Slime said:But does anyone else feel that season 2 is agonizingly slow?
Everyone feels that way.
(except for Birdie maybe :lol)
Slime said:But does anyone else feel that season 2 is agonizingly slow?
Richard told him he had to bring them all back to save the island. And Richard was told to say that by the fake Locke.Erigu said:Especially considering we don't know why Ben bothered to intervene.
Nor why Locke was so desperate to bring everybody back in the first place. Where did he get that idea?
Erigu said:Especially considering we don't know why Ben bothered to intervene.
Nor why Locke was so desperate to bring everybody back in the first place. Where did he get that idea?
"The writers told me I had to!"
Oh, that's right. Did the fake Locke get that idea from the fact the others were back already? After all, they were all on the same Ajira plane...Salmonax said:Richard told him he had to bring them all back to save the island. And Richard was told to say that by the fake Locke.
Even better - since he absorbed Locke's memories, he could have gotten the idea from the fact that it had already happened. Fun with paradox.Erigu said:Oh, that's right. Did the fake Locke got that idea from the fact the others were back already?
I guess it comes down to how omniscient the man in black is supposed to be. Assuming he didn't see the arrival of 316 coming, the candidates coming back to the island could be seen as an unfortunate but necessary side-effect of the "becoming-Locke" gambit.Erigu said:But never mind that: so you think the Main in Black wanted the candidates back on the island (just like Widmore and Hawking, conveniently enough... it's like that thing with Jack and the MiB agreeing to lower Desmond in the magical cave: they might be opposing forces, but who's gonna advance this mess of a plot? let's work together!)? Guess Jacob's final "they're coming" was actually good news to him, then?
Yeah, they sure did a great job at conditioning people to just accept whatever nonsense they were coming up with based on the promise that it would all make sense sometime down the road (like, in several years), and then to accept that none of it ever really mattered.BigNastyCurve said:For what it's worth, I enjoyed most of the seasons on the premise that the writers actually knew what the hell they were doing. That was an assumption that as long-since been shattered.
True. Anyway, in the end, the idea of coming back with everybody didn't come from anybody in particular, and just happened to coincide with Widmore and Hawking's (unexplained) intentions.Salmonax said:since he absorbed Locke's memories, he could have gotten the idea from the fact that it had already happened. Fun with paradox.
Good thing he somehow managed to foresee that Locke would die off-island and Hawking would insist for everybody to go back with the corpse. And good thing Ilana didn't immediately blow his cover (say, Bram had some magical ash on him, right? you could have trapped him, or... ah, well).the candidates coming back to the island could be seen as an unfortunate but necessary side-effect of the "becoming-Locke" gambit.
Yeah, for me 316 was the episode where things started to seem pretty excessively arbitrary.Erigu said:True. Anyway, in the end, the idea of coming back with everybody didn't come from anybody in particular, and just happened to coincide with Widmore and Hawking's (unexplained) intentions.
I believe it's clear it was really all about the writers trying to get the characters back and coming up with terrible pseudo-justifications to achieve that. Note how they "all" need to come back together... except for the kids (after all, the writers didn't know what to do with them and went trough enough trouble to get them off the island already, as they couldn't just unceremoniously kill them off like they do adult characters). And Widmore gets there in his sub just because. Okay.
I assume that's the same Christian who made his way to the freighter to say goodbye to Michael (meaning, I dunno). To truly attempt to make sense of it, you have to assume those apparitions were the spirit of the island or something. It's actually annoying to me that they explained Christian as being MIB in S6 because it arguably broke more than it answered, and it wasn't particularly satisfying to find out anyway.Erigu said:Say, where did the idea of Locke having to die come from though? Chronologically speaking, the first one to say that would be that Christian-looking dude, near the wheel, back when Christian wasn't even born.
I guess convincing everyone Locke was a messiah and then assuming his reincarnated form would enable him to convince anyone to do anything, including killing Jacob. Seems like kind of an over-elaborate long con considering MIB's powers, but I think that's how the show played it. This sort of goes to the omniscience of MIB again, because I find myself wondering how he knew so much about the flashes in advance (like where to meet Locke when he'd been shot by Ethan). I'd say it was Locke's memory, but Locke had no idea when or where he was at that point.Erigu said:And why did he need to become Locke, again?
