Tuesday, September 07, 2010 01:49

Archive for the ‘Television’ Category

How I Think “Lost” Will End

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

(NOTE: This post was originally written on Wednesday, April 7, 2010. For whatever reason, I forgot to post it. Oops)

WARNING: I’m going heavily into SPOILER territory and will be discussing episodes that haven’t aired yet. Read at your own risk.

Last night’s Desmond Hume-centric episode of Lost, entitled “Happily Ever After,” finally did what I’ve been waiting for all season. You see, Lost was famous for its flashbacks in the first three seasons, but then turned the table on everyone in the Season Three finale where the “flashback” was revealed to be a “flashforward.” Season Four continued that trend and then Season Five flashed between half of the cast in “the present” and half of the cast in 1977. This season introduced the “flash-sideways,” and showed what appeared to be an alternate universe where Oceanic 815 never crashed. However, there have been inconsistancies in this alternate reality: Shannon never boarded the plane with Boone, Desmond was on the plane when he originally hadn’t been, Locke was happily engaged, Sawyer was a cop instead of a con man, Jack had a son, etc. It became apparent that something was going on with this side story and it was more than just a glance at “what could have been…”

My initial thoughts were that the flash-sideways were a glimpse into the epilogue of Lost. That the Losties we’ve been following since the beginning of the series would do something that would prevent the plane from crashing in the past and we were seeing their “happy ending.” As the differences have played out, it seemed that whatever they did would have had to have occured far in their past in order for those differences to exist. That got me thinking that perhaps whoever the new Jacob was to be (as it’s been revealed to us that this is all a game by a higher being to prove to another higher being that mankind can evolve to a higher state), that they were going to be the one responsible for sinking the Island (as seen in the Season Six premiere) and change the present.

After “Happily Ever After,” I no longer believe that to be the case.

In the episode, Desmond’s consciousness is directly transported to the alternate universe and he begins to become aware of the previous universe in which the Island existed. He’s also directly told by the former Eloise Hawking, now married to Charles Widmore, that he needs to give up the pursuit to understand the truth because in this reality, he has everything that he ever wanted. Obviously, Eloise knows something is up and this knowledge leads me to believe that someone else is pulling the strings in the alternate universe and giving at least some of our Losties (Jack, Locke, Sawyer, Hurley, and Desmond) better lives. Or if there isn’t one pulling the strings, then she at least believes it is a better universe, possibly because she doesn’t kill her son in this world. Actually, the more I think about it, the more likely I think that second option is and that the split in timelines occured after the original Daniel Faraday was killed by his mother in the past and that she may have used his notebook to figure things out once the timelines split. Then again, she shouldn’t have knowledge of Desmond’s previous life, so it might be a bit of both.

Anyway, the former Daniel Faraday, now Daniel Widmore, flat out tells Desmond that he detonated a nuclear bomb that created this alternate reality and that it isn’t right. He tells Desmond where to find Penny - who alternate Desmond has been looking for without knowing why (we as the audience should know that Penny is Desmond’s constant that keeps him rooted in time, as shown in previous episodes). Upon touching Penny, Desmond’s consciousness is transported back to the Island universe and he suddenly knows exactly what it is he has to do there. Meanwhile, alternate reality Desmond also knows what he has to do and makes a plan to start assembling the passengers of Flight 815.

So, what does all of this mean if the alternate reality isn’t the epilogue to the series? Well, frankly, I believe what’s going to happen is this: alternate Desmond knows they shouldn’t exist. And he’s going to play Morpheus and reveal the Matrix to our alternate Losties. But what does that mean for them? Well, I think they’re going to be the ones who reset the past and set reality “right.”

There’s a number of possibilities here. One of them is that the Island segments are the flashbacks, showing what happened after the alternate Losties set things right. Which is an interesting idea, but kind of bland. What I prefer is a little more dramatic and extreme.

