Showing posts with label Ben Linus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ben Linus. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Lost: "Dr. Linus" Recap


Dr. Linus watches you masterbate



So, let me just go out on a limb and say that Michael Emerson deserves an Emmy for his work in the episode. This season has been really Ben-light, and it was refreshing to get several new looks at the character; there were ideas and perspectives that we really haven't been accustomed to in terms of what we thought we knew about him and his motivations.

Awhile ago, I posited a series of important questions about Ben. I added, in none-threatening green text, important info that was divulged this episode:

How much does Ben truly know about the island and its patron-deities?
- Clearly, Ben thought he had an intimate relationship with whichever entity occupied the cabin. Being that he has at one point been able to summon Smokey at will, my bet is that entity was probably the Man in Black who was trapped behind some of Jacob's ash. Was Ben an unwitting or knowing agent of said "evil incarnate?"

- One of the most integral lines spoken by Ben in terms of his true knowledge about Jacob: "Oh after all this time, you have decided to stop ignoring me." So either A) Ben was faking it in the cabin and no one was actually talking to him or B) he knew the person in the cabin wasn't Jacob, but was still following orders anyway. I am leaning toward (B) right now for the simple fact that he had knowledge of the entity in the cabin, like how it didn't like technology.

- It's funny, because for so long we have assumed that Ben was one of the masterminds pulling all the strings; but like he did with Sayid, what if he is just a pawn put in play by the Man in Black. I say the Man in Black because:
Not too much here, but his encounter with Smokey while digging his grave points more toward him being an unwitting aide to "evil incarnate" rather than knowing disciple.

This episode, personally, had me thinking that I had been giving Ben too much credit; like Richard and many other Others, he had been left out in the weeds and desperate for guidance from Jacob. However, I still think there is a legitimate logic question about that encounter in the cabin, but now I wouldn't put it past him with how much he has lied before on whether or not he was faking about seeing Jacob.

What gets Ben crossed off the list of "candidates?"
- Ok, so the "Linus" that was crossed out on the lighthouse wheel could have also been his father, but it's highly unlikely; only Ben eventually became an other after his resurrection in the temple. If the waters were clear, and Richard says "he will always be one of us," why has Ben been ignored by Jacob? Has he ever really met Jacob? He has methods of brainwashing people to believe in Jacob (see Alex's first/last boyfriend), though he goes to the cabin instead of the base of the statue to see his "master."

- What made Ben a "candidate?" Was his potential candidacy the reason why he was chosen to lead the others? Why then, did Richard never reveal the true location of Jacob's home?

Up until Jacob's demise at Ben's hand, he still held out hope that Ben would choose to do the "right" thing. This should serve as a warning to all those absentee parents: if you leave your kid in a car (island) to do what he wants, crack the window. They'll probably get all emotional and stabby later if you don't.

When Keamy killed Alex, Ben said he had "changed the rules." Are these rules similar to the ones the creepy boy told Darth Locke about: "You know the rules, you can't kill him."?
- This could be, more simply, rules of engagement that Widmore and Ben would not kill each others' family. Or, if we are to believe that Ben had knowledge of how events were supposed to play out, but they had been altered. This would be in reference to:

The most refreshingly "on the money" question in reference to this episode, as we finally found out what "rule" was changed: Ben chose the island, and Jacob let Alex die. For all you Jacob-haters, this episode must have been right up your alley, as Ben is the personification of everyone's gripe: why would a benevolent being, one who you gave up everything to protect, allow for all this terrible collateral damage and loss of life? Why would he not step in and use his "gift? " Why would an entity whose has been placed on this pedestal and the object of faith for so many, allow for these terrible crises of faith situations for his "chosen?"

Does Ben remember Sayid shooting him - or any of the castaways that had come back in 1977?
- If Ben knew how events were going to play out, and that the castaways had to end up in the past, has he had an edge this whole time?

Also not much here...

On to events on/off island:


Dr. Linus (Off-island):
• I feel like a broken record, so I should probably stop mentioning this "trend" after this week: Ben's off-island shenanigans once again fell into the theme of "cosmic second-chance." His alternate-reality "Dr. Linus" is a man who is dealing with those same personal struggles that mirror his on-island persona: the struggle for meaning, and the struggle for power.

