Analysis: 4.10 Something Nice Back Home
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By AngeloComet
- Analysis: 4.10 Something Nice Back Home
- Created: May 5, 2008
- Last updated: Aug 14, 2008
- After episode: 4.10: Something Nice Back Home
- Status: Current
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Something Nice Back Home. An ironic title if ever there was one.
— AngeloComet
Lost has always been a flirt with Star Wars. Batting its eyes with its Chewbacca/Jin comparisons. Giggling sweetly at the “I have a bad feeling about this” remarks. But Something Nice Back Home cut the flirting and made a serious move. Jack stood on the toy Millenium Falcon, Aaron’s mobile was of stars and planets and then came the realisation that Aaron, like Luke Skywalker, has an uncle who is impeding his destiny. “You’re not supposed to raise him, Jack.”
A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away Luke and Leia were brother and sister. For most of the time, they were unaware of this. For most of the time, neither were the audience. Ditto Jack and Claire. The estranged siblings on an Island immeasurably far away in a time unspecified. Possibly Jack has found out the truth. “You’re not even related to him!” he accusingly fired at Kate, as though stating more right over Aaron. Perhaps that sense of duty was what made him change his mind since Eggtown and give Kate and Aaron a try. Maybe. But I’m inclined to think not. I think that was just one of those neat irony things Lost also likes to flirt with.
Of course, the upshot to all of this is that the parallels with Jack and Claire/Luke and Leia mean that, ah, Christian Shephard is Darth Vader. Has Christian lead Claire off to the dark side? Well, there’s only so far you can stretch the Star Wars angle, but it brings me to my first point of analysis: What happened to Claire?
If it didn’t seem so altogether completely stupid I’d suggest that she was dead. Seriously. As in she died when her house exploded during The Shape Of Things To Come. It was a credulity-straining survival, when you think of it. And consider Miles’ curious behaviour. Sawyer interpreted Miles’ staring as lustful - but Miles the ‘Ghost Whisperer’ was perhaps more taken with Claire being a fully-fledged, moving spirit. That would explain why he allowed her to go; if she really was dead then why would he follow her? And I think of how Claire didn’t want to remain at the burial site of Rousseau and Karl (yep, Rousseau’s definitely dead!) and I get more enticed by this possibility.
Hell, even Claire walking around carrying Aaron doesn’t stop her being a dead person on the Island. Look at how Christian Shephard was creepily holding Aaron in his arms by the campfire?
So is that it? Claire’s one of them now? The evidence points towards it. But the eternal cynical optimist in me won’t believe it. I believe Christian either did something, or told her something, or showed her something pretty astonishing or compelling or inarguable that made her ditch Aaron and disappear. Point is, through choice or against her will, the alive Claire left Aaron and we just don’t know the reason why yet.
I mentioned up above about how Lost likes to flirt with irony. How about this for a seduction technique? In the episode A Tale Of Two Cities Jack bursts into his father’s alcoholism meeting and accuses him of sleeping with Sarah. This startling event plunges Christian Shephard back onto the booze where he remains an alcoholic until his death. Then, in Something Nice Back Home (an ironic title if ever there was one!), a dead Christian Shephard appears in Jack’s life and the event is so startling Jack immediately snaps up some clonazepam pills and washes them down with a beer. All he needs to do is stop shaving with that nice razor Kate thoughtfully bought for him and the transformation to Suicidal Bearded Jack in Through The Looking Glass will be complete.
Whilst Jack’s paranoid control-freak was shining through, Kate wasn’t exactly doing herself any favours with her sly phone calls and cloak and dagger behaviour. Jack caught her talking on the phone, making plans to stay “for at least an hour”, and then the next day she came home late saying she had been fulfilling a promise to Sawyer. Now what on Earth could that be about?
Given that the only ties off-Island connected to Sawyer were Anthony Cooper (the “real Sawyer”, now dead) and Cassidy (with their daughter, Clementine) it would seem that Cassidy and Clementine are this promise. Sawyer did send a sizeable amount of money for Clementine in Every Man For Himself when he was released from prison, and given the protective quality he has shown towards Claire this force in his nature is particularly strong.
Sawyer - “Why are you telling me this?”
Cassidy - “I just thought you could write her a letter. Her name’s Clementine.”
