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Wednesday, October 25, 2006
'Lost' - "Every Man For Himself"
Graphic artist Zoetawny made me another new tag! Cool. Now I can rotate them! (She rocks, y'know.)
I swear I'm getting just a tad more lost each week watching Lost, aren't you? Perhaps I was doing better when I knew a bit less, the days of pushing the button, a strange French woman, and mysterious hatches. I really can't figure the Others out at all. They keep claiming they're not evil and the show has shown us evil in the "good" people stranded on the island.
I can't help but think of Benjamin Limus (whom I used to think of as Henry Gale) as being almost the persona of evil. Michael Emerson, who plays the role, is perfect for the part and he can creep me out with a single glance. How can he be on the side of Good? I just don't see it.
Tonight's episode had no polar bears running amok and didn't really answer any of our past questions, per se. Did it bring up a few new questions? Well, of course. It's Lost, after all.
The show opened up on the camp where Desmond's character is getting even a bit more quirky. He told Claire that she should move the baby down the beach as he needed to fix her shelter roof. Charlie, jealous and jumpy dude that he is, balked and Desmond seemed to give up on the idea. But, he didn't give up.
Instead, he asked the still-not-officially-introduced character Paulo for a golf club. He rigged it to a wooden pole and thus, he saved the world as easy as pushing a button. Okay, it actually acted as a lightning rod and took a blow that supposedly would have struck Claire's shelter. How did he know a storm would hit so suddenly? And, more importantly, how did he know lightning would strike right there? I haven't a clue. I said he's growing more quirky.
The majority of the show focused on the captives - Jack, Sawyer, and Kate. In flashback sequences this week, Sawyer's past was expanded upon. Again, the flashback sequences were interspersed with the "now" and they both tied in together in theme. I'm separating them here so I don't get dizzy jumping back and forth from past to present.
Sawyer in Flashbacks
The flashbacks focused on Sawyer's prison days. He was a tough guy (of course) and had problems with the prison warden. Or, so he claimed to a new prisoner who seemed to be abused by the inmates and receiving special privileges from the warden. That guy stole ten million dollars, yet said he didn't do it. The warden and other prisoners were sure he did it and hid the money.
In one sequence, both Sawyer and the other prisoner (Munson?) were visited by women. Munson's woman was blackmailing him and Sawyer's woman was the girlfriend whom he swindled and the reason he was in jail. She showed him a baby picture and claimed it was his daughter, Clementine. That explains why he's sung the song before. He denied being the father.
He grew closer with Munson after the visit and, dang, the con man conned the other con man. Munson told him where the ten million dollars was hidden and asked him to relocate it for him.
It turns out it was all a Get Out of Jail Free Card played by Sawyer. He was working for the Feds and the prison warden in a deal to get a hefty commission and leave a free man. He asked that his take, er... commission be put in a fund for Clementine with no way she could find out who gave her the money.
The "Now" on the Island
They've occupied Jack with cartoons, but that just isn't doing the trick. The Others continue to keep Jack separate in the dolphin cage while Sawyer and Kate are in the bear cages, as well as working together on the chain gang. Jack tried to stir up a problem with Juliet by accusing her of being Benjamin's pawn. She denied that Benjamin was the leader.
It was all interrupted by Benjamin himself bursting in. He needed Juliet to attend to Danny's girl (as Sawyer called her), Coleen -- the one who was shot by Sun in the episode before last. Juliet is their only doctor. Meanwhile, Sawyer and Kate see Cole being carried on the stretcher. Sawyer chalks it up to a point for their side and says it's a ticket out of there. I don't really understand his reasoning, but that's okay. I'm lost, of course.
Sawyer came up with a plan to use the food/water/music button in his cage to create a puddle of water and electrocute the next Other who came to the cage. Well, that happened to be Benjamin who beat Sawyer's butt. Sawyer previously said none of the men really knew how to fight. But tonight he found that Benjamin can wipe the floor with him without raising a sweat.
