Review: `Lost' ends season with answers, mystery




By FRAZIER MOORE, AP Television Writer
2 hours, 1 minute ago


This is a game "Lost" devotees are happy to play — albeit fewer of them lately than there used to be. Four seasons in, the show demands even more of the viewer than it used to. But those who have stuck around know that rewards richly outweigh the frustration.

This was never more so than on Thursday's two-hour season finale. It might be the most rewarding, deliciously challenging episode in the history of this mystical ABC serial.

Spoiler alert: Read no further if you mean to watch it for yourself and want to preserve its surprises. There are many.

For instance, you get to see the man in the casket at the L.A. funeral home. Though identified at the end of Season 3 as Jeremy Bentham, he is shown to the audience at long last, lying in pasty-faced repose: none other than John Locke.

But how did Locke, who embraced life on the island, get to Los Angeles? And how did he die? Let the guessing begin.

Another mystery addressed: that recent crazy talk about "moving the island." Darned if it doesn't happen! But not like moving a couch from one room to another. This was moving from Now to Who-Knows-Where-Or-When.

Ben did it deep within a chamber of the Dharma Initiative's Station 6, where experiments had previously been conducted in time travel. Ben made the island disappear along with its occupants (including Locke, Sawyer and Juliet), while, aloft in their helicopter, Jack, Kate and several others watched in disbelief.

Yikes! Time, not just space, is now a way to separate and torment the characters — and amplify the "Lost" narrative.

From the start four seasons ago, "Lost" roamed freely from the island where its characters were stranded. The series interspersed the "present-day" island story lines with scenes that captured its characters prior to their fateful flight on Oceanic Airlines flight 815.

But in the final moments last season, "Lost" added another dimension to the saga: propelling the action into the future, to offer glimpses of how certain characters readjust to the "normal" world.

The flash-forwards have given "Lost" an intriguing new perspective on the characters who got out. But their post-rescue lives are also shedding light on what took place on the island — and serve as a reminder to the audience that, even for those characters who came home, there's no escaping. Not yet, anyway.

The finale makes clear how, for the safety of the "Oceanic Six" as well as any comrades they left behind, everything that happened on the island must stay secret.

"We're gonna have to lie," says Jack.

"Lie about what?" Sayid asks.

"All of it," Jack answers. "Every moment since we crashed on the island."

"Jack, we can't pull it off," argues Kate.

John Locke


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