cyclonekruse said:
One significant thing it did was give a slew of information to the audience.
Like what? We got to see the DHARMA initiative for ourselves... and it turned out they were just a bunch of clueless hippies after all. Well, that was
totally worth all the build up.
Also, Ben is a manipulative bastard because he was healed by some magic water that robbed him of his innocence back when he was a kid. ...
Seriously?
As for the castaways and a hydrogen bomb being involved... Well, I went over that several times already. It was unnecessary and ultimately pointless.
Do you also have a problem that they showed things in flashbacks?
Not the same thing at all... Knowing the background of a character can tell you a lot of things about him/her (for example, Kate was a fugitive, and she was a fugitive, and she was a fugitive).
It's where Sawyer and Juliet fell in love (something that wasn't possible for S1 Sawyer).
But something that would have been possible without time-travel, really. They were left behind on the island. Three years passed. There you go.
It's where you could see Jack not trying quite so hard.
Trying to set off a hydrogen bomb is "not trying quite so hard"? Just what does he do when he tries hard? :lol
It's where Miles gets over his daddy issues.
Admittedly. And considering Miles was pretty much flat out of things to do after that...
It's where we saw Faraday lose Charlotte (which was an impetus to try to change his past).
(... which didn't work out in the end and had no consequences for the rest of the series, which was pretty much my point)
Did their actions in the past alter their future? No. But at the time, we didn't know that. And it was tense because of it.
I thought it was just stupid, sorry. :lol
If "whatever happened, happened", there was no way to change anything. And stuff like Ben surviving the gunwound after all, or Richard remembering Jack and the others in 2007 (except you didn't watch them die, Richard... what was up with that, anyway?) pretty much meant it was indeed a "whatever happened, happened" scenario.
So all I saw was a bunch of characters acting like idiots, including the supposed expert on the subject ("wait, did I say we couldn't change history? why, of course, we can! I don't know why it took me years to realize that we got to choose our destiny! it must be that Hollywood cliché about us geniuses constantly missing the obvious so the non-genial viewers wouldn't feel inappropriate, except cranked up to 11!").
And after, we realized that they were the cause of their own crash landing on the island. That's very Greek tragedy. They caused the very thing they tried to prevent.
Considering the idea was that there was nothing they could do to avoid it, it's actually completely meaningless.
Though, if they had not detonated the bomb (leading to the plane crash), the world would have ended
But that couldn't happen, or you'd have a big fat grandfather paradox on your hands.
It doesn't matter if the Incident was brought up again.
It does matter that it ended up not mattering at all in season 6.
(... there's
got to be better way to put that :lol )
We learned that it was the cause of the pregnancy issues on the island.
No, we didn't, really.
We saw that Ethan was born before the incident, implying there were no pregnancy issues back then. And we know there were pregnancy issues decades later.
When did that change? Never said. Why did that change? Never said.
What you did is merely extrapolate that the incident was responsible, not because it makes sense for such an incident to cause those pregnancy issues (what kind of electromagnetism or radiation causes pregnant women to die if they stay on the island during the whole pregnancy, whereas everything works out of the baby is conceived off-island and born on the island (Alex, Aaron), or conceived on the island and born off-island (Ji-yeon)?
magical electromagnetism, presumably!), but simply because we don't really know about any other major event in-between those two points.
The whole thing was stupid anyway. Why couldn't the Others' pregnant women just take the sub and give birth off-island? Others like Richard or Tom were apparently leaving the island every now and then (even right after the implosion of the Swan station, for Tom, despite the fact it shouldn't have been possible according to Mikhael... just saying), so that shouldn't have been a problem, really.
(and of course, you'd
think the statue of Taweret, goddess of childbirth, had something to do with that,
but you'd be wrong!)
We learned from the Incident that releasing the energy, pulling the cork on it as it were, has profound consequences in the form of destroying the Island.
No, we didn't. And that wasn't the (amusingly literal) cork of the island anyway, really.
We learned that Candle/Halliwax/Chang was actually telling the truth in those orientation films (which is something that couldn't be assumed before given all the lies he told).
Yeah, like all the fake names. What was the point, again?
He also pretended he still had both arms in his 1980 video for the Pearl, and that's got to be the biggest lie of them all. :lol
But really, was there any doubt all that stuff about the Swan was true? Wasn't that question put to rest years before with the season 2 finale?
You are so wrong about this. They had said since the beginning of the flash-sideways that it wasn't an alternate timeline.
I'm afraid
you are so wrong about this.
