Lost thoughts

SPOILER ALERT, SPOILER ALERT

* And Sayid gets beaten again! Has he ever won a fight? Was there a touch football game with Walt in the early days he managed to come out on top of or something?

* Dogen and Lennon, we hardly knew ye.

* I’m gonna go ahead and attribute Sayid’s dirty deeds in this episode to the aforementioned “darkness growing inside him.” Sayid is someone who’s done a lot of terrible things, though mostly during his offscreen years with the Republican Guard, but he was obviously extraordinarily repentant about that. Moreover, until tonight I really hadn’t seen him do anything unforgivable on the show itself. (I’d have shot Young Ben too. Baby Hitler, if they ever invent time travel, I’m coming for you, asshole.) The point is that the show has never framed Sayid as a bad person deep down–they’ve framed it that he thinks this is the case, but they’re always showing us evidence to the contrary. So it’s a big leap for him to suddenly be walking around smirking about murder, something he’d never ever done before no matter who he was in the process of killing–hitmen, golfers, Others, future archvillains, you name it.

* But Sayid’s corruption makes me wonder what the heck Richard was talking about last season when he warned Sawyer and whoever else that if he took Ben to be healed in the Temple, he’d never be the same. Obviously there’s some other kind of process at work with Sayid than whatever saved Ben, since Ben is clearly not in thrall to the MIB the way Sayid is (or the way crazy Claire is). What we’re seeing from Sayid is more similar to the cold evil of Rousseau’s teammates when she was in that kill-or-be-killed situation with them long ago.

* I’m also wondering how separate the Others community seemingly overseen by Dogen at the Temple was from the Others community ostensibly run by Ben and Richard at the old Dharma Village. Based on tonight’s evidence, the Temple Others really were servants of Jacob, doing his will and often being quite shady in the process. But they still seem miles away from the neck-snapping, boat-detonating, Walt-kidnapping, Sawyer-shooting, Charlie-hanging, Juliet-branding, Michael-blackmailing, Charlie-drowning antics of Ben, Tom, Ethan, Goodwin, Miss Klugh, Mikhail, Pickett, and the rest of that crew. Was Jacob down with all that? We’ve gotten the impression that the MIB was, I dunno, impersonating Jacob in that cabin for quite some time–was Ben getting orders from the wrong guy without knowing it, or was he getting orders from Jacob but twisting and perverting them, or is Jacob just as much of a creep as the MIB?

* I suppose it’s also worth pointing out that Ben didn’t seem to make the connection between the smoke monster and Jacob’s arch-enemy back when the monster became Alex and talked to him. It seems like he’d thought of the Monster as “The Island” in some way, up until the moment Fake Locke transformed into the Monster, killed those dudes in the base of the statue, then transformed back and admitted they were one and the same. So obviously Ben was in the dark about what was really going on for a long time.

* Come to think of it, Ben’s dead mother appearing to him was the first step of his life of crime, right? So MIB’d been monkeying with him for a very long time.

* Anyway, back to the episode itself:

* I can’t be the only person who kind of enjoyed watching the smoke monster wreck shop in the Temple, right? First of all, killing Others is always fun, and the more the merrier. Secondly, I was kind of disappointed in the Temple as a set. The use of an outright namedrop from the mouth of Hurley is not enough to offset how syndicated-ripoff-of-Indiana-Jones it felt. Compare and contrast with the wondrous ’70s EPCOT specificity of the Hatch–the Temple comes off generic and unimaginative. I don’t mind leaving it behind. But mostly, yeah, kill those Others!

* Crazy Claire isn’t just crazy and/or evil, she’s also obnoxious. That’s not a bad choice for that role.

* There aren’t a ton of characters who could sustain a whole episode of Lost without any Sawyer or Jack material in it. Sayid’s one of a very few.

* Nadia’s pretty.

* I was pulling hard for Eko or Jin being related to Sayid’s brother’s money mess, and thus was about 50% disappointed. But Keamy was a nice surprise! What a creepy, unpleasant man. Kevin Durand, yet another example of the show’s nigh-flawless villain casting. Great to see him back. And I’d forgotten until I hit Lostpedia just now to look up Durand’s name that his underling, Omar, was his underling in Widmore’s mercenary crew, too.

* No Other in Sayid’s flashsideways, though. I suppose Keamy fulfills that role in a sense. Or perhaps there’s some narrative significance to Others appearing with Jack, Locke, Kate, and Claire, but not Sayid…

* So how did Jin go from being held up in customs to Keamy’s freezer? Does the presence of Keamy mean that my long hoped-for connection between Jin and Eko in L.A. won’t happen? Does it mean that Widmore is involved as well?

* I’m wondering what the hell Sawyer and Jin were sitting around talking about while Fake Locke and Claire destroyed the Temple. Perhaps Jin was able to convince Sawyer that if crazy Claire thinks following Fake Locke is a good idea, it’s probably a bad idea.

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