• I really thought that off-island Locke would have a more rival-type role opposite Dr. Linus, but really he was pretty integral in pushing Ben down his mini-arc that climaxes in him becoming a not so bug-eyed creeper; he offered Ben support in his becoming principal when Ben voiced his disdain that he had to baby-sit the school's rejects while giving up his after school "history" club that serves to nurture the gifted students. Now think back to the end of season 2 and the beginning of 3 when Ben captured 4 of our 6 "listed" candidates handed down by Jacob himself; what exactly do you think his mirrored island self was thinking? Probably, "Why the heck do I have to babysit these damn rejects when I should be tending to my gifted flock of others?" Little did he know that the actual "gifted" ones were those four (well 3 after he let Hurley go), but he was probably crying buckets that Jacob wasn't talking to him. The point: Ben's grievances to his co-teachers were a very tongue-in-cheek way of pointing out why he started to become so frustrated with Jacob in the first place.

• Who knows if this is also why Ben got scratched off the list? Maybe Ben had been handed a list down from Jacob (or Richard from Jacob) to be a care-taker to these Oceanic castaway "rejects," but their importance was such an affront to Ben and the others who had given up all their lives to Jacob's cause. It probably wouldn't be that cool if you had to get shot, purge Dharma, instigate a coup of Widmore, and become the leader of Jacob's disciples just to then step aside and protect a few random people that drop out of the sky one day off an Oceanic plane. Great line, by the way, from Lupidus when he calls out Ben for being "nostalgic" for those days before the crash.

• The power-play, which I guess would mirror his coup of Widmore, was trying to blackmail the current douche-in-office, Walter Peck. Alright I know that's not his name but that actor always plays jerks, and he will always be the uber-douche "Walter Peck" (is a pecker) of Ghostbusters fame (You know, that city agent who opens the containment unit. Great type-cast btw). Ben enlists the aide of Artz (man I am loving these multiple shout-outs in both timelines - when Hurly mentions getting Artz on his shirt in the Black Rock) to get the dirt on the principal that would prove his illicit affair with the nurse. Ben is caught in a catch-22 of sorts, as Peck counters with the threat of trashing Ben's prized student, Alex, and her chances at getting into Yale. So, like on the island with Keamy (although with less brain-splattering), Ben is given the choice to "save" Alex or choose power.

• We get it, everybody gets a happy ending. Sheesh. Ben chooses Alex and giving up his car spot to non-exploded Artz rather than power. He probably also just condemned himself to more T.V. dinners and adjusting his father's iron lung. Speaking of which, we got some small but important info about when the island sinks: it has to be after Ben and his father already had joined Dharma and then get the opportunity to leave. If they both leave together - does that mean Ben is never shot and thus never tied to the island and the Others before the island is sunk?

Dr. Linus (On-island)
• Ilana and her bag o' knowledge. What didn't Jacob tell her? Apparently they were so close, she thinks of him as a "father." Aw, if only Jacob had touched Ben like that, Ben probably wouldn't have touched him with a knife. Seriously though, she grabbed Jacob's ash because she knew Miles could commune with the dead; more specifically, he could tell her exactly how Jacob died. One of the best line reads ever from Miles to Ben, "Uh oh."

• Ilana played surrogate leader to team Jacob, while team Jacob's once and future king, Jack, ran into the man that must have been losing mascara running around for three episodes: Richard. Like Ben (and frankly, like more than 50% of you in that poll), Richard is having a little crises of faith in Jacob. Hundred(s) of years - all for what? So that Jacob could die? That's when Richard drops the episode's biggest lore-bomb perhaps explaining his immortality and none-cyborg nature (go Hurley): If Jacob touches you, you cannot die. Now there needs to be some debate as to whether Jacob's touch just saves you from killing yourself, or whether it also means natural causes (such as aging = Richard). Jacob touched Sawyer and Kate as children, though they aged and Richard seemingly does not. Is there an extra special "fountain of youth" special massage touch you can buy? There might be more to it than that, but right now the only thing that was confirmed was that once you are touched, you cannot commit suicide - you can only die by another's hand. Suicide watch recount-time:

1. Jack tries to throw himself off a bridge, and fails.
2. Michael tries to shoot himself, and fails...at least until "Christian" said he "could go now."
3. Locke tries to hang himself and...well fails for about 5 minutes until Ben lends a helping tug.

• So wait, under those rules, why couldn't Smokey kill Jacob? Could it be, that it would be SUICIDE (dramatic sounds)?!? Hey, if Smokey and Jacob are just two sides of one coin, it might not be so far fetched.

• Awesome new-Jackness that followed: Russian roulette with dynamite! Jack pulled out his Lighthouse-gifted knowledge that Jacob had been watching him since he was a child, so if it was all true about himself being meant for something on the island (and not a lie as Richard had suggested), he couldn't kill himself. What does Jack get for his Jedi tricks? A new recruit! The teams stand:

Darth Locke
1. Sawyer
2. Sayid
3. Claire
4. Random Others
5. Kate?
6. Smoke monster (should definitely be counted more than once. It gets on point for every retarded dinosaur scream it makes)

Jack
1. Hurley
2. Sun
3. Jin (I don't think this is a stretch)
4. Ilana
5. Lupidus
6. Miles
7. Richard
8. Ben?!?