There’s really only a couple of questions left for Lost to answer when it comes down to it. Who are Jacob and the Smoke Monster? And will the Smoke Monster/Locke succeed? It’s the second question I’m going to answer by saying “Yes and no.” Frankly, I think Smokie will initially win in the Island universe. I think he’ll escape the Island by killing all the candidates (or tricking them into sacrificing themselves) and that will create some dark times for the Island universe. But what I don’t think he’s counted on is the alternate universe in which Desmond will wake up the remaining candidates, who will then do something in their universe that will set things right. Frankly, I see them somehow crossing into the Island universe, either physically or with their consciousness, and basically resurrecting their fallen selves. Afterall, the second to last episode is entitle “What They All Died For,” which leads me to believe everyone is going to die before the finale. I could see the finale, named “The End,” being the resurrection story with the alternate Losties saving the day and setting everything right. Or at least recapturing the Smoke Monster, who will remain trapped in Locke form. I don’t know, there’s just something greatly poetic about the image Brad Ellis put in my mind of the final scene of Lost being Jack as the new Jacob and Locke as the new Smoke Monster sitting on the beach as Jack brings in yet another group of castaways to try to prove the Smoke Monster wrong about humanity, thus continuing the game that Jacob started thousands of years earlier.

Will I be right? And what does that mean about who’s controlling the alternate universe, if anyone (I like the idea of the Smoke Monster succeeding in the Island world and thus controlling the alternate world and trying to keep everyone happy to keep them from turning on him), but who knows? There’s only five episodes left, and “Happily Ever After” was the episode I’ve been waiting for all season. It’s got me thinking something really epic is happening on the show and that the finale may be more complicated than just “Good vs. Evil” like I originally thought. I guess we’ll find out in a few weeks. Until then, I reserve the right to change my theory based on any new info that’s present between now and the end.

Geek Round-Up, 4-19-10

Monday, April 19th, 2010

Wow. It’s been awhile since I blogged. Bet you thought I forgot about this site. Well, I haven’t. So, let’s get to it.

  • wormsI’ve been playing a lot of Worms on my Playstation 3. Believe it or not, I only became aware of this series last year. I downloaded it from the Playstation Store and now I’m addicted. My buddy Andy and I have spent several late nights holy hand grenading the crap out of each other. I highly recommend it to those who aren’t familiar with it. You can read IGN’s review on the game here.
  • Another game getting a lot of play on the PS3 is Super Rub a Dub, even despite IGN’s horrible review of it. But what can I say? The ladies absolutely love moving those ducks around in the tub (a past time I’ll try transferring over to real life..). So, I think I’ll keep it. After all, gotta keep the ladies happy.
  • One more video game-related bit and I’ll move on. I just became aware of the upcoming Legend of Zelda-inspired game, 3D Dot Game Heroes for Playstation 3. Holy crap. I want this game. The LoZ series are my favorite games of all time. And IGN really liked 3DGH, so I think it’s safe to say I’ll dig it too. Check out the trailer:

  • ORIGINAL STAR WARS CHARACTERS TO RETURN POST-RETURN OF THE JEDI. Is this the new “comedy” series set in the Star Wars universe? (I seriously hope not) Or is it, as some have speculated, a new Clone Wars-style animated series following the adventures of our favorite characters? What about Sansweet referring to “not everyone who dies in sci-fi remains dead?” Could it be that a prequel-era character comes back to plague the original trilogy characters? Darth Maul? A Dooku clone? Asajj Ventress? Grievous? I’ve often thought something like that could happen in a post-ROTJ animated series, but who knows? There’s so much to speculate on and next to nothing has been revealed. Lucasfilm is going to have a lot of explaining to do at CV.
  • Call me crazy, but I liked the Vin Diesel starring Riddick film series. Pitch Black and the animated Dark Fury were both great and The Chronicles of Riddick was decent (in a “stupid action flick” kind of way). So, of course the idea of another Riddick film (as has been rumored for years), is kind of exciting for me. Well, one was announced a few months back and now a script review has popped up for it (WARNING: there are spoilers there). Definitely sounds intriguing, and I look forward to hearing more on the project in the future.

Clone Wars - Reviews - Episodes 2.07-2.11

Monday, February 1st, 2010

I’ve gotten a bit behind in my reviews of The Clone Wars. Since I’m pretty jazzed about the most recent episode, I figured I’d get caught up by reviewing all the episodes leading up to it in one giant post. (more…)

Clone Wars - Review - “Weapons Factory”

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

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Weapons Factory

Luminara & Anakin act as decoys to divert new enemy super-tanks - while Padawans Barriss Offee & Ahsoka attempt to destroy a Separatist droid factory.

