Monday, March 02, 2009

Jeremy Bentham



Some thoughts on the last couple of episodes.

• Lock may have known that he was supposed to die, but I don't think he knew how or why, or that he would be resurrected. He honestly thought killing himself would be the end. And for that matter, I don't then Ben knew either. After Ben killed him, Ben said "I'm honestly going to miss you." I think he meant it. The writers threw this in just to make it clear that he didn't think John was coming back (even though he gave that convincing speech to Jack about Doubting Thomas).

• Ben talked Locke off the ledge solely to get the information he needed from him, which was how to get back to the island. Once he heard the name Eloise Hawking, that was it. He then finds his way to her, and using his normal Ben wiles, convinces her that he's looking out for the good of the island. When she tells him that he must gather everyone, including Locke's body, he still didn't think it would result in Locke being resurrected, he's just doing what he's told. He also seemed genuinely surprised when Desmond announced that she was Faraday's mother.


• Interesting note about how Widmore used to be a leader until Ben ousted him. To me, this goes back to an earlier theory of mine, that Ben really doesn't have any real understanding of the true secrets of the island (can't speak to Jacob, doesn't know about resurrection), and has conned his way into the leader position. He took leadership of the island from Charles, and now he wants to take that leadership from Locke. Which is why he 1) shot him in the dharma pit after he realized he could actually talk to Jacob, 2) took his place when originally moving the island, and 3) tries to take his place in gathering everyone up and getting back on that plane.


• Walt's dream about the newly crashed passengers wanting to hurt John: I think Locke is going to have to struggle for authority in the "new losties" camp. People are already suspicious of him there, and will be doubly so when he tries to assert his authority over Ben. As we all know, Ben is good at convincing anyone to do anything, something that Locke isn't very good at. Once Ben wakes up, I'm guessing he'll have everyone on his side pretty quickly. Even though Ben isn't expecting to see John walking around again, he might play it off as if he did, and tells Locke that he needed someone to kill him in order to get to the island... or something.


• Remember in the episode "Jughead" when Sawyer, Juliet, and co. found the canoes with the Ajira Airlines water bottle in them? I'm guessing the "new losties" (Caesar and Ilana) used those boats to get to the main island (they're on the jail island now) and are the ones firing on them from a distance in that scene.


• Finally, when Ben told Jack that he needed to fulfill a promise he made to an old friend, undoubtedly he meant that he was going to go find Penny to kill her. I hope he didn't succeed, but something terrible went down. Nothing but foreboding in that scene when he's all bloody at the marina. Whatever he did, it's going to somehow prompt Desmod to go back to the island, because after all Eloise told him that the Island wasn't through with him.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Motorpsycho Lost Dream



Ok, normally I don't post anything on this blog that I haven't done some serious thinking about. If I expect you to spend your time reading something, it should be ideas carefully considered, and not necessarily "off the cuff."

But after last week's show, I had a dream. It was one of those long, drawn out ones that are really intense and highly memorable. And it was all about Lost. In it, I was basically watching the final episode, and the major secret of the show was revealed. I've decided to go ahead and share that dream with you now. So if you're into the more serious-minded philosophical musings with actual thought and merit, you can stop right here. If you're interested in hearing about a crazy dream with no logic whatsoever, but still may contain answers to the show's questions, keep reading, you've been warned.

Ok, I need to start by saying that even though I was dreaming this, I wasn't actually in it, I was just watching it, like watching the show.

The first scene (of the final episode) opens up on a boat, about the size of Desmond and Penny's clipper. On the boat is Juliet and Locke, and maybe a couple other Losties. They're out at sea, in an area that resembles the Caribbean, where clear shallow water goes on for miles and miles. They have something incredibly important on board, and they have to protect it. They're constantly on the watch for anyone following.



We never actually see what they're protecting. It's about the same size as J.J. Abrams' mystery box, and kept hidden deep in the hold of the boat throughout.

