5.21.2010 | 11:00 am

Kicking Television: Dear John (Locke) – Saying Goodbye To “Lost”


ABC

Few things in life sting more than a sour end to a long relationship, pulling inside the curtain to reveal your lover as a wizard of lies, cheating, heartbreak. I’m talking, of course, about myself and Lost. I’ll admit, I’ve changed, too. Our first time together was in December 2004, a few short months after the show’s September premiere. Over two days of sweaty marathon sessions, I watched 11 episodes and fell passionately in love. I watched them, I should note, on a DVD-R burned from ripped episodes gleaned from Bittorent. Hulu – and YouTube! – was then about as realistic a possibility as a flying car.

I was in college then, a sophomore months removed from the loss of my virginity and still yet to discover “blogging.” I was optimistic; I was listening to a lot of Wilco. In the 5-and-a-half years since, I dumped one girlfriend and moved in with a new one; watched journalism, my chosen profession, suffer one subarachnoid hemorrhage after another (get well soon, Bret); saw indie rock, my chosen musical genre, explode into something suddenly popular and exciting but increasingly unwelcoming; and after two years in the working world observing the inner corridors of entertainment news, turned what most would call cynical. (I prefer “pragmatic.”) But a lifetime of comic book reading, thank God, has let me retain some semblance of a sense of wonder, and I’m still amazed by a great album or a vividly imagined film or, to return to our subject, an endlessly intricate television show. I’m no angel, but Iet me be perfectly clear: it’s Lost that’s done me wrong.

From its inception, Lost has been a show about binaries: fate vs. choice, faith vs. science, Jack vs. Locke, good vs. bad, black vs. white. Many of its fans grapple with their own duality: mysteries vs. characters. Is “Lost” a show about Jack’s Daddy issues or one about electromagnetism? In its best moments, the show has embraced both sides; in season 6, it has satisfied neither. My concern is less with what the mysteries mean than that they mean something; that the episodic tangle of twisted threads all ties to one knot, not a beach strewn with red herrings. The Others’ fascination with Walt; the island-goers’ troubles with pregnancy; the source of John Locke’s visions; Desmond’s time traveling; the Swan Hatch’s post-button existence; the Dharma Initiative in general; anything that happened in season 5; I’d love for any of it to be properly explained, though I know it won’t be.

I’d be at peace with not knowing if, like Lord of the Rings or Star Wars, the steps along the way felt like myriad elements of a grander world – not the product of a spit-balling writers’ room. The characters have hardly received better treatment over the show’s final weeks, with the ones that haven’t been killed off left to scramble about the island, fighting for causes they can’t understand as their disconnected alternate reality counterparts make their actions feel moot. Instead of tension and release, Lost gives us build-up and abandonment, like an orphan ferried from home to home at his prospective parents’ whims. The show’s great trick over the years has been to raise the stakes at every turn, so that one dominant arc – Claire’s strange baby birth, for instance, or Walt’s kidnapping, or the existence of one fascinating hatch after another – falls away to one that feels more viscerally important, whether or not resolution’s been reached. In season 6, Lost has pushed so hard and so high that this year’s dramas – warring demi-gods moving our heroes like black-and-white chess pieces! — seem forced, even silly. It’s hard to imagine the weight of a writer’s pen more than in episodes such as “Sundown,” where a whole temple of new characters – the subject of a third of the season’s investment – are cleared out like a basket full of crumpled-up plot notes.

Lost’s dilemma is this: to answer every question with “what” and “how,” as its final season has intermittently done, still leaves the Everest-tall topic of “why.” It’s the “why” that worries me. Last week’s episode, the mythology-explicating “Across The Sea,” is the best (worst?) microcosm yet for the season’s failings. Consider: in a show aligned on binaries, Jacob and his nameless brother arrive, respectively, in white and black towels, with hair and eventual clothing and gaming accoutrements to match. The symbolism is painfully clear. And yet, we learn that the two soon-to-be battling brothers are painted in shades of grey. Jacob, far from the all-knowing Judeo-Christian god he’s appeared to be over the course of the show, is naïve, trusting, a follower – even passive-aggressive. He rages against his sewn-lipped adoptive mother but accepts the responsibility of the island’s protection because… he must? Meanwhile, his brother attempts to understand, to examine, to lead, to attain the freedom to return to his homeland; in other words, to follow the admirable morals of series creator J.J. Abrams’ own adoption, the Star Trek franchise, so eloquently defended by William Shatner over dozens of the original series’ episodes. But to boldly go back to Lost: our Man in Black’s goals are quite the opposite of evil; still, his reward is to commit murder and find his humanity itself stripped away, his spirit locked for all time in his own personal hell. Remember our binaries – fate vs. choice. “Across The Sea” finds both its believer and its scientist realizing that neither option will work. The answer, the episode seems to say, is that there are no answers. If you hear that sound, it’s six seasons of seeming purpose shattering into a million pieces.

