


Sayid, Kate, John and Rousseau are still eyeing the football toss between their would-be rescuee (Jack) and the Lostaways' frequent tormentor (Tom). Juliet emerges and seems to "have a moment" with Jack. Kate identifies her as the one who helped Sawyer and her escape, and Danielle slips away on her search for Alex. The rescue party watches as Juliet lead Jack to a building. As Jack waits outside, Juliet wheels Ben out in a wheelchair. As Jack shakes Ben's hand, Locke mutters, “this is going to be more complicated than we thought.” Alas, John, it will be you, not Ben, who really complicates things...
Kate loads her rifle, but Sayid tries to convince her that Jack may not want to be rescued. Locke stop Sayid from stopping Kate, claiming they owe Jack, who has done so much for them. Night falls. Juliet walks Jack "home." Locke devises a plan that splits up their party to send Kate in through Jack's side door (and give Locke time to go on his own rogue mission). Kate slips into Jack’s place, where he is playing the piano. Unfortunately, she walks right into the path of a security camera, and the Others are upon her almost as fast as Jack can scold her for being there. They’ve captured Sayid as well, and want to know who else is with them, but, after a seemingly compliant Jack tells her to answer her captors' questions, Kate says nobody else.
And “nobody” shows up in Ben’s place. Ben needs to adjust his craftmatic hospital bed to sit up and see John, pointing a gun. Locke tells Ben, “I’m not looking for Jack – I’m looking for the submarine.” Ben denies knowledge at first, until John tells Ben that he killed Mikhail after Mikhail told them about the sub. Alex enters and John takes her hostage in the closet when Tom arrives to reports that Kate and Sayid have been captured. Ben tells Tom he wants them separated. Tom starts to say that tomorrow Juliet and Jack…but Ben cuts him off, demanding that "the man from Tallahassee" be brought to him. After Tom goes to "make it so," John says he wants Alex to bring him Sayid’s bag. Ben asks John’s help getting into his wheelchair – no tricks, just dignity. “You of all people should understand what it means to want some dignity.” (Incidentally, it was great that the writers let Ben chew up so much screen time just being Ben. Michael Emerson brings so much to this show, doesn't he?) Ben figures out that John has the explosives (if he met Mikhail, he must have been to the Flame, etc.) and therefore wants to blow up the sub, not pilot it. When John angrily denies that Ben knows him, Ben recounts that John Locke was born in California, wasted time in Tustin at a box company, lost his last four pre-island years in a wheelchair, and says he knows how John ended up in it. In that brilliant Ben tone that's have sensitive inquiry and half menacing taunt, he asks, “Tell me, John, did it hurt?” Locke angrily replies “I felt my back break. What do you think?”
Kate, in a rec room, gets her cuffs in front of her feet. Tom enters and seems both impressed and happy to see her (his bonding moment with Kate in the Hydra locker room hanging creepily in the air). Tom points to his head and tells Jack, now entering, to be careful in here. Jack, now alone with Kate, asks if they hurt her, and Kate returns the question. He tells her enigmatically that the abductees from the tail section are "safe." Kate asks if Jack is with the Others and he says, “I’m not with anyone Kate.” He reminds her that he told her not to come for him. “I didn’t think you meant it.” She takes his hands, and Jack tells her that the Others will let him go home first thing in the morning, but he plans to bring back help. Crushed that Jack would abandon her (despite his logic), she asks why he trusts them, and he says he does because she told him to when he asked her to save Sawyer’s life. Oh Snap! It's clear by now that Kate's plan to rescue Jack was as much to rebound from her troubled relationship with Sawyer as to help a fellow castaway, and Jack just threw it back in her face (albeit gently). Juliet comes in, and says they need to go. Kate, perhaps ashamed, perhaps feeling a little silly, realizes Jack may not be the alternative to Sawyer she was hoping for, but Jack again assures her he will come back for her.