I wasn’t a big fan of this one. It’s not a bad episode, but it kind of felt like two episodes put into a single episode time frame. As if the entire third act - the search for the Padawans - could have been it’s own thing.

Apart from that rushed ending, the rest of the episode was decent. It was nice to see Luminara again and her padawan, Barriss, is a welcome new character to the show. Frankly, I wouldn’t mind more Barriss and Ahsoka team-up episodes (there’s another in “Brain Invaders”), as they make for a good duo.

There’s some good action scenes throughout and I particularly liked the destruction of the droid factory.

As far as the rushed ending was concerned, there were some decent elements to it. Not knowing Ahsoka’s fate in the Star Wars lore, I did have a bit of a genuine concern for here well-being. I didn’t honestly expect her to die (she doesn’t), but there was a part of me that thought it’d be awfully ballsy of the creative team to just kill her off this early on in the second season.

Despite that one setback, the rest of it’s entertaining enough. There have been very few bad episodes of the show, and this keeps the good episode trend going.

Clone Wars - Landing at Point Rain - Review

Friday, November 27th, 2009

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Anakin, Ahsoka and Ki-Adi-Mundi lead a landing party to destroy a droid factory on Geonosis.

When this episode was initially previewed, I thought, “Geez, they’re going back to Geonosis? Lame…” Man was I ever wrong.

This episode is light on story and character development. But wow, if it isn’t one of the best action sequences ever done for Star Wars in any medium.

The whole thing is essentially a D-Day invasion by the Republic forces against the newly rebuilt droid factories of Geonosis. As such, it’s 100 times bigger than the previous invasion episodes in the Ryloth Trilogy. The imagery is striking and the sequences well done and amazing.

And by the time Jedi Master Ki-Adi-Mundi utters, “Bring in the flame throwers!” I was blown away.

Clone Wars - Senate Spy - Review

Saturday, November 21st, 2009

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At the Jedi Council’s request - Padmé investigates a Separatist conspiracy in the Senate.

I don’t know what it was about this episode, but it really failed to connect with me on a storytelling level. The set up was believable enough, but about mid-way through, all the tension that the CW crew seemed to be building to just dropped out and I just didn’t care about the plot anymore.

That’s not to say that the episode is bad; it just seemed like the second half of it needed to be fleshed out - as if they had a rough draft, animated it and just let it go.

There’s a lot of good though too. Banking Clan member Rush Clovis has an interesting design and seems like a character that could create an interesting antagonist, provided they decide to bring him back.

There’s actually a lot of pretty design work at display here, and the episode seems to be a showcase for locations.

But overall, it just didn’t do anything for me and seemed to be the first episode in awhile that was truly forgettable.

Clone Wars - Children of the Force - Review

Sunday, October 11th, 2009

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Darth Sidious has a new dark assignment: kidnap Force-sensitive children from across the galaxy and bring them to Mustafar.

Okay, this is pretty much what I’ve been waiting for on this show: the Jedi being Jedi! Holy crap! Need to get information? Use the Force! Need to crack the mind of a strong-willed bounty hunter? Use the Force! Really, this use of the Jedi doing Jedi-things only serves to make early instances of the Jedi not using the Force more annoying to me. Like I keep saying: the Jedi are only as strong as the writers want them to be and it’s been wildly inconsistent. At least here I can’t complain about their use of powers.

In fact, there’s not much I can complain about. It was a pretty good story giving more depth into both the Jedi and Darth Sidious. There are a ton of locations in this one, making it feel much more epic than in some episodes. And of course, Cad Bane is becoming an interesting character in his own right.

The only downside is that the action sequences - something this series has been solid in - feel a bit rushed. The episode could have stood to have been ten minutes longer, just to flesh out the fighting scenes. But otherwise, so far, this is the best episode of Season Two in my book and one of my top three favorite episodes so far.

Clone Wars - “Holocron Heist” and “Cargo of Doom”

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Well, The Clone Wars are back on Cartoon Network, with Season Two having premiered this last Friday. As I did during Season One, I’m going to be posting my thoughts on the episodes. So, let’s get started.