• Wait...Ben? Smokey visits Ben digging his own grave and gives him a way out. Curiously, he doesn't offer Ben a seat on his ship out of town, but offers Ben more power in what is presumably Jacob's vacant caretaker position of the island. I say presumably because it is only implied, and yet could also very well mean Smokey's job if he succeeds in leaving the island. Why can't Ben leave? This would fit in nicely to the whole "Locke's resurrection in Jacob's role and Ben's ascension to MIB status" for the series finale idea I had been thinking about.

• After "getting the jump" on Ilana, Ben does something his on-island persona has never done before: he doesn't shoot first, but instead shoots bullets of truth (that was corny, my apologies). He bears his tortured soul, and you know, it kind of makes sense. He let his own daughter die for the island - but for what? He hated Jacob for not caring or helping, but also realizes that he was sad and confused when he stabbed him. Ilana does a very Jacob thing and lets him die...er, I mean forgives him. Ben meanders back to the beach to start the process of mending fences and shelters, and just in the nick of time to see his new leader and former number 2 return. Can't wait for that conversation (awkward).

• What's long, hard, and full of seaman? Charles Widmore's sub!!! Does he have some unfinished business from his first time around, or is on a new mission?

If you made it through this wall-o-text, I salute you. It was a dense and fulfilling episode. Now, I am off to shag a nurse on my lunch break. Toodles!

Now with "Jack beat me again" bruises

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Lost: "The Incident"


What lies in the shadow of the statue?

Thanks to babelfish translations, Ricardo Alpert tells Illana, "He that will save us."

...

Long ago when I first saw the line of ash and then the cabin for the first time, I postulated that perhaps the island was an eternal prison for an evil being, or Jacob. The extreme version of this story would be the Lucifer one; the island was the place on Earth that the fallen angel Lucifer fell when he was cast out of Heaven.

In "The Incident," we got a new twist in the war between good and evil to control fate. It has long been established in Lost that there seemed to be two dueling sides vying for the island, and thus perhaps the world. Was it the Others vs. Dharma? Widmore vs. Ben?

Apparently this duel, this time loop has been in motion for much longer than any of us anticipated. Enjoying a fresh-fish taco, Jacob stares out into the Ocean and upon the incoming Black Rock and probably it's long expected cargo, Ricardo Alpert. And then he is joined by his opposite, the Man in Black.

You see, Jacob isn't the only powerful force on the island. As Locke once explained to Walt via backgammon, for every white piece - there is black. There is evil. The Man in Black (MIB lols) hates Jacob so much for his belief that humanity can be saved. All he sees out of men is their desire to control, destroy, and make war. Still, Jacob beckons more of his chosen few to the island.

For what? Well it seems that Jacob has been weaving a tapestry in the shadow of the statue; literally though, it seems the man in white has been carefully weaving certain events and people together. Jacob travels the world touching lost souls at their exact time of need, thus binding them to the island so that they may enact free will within the waves of time and change themselves, and maybe change the final outcome: humanity's destruction by their own hands.

The MIB despises humanity, for he knows how this every loop ends in men destroying themselves. More importantly, he despises Jacob for his faith that men can break the cycle of destruction through their choices, through the illusion of free will. How many times has Jacob done his little experiments with incorrigible men? The MIB is sick of it. Endless loops - endless times having to go down to the wheel and reset it all before everything is destroyed.

"It can end only once. Everything up to that point is progress."

Progress? An eternity of living multiple lifetimes, watching the same events unfold. All the while Jacob weaves his timeline tapestry, ferrying his chosen saved to the island, while the MIB is forced to feed on the damned. A thousand lifetimes, and all MIB wants to do now is end it:

"You know how much I want to kill you right now?"

Ah, but there is a catch. It seems these two opposing demi-gods cannot directly slay each other. Disgusted, MIB returns into the jungle - returns to his cabin. His hatred festers. He begins to actively plot, so much so that Jacob is forced to bind him behind a wall of white ash so that he cannot spread his influence and discord.

"I will find a loophole."

...

The big revelation in Season 5's finale was that Darth Locke (as I have come to call him) actually is way more Darthy then we thought. In fact, he isn't even John Locke at all. It seems the Man in Black finally found his loophole. I am sure we will eventually find out how the MIB broke free of his cabin bondage - how the ash turned black. The important part is that he is free. Ben is just some sort of apprentice-level manipulator compared to his new master, easily falling under Darth Locke's spell and becoming the loophole by finally killing Jacob.

