The Package Recap

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“The Package” is the 10th episode in Season 6 of Lost and the 113th produced hour of the series as a whole. It was originally broadcast on March 30, 2010. While Jin and Sun continue to search for each other, Locke meets with Charles Widmore.  (Lostpedia.com)

  1. I really liked how this subplot tied in Jin’s time travel as well. Charles kidnapped Jin because he wanted some questions answered on where DHARMA was investigating pockets of electromagnetism on the Island back in the 70′s. But why is Widmore interested? Will this help him stop Smokey?Electromagnetism has always been the blanket explanation for just about everything mysterious happening on the Island: Healing properties, why it’s hard to locate, why it’s hard to leave, time travel, etc. And EM was a major interest of DHARMA which constructed stations to investigate two such pockets of energy: The Swan and The Orchid.

    Now if you remember, Smokey seemed to have a very vested interest in keeping the button in the Swan pushed and the energy there contained. He appeared to Eko in a dream and told him that Locke had “lost his way” and that the button had to be pushed. Then, when the Swan was destroyed, Smokey went ballistic and killed Eko.

    At first, I thought all of this was part of Smokey’s grand plan to find a loophole – i.e. his original plan involved the Swan staying intact, but its destruction forced him to turn to Plan B (The Orchid). But now I’m thinking that maybe there’s something more going on here. Perhaps the reason Smokey got so mad when the Swan’s energy was released is because if all the Island’s energy is released with him still on it, he can die!

    Now we know that the Swan energy is gone, but the Orchid’s energy still seems to be there, at least it was when Locke put the wheel back on its axis and stopped the Island from skipping through time. But looking at Jin’s map, we can see at least three distinct areas on the Island with electromagnetism that DHARMA was interested in. Take a look:

  2. The catch? I’m betting the third and final pocket of energy is going to have to be destroyed manually, meaning someone’s going to have to stay behind to get the job done and that someone is going to have to die. Welcome to your destiny, Jack.
  3. Back in “The Substitute,” the mysterious young blond kid, presumed by most to be either Aaron or Jacob, told Smokey he couldn’t kill Saywer because it was against the rules. Now we learn that all the remaining candidates have to leave the Island with him or else he can’t leave.
  4. do wonder if Infected People count as someone else? If so, Smokey could simply unleash Claire and Sayid on them. If not, he’s going to have to manipulate someone else into killing recalcitrant candidates, and there aren’t too many of those left. Thus methinks Smokey’s going to have really turn on the charm the next several episodes.But the downside of all this is that it’s really easy to stop Smokey from leaving. For all Richard’s huffing and puffing about going to Hydra Island to stop Smokey, all he really has to do is keep one of Hurley or Jack away from Smokey (Sun may not be an actual candidate). Probably the worst thing they can do is take them to Hydra Island… where Smokey’s going… where the plane is.
  5. Let’s go back in time for a moment. Daniel, traveling through time himself, arrives at the Swan sometime between 2001 and 2004. Desmond leaps out of the Swan in his biohazard suit and holds him at gunpoint. Daniel says to him:

    What is important, Desmond, is what I’m about to say to you. I need you to listen. You’re the only person who can help us because, Desmond… the rules… the rules don’t apply to you. You’re special. You’re uniquely and miraculously special.

    He was, at that time, obviously referring to Desmond’s time travel abilities. But I think there’s something more to that. Widmore brought Desmond along for a very specific purpose. Could it be time travel? Could Charles want Desmond to try and change the past – prevent Jack’s phone call or prevent the Incident altogether? Possibly?

    But what if Desmond has some mysterious rapport with the electromagnetism on the Island? Remember that Isaac of Uluru told Rose some people are specifically attuned to energies in the Earth. Maybe Widmore plans to use Desmond as a dowsing rod to try and find the final pocket of energy on the Island. This could also explain how Desmond’s boat ended up on the Island in the first place – maybe he was drawn there by the electromagnetism