Here's what they had to say right after the season 6 premiere:
Lindelof: Should you infer that the detonation of Jughead is what sunk the island? Who knows? But theres the Foot. What do you get when you see that shot? It looks like New Otherton got built. These little clues [might help you] extrapolate when the Island may have sunk. Start to think about it. A couple of episodes down the road, some of the characters might even discuss it. We will say this: season 6 is not about time travel. Its about the implications, the aftermath, and the causality of trying to change the past.
Can we agree that's
absolutely not what season 6 turned out to be about? That there was really no point in trying and spotting clues as to when the island sank, in the end? That Lindelof's words make it pretty clear the whole thing was, like I said in my previous message, supposed to be a parallel timeline?
As for the term "alternate", here's what they said about that in that same interview:
Lindelof: [...] we dont use the phrase alternate reality, because to call one of them an alternate reality is to infer that one of them isnt real, or one of them is real and the other is the alternate to being real.
So the point was to say that they were both real (which is actually a stupid point to make, as "alternate reality" doesn't infer anything about "not being real"... especially considering we have that "reality" word, which...
ah, well!).
And of course, in the end, that turned out to be
quite debatable.
Take your pick: either they blatantly lied in interviews (when they really didn't have to), or they changed their mind at some point while they were writing the last season.
Not sure which is worse anyway, but I'd go with the latter, as it certainly wouldn't be the first time those writers proved they were unable to plan ahead for more than four or five episodes (and Sideways-Daniel's comment about setting off a hydrogen bomb etc makes me think it was still an alternate timeline at that point).
And there are lots of little clues given throughout the show that point to it being the afterlife. "Christian Shepherd." The "Dharma" Initiative.
C'mon... There are
tons of works of fiction with religious symbolism or imagery out there that don't end on a purely "spiritual" note like the "they're in the afterlife! in a church! and here comes the light!" twist.
The bleeding effects between the Sideways and the real world when characters were having near-death experiences.
'Could just as well have been bleeding effects between parallel timelines...
Dead characters appearing to be alive (e.g. Charlie appearing to Hurley..."I AM dead. But I'm also here.").
Compatible with the afterlife they introduced in season 6, really?
The got to the cave. Saw the donkey wheel. Decided it was safer to have a polar bear turn it.
'Didn't seem like a human being couldn't handle it, really...
Scientists find a cold cave... "Darn, we gonna need ourselves some
polar bears!"
It only makes sense, indeed. :lol
Saw it disappear. Decided it was safer to seal the cave.
"You know, guys, I think we really shouldn't have ordered so many polar bears, in retrospect..."
Built the lab to do just that.
Because labs are ideal ways to seal stuff like that?
He tracked Locke to find out how to get back to the Island.
Did he? I saw him take care of Locke, but no sign of him trying to find out how to get back to the Island.
(besides, it should have been quite easy for Widmore, really: as we later find out, he had the address of the Lamp Post right there on his desk all along! :lol )
In fact, Widmore only talked about helping Locke to get back to the island along with the Oceanic 6, because, according to him, a war was coming, and they needed to be back on the island before it happened, or the wrong side would win.
They trusted him more as a pilot than they trusted any of themselves to sail a ship.
OK, where does
that come from? :lol
Kate could handle the ship just fine, apparently...
SAWYER: How about it, Freckles? Know anything about sailing?
KATE: I know enough.
And really, it's not
Lapidus I'd be worried about, but
the plane, like I said a bunch of times already.
Who knew it was patched with tape? Miles, Richard, and Lapidus. Who knew about the boat? Kate, Claire, and Sawyer. Without knowledge of the duct tape, those three might think the plane is their best chance of survival over a boat with no lasting provisions sailing blindly into the ocean.
C'mon, the duct tape is just a funny detail, the cherry on the top of the silly cake...
The thing is, it's a damn
airliner that
crash-landed on a small island. Not a nice little Cessna or anything like that. You just don't quickly fix those things up and expect them to take off (especially with no actual runway). Except in a ludicrous show like
Lost, apparently...
Jacob had to convince them to be the replacement first. That took some doing.
And when did that "doing" happen, exactly? What did Jacob do to convince them, during the course of the series?
You forget that Ben had a settle to score with Widmore and was motivated to leave the island to get even for Alex's murder.
Yes, I admit I tend to forget about that contrived subplot...
"I can't kill you, so I'll go after your daughter!"
"Well, I couldn't kill your daughter, so I'll just kill you after all, I guess. Rules? What rules?"
But did he really need to go there himself, when he apparently had agents on mainland that could do his dirty work?
Did he really need to leave the island by turning the wheel (he said you weren't allowed to go back once you'd done that, but then again, he did go back, so maybe he lied, but then again, why would he lie about that? ... "mess of a show", like I said)?
