After rewatching all of Season One of LOST over the course of less than two weeks, I’ve come to a few conclusions. The first of these is that this rewatch was a fabulous idea. It’s not that I had forgotten very much of the first season; in fact, the only thing I didn’t remember was who knocked out Sayid during the first week on the island (apparently, everyone else I know vividly remembered Locke being the guilty party). No, what I found most enlightening about the rewatch was being able to look back on the first season with a keen sense of what was coming.
Of course, as Sherlock Holmes tells Watson, theories before data can be dangerous. I’ll confess that I’ve developed a few theories about how the final season’s going to play out, and rewatching the first season let me see that some of my theories might not be as crackpot as I thought. The idea that the people who have come to the island are chosen stands out; initially, I thought that it was just the writers being clever by showing us how many of the characters were connected in the backstory, but we now know they’ve been chosen by Jacob to come here. To what end? I’m not ready to theorize there just yet, but I’m sure it has something to do with the conflict between Jacob and his heretofore unnamed nemesis (who I’ve taken to calling Un-Locke).
Locke’s story really stands out for me on this rewatch (of course, this has a lot to do with my theory that he’s going to be of extreme importance in the final season). One of the most significant finds this first season came for me when Charlie remarks, rather curiously, “If there’s one person on this island I would put my absolute faith in to save us all, it’d be John Locke.” The writers spent so much time trying to get us to distrust Locke that first season – if anyone would have turned into a villain, it could easily have been him – that I think a lot of us missed the constant reminders that Locke is being tested for something. Maybe we dismissed it as Locke being crazy, but the events of subsequent season (and the fifth season in particular) make it quite clear that Locke is for one reason or another special, chosen by the island. Right now, though, I think it’s dangerous to assume that Jacob and “the island” want the same thing; I’d surmise that whenever Locke talks about “the island,” he’s actually talking about the nemesis, who’s testing Locke to see if he’s going to be able to be manipulated/used in the killing of Jacob.
For me, then, when the whole series is said and done, I think it’s going to be Locke’s story, not Jack’s. It might even be a larger story of science vs. faith and how quickly the line between the two can be blurred (I’m thinking particularly of Daniel’s “Jughead plan” and how this scientifically calculated theory requires an enormous leap of faith), but if anyone embodies this conflict, it’d be John Locke. On a sidenote – I think the reason I identify so much with Locke at this point is that he’s the only one on the island (as of Season One) who believes that all this is for a purpose; he’s the ideal fan for the show, then, because there are naysayers who claim the show has no heading, and then there are those like myself who believe that everything on the show thus far has been building to a larger purpose.
The other big thing we have to wonder about is the issue of on-island pregnancy. It’s been theorized about, and it’s a pivotal mystery to the show, but we don’t have any concrete answers. For sheer timeline purposes alone, I’m guessing that it has something to do with the detonation of Jughead at “The Incident,” but that’s just a guess. I’m much more interested in the issue of the black smoke monster, which we’re told in this first season is a security system for the island. The Top Pop Stop has theorized that the black smoke monster is actually Jacob’s nemesis, which makes a lot of perfect sense and which I’ll analyze more thoroughly once the monster does more than just flit around the jungle and kill things.
By the time this rewatch is over, I’ll have (hopefully) a comprehensive and full understanding of where the show has been, which will better enable me to ruminate and make connections – which I’ll probably end up posting here. Of course, I’ll be blogging while the show proper is airing come February, but for now, let’s just get through the rewatch.
As far as my favorite moment overall this season, there were so many very funny moments, but I’m still going to have to say that Charlie’s “It’d be John Locke” comment takes the cake for my favorite LOST moment of Season One. I know this is technically cheating, since it didn’t make the list in the actual episode in which it occurred, but come on. That moment rocked – and besides, this is my world, my rules on this blog.
And now for our Questions roundup. Over the course of this first season, I asked 127 questions, 41 of which can be answered from the material provided by the first season. Of the 81 remaining, after Season Five I can say that 50 of those can be answered while 31 seem unclear even after consulting Lostpedia. For the purposes of this roundup, though, 81 are still left unanswered (or at least partially so) and so will be carried over to the Season Two roundup. For the ease of the reader, here are all 127 questions asked during Season One, with answers where available; unanswered questions will remain in their own separate list until they are resolved. (NOTE: those of you keeping score at home will notice that five questions are missing from this list; these were just me being a smartass during the rewatch, so they go in their own SEPARATE list.)
Asked and Answered:- How does Kate know the man sitting next to her? – He’s the marshal who arrested her.
- What the heck are these strange noises on the island, and how are they related to the falling trees? What killed the pilot? – The black smoke monster is tossing trees and killing people.
