Search This Blog

Showing posts with label Jacob. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jacob. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Jacob's Foot: The Season Five Recap (LOST Rewind)

LOST Rewind: Season Five

As I think I wrote yesterday, seasons three and four unfortunately do not get a rewind. But if you search through the Jacob's Foot archives, you'll surely find season three and season four finale re-posts that do both justice. Plus, there's that whole entry in which I compare seasons of LOST to Mars Volta albums. But anywho, it is time to finally to do the ultimate recap to season five of the show.

I'm a big fan of season five. LOST fandom seems to be split about this season. Some have it ranked highly and others have it ranked just above the second season. The season doesn't kick into full gear until the sixth episode, "316." The first five episodes contain a massive amount of set-up for the rest of the season. Ms. Hawking insists the emotional and physical circumstances of Oceanic 815 must be re-created. Since they are only half re-created, the Oceanic 6 get separated by 30 years of time. This is confirmed by Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse on the LOST special "A Journey Through Time." The left behind Losties are foreshadowed to be in Dharma in the teaser of season five, the rules are established and established and established for time travel so the characters can later test the theory of whatever happened, happened, Faraday discovers Jughead and tells Ellie that her people need to bury it, the Aaron stuff with Kate prepares us for Whatever Happened, Happened, and etc etc. Once time stabilizes, the meat of the story takes place.

As the season aired, I always wanted more 2007 stuff. I enjoyed the happenings in Dharmaville but the 2007 stuff fascinated me. I then realized after rewatches that the 2007 story was/is a sort of set-up for what's to come which furthers my thought that there will be no time reboot. Dharma is the central story of the season. It's basically complete and will be complete once season six unwinds from that cliffhanger. 2007 just gets started in "The Incident." In "Dead Is Dead," Ilana and Bram prepare to move the box with Locke's body in it. Ben asks what's in the box and they say nothing. It's a small moment but it's something I should've been all over in my recap. Oh well. In "The Incident," a ton of things happen in 2007. We discover Locke is not Locke, Jacob's murdered, Ilana becomes very, very important, etc etc. The story just STARTS! It's so damn cool!

Well, by now the rewind dealy is pretty clear. It's more of a list thing than it is long-winded paragraphs. Oh, the long-winded entries are coming again but not in this entry. There's a good chance my final thoughts on the season will be long-winded. I'm changing a few things with this rewind. There will be no episodes you need to watch list because the whole season should be rewatched. Actually, that's all for the changes. In lieu of that will be my top 7 favorite episodes of the season.

JACOB'S FOOT FAVORITE EPISODES OF SEASON FIVE IN DESCENDING ORDER!

7. The Variable--The show's 100th episode does not disappoint. Faraday returns from Ann Arbor to tell our losties that everything he has said about time travel might be true because they themselves are the variables. We also find out Faraday's mother knew she killed her son all of her life and her son's death takes place in this very episode.

6. The Life and Death of Jeremy Bentham--A journey with noble intentions ends only with John Locke's death. But he does send Jack into suicide beard mode

5. 316--Lindelof and Cuse knocked it out of the park in back-to-back episodes. They wrote this gem and they wrote the Bentham episode. The scene between Ben and Jack as they look as The Incredulity of St. Thomas is remarkable.

4. Jughead--Occupied the 1 spot for quite a bit of time during the season. I love Young Ellie, loved the Jughead stuff, the Desmond stuff is fantastic (especially Des finally having the upper hand on Chucky Widmore). Faraday's such a badass in this episode. It's great. Oh, Jughead. What an awesome episode. And the bomb plays such a large role by season's end.

3. Dead Is Dead--In my recap I wrote, "this is one of the most important episodes" in the series. I didn't know why then and feel vindicated after that reveal in "The Incident." I think more light will be shed on the events in this episode in the final season. One of the best scenes in the episode is when Ben tells Sun that he's seen a lot of wonderful things happen on The Island but dead is dead. Little did we know that Ben spoke the truth on that porch.

2. He's Our You--Sayid's best episode of the series. This is an example of what makes LOST so good. An extremely gripping and moving character story. The ending always manages to stir some strong emotion as well.

1. The Incident--A finale that basically tops the immense finale that is season three's Through The Looking Glass. I wrote 4,000+ words on it. I haven't stopped thinking about since the season ended. Jack and Sawyer have a fight that was five seasons in the making, Bernard and Rose have one of the most touching scenes in LOST, there's the jaw-dropping reveal of Locke, the Ilana stuff. It's terrific.

THE SEASON FIVE MOST VALUABLE CHARACTER AWARD!

Yes, indeedy. Who will be the five MVC candidates? Continue reading to find out:

John Locke: Saves Juliet and Sawyer from the 1950s version of The Others, Refuses to shoot one of The Others because he is now their leader, Finds The Others camp proving that he knows the better Island than one Charles Widmore, tells Richard to see Locke two years in the future when he is born, Seeks to Know what he must do to stop the Flashes, Is Willing to Die if it means saving his friends, leaves the Island but before doing that STOPS the time jumps with a broken leg and absolutely no help at all from Christian but saves his friends regardless by stopping the time jumps, returns to real world, Visits Walt and acknowledges his existence, attempts to get all of the Oceanic 6 to return but that doesn't work out for him, AND manages to make a believer of Jack. Unfortunately, the man is murdered by Ben and the Man in Black seemingly hijacks his identity so the John Locke credentials here since the real John Locke falls out of the crate dead.

Sawyer: Becomes the leader of the Left Behinders, comforts Rose and Bernard, makes fun of Frogurt, is very proactive during the initial stages of the time jumps, wants to go to the Hatch for supplies, shows emotion about the freighter explosion because he thinks everyone he cares about just blew up with the boat, rescues Juliet from the flaming arrows, makes sure Faraday isn't killed by Young Ellie the Other, witnesseses the birth of Aaron but chooses to not interfere with the past (nor does this experience make him wonder 'oh we should try to find Claire' but I hold no grudge), protects his friends with the help of Juliet when they are being shot at while using the Outrigger canoes, Becomes LaFleur once they are in the mid-70s, saves Amy from The Others, works out things with Richard so the truce isn't broken, convinces Juliet to stay with him in hopes Locke (but for Sawyer probably Kate) returns, helps Horace after he's found throwing dynamite and drinking alcohol, becomes the head of security for Dharma, manages to seamlessly integrate Kate, Jack, and Hurley into Dharma when they return via Ajira, tries to help Sayid as much as possible when Sayid is mistakenly identified as a Hostile, helps Kate bring Young Ben to The Others so that he can be saved, tries to cover up taking Ben to The Others, is forced to bound and gag Phil because Phil saw the videos, suggests either leaving via sub or hiding in the jungle when discussing with the group how to save their asses, Is Eventually found out and Gives up the information in exchange for a trip off the Island with Juliet, Wants to stop Jack from detonating a hydrogen bomb, gets into a brutal fist fight with Jack, does not achieve his goal of stopping Jack, Tries with all his strength to save Juliet after she's pulled into the hole but can't pull her out.

Daniel Faraday: Is the only character able to explain the time flashes, the rules, etc. Tries to save Charlotte but cannot, is able to contact Desmond in the past so present Desmond can help them, Tells The Others to bury Jughead after informing Ellie to fill the crack with lead, Stays with Charlotte as Locke and the others make their way to The Orchid, Leaves The Island for 3 years to study in Ann Arbor, Returns and tells everyone that whatever think the rules are and was supposed to happen are wrong, informs Dr. Chang of the impending incident referencing the pocket of electromagnetic energy of his group and advises Chang to evacuate The Island, wants to meet with The Others, on the way tells Jack that his entire view changed on whatever happened happened and that people can change the past and that he plans to detonate a hydrogen bomb to prevent The Incident from happening so Oceanic 815 lands safely at LAX and the freighter would have never went to The Island, is murdered by his own mother.

Juliet: Figured out anything she and the others had with them would travel with them through time which is why Sawyer never lets go of the rifle, Suggests using the Zodiac to find shipping lanes, has Sawyer's back throughout the entirety of the season, tries to aid in Charlotte's recovery, translates the latin Charles Widmore and his Other friend are speaking in because, as she explains, Latin is the language of the enlightened and, therefore, the language The Others prefer, Becomes part of the motor pool in Dharmaville, delivers Amy's baby, is able to get Kate's name on the manifest before Phil finds out she's not meant to be there, does as much as she can to save Young Ben's life because he's just a kid and not the man he'll eventually be, has the idea to bring Ben to The Others so that his life can be saved, takes control on the sub in order to go back to The Island, is pulled down to the bottom of the well, finds Jughead undetonated, grabs a rock and bashes it 8 times as she yells 'come on you son of a bitch' until all goes white.

