“What the
‘eff just happened?”
The final episode
has come and gone, and as expected it’s cracked the
LOST fanbase right in half. The great polarization has impacted
many, and even within the halls of Fanboy Planet the lines
have already been drawn. I’m curious to get Lon’s
take on the series and the final episode, although I believe
the final outcome will be moot in the end. We’ll see.
I’m going
to forego a detailed recap, but we did learn a few things.
The sideways was nirvana, or the afterlife depending on
where you stand spiritually. The whole series centered on
Jack, his trial to both accept his role in a very important
sequence of events, and his trouble letting go. It was the
story of a group of people who came together to prevent
the end of humanity, and how they met up after they died
to reminisce and let go of the most important period of
time in their existence.
Where the great
divide is formed lies in one’s need for answers. The
producers have long said that they would answer what needed
to be answered, nothing more and nothing less. This doesn’t
sit well with many folks, but what happened happened. Right?
The concept of
the show is pretty interesting. It’s sort of like
what would happen if Luke, Leia, Han, Obi Wan, Chewy, R2,
and C3PO met up in the afterlife, helped each other remember
those times they stopped the Empire from destroying the
galaxy, and then ultimately help each other let go of the
things that bind them to their mortality, preventing them
from becoming one with the force.
This is a beautiful
thing to contemplate, especially considering our own lack
of understanding around our own individual existence, mortality,
and what exists in the great beyond...unless you're too
busy asking questions like, “Why does the force exist?,”
“Lightsabers, how do they work?,” or “Why
are some people eligible to be Jedi while others aren't?”
The dreaded midichlorian
scenes in the prequel trilogy were written for those folks,
and thankfully LOST never went there.
“What are
the rules, exactly?”
Do we really
need to know? There is enough evidence within the series
to surmise what these rules are, how they were formed, and
why they were formed. But do we need a numbered list of
the rules? No.
Seriously. Here’s
what you really needed to know. Jacob’s adopted mother,
as guardian of the island, was able to create rules for
the island and its inhabitants. She displays this by decreeing
that Jacob and his brother would be unable to harm each
other.
In making Jacob
the guardian, she passed this power to Jacob. Jacob’s
frustration with his brother’s abuse of power (while
playing Senet) led to the creation of several island rules,
some we know and others we don’t. What we know is
that his rules helped contribute to the series of events
that brought the LOSTIES to the island.
This entire story
was the result of mistakes made by both Jacob and his mother
– she commits matricide, Jacob abuses his power and
role time and time again. Jack is the one meant to set things
right and facilitate the arrival of the true island guardian
– Hurley.
Jack’s
arrival on the island, his trials, and his eventual rise
to heroism were the focus all along. The added bonuses come
in the form of metaphysical and spiritual overtones; a degree
of pondering that existed in subtext from the onset. In
a way, the reveal that the flash-sideways was, in fact,
nirvana actually informs the very style of the show from
the very beginning as well.
Jumping in time
often lead to interesting juxtapositions between off island
interactions and the events taking place on the island.
It’s almost as if someone were recalling these events
and drawing the kind of conclusions that one can only make
with the added benefit of total and complete hindsight.