Showing posts with label The Last Recruit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Last Recruit. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Lost Fantasy League: Week 12 Update!


Our third and final double-points episode has come and gone but it has certainly left a major mark on the Lost Fantasy League! "The Last Recruit" would have been a very high scoring episode without the double-points factor but with it, it has become the highest-scoring episode in LFL history! How many points you ask? Try 3,560!

The outcome of this episode has led to some exciting races within our character groupings, so nothing is certain yet! We have ruled out a number of characters from contention, so check out the video above to see if we think any of your picks are out of the running for their groups. Also, be sure to check out all of the scores and stats below to see if you have risen or fallen in the standings!

IMPORTANT: There were many point adjustments made this past week. These adjustments have had a large impact on a number of characters. These changes will make your weekly score look incorrect for this week. Please be sure to check out these changes in the 'Important Points Rulings' section.

Lost Fantasy Team Lookup Table | LFL on Facebook | G-Man on Twitter | Email G-Man





Monday, May 3, 2010

Episode 6x13 The Last Recruit - ODI LOSTometer Episode Grade Chart

Hey All,
Hope the one week break wasn't too long for you all? Well the last episode was an ideal "transitional" episode putting our Losties in position for the final stretch run.

There were several interesting scenes and it was almost an overload of information as the ALT stories began to merge and the on island Losties seemed like they were going to work together until Jack decided to jump ship and return to the main land. We had the Sun/Jin reunion, the Jack/Claire reunion, Jack and Locke meeting up both off island and on island and much more!

Some of the graders loved the episode while others thought it was just ok. We received a good mix of grades from the blogger/media sites and the final average grade was a "B".

Most of the graders mentioned that they thought the episode was a good episode but mainly used to setup the rest of the season.

BTW, yes Karen finally decided to NOT give an A+ to an episode! You can see why below because she is the "Quote of the Week".

Quote of the Week via Karen's LOST Notebook: "It is breaking my heart to do this, but even though we got A LOT of important information and connections, something felt...wrong. Who knows, maybe that was the intention. Witnessing Sun and Jin's reunion was wonderful but feel short in the heartfelt passionate love they're supposed to share. I felt like they were reunited after a weekend apart as opposed to the lengthy time frame we're led to believe they were apart. Again, who knows, maybe that's a bit of "info" we should keep in mind."

Once again thanks to all that are participating and don't forget to check out their sites and recaps at the following links:

DarkUFO | b3rt4 | Karen's LOST Notebook | Vozzek | Jeff Jensen - EW | Ryan McGee - Zap2it | Peter - SlashFilm | Cultural Learnings | Congested | Jay and Jack Podcast | FourToedFoot | DocArzt | SL-LOST | Jopinionated | Washington Post - LOST Bloggers | LOSTzilla | LOST-Media | LOST-Forum | AV Club | Lyly Ford | LOST Mythos Podcast | LOST Blog | F***YeahLOST | Luhks | LOST in Portugal | LOST-Board.de | Seat42F | Rap Basement LOSTIES | LOST in Greece | Find LOST with Carmel | LOST Revisited Now Podcast | PopWrap Blog - NY Post


Source: The ODI

ODI LOSTcast 66 - Episode 6x13 The Last Recruit - Super-Sized Recap

Hey All,
With the one week break we were able to record two separate podcasts for you all. The first one was the recap podcast that is super-sized and the second podcast which will be posted tomorrow, is a bonus podcast with LOST Blogger Erika from LongLiveLocke.com and our good friend DarkUFO.

Part of DarkUFO's segment contained spoilers, so we made that it's own little mini podcast for all the spoiler lovers. So if you want to hear the spoilers podcast you can find it on iTunes or in the spoilers section of the site.

Of course in the recap podcast, Karen, Vozzek and myself go into every detail and analyze each scene of The Last Recruit. We also had some nice debates about the MiB/Locke, his intentions and what the end game is.

I am sure you all will enjoy it!

The podcast was posted to iTunes late last night but for those that can not access iTunes, here is a link to the audio player and download link:

http://the-odi.blogspot.com/2010/05/odi-lostcast-66-episode-6x13-last.html

Sunday, May 2, 2010

S6Ep13: "The Last Recruit" Recap and Analysis, by Erika

Here is the Episode 6.13 recap from Erika Olson (aka "e") from LongLiveLocke.com.

"The Last Recruit" was one of those episodes where the time just flew by because the hour was focused on getting characters in certain places rather than the overall mythology of the show. It seriously seemed like only 20 minutes had passed by the time the end credits rolled. So there's not a heck of a lot to say theory-wise. I still really enjoyed the episode, though it didn't live up to the crazy-high expectations I had based on that kick-ass Willy Wonka preview.

I'll tackle the alternate timeline first.

- If, as I speculated last week, Des had mowed Locke down in the hopes of inducing his Island memories through a traumatic experience, then his plan worked. Did you catch how Locke said Helen was the woman he "was going" to marry... rather than the woman he is going to marry? That's a sign he's seen the other side, in my book. Same goes for Sun... she'd been shot and thought she might have lost her baby, which was certainly enough to trigger visions of the original timeline. That's why she was freaking out and yelling, "Oh no, it's him!" when being wheeled into the hospital next to Locke (which was a totally cool scene). She thought it was the MIB. When she was out of surgery later, however, she seemed to be back to normal after she found out the baby was OK. But if she runs into any of the 815ers again, will that trigger another memory?