There's another smaller boat that they're towing, and Juliet (armed with a serious machine gun) goes out on her own on it to do some reconnaissance. Soon she realizes that they're being followed, and quickly makes her way back to the larger boat. But even as she gets there, she sees scuba divers circling the larger boat, coming in to attack. She warns Locke, and begins firing into the water. In a panic, she points the gun into hold of the main boat, intending to fire. She wants to destroy the Important Mystery Object. She tells Locke that it's better to destroy it than to have it fall into the wrong hands. Too many lives have been lost, too much has gone wrong in the past, we have to just give up and destroy it. Locke does what he can to convince her NOT to shoot, and get her to focus back on the people that are currently trying to attack the boat.



Locke, Juliet, and the others on the boat are able to stop the people who are after the object. They capture them, tie them up and interrogate them about what they know and why they're there. Turns out, they're not so evil. They're all young kids - college students who have been trying to find this thing so they can study it. They don't have evil intentions, they're simply there to learn. Locke feels vilified and Juliet is only somewhat relieved that she didn't destroy the thing. Locke says that they have to come up with another solution.

CUT TO...

A significant amount of time has passed, but we're still roughly in the same location. We can see underwater the base of a small coral reef rising up into an atoll. Part of the reef is submerged, part of it is above water, and rises like a small gentle spiral out of the water. Scuba divers are coming out of the water and getting onto the boat, where Locke and Juliet are standing. We realize that they've buried and hidden the mystery object somewhere in this atoll, hoping that no one will know where to look, even if they knew of this location.

The episode is almost over. They're preparing to say goodbye. As they're pulling up the anchor, they're still looking out over the atoll, at the little bit of reef sticking out of the water, and Locke points, and says to Juliet, "look, you can see it already growing." The camera goes closer, and you can see small leaves of grass multiplying and roots slightly swelling. This mystery object that they planted is now causing a new island to be born.



And here's the part of the dream where nothing happens visually, but I suddenly GET IT. I suddenly understand what the island is. It is an alien life form. A conscious and self-aware alien being that expresses itself by organically causing an island to be grown. It communicates to people psychically, and protects those that protect it. And an alien race (four toes) used to live on it and protect it.

But it was just a dream.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Frogurt in our Cultural History

Did Frogurt (Neil) look familiar to you? That's because he was in the original classic "Got Milk" commercial. Someone should point this out to Darlton.

Smokey doesn't like you if you're an a**hole.



Last week we finally got to see how Montand lost his arm. Did you notice how they made a point out of showing how he pushed Jin around for apparently no reason? I think the writers were trying to make a point, that the smoke monster tends to be more dangerous to a people who are violent natured. Remember Ben's warning to the losties when he unleashed the monster on Keamy and his military team - he said to stay as far away from them as possible, knowing that since those dudes were so evil they were gonna be toast.

And even if he turned into a nice guy, Eko killed waaaay too many people to get redeemed. And he even told Yemi that he wasn’t sorry for what he had done.

Locke had never killed anyone when he met the smoke monster for the first time, and he was spared.

I’m not sayin.... I’m just sayin...

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Reincarnated



Thanks to everyone who has encouraged me to get back on the blog bus. In the spirit of starting new after a long absence, I've decided to tackle the subject of Reincarnation, which was handed to us as an anagram in the last episode, "This Place is Death."











Canton-Rainier = Reincarnation

Reincarnation is not so strange a concept. It may sound esoteric to westerners, but the majority of the people on the planet believe in it. And certainly, anyone who would go around saying "Namaste" on a regular basis (a sanskrit word that means "the divinity in me honors the divinity in you" ) would believe in it.

I'll also point out that reincarnation is not the same as resurrection, which is where someone comes back to life in the same body they died in. Lazarus was resurrected, not reincarnated. I'm assuming that this means Locke isn't going to come back to life once his body gets back to the island. But he will come back at some point.

I'm guessing that anyone born on the island (or conceived on the island?) contains the possibility of being a reincarnation of someone from the island's past. Aaron then could be someone incredibly important (possibly Jacob?), as could Ji Yeon.

