
(S05E15) "I have a purpose now." - Locke
I can't believe how fast this season of Lost has gone by. There's probably a time-travel joke buried in that realization somewhere, but my head is still spinning from "Follow the Leader," so I'm not really in clever witticism mode. Honestly, I'm speechless. For the most part, this wasn't one of my favorite episodes of the season. But for me to be at a loss for words at one of Lost's sub-par installments - well that says something about the quality of this show. "Follow the Leader" was a lot of set up for next week's two hour finale and the events that have been set in motion (even though it seems they always happened) are mind-numbing.
The hour was clearly divided between 2007 and 1977 and it jumped back and forth. I'd be lying if I said that I wasn't disappointed in the lack of backstory we got on Richard, other than Ben's mention that he's an adviser who's had his job a long, long time. However, the thirty year back and forth jumps provided us enough Richard moments that I do feel like we know him a little better - just not as well as I thought we would, especially considering the multiple interpretations of the episode's title.
Let's talk about 2007 first. Locke returned and took his seat as leader of the Others. It became apparent pretty quickly that he was going to be far more proactive than anyone expected and this was immediately an issue. Richard even went as far as whispering his concerns to Ben, who in turn agreed and told Richard that was why he tried to kill him. Ben's "I'm not gonna try and stage a coup" comment may not have been all that far off.
Two major things came out of Locke's first hours as Grand Puba. First is that when we saw Richard mend up Locke's shot leg in "Because You Left," he wasn't lying to Locke when he told him, you told me. I'm trying to wrap my head around the idea that it was Locke himself who realized that his past self would have sat there and bled to death, so he gave himself his own mission by sending Richard. I know that all this always happened this exact way, but it's still so easy to stop and think, how did this all go down during the first iteration? Would Locke have just died there and after years of failures, the island finally told John to find himself and make this work?
The second big bombshell was finding out what Locke considers to be his purpose on the island. After witnessing enough of how the Others work, John is done with blindly following Jacob's wishes without actually meeting, and seeing Jacob - something John claimed Ben never did and Ben didn't really put up a fight about. John's plan? Kill Jacob. He told Ben and I'm sure Ben will tell Richard - but will they try and stop him?
The one thing that I noticed was that while Locke seemed confident in his choices, Richard no longer did and that was a little out of character for him. I almost wonder if the speculation that Ben really was never supposed to leader, that he was just a placeholder until Locke finally arrived, is true. Maybe Richard is just floored to see what it's like to have a true leader in action again, taking advantage of all that such an individual is capable of?
Back in 1977, things progressed quickly. Jack and Kate watched Dan get shot and then Widmore found the two of them. Beaten and brought to Ellie's tent, Jack quickly convinced her that Dan was telling the truth and that what's written in Dan's notebook has to happen - Jughead needs to be detonated. The only problem? It's buried in the island's subterranean tunnel system, directly below DHARMA's village.
So the big question to ask is whether Ellie is helping Jack because she believes him or if she's using him and this is just a way to try and get rid of DHARMA for good? Sayid (he's back!) actually brought up this point and Jack dismissed him because he knew Ellie would help them in 2007. What Jack seems to be missing is that just because Ellie is off the island, doesn't mean what he's about to do still has a happy ending - lots of people are going to die and Richard confirmed this to Sun.
Elsewhere, Chang finally started to believe Faraday once Miles, Jin, and Hurley confirmed they're from the future. So the island evacuation began. After taking a solid beating from Radzinsky, Sawyer finally agreed to tell them where the hostiles were if he and Juliet could leave on the sub. He even said good riddance to the island. It just goes to show you how far James was willing to go to try and recreate the idyllic three years he had just spent with Juliet - he was willing to ditch everyone else much as they had done three years prior/thirty years in the future. Naturally, Kate showed up (she ditched Jack and got caught) and Phil threw her on the sub too. The look on Juliet's eyes was pure hate. Then the sub left. So will they be out of explosion range?