- Over at the police station, Sawyer was flirting it up with Fugitive Kate and musing over how many times they'd run into each other. I'm sure tons of Skaters cheered when Sawyer said, "It's like something wants us together" (or whatever the line was -- close enough). And did you notice how he was eating an apple and offered it to Kate as well? Is that a hint they're going to turn out to be the Adam and Eve skeletons? Then he learned about how Sayid escaped from what would go down in the record books as the Good Eggs Massacre, and he and Miles set out to find their prime suspect. I'm wondering if Kate will be gone by the time they return. I'm thinking she will be.


- Alt Sayid is totally weak and I was not digging him in this episode. His hair is a disgrace, he doesn't wear tank tops, and he was basically brought down by a freakin' garden hose. I mean, come on. What happened to Badass Sayid? He doesn't exist in the Sideways Timeline. I actually prefer Dead Eye Sayid. And now it's clear that NO version of Sayid is meant to live happily ever after with Nadia, dammit.

- Elsewhere in the sideways world, Des is stalking 815ers once again. This time he's found Claire, and he convinces her to talk with his attorney friend before she goes in to sign her adoption papers. If I were Claire I would've kicked his creepy butt down the escalator. He was coming on pretty strong, no? But whatever... she agreed, and since I was spoiled by the beginning credits I knew the lawyer would most likely be Ilana. And wouldn't you know it, she'd been looking for Claire in an attempt to settle Christian Shephard's affairs. I don't really know if that's why Des brought her to Ilana, or if he was just trying to get her to reconsider giving Aaron away, but regardless, the detour served to get her face-to-face with another 815er. That never seems to be enough to trigger a vision, though. Maybe she'll randomly go into labor the next time she and Jack reconvene with Ilana and then she'll be like, "I remember you! And I remember ME... with some sort of dead rodent on my head... what tha... ?"

- Jack has to make a quick exit from the will reading in order to attend to Locke. Whom he recognizes after looking in yet another mirror... this one underneath the operating table, very similar to how Ben was laid out for his spinal tumor surgery back in the infamous "KATE! DAMMIT! RUN!" episode (shout-out to Josh G). So call it -- will Jack make Locke able to walk again or not? I'm guessing he will, because then Locke will be one more 815er who is getting everything he ever hoped for in the alternate timeline. If he can walk Helen down the aisle in this life, is that really worth giving up in order to be called "a sucker" by the Smoke Monster? No. Unless something (or someone) convinces him that he will save the world by doing so. I should also mention that when Locke wakes up from the surgery, I believe he will have all of his Island memories still intact. The question is whether or not he'll "remember" anything AFTER the point he's killed by Ben. As in, will he be able to access the thoughts of the MIB since he's parading around in his form?

On to the Island.

- Things kicked off on a very awesome note with the much-anticipated Jack/Fake Locke discussion. We got confirmation that the MIB had been masquerading as Christian the whole time. He also told Jack that all he'd ever been trying to do was help Jack leave the Island, but that had been impossible while Jacob was still alive. Now that Jacob was gone, they could all bust outta there... but it had to be all of them leaving together. Jack was like "OK..." but inside his head he wasn't buyin' it. Especially after the MIB called Locke a sucker for believing that the Island brought them there for a reason. Since Jack is now a Man of Faith, the MIB had essentially just called him a pitiful punk, too.

- On his way back to the main camp, Jack ran into Claire, who attempted to bond with her long-lost half-bro. But he told her politely that he wasn't exactly on her and Fake Locke's side just yet. And she was like, "Ha, ha, joke's on you." She believed that the second the MIB spoke with Jack, Jack was a goner.


- Then Zoe strolled into the clearing and showed off Widmore's Explosion Skillz by decimating part of the jungle right behind them. It reminded me of that scene in The Princess Bride when Fezzik (Andre the Giant) threw a boulder near the Man in Black's head (AAHHHH, I just realized yet another Lost/Princess Bride similarity... and not even the one I was originally pointing out!) and said, "I did that on purpose. I didn't have to miss." Fake Locke was not fazed and destroyed her walkie-talkie the second she left. "Here we go," he sighed.

- That's when everyone started cutting deals left and right, and my husband pointed out that the music sounded very Imperial March-like. Maybe because of Hurley's awesome dark side/Anakin lines. Anyway, Fake Locke announced the plan, and then Sawyer filled Jack in on the Plan B while Fake Locke was telling Sayid to go finish off Des.

- Am I nuts, or did the preview show Sayid's gun firing down into the well? 'Cause that didn't happen. Instead, I'm pretty sure Des guilted Sayid into NOT shooting him. Or else, you know, we probably would've seen Desmond's death scene, don't you think? So between Sayid NOT killing Zoe over on Hydra and now not killing Des, I'm wondering if there's perhaps a glimmer of He of the Black Tank Top left in those dead eyes? I hope there is!

- Same goes for Claire... everyone had counted her out, but then she ended up choosing to sail away with her original peeps instead of run to the MIB and tattle on them. Though I did like her "he's gonna be really mad" warning. And kudos to Kate for sticking to the original reason she came back to the Island. I was happy to see that.

- So everyone's on the boat, but then something doesn't sit right with Jack. "If that thing wants us to leave... maybe it's afraid of what will happen if we stay." I did NOT see him jumping off the boat and swimming back coming at all. The Mad Doctor is BACK, folks!

- The other group makes it to Hydra and out of nowhere comes Jin in a blindingly white t-shirt for his three-years-in-the-making reunion with Sun. I KNOW I was not the only one who feared they were going to get zapped by the sonic fence. I could barely watch that scene I was so worried.



