Saffron: You won't tell anyone about me breaking down? Mal: I won't. Saffron: Then I won't tell anyone how easily I got your gun out of your holster. Mal: I'll take that as a kindness.

'Trash'


Lost: OMGWTF POLAR BEAR  

[NAFDA] This is where we talk about the show! Anything that's aired in the US (including promos) is fair game. No spoilers though -- if you post one by accident, an admin will delete it.


DCJensen - Oct 24, 2004 2:11:23 pm PDT #417 of 10000
All is well that ends in pizza.

I wonder how long before they name the island.

I hope they get the clearance for a Gilligan joke.

Or maybe someone can joke about naming it "Charlie's Island" as a very sideways jab at him being the Gilligan analog....

Or not...

They could name it "Nomanisan."


DCJensen - Oct 24, 2004 2:13:37 pm PDT #418 of 10000
All is well that ends in pizza.

I've said it before, but I hope once they get settled into the housing situation, they start deciding to at least map the perimeter of the island.

It seems to be a fairly big island.


Zenkitty - Oct 24, 2004 3:04:05 pm PDT #419 of 10000
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

Me, I wouldn't set out to map the perimeter until I had a reliable souce for water. I would, however, have already started making a map of the area as I scouted it. They've already discovered several things that need to be kept track of. Not the least, that big cliff over the gorge where Jack fell down and nearly broke his crown. Let's not forget where that thing is.


Ouise - Oct 24, 2004 3:14:16 pm PDT #420 of 10000
Socks are a running theme throughout the series. They are used as symbols of freedom, redemption and love.

Re: the flashback to the airport check-in. I think the absence of Sun from the line-up isn't significant. Jin's behaviour on the island indicates that he considers it is his job to take care of Sun, particularly by taking over any interaction with others.


DCJensen - Oct 24, 2004 3:26:50 pm PDT #421 of 10000
All is well that ends in pizza.

Me, I wouldn't set out to map the perimeter until I had a reliable souce for water.

You mean like the one Jack found this week? The waterfall into the pond with the sunken doll.


Zenkitty - Oct 24, 2004 3:46:12 pm PDT #422 of 10000
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

Yep, exactly. Drownded Doll Crick. Within a day's hike from the beach camp, and probably within a relatively short hike from other parts of the beach, which allows the explorers to set up camps as they move around the perimeter, and they don't have to carry a month's worth of water with them as they move. They can scout the interior as well as the perimeter, and find more sources of fresh water, which will allow them to safely move even farther from the base camp.

As long as they know which fish and fruits they can eat.


DavidS - Oct 24, 2004 3:49:03 pm PDT #423 of 10000
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

I don't know about "not good," It was pretty much what it meant to be. A lightweight, "lets have fun withthe afterlife" kind of movie. It's not fantastic, but I'd still put it on the "good" side of the good/bad divide.

Step off on the Beetlejuice disrespect! This is insano crazytalk. It's like you don't even understand the virtue of wide stripes in production design.


Zenkitty - Oct 24, 2004 4:20:03 pm PDT #424 of 10000
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

I'm in the liking-Beetlejuice camp. I even bought the DVD.


Deena - Oct 24, 2004 4:32:31 pm PDT #425 of 10000
How are you me? You need to stop that. Only I can be me. ~Kara

Sean, these two paragraphs:

I still think it's way too early to say that Locke will be an advisor to Jack. And I don't see Locke as a visionary at all. He's too much of a pragmatist. A meat and potatoes kind of guy, who doesn't believe in magic, even though he thinks the island is special in that regard.

In fact, I think this last episode, and Locke's interaction with Jack, strongly hint that, if they divide into two sides, Jack will be leading (in an army commander fashion) the "we need to get the hell out of here side," and Locke will lead (in a high-priest fashion) the "let's stay and worship the island" fashion.

seem highly contradictory to me. If he's worshipping the island, he's not a pragmatist. Also, considering his wanting to bring along his 1-900 girl on his walkabout, I don't think he's a realist at all. He's a visionary, or at least the world he sees isn't the one most other people see.

What about the Evil Look at the end of Kate's episode, as he looked jealously at Michael and Walt after having letting Michael take the credit for finding Vincent?