Yet the MIB should have known. Things seemed a little off when Ben told him that his dead daughter appeared to him and made him promise to do exactly what Darth Locke said. He was surprised - could it really be that easy? The MIB didn't even have to convince Ben to kill Jacob.

"They are coming."

From his dying lips, he sputtered the last words to his nemesis. Checkmate. Everything finally ended for Jacob; yet the chosen - the destined - were about to be summoned via an atomic bomb.

Jack the Shepherd and his tribe are coming.

Jacob had planned for this all along. He had been there in all their lives, touching them, binding them to the island and weaving their fates together. They were his ultimate end game in case the MIB had ever found his loophole. Disgusted by this realization, Darth Locke scowls and kicks Jacob's body into the fire.

...

Some people I have talked to said they were pretty upset that we didn't get our answer on whether or not Jack changed the future.

I think that we did though. I believe Faraday was ultimately right before that whatever happened, happened. Like Miles said, the castaways probably are the ones that caused the incident in the first place, because they had to. Akin to what happened to Desmond after the hatch imploded, I think through Jacob's grace (and Juliette exerting her free will), the castaways will be transported back to the present so that Jack and Locke (well the MIB) can have their ultimate showdown.

You see, I think the swerve is that the real game-changing "incident" wasn't in 1977. I believe the real incident was when the MIB finally broke the cycle and killed Jacob. Everything after that point is going to be different. It's funny, because it seemed destined from season 1 that Jack and Locke would ultimately be the driving opposing forces in Lost's conclusion. Locke the man of destiny against Jack the man of science.

Yet the real Locke is gone. Dead is dead. It sort of sucks, because you felt like the new Locke was a BAMF, that he had finally realized his potential. The only caveat to him maybe being REALLY dead is that Jacob not only touched him, but brought him back to life; we'll see.

No the real people of destiny appears to have been Kate, Sawyer, Sun, Jin, Sayid, and Hurly with Jack probably assuming the leadership role of a lifetime.

Jacob's death has signaled the end of the eternal backgammon game with the MIB, as well as the end of the time loops. Lost can and will end only once. The tapestry is complete (can't wait to see the finished product) and Jacob's hand picked team will either exert free will and make the right choices that will save themselves and the world, or they fail before the MIB's hatred of humanity.

So how do you think it will end? Was Jack the destined one all along? Will Ben become Sith-apprentice to his new (or maybe destined) master? Is the real Locke truly gone forever? Is the monster and the MIB one and the same?

There is a war coming.


Thursday, April 9, 2009

Lost 4/8: "Dead is Dead"



After a lull of an episode last week, Lost returned with another Ben-centric offering that was ripe with implications and (for me at least) created a ton of new questions.

Darth Locke

What makes Ben a good villain is that it is very difficult if not impossible to pierce the veil of his half-truths. Yet in this episode, the audience was aided by "Jedi Master Locke," who seemed to be brimming with a new confidence and seemingly able to call out Ben on ever lie he threw at Locke. Ben wakes up, and though his face reads instant surprise, he declares that he knew Locke would be alive; this of course, would seem to be debunked by Alex later (as we'll get to). Yet, Locke seemed to knowingly be the one that was one step ahead in this episode, openly admitting to Sun and Ben that he just knew things after his resurrection: like how he would reunite Sun and Jin and even how to find the supposedly hidden "Temple;" on that note though, Locke made it a point to Sun that he was still the same ol' Locke. It will be interesting to see how new Locke pans out, whether or not he is running on instinct in the moment and letting it all come to him, or whether he is fully aware of his condition and of what's to come thanks to Jacob-intel, but staying silent to pull strings.

Ben told Sun after he pulled the switch under the house and called out for Smokey that whatever appeared out of the jungle he would be unable to control. Who would appear but Locke himself - and Ben was right, he couldn't control him all episode. Who was conspicuously absent while Ben was on trial? Locke. Christian Shepheard seems to accompany the sounds of the monster, and he was in a casket when the Losties plane crashed the first time. Who else has that happen to?

Quite the pattern.

Daddy Ben

Enough about the new uber Other. In the latest episode, we got quite alot of info about the history of the Others, as well as glimpses into what Ben might actually be like. At the center of the episode's many surprises is that Ben actually wanted to be a father, and his intentions toward Alex (even sparing her mother) imply that he has a genuine weakeness towards kids. He wanted to give Alex a better life than he had with his father, yet as was the case in his own life, the problem with absentee or dead mothers seems to run rampant in Lost. Things between him and his daughter soured to the point that he, maybe unwittingly, caused her death. For that, he told Locke, is what he returned to the island for, to be judged by Smokey on the count that he killed his own "daughter."

