Archive for 2010

Come on, you son of a bitch!

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Grace, 20 — Singapore :

This is hard, because I can’t exactly pinpoint the one moment that has captured my heart. I guess I will have to go with one of my favourites, which is a Juliet moment.
It is the final scene in “The Incident”, right after she falls down the shaft. She wakes up all bloody and she is alone. She is broken inside, in physical pain, in emotional pain. I imagine all the people flashing through her mind as she lies there, crying. Sawyer, Rachel, Julian.
Then she sees the bomb, and she makes the decision to set it off. In Season 6, we learn that the reason behind her action is so Sawyer could get off the island. Not that she could go home, as we know it has been her desire since her introduction to Lost.
Juliet has had many selfless moments on Lost, from letting others leave the island first and saving Ben, but this is the one scene that hits me the hardest. In her last dying moments, she is still trying to put others first.

We’re gonna need to watch that again.

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Katie, 18 – California (USA) :

Season two was already off to an amazing start down in the hatch, and with the computer broken, things had reached a new level of intensity. Desmond begins to explain to Jack what the stakes are if the computer is not repaired, and finally tells him just to watch the film. Jack and Locke set up the projector and sit down. I’m on the edge of my seat, certain that this, yes, this will explain everything I’ve been wondering about for a year.
Pierre Chang (or Marvin Candle, I suppose) shows up on screen and begins to tell us all about the Dharma Initiative. My mind races, hanging on every word, trying to use all this new information to create an elaborate theory explaining what the island is and what these people are there for. The video ends, and Locke steals the words right out of my mouth – “We’re gonna need to watch that again“.
We still didn’t know much, but now we knew what the hatch was. It was the first real answer, and it was fantastic. Of course, it left a hundred new questions in its wake, but that moment was magical. I knew I loved the show, but now I knew I was addicted.

I just found out that my entire life had no purpose.

Friday, June 18th, 2010

Emily, 20 – Marlton (New Jersey, USA) :

My Lost moment was when Richard and Jack are inside the Black Rock discussing how Jacob gave Richard a gift. Jack has just been to the Lighthouse, where he saw that Jacob had been watching him for his entire life. Richard asks Jack to help him kill himself and begins to explain his life to Jack. He tells Jack how Jacob gave him a “gift” that has become his curse. The show took on an entirely new meaning to me when Richard says “I devoted my life longer than you can possibly imagine, in service of a man who told me that everything was happening for a reason, that he had a plan, a plan that I was a part of. And when the time was right, that he’d share it with me. And now that man’s gone, so I want to kill myself Jack, because I just found out that my entire life had no purpose.” Not only did I feel even more connected to the show than ever, but I began to think about my own life and the people in it.

You make your own luck. There is no curse!

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

Nick, 20 – Daytona Beach (Florida, USA) :

This episode was full of hope, and the scene near the end of the episode with Hurley, Charlie, Jin and Sawyer remains as one of my all-time favorite Lost moments. I still tense up when they are careening down the hill while Hurley tries to get the van started, even though I know the result. When the van kicks into gear, and the song “Shambala” starts playing, I can’t help but cheer with them. This moment is made all the better by the following scene with Jin bringing Sun a flower, Charlie with Claire, Sawyer holding a beer and wondering about Kate, and Hurley who is still near the van, with the orchestral version of “Shambala” playing in the background. Who knew you could capture the beauty and emotion of hope on television?

Can’t we — just start all over?

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

Alanna, 17 – Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, USA) :

I love this episode solely for the ending. Seeing Sun in the bathing suit, uncovered for the first time on the island, had a freeing feeling. She was breaking free of the bonds held by her culture and husband, and I loved it. I love Sun as a character, and this small step confirmed to me that she had a fight in her.
I have been a Lost fan for a long time now. I enjoy the show, and I love the questions it presents.

You’re MINE!

