I just said that you're pretty. Even when you're covered in...engine grease, you're... No, especially, especially when you're covered in engine grease.

Simon ,'Jaynestown'


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.


Topic!Cindy - Oct 25, 2004 3:26:18 am PDT #462 of 10000
What is even happening?

okay, I'll bite. Why does the notion that they may be in purgatory or something make you react so negatively?

It's a narrative cheat. Like a reset of a show -- the season of Dallas that never happened as soon as Bobby stepped out of the shower.

It's a cheat because it doesn't force the writers to deal with the complexities.

I am not sold that this is a purgatory story. That said, I don't think it has to be a narrative cheat. If this is the case--if they're all in some sort of metaphysical limbo--we can't just import our own real-world metaphysical assumptions into the show's mythology. The show's mythology and metaphysics will either be cheap, or they won't.

And sure Beatlejuice may have only sustained that sort of storyline for a couple of hours. But Angel had a dead man walking for 5 years. Buffy had the dead walking for 7, and we still cared what happened to them, because in their 'verse, that wasn't the end.


Kate P. - Oct 25, 2004 4:58:49 am PDT #463 of 10000
That's the pain / That cuts a straight line down through the heart / We call it love

I don't think they're dead, because that only leaves one big reveal, twist, new layer, whatever.

Yeah, this is part of what would bug me if they decided to go that route. Of course it's possible that they could make a purgatory-type situation interesting, but I am hoping for something less out-there. Also, it would be difficult to explain the people whose deaths we've seen since they crashed (the drowning girl, Marshall Shrapnel), if they're already all dead.


Deena - Oct 25, 2004 5:00:22 am PDT #464 of 10000
How are you me? You need to stop that. Only I can be me. ~Kara

They moved on? They were figments of the living's imagination, there to teach them something? Yeah, I don't like it either.

It would be a cheat in the same way Buffy in a mental institution would be a cheat, imo.


Cranberry - Oct 25, 2004 5:24:41 am PDT #465 of 10000
I was fine when existence had no meaning. Meaninglessness in a universe that has no meaning -- that I get. But meaninglessness in a universe with meaning? What does that mean?

I'd be down with the "they're all dead and don't realize it" theory if it hadn't been done in two recent movies, and therefore is probably the most common theory I've seen about this show so far (well, it and the "they're in an alternate dimension!" one). One of those two movies ( The Others) even tackled the issue of our afterlife being nothing like any organized religion or philosophy says it is. In that movie, a small group of people kept living their lives not knowing they were dead. I'd feel cheated if this show went that same route. I actually don't think Abrams and Damon will go that route, though, because generally when showrunners are so aware of a circulating theory that they actually comment on it in the media, they won't want to use it.


Wolfram - Oct 25, 2004 6:25:27 am PDT #466 of 10000
Visilurking

I don't buy it that neither Jin nor Sun can speak a word of English, either.

I think Jin is definitely fluent. Only because it's DDK.

And the more I think about it, the more I'm leaning towards Jack not being a doctor. Calling him "Mister" in the dialogue is a deliberate hint.


Sean K - Oct 25, 2004 6:46:40 am PDT #467 of 10000
You can't leave me to my own devices; my devices are Nap and Eat. -Zenkitty

Mega meara:

IMO, what is happening to the people on the island doesn't lead me to believe one way or the other that they aren't in some kind of Limbo.

Well, I guess we just very strongly disagree on this. I understand there was pain, punishment and suffering in Dante's afterlifes, but my understanding of them (I haven't read them either) is that they happened in a place that could in no way at all be mistaken for reality.

Here on the island, people need food, water, can be injured by boars, and even die.

Those are not punishments for sins, or problems for dead people, those are all very clearly delineated problems of the living.

In Beetlejuice, we knew that the main characters were dead, and there was still some tension in the story.

That's because they were very clearly presented as dead, as soon as it happened (something that has not, IMO, been done here), and very quickly and clearly presented with a bad end they needed to avoid, even though they were dead.

But most of all....

It's a narrative cheat. Like a reset of a show -- the season of Dallas that never happened as soon as Bobby stepped out of the shower.

It's a cheat because it doesn't force the writers to deal with the complexities.

What Steph said.

And count me among the people who like Beetlejuice, but it takes more than that to offend me.

