Showing posts with label Lost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lost. Show all posts

Saturday, November 02, 2024

What If: Lost Edition

(If you've never seen the television series Lost from beginning to end, proceed with caution as spoilers abound)

As I mentioned earlier this week, I finished up a recent viewing of Lost, and while I could've just left it at a recap, I was feeling ambitious, and while I'm feeling ambitious I thought...why not do something a little wild to close the Lost chapter of the blog?  So we're going to combine franchises.  The What If TV series is one of the lesser-discussed aspects of the MCU, but if you look at my collection of comic books, you'll find that it is the most prominently-featured title.  That's because I loved the What If comic books as a kid.  Unlike the TV series, they were more-than-willing to play with stakes.  The TV show frequently will make characters you love into ones that you learn to hate, because it's a parallel universe, but the TV series, seeing only dollar signs at risk, doesn't play that way.  But there was potential here, particularly in a world like Lost where we have time travel, and multiple key character deaths that lead to a lot of very specific outcomes.  I know Daniel Faraday would warn me against such things, but I want to understand-what would happen if we could change the plot of the show?

I'm going to explore below ten very plausible shifts in the plot, and what would've happened as a result of them.  You will notice a few things missing.  First, I'm focusing on the entirety of the show, but given the long-term impact there's very little from the show's final two seasons in terms of set-up because there's not that much to run-on.  I think there's a world where, for example, Jack not breaking the Lighthouse mirrors might have given him more information, or letting Sayid die rather than become infected may have saved a lot more lives in total...but there's so little room to play with there.  I also don't list deaths that (in the larger run) aren't consequential to the plot of the show.  Boone, Shannon, & Juliet, specifically, don't really change the trajectory of the program.  The first two were on so little that it's hard to know how getting rid of them might've altered the future, and the latter would've just made Sawyer want to leave more, but I can't really think of anything in the final season that Sawyer would've done differently if Juliet was alive.  No, the ten things I have listed below are all things that I think would've actually changed the show's outcome if you shifted what happened, and so they're more fun to ponder.

1. What if...Hurley Had Remembered the Blanket?

Previously on Lost: As you may recall, in Season 2, Hurley wants to go on a romantic date with Libby, with a picnic on the beach.  However, Hurley forgets the blanket, which causes Libby to go back to the Hatch to retrieve them.  In the process, she is Michael's second murder victim when he kills her & Ana Lucia while breaking out Ben in exchange for Walt.
What Happened Next: In this scenario, we still have Ben out, Ana Lucia dead, and Michael tasked with bringing Kate, Sawyer, Jack, & Hurley to the Others in a trick.  Libby being alive & well throws a pretty big wrench into this plan, though.  First, Libby's death was the whole reason that Hurley went to the Others camp, as revenge for what they did to him.  Without that, it's hard to see a world where Hurley goes with Michael.  He wouldn't want to be avenged & Libby (knowing what a fragile state Hurley is in after the "Dave" episode), is going to fight back on that too.  It's entirely possible that Michael will either have to force Hurley to go (giving up his cover), or (more likely) he only takes the other three, in which case he might not get Walt back as Hurley is crucial so the castaways know that their people have been kidnapped.  We are also in a situation where if Libby lives, she knows Desmond (she gave him her boat), and we would have an opening into her very mysterious backstory, and establishing a clear connection to Charles Widmore as many Lost fans have wondered if she was his connection to the Oceanic 815 crash.

2. What if...Locke Didn't Blow Up the Hatch?

Previously on Lost: Completely devoid of his faith, while Ben destroyed his confidence & made him feel inferior to Jack, Locke decides that his destiny is to destroy the Hatch, rather than to push a button every 108 minutes.  Despite the protestations of Charlie, Desmond, & Mr. Eko, Locke succeeds in blowing up the Hatch, causing it to explode and triggering basically the entire rest of the show, including Locke's continued sense of self-discovery and doubt.
What Happened Next: So in this scenario, two things stand out to me as crucial.  First, the castaways never really used the Hatch for what it's most obvious use could be-they didn't use it as a safe zone.  In the coming season, the biggest issue for the castaways is that they don't have protection (think of the "Flaming Arrow Attack" in Season 5).  The Hatch is hard to break into, they have tons of guns, and it has shelter, a pantry, & running water; there's a real possibility that they could've used it in future seasons as a base camp that the Others would struggle to use against them.  Secondly, the Incident is probably impossible without the Hatch exploding, which would mean the entire team would stay in the 1970's indefinitely (which would totally throw off the sixth season to the point of not really having an ending to the show but would definitely result in Daniel & Juliet staying alive), and would result in the Man in Black theoretically destroying the world...unless the aged versions of themselves in 2004 decide to buy a ticket on Oceanic Flight 815 themselves, which would've been a completely crazy ending.

