I found the episode very average for the most part, but the Locke/Jack conversation towards the end raised it up to
Above Average. I love the divergent timelines, I must admit that I hadn't considered that as a possibility for this season and I'm eagerly waiting to find out how the two timelines will connect together. But the best thing about this is that fact that in one of the universes Locke isn't dead, and that makes me so happy I'm considering lifting my hit on Damon and Carlton for killing him in the first place.
But there was too much to this episode that didn't work for me, the main one being the focus on Kate in the alternate timeline. I've always hated Kate, she should have died back in
Tabula Rasa, and this episode actually made me hate her more. She killed her father in cold blood, she is responsible for the death of her best friend (who had a family!), and she completely refuses to accept responsibility for her actions by, once again, going on the run. The only way I could possibly have more contempt for her is if she killed my dog.
As for the island stuff, it was okay but I felt it was undermined by the Japanese(?) guy. That was silly, it made the whole thing feel like a cartoon whenever he was on screen.
But I still enjoyed the episode for the most part, because Locke is back. And not just any Locke, but season 1 Locke, the best of all the Locke variations. NotLocke was also interesting, especially his speech about Locke.
Can you tell that I like Locke?
I haven't read all the comments in this thread yet, so maybe somebody will make a comment that changes my mind a little, but I'm sitting here this morning thinking about the show. And for some reason, it just seems so disconnected from previous seasons. Same actors, same characters, but it just feels so different to the point of me not really being all that excited about it last night. Maybe as the season wears on, I'll get more into it. Right now, I just want it to be over.
I felt that way about season 5. Seasons 1-4 all feel like the same show despite all twists and character combinations, but once they time-jumped back to 1977 I lost the connection I had to the show and stopped being so fanatical about it. I didn't like having the Losties living with the Dharma folk and I hated how the cast was separated for most of the season. What I liked about
LA X was that it felt closer to seasons 1-4 than any episode in season 5, largely because the main story is all taking place in 2007 again while the divergent timeline is heavily based on the events of season 1. I hope that they can keep this up because I really want to feel connected to this show again, the same way I did in the first 4 seasons.
But I'm waaay in the minority with this opinion, most people on this board seemed to love season 5.
Lost tends to have action/adventure episodes and character episodes. This was clearly the former. It remains to be seen if the slightly changed format can handle character episodes (the flash forwards and flashbacks did. Last season had some character moments, but it was quite a bit more linear and plot driven).
That's another reason why I didn't like season 5 so much, it lost its focus on the characters and focused too heavily on the plot. I mean, Locke was one of my favourite characters on television, and yet his death had no impact on me because of the way that it played out. I felt sadder about Boone dying than I did about Locke, and Boone was practically a redshirt.
LA X clearly wasn't character-centric, and that's okay because it was the season opener and and event episode, but if the character focus gets shafted again like it did in season 5 then season 6 will be very disappointing for me. If they regain the balance between character and plot that the show had in the second half of season 3 and the entirety of season 4 then I'd be one very satisfied bunny.
Did I just call myself a bunny?