But the hubby and wife duo didn't get to celebrate for very long, because then Widmore's team threatened everyone at gunpoint while also beginning to bomb the bejeezus out of the main Island.

- Speaking of... Jack makes it back to shore and then immediately gets blown sky high (though he miraculously remained in one piece). Fake Locke carries him into the jungle a ways where they appear to be out of imminent danger for the moment. He assures Jack that he'll be safe because "you're with me now." This brings me to my last point -- are we supposed to gather from this episode's title that JACK is "the last recruit"? Cause, um, I didn't really count Hurley, Sawyer, Kate or anyone else outside Claire and Sayid as technically being "recruited" by the MIB. Usually the episode titles make sense to me, but this one didn't.

Clearly, Jack is NOT on the MIB's side. If anything, he's just going to pretend to go along with him in order to stall... hoping that the Island will reveal whatever it was that he was brought there to do in the first place. The Island better hurry up! And while I'm on the topic of the Island -- I really pray this series doesn't end over on Hydra. That just wouldn't be right.

That's it for "The Last Recruit." On a semi-related note, I will not be able to write another recap until the finale, as I have a book manuscript due this month that I'm struggling to finish. I explain a bit more about my plans for the May 4, 11 and 18th episodes at the beginning of my post over at Long Live Locke here. Thanks for your support during this stressful time!

- e

Saturday, April 24, 2010

The Spoilered Perspective Podcast: The Last Recruit

Here's the link for people to download or listen to the "The LOST Spoilered Perspective," covering "The Last Recruit," hosted by BookhouseBoy and Thirty-Fiver of the SpoilerTV Forums. The Spoilered Perspective recaps the latest episode including all of the information that people who read spoilers knew about the episode ahead of time (but without any actual spoilers for unaired episodes): http://www.talkshoe.com/tc/77072



The podcast is also available at ITunes:

Episode 8, reviewing season 6 thus far while we wait for 6x14, will be broadcast live at http://www.talkshoe.com/tc/77072 at 8PM EST on Wednesday, April 28th. Fans can also read the text version of the Spoilered Perspective (6x13) here: http://www.spoilertv.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?f=17&t=18251

What did you think of Episode 6.13 - The Last Recruit

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Discuss this episode in our Official Episode Discussion Thread.

Here is the updated League Table after 21,000 votes.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Episode 6x13 The Last Recruit - Instant Dharma Recap via AOL TV

Things I Noticed - "The Last Recruit" by Vozzek69

THINGS I NOTICED - The Last Recruit

Let's face facts: The Last Recruit was a transitional episode. With only a few weeks left to tell the final chapters of LOST's story, the episode was designed to place everyone exactly where they need to be. The writers did what they could to keep things interesting, writing in some of Sawyer's best season six jokes and even saving the Sun/Jin reunion to help out. In the end, it was a good episode - but that's pretty much all it was. Things I Noticed:

Who's Your Daddy?

We've been drooling for a long time to see this confrontation between Jack and Flocke; a meeting that's starting to feel a lot like the calm before a great big storm. Some of the answers we get here are exactly what we expect, but some of the dark man's words also seem contradictory when compared to things he's been telling our other LOST characters.

I loved the visuals in this scene. Flocke leads Jack to a clearing with two rocks so that they might sit down and finally discuss things, yet Jack refuses to sit. Instead, Jack gets up close and personal with the entity assuming John's form, almost as if studying him. As the MIB sits comfortably Jack squats before him, bringing himself down to the same level, staring his opponent face to face, eye to eye. Like Desmond, Jack is showing no fear or apprehension here. There's an intangible equality between these two characters, as if both respect each other's power and neither wants to give his opponent any advantage.

We get a big reveal here, going all the way back to the beginning of the show: the dark man was responsible for representing himself as Jack's father. For a split second I thought he might be bullshitting, based solely upon his hesitation when Jack asked him why. But then the dark man mentions leading Jack to water, which is exactly what happened in White Rabbit. Unless the MIB conjured up this memory from John Locke's consciousness - which is entirely possible, since John was there too - one of LOST's biggest long-standing mysteries gets solved, right here in this clearing.

The dark man points out John Locke's foolishness in thinking he was brought to the island for a reason, even going as far as to call him stupid and a sucker. Initially this seems to contradict what he'd said about admiring John Locke during LAX. Looking back however, all the smoke monster admired about John was that he recognized his on-island existence was much better than his previous life. While everyone else was desperately looking for a way to leave, John Locke was the only person with a clear enough vision to want to stay.

What happens next is the same thing that happened to all the other recruits: the MIB dangles a carrot. Based upon Jack's actions for the past five and a half seasons, that carrot is rescue. Flocke knows how vehemently Jack has resisted the island's call. He knows how often Jack has laughed in John Locke's face whenever destiny or purpose was mentioned. Flocke is banking on the same old Jack, the guy who called the freighter, the one who fought so hard to leave the island. He emphatically bashes John Locke's belief that "everyone is here for a reason", and he intentionally does this in front of Jack as a way of saying "There's nothing here for any of us."

But once again, the MIB might be lying his ass off. Although Jacob may be dead, the dark man realizes that his recruits are still dangerous. If a candidate happens to take up Jacob's gauntlet, the smoke monster will once again be stuck on the island for good. I'm thinking Flocke recognizes something within Jack during that first staredown in the clearing... something that tells him "he's the one". Above all other possible recruits, Flocke seems to fear Jack the most. Unable to kill him, sending Jack off the island becomes top priority. And yes, I believe he gave Sawyer access to the boat for that exact purpose.