Perhaps Sawyer gave Kate a letter to give to Clementine. (He’s fond of letters. He wrote one as a kid to the real Sawyer and carried it around his whole life.) Perhaps Kate met Cassidy and the two realised they had met before (during Left Behind) and a clandestine friendship picked up. Mind, Kate’s heavy-handed insistence that Jack should trust her did hint that Kate is up to something that she can’t mention yet. My train of thought de-rails here.
We have been given information that Sawyer will get back to the beach camp before the Oceanic 6 leave. (When else could Sawyer have requested this promise for Kate to fulfil?) Furthermore, with Jack saying that Sawyer chose to stay on the Island, it seems the Oceanic 6’s freedom was based on a voluntary decision. Sawyer had stated he planned to remain on the Island simply because there was nothing else for him in the real world. Perhaps all the non-Oceanic 6 people made that same decision.
I can’t believe all the decisions were made willingly though. Juliet desperately wants to go home to her sister and yet, as far as we can tell, remains on the Island. And then there’s Claire leaving Aaron (although if she is dead then I guess leaving might be tricky!). And speaking of potentially dead people, Jin prophetically stated to Sun: “I will get you and our baby off this Island” - further foreshadowing that he’s not going to make it. So, yes, maybe the non-Oceanic 6 people did make a choice to remain but I can’t visualise it being a particularly willing choice. More like someone saying yes when they’ve got their arm twisted behind their back.
There is the suggestion being seeded, however, that the Oceanic people are not supposed to leave the Island. We’ve already witnessed Michael apparently unable to kill himself due to some ‘Island force’ in Meet Kevin Johnson. Inversely, Rose made the point that Jack - the person most likely to lead people to freedom - became almost fatally sick. The will of the Island? Or just badly-timed appendicitis? There’s that whole faith vs science dilemma again!
Science is hard-pushed to explain the appearances of Christian Shephard and Charlie in Flashforward Land. Hurley has reached the conclusion that he must be dead, but really he seems stricken by the feeling he is in a place he doesn’t belong. “They need you,” Charlie told Hurley. The initial inference was that ‘they’ needed Hurley and the other Oceanic 6 because ‘they’ were in danger. But maybe that’s not it. Maybe the Oceanic 6 are like missing pieces of a mosaic that need to be set in place to complete the picture.
So the Island sends the likes of Charlie and Christian Shephard and Libby to spread the message, nightmarishly pressing Island-leavers to return. (If Widmore’s been to the Island he’s experiencing the same thing, that’s why he needs a bottle of whiskey to help him sleep at nights.) Jack’s “We have to go back!” cries at the end of Season 3 are gathering momentum. In short, Something Nice Back Home is heavily hinting that “back home” is now the Island.
+1Great analysis AC as always.I’m glad you addressed the ‘Claire is dead’ issue and I agree with your thoughts about it.
It just amazes me that Jack still hasn’t evolved past his issues even in the future. True, Kate is still keeping secrets and Hurley’s still crazy, but at least they have their hearts in the right place. Jack seems so self absorbed and its hard to sympathize with his character.
He wanted to supervise his own appendectomy! Maybe he doesn’t trust Juliet :P
Wow —a lot to comment on. Thanks for the post! +1
I’ll start with alive Claire. I agree with you and Miles: she’s not dead “yet.” The show went to a lot of trouble to show us a house getting completely blown up. No one is surviving that. BUT, as explained by Mr. Friendly to Michael, if it’s not you time, something will intervene.
Alive Claire has work to do…
http://lost-theories.com/theories/2008/may/03/without-these-answers-we-dont-/
I also like what you say about “back home” being the island. It sure feels that way to me as a viewer.
+1 AC. Love the Star Wars connections!
I was only wondering one thing more:
Desmond had a vision in which Charlie drowned. In the end of that vision Claire was being rescued by a helicopter as a result of Charlies actions.
Was Desmond wrong? Did the writers of the series forgot? Am i wrong? If it implies that the vision was wrong. Could Charlie still be alive? Is Claire really dead?
AC, I have already read this on your blog,but like episodes of Lost,I like seeing it again. I hope Claire was not killed in the explosion of her house,and we are seeing dead/smokey Claire or worse yet another Claire. I prefer to believe she is still alive.
I think the )Where were you? ),Jack asked Kate was she went to see Cassidy.
