Hey! I'm almost caught up with the rest of you.
I've done some mini-marathons and watched an episode or three whenever I had time and I've now watched the first five seasons completely plus the 2-part opening of season 6. Talk about being hooked by a show!
Maggers Wrote:Is anyone as tired of Kate as I am? She runs, she punches, she pulls a gun, she runs some more. She has no real depth as a character.
However, she does climb like a spunky little monkey. There is no tree or cage or pylon that she cannot mount to the tippy top with ease. But excellence on the monkey bars does not an interesting character make.
Yes. Sawyer pegged her right when he told her she was still running and couldn't make up her mind (when Locke banished her from Dharmaville just after the freighties arrived). Still, I was kind of surprised to find that I was actually very happy to see Sawyer and Juliet together in Dharmaville, 1977.
And seeing Sawyer lose Juliet not just once, but twice, was almost too much to take. I watched the end of season 5 and start of season 6 back-to-back so it was really painful to watch.
Maggers Wrote:I also love that when Hurley finally picks up a gun to protect himself and Sayid from what eventually turns out to be Jacob's ghost, he can't work it. Everyone else on that Island who has touched a gun has worked magic with it. They check, they click, they lock, they load, all smoothly and effortlessly, and that's no matter the gun, rifle, or automatic weapon. But Hurley just can't do it. It's a bit of almost unnoticed comedy, and that's another thing I like about the show.
That was funny. But he bluffed pretty well.
Maggers Wrote:Nope, I'm talking about the characters as we have seen them grow and mature FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE SERIES.
To hell with timelines and past and future and alternate realities. These individuals have been tossed around in time and now, seemingly, space, and they are growing and maturing and becoming the people they've always wanted to be but never knew they could be. THAT IS THE POINT OF THIS WHOLE SERIES, in my opinion.
It's about emotional growth and maturity, and my god, it's taken alot for these guys to get whatever messages they needed to get.
Like Kate needed to stop running and think about others (through her life with Aaron), and yes, she apparently is still running in her alternate life, but we don't have the information yet to comment cogently on the new story lines.
Jack is calming down and losing his need to control everything.
Hurley is manning up and growing up and seems to be willing to take charge now and again.
Forget where and when you see the characters, just watch how they have blossomed since the first episode.
This whole series is about RELATIONSHIPS. They are all connected. We've known that since the beginning. Little by little the interconnections have been revealed, and probably more will come. This show is not just about sci-fi fantasy stuff. It's about people living through and surviving those crazy sci-fi fantasy situations and growing and maturing and becoming better human beings as a result.
Most of these characters have grown and matured, some more than others. I think Sawyer has grown the most. In their first weeks on the beach he was a complete butt-head. And just look at him now. His whole pre-island life was driven by the need for revenge and taking whatever he could get his hands on. Now, when anyone would be able to understand why he'd want to kill Jack, he steps off and leaves Jack to live with the results of his choices.
And up until the very end of season 5 I really couldn't stand Jack. This new, more humble Jack is far more likeable.
That's it for now - I have a few more episodes to catch up on before I can read anymore of this thread. Back soon!