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Even the Man in Black’s murderous ways come with a qualifier.īut the scene that made Sawyer number one for me was also the scene that made me realize this show was going to be something very special for me. In fact, the show brings the judgment hammer down on very few characters. Both end up vindicated on several occasions, and many times they end up very, very wrong. At the same time, it never lands on one side or the other.
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It is a perfect scene to illustrate why these two will end up at odds for so much of the series. Jack is going to use as many antibiotics as it takes to save the life of Edward Mars. Throughout the episode, we see Sawyer’s roguish personality, and perhaps more importantly his realism vs. I said in an earlier post that I would mention when he became my favorite, and this was it right here. Like so many characters both in Lost and in real life, what she is does not define who she is.Īnother character who got some big time development in this episode was Sawyer. The fact that she was loyal to Ray Mullen even after he sold her out is something very important to remember when watching this show. This episode was about how she ended up on the plane, and what kind of person she was. We wouldn’t find out for another season why she was on the run. We are focusing on Kate, revealed in the Pilot to be a fugitive. That metaphor may work for you, or it may not, but what I’m saying is that though it’s Jack’s eye that opens and closes the story, that story is not just about him.Īs evidenced by this episode. The tip of the triangle points where it’s ultimately headed, but the entire thing has to move together for the thing to get where it’s going. At its point, you have Jack, and then Kate, Sawyer and Locke, and on back to the extras. Imagine Lost’s (I’m going to stop italicizing it now, because you can only hit Ctrl-I so many times) cast as a triangle. Sure, Jack was the lead character, so to speak, but he was not the main focus of the story. The most obvious reason is because the episode demanded it, but also it was because there was no main character. Rather than focus on Jack, who is quickly becoming the leader of this group, whether he wants to or not, we get an aspect of Kate’s story. It wasn’t until this episode that we started getting the off-island stories of these people, accompanied by that now familiar whoosh. That is mainly because the Pilot’s flashbacks were based around the crash itself. In talking about the Pilot, I didn’t mention one of the most important aspects of Lost: The Flashback/forward/after.