- Why does Locke sit by himself thinking all the time? – He’s got a lot on his mind, least of all being his restored ability to walk.
- What’s Charlie hiding? – He’s a heroin addict.
- What’s the deal with Jin and Sun? Is he really just a controlling jerk, or is there something more going on? – It’s not this simple. Jin started to lose himself after working for Sun’s father, but when he didn’t like what he was becoming, he tried to turn himself around and is now overcompensating.
- What’s on Sawyer’s letter? And why is he such a stinker? – Someone conned Sawyer’s parents out of a lot of money, and the letter is Sawyer telling this con artist that he wants to kill him.
- Where did Vincent scamper off to? – The jungle. Same place he always goes.
- As facile as the question is now, is Locke good or bad? – Good.
- What secret does Locke tell Walt? – Locke can walk now.
- Claire’s baby – boy or girl? – Boy = Aaron.
- Why was Kate in handcuffs on the plane? – She was arrested by a U.S. marshal.
- What favor was Kate going to ask the marshal? – She wanted to make sure that the man who turned her in got his reward money.
- What happened with the Frenchwoman? Who’s “all dead,” and what killed them? – Rousseau was part of a science expedition, all of whom died after a mysterious illness.
- There’s a wheelchair lying about. Who does it belong to? – Locke.
- What was Locke’s miracle? – He can walk now.
- Why is Jack so resistant to the idea of a funeral service? – Jack was coming back from Sydney to bury his father.
- Who’s the woman in Sayid’s photograph? – Nadia, the love of his life.
- Who’s the apparition that Jack sees, and why does it trouble him so much? – It’s his seemingly dead father Christian.
- Sayid suspects that Sun understands English. Does she? – Yep.
- What happened to Christian that pushed him over the edge to Australia? How is this Jack’s fault / why does he feel guilty about it? – Jack told a medical review board that his father was operating under the influence of alcohol, which ended up getting Christian fired.
- What’s the deal with Sun’s father? – He’s some kind of Mafia figure in Korea.
- What happened to Charlie’s band, Driveshaft? – After falling into drugs, Charlie’s brother Liam left the band and went straight.
- Who attacked Sayid? – Locke.
- What will Sayid find while mapping the island? – The Frenchwoman Rousseau and “the whispers.”
- What does Rousseau think Sayid is? – One of “The Others.”
- What is The Black Rock? – It’s a slave ship that ran aground.
- If there are no monsters on the island, what killed the pilot? – Rousseau’s nuts. It’s a monster.
- Why does Claire take such offense at Charlie calling her “crazy”? – She’s starting to have feelings for him, and she is the only one who knows she’s not crazy.
- Why won’t Hurley reveal why he doesn’t use his real name? – He’s a big time lotto winner.
- I think it’s open to interpretation: was alcohol a factor in Christian’s surgical mishap? – Yes, he admits to Sawyer that it was.
- How can Hurley pay off his extreme backgammon debts to Walt, like he promises he can? – Big time lotto winner.
- The big question, though: what is buried in the jungle? – It’s a hatch of some kind, leading underground to God knows what.
- Why is the toy airplane so important to Kate? – It belonged to Tom Brennan, a childhood sweetheart who died while Kate was escaping.
- Who did the toy airplane belong to? Why did Kate kill him – the man she claims to have loved? – It belonged to Tom Brennan, a childhood sweetheart who died while Kate was escaping. She’s only indirectly responsible for his death.
- What was Hurley doing on Korean television? – Big time lotto winner.
- What’s the story behind Locke’s relationship with his father? – Locke’s father preyed upon Locke’s need for a father in order to get a kidney transplant from his son.
- Is Boone gonna make it? – Nope.
- What’s going to go down between Jack and Locke? – A conflict between science and faith.
- What’s going to happen when Sayid gets to the hatch? – Sayid cautions against opening the hatch.
- It’s come up before, but I don’t think I’ve asked it yet: How do you open a hatch with no handle? – Dynamite.
- How did Kate’s airplane get into the safety deposit box? – The marshal put it there.
Still Unanswered:
- Why hasn’t anyone come to rescue them?
- Why doesn’t technology work on the island?
- How the heck did a polar bear get on this island? (Hint: it’s not “Bear Village,” as Sawyer says.)
- “Where are we?”
- It bears repeating – if she’s a fugitive, what did Kate do? Jack implies it was murder, but we don’t know for sure...
- Michael promises to find Vincent “as soon as it stops raining.” Immediately, it stops raining. Is this situational humor, or is there something special about Walt?
- Did the people in the tail section survive?
- Why did the thing in the jungle let Locke live, and why does he lie about it?