Locke has exhibited no moral ambiguity, which is Hollywood for "not a bad guy."

Methinks Gus is viewing Locke with some rather rosy glasses, but Daniel and P-C have already pointed out the lack of moral ambiguity, so I'll just tease Gus about being in luuuurve.

I like the wish-fulfillment theory of the island, but some things I can't reconcile with it. Sun seems not to be happy with her marriage. If the island were fulfilling her wishes, I think Jin would be dead.

I don't think the islands wish fulfillment is so obvious and active, like a lamp genie granting spoken-aloud wishes to a young boy.

I think, if the island is doing some sort of wish fulfillment, that it's more like granting deep, subconscious desires. Sun wanting her "husband" dead, everyone wanting off the island, and the pilot wanting to live are all conscious "gimme gimme" wishes, and I do not think the island works like that.

Wanting a chance to prove your capability, beyond the crappy opions of those surrounding you, wanting to obtain closure with your dead father.... Those are deep, subconscious desires (even though both retain conscious elements). Those are the types of wishes the island is granting (if the island is indeed doing some sort of wish fulfillment).

I also hope that Jack's not really a doctor, or he's very recently a doctor, or that he lost his license somehow, or, well, really anything to take him down a couple of pegs.

I'm still in the "lost his license" camp, especially after his conversation with his mother, in flashback. I think those were the things his mother was verbally hinting at -- the thing he did to lose his license (or prevent from completing his training, or whatever).

Deena:

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.

Well, I don't think they're contradictory, but I'm disagree with a lot of people here (and saying stuff that other people think makes no sense), so that's okay, but....

He's a visionary, or at least the world he sees isn't the one most other people see.

We are operating under very different definitions of visionary, then. He's certainly not a visionary in the way Fiver is a visionary -- frail, but with prophetic visions. I don't see Locke as having any kind of prophetic visions yet, and if he does wind up doing so (which he may, if he becomes a high priest of the island) I think that might automatically disqualify him from advisor to (continued...)


Sean K - Oct 25, 2004 6:46:45 am PDT #468 of 10000
You can't leave me to my own devices; my devices are Nap and Eat. -Zenkitty

( continues...) Jack. Jack doesn't strike me as the type to want to listen to prophecy.

But to return to your earlier point, whether Locke is a true pragmatist or not, I think he's a pragmatist now. He's the only one who's been directly active on the "get food, get water" front. Pragmatic.

More to the point, I think Locke very much can be a pragmatic "let's worship the island" type. His worship of the island, if it comes, would come from a very pragmatic place -- the island gave him his legs back. Plain and simple. Direct, pragmatic, and understandable.

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

Exactly the type of thinking that leads to bad-guy-ism.

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 agree, Kate. Whether Jack's dad's body was on the plane or not, I don't think he's been bodily ressurected. If he has been, his dad can apparently violate the laws of physics (appear and disappear at will).

Plus, real people don't sound like ice clinking in a whiskey tumbler when they walk by.

I cannot wait for next week's episode. Is the writer for that ep someone we know?

Javier Grillo-Marxuach.

I know Javier. Went to high school with him. He's a very good writer. I wish I still had a way to contact him. I'd ask him for a job, even if it was just a PA job.

Best name EVAH.

We always thought so, back in high school.

Sayid, was in the Iraq military. How long ago, we don't know. There is a female in his past, we don't know the relationship, but it's obviously important to him. We do know he's the resident Professor. Not enough information to fit him into the "opposites" theory, yet.

Well, being ex-Republican Guard, back in reality, he's not someone people would regard as a good guy. He sure is now. That fits with your "opposite" theory, I'd say.


Jessica - Oct 25, 2004 6:51:04 am PDT #469 of 10000
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

I would just like to point out how tickled I am by the fact that this show's main character's name is Jack, and that the plane's point of origin was Sydney.


Dana - Oct 25, 2004 6:51:40 am PDT #470 of 10000
"I'm useless alone." // "We're all useless alone. It's a good thing you're not alone."

Soon Jacks will dominate fandom.


Sean K - Oct 25, 2004 6:53:41 am PDT #471 of 10000
You can't leave me to my own devices; my devices are Nap and Eat. -Zenkitty

I would just like to point out how tickled I am by the fact that this show's main character's name is Jack, and that the plane's point of origin was Sydney.

I'm thinking this is not unintentional.