My favorite part of the time travel part was John creating his own destiny of being "special". I thought that was a pretty aspect the time travel season.
I always wondered if what happened to Desmond was happening to everyone. Desmond could just remember it.
Yes, narratively the show was traveling sporadically through time long before the characters were literally time-traveling. That's part of the reason why it worked; it wasn't as big of a stretch as it may have seemed on the surface.
Same with the flashsideways, but in a different way. We were viewing what appeared to be two different worlds with the island story and mainland story, even though in that case we knew exactly how they were related. The sideways was basically no different to the flashbacks and forwards in this way, we just didn't know how it related to the island story until the end.
Well, the well wasn't there when they traveled back when John was going down there. Remember, he flashed and Sawyer was holding the rope. I assumed that Jacobs bro finished it afterward he turned into Smokey. So I just figured Locke was really the first one to turn it.
See, this is what I thought was the main point of the time travel and what I argued to people who thought the time travel was pointless. It was part of the Man In Black's plan to make Locke seem "special," particularly to Richard so Richard would make him the Others' leader. Richard checks up on the story at Locke's birth, testing him as a boy, and trying to sign the teen to science camp. In the 70's, Jack tells Richard to not give up on Locke. And Richard helps Locke pass Ben's "kill your father" test by giving him Sawyer's file.
Note that when not-Locke and Ben finally confront Jacob, he says, "Do you have any idea what I had to go through to get here?" or something similar.
That was a pet theory of mine after we saw Desmond's consciousness time travel. It was a neat idea that the flashbacks weren't just a narrative device.
Agree. Yes, flashbacks, flashforwards, flashsideways, Desmond unstuck in time, and literal time travel all worked narratively the same.
And ultimately, the flashsideways turned out to be a flashforward. Interestingly, Desmond being able to have his consciousness unstuck allowed his consciousness to travel to a time after he died!
Wow! I had not thought of that! It is interesting since ultimately, the show's premise was "whatever happened happened."
Somewhere on line, I found someone had edited all of Lost chronologically. Showing everything that happens, from when Jacob & MIB's real mother washes ashore to Jack's death (with the flashsideways as an epilogue) in chronological order. And I should have noticed it, but yes, the first time you see the wheel turned is by Locke.
It was an interesting site, because for one of my rewatches, that's what I wanted to do. It just seemed daunting (plus a lot of taking discs out and putting them back in).
No, the story was traveling through time with the flashbacks and forwards.So when we saw the flashbacks in season 1 -3, the characters were actually already time travelling without knowing it?![]()
See, this is what I thought was the main point of the time travel and what I argued to people who thought the time travel was pointless. It was part of the Man In Black's plan to make Locke seem "special," particularly to Richard so Richard would make him the Others' leader. Richard checks up on the story at Locke's birth, testing him as a boy, and trying to sign the teen to science camp. In the 70's, Jack tells Richard to not give up on Locke. And Richard helps Locke pass Ben's "kill your father" test by giving him Sawyer's file.
Note that when not-Locke and Ben finally confront Jacob, he says, "Do you have any idea what I had to go through to get here?" or something similar.
Do you think that was really Locke's father? I think it was old smokey. Cooper seemed so much more *****e than usual in that episode.
But Jacob helped Ben in creating that creepy house right?
I mean, when Ben showed John the house, Jacob came in and added more special effects which shocked even Ben... or am I remembering something wrong...
The guy in the cabin wasn't Jacob, it was probably the Man in Black, who had been trapped in there with the circle of ash. Jacob probably used the cabin at some point but did not at the time Ben took Locke there. Ben never made up Jacob, he was real, Ben just lied about his relationship with Jacob.
Is there an edit out there that shows only the Island stuff & in order without the flash backs & flash forwards ? The only off island stuff that would be seen is Desmond getting the group to remember the Island
This bit from The Candidate always gets to me. Hurley breaking down just kills me, and then the music is damn tear jerking. Amazing what a few notes on a piano can do.
[YT]kqwrBa-khRk[/YT]
This bit from The Candidate always gets to me. Hurley breaking down just kills me, and then the music is damn tear jerking. Amazing what a few notes on a piano can do.
[YT]kqwrBa-khRk[/YT]

Do you think that was really Locke's father? I think it was old smokey. Cooper seemed so much more *****e than usual in that episode.
The guy in the cabin wasn't Jacob, it was probably the Man in Black, who had been trapped in there with the circle of ash. Jacob probably used the cabin at some point but did not at the time Ben took Locke there. Ben never made up Jacob, he was real, Ben just lied about his relationship with Jacob.
