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Post by Karen on Dec 8, 2004 21:18:16 GMT -5
Uh, where are Boone and Locke? So Shannon is wondering too. Oh crap, Locke's a Black Hat. CRAP CRAP CRAP AAAAAGH!!!!!!!!!!!! SUnnuva.... END IT ON A FRIMPING CLIFFHANGER THERE!? SCREW BABA WAWA!!! RUN MORE "LOST" YOU ASSHATS!!!!! *snort* What do you mean by "Locke's a Black Hat?"
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Post by Karen on Dec 8, 2004 21:18:52 GMT -5
An old buried plane chassis?
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Post by Nickim on Dec 8, 2004 21:19:26 GMT -5
ETHAN! Not you - maybe Locke, who is too happy... I loved Locke being perfectly honest about his boring job and Boone not believing him.
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Post by Karen on Dec 8, 2004 21:19:35 GMT -5
Only with the RIGHT ending! Yea David Fury! I so love this show! Except that now Charlie seems really lost.
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Post by Patti - S'cubie Cutie on Dec 8, 2004 21:20:03 GMT -5
With something traumatic enough, you don't need any help "not remembering." Memory loss just happens. It can be temporary, or permanent. Also, he had the oxygen loss to his brain for who knows how long. *nodding in agreement* Not much more traumatic than having ALIENS abduct the person you are growing to love. I'd wager. I realize 'they' could just be the French Woman and her nutso son The Other.
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Post by Nickim on Dec 8, 2004 21:20:17 GMT -5
*snort* What do you mean by "Locke's a Black Hat?" In "The Wish" the good guys were the "White Hats."
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Post by Patti - S'cubie Cutie on Dec 8, 2004 21:21:20 GMT -5
I thought that ending was all about making the opposite point that is made in "The Body." I.E. Not "This is how reality works," but "This is how the reality of this island works." And that Island reality is being shown to us as being strongly, strongly related to the hopes and dreams and fears of it inhabitants. Walt wishes himself double-sixes; Jack wishes Charlie alive. So did I, so it was the right ending!
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Post by SpringSummers on Dec 8, 2004 21:21:59 GMT -5
Oh come on! It's a UFO - its gotta be the UFO! Too many clues not to be now. Oh - well, I can see the clues, but I'm hoping it's not a UFO. I don't like the idea at all. That just made me cry. Great acting all around, indeed. I think there was a contrast there, between the way Jack's dad handled "making a mistake" and the way Sayid handled it. Sayid is upfront with his "victim" and it seems healing might occur in the relationship; Jack's dad is manipulative and phony and ruins his relationships. I thought of that, but I am hoping it is more than that. Something real, like his place in a Native American tribe or something. He looks part Native American to me. I hope the hiatus isn't more than 3 weeks tops. I hope they are repeating more than one a week if they plan to repeat them all again. I missed two episodes, so I'd like to see them all repeated . . . but not one week at a time!!
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Post by Patti - S'cubie Cutie on Dec 8, 2004 21:22:54 GMT -5
I loved Locke being perfectly honest about his boring job and Boone not believing him. yes, that was great!
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Post by Nan-S'cubie Mascot on Dec 8, 2004 21:23:09 GMT -5
I thought that ending was all about making the opposite point that is made in "The Body." I.E. Not "This is how reality works," but "This is how the reality of this island works." And that Island reality is being shown to us as being strongly, strongly related to the hopes and dreams and fears of it inhabitants. Walt wishes himself double-sixes; Jack wishes Charlie alive. When you're right, you're right. And you usually often are.
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Post by Karen on Dec 8, 2004 21:23:12 GMT -5
Yes - and the realization that his dad had deliberately kept that from him. It just all came together for him in that moment: His father had ended the young woman's life, and with that, had ruined the young husband's life - the future he was looking forward to with wife AND baby . . . and Jack's father had hidden the extent of the hurt and damage he had caused - deliberately, to increase the odds of Jack not-telling. So it all comes clear for Jack - the extent of the damage, and the extent to which he was deliberately manipulated. Poor Jack. He did what he had to do. Yes, very good. But turning his father in has cost Jack so much.
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Post by William the Bloody on Dec 8, 2004 21:23:14 GMT -5
I thought that ending was all about making the opposite point that is made in "The Body." I.E. Not "This is how reality works," but "This is how the reality of this island works." And that Island reality is being shown to us as being strongly, strongly related to the hopes and dreams and fears of it inhabitants. Walt wishes himself double-sixes; Jack wishes Charlie alive. Yes, I was really paying attention to Walt tossing those dice..and that statement about his dad saying he was "lucky." Is it possible that Walt is some sort of psychic? And perhaps the island is ampifying that? It was after his reading of the comic book that we got the polar bear. We already have a psychic that saw claire's future "off-island" And whatabout that comic book. I understand that the story depicted in that issue is about aliens. Perhaps with developed psychic abilities? Are they trying to communicate withteh survivors? I am firmly convinced that hte metal plate that Locke and Boone found was a door to a bunker. Didn;t you hear how it sounded hollow when Locke banged on it? Vlad
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Post by Nickim on Dec 8, 2004 21:23:56 GMT -5
*nodding in agreement* Not much more traumatic than having ALIENS abduct the person you are growing to love. I'd wager. I realize 'they' could just be the French Woman and her nutso son The Other. But, didn't Danielle say the Others took her child? Unless, they abducted him and brought him back. Then, when Ethan-Alex started hanging out with the crash survivors, she thought he'd been abducted again.
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Post by Patti - S'cubie Cutie on Dec 8, 2004 21:24:29 GMT -5
Except that now Charlie seems really lost. He'll be better when they find and rescue Claire. I believe too!
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Post by Patti - S'cubie Cutie on Dec 8, 2004 21:24:29 GMT -5
Except that now Charlie seems really lost. He'll be better when they find and rescue Claire. I believe too!
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