Great, great episode. Loved it.
Walt and Locke were very close. In hindsight, I'm not surprised that Locke manifested Walt to help and/or encourage him, though I certainly didn't expect to see Walt again this season. No one else on the Island (or who had been on the Island) is/was close to Locke. Walt fits the bill of comforting island manifestations seen by benighted individuals like Locke.
I clapped like a fool when Hurley drove that old VW bus through the campsite and mowed down those bad guys like cartoon bowling pins.
Did anyone else notice that in the flash forward (if indeed that's what it was) that Kate looked like she'd been Botoxed to within an inch of her life? And her lips looked like they’d been shot up with collagen injections.
Regarding the flash forward, I'm not sure exactly what that was. Yes, it seemed to indicate a possible life for Jack and Kate following their release from the Island. But is the future so certain? The past is done (unless we want to get into some deep philosophical discussions). The flashbacks we've seen have indicated solid experiences of the cast. But the future is mutable. Look at Desmond's "visions," sometimes they happen and sometimes they don't. I think we saw a version of the future that COULD happen for Jack, just like the Ghost of Christmas Future showed Scrooge a possible future for him if he didn't change his ways. I don't think any "future" we see on LOST is set in stone.
I also clapped and stomped like a madwoman when Jack gave Ben that much needed smack down. And, as Lisa said, when Rousseau casually but forcefully bitch-slapped the tied-to-a-tree Ben, I laughed out loud.
Is Charlie really dead? He looked like it. I had tears in my eyes, though I didn’t actually cry. But can we have a LOST without Charlie? He is such a pivotal character, I’m not sure he’ll stay dead. But, for now, I’d have to say that Charlie surely looked like he left this vale of tears.
Sawyer is deeply depressed and acting out like crazy. Killing bad guys, even after they surrender, is a wonderfully therapeutic way of acting out. He should continue it.
I’ve always thought Penny’s Dad was involved with Dharma, maybe even the owner of Dharma. I think the ship offshore is a Dharma ship, raised by Locke himself when he punched in “77” on the computer at the eye-patch guy’s house before he blew it up. How Penny just happened to be attempting to contact the Looking Glass hatch at the time Charlie and Desmond were there is stretching credibility to the extreme, but what the heck, this is LOST. That stuff seems to happen all the time.
Who was in the coffin? When it was finally revealed that we were seeing a flash forward, I thought it might be Sawyer, but I think Kate is with Sawyer, the guy she told Jack would “be wondering where” she was. Could the body in the coffin be Locke? Did Locke die lost and alone after he left his beloved Island? Nah, I don’t think Locke will ever leave the Island. Was it Ben? No to that, too. I think he’ll die on the Island by the end of the series. Jack came to the coffin, gently placed his hand on the top and looked as though he cared for whoever was in there. When the funeral director asked “friend or family,” Jack said “neither.” Who on the Island would Jack not consider a friend but about whom he’d care if he or she died? I tried to slow mo the part where Jack unfolds the obit, but I could not read it. I thought it looked like “lost American” as a heading, but that’s just a guess.
But who knows what’s going to happen over the next 2-3 years? Maybe the rescue force that comes to the Island from Naomi’s ship really is nasty, as Ben said, and, somehow, Ben becomes an ally with Jack against this new set of Others/Outsiders. Maybe it is Ben in the coffin…neither friend nor family.
The message of this episode is… do you really want to go home? Where is home? What is home? What’s waiting for all these wounded people if they do get home? Danielle, Ben, Locke, Rose…none of them wants to go home. Carl and Alex don’t know any other home. Kate faces an uncertain homecoming…jail or what? They’ve all seemed to come into their own on the Island. The Island’s brought out the best in them. Do they all really want to go home?
Reading is freedom.
The mind soars, no earthly cares,
no limitations.
A Maggers Haiku, 2005
Years ago my mother used to say to me... "In this world, Elwood, you can be oh so smart or oh so pleasant."
Well, for years I was smart.
I recommend pleasant.
You may quote me.
Elwood P. Dowd