Frank Lapidus: Is the pilot of Ajira Flight 316, lands that aircraft safely on Alcatrez Island after expering major and tremendous turbulence, makes sure Sun and the people on the flight were safe and taken care of, accompanies Sun to New Otherton where they meet Christian and find that the other members of the Oceanic 6 are in '77 and members of the Dharma Initiative, tries to figure out what the heck Ilana and Bram are up to, follows them around as they burn the cabin and search for someone who can answer their question posed in latin, is the first of our beloved characters to see the dead body of John Locke.

THE SEASON FIVE MVC AWARD GOES TO...John Locke. If he didn't fix that frozen donkey wheel, all of the left behinders would've died. Here's the order:

2. Sawyer

3. Faraday

4. Juliet

5. Frank Lapidus

FINAL THOUGHTS

As I wrote earleir, fans are split with this season. I enjoyed the season thoroughly. Where would I place it with the other seasons? Good question. I won't answer that.

Damon and Carlton, in a recent interview, stated that they wanted fans to be thinking about the implications of detonating jughead as well as about Jacob and his "friend" but Damon makes it a point to tell the interviewer that mythology will remain secondary to the characters and that the mythology has been a device to explore and know these characters. With that in mind, my final thoughts concern only the characters and their respective arcs.

Time-travel allowed the show to do many things. What I've been thinking about lately, in regards to using time travel as a narrative device, is the theme of regret and reflection. This theme dominates the season when you think about it. "The Little Prince" brings the characters to 2004 on the night Boone dies and Aaron is born. As the characters walk in the jungle, Locke can be heard banging on the Hatch. Later, Locke reflects on that moment with Sawyer and he tells Sawyer that he needed that pain. Sawyer then chooses to not approach Kate when he sees her delivering Aaron. These two moments are sort of a microcosm of some of the things I think the writers wanted to accomplish this season. One is reminded of each character's arc during this season, where they've been, where they are, where they might go.

Damon and Carlton said these characters are connected in ways they don't even know yet on the recap that aired before the finale of season five aired so I think the big part of this season, in the midst of a tremendous amount of mythology, is to set the audience up for the final chapter of these characters.

There were tremendous character moments in this season like Sayid's struggle with his own selfhood, Kate's decision to go back to the Island to find CLAIRE. Ben's own arc is refreshed in our minds: his abusive childhood, the pain he felt over losing his daughter, his love for the Island, etc. There's Juliet FINALLY delivering a child successfully on the Island, Sawyer embracing his potential, Jack willing to believe, Jin sacrificing his wedding ring as a means to keep Sun away from the Island for her own safety, Sun desperately trying to find Jin, Miles reconciles his issues with his father, Desmond still doesn't want to go back to the Island but he travels to Oxford and then Los Angeles because he thinks he is helping his friends. Terrific character moments abound in season five.

Overall, I think the character arcs and mythology blend together very well as per the usual with LOST. They did a lot of bold, inventive things with the narrative, the structure, etc. I enjoy season five immensely. Do re-watch the season before season six beg
LOST Rewind: Season Five

[caption id="attachment_81" align="alignnone" width="805" caption="What a poster. I want to marry it."][/caption]

As I think I wrote yesterday, seasons three and four unfortunately do not get a rewind. But if you search through the Jacob's Foot archives, you'll surely find season three and season four finale re-posts that do both seasons justice. Plus, there's that whole entry in which I compare seasons of LOST to Mars Volta albums. But anywho, it is time to finally to do the ultimate recap to season five of the show.

I'm a big fan of season five. LOST fandom seems to be split about this season. Some have it ranked highly and others have it ranked just above the second season. The season doesn't kick into full gear until the sixth episode, "316." The first five episodes contain a massive amount of set-up for the rest of the season. Ms. Hawking insists the emotional and physical circumstances of Oceanic 815 must be re-created. Since they are only half re-created, the Oceanic 6 get separated by 30 years of time. This is confirmed by Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse on the LOST special "A Journey Through Time." The left behind Losties are foreshadowed to be in Dharma in the teaser of season five, the rules are established and established and established for time travel so the characters can later test the theory of whatever happened, happened, Faraday discovers Jughead and tells Ellie that her people need to bury it, the Aaron stuff with Kate prepares us for Whatever Happened, Happened, and etc etc. Once time stabilizes, the meat of the story takes place.

As the season aired, I always wanted more 2007 stuff. I enjoyed the happenings in Dharmaville but the 2007 stuff fascinated me. I then realized after rewatches that the 2007 story was/is a sort of set-up for what's to come which furthers my thought that there will be no time reboot. Dharma is the central story of the season. It's basically complete and will be complete once season six unwinds from that cliffhanger. 2007 just gets started in "The Incident." In "Dead Is Dead," Ilana and Bram prepare to move the box with Locke's body in it. Ben asks what's in the box and they say nothing. It's a small moment but it's something I should've been all over in my recap. Oh well. In "The Incident," a ton of things happen in 2007. We discover Locke is not Locke, Jacob's murdered, Ilana becomes very, very important, etc etc. The story just STARTS! It's so damn cool!

Well, by now the rewind dealy is pretty clear. It's more of a list thing than it is long-winded paragraphs. Oh, the long-winded entries are coming again but not in this entry. There's a good chance my final thoughts on the season will be long-winded. I'm changing a few things with this rewind. There will be no episodes you need to watch list because the whole season should be rewatched. Actually, that's all for the changes. In lieu of that will be my top 7 favorite episodes of the season.

JACOB'S FOOT FAVORITE EPISODES OF SEASON FIVE IN DESCENDING ORDER!


7. The Variable--The show's 100th episode does not disappoint. Faraday returns from Ann Arbor to tell our losties that everything he has said about time travel might be true because they themselves are the variables. We also find out Faraday's mother knew she killed her son all of her life and her son's death takes place in this very episode.


6. The Life and Death of Jeremy Bentham--A journey with noble intentions ends only with John Locke's death. But he does send Jack into suicide beard mode.


5. 316--Lindelof and Cuse knocked it out of the park in back-to-back episodes. They wrote this gem and they wrote the Bentham episode. The scene between Ben and Jack as they look as The Incredulity of St. Thomas is remarkable.


4. Jughead--Occupied the 1 spot for quite a bit of time during the season. I love Young Ellie, loved the Jughead stuff, the Desmond stuff is fantastic (especially Des finally having the upper hand on Chucky Widmore). Faraday's such a badass in this episode. It's great. Oh, Jughead. What an awesome episode. And the bomb plays such a large role by season's end.


3. Dead Is Dead--In my recap I wrote, "this is one of the most important episodes" in the series. I didn't know why then and feel vindicated after that reveal in "The Incident." I think more light will be shed on the events in this episode in the final season. One of the best scenes in the episode is when Ben tells Sun that he's seen a lot of wonderful things happen on The Island but dead is dead. Little did we know that Ben spoke the truth on that porch.

2. He's Our You--Sayid's best episode of the series. This is an example of what makes LOST so good. An extremely gripping and moving character story. The ending always manages to stir some strong emotion as well.


1. The Incident--A finale that basically tops the immense finale that is season three's Through The Looking Glass. I wrote 4,000+ words on it. I haven't stopped thinking about since the season ended. Jack and Sawyer have a fight that was five seasons in the making, Bernard and Rose have one of the most touching scenes in LOST, there's the jaw-dropping reveal of Locke, the Ilana stuff. It's terrific.

THE SEASON FIVE MOST VALUABLE CHARACTER AWARD!

Yes, indeedy. Who will be the five MVC candidates? Continue reading to find out:

John Locke: Saves Juliet and Sawyer from the 1950s version of The Others, Refuses to shoot one of The Others because he is now their leader, Finds The Others camp proving that he knows the better Island than one Charles Widmore, tells Richard to see Locke two years in the future when he is born, Seeks to Know what he must do to stop the Flashes, Is Willing to Die if it means saving his friends, leaves the Island but before doing that STOPS the time jumps with a broken leg and absolutely no help at all from Christian but saves his friends regardless by stopping the time jumps, returns to real world, Visits Walt and acknowledges his existence, attempts to get all of the Oceanic 6 to return but that doesn't work out for him, AND manages to make a believer of Jack. Unfortunately, the man is murdered by Ben and the Man in Black seemingly hijacks his identity so the John Locke credentials here since the real John Locke falls out of the crate dead.