A few more thoughts on "Follow the Leader" --
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Widmore seemed worried about Ellie's well being. He even rubbed his hand across her stomach, indicating that she was probably pregnant with Daniel at the time. But who was in charge? Richard seemed to take orders from both of them. Plus, how did Ellie get off the island?
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Speaking of Richard, could we read his hobby (building a ship in a bottle) as foreshadowing that he arrived on The Black Rock?
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I felt so bad for Kate when she told Jack that "it wasn't all misery" and he said "enough of it was."
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Mitch found the sub manifest and he and Phil realized that Hurley must be part of all this. But where are Hurley, Miles, and Jin headed to? The beach still? Won't they be found?
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Sun is going to go ape-shit on Locke when she realizes he lied to her about his intentions.
Lots of info to digest, and from what I've read, next week's two hour finale has such a big game changer, that it'll make you wonder how the show could even continue after finding out. Anyway, here's the official description:
"The Incident," Parts 1 & 2 - Jack's decision to put a plan in action in order to set things right on the island is met with some strong resistance by those close to him, and Locke assigns Ben a difficult task, on the season finale of "Lost," WEDNESDAY, MAY 13 (9:00-11:00 p.m., ET) on ABC.















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
5-07-2009 @ 8:38AM
JPN said...
I believe that next week is a one hour episode, followed by a two hour season finale the week after that? That's usually their season finale format and I think I remember reading that somewhere. They said last night that next week the season finale "begins".
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5-07-2009 @ 8:22AM
Matt said...
Next week is the end of the season. A 1 hr recap and 2 rd finale. One more night of Lost this year. That hurts to say.
5-07-2009 @ 8:39AM
b said...
"Poobah"
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5-07-2009 @ 8:18AM
MCW said...
"I felt so bad for Kate when she told Jack that "it wasn't all misery" and he said "enough of it was.""
I don't feel bad for her anymore, she makes a lot of goofy decisions on Lost... such as always going on her own and getting captured or shot at. Jack didn't even seem to mind when she left again last night... he was like, 'whatever, I got Sayid here... he's got the same hair length and all'.
I think the violin *burrrrrrrrreahhhhh* was a little over the top for Locke at the end of the show, when he said "I am gonna kill Bill". Ben seemed surprised, I had no reaction whatsoever, knowing that Jacob is probably unkillable.
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5-07-2009 @ 12:18PM
Brian said...
I was thinking the same thing, but really, we don't know jack about Jacob. We all just assume he's this mythical unkillable entity that likes setting cabin fires.
The connection between "Jacob" and "Christian" seems like it will be explored and clarified a bit. And yes I put their names in quotes because we really don't know what they are, or what they're doing, or why they're doing it. It should be a great finale.
5-10-2009 @ 8:32PM
lee said...
i agree, i have jus watched lost all the way over from the beginnign and i cannot stanbd kate! she does so much stupid stuff and she is very stubborn@!
5-07-2009 @ 8:39AM
Roland said...
This Episod was epic! All the penultimate episode of Lost are great, but this i think was the best one, even better than Greatest Hits from season 3.
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5-07-2009 @ 10:21AM
Eludium-Q36 said...
I agree with JT on this, it was very chess-positioning, putting alot of people in place for the big season finale.
Little disappointed re "Jughead" just sitting down there, no explanation how they got the 20-ton H-bomb there ("not through the pool"). And the underground area is full of heiroglyphics and ancient architecture and they dismissively refer to it as "the tunnels" ?!
And does it really matter what Locke says anymore ? He's apparently taking on Ben's habit of either outright lying or not revealing everything he knows. He lied to Sun and may be lying to Ben to get him to act in a certain manner. After all, what motivation is there for Locke to kill Jacob ?! WTH did that come from anyway ? Is he going to say because the Island told him to ala Flip Wilson's "the Devil made me do it" routine ?!
In any case, the chess pieces are in place for a whopper of a finale. Let's just hope Carlton and Cuse deliver bigtime heading into the final season.