The “flash sideways” reality, where Oceanic Flight 815 never crashed, has only further consigned the series to murky grey. Each season of Lost has run parallel to itself, with a flashback or flash-forward or season 5’s time travel in some way illuminating its characters’ present lives and motives through revelations and comparisons. Yet, in the alternate reality apparently rendered by Juliet’s triggering of the nuclear warhead in 1977, these epiphanies are unclear. Without, we assume, the island or Jacob’s influence, Jack has a son and thus shelved his issues with his father, and Hurley has learned to believe he’s lucky – not the opposite. On the other hand, Sayid, rather than triumph over his past to find true love (only to lose it again, duh) as he did on the island, remains tormented; Sawyer, a do-gooder cop instead of a con-man, is also a slave to his past. Kate remains a criminal on the lam. What does this reveal about what Jacob did when he touched them? What happened, happened? Or didn’t happen? Or might still? If there’s a consistent message in these vignettes beyond “Across The Sea’s” thesis – there are no answers, and by the way, life’s not fair – I’d love to hear it. In non-existentialist bullet points.

There’s plenty of Lost left, in fairness, but even if the show’s final two and a half hours wrap up everything in a neat bow on Sunday night, it’ll be hard to forgive the slog the last four months have been. Beloved characters have been turned to crazed zombies (Sayid, Claire), made possible saviors for an hour then dumped into wells (Desmond) or worse, left to blow on the dying embers of a love triangle that’s been heated up and doused out on a weekly basis for years (Jack, Kate and Sawyer). Sigh. We’ve had some good times, Lost. Really, we have. And I’m going to miss you. But right now, I want you to get the hell out of my house and — what? No, that’s totally my Morrissey album.

Previously: LOST Archives

  • satisfied75

    Well said, Dave. This season has been truly abhorrent. I was long afraid the writers had no idea where their story was ultimately going and the last few months have unfortunately exemplified as much.

  • http://www.popheadwound.blogspot.com James

    Dave, you make some very interesting points in this piece about pretty much everyne I know's favorite TV show ever, including my own. Yes, Season 6 has been the weakest season so far – I'd go with 2, 1, 4, 3/5 tie, 6, with Season 3's finale being the best 2 hours of television ever if you ask – I still think this year has had more than its share of fantastic moments/episodes.

    I think what has disappointed me most this year is, like you said, the quick dimissal of characters. I thought Sayid/Locke wiping out the temple was part of the year's best episode – truly, of all the flash sideways, Sayid's was by far, for me, the most satisfying, capturing the on island/off island connections the way the original flashbacks used to on a weekly basis. His motivation for becoming a “zombie” was clear, even if his resurrection has never been made believable. And the way he mowed down the Asian Col. Kurtz and his Dennis Hopper sidekick was awesome. I had no porblem with that.

    Nor did I have a problem with the Sun/Jin death scene – I wasn't exactly ready for it like I was for Charlie's, so I was pissed at the time (especially since I'm a relatively new father and FUUUUUCK), but have come to see how it was a very appropriate way to end their story.

    My problem is in how Richard, who finally got his own episode (which was very good save the “we're replacing Hurley for Jennifer Love Hewitt ghost whisperer ending”), was told he had to kill the man in black, then disappeared for 4 or 5 episodes, then gets killed in basically his first major scene since. WTF? And Widmore! Just like that? Really? And Lapidus, completely forgotten in his demise -what was ever that guy's point other than being the butt of Sawyer's Burt Reynolds line? I think the show dropped the ball with all 3 of these goodbyes, and in the case of Lapidus, with the character altogether.

    Of course, there is tremendous potential in the finale. It could go in a million different directions, but I've convinced myself that Desmond's plan will culminate in getting the “real” Locke back into his real body through the operation Jack will inevitable perform – thus finding a loophole and saving the world from the smoke monster. Will Ben wind up killing Kate and/or Sawyer, or even, gasp, Hurley? Does Walt (who has actually appeared in every season at some point except 6) play some role, somehow? Hell, I'll just be happy if Eko is in the last episode and Miles survives it all.

    Anyway, I enjoyed reading.
    James

  • http://www.rawkblog.net/ David Greenwald

    Thanks for the considered response, man. I really hated the Sayid story — I thought it was so unfair, which is really my gripe with the show, re: what is it trying to prove by screwing people over and over and over like the book of Job? Where's the payoff? This is why I have a hard time with organized religion.

  • KC

    So many questions will be left unresolved, its a let down.

    Dear Lost writers,
    please kill Kate. we have been waiting for it for quite some time. she's so bad.

  • Herman King

    Why did the smoke monster after being impervious to bullets let Kate kill it with one shot? And was Jack's son imaginary (was the pizza he shared with his father imaginary)?Lost was a lot of silliness, chapters apparently conceived ad hoc.All trying to make you believe it as profound and esoteric.

  • http://www.rawkblog.net/ David Greenwald

    He lost his powers after the light went out.