For his attempt against Ben, Sawyer was taken by the others and awakened strapped to a table, then knocked out with a huge needle of something. When he awakened after his surgery of some sort, Ben went bananas shaking a rabbit in a cage until it supposedly died. He told Sawyer that he had implanted pacemakers in both the rabbit and him. If the heart beat goes over a certain rate, the pacemaker would explode and kill him as it did the rabbit. EEK! He gave Sawyer a watch-like heart monitor. As his allowed excited rate is 140 beats per minute, a warning alarm triggers at 125 and he'd need to rest. It was to keep him from attacking others or escaping and he wasn't to tell Kate. Okay.
Meanwhile, Juliet, against the wishes of her Other buddies, wanted Jack to try to save the gunshot victim. They set off alarms to cover any voices, put a hood over his head, and led him by the cages with Kate and Sawyer. They called him, they knew it was him. But he couldn't hear them over the alarms.
He also couldn't save Coleen. She died despite his efforts. So, Danny the Other, went out and beat Sawyer to a pulp just because. All the time he was beating him, Sawyer couldn't fight back because he didn't want the pacemaker to blow up. Also, Danny kept shouting to Kate, "Do you love him? Do you love him?" Finally, when she said she did, he stopped.
But, you must remember, they say they're the Good Guys.
Sawyer, with his macho man image, claimed that Danny "hit like a girl." Kate realized she could fit through the bars at the top of her bear cage and wanted to escape. It worked. She got out and was stunned when Sawyer refused to go with her. He told her that it's "every man for himself" and that she should leave him behind. We know it's the pacemaker-bomb bit, but Kate didn't have a clue. She climbed back in her cage probably figuring she now knows how to get out.
But, she won't escape because that Evil Benjamin was at his bank of monitors watching every moment of it!
Then I got more lost with the next events. Benjamin and his henchment took Sawyer for a long walk up a hill which triggered his monitor. Sawyer thought they were trying to kill him, so did I. Then Ben showed him that the dead rabbit is still alive, said it was only sedated, and that neither Sawyer nor the rabbit had pacemakers. Conning the con man. Of course, that ties in with the flashback sequences. Benjamin says he's a better con man. I say he's just evil personafied.
Then they walked to a cliff which overlooked where the Oceanic 815 crash victims were. I just can't get the significance of that scene at all. To me, all it showed was that there are two separate islands in close proximity in an otherwise wide open sea. Did I miss something?
Back at the Others, Jack had noticed an x-ray of a man's spine as he attended to the gunshot victim. He grilled Juliet about it saying that a tumor on the spine is obvious and that person was in danger. That spine is Benjamin's.
Just one real question for me this week. Why was the rabbit labeled with an 8? It's one of the Lost recurring numbers, but...!
Oh, I'm still Lost. Will I ever be Found?
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22 comments:
Colleen is Colleen. My bad. I really thought I heard "Connie".
I like being Lost and even lost in Lost. But I missed the divulging secret this week. So, they're on a separate island. It makes things more complex, not an answer.
Evil people say they're not evil.
This week, I saw a link to the free will motif in Lost. The Others are forcing the Losties. The Others might have good intentions in whatever goals they have but meanwhile they are transgressing the Losties' free will and therefore destined :) to be at odds. Reading about Lost elsewhere, there is this heavy motif. The Losties always say, "You don't/can't tell me what I can/cannot do." Rousseau, Locke, and Desmond are philosopher names.
I'm still loving the show but I'm chilling more and more on analysis. This is my version of being put out by the perpetual lostness of the show that everyone mentions. If the separate island thing was the secret the show *does* have a problem with getting people lost. 5 million less viewers. Too bad. Of course it will still do well. Maybe people want the comfort to know something will unravel after the season is over and then they'll watch the DVDs.
Sawyer keeps getting hit more in one episode than anyone else gets hit in their entire lives. There must be healing on the island(s). Nah... that would mean science fiction. Me and Locke don't believe in that stuff.