3. What if...Ana Lucia had killed Ben?

Previously on Lost: In season two, Ana Lucia spends a large amount of her time guarding Ben, who at that point is going by the guise of Henry & staying in the locked cell in the Hatch.  They have multiple encounters, some violent, and securing his freedom becomes crucial enough for the Others that they send in Michael, who ends up killing Ana Lucia.
What Happened Next: Given the demons she's working through, it's totally plausible that Ana Lucia, at some point in a violent rage, kills Ben, either by accident or on purpose, the consequences be damned.  This would be huge as Ben was an enormous factor in the final seasons of the show.  Without Ben, there's no one around who knows how to move the Island, so the Kahana crew get to the shore and either kill everyone on the Island (or the casataways kill them back...either way a lot is going down).  Walt & Michael are stuck on the Island because they have no bartering power, and the Others are listless without an obvious leader.  Potentially in this case Juliet is able to get off the Island before anything goes down (as the Hatch hasn't blown up yet), and honestly most of the incidents in the final season never actually happen.  It's worth noting that this isn't the only way Ben dies-had the castaways realized right away that Michael was lying, he probably is killed by Jack or John at that point...Ben escaping death was a huge part of the show, and he did it twice in his first season.

4. What if...They'd Gone Back to the Statue Right Away?

Previously on Lost: At the end of Season 2, when Michael is leading Kate, Jack, Hurley, & Sawyer through the jungle, there is a side adventure happening where Sayid, Sun, & Jin are on Desmond's boat, and are trying to navigate to find the Others.  During this time frame, they come across a giant statue of a foot with four toes on a beach.  Though this becomes a key supporting player later as we learn its connection to Jacob, none of these three ever actually talk about it again, and before we realize its connection to Jacob it's only referenced once more (during the time flashes when it's seen by Juliet, Sawyer, & Miles).
What Happened Next: This is one of the few times in the series I genuinely think they left a major plot gap because they didn't know what to do.  The statue is important because it's the home of Jacob.  Though Jacob is seemingly all-knowing, he does appear to be something of a mortal man (he eats, he can be killed), so there's a real possibility if they went to the statue again, they would've met him.  Whether or not Jacob could be trusted or not, imagine what a difference knowing who Jacob was would mean in Season 3, that he is a real person, and that Ben is faking his connection with him would've destroyed his relationship with the Others, and would've also changed the course of John's life.  In general, though, the lack of curiosity about the island itself (that they didn't explore at all-only Sayid even bothered to try) always felt weird to me.  What if there was a Holiday Inn on this island that they had totally missed?!?

5. What if Edward Mars had lived?

Previously on Lost: Edward Mars, for those who are wondering who I'm talking about, is the guy in the picture next to this question (makes sense).  In Season 1, and throughout the series in flashback, he is the FBI agent that is assigned to track down Kate, and is taking her back to LA and prison in the pilot episode.  He is clearly going to die from injuries sustained in the crash, but that is exacerbated when he is shot by Sawyer (at Kate's bequest), and Jack ends up euthanizing him.
What Happened Next: Obviously there's a world where Mars doesn't die, simply where he gets out of the plane crash with only some scrapes & bruises.  In this world, the biggest question is what happens to Kate's storyline.  I think Mars staying alive adds a dimension that honestly wasn't really on the show.  Jack was meant to be the morality police in the first season, but Mars (in flashback) is shown to be a more ruthless, authoritarian figure that honestly wouldn't be a thing until later (with someone like Ana Lucia).  He would've outed Kate as a murderer, making her initially a pariah, but I honestly think much of his problem would've been butting up against Sawyer & Jack, as one would be too criminal for him, and the latter being too moral in his attitude toward the Others and handling figures that disobeyed like Sawyer, Kate, & Locke.  I don't think Mars would've eventually made it to the end, as characters like this never survive long (he would've had no obvious allies), but he would've added an element to the story that definitely wasn't there in the first season.

6. What if Mr. Eko had lived?

Previously on Lost: Mr. Eko was one of the "Tailies" and while fans of the show hated some of the Tailies (Ana Lucia, Bernard had his detractors), pretty much everyone welcomed Mr. Eko into the fold.  The enigmatic former priest, whose back story led to one of Season 2's best episodes (The 23rd Psalm) was ultimately written out of the show early in Season 3, when real-life actor Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje wanted to be written out of the show, as he did not like living in Hawaii.
What Happened Next: The writers have been very clear that they had a five-season plan for Eko, so it's worth pondering what it might've been.  I suspect that Eko would've taken on some combination of roles from either Locke or Ben given this was already written.  It's easy to see Locke, a man constantly struggling with his faith, transferring some of his moments of doubt (or misguided certainty) onto Eko, an actual priest who struggled with his faith.  It also would've been easy for Ben, who was manipulated by the Man in Black into both killing Jacob AND following his orders for years, into transferring that power-of-persuasion to Eko, given that Eko thought the Smoke Monster was actually his brother Remy.  I would assume this would've coalesced his power over the Castaways faster, and maybe have made the Man in Black genuinely successful in getting off of the island.

7. What If Both Sides of the Plane Landed in the Same Spot?

Previously on Lost: A major part of Season 2 of Lost is that we find out that the tail section of the plane had some survivors.  Sawyer,  Michael, & Jin are trapped by them before they confirm that they are, in fact, who they say they are, and then they go across the jungle to rejoin the front-of-the-plane.  But, of course, there's the possibility that the plane doesn't split (but still crashes), and the Tailies are part of the original castaways the entire time.
What Happened Next: Weirdly, a lot of things shift with this move.  For starters, you get a few characters that live automatically here.  Cindy is harder to kidnap in this scenario, and Ethan probably never joins the castaways at all because Ben would be likelier to want to punish Goodwin than Ethan.  We also don't have Shannon dead in this scenario, because she was killed by Ana Lucia traipsing through the jungle.  Perhaps most importantly, it changes the dynamics of a few key figures.  Ana Lucia is granted less power here, which would mean that Nathan probably lives (and if he's a member of Charles Widmore's crew, we'd find out) since calmer heads like Jack & Sayid would prevail, and Libby & Hurley's relationship would start earlier.  I think it's also probable that the war with the Others comes much sooner, as all of the castaways together would be far more formidable against them.  Honestly-this speeds up pretty much every timeline...it's lucky for Widmore & the Others that this didn't happen as both of their plans become a problem in this scenario.

