APhew Wrote:What really struck me with last nights episode was the human element. It's easy to just look at Kate, Jack, and Sawyer as their characters. We see this island with these castaways and all this strangeness going on. It can really put up a barrier between us and the emotions they are going through. Maybe it's just me, but last night it was really portrayed well the predicament these three have found themselves. The first two seasons built up the stories of all these characters and have led us to somewhere we never could have expected. It all came to a head in last nights episode. With Jack and Kate it was more obvious, but with Sawyer there was just the slightest glimmer of hopelessness when he saw Kate put into that cage. Their lives have been completely uprooted, they have been through a plane crash, trying to survive on the island, dealing with things inexplicable, and it has ended up with them being imprisoned by a group of people they know little to nothing about who seem to know everything. You could see it in Jack and Kate's eyes, the complete anger and frustration, the dispondency and hopelessness of their situation. It really struck me for the first time just how human these people are. And for that, it truly became the best show on television for me....
EXACTLY! Beautifully put, as always.
For me it was the moment Kate came out of the shower, terrified to find she had no clothes. For a woman, that touches on the worst sort of fear about what may come. To be naked and helpless will strip you (no pun intended) of your dignity and humanity more quickly than anything else. The humiliation, fear, helplessness, anger and confusion all flashed across her face. And then for her to be told what to wear and dressed up like a doll, well, you could see the simmering rage in her eyes.
These extremely independent individuals are now totally controlled by outside forces about which they know nothing. Their sense of helplessness and frustration mounted with every scene and was visible in each character.
I especially appreciated Sawyer and the manner in which he conducts himself. He has always been flippant and nonchalant, never taking anything seriously, at least on the surface. I saw last night how that can be an extremely effective coping mechanism, especially when you cannot control any element of your environment or circumstance. When he gave his hard won fish biscuit to Kate I nearly cried.
I also think the song that Juliette put in her CD player was significant, Petula Clark's "Downtown."
When you're alone
and life is making you lonely
you can always go
downtown.
Juliette can't go downtown or anywhere else but the compound, or so it seems. I was struck by the isolation of the compound as the camera pulled back again and again in that first scene.
I am not taking anything at face value in this season. Nothing is as it seems. I've no idea where they are going or how they will get there.