This is why Ben wants to take Aaron, why he stakes such an importance on being born on the island, why all of the children from the crash were kidnapped, and why Ben so completely freaked when Alex was killed. In fact, I'm guessing that Ben himself is probably masquerading as someone important from the island's past who was reincarnated, which is why he said he was born on the island, when in fact he wasn't.



When Richard Alpert went to visit Locke when he was a child, he gave him a test which was much like the test given to a child when trying to determine who is the next Dalai Lama. They come to the child with objects from the past life, and ask them "which of these objects is already yours?"

So anyone who dies on the island or at least end up with their body on the island (Christian Shepherd, Yemi) could end up reincarnated there. This would explain why some of the Others seem so willing to die (Bea, Mikhail), why Locke will be convinced to undergo death, and why they need to get his body back.

So why do we keep seeing dead people on the island? I'm guessing that they're all currently in the Bardo, which also might explain where the whispers come from.

On a side note - maybe only the people who are special and/or needed by the island will get reincarnated: this may explain the rationale for dividing people into the good ones vs. the bad ones, like the people on Jacob's list. This could also be the rationale behind the "the purge:" Let the island sort out who belongs there and who doesn't (which is also probably the reason for the Smoke Monster's existence).

Other references to reincarnation (thanks to Lostpedia):
  • On the Season 1 DVD bonus featurette "Lost: On Location", director/producer Jack Bender says that Lost is "All about redemption and rebirth."
  • In the episode "Outlaws," Sawyer believed that the boar was a reincarnation of Frank Duckett, and in the same episode, Locke tells the story of a golden retriever that his foster mother was convinced was the reincarnation of his foster sister.
  • The black horse that Kate sees twice appears to be a reincarnation of Wayne.
  • In the episode "Do No Harm," Boone died at the same time as Aaron was born, and the scenes were juxtaposed with one another to show the endless cycle of life.
  • On the Hanso Foundation website, it was written, "the work of the Hanso Foundation has always been intended to bring rebirth to a dying land and a dying people."

Thursday, May 08, 2008

Locke and Jacob

I haven't seen tonight's show yet, but I have a theory as to what might happen.



In the book Lost Horizon, the monks in the monastery of Shangri-La knew all about the people on the plane crash, just like Ben knows all about Jack and the rest of the survivors. It's revealed that they've been doing some research about the main character, Conway, because they think he can fulfill a very particular role in Shangri-La. The High Lama is dying, and they need someone to take his place.

Conway and the High Lama sit down and have very long discussion about philosophy, religion, and the future of the human race. The High Lama reveals to Conway that the reason why they brought the plane, crashed it, was to get Conway to Shangri-La and take over this important role.

I think in tonight's show, "Cabin Fever," Jacob will say the same thing to Locke. That he was brought to the island to take his place...

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Tovard's Ledger - A Proposed History



As we learned in "The Constant," the Black Rock ledger was the journal of the first mate of the Black Rock ship.

According to the auctioneer (and other sources like find815.com), the ledger is the only surviving artifact of the final voyage of the Black Rock, which was thought to be lost at sea following its departure from Portsmouth, England, March 22, 1845 on a purported trading mission to the Kingdom of Siam. The ledger was discovered in 1852 among the artifacts of pirates on Île Sainte-Marie, an island off the coast of Madagascar that at the time was a notorious pirate haven. It eventually came to be owned by Tovard Hanso.

The contents of the ledger were never made public and were unknown to anyone outside the Hanso family.

So what in the world is this about? I think it can be easily surmised that Widmore wants the ledger to help him learn about/locate the island.

We know that Widmore was certainly working alongside the Hanso Foundation, but in what capacity is still a mystery. Here's a possible history that I've come up with:

Back at the turn of the century, the Black Rock runs aground at the island. Magnus Hanso discovers a lost civilization much akin to Shangri-La. Magnus (or the first mate) leaves the island with the ledger, telling people of the amazing discovery they made. The Hanso family, with perhaps the wrong intentions, makes a difficult journey back to the island.