Did he really need to tell Locke where to find the Others and that they would follow his orders (i.e. to basically tell Locke he now
is the new leader, and help him with that)?
And you also forget that Ben needed some information from Locke. So he had to talk Locke down from suicide.
And what information was that? That they needed to go find Eloise Hawking. That's it.
And Ben knew Eloise Hawking. And he apparently knew where to find her as well. And he then helped Hawking reunite the castaways.
So Ben and Hawking knew each other, had the same goal, and didn't mind working together, but for some reason, Ben
absolutely needed to get that tidbit of "information" from Locke. Well, okay, then!
The whole being able to predict the weather down to the second thing. He had some connection to the island.
Seriously? How was that ever implied to be a supernatural ability in any way? ^^;
That was just Locke showing off his mad hunter skills to Boone...
It wasn't his need for control that drove those actions. He mentioned a feeling that kept him on the Island to Sawyer when Sawyer kicked him off the boat. That feeling of faith in the Island, for lack of a better way to put it, now defined him.
How are his belief that he's meant to do something on the island and his constant need to fix things mutually exclusive?
Was he "letting go", when he jumped on the MIB after Desmond uncorked the island?
Was he merely trusting his destiny, when he chased the MIB to his boat and 300-jump-punched him while all hell was breaking loose, because "no, mortal old man, I'm
not letting you escape the island, as mortal old men are a menace to mankind!"?
And what about when everybody was telling him
not to go re-cork the island? "Sorry,
'gotta fix this!"
In the afterlife, until he was "awakened" he wasn't privy to the lessons that he had learned when alive.
So much for character growth.
It was an entertaining way to tell the story.
But that doesn't answer my question: what was the connection between the Jacob / MIB reveal and the time travel plot?
Yes, but MiB thought he had won. He thought he had rid himself of the island's protector. That made him more confident. He would have gotten away with it too if it weren't for those pesky candidates and their mangy dog.
And even Scooby-Doo villains know to stay in the shadows as long as possible.
Seriously, why did the guy even "recruit"? 'Guess they had to fill those episodes with
something.
And Jacob was most certainly hindering MiB's plans to leave the island.
Yes, but what about killing the candidates? Sure, Jacob apparently made some rules so he wouldn't be able to kill them (and Desmond? and why didn't Jacob just make it a rule that the MIB couldn't kill
anybody? because he's a bit of an ass?), but the whole thing about having them kill each other... well, he could have worked on that before.
MiB also did plot to have the candidate's kill each other. He appeared as dripping Walt in the jungle to Shannon which led to her getting shot.
So the MIB can also take the appearance of living people, now?
I'm afraid I don't find simply being
told that a character is a genial mastermind all that engrossing. I think it's a whole lot better when the audience can actually see and understand just how clever the guy is, really.
Jacob also wanted to prove the MiB wrong and show that someone would choose the job of their own free will.
Was it really worth endangering the world? Especially considering Jacob eventually went "you know what, fuck that! just kill the guy for me, kthanksbye! (but I won't tell you how, nor that I asked Widmore to bring Desmond here for that very purpose, as that would be way too easy!)"
Once again, the whole thing was stupid anyway...
He wants to make a point, so he brings people on the island and lets his brother kill them (because his brother apparently now agrees with their mother about mankind, despite the fact he killed her for acting on that belief)... because if he intervened, that would make the whole bet moot? Really? He expects them to "help themselves"?
"Geeze, if they can't even defend themselves against a murderous monster made of smoke, really!"
Richard points out that maybe, just
maybe, he should step in after all... And Jacob goes "well, no, that would be cheating. But I guess I could hire you as a spokesman, and that would
completely be fair game! Oh, and I'll give you eternal life in exchange, because that's
absolutely not cheating either!"
Goddamnit,
Jacob.
And he sure isn't a very practical guy, considering his age, is he?
"Oh
hai Ilana. Here's a list of people I want you to protect. But I won't tell you which "Kwon" is the one!"
At this point, why not go all out, really?
Dear Ilana,
Here is the list of people I want you to protect:
_ A _ _ _ _
_ _ _ N
_ _ _ _ S
_ _ S _ _ _
_ _ E _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ E
_ _ T _ _ _ _ _
_ O _ _
_ A _ _ _ _ _
Three of those don't belong (and one of them is an African bird).
Kisses, Jacob
PS: Don't forget to come and visit me at my cabin, where I will most certainly be waiting for you despite what that "shadow of the statue" password thingy may imply!
And MiB would have found a way to kill Jacob without using someone else. Jacob said it was inevitable.
Sure:
everything is inevitable. That's what makes the whole thing so thrilling.