8. What if the Castaways Found The Pearl before finding The Swan?

Previously on Lost: The Pearl Station, which is an observation center where you can see all of the other stations on the island, is first discovered by Nikki & Paulo, but they don't go into it or discuss it with anyone else.  It is also walked over by Boone & Locke, but during that time frame Boone dies, which becomes the more pressing matter, and later that night Locke finally sees the light in the Hatch.  The castaways (in this case Locke & Mr. Eko) don't actually go into the Pearl station until late in season two, where it causes John to lose faith in the button itself.
What Happened Next: Here's the deal-this is maybe the biggest shift in the story of any of these questions because it likely leads to completely different stories for all involved.  For starters, let's assume that the actual discovery of the Pearl takes place with Locke & Boone, that they discover it before Boone goes into the Beechcraft.  In this scenario, Boone lives, adding a new element and ally for John for the rest of the series, and also the castaways learn about not only Desmond & the Flame (Mikhael's station), but if the cameras still work, the Tail section survivors as I would assume (it's hard to tell upon rewatch, but it'd be logical) that you could see into the Arrow from here.  This would give the castaways a vast upper-hand in the story.  They could retrieve the rest of the Oceanic survivors pretty quickly from the Arrow once they ascertained where it was, and know to look for both the Flame & the Swan before the Swan exploded, which would result in them being able to communicate with the outside world the same way the Others had been doing.  Keep in mind that this all happens after Ethan is dead, but before Walt is kidnapped, a rare gap in the story where they'd have the complete upper-hand over Ben without realizing it.

9. What if the Writers Never Went on Strike?

Previously on Lost: Season 4 of Lost was considerably shorter than the previous seasons.  This was both by design (from my understanding, they had already negotiated with the series' creators that there would be less episodes than the previous three seasons), and because of the 2007-08 writer's strike that caused the season to be trimmed.  The original 16 episodes were shortened to a 13 episode run, which means for fans of Lost, they were unable to see the three episodes that were cut from the series.
What Happened Next: In terms of practical impact, there's nothing really happening here-the Lost main plot from my understanding was just moved up, rather than altered dramatically as a result of the cuts (this is not the same thing as the alleged inclusion of a volcano explosion in Season 6, which was cut because ABC wouldn't approve the budget).  Some will argue that they were cheated out of only two episodes due to the studios not paying the writers enough, though I doubt that (I would assume "There's No Place Like Home" would've just been shorter, rather than getting an extra hour of runtime like what happened in reality).  The show's creators have never outright stated exactly how they would've planned these three episodes, but the consensus from interviews/panel discussions is that we would've gotten a Charlotte-centric episode, one that talked about her background, and an additional Ben-centric episode that would've been focused on more of Ben's personal life, including the reappearances of both Harper & Annie, two Others that felt like they didn't have resolution on the Island.  The third episode's central character isn't clear, but it seems to have either been focused on Michael & Libby (who both had small roles in Season 4) coming to terms with Libby's death and/or Danielle & Alex Rousseau having some sort of reunion (possibly in the Ben-centric episode).  Here's the deal-none of this really impacts the larger plot, but in all of these cases they are answers to questions that were clearly glossed over on the show, and it would've been nice (especially with Annie & Charlotte) to get some answers.  So it doesn't change the plot, but it does change the show and provide some of the rare questions they truly left unanswered from the series.

10. What if the Oceanic Six Hadn't Returned?

Previously on Lost: When the Island disappears, there were six survivors of Oceanic 815 (Jack, Kate, Sun, Hurley, Sayid, & Aaron), along with Desmond & Frank, that lived and were proclaimed "the Oceanic Six" by the press.  All six of these figures during Seasons 4 & 5 were seen back in their real lives, but in many cases (with Jack especially), they struggled to survive, and had a need to eventually go back to the island.  In the end, five of them (save for Aaron) returned to the Island, along with Ben & Ilana, and set off the events of Season 6.
What Happened Next: There's by my estimation two really big variables that could've happened here that might've changed the course of the Oceanic 6.  The most obvious one is if it'd been the Oceanic 7.  A few minutes of delay, and Jin would've been on that helicopter, and Sun & Jin both make it back.  It's hard to imagine the two of them returning for the rest of the people they left behind in that scenario given they have a child.  The second is Kate-at that point in the story, Kate could've been pregnant with Sawyer's baby (they even hint, to a degree, that this is the case at the beginning of "Eggtown"), just like Sun had gotten pregnant...a pregnant Kate would've made the Aaron story impossible (and quite frankly, would've made her trial scenes more believable), but she almost certainly doesn't leave to go back.  Let's keep in mind that Hurley had to be prodded by Jacob to return, and Sayid does not return of his own accord (he's arrested and brought back by Ilana against his will).  Without the true Oceanic Six...would they have even crashed the Ajira flight?  Then again, as we found out with Desmond, if the Island wants you back...it'll find a way to get you back.  Perhaps a pregnant Kate or a reunited Jin & Sun would've still been on that plane because that's what fate had decided.

