Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Lost- "The Substitue" E4S6

This is my first post about LOST in the sixth and final season. Do not read until after you have seen "The Substitue" (Season 6, Episode 4).

Last night’s LOST was fantastic, especially coming off of the slow-paced “What Kate Does” episode. When the Smokey-Possessed-Locke says, “Come with me and I promise I’ll tell you everything,” I think there were fans everywhere who were exhausted from changing sick baby diapers all day saying YESYESYES MOMMY NEEDS THIS. Oh wait, maybe that was just me.

“The Substitute” was the fourth episode of this final season (if you count the 2-hour premiere as two episodes). I’ve held off on writing about the show on this blog because, after being presented with a “flash-sideways” parallel universe storytelling device, a slew of new Temple-dwelling characters, and more questions created than answered, I needed to play wait-and-see. I was not too excited about any of the three things I just mentioned, but now I have re-gained my confidence.

For one, it looks like we’re going to be very reliant on Sawyer. He is broken and sad, and an emotional loose cannon. But since he has nothing to lose, he gets to be our guide leading us towards exposition! Follow Smokey and let’s figure out what this whole Island thing is all about… why not? Turns out Smokey’s going to lead us towards a nifty little cave, showing us a scale weighing a black rock vs. a white rock (reminding me of Greg and my favorite Ralph quote from the Simpsons: “the rat is a symbol for obviousness!”) and, oh yea, a whole slew of names matched with numbers. Most (not Kate) of our castaways have been assigned to THE numbers and have so far remained un-scratched. For a whole look at which names are up there look HERE. It’s interesting! Almost every one of the names that are decipherable can be matched to a character previously seen on Lost.

This episode also gave us some insight into Smokey himself. He was a man, he feels like he’s trapped, he’s super old, and he’s haunted by a dirty blonde Other boy. But this episode also underlined a major pre-exisiting question: is Smokey the good guy or the bad guy? And, consequently, is Jacob good or bad? Obviously there are a slew of people who have sided with Jacob (Ilana, Richard, Temple-Dwellers), but that doesn’t mean that what Smokey represents is necessarily “bad” – maybe what he wants is “bad” for the creepy Island that conducts psychological / anthropological tests but is “good” for people who want to live normal lives.

We know that Smokey is saying Jacob tampered with the castaways’ lives when he groped them in their pasts. Is this a clue to the side-ways world? Are we seeing how life would have progressed had our characters never been touched by Jacob? My current theory is yes, that’s exactly what we’re seeing and at some point the castaways who make it to the finale are going to get a choice: live this Island life existence, or be consciously teleported into this non-Island life. In fact, it already seems that those who die on the Island are having their brains switch over to their sideways bodies. Juliet’s dying words about going Dutch on coffee seem like a sure-fire preview to a sideways storyline, and did you see Locke’s corpse SMILING laying dead on the beach when we just finished seeing how happy his side-ways life is leading?

Sideways world is not perfect: Locke’s still is in a wheelchair, Kate is still a fugitive, and Jack still seems to have daddy issues. However, although it may not be perfect, it is better. The characters seem more at peace and less arrogant. John can laugh when he bites it into his lawn, Kate can run towards someone rather than always running away, and Jack can stomach listening to Locke talk about some spirituality.

But I’m not too attached to my theories. They are just little mind-games to help me get through the week. Mostly I’m just enjoying the ride, fine with being proven wrong, and feeling bitter sweet thinking about how few episodes are left.
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Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Big Love - Again

Whoa. I'm not really sure what is going on with Big Love right now, but it's still an awesome show. What's throwing me - though I knew it was coming from reading things ahead of time - is the focus on Margene and Ben. We did that storyline already, didn't we?



I can't decide if I completely hate the fact that they are revisiting that stry line or if it is good, because I think they are handling it better this time than they did the last time, in part simply because Ben is older and more mature, so he's handling it better.

But what is really throwing me is how Bill is behaving, not just with respect to Margene and Ben, but overall. We've seen him like this before, when he's so focused on something that he completely stops caring about everyone else, but in last Sunday's episode, with him asking Don to take the fall when it comes out that Home Plus is a front for polygamy or essentially kicking Ben out of the house after finding out that he has feelings for Margene, Bill is currently at his least sympathetic. Especially since what he is doing to Ben is exactly what his own father did to him - kicked him out of the house because he was sexual competition.

Anyway, it's going to be interesting to see where things go from here, particularly how Barb reacts to Ben leaving, and whether or not Bill can redeem himself or slides further into a completely unsympathetic character.
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