: a lot more Jacob vs. Flocke mythology. SPOILER ALERT: the episode features almost no regular cast members. Methinks we will get some answers regarding the island. And, of course, more questions. A