Chaos ensues. Like many islands that were colonized by westerners, the indigenous population is killed off and the island is mined for its resources. After decades of having the island to themselves, the Hanso family sets up the Dharma Initiative, to allegedly solve the problems of humanity (or maybe just finding new ways to manipulate and profit from the island).

Some members of the Dharma initiative learn about the history and magic of the island, decide to revolt against the Hanso foundation, and create a new utopia/Shangri-La of their own. Ben gains power within this group, and they take over the island and all of its communications, thereby making it once again invisible to the outside world.

Widmore, whom has been working with Hanso and profiting from the discoveries made on the island, decides to take matters into his own hands. Now that communications are controlled by the insurgents, he acquires the ledger, which is the only known guide to locating the island. He holds a boat race around the world, perhaps in order to get people to end up there. He knows that flight 815 crashed there, and in order to stop people from searching for the wreckage he plants a fake plane at the bottom of the Sunda Trench and backhandedly gets Sam Thomas to find it.

Penny Widmore knows something about what her father is up to, and when Desmond goes missing she learns that her father sent Desmond to the island. She then sets up her own team of people to search for the island. When the hatch implodes, she is able to locate the island.

But Charles Widmore is also able to locate the island, and sends out a boat to go there. He hires Abaddon to be in charge, with the main goal to take Ben out in order to regain control of the island and its communications.

But for whatever reason, it doesn't work...

In the future, control of the island is still in Ben's hands. Abaddon is still on the hunt for him. Sayid, after trusting Widmore and then seeing one of the losties killed because of it, sides with Ben in order to protect the rest of the people on the island. He starts offing key people in the Widmore Corporation, but aims for Charles Widmore himself, "The Economist."

Friday, February 29, 2008

Time Travel: Consciousness vs. Physicality



In "The Constant," Faraday reveals that Desmond's consciousness, his mind, is traveling through time. I'm guessing that the natural tendencies of the island that cause this is the 'casimir effect' discussed in the Orchid orientation film. I'm also guessing that the experiments in the Orchid station are attempting to amplify this effect so that it isn't just consciousness that is caused to travel, but an entire physical being (like a bunny or a polar bear).

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

The Dragon Triangle

From the History Channel:

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

More Time/Space Clues



I listened to the latest LOST podcast which has writer/producers Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse answering viewer questions, although somewhat obliquely. They added some major fuel to the time travel/wormhole theory. Here's an excerpt:
------------
Damon: "Faraday was conducting some interesting experiments in 'The Economist,' and I was wondering, Carlton, if you'd like to explain to me at least, because I found it very intriguing, what's up with all this rocketry/digital watch fiasco."

Carlton: "Well there was kind of a time shift that obviously occurred. This rocket was launched and was synchronized with Faraday's watch, but in fact when it arrived the digital clock had a slightly different time. Which would suggest that there was some sort of time fluctuation that occurred in that rocket's journey from the freighter to the island, and I think that's something which is pretty important."

Damon: "That's interesting, that's why I was asking."

Carlton: "Thanks for asking, that was a good question. You picked up on something very important in that episode."

Damon: "That's good, because we wrote future episodes about that very thing, and if we hadn't picked up on it, it would have been a detriment to the show..."

------------

Carlton (reading a fan question to Damon): "How does a polar bear with a Dharma collar get in the middle of the desert?"

Damon (after some silly meandering): "There are properties of the island that are potentially capable of shall we say transporting things from the island off the island."

Carlton: "It might be helpful actually for those viewers who are interested in this question to go online and find the training film for the Orchid Station."

Damon: "Yeah, that would be a very good place to start."

Carlton: "Rarely do we actually have things that aren't in the show that are important to the show, but in this case it is important. Yet if you don't see the Orchid trailer, when we get to it later in the show..."