Well, even if I think it doesn't make much sense for the ghost of Jack's father (of all people) to appear in front of Michael on that freighter, it's still a lot less ridiculous than his ghost appearing before he was even born and telling Locke to go find Eloise Hawking in Los Angeles (because she will be waiting for him in 140+ years?).Salmonax said:I assume that's the same Christian who made his way to the freighter to say goodbye to Michael (meaning, I dunno).
That whole thing about the island having its own will sure was convenient for the writers ("no, Michael, you can't kill yourself: the island won't let you!") but went absolutely nowhere, in the end...To truly attempt to make sense of it, you have to assume those apparitions were the spirit of the island or something.
And of course he'd want to help the candidates find water! It's not like he wants them to die or anything!It's actually annoying to me that they explained Christian as being MIB in S6 because it arguably broke more than it answered, and it wasn't particularly satisfying to find out anyway.
It certainly is quite the long con, especially considering it depended on quite a few things happening off-island, where the Man in Black couldn't intervene...I guess convincing everyone Locke was a messiah and then assuming his reincarnated form would enable him to convince anyone to do anything, including killing Jacob. Seems like kind of an over-elaborate long con considering MIB's powers, but I think that's how the show played it.
Wait.BEN: Why do you want me to kill Jacob, John?
LOCKE: Because, despite your loyal service to this Island, you got cancer. You had to watch your own daughter gunned down right in front of you. And your reward for those sacrifices? You were banished. And you did all this in the name of a man you'd never even met. So the question is, Ben, why the hell wouldn't you want to kill Jacob?
Indeed... The show sure was working extra-hard to show again and again how knowledgeable and in control the reborn Locke was, back then. But how he knew all that, in the end? Guess that's not important.This sort of goes to the omniscience of MIB again, because I find myself wondering how he knew so much about the flashes in advance (like where to meet Locke when he'd been shot by Ethan). I'd say it was Locke's memory, but Locke had no idea when or where he was at that point.
Actually, yes, people can leave the island. Many people did that, in fact. Including you, Hurley. Maybe you just forgot. And even if you're out of crashed-airliners-that-can-somehow-be-quickly-fixed-by-three-guys-and-some-duct-tape, there's still Desmond's Nice Boat, and, yeah, the wheel.BEN: You can start by helping Desmond get home.
HURLEY: But how? People can't leave the Island.
BEN: That's how Jacob ran things...
Slime said:But does anyone else feel that season 2 is agonizingly slow?
Erigu said:Nor why Locke was so desperate to bring everybody back in the first place. Where did he get that idea?
"The writers told me I had to!"
Read above, you're late to the party.Drealmcc0y said:Seriously?
Richard Alpert told him to bring them back. Which was actually information given to Richard by the MiB.
More genius writing from lost.
Erigu said:Read above, you're late to the party.
Seriously, you should learn to read, evil solrac v3.0. It will change your life.evil solrac v3.0 said:Drealmcc0y is not wrong, just thought I'd let you know.
JACK (CONTD)
The bodies were placed there decades, maybe centuries ago. So their plane crashed - or maybe they were shipwrecked - they probably found this place and knew they could survive here. Unlimited fresh water...
Erigu said:So we're looking at previous drafts to try and solve inconsistencies, now? That's not desperate at all.
It doesn't matter what a previous draft said. They had a character say they were relatively recent corpses, pretended that would eventually prove they knew where they were going (a claim that never made sense in the first place), and in the end, the hilariously contrived explanation they came up with didn't fit. Success?
Is that a fact, now? Jack's comment as heard in the actual episode is in the script linked right above as well. What does that say about "their intent"? Should we just ignore it?oatmeal said:Well, it does help the fact that Jack saying that it was a short amount of time wasn't their intent.
What's the source for that one, by the way?if it's true that ABC said "No, no, that's too much" and they had to change it...
Season 2 is worlds better than 5 or 6, even with all the filler and Charlie's crappy Aaron fixation.Kitschkraft said:Season 2 was one of my favorites although I understand why many disliked it. Felt very mysterious. I like camp though. I'd definitely take it over the last 2 seasons. *shrugs*
I'm just assuming that Dreal was reporting something he found, if that was their intent and it was changed...well you can't blame the writers for that.Erigu said:Is that a fact, now? Jack's comment as heard in the actual episode is in the script linked right above as well. What does that say about "their intent"? Should we just ignore it?
You'll notice I said "IF"...Erigu said:What's the source for that one, by the way?
