I don't know.
That's my simple reaction to last night's mostly entertaining season five finale of Lost. Once the first scene was over and done with, you knew that the next two hours would be rife with mythology and big ideas. Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse have always claimed that Lost was more about the characters than the plot, but despite some clunky attempts at inter-character gravitas, Lost was all about the mythology last night which, depending on your point of view, was either great or merely confusing. The matter-of-fact introduction of Jacob as a real player in all of our favorite characters' lives shielded the fact that we still don't really know anything about Jacob at all. What has occurred in the last 24 hours in the Lost community is speculation and extrapolation based on the show's previous sub-textual themes. Good vs. Evil. God vs. the Devil. Fate vs. Free Will. Jacob, to many, now represents Good, God, and Free Will in those conflicts.
But, why? Simply because we think we have to assign him with such
concrete ideas? I find it interesting that, on a show where no one
character has ever been fully good or fully evil, a show that plies its
trade in shades of gray, that we're all so quick to assume that Jacob
is staunchly one thing or another. The idea that Jacob is God took on
a severely Nietzcheian slant at the end of the episode, the
ramifications of which are difficult to ascertain. Perhaps the island
is meant to be a microcosm of the world, and that whatever happens on
the island will, in some way, set a course for the world at large. Or,
maybe the island is a reflection of the world, and the big events of
the world will all realize themselves in some symbolic manner on the
island. Again, I don't know, because Lost didn't answer as many
questions last night as we'd like to believe.
I'm used to Lost finales blowing my mind, but last night left me
gasping only once - in that first scene, when we watched Jacob talk to
the man who wanted to kill him (and, eventually did). Nothing else was terribly shocking. We were told
that Locke (or Non-Locke) was going to kill Jacob. He did. We knew
that the nuke was going to go off (it did (don't give me the "we don't
know if the bomb really did go off" nonsense - there's no other
explanation for the white flash, and it would be an obscene coincidence
if everyone time-jumped for some different reason just as Juliet wailed
on the nuke)). Instead of trying to blow our minds with unexpected
plot twists, the writers (I think), attempted to open our eyes to the
grand scheme of things, to show us how grand the war of the island
really is. In that vein, again, I'm not sure how successful they were,
because we really just learned that, whatever is going on, Jacob is
involved. But, didn't we already assume this to be the case?
I suppose we learned a bit about Jacob's motivations. Again, the first
scene is the key. In Jacob's discussion with the man in black (or The
Devil or Evil Incarnate or whatever), Jacob expressed his world view -
even if we know what is going to happen, we can and should try to change it. Even
if the finish line is never going to change, we can change the path,
which might be more important than the destination anyway, and we all
might become better people in the process. If we are to continue on
this line of thinking, that we're dealing with God vs. The Devil, Cuse
and Lindelof have made things particularly interesting.
The Man in Black, it seems, desires a laissez-faire approach. He wants
the world to run its course as it should, because no matter what,
things will always end up the same. Jacob, on the other hand, decides
to mettle in the affairs of people who may or may not have a say in the
island's fate. The Devil doesn't need to get involved, because the
denizens of earth will do the awful things that he believes they are
fated to do. But, apparently, he's so angry with what Jacob/God has
been doing, that he needs to find a loophole that will allow Jacob to
be killed. And, to do this, he masterminds some plan that allows him
to inherit the body of the island's ordained leader.
My question - why is the devil so angry? Does he want to hold power
over the island so he can watch it come to its inevitable fate? If he
believes that the future is pre-ordained, and that no matter what Jacob
does to try and alter it, everything will end as it was supposed to,
then why bother? Why wouldn't the Man in Black try and mess with
Jacob's plans, try and thwart whatever changes Jacob attempts to make
instead of this long-winded "kill Jacob and inherit the island" quest?
Either he is scared that whatever Jacob does actually will change the future, or
it's simply a power struggle, that "competition" motif coming to fruition,
that motivates him.