Richard probably didn't know about Ben's supposed relationship with Jacob, or Richard knew about it but somehow didn't know it was fake. Perhaps Jacob just didn't tell him, which would make some sense given his intricate, complex scheming.Yeah, but he made up seeing and talking to Jacob, and i'm wondering why Richard was OK with that, especially when Ben would go out and come back with some fake Jacob order that Richard knew was bogus.
And who told Ben Jacob lived in that cabin? Richard? Richard knew he lived in the foot (weird sentence) but it had to of been him. I wonder if any leader of the others has ever seen Jacob (like Charles or Eloise).
The simplest answer is that Smokey was confined to the cabin very recent to Ben and Locke's pilgrimage to the cabin. I've actually heard a theory that the MIB also time-traveled with the Losties, so that there were essentially two smoke monsters on the island, one of which was the one trapped in the cabin.Definitely the guy in the cabin was the Man in Black (incidentally, it was Horace that built the cabin. And I believe it was MIB that impersonated Horace that told Locke he need to find him -meaning Horace's body in the Dharma mass grave pit). But the thing about the ash is troubling. While a lot of people figured out the ash circle was to ward off Smokey, since he was in the cabin, it was meant to keep him confined, no? And later it seemed the ash circle was broken (possibly by Claire?). The thing is, Smokey seemed quite active before this possible release (Christian, Eko's brother, Boone, Dave(?), and plain old Smoke Monster).
Well the Lost Encyclepedia says that when Ben took Locke to the Cabin they both failed to notice that were was a breach in the ash which meant that MIB could get in and was in fact in the Cabin. Then (I'm just guessing here the Encyclepedia doesn't say this) MIB was able to move the Cabin away from the Ash. Which explains why it moved when Hurley saw it and why it wasn't around the Ash when Locke saw Christian and Claire. So apparently that breach in the circle of ash has been there since we were first saw the Cabin.
Finally got around to rewatching the whole series, and man, what a ride. I didn't loathe the last season like most did, in fact I rather liked it. I was maybe a little let down by some of the unresolved stuff, and the afterlife thing, but on second watch, I actually really dug the afterlife flash-sideways angle, a lot.
I still think Lost had one of the most internally consistent time travel mechanics of any show or movie. You had Desmond and his special consciousness time travelling (which is a viable theory of time travel that many great scientific minds have stated could be very possible, especially if we figure out how to transfer or mess around with the human mind, which we're not far off from). And then you have the excellent physician time travel stuff, with Locke's compass and the man in black's use of time travel to create Locke's specialness. They did a great job sticking to the circular idea of time travel, which is something the Terminator movies couldn't even do after the first one, and Lost did it over a longer period of time and with even more strands to keep up with.
Well the Lost Encyclepedia says that when Ben took Locke to the Cabin they both failed to notice that were was a breach in the ash which meant that MIB could get in and was in fact in the Cabin.
To any and every one, what was the unresolved stuff?
Well the Lost Encyclepedia says that when Ben took Locke to the Cabin they both failed to notice that were was a breach in the ash which meant that MIB could get in and was in fact in the Cabin. Then (I'm just guessing here the Encyclepedia doesn't say this) MIB was able to move the Cabin away from the Ash. Which explains why it moved when Hurley saw it and why it wasn't around the Ash when Locke saw Christian and Claire. So apparently that breach in the circle of ash has been there since we were first saw the Cabin.
I always wondered if what happened to Desmond was happening to everyone. Desmond could just remember it.
The writers essentially accomplished all that with the Sideways as yet another purpose of that universe. Even a reason given to go back and revisit their own lives, to work out those unresolved issues of the tragedy of their lives and actually get over them. I found that subtle and sublime...When I think of this I always go back to the episode where we found out how Locke was paralyzed. When the the nurses are putting Locke in the wheelchair. He reacts as if it is happening again. He seems to have this no please not again element to it.
I think that when there mind flashes back to the island. They just don't remember traveling back to there previous life.
Yes, narratively the show was traveling sporadically through time long before the characters were literally time-traveling. That's part of the reason why it worked; it wasn't as big of a stretch as it may have seemed on the surface.
Yeah, but he made up seeing and talking to Jacob, and i'm wondering why Richard was OK with that, especially when Ben would go out and come back with some fake Jacob order that Richard knew was bogus.
And who told Ben Jacob lived in that cabin? Richard? Richard knew he lived in the foot (weird sentence) but it had to of been him. I wonder if any leader of the others has ever seen Jacob (like Charles or Eloise).

I'm mad that I haven't seen a single copy of the Lost Encyclopedia at any book store in the last several months.
Glad you enjoyed it, I rewatched the series about a month or two ago and enjoyed every bit of it. To any and every one, what was the unresolved stuff?