Salmonax said:Season 2 is worlds better than 5 or 6, even with all the filler and Charlie's crappy Aaron fixation.
oatmeal said:I'm just assuming that Dreal was reporting something he found, if that was their intent and it was changed...well you can't blame the writers for that.
That has nothing to do with what I just said. Again, Jack's comment about the clothing is in that script as well. You can go and check.oatmeal said:I'm just assuming that Dreal was reporting something he found, if that was their intent and it was changed...well you can't blame the writers for that.
We agree on that. But they claimed they did know, and even that it would be evidence that they knew where they were going. Cool if we agree that they lied, then.I'm sure they put it in as a hook, but they didn't know the specifics of what the hook was.
The link doesn't say anything about why that line isn't in the actual episode. Where does that thing about ABC come from?Drealmcc0y said:I just read it on a forum and had a link to back it up.
Drealmcc0y said:Watched up to Confidence Man so far(Unappreciated Gem btw). Season 1 is great, but not enough mythology.
Snuggler said:That is a great one, probably my favorite Sawyer-centric episode. "DON'T YOU FEEL SORRY FOR ME!" (hopefully that's in this episode).
It makes me miss complete asshole Sawyer, but I still like asshole with a heart of gold Sawyer as well.
How do you know? They claim they already had it planned back then, but there's no evidence of that, on the contrary.Drealmcc0y said:The skeletons are the shows adam and eve.
The origin, thats what they knew. A plan was in motion.
Erigu said:How do you know?
And you didn't answer about the ABC thing.
Except I'm basing my conclusion on telling details. What are your telling details, here?Drealmcc0y said:The same way I know how you know.
Not much either. Why are you interested, anyway?Snuggler said:Hey Erigu, what did you think about the part when they move the island?
Erigu said:Not much either. Why are you interested, anyway?
I see what you're saying, I apologize.Erigu said:That has nothing to do with what I just said. Again, Jack's comment about the clothing is in that script as well. You can go and check.
The only difference is that after that, in a later scene, Jack adds that the bodies were placed there "decades, maybe centuries ago"... which is a bit odd after his previous comment (... and I would consider that a good reason to get rid of one of those two lines, in fact...).
Either way, those aren't 2000 year-old skeletons. But then, at the end of the show... Magic!
If that's what happened. Everything you or I or anyone says about what happened in the writing room is conjecture.Erigu said:We agree on that. But they claimed they did know, and even that it would be evidence that they knew where they were going. Cool if we agree that they lied, then.
Erigu said:What are your telling details, here?
Drealmcc0y said:It seems to be all or nothing with Erigu.
Because they didnt have the whole backstory planned and only a bit of it planned, seems to equal no plan to him. Interesting.
Salmonax said:I personally don't believe they had a plan for Adam and Eve or the backgammon speech, although I'm not in the camp that a show needs to have been 100% mapped out to be enjoyable. That said, I wasn't particularly satisfied with how either element was resolved.
oatmeal said:I'm in the camp that originally, they were all dead and when people started guessing it, they adapted.
If you listen to Vozzek69 (the best LOST theorizer IMO) on The ODI podcast, he lays it out pretty well in their Finale recap.
That's why the ending that they used in the church was, as that ex-Bad Robot employee said, exactly as JJ first wrote it.
I hope in another year or undetermined amount of time, they let the bible out. I'd love to read that 18 page treatment that sold ABC.
Yeah, I totally agree with that. They must have been pretty freaked out when that speculation started surfacing.oatmeal said:I'm in the camp that originally, they were all dead and when people started guessing it, they adapted.
Drealmcc0y said:Its actually "You speak to me as if I were your brother"
But why would the MIB want to show all the candidates where to get water? Wouldn't he rather they just died of natural causes, saving him a lot of trouble?Snuggler said:I rewatched the first Jack-centric episode (White Rabbit) and seeing the manifestation of Christian made a lot of sense now, knowing it was just Smokey using the form of Christian to manipulate Jack. Pretty cool stuff.
Salmonax said:But why would the MIB want to show all the candidates where to get water? Wouldn't he rather they just died of natural causes, saving him a lot of trouble?
Salmonax said:But why would the MIB want to show all the candidates where to get water? Wouldn't he rather they just died of natural causes, saving him a lot of trouble?
Drealmcc0y said:He tried to drive Jack off a cliff indirectly.