Ben says it was rough not asking Locke about his healing while he was held captive in the Swan. Locke pieces together why Ben had such an interest in him - after all, why is it the island healed John's paralysis but not Ben's tumor, or his post-surgery infection, or even the surgical wounds that keep him in a wheelchair for the time being? After some great verbal jousting, John asks for some food.
Alex approaches Sayid, chained to a swing set. She says her father sent her for Sayid’s pack. Sayid recognizes her immediately, even though they've never met. He says she looks like her mother, but Alex thinks her mother is dead. The guard swats Sayid to shut him up.John takes some leftover chicken from the fridge. Ben says blowing up the sub will cause a problem. He was born on the island but most of the other Others were recruited. They need to know they can leave if they want to, and he will lose his hold over them if they think is lying about the ability to leave. He recognizes John wants to stay on the island, and offers to show John a box, "and whatever you imagine and want to be in it, there it would be." John responds "I’d say I hope that box is big enough to imagine up a new submarine." Hotheaded, he blasts that he is angry because the Others are cheaters, hypocrites, Pharacies. Their cush life in the barracks reveals that they don't know what the island is really about. Ben is incredulous - how could John know more about the island than he does if John has been there 80 days while Ben has been there his whole life? "Because you’re in the wheelchair and I’m not."
(As an aside, to the left is a collage of the artwork in Ben's place. More on this later, but if you want a closer view, click on the title of this post...As another aside, on Ben's table when he was whelled out by Locke was a copy of...A Brief History of Time which by now must have been an Others Book Club selection)
Alex returns with Sayid's pack. She denies having had any problems (concealing her discovery that her mother may be alive). Ben tries to stop John from destroying the sub (or does he?) by saying, after the anomaly (Swan implosion, sky turned purple...) the sub can’t come back if it leaves, so there's no reason to fear having to leave because of the sub. John doesn't listen and has Alex lead him to the sub. She tells him that Ben was manipulating him. At last we see the Others' submarine, and John apologizes for involving Alex…who Danielle, crouched in the bushes, has finally laid eyes upon and recognizes as her long-lost child. John walks the dock and opens (not another!) hatch. He climbs down into the sub, powers on some lights…
Ben returns the leftover chicken to the fridge. Jack and Juliet enter and Jack asks Ben to let his friends go after he’s gone – and he would not leave if they weren’t let go. Ben gives his word that he’ll let them go just as soon as Jack has left the island (tee hee, because John's about to stop Jack from leaving!) Juliet tears up and thanks Ben for keeping his promise, and the Drs. J leave. A wet Locke meets up with the escort taking Jack and Juliet to the sub. John apologizes, and the sub blows up. Jack shoots Locke a look of utter horror, revulsion and anger...hoo, boy!
Locke later finds himself chained in a pipe room. John tells Ben he knows Ben wanted it to happen, which was why he left the C4 in the bag. Richard Alpert, the Mittleos recruiter who conned Juliet onto the island, shows up and releases John's cuffs. Ben tells John that he was scared that letting Jack go would mean defeat in the eyes of his people, but killing him would break a promise, which the Others would not cotton to, either, but then John took care of everything for him by blowing up the sub. Now Ben doesn't have to let Jack go but can't be blamed for Jack's continued presence, either. Ben tells John he will show him what came out of the "magic box" he described earlier. He clarifies his question about whether the back-breaking hurt was asking what it felt like when John's own father tried to kill him. Ben taunts that John is afraid of him and the island is the one place he can never find you. He notes that John seems to have some sort of communion with this island, and that makes him very important, which, in timem he’ll understand. "I want to help you John," says Ben, "because I’m in a wheelchair, and you’re not." Richard opens a door, and John sees… his father, tied up and gagged!!
Recap Part 1 - the Cooper/ Sawyer Connection
I've long maintained that Locke's dad, "Cooper," will turn out to be the "real" Sawyer that James Ford was hunting when flight 815 crashed. To me, last night proved it. Here's my thinking:
I know I'm not the only one in cyberspace to think this, but at least now I have some "evidence."