  6. Smokey’s certainly convinced that Kate’s not a candidate, but I’m still not so sure since her name clearly wasn’t crossed off the lighthouse list. If Smokey is indeed wrong about Kate being a candidate, wouldn’t it be amusing to see him turn her over to Infected Claire only to have to later save her after he realizes he can’t leave the Island without her? (1-7 from Mistaking Confidence For Fate)
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  7. But let’s back up just a second. When checking into the hotel, Jin and Sun make sure to clear their respective last names with the front desk. Jin is a Kwon and Sun is a Paik. Of course, the last name issue is very critical to on-island Jin and Sun. Was this a hint that the candidate is Jin? I would have guessed Sun, since she’s typically been the more “main” character of the two, but Jin’s star has been rising for the last two seasons, so we’ll see.
  8. Sun is accidentally shot, and as Jin carries her away, she reveals that she is pregnant. Sun, I believe, is the first main character in mortal peril in the ATL. Maybe things can only end happily in one reality and not the other? Maybe this bodes well for the on-island couple? Well, I expect Sun to pull through. A checkup with Dr. Jack Shephard should fix her, right?
  9. I also thought it was noteworthy that Sun cut herself just before Flock appeared.
  10. I couldn’t shake the idea that Flocke’s very proximity to Sun caused it. Randall Flagg/Walter, the Stephen King archvillian to whom MIB is often compared, would inadvertently kill small animals and cause headaches in the young and the elderly (I think) just by being around them.
  11. Flocke soon causes Sun a more serious injury. Admittedly, the effect was a little difficult to believe for just a bump on the head: she can’t speak in English anymore, though she can still understand it. This has happened before – to John Locke in “Further Instructions”, interestingly enough. In that instance, it was caused by John’s proximity to the implosion of the Swan. Does this mean electromagnetism is involved in the loss of speech? Maybe the Man in Black is really just a walking, talking, pocket of electromagnetic black smoke, and encountering him can have such an effect
  12. We know that electromagnetism can cause consciousness teleportation. Perhaps Flocke was able to force her to channel herself in the other reality, where she doesn’t know English. If Flocke has that power, we might have just seen our first glimpse of how the ATL could ultimately factor in to the MTL. Flocke might be the link between these two realities
  13. It’s also conceivable that Sun’s weird loss of English was caused by a variety of other things. Maybe Flocke has that power because it happened to John Locke, and he can use aspects of John Locke’s personality and memories. Maybe it was caused by a subconscious connection to her flash-sideways character (whose inability to understand English was placing her in mortal peril), and Flocke wasn’t involved
  14. Finally, Sun chooses to go with Jack. Interestingly enough, he reaches his hand out to her just as Flocke did. Jack is also “talking destiny” just like his old enemy, John Locke. And the character inhabiting John Locke, is definitively anti-destiny
  15. I think it is significant that Widmore didn’t bring the usual crowd to the island this time. Ever since his conversation with Desmond in “Jughead”, Charles has seemed to me like a sort of reformed bad guy who genuinely regretted the consequences of putting Keamy on the island. In many ways, Charles’s plan seems to be a repeat of his Season Four plan – bring scientists to the island to investigate strange properties – but with less violence
  16. I think the electromagnetic energy might correspond to Flocke, the other reality, or both, and I think that sort of explains Widmore’s interest. Also, now that we know a certain Scotsman with a special connection to electromagnetism is back on the island, Jin’s knowledge of the location of the pockets could be especially important.
  17. Flocke demonstrates once again that he has access to John’s memories by quoting Widmore’s speech to John: “a war is coming.”
  18. ever since Desmond kept Charlie alive long enough to shut down the Looking Glass station, I’ve thought that Desmond and Desmond alone has the power to change things, to operate outside the “whatever happened, happened” framework. Remember in “Because You Left” when the Swan hatch version of himself was able to send a message to his post-island self? Only Desmond can do that. It will be interesting to see if such powers extend not only through time, but through reality itself.
  19. Recall that 108, the number to which Hurley was supposed to turn the wheel in the lighthouse, bore the crossed out name, “Wallace”. According to Lostpedia, the novel A Wrinkle in Time (which appears on Sawyer’s dresser in “Recon”) has a character named Charles Wallace. This Wallace is psychic, messes with time, and appears as an evil cloud called The Black Thing (7-19 from Robz888 at DarkUFO)
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  20. We confirm that Flocke can’t travel to the Hydra island in his far-more-convenient Smokey form. And — this is just a guess — he may need to go there in the company of a candidate. That would explain why he recruits Zombie Sayid for “Operation: Recover Jin.”
  21. Jin is briefly locked in Room 23, the subliminal-message cell once used by the Dharma denizens (and Ben’s Others) to keep horny teenagers in line. But here’s a question: remember how the subliminal messaging Karl endured featured the line “God loves you as He loved Jacob“? Was that line added by the Others or was it part of Dharma’s material? These questions dovetail with something I’ve been mulling lately: were all of the island’s inhabitants lured there by Jacob? Or, was it a smattering of Jacob’s candidates and anyone else who happened to stumble across the place? Put another way: Was Dharma Jacob’s attempt at a massive recruitment effort?