Damon: "But it's good to say that if you're curious about how a polar bear with a Dharma collar ends up in Tunisia, watch that film because that polar bear has certain things in common with say, bunnies with eights on their backs."

Carlton: "That's right."

------------

Carlton (answering a question regarding C. S. Lewis): "Let's just say yes, the homage to Clive Staples Lewis is very intentional, and there are definitely themes in the Narnia Chronicles that are very relevant to Lost.... Yes, I think a reading of the Narnia books is not only enjoyable but probably somewhat instructive."

Damon: "Yeah, in the same way that I think Alice in Wonderland is something that we refer to and Oz... What's great about those worlds is they're all world on the other side of earth. That is to say that they're not fantasy realms like Star Wars, Narnia is actually connected to the world that we know and so is Oz, as is Wonderland."

Carlton: "As is our Island."

Damon: "As is our Island."

Friday, February 15, 2008

Time Travel






















In the book Lost Horizon, there is a crucial moment at the end of the story. Conway, the main character, and another of the plane crash victims struggle to make their way out of Shangri-La. With them is the character Lo-Tsen who looks about age 19, but has lived in Shangri-La for an untold number of years. When the three of them finally get out of the valley and into the mountains, Lo-Tsen instantly ages, becoming a frail old woman in a matter of seconds. It was as if time completely caught up with her the moment she leaves Shangri-La.

Last night on "The Economist," we were shown that due to whatever strange magnetic features the island possesses, time on the island moves more slowly. But I think the time difference between the island and the world is much more than 30 minutes. My theory is that time off of the island has progressed along with our own. While only 100 days have passed for the crash victims, in the rest of the world it's winter of 2008.

• In the ARG Find815.com created by the writers of the show, the ship Christiane I finds the remains of Oceanic flight 815 in the Sunda Trench, as later tied into the show. The timeline of the finding was very specific - it took place over Christmas of 2007. If the discovery of the wreckage took place before the freighter brought our four new characters to the island, then it must currently be 2008 or after.

• During this summer's Comic-con in San Diego, the writer/producers Damon Lindelof and Carleton Cuse were on hand to talk about the show and answer some questions. Here's an excerpt from the interview:
Damon: It’s interesting that you should ask about time because… you know… you’re making a basic assumption that they’ve been there, y’know, as long as they think they’ve been there. [Crowd murmurs, someone says “Oh, no.”] I would say by the end of Season 3… that very different idea…
Carlton:
Stop right there, Damon, stop right there.
Damon:
Well, I was just…
Carlton:
Stop right there. Nope, nope, no.

Seems like he was talking about something very key to this season.

• In the new episode Confirmed Dead, the new character Charlotte Staples Lewis is introduced. Her name is a reference to author C. S. Lewis who wrote the Chronicles of Narnia. In those books, time passes in Narnia at a different rate - what seems like months and years in Narnia is only minutes in the outside world, and months passing in the outside world is a thousand years in Narnia.


So If time is moving the way I'm thinking, it could explain several things:

Walt is taller because he began aging normally after he left the island. Several years have now passed for him.

Mittelos Bioscience, the name of Richard Alpert's company, was confirmed as being the plot-significant anagram LOST TIME. This refers to the time lost while on the island.

• Alpert shows Juliet a CAT scan during the Mittelos recruitment. Juliet states that they appear to be from a woman in her 70's, while Alpert says the woman is only 26. It is possible that internal aging continues to occur at standard time, though time for the woman (and appearance) moves more slowly. It could also be the result of a woman leaving the Island; like in Lost Horizon, upon leaving the Island and reentering standard time aging may occur rapidly, thus a woman who only lived for 26 years (on the Island) could suddenly become old and die upon leaving.

• Alpert tells Juliet: "You're gonna be amazed at how time flies once you're there."


Regarding time, what might be most intriguing of all is the new orientation film for the Orchid station released by the producers last summer. In it, Edgar Halowax (aka Marvin Candle) says "The unique properties of this Island created a kind of Casimir effect, allowing us to..."
Later in the film a bunny identical to the one he's holding appears out of nowhere and everyone freaks out.

