Same.
Hopefully I can recall information as it becomes relevant, but I don't have this show memorized or know all the details at this point.
Interestingly enough, I am curious to see if after this season ends if I find the ending as complete --- doing a good job at tying up all old plot threads --- that I may want to rewatch it to see how things were formed in the beginning.
I don't think it will be as tightly done as a B5 per say, which to me still has a ton of rewatch value even though I know every episode almost by heart at this point, but I am curious to see how well they pull this together and how good the end of the story is.
More than that, we get (almost) final confirmation of what we'd always suspected; Smokey doesn't just mimic the physical forms of the various corpses, he also seems to be able to assimilate their memories too, rather than just extrapolate them from reading the mind of the person being visited. There's no other way he could have known what Locke was thinking as he dangled from the rope, although I suppose he could still be lying based on what Ben remembers of Locke's personality ....He is, as many suspected but they reveal in the premiere, the smoke monster.
Of course that leads to the question of how the smoke monster came to be under Ben's bidding in the first place.
The premiere operates under the premise that Faraday's theory was essentially correct- Juliet setting off the nuke prevented the plane from ever landing. And so we get to see what goes down on Oceanic 815 as it gets to LAX and we get some old characters in the process- Boone chats it up with Locke, Charlies sort of attempts suicide but Jack saves him, Kate escapes, flirts with Sawyer, and hijacks a cab with Claire in it.
Must refrain from Hawk the Slayer jokes ..... must refrain .... :devil:And probably most importantly, Christian's corpse goes missing.
Who's apparently called "Lennon" according to the official synopsis (and of course gets ordered around by the pretentious Japanese dude). Ouch - that makes last season's "Stu Radzinsky" seem subtle.Yet meanwhile our heroes are still on the island, mucking about with some new Others (including Jack's stewardess from the flight) and some ninja warlord type and Sol Star from Deadwood.
Which is why I'm more inclined to favour the Desmond explanation at this point. As Eloise said, him pushing the button is the only truly great thing he'll ever do ...And that base thing that the bomb was supposed to have prevented building was built anyway.
In all this mishigas Sayid dies but... resurrected right before the end credits. My guess is that this won't be Sayid, but Jacob taking his form or body, as Jacob's enemy did with Locke (though not in the exact same way since Locke's real body is still dead).
Hell of a way to start a final season.
Lindelof: Should you infer that the detonation of Jughead is what sunk the island? Who knows? But there’s the Foot. What do you get when you see that shot? It looks like New Otherton got built. These little clues [might help you] extrapolate when the Island may have sunk. Start to think about it. A couple of episodes down the road, some of the characters might even discuss it. We will say this: season 6 is not about time travel. It’s about the implications, the aftermath, and the causality of trying to change the past.
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