We can't know the motivations yet, because we don't know exactly what the two
men were talking about in the finale's first scene. Another question I
had - where is Widmore in all of this? Is the struggle between he and
Ben a mirror of the struggle between God and the Devil? Jacob's curt
dismissal of Ben's plight, which led to Jacob's death, implies that
Jacob was never really on Ben's side. And, yet, there is a smidgen of
Job's story in Ben. He had been tested and tested and tested by the
island and Jacob, and even in the end, after the sliminess and
sometimes evil that Ben had represented, Jacob gave Ben a choice. This
is important, because it summed up the Fate vs. Free Will theme yet
again. Ben had a chance for a certain kind of redemption. He didn't take it, but that's not to say that Jacob hadn't hoped he
would take it.
You see, the Jacob we saw last night struck me as an absolute beacon of
optimism (well, except for the whole orchestrating Nadia's death
thing). He was the forgiver of Kate's sins, though she was doomed to
repeat them. He gave Little Sawyer the pen that wrote most of the note to the Real Sawyer, a note whose promised vengeance would eventually manifest
itself. This may not seem like a good-natured thing to do, allowing
James Ford to finish his letter, but it was a symbol of the Free Will
theme again. A new pen represents infinite possibilities and, though
Jacob possibly knew what was in store for James in the future, Jacob
still probably wanted Sawyer to take a different path. He gave Locke
second life after his fall out of the building, which allowed Locke a
shot at ultimate redemption, even if Locke never got there. For Jack,
well, he showed him that frustration doesn't need to be a dead end,
that all it might take is a little push to find the serenity that Jack
needs. Jack's scene in the hospital was significant. It was a great
representation of his stubbornness and tendency to harp on non-issues.
He was mad at his father in an instance when he should have been
thankful for, what turned out to be, great advice, advice that he spoke
so glowingly about in Lost's very first episode. As for Hurley, like
Locke, Jacob gave the big man a new lease on life, and turned his
perceived insanity into an asset.
This view of Jacob may seem like a reach (and, probably, it is), but if
his presence in all these scenes doesn't represent something in this
vein, why was he there? Unless it's some mumbo-jumbo about how if
Jacob literally touches you, it means you'll be drawn back to the
island, there wouldn't be a point. I have to believe that there was
significance outside of the literal nature of those scenes, otherwise
Cuse and Lindelof wouldn't have included them. Because if our
characters, who have been at the fore-front of Lost for five seasons, are
actually insignificant pawns in whatever game Jacob is playing, the
entire series would be pointless. Now, after last night's finale, we
have to assume that the 815ers are meaningful to Jacob.
But, meaningful as what? Attempts to change the future? Examples that
human nature can be subverted? That fate isn't a be-all end-all? What
are Cuse and Lindelof trying to say with Jacob's death? Has evil won
in the world, and is that the course we were always on? If Lost really
is about Big Ideas, then what other conclusion can be extrapolated so
far?
Crackpot Theory: Maybe Jacob is playing a huge trick on the Man in
Black, The Devil, whatever we want to call him. Maybe Jacob's
interactions with the 815ers, which ultimately brought them to the
island, and ultimately led to his own death, was always part of the
plan. Maybe the conceit that "what was meant to happen, will happen"
encompasses the everlasting battle between Good and Evil, God and the
Devil. Meaning, that the Devil's long-term plan to kill Jacob was
fated to be futile, and that the Devil's plight was always meant to be
fruitless, and that the only way for Jacob to subvert inevitability was
to somehow allow the Devil to find that loophole, and for the Devil to believe it was by
his own doing. Maybe Jacob's death was a willing sacrifice,
knowing that he has to be taken out of power for other forces to rise
up, take on the Man in Black and eventually change the future of the
island/world.
So, let's start where we began. I don't know. A lot of what I just
wrote pre-supposes that the theory of Jacob representing God and the Man
in Black/Non-Locke representing the Devil is correct. It could be totally
false. Maybe they're aliens. Maybe they're multi-dimensional beings.
Maybe they're re-animated Egyptian pharaohs. Since I've written too
much already, let me sum it up one more time: I don't know. And I don't think anyone else does either.
-Oscar Dahl, BuddyTV Senior Writer