If you think about it, the dark man has sent Jack off the island before. I've long theorized that Jacob was the one trying to kill Charlie in season three, to prevent him from flipping that jamming switch in the Looking Glass. The dark man's countermove was to give Desmond his visions, saving Charlie just long enough to get the job done. This brought the freighter to the island, ultimately allowing the Oceanic Six to leave. Jacob eventually brought them back, using mirrors to show each of them they were living a lie.

This is the chess game, move by move. Jacob (or perhaps the island) wants the characters to stay, to accomplish some end goal. The dark man wants them dead or gone, away from the island. Back and forth they've pushed their playing pieces across the game board, and even now they're still making moves. The dark man is about to send Jack off the island for what he hopes is the last time... but before getting to him, Jacob has already instilled a strong sense of purpose within Jack during Lighthouse. Enough purpose to stop him from leaving the island on his own accord, and staying by his own choice.

Another line I thought interesting this scene came from Flocke: "You were trapped on this island before you even got here". While it's representative of Jack being fated to come to this place since the moment Jacob touched him, it also gave me a sense of how far-reaching the "island" really is.


If I'm Not The Same, Then The Question Is... Who In The World Am I?

A very important thing happens in the ambulance as Locke mentions Helen. The way he spoke, the way he referred to her and asked Ben to call him 'John'... it seemed for a minute as if the old Locke was talking here. Instead of just asking for his fiance' as LAX_Locke would've done, it appeared as if the John Locke we all know and love - the one we last saw being choked to death by Ben - had somehow made the transition into LAX_Locke's broken body. He referred to Helen as a man near death and remembering the bigger regrets of his life; of losing someone he loved and desperately wanted to marry.

Are we getting Locke back??? I really hope so. I totally love this angle, and it would really bring John's story full circle. Dying abruptly the way he did, it always seemed like John Locke's story was never finished. We'd all been rooting for him to break out of being the gullible off-island loser we'd watched for so long, and we never got the chance to see that happen. Perhaps, if John's transition becomes permanent, we'll finally get the opportunity and closure needed for such a great, epic character.

Sun on the other hand, is experiencing a transition of her own. Island Sun's current memories include seeing John Locke as a monster, which is why she's screaming in fear as she's rushed into the hospital alongside him. In both cases the transition occurs during trauma, semi consciousness, or near-death. This, or a brutal headwound, seems to be yet another way for the characters to suddenly remember their previous island lives.


You're My Brotha From Another Mother!

I'm still confused by the sickness. There are times when Claire seems batshit crazy, and times when she's lucid enough to resemble the old Claire. Her scene with Jack was cool enough, but the brother/sister thing was a little underwhelming. I think it's a case of the writers giving this answer away so very long ago, and then waiting a bit too long to put these two characters together again. The impact of their on-screen connection as siblings has sorta, well, totally worn off for me by now.

Claire does point out that Jack is now "with Locke", something Jack seems to know nothing about. I'm pretty sure Jack hasn't accepted any offer from Flocke just yet, but if he'd stayed on the boat that might have qualified. By making his own decision and not taking what the dark man offered him (even indirectly) I think Jack remains on his own side. His choice to stay on the island this episode was a big one.


You Can Always Bring People Back From The Dark Side

Hugo's Star Wars reference here might not be all that far off. While we all watched Sayid's degeneration into a zombie-like bad guy, we've also seen recent signs of improvement. First he lets Zoe live (which didn't make the dark man very happy), and last episode he cared enough to start questioning Flocke's whereabouts and motives. This week, Sayid seems to struggle greatly with shooting Desmond in cold blood.

I think there are two possibilities at this point. In one, Sayid has been playing dumb the whole time, firmly implanting himself within Flocke's camp as a sleeper agent. While I really like this idea, it doesn't seem to make sense for me - especially after watching the way he killed Dogen. That Sayid was just way too dark to be pretending.

More likely I think, Sayid has been gradually 'getting better'. I don't think for a minute that he'll fully recover, but he's consciously regretting his decision to take the dark man's offer and is beginning to rethink things. Sayid is demonstrating remorse and independent thought, which will probably lead to a very kickass uprising. I'd love to see his character go out in a blaze of glory, kicking a huge dent in the MIB's overall master plan as he goes down.

And I don't think for a minute that he killed Desmond in that well.


An Apple a Day Keeps The Po-Po Away

I have to admit, this was almost a wasted scene. If it was designed to answer the not-so-burning question as to why Sawyer let Kate go in the airport elevator, then fine. It didn't really do it for me, because that wasn't even a mystery as far as I was concerned. Thankfully, Miles calls us away from this scene so we can move to more interesting on-island events.

The only thing noteworthy here: just about everyone in this scene wears black. Sawyer, Kate, the police, the detectives... even the hat Kate puts on as Sawyer runs off to catch Sayid is black. In stark contrast are the two bright red apples, perhaps once again a reference to a third, outside influence. Sawyer eats his apple, but Kate leaves hers alone. Not yet sure what that means.


Mortar Strike Beats Rock, Paper, And Scissor

Widmore's return to the island has been marked by some real high-tech shit. First the sonic fence, then the giant copper doughnuts... now it looks like he's got GPS-guided mortars. Unlike the Shadow-Statue people, it's good to see he came prepared. But unlike the filthy barefoot leader who shunned technology during his on-island rule, it certainly seems as if Charles Widmore has turned over a new leaf.

