I'm glad to see Sawyer isn't just snarking from the sidelines now.
What was up with the gratuitous Vincent moment?
I think that was supposed to support the Ana Lucia red herring since they've shown the dog hanging out with her.
The book is Bad Twin, by Gary Troup, a mystery writer who boarded flight 815 and is now presumed dead. From Amazon (where the ''real'' book will soon be sold, in a gloriously meta tie-in)
Is it really a tie-in? As in created to go with the show (like DriveShaft)? Or is it product placement?
Aurelia, my understanding is that the writer is fictional, but the book will be written and sold in real life. It would be like releasing a DriveShaft album in the real world.
Hmm, too. I think it could be taken in that direction, but so far, not really seeing any of it. Of course, last weeks episode is still in the forefront of my mind, so I'm not sure it couldn't be said of some of the characters, just not Charlie or Sawyer at this point for sure.
You know, I was thinking about Charlie and Sawyer and Charlie refusing the statue could make Sawyer nervous. Sawyer probably assumed he could control Charlie via being the one with the heroin, but now that option is out. Though I suppose now that Sawyer has played his hand and got the guns, it's not like Charlie can really tell anyone anything to hurt him.
The Scott/Steve gag is really, really, really times infinity, really fucking old. And tired. And stupid. Scott DIED before Ana-Lucia even came on the scene, why the hell would that confusion infect her?
Unless it is actually some sort of symptom of being infected by island sickness, or something that ends up being a major plot point, jesus please- Just. Stop. With. The. Dumbass. Scott/Steve gag.
Other than that, a suprisingly interesting episode.
Scott DIED before Ana-Lucia even came on the scene, why the hell would that confusion infect her?
I was going to mention that. Maybe it's a sign she knows more than she lets on about the non-tailies.
When she said it, I went "hmmm."