Sawyer: Becomes the leader of the Left Behinders, comforts Rose and Bernard, makes fun of Frogurt, is very proactive during the initial stages of the time jumps, wants to go to the Hatch for supplies, shows emotion about the freighter explosion because he thinks everyone he cares about just blew up with the boat, rescues Juliet from the flaming arrows, makes sure Faraday isn't killed by Young Ellie the Other, witnesseses the birth of Aaron but chooses to not interfere with the past (nor does this experience make him wonder 'oh we should try to find Claire' but I hold no grudge), protects his friends with the help of Juliet when they are being shot at while using the Outrigger canoes, Becomes LaFleur once they are in the mid-70s, saves Amy from The Others, works out things with Richard so the truce isn't broken, convinces Juliet to stay with him in hopes Locke (but for Sawyer probably Kate) returns, helps Horace after he's found throwing dynamite and drinking alcohol, becomes the head of security for Dharma, manages to seamlessly integrate Kate, Jack, and Hurley into Dharma when they return via Ajira, tries to help Sayid as much as possible when Sayid is mistakenly identified as a Hostile, helps Kate bring Young Ben to The Others so that he can be saved, tries to cover up taking Ben to The Others, is forced to bound and gag Phil because Phil saw the videos, suggests either leaving via sub or hiding in the jungle when discussing with the group how to save their asses, Is Eventually found out and Gives up the information in exchange for a trip off the Island with Juliet, Wants to stop Jack from detonating a hydrogen bomb, gets into a brutal fist fight with Jack, does not achieve his goal of stopping Jack, Tries with all his strength to save Juliet after she's pulled into the hole but can't pull her out.

Daniel Faraday: Is the only character able to explain the time flashes, the rules, etc. Tries to save Charlotte but cannot, is able to contact Desmond in the past so present Desmond can help them, Tells The Others to bury Jughead after informing Ellie to fill the crack with lead, Stays with Charlotte as Locke and the others make their way to The Orchid, Leaves The Island for 3 years to study in Ann Arbor, Returns and tells everyone that whatever think the rules are and was supposed to happen are wrong, informs Dr. Chang of the impending incident referencing the pocket of electromagnetic energy of his group and advises Chang to evacuate The Island, wants to meet with The Others, on the way tells Jack that his entire view changed on whatever happened happened and that people can change the past and that he plans to detonate a hydrogen bomb to prevent The Incident from happening so Oceanic 815 lands safely at LAX and the freighter would have never went to The Island, is murdered by his own mother.

Juliet: Figured out anything she and the others had with them would travel with them through time which is why Sawyer never lets go of the rifle, Suggests using the Zodiac to find shipping lanes, has Sawyer's back throughout the entirety of the season, tries to aid in Charlotte's recovery, translates the latin Charles Widmore and his Other friend are speaking in because, as she explains, Latin is the language of the enlightened and, therefore, the language The Others prefer, Becomes part of the motor pool in Dharmaville, delivers Amy's baby, is able to get Kate's name on the manifest before Phil finds out she's not meant to be there, does as much as she can to save Young Ben's life because he's just a kid and not the man he'll eventually be, has the idea to bring Ben to The Others so that his life can be saved, takes control on the sub in order to go back to The Island, is pulled down to the bottom of the well, finds Jughead undetonated, grabs a rock and bashes it 8 times as she yells 'come on you son of a bitch' until all goes white.

Frank Lapidus: Is the pilot of Ajira Flight 316, lands that aircraft safely on Alcatrez Island after expering major and tremendous turbulence, makes sure Sun and the people on the flight were safe and taken care of, accompanies Sun to New Otherton where they meet Christian and find that the other members of the Oceanic 6 are in '77 and members of the Dharma Initiative, tries to figure out what the heck Ilana and Bram are up to, follows them around as they burn the cabin and search for someone who can answer their question posed in latin, is the first of our beloved characters to see the dead body of John Locke.

THE SEASON FIVE MVC AWARD GOES TO...John Locke. If he didn't fix that frozen donkey wheel, all of the left behinders would've died. Here's the order:

2. Sawyer

3. Faraday

4. Juliet

5. Frank Lapidus

FINAL THOUGHTS

As I wrote earleir, fans are split with this season. I enjoyed the season thoroughly. Where would I place it with the other seasons? Good question. I won't answer that.

Damon and Carlton, in a recent interview, stated that they wanted fans to be thinking about the implications of detonating jughead as well as about Jacob and his "friend" but Damon makes it a point to tell the interviewer that mythology will remain secondary to the characters and that the mythology has been a device to explore and know these characters. With that in mind, my final thoughts concern only the characters and their respective arcs.

Time-travel allowed the show to do many things. What I've been thinking about lately, in regards to using time travel as a narrative device, is the theme of regret and reflection. This theme dominates the season when you think about it. "The Little Prince" brings the characters to 2004 on the night Boone dies and Aaron is born. As the characters walk in the jungle, Locke can be heard banging on the Hatch. Later, Locke reflects on that moment with Sawyer and he tells Sawyer that he needed that pain. Sawyer then chooses to not approach Kate when he sees her delivering Aaron. These two moments are sort of a microcosm of some of the things I think the writers wanted to accomplish this season. One is reminded of each character's arc during this season, where they've been, where they are, where they might go.

Damon and Carlton said these characters are connected in ways they don't even know yet on the recap that aired before the finale of season five aired so I think the big part of this season, in the midst of a tremendous amount of mythology, is to set the audience up for the final chapter of these characters.

There were tremendous character moments in this season like Sayid's struggle with his own selfhood, Kate's decision to go back to the Island to find CLAIRE. Ben's own arc is refreshed in our minds: his abusive childhood, the pain he felt over losing his daughter, his love for the Island, etc. There's Juliet FINALLY delivering a child successfully on the Island, Sawyer embracing his potential, Jack willing to believe, Jin sacrificing his wedding ring as a means to keep Sun away from the Island for her own safety, Sun desperately trying to find Jin, Miles reconciles his issues with his father, Desmond still doesn't want to go back to the Island but he travels to Oxford and then Los Angeles because he thinks he is helping his friends. Terrific character moments abound in season five.

Overall, I think the character arcs and mythology blend together very well as per the usual with LOST. They did a lot of bold, inventive things with the narrative, the structure, etc. I enjoy season five immensely. Do re-watch the season before season six begins.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Jacob's Foot: 'Because You Left' Audio Commentary Thoughts (Part ofMassive Season Six Preview)

LOST: The Complete Fifth Season

The Journey Back-Expanded Edition

One of Many Reviews: Audio Commentary for "Because You Left."

I know I promised the season two would be up next; however, what I declined to mention is that only pertained to the next season I'll write too many words about. Anywho, it's time to give my thoughts on the commentary Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse recorded for the fifth season premiere "Because You Left."

--This is an epic, detailed commentary. They discuss the major points of Season Five, how they got there. In sum, they summarize the entire writing process of the fifth season from mini-camp to the finale.

--With that said, they let slip a few things about the final season. It's barely anything but it's enough that I can write many words about it. The first thing I'll mention is their use of the word paradox when discussing what Faraday will attempt to do by season's end. The reason why the word struck me is because, since they recorded the season three podcast for Flashes Before Your Eyes, they've advocated the no paradox rule. I'm sure I've written about this using different words and phrasing months ago but I'm ready to advocate 'time will not reboot' during the final season full time. I'm open to anything that actually happens. But yes: paradox absolutely stood out to me.

--Damon quips about the teaser of the episode, saying "Because You Left" begins as the other seasons doe: not knowing where the hell you are or you are with. I got a kick out of that.

--Desmond is discussed. The Desmond discussion takes place at the end of the episode (you know...when Desmond appears) and Lindelof and Cuse jump ahead to what Ms. Hawking tells him: The Island is not done with him. Apparently, The Island is not done with Desmond at all. The discussion is very interesting not because they say a certain character's story is not done, it's HOW they discuss it. They used words like significance as in the viewers will learn Desmond's significance to the WHOLE story. But it is the final season. We're going to learn about where every character fits in to the grand scheme of things. In the recap before 'The Incident' aired in May, Damon and Carlton give a brief summary of where the characters were left at the end of "Follow The Leader" and then say that they are really excited to be at this point where they can begin really telling the final chapter of how these characters are more intertwined than they ever imagiend. Oh man I can't wait.