- How did Locke become paralyzed?
- Where’s Christian’s body?
- Is the Christian on-island a ghost, a resurrected Christian, or something else entirely?
- What does Locke mean when he says that he’s “looked into the eye of this island, and it’s beautiful”?
- What’s the deal with Jack and his tattoos?
- Who was the original Sawyer?
- What happened in Sayid’s past to make him promise never to torture again?
- What’s the cable for?
- Where is Alex?
- What happened to Nadia?
- Are there other people on the island? – Ethan, yes, but we don’t know about anyone else...
- What is the source of the mysterious whispers?
- What does Claire’s dream/nightmare mean?
- Why can’t anyone else raise Claire’s baby?
- Did the psychic know that Flight 815 was going to crash?
- Who’s Ethan with, if he wasn’t on the plane?
- Why did Ethan kidnap Claire?
- Who’s Ethan working for/with?
- Who else is on the island...?
- Who are “The Others”?
- Who are the “they” Charlie talks about?
- Walt keeps rolling what he needs in backgammon and says he’s the luckiest person his step-dad knows – is there something supernatural at play?
- Why are the tides rising so quickly?
- Were the bank robberies the reason Kate was wanted? If so, why was she considered extremely dangerous? – We know they’re not, since the marshal said he was chasing Kate before the bank robbery, but we still don’t know why she was wanted.
- Why has the monster been quiet the last few weeks?
- Why is Sayid’s compass funky?
- Where does Rousseau’s map lead? – The Black Rock, but it could point to other places.
- There’s a polar bear in Walt’s comic book. There’s more than one polar bear on the island. Coincidence?
- Why is Michael “holding on” – for Walt or for himself?
- Did Walt somehow cause the Bronze Kahuku to crash into the window?
- Is Claire’s black rock the same as Rousseau’s black rock?
- Where has Claire been all this time?
- How did Claire make her way back to the survivors?
- Where’s she been?
- Why doesn’t Claire remember anything?
- What sort of ramifications will there be from killing Ethan?
- What was the Tampa Job that Sawyer and Hibbs worked?
- What’s the story behind Kate’s short marriage?
- If Frank Duckett wasn’t the real Sawyer, who was?
- Did Sawyer ever get revenge on Hibbs for using him?
- What’s the significance of The Numbers?
- Why does “using” The Numbers lead to problems?
- If Hurley is coming back to the mental institution, why was he there in the first place?
- Where did Sam Toomey learn The Numbers?
- Are The Numbers cursed?
- Who’s been broadcasting The Numbers from the island?
- Why are The Numbers stamped on the side of The Hatch?
- Why did the island take away Locke’s ability to walk?
- Who were the Nigerians who crashed on the island?
- Who did Boone reach on the plane’s radio system? Why did they claim to be the survivors of Flight 815?
- What’s down in the hatch that a light could just come on?
- How did Jack and Sarah’s marriage turn out?
- Why did Locke lie about what happened, only to have a change of heart?
- I think this one is between the lines, especially in light of the fifth season’s events: Did Shannon miss, or did the island save Locke?
- How does Walt know about the hatch?
- Why did Kate’s own mother call the police on her?
- Why is it so important for Sawyer to be on the raft? He claims it’s because there’s nothing on the island, but there has to be something deeper, right?
- Was it Walt’s thoughts on the hatch that spurred his change of heart vis-à-vis leaving the island?
- What is the pillar of black smoke? – It’s smoke from a pyre, but we don’t know who lit it.
- Jack tells Ana Lucia he’s not married “any more.” Why?
- Who was on the phone with Ana Lucia?
- Why did Montand lose his arm?
- What infected Rousseau’s team?
- What makes Rousseau claim the monster is a security system?
- How did The Black Rock get all the way inland?
- Michael said it best: “How the hell does a place this big never get discovered?”
- What does Sun have to be punished for?
- Will Charlie relapse? (He has the statue, but we don’t know if he intends to use it.)
- What’s inside the hatch – Twinkies or hope?
- Why isn’t Locke afraid of the smoke monster?
- Where did the smoke monster try to take Locke?
- Who lit the pyre for the pillar of smoke?
- Who took Walt?
Me Being a Smartass:
- Why do the writers want us to think that Locke is a bad dude? (Spoiler warning: he’s not. Un-Locke, however...)
- Are the four above questions (about “Others” and who Ethan works with) variations on the same question?
- Does “La Mer” have any significance beyond Rousseau being crazy? (Spoilers: No, it doesn’t.)
- What did Boone want Jack to tell Shannon? (The world may never know.)
- Is Sawyer ever going to learn the difference between Steve and Scott?