It occurred to me that if Flocke wants all the candidates dead he might encourage and welcome a mortar strike. We already know it won't hurt him, and it indirectly accomplishes his end goal. Smashing the walkie with his staff may have been an act of defiance, but it also may have been his way of intentionally provoking another hit. We see this happen later on, at the end of the episode.


Desmond's Comprehensive Guide To Stalking Blondes

Alright, I need to come clean about something. In watching the whole Desmond/Claire/Illana/Jack/David at the law office sequence, I was just looking for it to end. It's not that it was bad, because it wasn't. But as these precious long minutes ticked off my DVR clock... I found myself just wanting more than this.

On one hand I feel bad for feeling this way. I know the LAX storyline is important to the overall plot, and I trust the writers are eventually going somewhere cool with it. At the same time though, there's a big part of me that knows we're in the home stretch. That part wants as much time on the island as possible, because let's face it: the LAX stuff isn't half as exciting.

I noticed the big sign that said "Visitors must sign in". Both Claire and Desmond signed it, and later Jack but not David. Perhaps this is indicative of our heroes being nothing more than visitors to this timeline. I also loved the upward-angled shot of the long escalator, which reminded me instantly of Boone's warning vision to Locke in further instructions. It wasn't the same escalator, but it was close.

Desmond is borderline stalking Claire here, practically shoving her into Illana's office. Maybe his goal is to reunite her with Jack, hoping for some type of mutual recollection. It looked more to me however, as if his goal was to stop her from signing those adoption papers. He mentions that she shouldn't do something "irreversible", which directly conflicts with Jack's LAX assertion that nothing is irreversible.


Have You Seen Cindy? She's Starting To Give Taller Ghost Walt a Run For His Money

As Flocke once again instructs his group to break camp, he explains their new mission: get to Hydra island. By now there are so many red-shirts that he sends Sawyer off to pick up Desmond's boat, presumably so everyone can travel in style. "Take whoever you want", he tells Sawyer, knowing full well that he'll pick Kate. And that's when the MIB moves on to more pressing business: getting Sayid to kill Desmond.

If you ask me, Flocke doesn't care about his followers at all. The recruits are all he's ever been concerned about, and the rest of the red-shirts are there to keep up appearances. He'd just as soon take a couple of outriggers to Hydra island, leaving all non-essential personnel behind.

For this reason, we should consider the possibility that the MIB knew exactly what would happen here. Flocke sends Sawyer off knowing full well he intends to sail away from the island, and even more importantly, that he'll take Jack with him. He disappears with Sayid, intentionally moving out of sight in order to to give these two time to hatch their "plot". Later on it appears he's listening to Jack and Claire's conversation, and then conveniently picks this time to go off and look for Sayid, giving Jack plenty of time to gather his allies and bolt.

At the same time, Flocke really does want Desmond dead. He might not know exactly why Widmore brought Des to the island, but he can't take any chances in leaving him alive. The smoke monster also can't kill Desmond directly, lending more weight to the theory that Desmond might just be a candidate. We see Sayid's hesitation here, as the dark man asks if he still wants what he offered him. At this point, Sayid is not so sure.

At the well, Desmond wisely shows Sayid a reflection of himself through Nadia's eyes. "What will you tell her?" Des hits a home run here. Perhaps the only thing Sayid cares about at this point is what Nadia thinks of him, both on and off the island. In the LAX world he packs his things, telling Nadia: "I'm leaving, and I'm never going to be able to come back again." This line is not only similar to the way Ben described leaving the island, it's also an ominous sign that maybe we're coming up on the end of Sayid's storyline.


Welcome Back To The Cool Kids Table

I thought they wrapped up the crazy-Claire story rather nicely here, as Kate finally convinces Claire to stop being "one of them" and start being "one of us" again. This took some very slick wording and non-threatening movement, but it also took an extension of Kate's genuine feelings for both Claire and Aaron.

Turns out three seasons ago the dark man had offered Claire the one thing she needed most: commitment. During the course of her life she'd been abandoned by her family, by her boyfriend Thomas, and then seemingly by everyone she crashed onto the island with. Cue the dark man approaching as Christian Shephard, the father-figure Claire never had. Three years and a squirrel-baby later, her loyalty now lies with him.

Kate says everything necessary to recruit Claire back into the heroes' fold. She's truthful about her reasons for returning to the island, and honest about her intentions to reunite Claire with Aaron. Claire stops blindly hating Kate just long enough to realize that she did nothing wrong, and starts to trust her again. Even so, we can't blame Kate one bit for taking Claire's rifle.


Captain Sawyer... Driving Cool Water Sales Up 300%

As they sail away from the island for what might be the last time, Sawyer's conversation with Jack mirrors the one they had at the end of The Incident. Jack was a man of faith then, and he's a man of even stronger faith now. By contrast, Sawyer's pendulum has swung in the opposite direction: at one point he was content to stay on the island forever, but now he only wants off. What Sawyer doesn't realize is that the off-island world isn't all that it's cracked up to be... something Jack learned first-hand a few seasons back.

All that hardcore pondering with a faraway look in his eye has finally done Jack some good: he's starting to see the big picture. The further they get from land, the more uneasy Jack feels about leaving. Inwardly, he somehow knows there's something still left to do. He steals his agenda, mannerisms, and even full lines of dialogue directly from his old nemesis... John Locke, man of faith. Sawyer sees this, and is hella-pissed.