-I really enjoyed the discussion about how season five was constructed and crafted, even the first episode alone. Damon and Carlton discussed the mistakes they made in past finales (not involving all of the characters) and how they wanted to account for every character in the premiere. They discussed how to pay each character the time they needed in a 42 minute window. The discussion provides valuable insight into the inner-workings of the LOST writers room and how an episode is broken (the most famous episode break is for "The Constant").

-During the scene in which Locke is treated by Richard for his bullet wound, Damon and Carlton talk about how (the viewer now knows) Future Locke and Ben are watching the scene from the jungle. Carlton simply says 'Locke is basically a different person" and Damon then says "You can say that again!" Oh those wacky dudes. Should I have written Future Locke or Not Locke there? Hm. They have a lot of fun messing with the audience. Speaking of that, there's a worthwhile quote from Damon from a GQ interview with Bad Robot. It's about the final season. Suffice to say, I will be using this quote again when I write the final part of this preview on February 1, 2010.

But it makes you understand why some people go to church every Sunday and some people are atheists. Some people need Lost to have a scientific explanation for everything, and that's why our viewership now is what it is—because the people who needed there to be a scientific explanation for everything stopped watching. They were like, "Okay—the show has now proven my theory wrong." This is another joke masking a true terror for us—we're doing the last season of the show now, and this season is where you get your answers. And we're not waiting until the last episode—the answers start coming fairly fast and furious right out of the gate. But in a lot of ways, the storytelling this year is just us telling people that they were wrong. They've built up theories for five years. When a show like this gets to a certain point and then it's "Oh, man, we were cancelled," people get to bring their theories with them to the grave. With us, it's basically like, "No—you're wrong." And some people may have been right. Who knows?

-Back to the commentary: they spend some time emphasizing thee motif of the season which is The Hatch. They wanted to set up the importance of the Hatch again because they knew that would be the key thing by season's end. They wanted to establish the rules of time-travel because they wanted the viewers to question whether or not the characters would try to change anything. This led into a discussion about the overall story of the show and how free-will is a very important theme. Eventually, the characters do try to change things and those episodes are really, really good.

-There could be a part two to this because I might be leaving things out. But this is the end of this LOST entry.
LOST: The Complete Fifth Season

The Journey Back-Expanded Edition

One of Many Reviews: Audio Commentary for "Because You Left."


I know I promised the season two would be up next; however, what I declined to mention is that only pertained to the next season I'll write too many words about. Anywho, it's time to give my thoughts on the commentary Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse recorded for the fifth season premiere "Because You Left."

--This is an epic, detailed commentary. They discuss the major points of Season Five, how they got there. In sum, they summarize the entire writing process of the fifth season from mini-camp to the finale.

--With that said, they let slip a few things about the final season. It's barely anything but it's enough that I can write many words about it. The first thing I'll mention is their use of the word paradox when discussing what Faraday will attempt to do by season's end. The reason why the word struck me is because, since they recorded the season three podcast for Flashes Before Your Eyes, they've advocated the no paradox rule. I'm sure I've written about this using different words and phrasing months ago but I'm ready to advocate 'time will not reboot' during the final season full time. I'm open to anything that actually happens. But yes: paradox absolutely stood out to me.

--Damon quips about the teaser of the episode, saying "Because You Left" begins as the other seasons doe: not knowing where the hell you are or you are with. I got a kick out of that.

--Desmond is discussed. The Desmond discussion takes place at the end of the episode (you know...when Desmond appears) and Lindelof and Cuse jump ahead to what Ms. Hawking tells him: The Island is not done with him. Apparently, The Island is not done with Desmond at all. The discussion is very interesting not because they say a certain character's story is not done, it's HOW they discuss it. They used words like significance as in the viewers will learn Desmond's significance to the WHOLE story. But it is the final season. We're going to learn about where every character fits in to the grand scheme of things. In the recap before 'The Incident' aired in May, Damon and Carlton give a brief summary of where the characters were left at the end of "Follow The Leader" and then say that they are really excited to be at this point where they can begin really telling the final chapter of how these characters are more intertwined than they ever imagiend. Oh man I can't wait.

-I really enjoyed the discussion about how season five was constructed and crafted, even the first episode alone. Damon and Carlton discussed the mistakes they made in past finales (not involving all of the characters) and how they wanted to account for every character in the premiere. They discussed how to pay each character the time they needed in a 42 minute window. The discussion provides valuable insight into the inner-workings of the LOST writers room and how an episode is broken (the most famous episode break is for "The Constant").

-During the scene in which Locke is treated by Richard for his bullet wound, Damon and Carlton talk about how (the viewer now knows) Future Locke and Ben are watching the scene from the jungle. Carlton simply says 'Locke is basically a different person" and Damon then says "You can say that again!" Oh those wacky dudes. Should I have written Future Locke or Not Locke there? Hm. They have a lot of fun messing with the audience. Speaking of that, there's a worthwhile quote from Damon from a GQ interview with Bad Robot. It's about the final season. Suffice to say, I will be using this quote again when I write the final part of this preview on February 1, 2010.
But it makes you understand why some people go to church every Sunday and some people are atheists. Some people need Lost to have a scientific explanation for everything, and that's why our viewership now is what it is—because the people who needed there to be a scientific explanation for everything stopped watching. They were like, "Okay—the show has now proven my theory wrong." This is another joke masking a true terror for us—we're doing the last season of the show now, and this season is where you get your answers. And we're not waiting until the last episode—the answers start coming fairly fast and furious right out of the gate. But in a lot of ways, the storytelling this year is just us telling people that they were wrong. They've built up theories for five years. When a show like this gets to a certain point and then it's "Oh, man, we were cancelled," people get to bring their theories with them to the grave. With us, it's basically like, "No—you're wrong." And some people may have been right. Who knows?

-Back to the commentary: they spend some time emphasizing thee motif of the season which is The Hatch. They wanted to set up the importance of the Hatch again because they knew that would be the key thing by season's end. They wanted to establish the rules of time-travel because they wanted the viewers to question whether or not the characters would try to change anything. This led into a discussion about the overall story of the show and how free-will is a very important theme. Eventually, the characters do try to change things and those episodes are really, really good.

-There could be a part two to this because I might be leaving things out. But this is the end of this LOST entry.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Jacob's Foot: The Seven Week Preview for The Sixth and Final SeasonBegins!

It's Finals week. So what better time to launch my epic seven week season six preview? Finals Week!

I've been thinking a lot about Jacob's Foot since I launched it. I'm always debating with myself how to improve the blog, how to approach weekly coverage of the show when the show is on hiatus for 8 months. I've figured it out: a seven-week season six preview.


What exactly will this seven week preview contain? A little bit of everything. The episode of the day feature is not going away but it won't be written on a weekly basis. I'll explain why later. For the preview, I'm going to break down each and every season of the show with full mind being paid to the upcoming season. I'm going to stare at the final poster released as part of damoncarltonandapolarbear.com and then write about it. I'm going to write a lot about certain characters, review every single thing contained in the season five dvd. It's going to be an interesting and exciting process. Without further do, here is an NBA/NHL style recap of the first season of LOST

THE FIRST SEASON OF LOST


I know I\'ve done a variation of this when I compared seasons of LOST with The Mars Volta albums during the summer This will be much less wordy I promise you but I have to do some set-up first

In the official LOST podcast for "Follow The Leader," Damon and Carlton spend a few minutes explaining the similarities between the end of season five and the end of season one. Here's the transcript of that conversation:
Damon Lindelof Yeah, what do you think the reaction to the finale is gonna be? Let’s just get that out of the way.

Carlton Cuse Umm, I think that, you know, people are gonna like it because there are some good mythological advancements in it, but I think there’s also gonna be a fair share of annoyance that they’re gonna have to wait 8 months to find out what happens after the finale. It has a very, sort of, Season 1 feel to me, like when we blew up in the hatch and people were like, “You’re kidding me! That’s where you’re leaving us?”

Damon Lindelof Yeah, that is always a part of the finale, and I think that umm, several have begun to assume that the show is almost, that there is sort of a reflective quality to it, so that if we’ve been saying that Season 6 is going to be a lot like Season 1, it would seem only fair that this finale going into the finale season of the show is sort of, sort of reminisced about Season 1. We do know that the Jack-gang at the very least is about to go to the Swan site, which is exactly where Season 1 ended, correct?