There was no evil look! There was an ambiguous look, to make us sure we get that he's mysterious and sexy magical/mystical.

Plus, he initiated the backgammon metaphor. He told Walt there were two sides, but he didn't say which side he was on.

Pfft. Of course he's on the white side, even if he's not. He's not the type to believe he's wrong.

As for being called mister in the hotel, I don't think he'd correct them. It wouldn't be important to him when he's thinking about his dad. Most people are misters. He would have said his name, they would have called him the default.

What if Jack is the surgeon who worked on Locke four years ago and couldn't fix his spine? Okay, long shot, but still. Jack's a spinal surgeon, Locke had a spinal injury.

Ashtareth, you said that was unlikely because they hadn't met (so far as we can tell), but what if Jack was an emergency room doctor? He might not have registered the patient's face. The patient might never have met him. OR, being 4 years ago, he just doesn't remember Locke, but Locke remembers him. It wouldn't be outside of Locke's character to not tell anyone he knows the doctor already.

Re: the flashback to the airport check-in. I think the absence of Sun from the line-up isn't significant.

Ouise, I agree. He would have stashed her somewhere while he did his manly business, keeping the real world/other people away from her as he's trying to do now.

I'm not sure why people think they're not married. I thank Greg for things and he says that's just what husbands do all the time. I don't think that's an indicator that they're not married, just Jin shrugging off her thanks, and/or obliquely reminding her that she belongs to him.


Kate P. - Oct 24, 2004 4:47:11 pm PDT #426 of 10000
That's the pain / That cuts a straight line down through the heart / We call it love

Also, considering his wanting to bring along his 1-900 girl on his walkabout, I don't think he's a realist at all.

Yeah, his little "I'm a meat and potatoes man" speech struck me oddly because it seemed so clearly contradictory to what we've already seen of his life pre-crash: playing games, pretending to be a colonel, actually believing Helen would go to Australia with him. I'm not sure what to make of his possibly-evil look at the end of the Kate episode. He has such an interesting face--when he breaks out into a smile, he's genuinely beautiful, and yet he looks so creepy sometimes. I don't think I could love this character more if I tried. Lovelovelove.

I rewatched this week's ep yesterday with some friends. I think the first scene with Jack's father was written kind of heavy-handedly (heavily-handed?), but in general it was a great episode. I had no idea that it would be Boone who'd taken the water. He's becoming one of the most intriguing characters to me. One of my friends said she couldn't stand either him or Snicker Bitch because they seemed so immature, but I wonder if that's at least partly because we've mostly seen them interacting with each other rather than with other people. I find it really believable that being around each other brings out the worst in both of them.

I'd like for Sawyer to be a little less despicable. I liked his moment in ep. 3 when he shot the marshall, and then Jack had to go and finish the job. It was a nice vulnerable moment for the character, and I thought he played it really well. But otherwise he's just really annoying (also? not hot). Meh. (Also, did we all know that he was in the very first Angel episode?? He's one of the vamps that Angel stakes in the first scene. I just watched it last night--got the DVDs for my birthday--and my housemate and I were all OMGWTFSAWYER!!)

Re: the empty coffin, I figure it was empty when they loaded it onto the plane in Sydney. For some reason, I am loathe to believe that Jack's dad was actually raised from the dead on the island. That takes the mystery of the island one step too far, IMO. Plus, as previously mentioned, nobody else could see him when Jack saw him, so I believe pretty firmly that he was a hallucination.

I love Charlie and Claire together. And her scene with Kate folding clothes was great too. "Geminis." hee!

Oh, and one thing I noticed in this last episode was how many people were wearing white (Kate, Jack, Sayid, Boone). I don't know what the symbolism of that might be, but it was visually striking. Maybe it was just meant to accentuate their sexay new suntans.

Which would also redeem that schmaltzy single tear he cried while telling his story, as it may have been bitter aching regret rather than being moved by how touching and inspirational his own story was.

Well, I'm kind of inclined to chalk it up to the pain of having someone sewing up a huge bloody gash in your skin. It didn't even occur to me that it might be in relation to the story. But put me down on the side of those hoping that the story actually has a darker ending than the way he told it.

I'm loving the WD speculation, by the way. I haven't read the book in ages, but I'm intrigued enough to want to search out my old copy and skim through it again.