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Revisiting Lost

(If you've never seen the television series Lost from beginning to end, proceed with caution as spoilers abound)

In my life, politics & movies are the two obsessions, the two things that I am famous for in my personal life.  But there is a third pop culture phenomenon (don't look at me like that-when the Republican party is nominating reality TV stars, bestselling memoirists, and failed 1940's leading men, politics has descended into pop culture) that I am obsessed with (well, four if you count Harry Potter) and that is Lost.  And we cannot say goodbye to this blog without me bringing back at least a couple of Lost articles, so in the next couple of days, I have every intention of doing just that as we will talk through two Lost-related topics.

One of these articles is spurred by a recent rewatch of the series.  I usually watch the series once every three years, but due to some logistical issues, this is my first revisit since 2020.  I always find, though, that I learn some new things with each visit.  Lost, divided into 121 wonderful episodes, is not a show that you watch with your cell phone out (at least not the first time).  The series is filled with intense, in-depth clues and long-running mysteries.  For all of the talk about shows like Severance or Succession today being cinematic in their presentation of different enigmas on the show, Lost was really in a class by itself, and doing so on broadcast television.  Coming in the wake of The X-Files, it created a multi-character bonanza with mysteries that were largely solved within the confines of the show (yes, they were).  So there's always a lot to learn with each revisit.

My biggest observations this time, though, were around some of the cultural conversations about television that have happened since my last rewatch.  The concept of a "filler" episode has become a discussion topic that people (including me) have a lot of opinions on.  Watching this show, I was struck by how important the "filler" episodes were to the longer success of the series.  Lost came out during an era where it was not unusual to have 20+ episodes each season, and indeed for the show's first three seasons that was the case.  Much of the end payoff of Lost comes from the characters being found after coming to the island as broken...that they found love & compassion with each other.  That's not possible, though, if you don't have episodes like "Tricia Tanaka is Dead" or "The Long Con" or "Whatever the Case May Be" building their bonds and back stories together.  This is honestly a problem you see with a lot of modern television.  One of the best shows on TV right now, Heartstopper, is almost transcendently good at showing the complicated, burgeoning young love of the two main characters...but without more episodes the side characters feel phoned-in and two-dimensional by comparison.  No character on Lost ends up being two-dimensional because we are allowed time for Miles, Rose, & Richard to get their own episodes tucked into the series, giving them room to feel formed as fan favorites.

This also makes their episodes where they try to play with form much more successful, because there's so much bought into the individual episodes themselves.  The most recent season of The Bear suffered because so little was said between the characters, and because you didn't have as much plot already cooking to be able to take episodes where you feel like very few things are happening or they want to focus just on one little character development.  But on Lost, when you have an episode like "The Constant" or "The Other 48 Days" you really feel like you're learning in-depth about other characters, things that will be important to what's happening onscreen.  It doesn't feel like it's taking you out of the story, but more like it's investing into what you're doing.

I will also say that I loved, aesthetically, the way I did this rewatch.  Though I have Netflix, I made a point of watching the series on my DVD sets.  DVD's of this time frame put actual work into creating something special for the home viewer, so you get little Easter eggs (like a microwave making popcorn or a plane falling) when you pop in a new disc.  It also felt more tangible.  One of the joys that Lost watchers had when it was live (and I do go that far back with the series) was taking a break each week to obsess & ponder; we've seen this joy repeated with the most recent seasons of Agatha All Along and Only Murders in the Building, where you need to pour over clues to understand what might be next.  Though you can never duplicate this, the DVD's at least added some nostalgia to the endeavor.

Okay, in terms of actual new observations this time, I found a few things that tilted a bit in my opinions.  First, it is staggering how many bad decisions on the show are driven by a sense of toxic masculinity.  Jack, John, Sawyer, Ben, & Michael all make really crucial mistakes the further you go.  Perhaps one of the reasons that Sawyer has emerged as one of my favorite characters the more I rewatch is because of the five he's the only one who seems to get a sense of understanding that he's actually caused harm, and should maybe think before he acts.

Also, Jack is a real asshole in Season 3.  Jack is, let's face it, an asshole for most of the series' run outside of maybe the very end of Season 6 and most of Season 1.  But I was really struck by how just straight-up awful he is in Season 3.  The way that he expects Juliet to be accepted after what the Others did to Charlie, Claire, & Libby, particularly as Juliet is provably still working for Ben...come on dude, that's expecting too much of them.  

I will also say that my complicated relationship with Juliet continued this rewatch.  Juliet is a fan favorite, and unlike Ben, one that pretty much everyone agreed to like before the finale.  It's easy to like Juliet.  She is (give or take Ben and maybe Rose) the smartest of all of the castaways, and generally makes the most good decisions (she dies by accident, and because Jack needed to prove he was right when he was wrong again, because I don't think anyone would've ever actually gotten the better of her on the show).  But she is really too ruthless in Seasons 3-4 to actually be redeemed.  I get the why behind some of her decisions, but when she was free of the Others she still helped them...I don't know, I feel like people like Elizabeth Mitchell so much they're willing to overlook some of the clear dirty-handedness of her character in Season 4.