So if we do our research and look up what the hell the Casimir effect is, we learn that it's a physics term that relates to energy fields. This is a quote from the wikipedia entry:
"...the quantum mechanics of the Casimir effect can be used to produce a locally mass-negative region of space-time, and suggested that negative effect could be used to stabilize a wormhole to allow faster than light travel."

Ok, so suddenly we are introduced to the idea the the island has the capability to create wormholes in time/space. This would explain a lot.

• Perhaps when Desmond turned the failsafe key, perhaps he created a wormhole and was able to move freely about in space/time. He arrived at the place he wanted to be most - the time when he should've proposed to Penny.

• The polar bear found in Tunisia with a Dharma collar was an experiment in sending an animal through a wormhole to a different space/time.

• The reference to the book "A Brief History of Time"

• The recording in Room 23 saying "only fools are enslaved by time and space"

• Ms. Hawking (another reference to Stephen Hawking) - In an interview with ew.com the producers suggest that she travels through time.

• Sawyer is seen reading the book "A Wrinkle in Time" in the first season.

• The name of the airport that is shown to be used by Mittelos Bioscience in "One of Us" is "Herarat Aviation." Herarat is an anagram of Earhart, as in Amelia, whose plane mysteriously disappeared over the South Pacific. The reference to Amelia came back in Find815.com, when Sam overheard a transmission from the time of her disappearance on his radio in the cabin, which was unexplained by the radio station. The implication is that the transmission traveled through time.

Basically, my thought is that time on the island moves very slow, and contains the possibility of time travel.

Monday, February 04, 2008

I am dead, but I'm also here.





So far in the new season, they've presented us with plenty of new questions (Who are the Oceanic six? How do they get off the island? What is Hurley and Jack's secret? Who are the people on the boat? etc etc.). I'm guessing that the majority of these questions will be answered by the end of the season. But the main question, the big question we have for this show has to do with the biggest character of all: the island itself. What is the story of the island? Why is it the way it is? What exactly makes it so different, and why? (John Locke's character represents the search for this answer - when Ben told him that he had answers, Locke didn't want to know about the crewmen, he wanted to know what the smoke monster was, perhaps the biggest mysterious characteristic of the island) The question of the island is the big question of the show, and I don't think we'll get the full answer until the end of the entire series.

In the first two episodes of the new season, if we look past the other plotline mysteries they keep throwing at us, we'll see that they've been giving us some pretty strong clues about the nature of the island, and it has to do with death.

Naturally there've been plenty of clues about death earlier in the show, I even wrote a post about it (check it out here). But in the new episodes, there have been two larger efforts to make the presence of the dead on the island seem much more concrete. In the past, when we've seen or heard the dead on the island (Jack's dad, for example), it was treated almost as a hallucination, and it left the viewer wondering if the vision was real or imaginary. But now the dead are literally slapping us in the face. Hurley directly confronts Charlie with our own concerns. "You're dead, and this is just a hallucination, right?" But Charlie demonstrates otherwise, and another inmate sees him too.

And then we have Miles Straume. I think it's very significant that this new character, who might be even more matter-of-fact than Sayid, plays a ghost hunter. This is someone who seems incredibly practical and down to earth, unlike the new physicist Daniel Faraday. We don't doubt that he spoke to that kid in the bedroom and got the facts from dead Naomi. I think this is very intentional. Somehow the voices of the dead on this island are very real, not hallucinations, and this is a revealing bit of info on the island for us to chew on.

I see the island as a psychic amplifier. Whatever is going on with the electromagnetic anomalies it creates, it enhances all manner of psychic abilities, which also means people abilities to communicate with the dead, and vice-versa. If you are already gifted in this arena (like Walt, for example) it only makes your skills stronger.

Other thoughts:
- Perhaps all children tend to be better psychic communicators, have these skills, which is why they were being stolen.
- After seeing the ABC "Missing Pieces" short, I'm also convinced that Vincent the dog can see dead people.
- Perhaps the whispers we keep hearing are the voices of the dead.