Recap part 2 - that Devious Scamp, Benry
Ben is good. Really good. He even boasted to James about how much better at the long con he is than the island's version of Sawyer. Last night he manipulated Locke into blowing up the sub so he would be held blameless for keeping the other Others (and the castaways) trapped on the island. But this was not the first time.
Think last season, in "Lockdown," when "Henry Gale" was dispatched by John to push the button. Later he claimed he never did and nothing happened, which began John's fateful doubtfest that ultimately led to the implosion of the Swan (and the purple sky event that cut off the Others' access to the outside world). I'm thinking Ben knew what would happen if the button was not pushed, but he sure as heck did not want to be around when it happened. So he pushed the button to save his own skin but planted the doubt in Locke that would ultimately cut off all off-island communications (and really, he didn't seem all that surprised in last season's finale when it happened).
Two things to reconcile with this theory: 1) if John was so important to tumor-laden Benry, why goad him into being in the hatch when it blew (I suppose he figured Locke would just walk away and let the clock count down while he was not there...); 2) the very plausible theory put forth by the producers this week that the Others didn't know about the Swan hatch (since Kelvin Inman was not killed in the "purge")... There will hopefully be explanations for both of these inconsistencies, but for now it's a thing to make you go, hmm...
Recap Part 3 - Ben's Decor
If you have not yet, click on the title of this post to be whisked away to a collage of Ben's wallhangings. In addition to the detailed map of the island (someone from props, please please post that!), there are lots of unique tribal masks. What do you think? Ancient history of the island (the 4-toed people?) Just a love of primative things from around the world (but don't take his fridge!)?
Recap Part 4 - the Psychology of John Locke
Poor John. At least now we have a good idea of what makes him tick. Forever tormented by his father's leaving him, then stealing his kidney, and later, trying to kill him and leaving him maimed, John Locke was depressed before he lost the use of his legs. Trying to break free from his humdrum existence in data entry at Hurley's box factory, he tried to prove himself on walkabout, but got more than he bargained for when he crashed on the island, regained the use of his legs, and became a spiritual guru/ expert survivalist for his ad hoc new community. He believes his life finally has a purpose, and more importantly, that purpose is far away from his father. No wonder he doesn't want to leave, and, scared that his father's machinations will follow him here, he is scared to let anyone else leave and send help. In the end, John is far more fragile than the rugged jungle man he projects. Too bad for those around him...
Next Week
We're told the heretofore useless Nikki and Paulo will get their moment in the sun, as their flashback to the last 80 days on the island will bring back deceased favorites Boone, Shannon, Arzt and Ethan.
Hey, gang. Doc Jensen at EW.com has some nifty theories about Paolo and Nikki (course corrected time travelers who showed up on the island after Desmond turned the key in a revised timeline?) and Locke (a future time traveller who designed the Dharma hatches to appeal to his own damaged psyche). Click on this link to be whisked away to the Doc's column.
http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20015197,00.html
Also, check out this Canadian television promo for next week's episode, "The Man From Tallahassee," (above) for a glimpse at what Locke's hidden agenda may be.
A thought on Vincent…
Walt’s dog somehow survived the crash from inside a crate in the under-plane cargo hold? Somehow I doubt it. I’m starting to think Vincent is some combination of 1) Walt’s apparent power to conjure up animals by thinking about them, and 2) whatever it is on the island that creates apparitions in order to reveal the island’s secrets to our survivors. What’s that, you wonder? Think about it… Jack found the cave (complete with our castaways’ fresh water source and “Adam and Eve” and their white and black rocks) by following his dead father. Locke and Eko found the Pearl station by following Yemi. Boone died because he followed Locke’s dream to where the old plane had crashed. And now, Vincent led Hurley right to the bus, with the ignition key in hand. Well, in a hand, which belonged to…
Roger
For the first time since Desmond, we met a guy in a Swan hatch jumpsuit. Alas, the guy, who Sawyer later nicknamed Skeletor, was a dead man whose nametag read Roger Worman. Or, more likely, Roger, who was a Work Man. The guys on the Buddytv Lost site posit – could Roger be the “him” Kelvin was waiting for, but who didn’t show up because he died in the overturned truck? And, yes, that’s right, the nickname came from…
Sawyer!