  22. Richard’s big plan is to destroy Ajira 316. Now, I don’t mean to be callous, but wouldn’t it be just as easy to destroy the one guy who can fly that plane? Everyone knows I’m Frank Lapidus’ biggest fan. Love that guy. “We’re not going to Guam, are we?” still ranks as one of my all-time favorite lines. But, you know, if we’re talking life-death-future-of-the-universe stuff, I could see how Lapidus’ survival could at least surface as a discussion point.
  23. It’s never a good sign when an adversary quotes you back to you (the “wise man” Flocke referenced was Widmore himself). So I’m guessing Flocke and Widmore aren’t on the same team, and that opens up the really intriguing possibility of Widmore and Ben working together.
  24. Sun’s inability to speak English sure feels like a groan-worthy soap opera twist, but what if — and this is a big if — it actually represents a “leak” from the alternate timeline? Could this be evidence of Alt Sun and Island Sun meshing? Alt Sun doesn’t know English, after all. Is that a reach? Sure. But we already saw Juliet mumble something about “going dutch” just before she died, so I think there’s a hint of precedent for this leak theory. And, from a storytelling perspective, I could see the “Lost” crew using what initially appears to be a cliched plot device (Amnesia? Really?) in a unique and twisty way.  (20-24 from The Lost Blog)
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  25. The smoke monster may seem all powerful, but there’s one thing he hasn’t had to do in the last few centuries: lead anyone. It’s all well and good to be ripping trees out by the roots and judging people when the mood strikes, but getting human beings to do what you want while giving them the choice to do something else isn’t as easy as just promising puppy dogs and ice cream. “You’ll get answers” can only take you so far, and this is why people keep slipping through Flocke’s fingers. It’s also why he doesn’t notice a whole team of Widmore’s people surrounding his camp with night vision goggles, even though he has Sayid on his team
  26. It’s important to point out Sayid’s motivations for joining the MIB: he wanted to see Nadia again. This was back when he had feelings, however. Without such emotions, Sayid’s motivations for continuing on will rapidly disintegrate… and along with that, his loyalty as well. The smoke monster is too busy to see this right now, but as six-year veterans of LOST we all know what happens when Sayid gets restless
  27. Flat out, we learn the ultimate purpose of Flocke’s army: the man in black needs to collect all six candidates before he can leave the island. If he’s really going to fly off into the sunset the dark man obviously need Lapidus too, but I’m of the opinion the Ajira plane probably means squat in the grand scheme of things. I don’t know about you guys, but I for one do NOT want to see a heroic last-second takeoff as that plane screams down a dirt runway… Hurley helping Frank yank back on the control wheel as Ajira’s landing gear skims the jungle treetops. I can totally picture Frank wiping the sweat from his grimy brow: “Whew! That was a close one!” Yikes.
  28. With each passing episode, the dark man continues to lose control. He’s unused to people not doing what he wants. In the past he’s killed whenever he needed to, but things are now different. Here, he’s forced to try and finesse certain people into doing what he wants without being able to bash them against the nearest tree when they refuse. This is taxing on him – it’s wearing him down, and his frustration is growing. The dark man is unable to disguise his impatience with “Something wrong, Claire?” and answering to an increasingly sarcastic Sawyer is taking its toll. His camp is rapidly coming apart, just as John Locke’s own perfect little community began unraveling when he lead half the cast to New Otherton
  29. Okay, hang on a second. Before we talk about what happens here, we have to examine the circumstances leading up to this flash-sideways. On-island Sun is knocked out cold, and off-island Sun is just waking up. We’ve seen this happen time and time again, most noticeably when Jack gets put under for his on-island appendectomy and immediately wakes up in the Oceanic Six timeline.How many times does this have to happen before it becomes more than just a convenient plot device? Unconsciousness has always been associated with enlightenment. It’s always worked as a transition between scenes and storylines… but what if it also acts as a transition between worlds? Remember sleeping Claire waking up in her flashback car crash during Par Avion? Remember Desmond hitting his head on the freighter and waking up in one of his flashes? I could list dozens and dozens of examples here, but there’s really no need. The link between unconsciousness and making these journeys is as plain as the big frosty glass of Orange Julius they made Desmond drink on the sub-ride over
  30. We’re seeing LAX_Sun’s non-English speaking skills carrying over to island_Sun, and at this point there shouldn’t be much of a debate about that. The more important question to ask is this: how long has stuff like this been going on? Is Sun losing English the same thing as season one Claire losing her memories? As post-Swan Locke losing his ability to speak? As Desmond losing his clothes? Is this what’s been happening to characters we’ve seen reset or rebooted, and if so, when did it start?