Holocron Heist

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Cad Bane infiltrates the Jedi Temple and attempts steal an ancient Jedi Holocron. It’s up to Ahsoka, Anakin & Obi-Wan to stop the bounty hunter from escaping with the valuable Jedi artifact.

Right away, this episode is up there with the best of Season One, which I think is a good way for the season to start. Season One was rocky at first but progressively improved and by the end was pretty solid. It’s good to see Season Two starting off on that pace.

The introduction of the bounty hunters adds a nice area of gray into the show and I think helps round out the animated universe. It’d be nice to see more “normal”  characters (i.e. not Jedi, not Sith, not Clones) introduced as I tend to believe it is easier to identify with a Han Solo-type than a character using the Force. The bounty hunters give a bit of that normality, though working for the bad guys it’s still not there 100%.

My big complaint with this episode in particular is that, once again, the Jedi are only as powerful or weak as what fits the story. I found it kind of hard to believe that while tracking down Cad Bane in the Jedi Temple that Obi-Wan and Anakin wouldn’t be relying on the Force more to sense where he was. Instead, they’re easily fooled by diversions, and I just didn’t buy it. They’re Jedi: it should be quite a bit more difficult to trick them. And frankly, it seemed like Bane had a harder time infiltrating the Senate in last seasons episode “Hostage Crisis” than he did the headquarters of the Jedi.

Still, despite its flaws, this is the kind of storytelling I’d like to see the Clone Wars go after. There was a bit more depth to it, and the introduction of the Holocrons added an extra little layer to the Jedi. I’m hoping that as the series progresses, they begin fleshing out the details of this world and give us more insight into things like the Jedi, the Sith, the Separatists, and so forth.

Cargo of Doom

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Anakin & Ahsoka intercept Cad Bane’s warship hoping to recover the stolen Jedi Holocron - but the Jedi underestimate the bounty hunter’s cunning tactics.

This episode was more or less a straight forward mission episode. As such, it was well done and I don’t really have a lot to say about it as the episode description pretty much says it all. What you expect is what you get, with some great action sequences and great animation. The only thing that makes it stand out more than just one giant animated battle is the Anakin and Ahsoka interaction, which seems to be growing in complexity over the previous season. Which of course, needs to happen as for whatever reason Ahsoka isn’t in Revenge of the Sith, meaning she’s ultimately what this series is hinged upon.

X-Men - Night of the Sentinels - Review

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

300px-night_of_the_sentinels_part_2Growing up as a child of the late 80s, early 90s, there were only really three things for me: Star Wars, Batman, and the X-Men. This is probably why so many of my posts as of late have been X-themed. I was obsessive with the X-Men in those days, collecting all of the toys and reading some of the comics, and that seems to have carried over a bit into adulthood.

Being such an X-Men fan (who sadly hasn’t collected the comic series since the Phalanx Covenant, though I did pick up Apocalypse: The Twelve) I was of course addicted to the cartoon show X-Men, which ran on Fox from ‘92 through ‘97. This was recently released on DVD in two volumes, covering roughly the first two and a half seasons worth of the show.

The series started off with the two part episode, “Night of the Sentinels.” In it, Jubilation “Jubilee” Lee finds out that she’s a mutant and runs away from home after her foster parents forced her to register under the Mutant Registration Act. It’s not long until young Jubilee is attacked by giant, mutant-hunting, robotic Sentinels. Enter: the X-Men, who save the day, but not before Jubilee is gassed. She wakes up in the X-Men’s headquarters and as she sneaks around is introduced to the team: Cyclops, Jean Grey, Professor X, Storm, Beast, Rogue, Gambit, Morph, and Wolverine. Shortly after, Jubilee attempts to see her foster parents and is kidnapped by the Sentinels. At the same time, the X-Men have learned that the Sentinels are tracking down mutants that have registered under the Mutant Registration Act and they disastrously infiltrate the compound where the MRA files are kept, destroying them but leaving Morph dead and Beast a prisoner of the MRA agents in the process. Wolverine storms off, Cyclops convinces Wolverine  to help him get even on the Sentinels, they track down the robots, save Jubilee again, and the girl decides to learn how to use her powers at Professor X’s school.