Those are what I found this cycle.  Still my favorite show, still can make me cry, swoon, laugh, & dream.  Can't wait until 2027 when I catch it next!

Wednesday, June 29, 2022

Ranking the Lost Episodes

It is my birthday, and tomorrow we will be concluding our month-long 10th Anniversary celebration.  As a result, I wanted to do something extra-special on our penultimate day, and that of course meant we needed to do some ode to my favorite TV Show, Lost.

If you look at the tag at the bottom of these, you will find that I have written about Lost a lot.  It is not just my favorite show, it's also my favorite thing.  As a result, though, I only allow myself to rewatch it once every three years, and we are not scheduled for another viewing until 2023, so I can't try a new slant on it for this year's article with a fresh viewing.  So instead, I'm going to pay homage by revealing, for the first time ever on the blog, my definitive ranking of all of the episodes.

A couple of notes before you dive in.  First, I don't have recaps of these episodes, but you can read my full recap of every episode here: Seasons 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, & 6.  I've also done a ranking like this for the mobisodes that you can find here.  I don't, therefore, have episode descriptions below (it's just the list) since you can find VERY in-depth looks at every episode there (if you haven't seen the show, I encourage you to watch it before clicking those links, though this post is the rare spoiler-free one for Lost).

Second, I will say straight-up that Lost is something I love, even at its worst.  I genuinely liked the finale, and think that the people who got super angry about the ending were either expecting too much (the philosophy of Lost poses questions that humans haven't been able to answer in the past 2000 years-I doubt a weekly ABC program could find the solutions) or are the kinds of people who only want things to end the way they wanted to (I suspect the Venn Diagram of people who really hated the Lost finale and hated The Last Jedi would resemble a circle).  As a result, this is just a ranking of episodes on the show...none of these episodes are ones that I skip when I rewatch, none of them are ones that I hate.  Even at its worst, Lost was usually the best hour of television on that week.

Finally, these are a personal list.  I understand qualitatively that some episodes are technically better than others, and while that bears out in the rankings (#2 is pretty much every Lost fan's favorite for a reason), it also means that I will favor episodes that center on certain characters more than others.  John Locke, Ben, Sawyer, & Sun are my favorite characters that regularly got their own episodes so they'll rank higher, and I tend to like some of the lighter fare because I know how serious the back-half of the series gets & I love getting to just hang out with these characters (#14, for example, moves up virtually every time I rewatch the series under this logic).  So if you have quibbles, bring them to the comments, but keep that in mind before laying into me for a personal favorite that feels slighted or an unsung hero that is way higher-than-expected.  And with that, here are my rankings:

1.    Through the Looking Glass (3.22)
2.    The Constant (4.5)
3.    Deus Ex Machina (1.19)
4.    The End (6.17)
5.    Exodus, Part 2 (1.24)
6.    The Candidate (6.14)
7.    The Incident, Parts 1 & 2 (5.16)
8.    Exodus, Part 1 (1.23)
9.    There’s No Place Like Home, Parts 2 & 3 (4.13)
10.  The Other 48 Days (2.7)
11.  Walkabout (1.4)
12.  Sundown (6.6)
13.  Greatest Hits (3.21)
14.  Tricia Tanaka is Dead (3.10)
15.  Live Together Die Alone (2.23)
16.  Ab Aeterno (6.9)
17.  The Life and Death of Jeremy Bentham (5.7)
18.  Flashes Before Your Eyes (3.8)
19.  The Shape of Things to Come (4.9)
20.  Happily Ever After (6.11)
21.  Pilot, Part 2 (1.2)
22.  The 23rd Psalm (2.10)
23.  The Man Behind the Curtain (3.20)
24.  The Man from Tallahassee (3.13)
25.  Solitary (1.19)
26.  Not in Portland (3.7)
27.  Dead is Dead (5.12)
28.  Ji Yeon (4.7)
29.  D.O.C. (3.18)
30.  Raised by Another (1.10)
31.  Orientation (2.3)
32.  The Substitute (6.4)
33.  LAX Parts 1 & 2 (6.1-2)
34.  The Long Con (2.13)
35.  Do No Harm (1.20)
36.  Confirmed Dead (4.2)
37.  Lighthouse (6.5)
38.  Whatever Happened, Happened (5.11)
39.  Confidence Man (1.9)
40.  …In Translation (1.17)
41.  Dr. Linus (6.7)
42.  The Cost of Living (3.5)
43.  The Whole Truth (2.16)
44.  Because You Left (5.1)
45.  Enter 77 (3.11)
46.  Man of Science, Man of Faith (2.1)
47.  Everybody Hates Hugo (2.4)
48.  Everybody Loves Hugo (6.12)
49.  White Rabbit (1.5)
50.  I Do (3.6)
51.  A Tale of Two Cities (3.1)
52.  One of Us (3.16)
53.  LaFleur (5.8)
54.  Lockdown (2.17)
55.  There’s No Place Like Home, Part 1 (4.12)
56.  Numbers (1.18)
57.  The Glass Ballerina (3.2)
58.  What They Died For (6.16)
59.  Outlaws (1.16)
60.  Jughead (5.3)
61.  Dave (2.18)
62.  The Lie (5.2)
63.  Pilot, Part 1 (1.1)
64.  Across the Sea (6.15)
65.  Recon (6.8)
66.  Catch-22 (3.17)
67.  What Kate Did (2.9)
68.  The Variable (5.14)
69.  S.O.S. (2.19)
70.  316 (5.6)
71.  House of the Rising Sun (1.6)
72.  The Economist (4.3)
73.  Every Man for Himself (3.4)
74.  Maternity Leave (2.15)
75.  Left Behind (3.15)
76.  The Last Recruit (6.13)
77.  Par Avion (3.12)
78.  Two for the Road (2.20)
79.  The Beginning of the End (4.1)
80.  Special (1.14)
81.  Cabin Fever (4.11)
82.  Expose (3.14)
83.  Further Instructions (3.3)
84.  Hearts + Minds (1.13)
85.  All the Best Cowboys Have Daddy Issues (1.11)
86.  Tabula Rasa (1.3)
87.  The Brig (3.19)
88.  This Place is Death (5.5)
89.  The Hunting Party (2.11)
90.  The Other Woman (4.6)
91.  Something Nice Back Home (4.10)
92.  Homecoming (1.15)
93.  Collision (2.8)
94.  One of Them (2.14)
95.  Meet Kevin Johnson (4.8)
96.  The Package (6.10)
97.  And Found (2.5)
98.  He’s Our You (5.10)
99.  Whatever the Case May Be (1.12)
100. Namaste (5.9)
101. The Moth (1.7)
102. Follow the Leader (5.15)
103. Eggtown (4.4)
104. Some Like It Hoth (5.13)
105. ? (2.21)
106. The Little Prince (5.4)
107. Born to Run (1.22)
108. The Greater Good (1.21)
109. What Kate Does (6.3)
110. Adrift (2.2)
111. Abandoned (2.6)
112. Fire + Water (2.12)
113. Three Minutes (2.22)
114. Stranger in a Strange Land (3.9)