After apologizing once more for Juliet, Jack takes his own leap of faith. His jump parallels Sawyer's jump from the helicopter, complete with Kate calling out after him and Jack swimming to shore. Kate parallels Jack's own words from the season three finale, telling Sawyer "We have to go back." Sawyer disagrees, telling her "We're done going back."

All on his own, Jack's figured out something important: that the MIB is more afraid of them than they are of him. He's also conceded that whatever agenda the island has for everyone can no longer be ignored. Jack surrenders to fate, and gives himself fully and completely to the island. He's ready to face the dark man rather than go back to living another off-island lie. This is a critical continuation of Jack's one big lesson: letting go.


Here's Some Money For The Vending Machine. See Ya In a Bit.

David and Jack's relationship has certainly sweetened since Lighthouse. He's now a supportive, loving, caring son, and Jack is doing his best to make up time. We still don't know who his mother is, but I'm guessing they're saving that up to make the reveal even juicier. My money's on Juliet or Ana Lucia, because we've seen just about everyone else so far.

Jack peers into the operating room mirror and sees Locke's face, and as viewers we're flashed back to the spinal operation he did on Ben at the Hydra station. This is where Ben cryptically told Jack "See you on the other side", something that made little sense at the time. Now however, Jack is on the other side. Maybe this scenario is what triggers his own magic memory moment, but we'll have to wait for next week to be sure.


A Love So Deep... Not Even A Sonic Fence Can Come Between Them

The Sun/Jin reunion has been a long time in coming... maybe even a little too long. These are two very good characters, and it was satisfying to see them finally reunited with one another. It sucked to see them apart for so long, mainly because both Sun and Jin have been reduced to token roles since the freighter blew up. And damn, I can't believe that was a whole two and a half seasons ago.

Like everyone else, I cringed as they approached the sonic fence, thinking how cruel and yet legendary it would be to see them both get their eardrums fried. This didn't happen of course, and they had a happy reunion - in both the island world, and in their room at the hospital. LAX_Jin tells Sun that it's over, and that they're all finally safe - including the baby. Maybe this is even true for them, in that timeline. On-island however, things still aren't looking so hot.

The very sight of Jin brings back Sun's ability to speak English. Just in case somebody might've missed this, Lapidus is there to help out. "Looks like someone got their voice back". Pure awesome.


Good, Bad, Whatever

The end of this episode gave us a few little twists and turns. Widmore's crew turning their guns on Sawyer and company was more than a bit surprising. Score one point for those who still think Charles Widmore is a dick. He had yet another chance to win us over, and he just blew it.

Simultaneously, the sub-people begin launching mortars at the MIB's team. Maybe the screaming sound of an incoming projectile wasn't enough for some people, because despite being shelled only hours earlier, no one moves until Jack barks out a warning. Even when he does Flocke moves not a single inch, all but confirming that he's impervious.

This is where the dark man scoops Jack into a fireman's carry, Platoon-style, and reassures him that everything will be alright. "You're with me now", he tells him. Flocke sure is pushing for recruitment here, but as far as I'm concerned Jack still hasn't made a decision of his own.

In the end, The Last Recruit was another solid episode of LOST. On island it continued to split sides and shake up alliances, while off-island it continued to gather everyone together in one single place: the hospital.

It will be interesting to see where Jack and Locke go next. I think that at this point, their fates are completely intertwined. Eventually they're going to disagree on something, and I'm crossing my fingers that all hell will break loose.

Episode 6.13 - The Last Recruit - Rating News



Source: TVByTheNumbers

Sean's Random Thoughts - LOST Recap - The Last Recruit

Here is Sean Furfaro's Recap of Tonight's Episode.

Normally at the end of a season of Lost, there's an acceleration for the final few episodes. If you've watched from Season 1, you'll know what I'm talking about...that feeling of as if it's a hockey game, you're down a goal, and there's under a minute left. You've got no choice to pull the goaltender and go full throttle in an effort to catch up. Tonight's episode felt a lot like that, sensory overload coupled with an ongoing effort to just "catch up."

So on that note, it's time to pull the goalie and put the pedal to the medal for "The Last Recruit."

Please keep in mind that I write this recap immediately following the episode, and as I'm sitting down, my head is still kind of muddled from everything I just watched...and there was definitely a lot to take in. If I miss anything that I think of later, I'll add it in the Comments section. (And don't forget to mouse over pics for captions.)

I had heard some theories that the Flash Sideways world was heading for a big culmination at the hospital where Jack would be operating on Locke. Right from the opening moments of 'Previously on Lost", it was clear that's where this episode was heading. I'm not sure why, but it still makes me smirk every time I see Desmond's visible "grunt" as he plows into Locke with his car.

The opening scene with Jack and Flocke maintained the tension from the closing scene last week. As the two stepped aside for a private conversation, Flocke explained to Jack that John Locke was stupid to think that he had been brought to this Island for a reason. And since we had a wrap-up answer to the Whispers last week, why not answer another long-standing mystery in this episode before the opening credits roll?



So we now have confirmation that Christian was the Man In Black (MIB) all these times we've seen him in the past. On the beach, in the woods, down by the Frozen Donkey Wheel, in Jacob's Cabin, with Claire... Apparently, all MIB needed to take someone's form was for the body to be brought to the Island "in a wooden box." I did like that this answer came as a result of a direct question from Jack, as opposed to another "Hey, by the way..." explanation.