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5-07-2009 @ 10:21AM
JPN said...
I agree, it was a lot of set-up. I hope that how they got the bomb down there is revealed or plays a part in next week's finale.
The downside of all this flashing back and forward is that when you see the scenes for a second time you already know what's going to happen and it can be a little slow. We knew that Richard helped Locke with his wound, but I don't know that I needed 10 minutes of watching it from their point of view with nothing much new except that Locke was there the whole time.
5-07-2009 @ 3:52PM
zooguy65 said...
All very good points, but as an aside, its not Carlton and Cuse, its Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindelof. So, it would be Cuse and Lindelof. Just had to mention it. ;-)
5-07-2009 @ 10:21AM
Reuven said...
I thought it was a good episode, and a great setup for next week as well.
Best Hurley line (and delivery) ever: "There's no such thing."
And to note a musical irony - the music playing while the Others trekked along the beach is, I'm pretty sure, the same theme we first heard in the Season 1 finale when the Losties trekked along the beach to escape the Others.
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5-07-2009 @ 10:21AM
mdisloki said...
I believe that piece of music (my favorite from the show) has been used in every season, played by different instruments or at a different pace, but usually during group-travel scenes.
How depressing is it going to be next year at this time when we are discussing the end to one of the best shows ever?
5-07-2009 @ 10:13AM
JPN said...
At least they'll probably end on a high note, which will be nice.
5-07-2009 @ 10:21AM
Ian said...
Note Ben said to Richard that Locke looked like he was going to go out of control re changing matters on the island (or words like that). Indication here is that both Ben and Richard know a lot more than they are letting on about future events and they now fear that Locke could indeed make new changes to future events. They don't like this at all.
Why do the Darhmah people so easily accept they have to evacuate so many people. They have been shown no real evidence?
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5-07-2009 @ 10:22AM
ecrates said...
One thing I noticed during the early scene shortly after Eloise shoots Faraday... when Widmore cautions her not to go to the bomb in her 'condition' and motions towards her belly.... she must be pregnant with another of our characaters... which one?????
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5-07-2009 @ 10:55AM
Captain Obvious said...
Isn't it Daniel?
5-07-2009 @ 1:59PM
ecrates said...
oops
5-07-2009 @ 10:54AM
jffm said...
Great episode. So far, my brain has assembled one possibly interesting idea out of all of it.
When Locke says he's going to "kill" Jacob, I think what he really means is he's going to *save* Jacob.
Jacob, who when we first meet him seems to flicker in and out. Not unlike some type of time flash like the Losties just experienced? Jacob's cabin is surrounded by a gray ash. Ash like something left over from the detonation of a huge (hydrogen) bomb? Jacob's words to Locke when they first meet? "Help me."
Jacob, someone who, as a result of some near cataclysmic "incident" (Like the mingling of huge atomic and magnetic forces), is now trapped in some permanent state of time flashing and whose presence is perhaps now spread throughout the entire history of the island. To use Faraday's analogy, time is like a record, a record is actually one long groove, and Jacob's "essence"(?), his consciousness, has been spread across the entire length of that groove.
Locke is going to "kill" Jacob by freeing him from this state of being everywhere and nowhere, always there and never there.
Who is Jacob? Well, right now Jac(k) is very determined to unleash one tremendous force while trying to cancel out another. Hoping to literally reshape reality. Sometimes fantastic plans like that yield unexpected results...
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5-08-2009 @ 10:32AM
Justin Williams said...
I totally agree with your reasoning. I got the feeling that when he said he was going to kill him, it wasnt a malicious thing. He asked for help in the cabin and now John is going to do that. I think Jacob could in someway tie into the islands power that keeps Richard living forever and thats why he is worried about what John is doing.
5-07-2009 @ 10:54AM
Michael said...
What an amazing season--can't wait to see what happens in the finale, though at 11 PM next Wednesday I'll be pulling out my hair when I realize I have to wait another 7 months for another episode. Where's OUR time traveling island, huh?
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