But seriously, although I believe (and know enough to explain the Truth) that "God has a free will too", the free will issue is always interesting to see unfold. It's going to be bigger here in this show Lost than in any entertainment I can remember. Basically, humanism has run amuck and found it's lowest common denominator in cornerstone of "free will". This places humans at the center and as the first cause, instead of God. How self-centered, literally. Hopefully, "self-centered" is still carries derogatory connotations nowadays. Excuse me, it's late in the morning and I'm half-asleep. You could say that I'm half-awake, like the glass is half-full, but that doesn't matter as much as people think. More than positive and negative in reality, there is right and wrong.
So, it's wrong to ... make us wait until February for more Lost episodes. ....or something relative to that. You know what? I'm being quite "indulgent" right now, as Simon Cowle (sp?) would say. And that is a self-centeredness. And that is wrong. So, I'm sorry. And so you see, everything is intimately related like Lost purports. I've come full circle... a few times. It is dubious that anyone will read this far on my present rambling, sporadic, rant. "Anyone? Fly?". Yet I'm having fun...riddled with allusions. If you don't get them, then they will have to remain an inside joke, inside my Lost head, where entertainment and reality meet. I *hope* they meet. They have a lot to say to one another.
I have no idea why 8 is on the rabbit.
Julie is a fertility specialist (?)..aren't they MD's??? Yet, she needed Jack to try and save Col. The resusitation machine is broke and she said they had never had a need for it before???? Could it be that once you are on the island(s) for a lenght of time the magnetism causes sterility? Hence, children being taken and interest in taking babies from mothers.
Still not really convinced that there is no pacemaker in Sawyer. We will see. So now we have "2" islands..bet there are more. LOL
Desmond and the lightening rod was just plain strange..how did he know? Thought he was just playing Ben Franklin.
I am not good at figuring this show out, I just enjoy seeing what will be thrown at us next and waiting for the AHA's to happen.
Ben/Henry, where is this character being lead with us the viewers? Good/evil!!! I just do not like him..period..creeps me out. Now he has a tumor on his spine and they need Jack, a spinal surgeon. What a coincidence, that J was on that plane. This show takes you round and round and around again...
I Love This Show! I don't understand it (just like everyone else) but I Love IT!
My thoughts on the "other" island Benry showed Sawyer... He mentioned Alcatraz when talking to Sawyer so... could someone swim from one island to the other and if they make it, be home free. Could the "other" island be connnected to freedom in some way??? That's what the prisoners from Alcatraz were doing, swimming from one island to freedom (hope they made it, wish we knew), but I digress..
Quistian: Still "Rambling" on I see. And I read it to the end. Woe is me if I'm beginning to understand you! HA! And that's reality!
I guess I am thinking in more simplistic terms. I thought Benry showed Sawyer that they are on another small island so that he would tell Kate that they do not have anywhere to run to. It did look pretty far to swim............my big question is this - When Sayid, Jin and Sun sailed the boat around the big island - the "Others" saw them and went to steal the boat etc....That means that the Others had to get on their own boat to sail to the other (pun on words...) boat to try and steal it.
I am sure the first episode this season showed Juliette and neighbors living on the big island. Now they are all on the small island......do they commute back and forth every day on a fery boat?
from
Lyss
If they clear up the mysteries the show is over! True, they need Jack NOW, but if they have that much control to bring down a plane (and insure the one they need to survive) ....then we are dealing with some MAJOR forces!!!! I too want to know what all those rocks are for. But chain gangs work on these things (or did) to what end? Just manual labor, just not sit in a cell? Kind of like brain-washing or tire them out, more malleable!? Just hit me...if they sent Michael and Walt HOME..then why not send Benry somewhere that he can have the tumor surgery. Lightbulb moment!!!! This show circles and circles.