Carlton Cuse It’s kind of like, you know, in movies, when instead of having the credits at the beginning, they put them at the end of the movie but they’re in reverse order. Right, you know?

Damon Lindelof Oh, interesting.

Carlton Cuse So, feels like we’re kind of, almost spinning back into Season 1. Does that mean that we’ll start Season 6 with the most exciting part of the season?

Damon Lindelof All I have to say is that over the summer, if anybody asks me, “What’s in the hatch?” I’ll know that something has gone horribly haywire!"

I spent the last portion of my 4,000 word "The Incident" recap discussing the mirror of season six to season one. Now I have no idea how this mirror will work. I'll just have to wait and see. But know the set-up is there throughout the season five finale and the intention for the mirror is there. The official posters for season six features every major character. The final poster for damoncarltonandapolarbear is very season one. Now, let the seven week season six preview commence with a look-back at the first season of this fantasic show:

Episodes You Need To Watch before Feb.2

*Walkabout--The first John Locke episode that revealed he couldn't walk for four years until he landed on The Island was healed. This is absolutely the finest Locke episode of the series and a top 3 episode of season 1. I have no idea what to make of the "John Locke" we saw in the season five finale but I totally think this episode will be re-visited somehow, someway. I'm not sure if healing itself will be answered on the show but it's been an essential thing throughout the show. This episode truly begins Locke's special communion with The Island.

*White Rabbit--Jack's first episode! Jack follows his father through the jungle. He's led to his father's casket which he finds empty and then is brought to the caves and the fresh water. Those two sentences say everything. Christian's been pretty important during the show. That empty casket will probably make some sense by series end.

*Raised By Another--The dream Claire has in the beginning of the episode seems so significant that I'm posting the first 8 minutes of the episode. This is Claire's best, has the most mystery regarding the significance of her relationship with her son Aaron. We haven't seen her since Something Nice Back Home (unless you count The Little Prince). This is the perfect Claire refresher.

*Exodus ALL PARTS--There's the Black Rock, The Others, and the fantastic montage of everyone getting into their seats on Oceanic 815.

Episodes You Don't Need to Watch but should still watch:

*Solitary--I said enough when I wrote about it a few weeks ago.

*The Moth--A great Charlie episode, wonderful scenes between he and Locke.

*Confidence Man: See the Episode of the Day I did for it:

*Born To Run

*Hearts and Minds--Boone and Shannon's episode. Remember them? In this episode, Locke gives Boone something that makes Boone hallucinate Shannon's death. There's a lot of great Locke moments PLUS the first notion of electromagentism existing on The Island.

*...In Translation: an episode I will probably write about in the Episode of the Day feature because it's a favorite of mine. Jin finds himself in an unpleasant situation when people find his hands burned. They think he burned the raft. The scene when he yells at Michael in Korean, he is merely telling him that he tried to put the raft out. It's an absolute spectacular episode. You should watch "House of the Rising Sun" as well since, perhaps, Jin and Sun will be reunited in the sixth and final season of the show.

*The Greater Good--Remind yourself how Sayid ended up on Oceanic 815. This episode provides some context for the B-plot in "Walkabout."

*Outlaws: See the Episode of the Day for this episode: (http://blogs.wcuquad.com/2009/11/17/jacobs-foot-outlaws/)

Most Valuable Character

I told you this would be in the style of a major sports league recap. There's a few characters in the running for this: John Locke, Jack Shephard, Sayid Jarrah, Kate, and Michael. How does one decide? That's a good question. I'm not sure. I haven't made up any rules for this and since me and STEVE didn't begin recording our rankings until season three...I can't look at rankings and say "oh there's the MVC." I have enlisted STEVE for the MVC. Here's the different characters credentials (i'm relying on my memory as well as the greatest LOST resource in the world for this: lostpedia.com and I am basing MVC on their on-Island stuff only. no flashbacks.):

Locke:

Discovered the Hatch, Hunted Boar for awhile, helped Boone's obsession with his step-sister to cease, built a crib for Claire's baby-to-be (big points right there as I am a Claire geek), ate an orange whole in the pilot, the first survivor to see Smokey the Smoke monster and put an optimistic spin on the Monster, helps Charle kick his drug habit, discovered Claire who had just gotten back from her time in The Staff with Ethan and his Other friends, was able to get Walt to confess to burning the raft, lights the fuse that blows up the Hatch.

Here's some things that could prevent him from winning MVC: Hits Sayid in the head when Sayid attempts to triangulate the distress call, had the poor taste to show up to Boone's funeral in a shirt covered with Boone's blood, and lied about Boone's fall which caused Jack to mistreat him.

Jack:

Assumes the role of leader of the losties, Wakes up surrounded by bamboo and immediately leaps to help everyone after the crash, finds fresh water at the caves, gives the great 'live together, die alone' speech, breaks up many fights between the survivors in the first days, always treats Claire and whoever else needs to be treated, tries to save Marshall, sits by Rose and talks to her about Bernard when Boone expresses concern, tries to save Boone after Boone's accident, nearly kills himself giving Boone a blood transfusion, and saves Charlie's life.

Sayid:

Devotes Much Time seeking ways to communicate with the outside world,Tries to Triangulate Rousseau's distress call, Stands by his Beliefs like not wanting people to move to the caves with jack, Disagreed with Jack's plan to burn the bodies in Walkabout (again watch The Greater Good), Helps and Connects with Rousseau, Fixes her Music Box, Is Honest with her, Finds the Looking Glass cable, Is the first character to hear the whispers and acknowledge they are not alone on The Island, Begins to Court and DOES court Shannon, goes with Charlie on a mission to retrieve Aaron from Rousseau, and helps RESCUE Aaron alongside Charlie.

Kate:

Goes on the quest to retrieve the Transceiver with Jack and Charlie, humors Charlie when Charlie sings "You All Everybody," helps Sayid triangulate the distress signal, helps an injured Michael back to camp, Makes out with Sawyer in an attempt to get the truth out of Sawyer, Helps Sawyer break out his shell, Goes with Jack in pursuit of Claire and Charlie, Gathered fruit in the Jungle, Helped Sawyer track the boar who annoyed Sawyer, and HELPED CLAIRE GIVE BIRTH TO BABY AARON (Big Points).

Michael:

Builds a Relationship with his son after the crash, Uses his construction skills to make The Caves a safe dwelling place, Saved Walt from an attacking Polar Bear, Helped Sun deal with her problems with Jin, Eventually Settles His Differences with Jin and becomes Friends with him, and builds a raft NOT ONCE but TWICE giving the losties the best possible chance for rescue.

Here are some Honorable Mentions:

* Hurley: He's the heart of the show.

* Charlie: Kicked a drug habit, became Claire's best friend, became best friends with Hurley. He's a good man.

* Jin: For everything post-...In Translation.

* Claire: Gives Birth on a FRIGGIN' Island!

* Sawyer: He caused so many problems that he couldn't jump Michael. The MVC is tough.

THE WINNER AND MOST VALUABLE CHARACTER OF THE FIRST SEASON OF LOST: Jack Shephard. As STEVE writes, "He's the leader." Indeed. Jack's experience as a doctor is so essential that it'd be a crime to rob him of the MVC.

Runner-Ups:

2. Sayid

3. Locke

4. Michael

5. Kate

-------------------------------------------

I was going to do an LVC category but...it's too negative and every character is so damn good and important this first season and throughout the show so the LVC has been scrapped.

For fun, here's The All-Island Adventure Team (the characters YOU want going into the jungle for an adventure or search or something). It'll only be 5. Think the All-NBA team set-up.

All-Island Adventure Team: Kate, Sayid, Locke, Jack, and Sawyer.

-----------------------------------------

You must be wondering to yourself, "I thought he said this is the first of a seven week season six preview." Indeed, it is. It's the first part of the preview. The whole objective of the episode of the day is to show where these characters were, their arcs, etc as we prepare for the final season of the show. It's all about reminding people of the story and these characters. And for these next seven weeks, that is what I'm going to do.

UP NEXT: Season TWO!

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Jacob's Foot: Some Season Four Action in this one!

