Well, he did it before she could speak to him? Thinking about Dogen's warning to Sayid and Jacob's to Ricardo?
Yep, I noticed that too.
'Safe'
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Well, he did it before she could speak to him? Thinking about Dogen's warning to Sayid and Jacob's to Ricardo?
Yep, I noticed that too.
I'd have preferred to have had bits of this story play out over the season, instead of using up a whole hour of it when we're so close to the finale.
I agree. I think even if it had played as is earlier in the season, it would have felt too much in one go.
Hey, it's Lost's very own "The Girl in Question". Minus the "Ciao!"
Hey, it's Lost's very own "The Girl in Question".
In a quick, we need to fix this problem before they all die way?
Someone mentioned on twitter that it was shown out of order. Apparently it was supposed to be shown earlier in the season. That would have made more sense. But yes, it would have worked better as interspersed scenes.
I wonder if that was a wishful-thinking tweet. This episode aired when planned, according to Alan Sepinwall's interview with Damon and Carlton:
[Q:]Even some people who were positive about the episode last night objected to or questioned its placement this late in the season, right after this big episode where so many characters died and right before the final hours. And at times I and other people have wondered about whether Desmond should have more prominently appeared in the sideways universe sooner, or if we needed to spend as much time in the Temple as we did, etc. Looking back over the season now, how do you feel about how you placed things and about certain landmarks. Did they have to be at the particular parts of the season where they occured?
CC: We told the story the way we wanted to. Like David Chase, we tried to make the show to entertain the audience. That was our primary goal. We kind of planned this episode to come at this period of time because we actually wanted to take a break after the deaths of these major characters. It felt like this was the perfect time to take a time out from the main narrative. And since this was the final big mythological episode that we were going to do, we felt like it was a good placement for it, and now we'll roll into the finale. We make no apologies. We planned this to be the way it is. Again, it is funny, because there are a lot of people who are very happy with the show, there's going to be a very vocal group of people who are not happy, and that just kind of comes with the territory. We're making the show the best way we know how to make it, and we stand by it, and we're excited about how it ends and how the journey's unfolded.
That works too.
I wonder if that was a wishful-thinking tweet.
Sounds like it, given the interview. Interesting. It certainly would have worked better earlier in the season. I see the point Cuse is making about why they put it there, but it felt like very awkward timing. I still liked the episode, all the same.
Heh, that was a nice interview.
So, all that was supposed to be several thousand years ago? I did not get that. I actually thought that this episode was telling me that Jacob was a lot more recent than I had previously believed.
So, all that was supposed to be several thousand years ago? I did not get that. I actually thought that this episode was telling me that Jacob was a lot more recent than I had previously believed.
I read somewhere that the game Jacob and Smokey were playing was Senet which was an acient Egyptian game (Wikipedia says it may be the oldest board game that we know about, something I also remember Laurence Olivier's character in Sleuth mentioning).
They were speaking Latin at the beginning, weren't they?