I welcome your comments!

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Thoughts on Jacob



So this Jacob character was at first presented as this all-knowing guru or guiding figure. He was considered leader of the others, had a list, and was loved by God. Ben seemed to use him as an excuse to do all sortsa crazy shit.

Here are my thoughts on Jacob:

In the episode "The Man Behind the Curtain," when Ben first meets Richard Alpert by the sonar fence, Ben explains that he was out there looking for his dead mother. Alper doesn't seem to think that this is a big deal. Only when Ben mentions that she didn't die on the island does Richard think Ben is pretty special.

This leads me to believe a couple of things. First, it kind of explains that seeing people on the island that were supposed to have died there, or their bodies are there, is a kind of natural occurrence (see Christian Shephard, Boone, Yemi, etc.). Second, it demonstrates that Richard thinks Ben is special, much like Walt was thought to be "special." So the others seem to put a premium on psychic abilities, powers, or what have you. With this I'm going to surmise a story about Ben and his relationship to Jacob.

In my Shangri-La theory, there was an older civilization on the island that lived in a kind of paradise on the island. In Lost Horizon, this place was ruled by the High Lama, who was originally a jesuit priest who made his way into the valley, combined western religion with eastern philosophies, and used the natural tendencies of the valley to lead people into a kind of utopian ageless paradise. For right now, I'm going to say that this character of Jacob represents this High Lama guy. But at some point in the history of the island, something went wrong. The original inhabitants were killed off, some crazy corporations took over to try and mine the place of its riches. There was an incident. Or something. This act of destruction caused Jacob to be left in some sort of limbo.

The others that Ben joins are westerners, possibly ex-dharma scientists, that somehow discovered the original history of the island and want to re-create the Shangri-La that once was. Already they've discovered some of the island's natural tendencies (like psychic reconstruction of the dead and agelessness). They know that the previous civilization was perhaps ruled by Jacob, that he's supposed to be in that cabin, but they're not quite sure how to talk to him. Enter Ben Linus. When he becomes initiated into their group, they think "just how special is this kid?" They tell him that he should try and communicate with Jacob, see what happens. So he goes into that cabin and tries, but doesn't hear or see a damn thing. But Ben's a slimy mofo, and out of fear of rejection or whatever, he lies and tell the people that he did, in fact see and talk to Jacob. So suddenly he's the only one that can talk to Jacob, and over time Ben uses this to become an authority on Jacob's wishes and leader of the Others.

Ben, being the twisted dude that he is, tells the others that Jacob wants all sorts of mayhem. Kill the scientists. Kidnap the children. etc.

So when Ben brings Locke to the cabin, he doesn't expect Locke to hear a damn thing. And when Locke doesn't hear anything, he would then tell the others that Locke isn't that special after all. But Locke does hear Jacob, and suddenly Ben is threatened. The entire authority that he's falsely constructed for himself is about to be challenged. So his only choice to stay in power is to kill Locke.

I would also say that this abuse of power is what caused Ben to get ill with the tumor. Locke keeps saying how Ben's wheelchair demonstrates that he's not the real leader. Somehow, the island picks its own, and Locke knows this. Jacob isn't this floating metaphysical entity that makes commands to steal children and kill the bad people, he's a guy stuck between worlds and needs help from our main man John MFing Locke.

Friday, January 11, 2008

Original Orientation FIlm

As time has gone by, I'm discovering that lots of people I've been talking to haven't seen or heard of the original Dharma film that was released online during the summer of 2006 ARG. If you haven't seen it, it's certainly worth a look:

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

Saying Goodbye to My Free Time














The new LOST arg starts here:

http://www.flyoceanicair.com/

And so it begins.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

New Lost Webisodes

http://abc.go.com/primetime/lost/missingpieces/index

I haven't actually watched these yet, but just thought I'd share that they're out there. I'll give comments once I've been through them.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

New Orientation FIlm


This video was announced at Comic-Con and can currently be seen at the ABC website.