[caption id="attachment_588" align="alignnone" width="250" caption="Love this one. It's neat."]Love this one. It's neat.[/caption]

Written by Chris Monigle

 

I promised archival LOST writing pieces and today you shall get the first of the archival LOST writing pieces...in time. I'm taking a little shortcut way to getting an entry this time. I have my reasons. Firstly, I am (dare I say) pressed for time this week and by pressed, I mean, I am unable to devote the 3+hours it takes me to write a gargantuan entry this week. Now you might be wondering why I don't simply write it in spurts, why I write it in one fell swoop, and I do not have an answer. The truth: I do break up the days of writing. It's better in the long run. Better for me because I love to write long pieces. I feel like you get the most bang for the buck you don't spend by reading a long piece rather than a short piece. I got into a habit (you can decide whether it is bad or good) of writing more than the 600-800 word count required for articles. And I felt that I'd be doing a major injustice to the season five LOST finale if I didn't write at least 4,000 words (I wanted to get 6,000 but I came way short of that and settled for 4,000 and some change). But enough about word-counts!

I'm in the process of preparing the biggest thing that I will write this summer. Inspired by the experiential post-cards (as he liked to call them) of the late David Foster Wallace, you will, at some point, be reading about my experiences from May 30, 2009 until June 6, 2009. It is a week that includes a trip to the shore, a return to philly that began at 6:52am june 2nd, a return to the shore, and other wild things. Get excited.

Time to spend a few words on sports: Antonio Bastardo made his start last night. I saw about one inning from the entire game because I passed out from my lack of sleep just as the game began at 10pm. It was one of those dealies in which you aren't concious of passing out but you also are. You'll find out more about that day in the big jawn I'm going to be writing! But yes, Bastardo pitched 6 innings of 1 run ball. He threw mostly a fast-ball and didn't really change speeds all too much. But the dude throws heat. Averages 94-95 mph. I happened upon a start of his a saturday or two ago when he was with the Iron Pigs. It was his first start in AAA after pitching twice in AA (I believe). The dude was unbelievable, cruising through the first 4 or so innings before running into a little trouble. Here's the question though: are the Phillies simply showing him off as a means to end to replace Myers? If I was a betting man, I'd say probably. They've got to at least get Roy Halladay though. Just saying. As a whole, the Phils team is playing very solid, fluid baseball. Ruiz is rust-free now and a big, big help out of the 8th hole. It's an absolutel complete line-up now especially with the offense of Pedro Feliz. The bullpen has been as good as ever. Madson is terrific in the 8th. It's amazing watching him now that he's no longer lost in 'I should be a starter' thought. One of my favorite memories from the World Series run is when Madson hit 97 on the radar gun. He finally arrived when that happened and realized the potential he's had since becoming a major leaguer in 2004. That's about it for the Phillies.

THE LOST SECTION OF JACOB'S FOOT!

Anywho, it's time for the archival LOST writing piece! What is below is my season four recap which has quite a lot of text from lostpedia.com and Jeremy Bentham. In hindsight, it's entirely unnecessary given that Widmore thought it'd be funny to name Locke after another philosopher. There are quite a few things in this recap that have been shot down completely by the show itself which is yet another reason why everything should default to the people who run the show. There's a terrific interview with Damon and Carlton at lostpedia.com (which i finally read. i refused to go near it until season five had wrapped. i didn't read the entertainment weekly cover story on LOST that was featured in early february until the day after the finale ended and it turned out to be a good thing because there's loads of stuff that didn't happen when the cover story originally was published) and Damon addresses the world of fan theories. Now, with season six looming in a few months, every thing is going to fall into place but this quote from Damon is certainly apt. It even connects back to a rant of mine from, I believe, the Dead Is Dead recap (in which I went off on Smoky theories). Here's the man himself:

Alex: Have you ever seen any theory that has come close to solving any major mysteries? Like the Smoke Monster or Jacob?

Damon: You know, the answer is not really, because... Sometimes, like for example, there were popular theories probably about a year ago, or maybe as long as two years ago, right around the time I guess Eko died. About the Smoke monster's function was some sort of judge. It basically took your memories and processed your life and decided whether you were worthy of living or not, and that is certainly, kind of, one of it's functions. We've dealt with that more specifically now on the show, but the audience simply does not know enough yet to make an educated guess about where all of this is leading. You will know a lot by the end of the Fifth season, probably a lot more to begin to get a much better sense of what the end game of the show may be, but we've had to hold a lot of that stuff back so that people wouldn't get it too early or that all the answers were coming in the penultimate season of the show. Considering what the audience has to work with, they've proven to be incredibly resourceful and insightful, but there are some clues that we have not yet presented them, that are really integral to figuring out what the real endgame of the show is, so there's no way that they could really, you know, really...(http://lostpedia.wikia.com/wiki/The_Lostpedia_Interview:Carlton_Cuse_%26_Damon_Lindelof)

There's also a great quote from Lindelof from that EW Cover Story about What Is To Come and lays out exactly what they mean by season six mirroring season one: 

'the storytellers hope that anyone who has ever been a Lost fan will tune in next year as the show moves into payoff mode and begins resolving long-term character arcs. Indeed, compared with this year, season 6 sounds like it could be something of a blast from the season 1 past. Lindelof teases that the sci-fi-heavy season 5 (which includes more Smokey, four-toed statue, and numbers intrigue) ''sets up where we need to go in season 6, which will be much more grounded and character-centric than it is this year.'''

I can't wait! But in the meantime, here is my season four recap from June 12, 2008 at 9:02pm.

THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE HOME PARTS TWO AND THREE!

I haven't been able to stop thinking about LOST. I don't even mean simply the finale. The show as a whole has been on my mind. I've been re-watching episodes. I've been reading lostpedia.com, thefuselage.com messageboards, old billie reviews, the bible, and alice in wonderland. I'm not even reading these for theory purposes because I don't really give a damn about theories to be honest with you. I'm refreshing my memory with regards to the past three seasons which is why I'm reading lostpedia, thefuselage, and old billie reviews. I read Doc Jensen's columns over at ew.com because he's great with picking out the allusions to literary texts (which i'm very much interested in). When it comes to theories and all of that jazz, I'm much more interested in waiting to see where the show goes instead of going over theory after theory. Most of all, I'm most interested in the characters. LOST is a character study/drama at its core and thats what drew me to the show in the first season. The first season is one of the greatest seasons in history of television. Episodes like Walkabout, White Rabbit, The Moth, Confidence Man, Solitary, Raised By Another, Special, Outlaws, ...In Translation, Numbers, Deus Ex Machina, Do No Harm, and the Exodus finale are some of the finest episodes EVER. How can we forget the reveal that Locke was paralyzed prior to crashing on the island? How can we forget the scene when Jack finds his father's coffin empty and proceeds to destroy it as well as the scene in which Jack tells the airport clerk the importance of burying his father? How can we forget the scene between Locke and Charlie when Locke tells Charlie about the moth's struggle and the scene when Charlie battles his way out of the collapsed cave because Jack's arm is dislocated? How can we forget the scene when we learn that Sawyer wrote the letter to the man who ruined his family as well as the scene when Sayid goes to map the Island because he's ashamed of himself because he tortured Sawyer? How can we forget Sayid's first flashback with Nadia? How can we forget Claire's first episode with the psychic Malkin, her reluctance to have Aaron (a great Claire moment, by the way, is in her episode in the second season in which she talks to Aaron after she's been to the Staff station. The moment bridges her season 1 and season 2 flashbacks). How can we forget the struggle Michael endured while he was kept away from Walt (and subsequently the bond the two forged on the Island)? Of course, I have more to write on Michael later in the entry and the story that was his. Who can forget the scene between Christian and Sawyer in the bar or the scene when Sawyer killed the wrong guy? Outlaws also had the great Sawyer vs. the Boar plot. Who can forget the great Jin flashback in which we find out he is ashamed of his lineage? One of the top 7 scenes in LOST is when he returns to his father and they talk on the fishing boat. I will have more to write on Jin later as well. How can we forget Hurley's first flashback in which he travels to Australia to discover whether he's bad luck or the numbers? How can we forget the epic scene in which John Locke pounds on the door of the hatch, yelling: 'I've done everything you've ever asked me to do so why did you do this to me?' and then the light goes on inside of the Hatch (we of course later learn that Locke ended up saving Desmond's life that night just as Desmond saved John's. The light gave John more hope and restored his faith in the Island, and Desmond discovered he wasn't alone.) Who can forget the birth of Aaron as Boone dies as well as the flashback of Jack's wedding day with Sarah? Do No Harm is the first episode in which a main character dies. And then there is the Exodus finale in which we see everybody boarding flight Oceanic 815. The point of this long paragraph: I'm big on character study and development. Come on, I'm a Joss Whedon fan. That guy's all about character. Anywho, those episodes are very cool because of the mythological stuff. I'll never forget the first time I heard the Whispers in Solitary as Sayid's wandering through the jungle or when Ethan was there to kidnap Claire (I had to leave for Kairos the next week and missed All The Best Cowboys have Daddy Issues! Drove me nuts!). But this isn't about the first season. This entry is about the fourth season finale of LOST.