After Richard, Jacob had a new line of protection...Richard. Richard was the go-between for Jacob and the rest of the world. You couldn't get to Jacob without Richard showing the way.
Because Jacob living under the statue was a big secret?
Was I supposed to understand the MIB didn't know that Jacob was living under that statue, back when we first saw them, in that season 5 finale?
When did he do that? To me it looked like Charlie was supposed to always die in the Looking Glass.
So all those scenarios where Charlie kept dying no matter what (we actually
saw that), Hawking mentioning "course-correction", all that stuff... that was just BS?
(then again, Desmond
did say he saw Claire leaving the island with Aaron... 'guess he couldn't see the future beyond what little the writers had planned, and that made him quite unreliable, really)
Because he could. I don't know. Does it matter? Not really.
He lied because he could. And that's it.
Well, that's
great writing, right there. :lol
Except that what I said is scientifically verified.
Sure, it is. But most works of fiction deal with situations of crisis, if you go there, and you could justify all kinds of idiotic or inconsistent behavior, with that excuse. It's just lazy.
He shot Ben in a misguided attempt to stop adult Ben from ruining their lives.
It sure was misguided.
"I have to shoot him because I know he
will turn into a bastard. Because
whatever happened, happened. ... Which means... I can't kill him as a kid anyway...? Wait."
Same thing for Jack, after that.
Clever protagonists.
he spared Zoe because he was an emotionless shell and saw her as not being a threat and not worth exerting any energy on.
He had a gun. She was right in front of him. Just how lazy can he be?
"I wanted you to have the one thing I didn't...a choice." Whether you buy that is up to you.
Considering he caused their plane to crash on a magical island you (normally) can't escape from, I think I'll go with "whatever,
Jacob!"
It didn't strain my disbelief. Of course, I didn't go through looking for inconsistencies either.
I don't think you have to look for them any more than you need to look for trees in a forest...
As frustrating as it might be, it's true. You can just accept some things. Or you can be like kids incessantly asking "Why?" to their parents every answer.
And we're having this conversation because scientists once said "oh, fuck that: it's all pointless."
Because it really is priceless:
Lindelof: Its like when you spend time with a 3-year-old, you quickly find out that one question just begets another theres a why in the wake of every why and the only way to end the conversation is to say, Oh look, a Chuck E. Cheese! The show is doing its best to say, Oh look, Chuck E. Cheese!
(
source)
Where to begin?
"Damn, that's some terrible parenting!"
"Your viewers are like 3-year-olds? Condescending much?"
I don't even know!
Also, same interview:
Wired: Do you still see that as the central issue, man of faith versus man of science?
Lindelof: The paradigm has shifted from that to, were we brought here for a very specific reason, and what is that reason? Locke is now the voice of a very large subset of the audience who believes that when Lost is all said and done, we will have wasted six years of our lives, that we were making it up as we went along, and that theres really no purpose. And Jack is now saying, the only thing I have left to cling to is that theres got to be something really cool thats going to happen, because I have really, really fucking suffered.
(emphasis mine, for lulz)
It's like when you spend time with a senile old man, you quickly find yourself going "geeze, granpa! please shut up, you're embarrassing yourself even if you don't realize it! and put some clothes on!"
InaudibleWhispa said:
Who said anything is possible?
I dunno, you made it sound like smoke monsters also had magical plane-fixing powers or something...
I'm just saying it's a legit reason for Lapidus to not bring up the plane when talking about a man that can turn into smoke. To him, the island is seemingly full of impossibilities. The idea of him questioning a plane with a broken window and dodgy hydraulics taking off really does not matter to me. At all.
Well, I guess I do think he should have spoken up right there and then instead of saving himself for "'looks like someone got their voice back!"
They know he wants off the island. Sawyer already asked why he doesn't just cross the water and he says that he can't, to which Sawyer replies "Yeah, because that would be ridiculous", further strengthening the idea that typical questions don't necessarily apply to Lost since these characters have had their world flipped upside down and are inadvertently taking part in a sci-fi fantasy.
I thought it just strengthened the idea was
Lost was a dumb plot-driven show governed by arbitrary rules.
That line was a bit like Miles' "she hits her head and forgets English? Are we supposed to buy that?". Just because you point out it's stupid, that doesn't make it any less stupid, show.
"The Losties should talk to each other about what the heck is happening to them more often" has been a criticism since day 1, but I think that unless what they're saying is new information for the viewer, or decent character dialogue/development, then we don't need to see it.
You think Hurley told them why he almost killed himself over some numbers, in the season 1 finale? 'Cause it really didn't look like he did, and it seems odd that he would never say anything about that.