Friday, July 16, 2021

Ranking Every Season of Lost

I could've waited until September 22nd to do this, but as this is my first full week back to work in a while, and because I'm guessing that it was a long week, I thought it'd be fun to start our Friday with a project I've been meaning to get to for a while: ranking the seasons on Lost.  If you're new to this blog, you might now know about my love for Lost, a show that went off the air before I started writing on this daily, but I am obsessed.  It is my favorite show...really it's my favorite thing, period.  I only rewatch it every couple of years to keep it somewhat fresh, but I love it unabashedly, and think about it constantly. As a result, I occasionally will do an article about it when I have an itch I need to scratch, and that's happening right now!

Before we begin with ranking Lost episodes, I'll be very, very real-I love Lost unabashedly, to the point where I can't be properly be critically-objective of it.  There are so many memories of not just my life when I first watched it, but it's been a part of my life for so long there's a lot of identity I've put into each episode.  And even objectively (what I can muster), it's a superb show.  I do think, truly, it's the best show ever made-it has the sort of intellectual, in-depth writing that other shows aspire toward but rarely approach, great acting & scoring & set design...there's so much detail in it that when people are like "I didn't like the finale" I just feel bad for them because they clearly missed the point.

As a result, the rankings below are pitting the cream against the cream-I love every season of Lost pretty much more than every other season of every other show.  There are no episodes I hate, and certainly there are no seasons I dislike.  It's also pretty personal, so my rankings are going to reflect not just the quality of the show, but also characters I like, what I know is going to come in the future, and how each season makes me feel.  This is a lot of hemming-and-hawing, but the point you should not make here is that I'm insulting, say, my last place here, but instead that lists have to have a structure, and someone has to come last.  With that said, let's take a look at the ranked list of Lost seasons.

(Spoilers Ahead, Obviously)

6. Season 5

My Rationale: Okay, so there's a lot to like in Season 5.  Occasionally it's quite fun (the Juliet/Sawyer romance, Miles) and the mysteries are decent (particularly the ones involving the Oceanic 6 and their time off-island), but Season 5 definitely is the season that loses its way a bit.  The introduction of time travel was a risky endeavor, and though it works (for the most part), it does open up enough logical inconsistencies that Lost should've seen if they could avoid it (specifically, why did Sun not travel back in time while Kate, Hurley, Jack, & Sayid did).  It's also not as funny or as emotionally-resonant as past seasons, and I enjoy my Lost with a bit more heart than we got this season.  Overall, it's obviously worth the time, but there's nothing in Season 5 that really comes-to-mind when I think of the "greatest" moments of Lost, and so as a result I put it at the bottom.

Top 3 Episodes: 1) The Incident 2) The Life and Death of Jeremy Bentham 3) Dead is Dead
Worst Episode: The Little Prince
Best Moments: Okay, this is hard to do, but my favorite moment overall from this season was the total mind-bend of Jacob & and the Man-in-Black in the shadow of the statue, likely right before Richard arrives.  Other things I loved were Juliet detonating the bomb, Ben's showdown with Jacob, and the death of Jeremy Bentham.
If I Could Add One Episode: What is Lost without fan fiction, right?  I don't want a reboot or sequel (Lost stands up on its own), but if I had a magic wand to add one episode to each season, I'd add in one about Dan in Ann Arbor.  I think we understand largely what he's doing there (studying time travel), but I think this is a missed opportunity not putting more about Daniel Faraday into this season, maybe right toward the end of the run.
Overall Season MVP: I have written recaps of every episode of this series (seriously, we write about this series a lot on this blog, click the "Lost" tag below & prepare to be, well, lost for hours).  In Season 5, only two characters (Hurley & Sawyer) get an MVP mention more-than-once, which is a bit of a sign that they weren't as focused on growing the characters like they have in past seasons.  Overall, if I had to give it to one person from this list, it'd be Sawyer, who really grows this season & becomes the character that Lost fanboys know-and-love.