Damon and Carlton did one hell of a job with the season finale. There were three deaths. The Island moved. The Freighter exploded. Lapidus' copter crashed. Penny Widmore ended up rescuing the Oceanic 6 (with Frank and Desmond). The Others were back in their most primitive form. Locke became the leader of The Others. Sawyer jumped out of the helicopter so that the rest could make it to the freighter to re-fuel. Daniel's lost at sea along with some random survivors. Charlotte, apparently, was born on the Island. Now it's time for some thoughts:

--I re-watched the scene when the Freighter explodes and have come to the conclusion that Jin is probably dead. Unless the blast sent him overboard before he was killed and he can survive in the water on something then color me wrong but I think Jin is no more. He's one of my favorite characters. Before his episode in the first season, I had the sense that Jin was a good guy. Indeed Jin was/is the personification of good. I hope but it is a slim hope.

--I know Michael's dead. Everything changed for Michael once Walt was taken by The Others. But he redeemed himself in the end. I do hope Walt has some part to play in the final seasons. Damon and Carlton owe it to the fans.

--Is Claire dead? I'm not sure anymore. Had that been real and not a dream, I would've been certain Claire died in the explosion. I think she is alive. Not sure what Jacob wants with her. Hopefully Damon and Carlton answer that next season. The opening of Raised By Another is a scene in which Locke tells Claire that she gave him away and now everyone will pay. Just saying.

--The Suicide Beard himself was back: Jack Shepard. Loved everything Jack did in the episode.

--I feel like Sun's going to become my least favorite character on the show. In the flashforward, she basically tells Widmore that she and the other five weren't the only ones to leave the Island. She's going to ruin everything but Yunjin Kim knocked it out of the park after The Freighter exploded. Holy cow! Intense.

--Looks like it took Ben 10 months to re-surface after moving the Island. No comment until I see more but Ben is one of the greatest characters ever created. Michael Emerson deserves an Emmy. 

--I'm excited to see the zany antics and adventures Hurley and Sayid will have together next season as they try to get out of harm's way. But I think Sayid's safe place is that Island. Speaking of Sayid, his fight vs. Keamy rocked!

--There's gotta be more Richard Alpert next season. Very interesting character. If there's one thing Richard does its get rid of someone he feels is no longer qualified to lead his people. Is that what happened with Locke? We shall soon see (I hope and, of course, in about 8 months. Ugh.) 

--Speaking of John Locke's corpse, he was going by the name Jeremy Bentham! Who is Jeremy Bentham? Welllllllllllllllll keep reading (there's very interesting info in here especially about The Jacobins):

FROM LOSTPEDIA.COM

Jeremy Bentham (15 February 1748–6 June 1832) - was an English jurist, philosopher, and legal and social reformer. He was a political radical, and a leading theorist in Anglo-American philosophy of law. He was a child prodigy and was found as a toddler sitting at his father's desk reading a multi-volume history of England and began his study of Latin at the age of three. 

He was a political radical best known for his advocacy of utilitarianism, a form of consequentialism, meaning that the moral worth of an action is determined by its outcome - the ends justify the means. Utilitarianism argued that the "right" action or policy was that which would cause "the greatest happiness of the greatest number". His critics objected saying that it would therefore "...be acceptable to torture one person if this would produce an amount of happiness in other people outweighing the unhappiness of the tortured individual." 

Bentham also designed a famous prison structure called the "Panopticon", which creates a sense of constant surveillance and paranoia amongst prisoners. 

Bentham was also known for his outspoken opposition to the French revolutionary discourse of natural rights, an idea championed by philosopher John Locke (whose father, also named John Locke, worked for Jeremy Bentham). He also suggested a procedure for estimating the moral status of any action. His principle regards "good" as that which produces the greatest amount of physical or spiritual pleasure, and the minimum amount of pain; and "evil" as that which produces the most pain without the pleasure. 

Bentham also argued that the ability to suffer, not the ability to reason, must be the benchmark of how we treat other beings. He stated that if the ability to reason were the criterion, many human beings, including babies and disabled people, would have to be treated as though they were things, rather than beings. 

The Jacobins
Bentham was an outspoken critic of the violence which arose after a group called "The Jacobins" seized power in a coup after the fall of the French monarchy -- on September 21, 1792. 

Originated as the "Club Bentham", "The Jacobin Club" was the largest and most powerful political club of the French Revolution. It was led by Maximillian Robespierre, self-styled as "the Incorruptible", he was a disciple of philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau. As such, his political views were rooted in Rousseau's notion of the social contract, which promoted "the rights of man" (however, Robespierre's version was of collective rights, rather than individual rights). Any club member who by word or action showed that his principles were contrary to the constitution and 'the rights of man' was to be expelled, a rule which later on facilitated the "purification" of French society by the expulsion of its more moderate elements - this became known as the "Reign of Terror". Robespierre described it thus: "Terror is nothing other than prompt, severe, inflexible justice." 

Later, Robespierre (leader of The Jacobins) had a decree passed that established the "Cult of the Supreme Being". The notion of the Supreme Being was based on ideas that Jean-Jacques Rousseau had outlined in "The Social Contract". Robespierre made it clear that his concept of a Supreme Being was far different from the traditional God of Christianity. Robespierre's Supreme Being was a radical democrat, like the Jacobins. He explained: "Is it not He whose immortal hand, engraving on the heart of man the code of justice and equality, has written there the death sentence of tyrants? Is it not He who, from the beginning of time, decreed for all the ages and for all peoples liberty, good faith, and justice? He did not create kings to devour the human race. He did not create priests to harness us, like vile animals, to the chariots of kings and to give to the world examples of baseness, pride, perfidy, avarice, debauchery, and falsehood. He created the universe to proclaim His power. He created men to help each other, to love each other mutually, and to attain to happiness by the way of virtue." 

Bentham's auto-icon
As requested in his will, Jeremy Bentham's body was preserved and stored in a wooden cabinet, termed his "Auto-icon". The Auto-icon is kept on public display at the end of the South Cloisters in the main building of University College London, his alma mater. For the 100th and 150th anniversaries of the College, the Auto-icon was brought to the meeting of the College Council, where he was listed as "present but not voting". Tradition holds that if the council's vote on any motion is tied, the auto-icon always breaks the tie by voting in favour of the motion. The Auto-icon has always had a wax head, as Bentham's head was badly damaged in the preservation process.

--I'm positive that Sawyer's still surviving on that Island despite the horrible things that have happened. If I were a betting man, I'd bet the season 5 premiere belongs to Sawyer. It's just a gut feeling.

--'If anything goes wrong, Desmond is my constant'--Daniel's words in his journal. Again, if I were a betting man, I'd bet that Daniel uses his constant while he's lost at sea. I don't think he moved with the Island.

--Regarding Charlotte, I think we'll finally learn about the toe statue in season five. And Miles is going to tell me what happened to Claire! ATTICA! ATTICA! ATTICA! ATTICA!

That's about it for thoughts on the finale. It's time for the Rankings!

THE OFFICIAL LOST RANKINGS

For the first time ever, me and STEVE commented on each character's ranking. Me and STEVE have new number ones. Yes, Sayid is no longer number 1 for the first time since the rankings became official. The new number one for me deserves the top spot. I need not say more. Read and enjoy the final rankings until our pre-season rankings in January 2009. Mic's Rankings will be posted sometime before the fifth season begins.