BTW thanks for voting. I will be voting myself tomorrow, but in the real world of elections(voting my choice of the next President of the United States) +1
You’re looking way to much Star Wars movies, lol.
No, seriously, nice analysis.
+1 Angelo, I’m really not a Star Wars fan, in the sense that I watched it all, but don’t remembe all the details. The rest of your theory goes along with my thinking, though. The blast that should have killed Claire, but didn’t seems to me to be to be along the same lines as Michael having more work to do.
The one part that bothered me was when Christian led her off into the jungle and she left Aaron alone. Why would she do that?? It just doesn’t seem like something Claire would do.
Didn’t Hurley yell at Ben to stop boarding up the house when the Freigher people were coming to get them because Saywer wasn’t back yet? Didn’t Ben then tell Hurley that Saywer wasn’t coming back? Ben seemed pretty confident about that confirming his future seeing ability. I thought that this eluded to the fact that when Saywer did come back that perhaps the rules had changed before Alex was shot, and Ben missed it. Perhaps if he would have recognized the rule changing sooner, he could have saved Alex.
One Star Wars reference I noticed as well was how Hurley looked more like Jabba the Hutt than usual, what with the dim lighting and all.
But seriously, very well-ripened analysis. I do think that Claire survived the explosion, and it was the Island which interfered and wouldn’t let her die yet. I’m guessing she has some important role to fulfill somewhere in the near future, and Christian is steering her toward it, just as he guided Jack when they first arrived on the Island.
Great post. +1
Perhaps the reason Michael couldn’t kill himself was because he too was already dead.
I made put down some other thoughts about Starwars references… took me somehow to other ideas. Thanks. I still don’t know about people being dead. It was a thought that crossed my mind early in the series. But i remember interviews with the producers in which they stated that the people from flight 815 where not dead….
I’m also troubled with the premonition of Desmond, seeing Claire take off with a helicopter (if Charlie would sarcifice himself, and he did)…
I don’t believe Claire is dead yet either, although Miles was looking at her strangely. I think he may have had more interest in Aaron than Claire.
I also felt the whole Jack and Kate relationship felt wrong this episode. I’m not sure they’re meant to be together.
I know that Hurley said that Jack wasn’t “supposed to raise him” yet I can’t help but feel sorry for Aaron. Jack may not be the right person but Kate isn’t either. He deserves better than Kate.
I really appreciate your posts. +1
I love the “back home is now the island”..yep!
+1…..great thoughts with the Star Wars parallels.
AC, many great thoughts. +1
But you have two Lukes. An infant Luke (Aaron being raised by his uncle) and an adult Luke (Jack never knew about sister). They have already seen each other. If they ever figure out they are the same person the universe will self destruct.
AC +1 on bringing out the irony in how Jack made his father become an alcoholic, and then Christian did the same to Jack. That alone is better than most of the posts on the site.
But, as far as Claire goes, I couldn’t quite get a feel for where you stand on whether she is dead or alive. At first, it seemed like you were leaning towards her being dead, then you kind of talked yourself out of it.
I think she is alive. It was a big house explosion, but if 70+ people can survive a mid-air plane explosion, certainly we can buy Claire somehow surviving a house explosion. And I find it easier to believe she survived the house explosion than it is to believe a “Zombie Claire” is walking and talking amongst Sawyer, Miles, Hurley, Locke, and Ben.
Ahhhhhh…
So refreshing to read insightful commentary. I missed ya AC.
+1 :)
Yeah for real! Like, when is Desmond gonna talk about his “visions” “I’m also troubled with the premonition of Desmond, seeing Claire take off with a helicopter (if Charlie would sarcifice himself, and he did)… ”
Iamanewbie: that’s a very good point, totally forgot about that, I thougth for sure Sawyer was gonna die this episode.
I bet we have a scene with Claire waiting in the bushes, looking at Baby Aaron, and I bet we see her only leaving with Christian once Sawyer has the baby.
So Claire sees Christian Shepherd instead of Sawyer, and at the camp fire it was Miles as CHristian Shepherd insteand…………interesting….
Claire survived the explosion in the same way that Sawyer dodged the machine gun bullets. Both highly unlikely without some outside assistance. There is no way the writers would have had Sawyer luckily saved by the pickett fence. They went out of their way to show that they could not be killed. Or… Sawyer’s dead too. +1