5. Season 2

My Rationale: Season 2 of the show gets a bad rap from fans (in the same way that Season 6 does), and part of that might be earned.  S2 definitely had a shift in the way it tackles some of the series mythology.  While the first season clearly includes references & links to the mysteries of the final episode (Adam & Eve, anyone?), Season 2 is definitely adding the Dharma Initiative, the Others, and most of the series-defining mysteries that we'd get to know.  I like this tonal shift, but I understand if people feel it isn't a totally organic fit with the first season.  My problems with this season mostly are attributed to Michael (who is my least-favorite character), and what he goes through trying to save Walt, and to a lesser degree there's not quite enough character growth from Jack & Sawyer as there should be.  That being said, there's a lot of good here-the Tailies and Others both being introduced exceptionally, there's fun in how they handle the Hatch not just as a source of intrigue, but literally a place to get a shower, and we get most of my favorite series mysteries.

Top 3 Episodes: 1) The Other 48 Days 2) Live Together, Die Alone 3) The 23rd Psalm
Worst Episode: Three Minutes
Best Moment: Desmond reading the note from Penny, for sure.  Such a good moment, and it always makes me cry (Desmond/Penny is my favorite Lost love story).  I also adore the opening scene of the Other 48 Days (I just watched it before writing this-it was actually the inspiration to finally write this article, and it still gives me goosebumps), and Desmond turning the key at the end of the season.  Special points go to Sawyer's line reading of "there's a new sheriff in town boys" as well.
If I Could Add One Episode: This one's easy-Libby deserved an episode.  I know that there were issues with Cynthia Watros's negotiations at the time, so I get the real world explanations of this, but Libby clearly had more story behind her with her links to Hurley, Desmond, & Charles Widmore, and we deserved a standalone explanation of what that entailed.
Overall Season MVP: Five characters got two MVP statuses this season: Ana Lucia (I'm not a hater), Ben, Eko, Hurley, and Locke.  These would not be the Top 5 from this season (I'd probably cut Ana Lucia for maybe Sawyer), but using the MVP rules they're the only ones I'll consider.  Of the five, I think the overall Season 2 winner has to be Ben, though there's a part of me that wants to give it to Eko since I think Ben will get MVP in a later season, but Ben is the best part of Season 2.

4. Season 6

My Rationale: I have talked about this many times on this blog, but I am in the minority in genuinely adoring the finale of Lost, and I have zilch problem with it.  I think that (with one exception I'll get into below) most of the big questions of the series were resolved this season, and the questions that couldn't be solved are "what is the meaning of life stuff?" that you just shouldn't expect from a television show as philosophers have wrestled with this for centuries.  Season 6's problems are more reliant upon it being a final season, and final seasons struggle in general because there's more urgency & therefore less room to breathe with smaller, character-driving moments, and also because in a show as large as Lost, it's hard to give resolution to dozens of characters.  I also think the Dogen & Ilana characters get slightly short-changed, but overall I'm behind this season, and 100% behind the finale.

Top 3 Episodes: 1) The End (I don't care-I liked it, and it holds up when you watch it as a full series), 2) The Candidate 3) Sundown
Worst Episode: What Kate Does (I actually do like Kate, so I feel bad that she's getting another "worst episode" citation, but it is the least of the season.
Best Moment: Okay, I loved every flashback moment of the finale episode, though the final eye close is my favorite moment of the season because of the beautiful symmetry to the rest of the series.  Sun & Jin in "The Candidate" (I still can't), and the saunter out of the temple in "Sundown" are also top drawer if we aren't just going for the sentiment of the finale.
If I Could Add One Episode: I think one of the main reasons that people criticize the final season as there's a few different ways you could approach this season to give it more episodes that might help it along.  Ilana or Dogen getting standalones would help, as would giving a look at what it was like for Claire on the island (and how she interacted with the MiB).  But if I've only got one, I want a full Charles Widmore episode, one that gets behind what it's like being the leader of the Others & get more insight into the "rules."  I think honestly that would have helped measure some of the criticism a lot by putting more mystery-solving into him.
Overall Season MVP: I gave six people "MVP" status in Season 6 twice: Ben, Hurley, Locke, Sun, Sayid, & Sawyer.  Obviously Locke is more "Fake Locke" here, but Terry O'Quinn gets my MVP status from this season-he's mesmerizing & totally deserved an Emmy.

3. Season 3

My Rationale: Season 3 is a weird season to put here, as arguably my favorite moments in Lost might happen this season.  The growth of Desmond as a character is integral, we get to see a new chapter in the mystery with the "Not Penny's Boat" moment and the realization of where the other episodes are headed.  And I honestly enjoy lighthearted Lost, so some of the detours in the middle-of-the-season with "Tricia Tanaka is Dead" are marvelous & some of my most cherished Lost moments.  That being said, the scenes in the first half of the season don't hold up as well upon repeat to what later happens, particularly the Jack/Kate/Sawyer love triangle in the cages that went on for too long, and arguably the series' worst episode "Stranger in a Strange Land" feels like a punt kick on adding one too many mysteries/characters.  Overall, though, I like this one better than even ardent fans do, but will concede that the character growth & look into the past just wasn't as valuable as the first two seasons.

