Lefty
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- Jul 4, 2002
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I think Jacob is inhabiting Sayid's body.
I think Jacob is inhabiting Sayid's body.
Makes sense, since Jacob was the one who had Hurley take Sayid to the temple.
**I'm not sure what should be hidden as a spoiler, but I assume anything in tonight's episode is fair game to discuss, right?**
The one question I have is "when" they are at the temple. I can't remember if the recap episode said that Sun and Cap'n Frank were in 2007 or present-day, but it was one or the other. Given that the temple is not in ruins, it would seem to suggest that Jack, Sawyer, Hurley, Kate, Miles, Jin, and Sayid are in the past - but Richard sees the fireworks when he's with Sun and Frank. Unless those are different fireworks in a different timeline, just jaxtaposed as scenes.
I think Jacob is inhabiting Sayid's body.
WHAT a premiere. Leaves you breathless. Even the recap episode was fascinating.
There is no more time travel, they are all in the same time, 2007. (on the island, that is) That is plainly said when dead Jacob tells Hurley that he died an hour earlier.
The plane stuff are actually flashbacks, to September 22nd, 2004.
WHAT a premiere. Leaves you breathless. Even the recap episode was fascinating.
I think that makes sense.
So, who is inhabiting Locke's body? Is it the guy that was on the beach with Jacob in the beginning? I really should have spent more time reviewing last season.
I really wonder how "Old Locke" is going to come into play. I don't believe that with his connection to the island, it won't happen. He is alive, after all, in the other storyline. The island may be underwater and it may be 2004, but that doesn't mean that three years later he won't have found a way back.
Edit: now that I think about it, was Locke just lying to Boone when he described his walkabout?
Edit: now that I think about it, was Locke just lying to Boone when he described his walkabout?
I really wonder how "Old Locke" is going to come into play.
Locke's relationship to the island was Jacob. It was Locke's vanity that he lost that relationship to the island and allowed the evil to step into his place.
I was wondering if maybe it was Jacob's enemy that actually engineered the entire thing leading up to Locke getting to the island so that he could use Locke to kill Jacob? I forget exactly but didn't Richard say something like he'd been to see Locke more than once off the island and still didn't get what was so extraordinary about him?
We know Jacob saw him just after he went out the window but maybe his nemesis had somehow tricked Jacob into thinking Locke was special to the island when he was really just needed by the nemesis? Create the whole idea that Locke is special which ultimately results in Ben trusting the nemesis was Locke when he knew he himself had killed Locke off the island?
Was the one hour show before last night new too or a rerun? I was stuck out of town and forced to watch American Idol so we saw only the 2 hour premiere not the show before.
Dang - what a great premiere! I figured it would be a strong one, but did not expect it to be as amazing as it was. The writers either really did figure out a few years ago where all this was going and built toward it, or have done an amazing job in making it up as they have gone along. Predestination vs free will, indeed.
Was the one hour show before last night new too or a rerun? I was stuck out of town and forced to watch American Idol so we saw only the 2 hour premiere not the show before.
This is what's amazing to me. Most continuing dramas reach that point where the writers have to reinvent the show because the story line has run its course. Heroes had no idea where they were going after the first season. Lost writers either had a 5-6 season plan or they are masters of making it seem like they did.
I think this is the case. Man-In-Black (what the various fansites call Jacob's enemy - or 'FLocke' = Fake Locke - 'Esau' seems to have fallen out of favor) and Jacob have been moving all kinds of pieces on their big Island chess board for a long time.
There are a bunch of assumptions at this point (who was really in Jacob's cabin giving instructions, who is Christian Shepard, etc), but it sure looks like MIB used Locke and Ben's weaknesses to get to Jacob. Jacob, though, appears to have had his own backup plan, which is now in motion.
The open questions are why are they fighting, what is at stake, etc. The writers have said they will only answer questions that 'matter to the main characters', so we'll see if they go there, or leave MIB/Jacob in the 'good vs evil', 'cynicism vs hope', 'predestination vs free will' arena.
And of course we still don't know what they are and why they appear in the forms they do. For example we've seen Jacob in human form touching the lives of main characters, but we've seen the MIB in human form as "himself" only once, in the season 5 finale.
He can impersonate others, and appear as the smoke monster (which can take the form of others) but Jacob has appeared only as himself, and can be killed as a mortal. Seems imbalanced at present. Even if he is inhabiting Sayid's body, it's still a real body. New Locke is not Old Locke's body. Why can New Locke not kill Jacob (he needs Ben to do it) but he CAN beat the hell out of Richard? Is Richard on the same plane as Jacob and MIB, while others are not?