Jack also asked why MIB as Christian led Jack to follow him through the jungle. Flocke answered that it was "because you needed to find water", since he was trying to help them leave. As seductive as Flocke was here, I didn't buy it for a second. Partially because it goes against what my gut is telling me about Flocke and his motives, and also because if Flocke really wanted the Lostaways to be able to leave the Island, I'm pretty sure his first order of business wouldn't have been to kill the pilot of Oceanic 815.

Flocke: "John Locke was not a believer, Jack. He was a sucker."

In the Flash Sideways (FS) World, we see Ben and Locke in the ambulance immediately after Desmond's hit and run on our favourite bald substitute teacher. When Locke mentioned Helen's name as a contact, he said "I was gonna marry her", which I'm sure led many people to believe that he was saying it as if he knew he was dying, especially after Ben corrected him on using the past tense (teachers are SO picky.) But my thoughts on this line were that his Island consciousness was speaking, flashing back to an off-Island time when he was going to marry Helen. If I'm right, then Desmond indeed caused a near-death experience that triggered Locke's connection to his alternate consciousness.

As Sun was being wheeled into the hospital right beside Locke, she panicked when she saw him, and started shouting "him!" in Korean. Clearly this was another instance of both worlds connecting, as Sun had yet to meet Locke in the FS World, and was sufficiently scared and intimidated by Flocke in the Island World.

Back on the Island, we got a reunion that I think a lot of people had forgotten about: Jack and Claire. The first meeting between the now-aware brother and sister was a little awkward, but did confirm for us that Flocke/MIB was honest with Claire about who he was when he appeared to her as Christian. So her choice to be working alongside him has been made with her being fully aware of the situation. Interesting.

Her closing line to Jack was sufficiently creepy: "You decided the moment you let him talk to you, like the rest of us. Whether you like it or not, you're with him now."

After a standout performance last week as the emotional soul of the show, Hurley was once again back to his comfortable role of comic relief. My favourite two lines this episode:

"You can always bring people back from the dark side. I mean, Anakin?"

"Claire...you look...great?"

And after an inexplicable switch from nightime to daytime at Flocke's camp, Flocke said what every viewer was thinking at that moment..."It's so nice to have everyone back together again."

Sawyer sat down with Kate in the FS World and flat out answered a question that I posed in my recap to Recon, why did he allow Kate to escape from the airport in LAX? As much as he tried to deny seeing the handcuffs on Kate in the elevator, she was on to him and astutely pointed out that the reason he let her go is beause he had something to hide himself. This scene didn't seem to serve much of a purpose otherwise, except to establish Miles and Sawyer as the cops assigned to the Sayid restaurant shooting.

Back at Flocke's camp, Zoe just strolled on in with a two-way radio and a threat in what was one of the least intimidating scenes I've ever seen on this show. Her threats to Flocke seemd idle and not intimidating in any way, whatsoever. I wasn't buying her 'tough girl' face as she asked to see the man in charge, and then demanded that Flocke return what he took (Desmond). It was a completely lame scene, and it was almost laughable. I would have enjoyed the scene more if Flocke actually laughed in her face instead of stick-spearing the radio.

Back in the FS World, Claire was heading into her meeting at the adoption agency when Desmond showed up for his next 'pushing' assignment. Knowing what we know about his intentions, and ultimate goals, we were all rooting for Claire to go with him, right? But let's look at what it would have appeared like to Claire:

Strange guy who I had a one-time conversation with at the airport and predicted I would be having a boy, just happens to show up at the adoption agency. Now he wants to know my name, so he looks over my shoulder as I'm signing in to the building and gets it off the sheet. Next, he follows me up the escalator and starts asking why I'm alone. Then he follows me into the elevator and says he is going to the same floor as me. Now he wants me to go with him.

Ok, if I was Claire, I couldn't have ran fast enough away from this creep, but let's remember that this is the same woman who got back into the cab with Claire after she carjacked it, dumped in the middle of nowhere, and stole her stuff. On paper, FS Claire isn't really the best decision-maker, is she? Yes, you and I know that it is all for the ideal end goal, but if you were a father, and your daughter was doing that, how would you feel?

Desmond did explain to her that there was a chance her situation could become "irreversible", which was a very interesting choice of words used specifically to echo jack's words from the season premiere..."nothing is irreversible." And it was a nice surprise to see Ilana as the lawyer in the FS World. I knew we hadn't seen the last of her.

On the Island, Flocke sent Sawyer off to retrieve the sailboat to meet them and go over to Hydra Island. So off he went with Kate, splintering from the rest of the group as they marched off. This was a mirror of what happened at the end of Season 2, as Hurley, Jack, Kate, and Sawyer went off to confront The Others, and Sayid, Sun, and Jin took the sailboat to try and meet up with them.

This was the first of many images and situations that mirrored previous moments in Lost season-ending stories. Not all of them took place in the actual Season Finale, but in the final arc leading to it. I'll call this one Mirror Image #1, and continue with the others throughout this recap. The names and characters are different, but the situations seem the same.

Sayid was sent to kill Desmond, and as he expressed trepidation when instructed to do so, Flocke appeared to become angry. Which Flocke do you, as a viewer, believe in? The one who told Jack at the beginning of this episode that he was trying to lead him to water? Or the one who told Sayid in this scene, "Go do what I said!"