All in all, it’s a pretty decent story for what is meant to be a kids show. There’s a lot of action and the drama is such that it holds the attention of adults while being easy enough for the kids to understand. The only real drawback to the show is the animation itself, which at times gets a little bit sloppy and seems kind of cheap, especially in comparison to the beautifully animated Batman: The Animated Series, which aired on Fox Kids during the same era. Still the animation isn’t enough of a detractor for an otherwise compelling show and even if “Night of the Sentinels” isn’t the best of the X-Men episodes (it isn’t), the cartoon was still off to a strong start. I clearly remember being entranced by the cartoon as a kid and made sure to record every episode onto VHS as they aired. Luckily, unlike a lot of things from childhood, it still holds up remarkably well all these years later. If one isn’t familar with it, I recommend picking it up on DVD and giving it a shot. For those who are familar with X-Men only from the movies, it might just surprise you. And hopefully, make you a fan as well.

If Jacob Turns Out to be Patrick Duffy, then “Lost” is Brilliant

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

I am a fan of the TV show Lost. There’s no secret there. I started watching it during the first season, catching the first four or five episodes before being unable to see it due to conflicts/life. I remember trying to get friends to watch it at the time, only to have them discover it later on their own. I didn’t get to see much of the second season until towards its end, when I was given bootleg copies of all the episodes to watch so that I could be caught up for the season two finale, which I watched at my cousin’s house with him and his dad. In season three, I only missed one episode, which I downloaded via iTunes the next day anyway. The rest of season three I viewed at a friends apartment on our weekly “Lost nights.” Season four, I watched online as I most often had to work. And season five has been a combination of viewing patterns.

Regardless, I like the show. Season one was good, season two kind of sucked, season three got it back to being good halfway through it, season four was awesome, and season five has been pretty shaky.

At least until the last few episodes.

If you don’t want spoilers, then turn away because I’m going to talk about them. If you continue reading, do so at your own risk.

What I’m starting to dig is the Egyptian links to the show. Now, in season two, Locke has to push a button in the hatch he discovered in the first season every so many minutes or supposedly it’ll end the world or something. When they don’t push it at one point, the countdown clock turns to hieroglyphics, which seemed kind of confusing at the time. Also in season two, they pass by the remains of a giant statue, which at that point is basically just a big foot and part of a leg.

Now, in season five, they’re busy time jumping and we got to see a glimpse of the statue as it was in the past. And dang if it didn’t look Egyptian. And suddenly, my mind turned to Plato.

You see, the legend of Atlantis first made its appearance in Plato’s “Timaeus” and “Critias.” But in those dialogues, Plato quite clearly ascribes the original source of the Atlantis myth to the Egyptians, who in turn gave the knowledge to Solon who took it back to Greece. And some alternate historians/conspiracy theorists have mused that the Egyptians themselves could be the descendents of the survivors of Atlantis based on vague remarks from ancient historians and reinterpretations of Egyptian mythology.

So, suddenly there’s this big Egyptian statue on Lost’s Island and my gut goes, “They’re on Atlantis.” This train of thought was furthered by this last week’s episode in which Ben is traveling through tunnels to get to the Others’ temple and the tunnel is filled with Egyptian hieroglyphs and is quite clearly Egyptian in design.

“But how can they be on Atlantis when they are quite clearly in the Pacific Ocean and Atlantis was in the Atlantic Ocean?” Well, the island moves. That’s been established on the show. Also in fiction, there were lost islands in the Pacific - Lemuria and Mu - and in Hinduism, there is the lost island of Atala.  All of these could be tied to the Island, as many have theorized that these stories are all about the same place (read a couple of accounts here and here).

What I’m getting at is that it could quite possibly be the writers of Lost’s intentions to have the Island be the source of the legends of lost island civilizations around the world. Actually, what I believe is that they’re even insinuating that the Egyptians may have been the first Others, who after leaving the Island founded that early civilization. Perhaps the mysterious Other who never ages, Richard Alpert, is even the basis for the Egyptian god Ra (his initials do spell the name…).

Of course, this doesn’t explain what the Island is, who Jacob (the mysterious will seemingly behind the Island) is, or just about anything else. It’s just another piece of the puzzle and very well may not pan out. Then again, there’s only around twenty episodes left in the series, so they need to start wrapping things up and the Island as Atlantis would be a very interesting twist. I look forward to seeing where they go with it.