AFTER EPISODES 13 AND 14
Ranked: 5/30/08

CHRIS
1. Jack--He got them rescused and now he needs to go back to finish what he started. Welcome back to the top spot, Jack.
2. Sawyer--JABOY season for Sawyer. I'm sure he'll be kicking some more ass in Season 5!
3. Sayid--Sayid's great. Always dependable. But don't kill Penny, Sayid. She rescused you. And sorry, Sayid. Records are sometimes broken.
4. Locke--'Wait til you see what I'm about to do' and 'This is a place of miracles.' Locke is amazing.
5. Desmond--He's great. Sure he was absolutely wrong about his vision of rescue but he never stopped helping the effort to get off of the Island. One of my favorite characters.
6. Michael--You stepped up, Michael. 
7. Hurley--I love crazy Hurley.
8. Jin--Don't believe he's dead. He could've grabbed onto debris. Come on, Lindelof and Cuse! Jin's amazing!
9. Claire--She might be dead. Who knows. I still love her. BAM!
10. Ben--one of the greatest characters of all time. He is 10 because it is a numbers game.
11. Kate--How dare she call Aaron her son with Claire sitting there!
12. Frank--the best freighter character.
13. Juliet--Solid character she is.
14. Daniel--Was once 4 and now is 14. Why? Not sure. Just feels right.
15. Miles--He's great but hasn't done anything to move up.
16. Sun--How dare she blame Jack for Jin’s death!
17. Charlotte--Don’t care about her yet.

STEVE
1. Ben - The most original character of the show. He's wild. The actor is great. The writing is great.
2. Sawyer - Should be part of the Oceanic 6 if it wasn't for Fatty McFatFat
3. Desmond - I love the character of Desmond. Hopefully we will see more of him.
4. Locke - Crazy Locke. Great stuff this season. Can't wait till he's resurrected. 
5. Sayid--The only reason you're down this far is because you after the island.
6. Jack--They should of made Jack black.
7. Michael--He did what he had to do. RIP.
8. Jin--RIP
9. Miles-- Don't know why Miles is this high...I wanted to get him to #8. Get it 8 Miles. 8 Mile...ha..whoo whoo ha ha
10. Frank--The Real Flyin' Hawaiian holdin' shit down.
11. Sun-Woo Kim
12. Claire--Ghostface
13. Kate-Murderer! Stealer of a child! Slut!
14. Charlotte-Starting to Like her
15. Daniel-Can't stand 'em.
16. Juliet-She said she wanted to get off the island as bad as anyone. Then she didnt even get on the boat to get off the island. WHOOOOOOOOORE.
17. Hurley-Should of jumped out of the plane. Unnecessary weight.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Jacob's Foot': Dotting My I's

Written by Chris Monigle

 

[caption id="attachment_551" align="alignnone" width="180" caption="Yep. This blog is now 'Jacob's Foot.'"]Yep. This blog is now 'Jacob's Foot.'[/caption]

As you can see, I've changed the title of the blog to 'Jacob's Foot' since it was revealed Jacob's Cabin hasn't been Jacob's cabin in a long time. It's time to dot my I's, so to speak, with the LOST finale. Yes, I still have more to write about the LOST finale.

--'What lies beneath the shadow of the statue?' 'He who will save us all' is THE answer to the question. By now, I'm sure everybody that reads anything online about LOST knows that. I discovered the answer about 3 minutes after I posted my recap. My whole deal is: I don't like to read or hear anything about people's thoughts on an episode until I have my recap finished. Why? I want my thoughts to be my own and not influenced by anything else. And then afterwards everything is fair game. And I'll shove my absolutely wrong thoughts in a garbage can once Lindelof and Cuse introduce something totally different from what I thought into their show.

--Speaking of Lindelof and Cuse being awesome and me being inferior to them, I really, really, really, really (you get the gist) believed in the idea of John Locke as special, and the only character who could be resurrected on the Island. While doing so, I tossed aside the previous season's commentary by Lindelof and Cuse about a character being dead once the show kills them off (it's still a wait and see with Jack's daddy). They even titled an episode 'Dead Is Dead' in season five. To say the least, John Locke falling out of the cargo jawn did shock me. It doesn't matter that I heard someone say that John Locke isn't John Locke because, to be honest, I don't listen to any theories the average fan has to say about the show. I'm an elitist so-and-so when it comes to LOST. If there's anything that steams my clams, it is literary theory that states the author is dead. Good ol' Roland Barthes wrote the blowhardy essay arguing that the author is dead. How does this relate to my intolerance for LOST theories? Well, first of all, I'll state that I am not against fans thoughts on the show. What I hate are people who care more about their dumbass theories than the story itself. It reminds me all too much of these blowhard literary critics who claim that the readers create the text rather than author. No. Not how it works. Without these texts, literary theorists can't be blowhards. So, the author is in no way dead. With LOST, I'm all about the story. I won't always buy what the writers are selling me but I won't entertain any theory unless it becomes part of the story. It's the way I roll. Another thing about theories. Fans just can't throw anything on their theory wall, hoping that it sticks. You gotta have evidence for anything you theorize. It's like writing an English paper. If I want to write about...say...Jane Eyre as a text about strawberry milkshakes and the growth of Victorian belief in cows as overlords then I need textual evidence to support my arguments. See what I'm saying? That's about it. Just think.

Anywho, now with the pieces of the season five mosaic fixed in place, it's all so obvious with Locke. I might've been too quick to say that Mr. Nameless (Doc Jenson came up with that and I like it so I'm using it) hijacked John Locke's body because (it's pretty clear) that Locke's body fell out of the cargo. Times like these, I should let my dog hit me over the head with a bleeding two-by-four. Here I was, on Wednesday/Thursday, writing about how Mr. Nameless gives off a Smokey vibe and I'm writing about HIJACKING A BODY?!? I expected better from myself. If Mr. Nameless is Smokey, and it seems likely, he just assumes the form of people. What confused me, my 750,000 readership, was the whole idea of the loophole. If Mr. Nameless is Smokey, what makes John Locke the loophole? What about John Locke being dead creates the loophole? Or is it something larger than that? Or maybe all of these questions I'm asking is taking me and you away from the bigger issue at hand: the scene with the Ajira folk at Jacob's Cabin. Bram finds the ash surrounding the Cabin (it's not even Jacob's cabin) disturbed. Ilana enters and then exits, claiming that Jacob hasn't been here in a long time. This scene takes me back to season three's 'The Man Behind The Curtain' in which we hear 'Help Me!' uttered by the dude seen in the chair for a brief instant. He's a fellow who looks like an older version of Mr. Nameless. It seems as if he was set-free but it still doesn't explain why he used John Locke. So this will probably be a pretty big plot-point for season six. I wonder what it means for Claire. Mr. Nameless better have been good to her.

--I am of the opinion that time will not be erased. I think Kate, Jack, Sawyer, Miles, Hurley, Jin, and Sayid will be in 2007. But I'm all up for being surprised. 

--I made a big commotion about the line 'If it only ends once, anything before that is progress.' Well, the meaning of it hit me one day as I played FIFA 08 on ps2. I made it more complex than it actually is. All it means really, in the context of the scene and the conversation, is that Jacob is the optimist and Mr. Nameless is a nihilistic pessimist. Or to generalize it biblically and enter blowhard territory: Mr. Nameless represents the Old Testament vengeful God whereas Jacob represents the merciful, selfless God of the New Testament. Now this is beginning to resemble my essay on The Merchant of Venice so I will move right along...

--...To John Locke again! Obviously, as evidenced by the rankings, John Locke is one of my favorite characters. I've been watching season one re-runs weekday afternoons on sci-fi, and Locke owned those early season one episodes. Yesterday, 'The Moth' was on, the episode in which Locke helps Charlie overcome his drug addiction. Locke is one of the most fascinating characters on LOST. If his paralysis could be healed by the Island, I believed any other miracle, including being raised from the dead, could've happened. I always loved the story of John Locke. This guy who felt hopeless about his life until he came to the Island, was healed, and found his purpose, felt he realized his destiny. I liked how he made mistakes, sometimes fatal (as with Boone). One of my favorite moments from season five is when he tells Sawyer that he needed that pain, when explaining why he doesn't want to change anything. I will miss John Locke. It is surprising that he's actually dead. But dare I, despite everything I've written in this, hold out hope that the real Locke is not totally dead? I don't know. 

That's about it for the additional thoughts on the finale. I'll probably have more as the summer wears on. I'm going to post some favorite moments from season five soon. And soon, I'll cover other things that are not LOST. But not yet.

About The Foot

My photo
Originally, I titled the blog Jacob's Foot after the giant foot that Jacob inhabited in LOST. That ended. It became TV With The Foot in 2010. I wrote about a lot of TV.