Meanwhile, in the jungle, Sawyer and Kate, sweaty messes, believe they’re almost home. Sawyer steps on a dart, and Kate yanks it from his foot. Sawyer talks about how he used to watch Little House as a kid when he had mono, and it looks like they’re going to have another tender moment. Kate says they can get things back if they just apologize to each other. Sawyer, his guard back up (again with the self-loathing thing) says he has nothing to apologize for. When Kate doesn’t just melt over this, Sawyer says “so that’s how its’ going to be.” At that point, with his jerky persona back up, Kate stops calling him James and says, “Welcome home, Sawyer” They emerge on the beach, and first Sun and then the extras come to greet them. Charlie hangs back. Sawyer looks at Kate like he’s already lost her, and she looks back in much the same way as they talk to different groups of castaways.
Back at the van, Jin discovers that Roger was on a beer run! And Dharma had both light and regular Dharma beer! Jin and Hurley work to lever the bus back onto its four tires. Sawyer shows up to complain about the theft of his scotch, but Hurley, suddenly hopeful, shouts, “dude you’re alive!” And bearhugs the big galloot Jin tries some English – “good to see you” – leading to a great Sawyer line – “hey, you’re hooked on phonics!” Sawyer sheepishly says Kate’s with him but “they still have Jack,” and Hurley, surprisingly, says that’s fine, Jack will be alright. We all are. Hurley believes the car and Sawyer’s return are a sign that things are picking up. After all, getting an old car running is something he hasn’t done since the last day he really had hope…
Sayid asks Kate what happened with Jack. He asks about other boats. Locke wants to know if the Others can leave the island. Kate tells Sayid and Locke about the zoo, and the Other village. Kate says she’s getting Jack back and is going to get help, but doesn’t answer when Locke asks “help from who?”
In the jungle, Hurley, Jin and Sawyer succeed in tipping over the van, which is filled with old paper wrappers. There’s a blueprint for a winding road, suggesting Dharma was trying to connect two points on the island, but we don’t know what points or why. Sawyer finds the beer, then Roger’s head. Hurley goes to start the car as Sawyer takes a handful of beer cans. Hurley turns the key, but nothing happens. So Sawyer opens the flat, skunky beer and takes a sip. Again, I agree with Kelly, who said, “watching Sawyer drink hot, skunky, flat beer made me want to vomit.” Hurley is looking for hope in fixing the car – but Sawyer says there sure as hell ain’t no hope here. And that is my response to you, Kell – yeah, it was gross that Sawyer was drinking the icky old beer, but in a hopeless situation like he felt he was in, it was something to hold onto and try to enjoy for him, just like the bus was for Hurley.
Hurley prays for help while he sits with Vincent. Sawyer tosses him “help” in the form of a beer, but it rolls past. Hurley follows it with his eyes, and smiles. He goes to get Charlie and says they’re getting the car running. Hurley tells Charlie that, if he comes, and doesn’t die, they win! Hurley gives a pep talk (ok, a bitch-slap), and Charlie comes. In the best scene in weeks, Sawyer teaches Jin the only three things a woman needs to hear. “I’m sorry.” “You were right.” “Those pants don’t make you look fat.” They then help Hurley and Charlie push the bus to a hill top, and look down on a relatively treeless hill. Hurley says he’s going to jump start by popping the clutch when they push him, rocks be damned.