Dr. Edgar Halowax (aka Marvin Candle, aka Mark Wickmund... ok, we get it) wearing a Swan Station lab suit introduces us to the Orchid station. Quick glimpses of Gerald DeGroot can be seen, as well as the Narvik building and a brief glimpse of the video from room 23.

Notice that the Casimir Effect is mentioned. This could give us lots of new ideas....hmmmm

Bonus points to anyone who points out the Star Trek in-joke!

Here's a transcript:

[A cue card with a DHARMA logo is held up as indistinct mutterings are heard. The film jerks and clarifies to show Marvin Candle. A woman is applying make-up to his face.]

CANDLE: I'll never get used to wearing make-up.

MALE VOICE: You look great! It takes away the shine.

CANDLE: Who cares if I shine? I'm a scientist, I'm not a...

[Film jumps to show a rabbit on a table. A female assistant lifts it up and passes it into Candle's arms.]

MALE VOICE: Turn the rabbit around, please.

[Candle does so, revealing a painted number 15 on the animal's side.]

MALE VOICE: Got it.

[Film jumps again; an image of Gerald DeGroot is shown for a brief moment.]

CANDLE: Hello. I'm Doctor Edgar Halowax, and this is the Orientation Film for Station 6 of the DHARMA Initiative. As you [the Narvik building overlaps for a brief moment] have no doubt surmised, Station 6, or "the Orchid", is not a botanical research... [cut, image of building in swan orientation film when "social engineering" is mentioned can briefly be seen] We apologize for asking you to deceive your family and colleagues. This is, of course, in the interest of their own security. The unique properties of this Island created a kind of Casimir effect, allowing us to...

[A shot of the Room 23 film is very briefly shown, reading "God loves you as He loved Jacob". The film resumes with Candle holding the rabbit again.]

CANDLE: The field you have been selected to study is highly volatile and potentially dangerous. But, over the next few minutes we will demonstrate the elaborate safety measures that have been put in place to ensure... [a laboratory flask falls from a high shelf above Candle with a loud crashing noise] ... the hell?!

[On the shelf above Candle is another white rabbit with the number 15 painted on its side. Several people start shouting, and the assistant runs past Candle.]

MALE VOICE: Hey, what is that?! What's going on...?!

ASSISTANT: Oh God, it's fifteen!

CANDLE: ... the hell?! Don't let them near each other! When did you set the shift?

ASSISTANT: Negative 20!

[A recorded female voice counts backwards from ten, cutting off at "three".]

CANDLE: How long?

ASSISTANT: Nine minutes, but we're still learning how to...!

CANDLE: [looks at camera] Why is that still running?

MALE VOICE: He told me to keep the camera running...

CANDLE: Turn it off. Turn it off!

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Flash Forward

If this is your first time here, please click here for the main theory of this blog.



Okay, put on your earmuffs if you who still haven't read the book Lost Horizon and wouldn't like to have the ending spoiled. Here goes: in the end of the book, Hugh Conway escapes Shangri-La and barely survives the journey down from the mountains. Once back in the safety of western civilization and with a hero's welcome awaiting him back home, he decides to head back into the mountains and spends the rest of his life hiring whatever planes and mountain guides possible in search of a way to get back to what he now realizes is paradise.

Need I say more about this theory???!!

* A new note regarding motivations (thanks capcom!): In the book, Conway is presented as a very admirable figure. Like the traditional hero, he puts others' concerns before his own. But this kind of heroism is thrown into question when his need to help others becomes his own downfall when he feels that it's his responsibility to guide others out of Shangri-La. I think it's perfectly clear now that Jack faces the same kind of internal struggle. Jack needed to fill the role a hero for the survivors, and I know I've certainly rooted for him to kick ass, but his need to have something to fix has led to a form of self-destruction.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Alpert's Longevity


Richard Alpert (Batmanuel) doesn't age. For those new to the theory, click here.