  31. So many questions get potential answers here, it’s actually kind of frightening. Were Desmond’s “flashes” really just him experiencing the ALT timeline, but we were thrown off by this because he was visiting a past version of it? And while we’re at it, exactly how many different timelines exist? Just because our LAX characters seem to have blasted themselves into the “Jughead” universe, it would be ignorant to assume there’s only one. Was the Oceanic Six season nothing more than another alternate timeline, one in which Flight 815 really did hit the Indian ocean? Did Ben/Jacob really cure Juliet’s sister’s cancer, or was Mikhail pointing the Flame’s monitor at a different timeline, in a different universe, on a different playground where that cancer didn’t exist?
  32. And if the two timelines merge, will it go both ways? Will the LAX characters gain sudden knowledge of their on-island experiences, and use them to move on with their lives? Is this where everyone’s consciousness ends up when they die? Is this how on-island Juliet and on-island Sawyer can eventually go out for off-island coffee?
  33. These are all tremendous questions. The floodgates have been opened here, starting with Sun smashing her head into that tree branch. The possibilities are endless. The stories can wind in any virtually direction. The merging of character consciousness allows for both timelines to remain relevant, and for both timelines to mean something. It seems to be the answer as to where everything is going, and yet at the same time it also seems to be something that’s always been there.
  34. Let’s go to the walk-in fridge, where Omar bangs Jin’s head on the way in. “C’mon Omar, you gotta be more careful than that…” For a guy about to ‘pop’ someone, didn’t Keamy seem overly concerned about what happened here? Was he just looking to keep things neat and tidy, or was Keamy concerned that Jin might go unconscious on them? Remember, unconsciousness = enlightenment. As far as I’m concerned, Keamy seems to somehow know this. He puts a wet cloth to Jin’s head too, not out of caring or kindness but to wake him up. Before even talking to Jin, Keamy prefaces his speech by making sure he can’t comprehend him, asking: “You don’t understand what I’m sayin’ to you right now? Nothing?”This is, of course, when Keamy mentions THE ISLAND. Yeah, that’s right – the island. There’s no possible way you can convince me that Keamy didn’t say “Just in case you figure out what’s about to happen TO THE ISLAND…” here. Closed captioning can kiss my ass, that’s what the man said. Maybe it doesn’t mean anything, and the writers tossed it in as a joke to get us talking about it. Or maybe it means everything, and Jin – still in a daze from hitting his skull against a metal doorframe – heard Keamy correctly. Either way, we know something is going to happen to the island, back in the regular timeline anyway. Something that sinks it to the bottom of the ocean… probably something we’ll see at the end of the show.
  35. ‘d be lying if I didn’t say I asked myself a question: was Sayid fully himself? The carefree way he said “Good luck” (and with an almost evil smirk) belied a character who seemed so committed to caring for his niece and nephew a few episodes ago. It made me wonder if on-island Sayid’s ‘emptiness’ was bleeding through to his LAX life. We already started to see this the moment he shot Keamy, and now we continue to see it in the following scene. Accepting this as fact, the merging of consciousness seems to go in both directions, and this is another huge piece of the puzzle.
  36. Here, bleeding all over Keamy’s immaculate kitchen, Sun reveals that she’s pregnant. For me, this one small moment changes everything. It lends tremendous evidence in favor of the LAX universe turning out to be the final timeline, because now this story has an ending. Ji-Yeon’s place is established in both worlds, providing a satisfying conclusion to that whole story arc.
  37. Being unable to cross the ocean, the island makes the perfect jail for the man in black. This could easily be why he’s been imprisoned here, of all places. The fact that he can’t cross bodies of water (without a boat, anyway) also gives us an answer to another long-standing question, although indirectly:
  38. The Christian we saw in the cabin? Yes. The Christian we saw on the freighter, talking to Michael? No way. Because of the dark man’s aversion to water, this particular incarnation of Jack’s father had to have been someone (or something) else.But wait, there’s more. Think about the Christian Shephard we saw in the Oceanic Six timeline, where Jack saw him at the hospital. This is when the smoke detector went off, prompting everyone (me included) to think we were looking at the smoke monster. Could this have been the man in black taking Christian’s form? Not if we believe what the MIB tells us this episode.
  39. It’s interesting how Flocke reaches out to touch Claire, just as she’s questioning his motives. Maybe his “I need you” speech isn’t enough – he needs to physically touch her in order to keep Claire on his team right now. It’s a good thing Richard, Ben, Kate, and now Sun have all refused the dark man’s hand when it was offered to them.
  40. The Charles Widmore scenes told us a hell of a lot this episode. We learned that Widmore is indeed looking to stop the man in black, if not defeat him altogether. He’s on some sort of timetable, and although seizing Jin seemed to be part of his overall plan, it was a part he wasn’t yet ready for. He made the best of it though, and did a good job deflecting Jin’s angry questions by leading off with photos of Ji-Yeon. Cool scene.  (25-40 by Vozzek69 from DarkUFO)

and here is a sneak peek at next weeks episode:

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