What ensued was a scene between Sayid and Desmond in a shockingly shallow well. Des knew somehow (how?) that Flocke's recruitment was based on promises, but when he learned what Sayid was promised, he asked what Sayid would tell Nadia he did to get her back. As we saw in the FS, Sayid can't tell Nadi the bad things he's done, and I don't think Island Sayid could either. I don't believe for a second that he killed Desmond. But he ran a pretty serious bluff on Flocke telling him to go and check if he didn't believe him.

In the FS world, Miles showed up at Nadia's door looking for Sayid, but as he tried to sneak out the back door, crafty Sawyer tripped him up and cuffed him. Mirror Image #2: from Season 1's "Confidence Man" where Sayid had Sawyer as his prisoner before torturing him...now the roles are reversed.

Sawyer: "We're gonna ditch Locke. You, Me, Jack, Hurley, Sun, and that pilot who looks like he stepped off the set of a Burt Reynolds movie."

Mirror Image #3: Sawyer steps ino the water to swim out to the sailboat, and the scene is shot almost exactly the same as in the Season 5 Finale "The Incident", when we first saw Jacob wading out into the water to get a fish out of his trap.

As Flocke's team trods through the jungle, he asks Sun a question and is surprised when she can't respond. When she writes "You did this to me", Flocke confirms (believably) that he did nothing, debunking the theory that Flocke took away Sun's ability to speak in "The Package." As I suggested in my recap to that episode, this is a confirmation that the link between the FS and Island Worlds caused her language problems.


Immediately after this scene between Sun and Flocke, Claire explains to Jack that the reason she joined Flocke is beacuse he was the only one who didn't abandon her. And Jack responds to a clearly bitter and angry Claire by sidling off with Sun, Hurley, and Frank...and abandoning her again. Look, I'm no genius, but when the crazy lady tells you she has issues because you abandoned her, I can't think that it's the best idea to abandon her again mere seconds later!

As the mutineers headed off to meet Sawyer and Kate at the sailboat, all seemed peachy and super-keen until the tell-tale "click-click" of a gun revealed an angry Claire. As she and Kate talked on the dock, I flipped and flopped in anticipation of what was going to happen. Claire is going to shoot Kate! Now she's trying to trick Claire! No...she really wants her to come! No, she's definitely trying to trick her...damn, Claire really is going to shoot her...wait, a single tear just streaked down Kate's cheek...maybe she is sincere.

Claire: "If he finds out we're gone, he's gonna be mad."

Um...yeah. Slightly.

Side note: don't you find it funny that the Evangeline Lilly commercials for L'Oreal air during Lost. Here's dirty and grubby Kate on the Island...and here's Glamour Shots Kate!

In the FS World, Jack and David entered the same building Claire entered earlier in the episode. As Jack answered his phone call from David's mother, I hollered along with all of you "who is it???", but alas, no answer once again. Interesting that David made that face at Jack when he heard he was going back to mom's at 5:00. Was it because he didn't want to be with mom, or just that he's having so much fun with dad in the last week since they re-connected? It wouldn't matter as Jack got an emergency surgery call that would take him away to the hospital anyways. So much for Father and Son Boys' Night. And then Jack just left David while he went in to operate? Father of the year.

The reveal of Claire to Jack in Ilana's office was interesting, but I was expecting there to be a "flash" once they re-connected. I guess the a) love or b) near-death options are the only ones that trigger it...not c) meeting your long-lost sister who was also on the Island?

On the sailboat, Jack is getting all pensive looking out at the ocean once again, when Sawyer comes up for the 'punch-in-the-arm' pep talk. As he tells Jack that "taking orders isn't your strong suit," I chuckled. But when Jack said "It doesn't feel right", I knew immediately that he wasn't talking about Sawyer's comment. As Sawyer got angry and told Jack he was with them or "get of my damn boat" (people with entitlement issues...tsk, tsk, tsk), we all knew with 100% certainty that Jack would indeed take a "Leap of Faith."

Jack: "If that thing wants us to leave, maybe it's afraid of what happens if we stay?"

And as Jack jumped off the side of the sailboat into the water, we saw Mirror Image #4: from Season 4's finale, when Sawyer sacrificed himself and jumped out of the helicopter and into the water below. Again...a role reversal in a similarly shot scene.

Which was immediately followed by Mirror Image #5: from Season 3's finale, only now instead of Jack yelling after Kate, "We have to go back!", Kate is now yelling at Sawyer about Jack..."We have to go back!"

When Sun woke up in the FS hospital and asked what happened, Jin told her, "you were shot", which I have to admit, is a hell of a lot smarter than saying "I shot you."

And then we got the long-awaited Jin and Sun reunion on the beach at Hydra Island. It was nicely done...rather unexpected...and I was surprisingly moved by it, considering how little I cared if these two ever found each other again. And as Sun embraced Jin, her ability to speak English returned, which I have to think symbolizes harmony between her consciousness in each World.

But that harmony would be short-lived as Widmore's team seemingly turned on our Lostaways under the orders of Charles himself...and after confirming that they were all there on Hydra Island, set off a barrage of explosives at Flocke (and Jack). Were they trying to just get the Lostaways away from Flocke to protect them, or is it a sinister turn for Widmore (as I've suspected all along...remember this is the man who ordered ben to kill a baby Alex)?

And as the bombs rained down on Jack, Flocke carried him out of harm's way and reassured him...."Don't worry. You're gonna be ok. You're with me now."

That ought to give us a lot to talk about until Lost returns in 2 weeks.

So, do you think Widmore is protecting our peeps, or willing to discard them at a moment's notice? What happened to Desmond? And who the hell is David's mom?