Top 3 Episodes: 1) Through the Looking Glass 2) Greatest Hits 3) Flashes Before Your Eyes
Worst Episode: Stranger in a Strange Land
Best Moment: "Not Penny's Boat"...so damn good & still such a jaw-dropper.  Desmond not being able to buy the ring is a great primer to the cerebral places future seasons would head, and Jack & Kate at the end of "Through the Looking Glass" are close behind, but "Not Penny's Boat"...perfection.  Also, I have such a soft spot for the "Shambala" scene, and I will admit that I've been on that hill before & jammed to that song while I was there in Hawaii.
If I Could Add One Episode: All right, if I could have one more episode to this season, I want more of an explanation of Naomi Dorrit.  If I have one specific axe to grind when it comes to the "Lost didn't solve the mysteries" thing is that there was clearly more to Charles Widmore than we were getting, and I think an explanation about Naomi in connection to Charles would be crucial.  I think you structure this a bit & then have a flashback to Naomi a few seasons later with a Charles episode in Season 6, and you've got a boffo pair of episodes.
Overall Season MVP: Ben, Juliet, & Sawyer are the three characters who get three MVP statuses this season, and I'm going to go with Juliet, whom I hated initially in this season, but in retrospect that was mostly because I didn't entirely understand her motives.

2. Season 4

My Rationale: Season 4 is proof that less can be more.  As Lost moved into the backhalf of the series, it's worth noting that the seasons became shorter, partially due to the writer's strike (more in a second) and partially due to contract negotiations.  This left the series with a much sharper ticking clock, and meant every episode counted.  In some ways that was a bit of a bummer (no more "Tricia Tanaka is Dead" distractions), but it mean that every episode was adding up to a three-season long endgame, and we got a truly compelling mystery in the form of the Kahana crew.  Add in the return of Michael, Desmond getting his Penny phone call in, and that amazing season finale, and you've got a strong halfway point (random aside-fourth seasons of shows are almost always their best after the pilot season in my opinion).

Top 3 Episodes: 1) The Constant 2) There's No Place Like Home (Parts 2 & 3), 3) The Shape of Things to Come
Worst Episode: Eggtown (sorry Kate!)
Best Moment: I mean, how do you beat Des & Penny on the phone?  I can literally watch just him saying "I won't call for eight years" and be a puddle just from that primer (I'm choking up literally just thinking about it).  No other moment in Lost lore quite gets to me that way, even if some of the mystery moments are more fun.  I'd also include the Island disappearing, Bentham's reveal, & Sun at the gravestone, but Des & Penny...it's on a pedestal for a reason.
If I Could Add One Episode: This was the season that actually should've gotten another couple of episodes but the writers' strike cut it short.  As a result, it's also the season that feels most like it needs it (though the brevity works to its advantage).  Miles & Daniel would get their own episodes at some point, and Frank was only ever comic relief.  As a result, it's Charlotte Lewis, the enigmatic redhead who was clearly the most street-savvy of the quartet from the Kahana who I want to see get her own episode here.
Overall Season MVP: Sun is the only character to get three MVP statuses, and I'm fine with that-Yunjin Kim is great this season & this would have been an awesome Emmy nomination moment if they were going to give her one.

1. Season 1

My Rationale: Is it cliche to put the first season as the best season, or is it just inevitable because it's the best?  Lost started out its mysteries so confidently, like a show that knew it was going to get a full six season run, and that shows in the writing.  Every character has a direction, every person a purpose.  The first season is not shy about giving us character growth, oftentimes complicated character growth (think John or Sawyer), but also it does a bang-up job of introducing the mysteries.  We wouldn't care about, say, the Hatch or the French distress signal or the whispers six seasons later were they not so perfectly put before us.  Lost Season 1 is a magnum opus, the kind of season that might've stood up by itself if it'd only been one season...thankfully for all of us they didn't stop there.

Top 3 Episodes: 1) Exodus Part 2 2) Deus Ex Machina 3) Exodus Part 1
Worst Episode: The Greater Good
Best Moment: "Guys, where are we?"  Easily a home run moment in a picture-perfect pilot.  Other contenders include Locke seeing the Hatch light, "we're gonna have to take the boy" (horrifying & still unnerving), and the launching of the boat, but that initial teaser to the rest of the series...so damn good.
If I Could Add One Episode: Here's maybe the best reason why Season 1 should sit at the top of this list-it doesn't need another episode.  There's no moment in Season 1 where I think we'd have gained more from the series with some padding.  The only character that feels like they need more information is Cindy, but that would spoil a lot of what we find in Season 2 about her (in general, I want a Cindy episode).  I also think that Boone was underwritten, so maybe adding in something additional about him might have helped in future seasons, but overall there's nothing more I want from Season 1-it feels like the one season that doesn't have anything that clearly needed to grow.
Overall Season MVP: I assumed this would be Locke, who would definitely be my favorite overall, but it's actually Sawyer who gets four MVP trophies (Locke gets three), and so I have to defer to him, making him the only character in the series I'd give "MVP status" to in two separate seasons.