Monday, May 24, 2010

Farewell Forever Lost

If you have not watched the LOST series finale, then DO NOT PROCEED. I don't want you to be spoiled if you still want to watch it.



Naysayers and haters go back to your holes in the ground. The LOST finale is exactly how things should have ended. And actually I've been waiting for a show or a book or a movie to give us the sort of ending like this. It was sort of a Dark Toweresque / What Dreams May Come type of ending. What we've been calling the sideways world this whole season was not sideways at all, but a gathering place after their deaths (whenever it may have occurred) for the Losties to discover each other all once again and once that happened they were able to move on (to heaven? into the light of the island? it doesn't matter because it was beautiful and warm and wonderful!) When characters die in a story, I always wonder what happens to them after that. Do they reunite in heaven? Is heaven a real place or is it something we create for ourselves? I have an odd view of heaven that probably not many people share. I believe that the afterlife is a paradise that we create for ourselves - much like the heaven of What Dreams May Come. The "sideways" world was the place that the Losties created so that they could all find each other once again. In comparison to the ending of the Dark Tower (which please don't read on if you haven't read it or plan to read it or plan to watch the movie version when it comes out) it was like the people who had died were still living on and able to reunite in another place in the universe where they could be together.

I think that some LOST fans, especially the ones more interested in Island Mythology and the science fiction part of things, might be disappointed in the lack of answers that we got. But I think that the lack of answers is sort of what makes it all so fun to still think about. What was important was the characters - and really the characters were who I cared about the most. I've invested 6 years into getting to know Jack, Kate, Sawyer, Hurley, et al. and to see them together in the end was highly satisfying for me.

I also like how the producers gave us two endings. An ending to the "real" world and an ending in the "sideways" world. In the real world, some of the Losties make it off the island for good: Sawyer, Kate, Claire (to return to her son Aaron, finally!), Miles, Richard Alpert (who is finally aging now!) and Frank Lapidus (he is so Miami Vice! Lol). Left on the island alive and well are Rose and Bernard, Vincent, Hurley (now the island's protector) and Ben (#2 protector) and Desmond (who Ben says he can help Hurley find a way to get him home to his family). Jack finds himself mortally wounded and makes his way back to the bamboo field where he first found himself on the island. Vincent comes to keep him company and Jack sees the Ajira plane fly over, which gives him peace that his friends made it off the island. Jack's eye closes and that's the end of the real world. In sideways world, the end also comes full circle with Jack. He's the last to become "island enlightened" when he finally touches his father's coffin in the back of the church. Suddenly Christian Shepard appears alive and well and Jack realizes that all of this sideways world stuff has been purgatory all along and that the people who meant most to him in his life were gathered there to all move on together - into that light and warmth of forever.

I am satisfied with this finale - it exceeded my expectations of how it would all come to a close. There are still mysteries out there, but I think they will just serve as wonderful debate points about the series in the years to come. I'm not sure when I will watch the series all over again - it won't be soon, but I will someday. For now though, I can say goodbye and be happy with "The End".

Monday, May 17, 2010

Farewell to Lost: Jack



Oh Jack. The hero, the leader, the doc, the man of science who may just turn out to be the man of faith. Over the course of the series I have hated, loved, and rooted for him. I loved him for all the lives he's saved (and those he understood he couldn't - RIP Boone). I hated him for being too stubborn to enjoy his life or the relationships he was in. And yet I've rooted for him all the way - from his heroic day on the beach when the plane crashed to his acceptance that he may soon become the island's protector.

I can't wait until we find out how Jack's story comes full circle. Here are some videos showing just how awesome Jack has been.



Sunday, May 16, 2010

Farewell to Lost: Hurley



Hurley is like the feel good character of the series. Every Hurley-centric episode was always lighthearted and fun to watch. His constant references to Star Wars and his constant use of the word "Dude" (Dude, I say dude all the time too) to his supposed bad luck because of the numbers makes Hurley just a ton of fun to watch.

I like that Hurley also served like the voice of the viewers. Questioning things that perhaps us Lost-theorizers would talk about. Like when they rediscovered "Adam and Eve" in the cave and wondered if maybe it was really him and Jack dead there because they had time traveled back to dinosaur times.

Here is one of my favorite Hurley scenes where he changes his attitude about his bad luck. Here he "makes his own luck" and casts the curse off of himself.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Book Recommendation: Under the Dome



Stephen King's most recent novel returns to some of his older styles with a massive cast of characters in this supernatural thriller.