Well I am lost lost lost...I cant watch it, its too horrifying. I dont like seeing Sawyers pretty self all messed up. It is all just sickening. Weird person I am I want to know what happens so I thank you Jackie for enduring it..but even the promos for it freak me out. JMO
Quistian,
Are you trippin'?
SSW
I don't think the inference was that "they" the "Others" brought the plane down 'because' Jack was on it. I believe that was all a mistake of Desmond.
I think Jack meant he knew why he was there "now", why he was brought to their camp, i.e., for Benry's surgery.
delee, that's ingenious (sp) about if they let Mike and Walt leave supposedly to go home, then like you said, why doesn't Benry go too and get his surgery done in a real hospital? Jack can't be the only surgeon in the world who does this kind of work.
The only theme I get for sure on this season is that the Others are Con Artists Supreme. Even Benjamin admitted that. 'Did we really set your heart to blow up, or were we just fooling?' "Is the bunny dead or alive?" So Benjamin pointed to an island and told Sawyer (who wanted a way to escape) that he wasn't on 'his' island so no use trying. Was that a con? How would they know that was their island? The writers can say or do anything and follow it up with a 'just kidding' grin. As far as the Good vs Evil theme, I see that continuing with the deeper meaning added that 'is Good Evil, or vice versa, if the deed doer believes it to be?'. We see, as Jackie wrote, the Evil Benjamin, in charge of OZ, but he thinks he can't be bad because he sees his motives (unknown to us) as Good. That goes along with the First Season episode where Fear prompted so much needless violence. I like a thinking show...but I want the thinker behind the writing to have a clear idea where he is taking me. I'm not so happy with Lost so far,...but I am still watching and hoping there is indeed a MasterMind running things. Sue
Thank you MEB. IMAO I actually found a theory. WOW, not as dumb as I think sometimes about this show.
Dang Survivor is a re-cap. And WHY?? World Series!!!! We just can not get away from sports!!! Most shows tonight re-runs!!! Boo-hiss.
Guys' go blank in the face when my brother and I say that we have never had the urge to turn on SportsCenter.
Jack, Sawyer, and Kate are leaders or highly influential members of the Losties. Benry knew this by watching them. Hurley is a go-to guy, so he played his part in Ben's puppet show. Locke was already under Ben's spell... or calculated to die in the implosion/explosion.
I *was* trippin'... on no sleep, on the lack of previous comments to stir me brain, and on... the content itself.
There are too many loose ends to have fun guessing on stuff. This bumms me out. I still love the show as the best show ever... next to WKRP. (jk) Guessing was an hugely entertaining facet of the show.
...Hey, I guess it made my head break up into loose ends. So much so, *you* couldn't guess what I was going to do next. See, I'm Lost.
I think the other island that Sawyer saw is just a reflection of the island they are on. I am thinking of it like a snow globe, from the beach level they just see open ocean and once they climbed the hill they saw a reflection. Makes me wonder if they really are out in the middle of the Pacific or in some Truman show type of experiment.
I thought the Alcatraz reference was just alluding to the fact taht you can try to escape but there is no where you can go. It's basicaly the same theme that they were trying to teach Sawyer with the whole pacemaker gimmick.
I'm still good on lost and I think in the next few weeks I think we will see some new villians added to the mix.
"see you in another life". Hmmm, insightful, susanb.
I hope the show doesn't go tooooo humanistic. Yet, enjoying a good guess here, I wonder if a thread unfolds to be that the island (or whatever) brings out talents (I believe/know as "gifts") that people already have. If not, then Desmond's comment to Jack was just a real neat foreshadowing.
island is a reflection?
Could be, but then anything could be. Neat to hear that idea as it's neat to hear all ideas. But I think that idea is a reflection of the loaded esoteric potential of the show to go each and every way the show *chooses* to go.
And you know what? The shape-shifting idea is just a reflection too, ... but on a broader scale.
I keep going back to the magnetics. What if this is a testing ground for the switch in the magnetic polarity.