Whether he really was there to be judged, or whether Jedi Locke saw through his bullshit and then really made it happen by leading Ben to the temple, is it not strange that for all the pain and suffering Ben has caused - including the apparent murder of Ceaser at the beginning of the damn episode - he gets judged for only that?

But judged did he ever get. In one of the coolest scenes in the series, Ben entered a crack under the temple and is surrounded by what looks like hieroglyphics. It is not until Ben walked up to the center of the room that the Egyptian connection became even more solidified. Ben stood before this glyph:


Smoke monster with a face coming out of the perforated hole-slab in front of Anubis. Fucking weird - I guess the Egyptians did not have a omgwtf glyph. Whoever etched the glyph could have thought that Anubis and Smokey were one and the same in function, or that even Anubis could not match Smokey and thus is subservient to it and judged by it. Anubis is Alpert!

Nah probably not...

Ben's torch went dark along with the rest of the room, and the monster emerged from the holes under the glyph. Slowly it surrounded Ben, electrically flashing how his life as a father to Alex had deteriorated. Ultimately, the monster recedes into the holes only to come back in the form of Monster-Alex. It's probably a good bet now that this is the way that the monster is able to communicate with people, as we have seen with Eko's brother Yemi, and Alex lays into Ben telling him that he has to follow Locke or that she (monster) will hunt Ben down and kill him. Alex also revealed that she knew that Ben was planning to kill Locke again, which would sort of counter Ben's claim that he knew Lock would be brought back to life. Yeah, something tells me that Ben just lost his clout with the island in this trial, but it'll be interesting to see why he was allowed to keep his life.

Widmore Conflict


Ever since Ben was "saved" and unable to remember the circumstances of his shooting, he has been an other. Leader Widmore was none too pleased with Alpert, who retorts that Ben's saving is what Jacob wants. This dynamic is interesting, because we have seen Ben as the leader interact with Jacob before, which begs the question: why did Alpert's retort silence Widmore? Is it because Widmore was on the ropes with Jacob and was losing favor? Also, if Alpert knows what Jacob wants, why can't he be the leader? We get hints of the notion of Jacob's (and Alpert's) shifting favor after Locke is able to see and hear Jacob for the first time in the cabin with Ben, and Ben, feeling threatened, shoots Locke into the Dharma death-pit. This seems to indicate that being the leader of the native island population isn't exactly what it is cracked up to be, especially when you seem to follow a fickle ghost-leader and there is little job security. Watch out Locke.

At the very beginning of Ben being an other, there seems to be contrary stances on the treatment of children.
  1. Widmore seems to feel that any outsiders, including children, must be killed. How then, do new Others "come on board?"
  2. Ben seems to think that children are the key to something - most likely to replenish the ranks of the others.
Widmore seems to be of the thought that the island knows, and will take care of those it deems worthy to live. If the islands wants someone dead, they'll be dead. Taking on Alex as a daughter was foolish to Widmore, for ultimately Alex was not supposed to be an Other in the first place. We also saw glimpses of a young Ethan, probably already recruited by Ben from Dharma; Ethan is another interesting case because he was born only because of Sawyer and Co.'s interference. Ultimately, Ethan's death at the hands of Charlie seems sort of a wash because he accomplishes and affects nothing, which in turn fits nicely into Widmore's belief that it is the island, not people, who determines who lives and dies. Ethan was not supposed to exist in the first place, and thus has no real affect in the grand timeline (like Alex? like all innocent children?).

Who knows if the other part of the schism is the fact that Widmore realizes that children simply cannot be brought into the fold, and his yearning for a family drives him to ultimately break the rules by going off-island. Perhaps his off-island trips were driven by the ever-present baby-making curse on the Others. We probably will find out soon enough, though we know which way Alpert swayed.

Lapidus Can't Catch a Break
What the hell was all that stuff at the end? As soon as Frank returns, the new castaways go militant and instantly start demanding to know what is buried or under the shadow of the statue. Where the hell did they get that info? Unless, Illana(?) is what I thought she was, a plant by Ben as a fail-safe in case something happened to him. Lapidus might be getting pistol-whipped into following these people to Ben's "final solution."

Now we have:

  1. Losties in the 70's
  2. Locke/Ben/Sun on the main island in the present
  3. Lapidus and rogue castaways on the Other's island.
Remember, hyroglyphics are bad news. Oh and when you hear whispers, run.