When a mysterious dome suddenly shuts in the small town of Chester's Mill, good versus evil amongst the town people emerges quite suddenly. Tones of Salem's Lot were prevalent within this novel. It wasn't his best by far, however, King really sucks you in and makes you feel like you are under that dome and are part of the character's lives. His scenes of brutality, heartbreak and inner thoughts of the minds of the townspeople is mesmerizing, as always in his writing.

This addictive and entertaining tome is over 1000 pages, but a fun and satisfying read from start to finish.

My rating: 4 out of 5 stars

Farewell to Lost: Desmond



Desmond is one of the great characters of LOST. While not entirely a main-main character, he is a key player in the series. From his emergence from his three year stay in the hatch to his attempted getaway on his sailboat and his mysterious survival of the blowing up of the hatch - his character was one that I both loved and was intrigued by. Desmond has only become more interesting as the series has progressed and it will be interesting to see how he ties it all up in the end. From the hatch explosion, he was able to see the future, he did some mental time traveling and now in season six he is sideways world enlightened and definitely has something up his sleeve that just may save on the Losties on the island.

Also, Desmond is a damn hot Scottie with a great accent! There is just something about him that makes him so likable. See you in another life, brotha! Compilation follows. :)

Friday, May 14, 2010

Farewell to Lost: Sawyer

With just 3 1/2 hours left of Lost, I thought I'd do some farewell tributes to my favorite characters during the next week. On the top of the list: James "Sawyer" Ford.



Besides being a hot-as-fuck book nerd, Sawyer's character is my favorite because he is so complex and interesting. His journey from troubled conman on a revenge mission to his transformation over the course of island life to a man with friends and a loving relationship (RIP Juilet *sad face*), Sawyer is a man after my own heart!

Here are some great Sawyer compilations:


The nicknames he gives everyone are riddled with pop culture and literary references. I was sort of surprised in season 6, however, when Hurley mentioned Anakin (Skywalker) and Sawyer had no idea who he was. I guess Sawyer is more of a Trekkie.




I'm kind of hoping the last words spoken in the show are of Sawyer saying, "Son of a BITCH!"

your novel



I think this is about me? :/

Ride in Style with a Couch Bike

I seriously need one of these. If I rode one of these babies around my neighborhood people would be asking for rides and wondering where they could buy their own.



I should ask my mechanical engineering students to build me one.

More couch bikes here.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Muse(ic)

Tickets.

I love tickets. Tickets to movies. Tickets to broadway shows. Tickets to concerts. (We aren't talking the traffic/parking violation type here, people! I don't get those and I don't want them!).

My latest tickets are of the musical concert type. I decided to splurge a little on myself for my birthday and I bought tickets to see Muse in concert at Arco Arena on September 28. That is so, so far away. But it does give me the opportunity to go from a casual fan of Muse to a hardcore, educated, rabid Muse fangirl by the time summer ends.

I started off by picking up a copy of Black Holes and Revelations by Muse (I really actually went to the record store hoping to pick up a copy of The Resistance, but since Dimple is mostly used CDs, there were no copies on hand). I am extemely pleased that I started with this album, however, because it's so many wonderful things that I'm going to have to blog at least another couple paragraphs to explain it all to you!

First off, I'd like to just say that I'm mindblown that Muse is such a mainstream band. The best way I could describe their music is that it mashes classical, jazz, electronica, hard-fucking rock and a whole bunch of other stuff into the composition of their album. I could hear distinct influences from Pink Floyd, Queen and Radiohead. Muse is avant-garde. And I think that is why I'm really, really getting into loving them more than just as a casual fan.

While there are some amazing hit singles on this album (Supermassive Black Hole, Starlight, Knights of Cydonia) the album is really best enjoyed as a whole. That's the thing I love about some of these modern British bands - they really put a lot of effort into making an album cohesive. The opening song "Take a Bow" offers a super electronic space-rock type feel to set the tone of the album. Later though, the quieter and more Spanish influenced Hoodoo sets the album story up for the finale song Knights in Cydonia.

I also enjoy the quirkiness of the band as they don't take themselves too seriously and yet they are genius music makers. This is clearly evidenced in the music video for Knights in Cydonia. More mashing of genres here as they set their story in the wild west and bring in unicorns and laser guns at the end. It is funny as shit, but genius all at the same time. Enjoy:

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