SSW
More SK (yes, Stephen King, quistian) influence in/on Lost.
see if this little excerpt (particularly the part I made bold) from "On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft" by Stephen King rings a bell:
----
Look — here’s a tablecloth covered with a red cloth. On it is a cage the size of a small fish aquarium. In the cage is a white rabbit with a pink nose and pink-rimmed eyes. In its front paws is a carrot-stub upon which it is contentedly munching. On its back, clearly marked in blue ink, is the numeral 8.
Do we see the same thing? We’d have to get together and compare notes to make absolutely sure, but I think we do. There will be necessary variations, of course: some receivers will see a cloth which is turkey red, some will as one that’s scarlet, while others may see still other shades. (To color-blind receivers, the red tablecloth is the dark gray of cigar ashes.) Some may see scalloped edges, some may see straight ones. Decorative souls may add a little lace, and welcome — my tablecloth is your tablecloth, knock yourself out.
Likewise, the matter of the cage leaves quite a lot of room for individual interpretation. For one thing, it is described in terms of rough comparison, which is useful only if you and I see the world and measure the things in it with similar eyes. It’s easy to become careless when making rough comparisons, but the alternative is a prissy attention to detail that takes all the fun out of writing. What am I going to say, “on the table is a cage three feet, six inches in length, two feet in width, and fourteen inches high”? That’s not prose, that’s an instruction manual. The paragraph also doesn’t tell us what sort of material the cage is made of — wire mesh? steel rods? glass? — but does it really matter? We all understand the cage is a see-through medium; beyond that, we don’t care. The most interesting thing here isn’t even the carrot-munching rabbit in the cage, but the number on its back. Not a six, not a four, not nineteen-point-five. It’s an eight. This is what we’re looking at, and we all see it. I didn’t tell you. You didn’t ask me. I never opened my mouth and you never opened yours. We’re not even in the same year together, let alone the same room … except we are together. We’re close.
----
More overt nod to SK that his books (Carrie, Hearts in Atlantic) or his creations (Noz-a-loz cola on "Henry's" balloon) being actually in the show.
flag, thanks. That's cool to hear about.
SSW, that's a cool guess. What about it? (I haven't seen your other references/posts to it.)
Q-man... to find out what happened to Desmond, read SK's Tommyknockers. He's now got "the touch" like so many of King's characters. Course the Flight 815 "crash" is similar to "The Langoliers" and Charlie's onboard scuffle near the bathroom and heroin addiction is like Eddie Dean's in the Dark Tower books. If you ain't watching Sportscenter (c'mon, catch up on some NHL games dude!), then use your time to do some reading of the guy Hurley would gladly call Dude! ;-)
flagg. so, do you think that the show will fill us in on Desmond or leave that esoteric like other SK references?
I have read only one SK novel. It was a semi-fantasy mideval story. Pretty neat. I heard "Misery" is good. The movie was great. I just don't have time for reading fiction with all the non-fiction I read. I certainly don't have a care to watch hockey. That's down at the bottom of the worst task-list of the most bored person in the world. Down there with watching golf and baseball... and even most soccer. *Playing* soccer is on the other end of the spectrum, mind you.
But back to SK. How evil or horror are his other books. I know about "Stand By Me" and "Green Mile". What are "Carrie" and the others that you mention like? I wouldn't be interested if they're like "Cujo" (bad movie) and certainly not if they're like the "RedRum" movie... the name is on the tip of my mouth and I can't remember it.....
Ah! "The Shining". Evil, evil movie. I don't need that stuff.
Some spookiness is tolerable but I sit wondering if most of the rest of SK's stuff is like that.
Is "Signs" with Mel Gibson written by SK? That was a good movie.
Tonight's the night. Lost time coming soon.
My earlier comment on this post: "Anyone? Fly?" I meant to say "Anyone?...Fry?" being a reference to Ferris Beuhler.
Save Ferris.
Penny, thanks. Too, I agree about flagg.
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