Charlie says he’s going to ride shotgun! Victory or death! Hurley starts the car, 8-track and all, and turns away just as they nearly smash into the rocks. They drive across the clearing and do donuts as Sawyer, Jin and Vincent come running after them. They pile in and go for a drive, finally diverted from their plight by the simplest of things, a joyride in a big dumb car.
On this, GrettyBetty grouses, “yes, my friends...i GET the part that it was for FUN that Hurley wanted to start the van. Hurley is the FUN guy...this we are supposed to juxtapose with the few good memories he has with his dad restoring the Camaro (after winning all that money, he STILL had it in the garage, mothballed in exact same condition as it was when his dad bailed on him. WAITING for his dad's return so they could finish it together)...” And to me, that was the point. Particularly this group needed this – Hurley, who has been without hope for so long and yet, as Locke and Sayid pointed out a couple weeks ago, was the camp cheerleader; Sawyer, consigned to loneliness, getting to bond with other people; Jin, trapped in virtual silence by his lack of English, got to connect with the boys; and Charlie, understandably bummed by the news of his imminent death, gave death the finger and enjoyed a moment of hope.
And that I believe explains the other problem GrettyBetty had with this episode – that any environmental conditions that would skunkify beer would also render the car unstartable. Sure, in the real world, but on this island, the laws of physics often seem to bend for what people need psychologically or mythologically. Just as the island, as Locke would say, seemed to provide hatches to further the quests and food drops to feed our survivors, so did it provide this van at the moment that these four characters needed it most.
Later, as Hurley keeps driving in the clearing, Sawyer looks at Jin and Sun, and Charlie and Claire, and, realizing he’s probably lost Kate, drinks alone.
I’ll let Kelly tell you about the last scene: “Kate was being unreasonably cranky by not asking for Sayid's and Locke's help to find Jack.” Kate’s excuse was that they have no motivation and don’t know where to look. Locke says she’s wrong – they have a compass bearing. Sayid scoffs about the “sign” of Eko’s stick, to which Locke refers. Shots ring out, but Kate says it’s safe…and out comes Rousseau. Again, Kelly had some very strong thoughts: “it ended with Kate telling Rousseau about Alex being on the other island, like it was some big deal and an interesting plot twist, when all along we've all known that that girl is Rousseau's daughter, big deal.”
Here, alas, I think the scene played out the way it did because the writers wanted to take it to a certain place (i.e. bringing Rousseau along). I think this part was handled pretty clumsily, but, just as Hurley found Hope in an old beat-up car, I find it here: for the first time that I can think of, the characters are talking to each other about the things we know but they don’t. Sure, it was no reveal to the audience (or shouldn’t have been) that Alex the Other was once baby Alex Rousseau. The big deal here is not that connection, but that Rousseau was brought in on it. Never having seen an “Other” before Ben, but always knowing some group of “other” people took her baby, now she can join the main action because her 16-year-long paranoid delusion has turned out to be correct. Now that’s a plot point, even if it’s not a reveal.
Afterthought
So why did I like this episode? I thought it brought it back to the intangible aspects of Season 1 that made most of us love the show. Granted, my buddy Todd’s reaction is understandable, because he came on board in Season 2, when the writing stopped focusing on character and started being all about the mysteries on the island. And they are fascinating (and the reason I maintain this blog). But if we don’t care about the characters, we’ll lose interest in the plot. This episode gave us snippets of all our chacters (less Jack and the Others) that reminded us why we cared. It gave some psychological insight with the flashback even if it didn’t reveal anything to further the mystery (at least, not apparently). And it gave Sawyer some of his best lines all season and, while returning his relationship with Kate to the status quo ante, made us understand what opportunity those two have lost.
Next week, when the mythologically-intense “Enter 77” runs, please note I’ll be traveling late in the week and may not be able to post until a few days later than normal. So I continue to welcome your comments and thoughts and will continue to work them into my post.
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