The Glass Ballerina
Original
Airdate: October 11, 2006
Writer:
Jeff Pinkner and Drew Goddard
Director: Paul Edwards
Like last season, these opening episodes serve
to update us on the status of the castaways, who were dispersed more than ever. Considering the cliffhangers, it would make
sense that the trio in the hatch would be the focus of the second episode
instead of the trio on the
Last time we saw them, the crew of
Sayid’s plan, to ambush The
Others
However, they decide to focus on Sun and Jin’s
relationship, further showing its dark side.
The affair some speculated in “The Whole Truth” has been confirmed with
Sun and Jae in bed.
This also makes him a candidate for the father of Sun’s baby. Some still hold on to the belief that they
didn’t get that far, but that is naïve.
Obviously ABC can’t show explicit sex, so some things have to be
implied, which can be tough considering “Lost’s”
nature.
This nature not to spell everything out leads to
some speculation that shouldn’t be bothered.
In this episode, it is whether Jae Lee
committed suicide or if someone threw him out.
Lindelof and Cuse
confirmed that Jae’s death was suicide. This piece has to make someone wonder what
else is just made into something it isn’t.
Jin implies that he knows more English than the
rest are led on to, which is a long running theory fans have had about
Jin. Although Jin isn’t fluent, the way
the other characters act and inflect their speech can give him the gist of what
they’re saying. This kind of theorizing
can be tricky because Daniel Dae Kim is fluent in
English, so some of his actions may be accidents in his performance (that is
not to say Daniel Dae Kim doesn’t do great work on
Lost, he does).
Jin implies that he knows of Sun’s affair, and
the scene where he confronts Jae could be seen as his
confirmation. I’m not sure how that
works, considering previously he has no other reason to believe that,
especially with the scene in “The Whole Truth”.
However, this could be the controlling side of Jin rearing its ugly head
again.
One thing worth noting; I believe this is the
first time on “Lost” where Sun and Jin’s conversations are subtitled when in
presence of a non-Korean speaker.
Perhaps this is symbolic of how integrated they have become with the castaways.
The boat showed the trio the four-toed statue
and the pier. Any more information they
can find can seriously jeopardize The Others’ operation. Therefore, the Others’ operation to usurp
Because of the seizure, Sun shoots Colleen. Unfortunately, Colleen fails to realize that
Sun has no reason to trust The Others. Since
she’s tight lipped about their operations, she can’t explain to Sun why they
behave as they do either. This can
certainly be frustrating to viewers, as Colleen could be withholding simply because
the story needs her to get shot in the gut.
Considering Colleen deemed Sun not the enemy, how would that affect what
happened to Ethan? Do they even know
what happened? Would The Others only
deem those who killed one of their own the enemy? What does Colleen’s shooting mean to the
castaways?
As the premiere was the trio’s introduction into
The Others’ society, this episode felt like the first ordinary day, in the case
of Kate and Sawyer, a day working at a rock quarry. Unless manual labor is meant to break their
spirits, is there something underneath this rock that The
Others hope to find?
It’s odd that they would have Kate working in
the quarry wearing a flimsy sun dress as opposed to work clothes like every one
else. They are using the allure of Kate
bending over and getting sweaty as a way to bait Sawyer. Obviously there is chemistry there, and this
dynamic is pushed to an extreme, possibly on purpose by The Others. This could explain why Pickett is so
antagonistic towards them. Is this
behavior a part of some experiment to create a stronger bond between Kate and
Sawyer?
Considering Ben watches Sawyer as he expresses
his plan to turn the table against The Others, the possibility that The Others
were pretending to be inexperienced as part of the con is now a
possibility. However, considering we
know nothing about what The Others are planning to do, anything can be
considered part of an elaborate con. In
this game, The Others are further ahead than the trio
may realize.
Alex’s cameo offers some further insight into
the dynamics between The Others. In
“Maternity Leave”, Alex broke rank to break Claire out of captivity. She also showed interest in Claire when she
asked Michael about her in “Three Minutes”.
These moments add to the bond she’s creating with some of the castaways,
so it would make sense that she would engage with one of the captives, albeit
covertly. The schism between The Others
is given some concrete foundation with the reveal that Karl wasn’t a plant.
For Jack, who Juliet broke last episode, Ben is coaxing
him into an unknown future project, with the reward being a trip home. There is still some resilience because Jack
has no reason to trust Ben or The Others, but Ben tries to rebuild that by
showing Jack a tape (which couldn’t be directly shown because it was a Fox
broadcast) of The Boston Red Sox’s historic World Series win a few years ago. Being from
Recalling “Live Together, Die Alone”, we’re
reminded that little time has passed since Ben’s captivity to the present,
which is easy to forget with weekly installments and hiatuses, unless there is
a constant reminder like on “24”. There
are only a few weeks on the island until the terrible tsunami that hit the day
after Christmas. That could certainly
affect what’s happening on the island, but hopefully they won’t explain that
something on the island triggered it, which would be in bad taste.
Considering the events we left off with on the various characters on the
island, this didn’t feel like the logical second step. Technically it wasn’t. Of course, the technique of only covering a
few people per episode is still a little frustrating the second time around,
but it did work out as the second season gelled.
Overall
Score: 7/10
Back to “A Tale
of Two Cities”