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Silvia, 21 – California (USA) :

This is definitely one of my many favorite Lost moments! Just the way Ben’s voice gets all shaky and serious when he’s explaining to Juliet why he asked Goodwin to join the camp group knowing he would be killed, then the eerie tone in his voice when he yells “YOU’RE MINE!“. He acts like a child who always wants his way… except he’s far more dangerous and evil!
Also, not to mention the way he can becomes so angry and emotional then just wipes all emotions from his face and calmy says “Take as much time as you need” then proceeds to turn and skip off into the distance [laughs]… It gives me goosebumps. It seems as if it his way of being romantic, but in a very twisted and evil way. Michael Emerson is an amazing actor and one of my favorite characters on the show.

Okay, so it’s 1977.

Sunday, June 13th, 2010

Steven, 20, bookstore clerk – Phoenix (Arizona, USA) :

When Hurley, Jack, and Kate stepped out of the Dharma van into the orientation process of joining the Dharma Initiative, it finally hit me. Anything is possible. Imagine putting so much of yourself into understanding something, to then go off and actually experience it. Imagine reading the works of Plato, and then going and having a conversation with him. As their feet hit the ground after stepping out from the van, I was hit with a huge sense of envy on their part. If only we could experience everything. If only we could see both sides of everything. This is what the show is and has always been to me. Dualism. Relativism. Life.

Para…lyzed.

Sunday, June 13th, 2010

Gideon, 21 – Athens (Georgia, USA) :

I came in a little bit late to Lost (I watched seasons 1 and 2 before season 3 aired), so I had already been spoiled for a majority of the twists and deaths. But in “Exposé”, an episode widely panned by a majority of viewers, came two deaths that I wasn’t spoiled for. I actually enjoyed “Exposé”, it reminded me of old Twilight Zone episodes I used to watch on Thanksgiving weekend with my dad. It was little bit of CSI: Lost and a little bit Twilight Zone, with Billie Dee Williams thrown in to give it a bit of class.
The twist ending of the episode, where Nikki and Paulo are buried alive, gave me chills. Every single time I see that scene, it gives me chills. The entire episode is a build up to this moment, when you realize that Nikki and Paulo aren’t dead, but just paralyzed, and these two characters that we have loved for two and half seasons, Hurley and Sawyer, are about to bury these hated newcomers alive. Nikki’s eyes flying open, and knowing that she knows that she’s dead, but unable to do anything is a perfect shot. Giacchino’s score is perfectly suited to the morbid end, building and building as Hurley and Sawyer pile more and more sand on the grave of the living. When the gravediggers pick up their shovels and walk away, Lost does the same to the viewer, forcing the shock and pulling no punches.

Why do you keep looking at me?

Saturday, June 12th, 2010

Randy, 20 – Kansas City (Missouri, USA) :

Three years after the Losties left the island, we are in a church where there is a room in the back. In this room we meet Elderly Eloise. Later we find out that it is Daniel’s mother. Surprise! She talks about finding the island and going back. At first I thought she was crazy and I wondered to myself how in the world she could know all this stuff.
Then, after many episodes of travelling through time we end up with a small group of people handling a very large bomb. One of those group members was a 20 or so year old blonde girl. Halfway through the episode she states that her name is Elly.
That moment was infinite for me, I pieced it together instantly that Ely was Eloise when she was younger. She became my favorite character of the show after that, for reasons I still do not know of.

Guys, where are we?

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Sara, 20 – Budapest (Hungary) :

I remember when I first saw the Pilot, I kept thinking “What the hell is going on?” – as I’m sure millions of others did too. At the end of the second part, when they hear Rousseau’s signal and actually realize that there’s someone on the Island for 16 years and she probably never been rescued, this expression on Charlie’s face when he says “Guys, where are we?” just perfectly sums up everything about the Pilot and even the first season as a whole, when the audience, as well as the Losties, knew absolutely nothing. I think this scene, this question, kind of prepared you for the great journey that is/was Lost.
This may be a cliche that I chose this moment but it was the very first cliffhanger, one of the firsts of the many WTFs and I remember how it gave me chills. It still does. Not to mention after he said it, just bamm… LOST. I was like, “Wait, what just happened? They can’t end it here!” With this at the Pilot’s climax, they bought me for 6 terrific seasons.