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| Theories & Speculation Share your theories & speculation on LOST. Let your imagination and reasoning collide! |
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#1 (permalink) |
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The Journey Begins
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Part 1 of 7
Well, it’s official... the Season 4 finale of LOST was mind-blowing!!! “There's No Place Like Home” was just what we needed to pose tantalizing new questions for us to ponder during another 8 month hiatus, but it also answered some very longstanding questions... namely the whole polar bear conundrum that's been puzzling us since the VERY FIRST EPISODE of the series! Now some of you make think I’m daft for seeing solutions wrapped in that enigma of an episode, but certain revelatory moments got me thinking the day after, and I believe that these may be some quite deft observations. Hear me out. After nearly a whole year's worth of setup since the Orchid video was released at Comic-Con 2007, we finally made it to DHARMA's Orchid station proper. It was confirmed once and for all that the station involved experiments in travel through space and time (so called “four dimensional space”), and after Ben blew up the Vault by sticking many forks in the metaphorical microwave he took the dharka and descended into the frozen underground of the Island. Based on our friend Dr. Halliwax's description of “negatively charged exotic matter” in the orientation, the existence of the dharka for no apparent cold climes on the Island, and a similar situation we'd seen with the Swan station (where DHARMA tapped into forces greater than their understanding), we know our favorite Initiative had gone to this seemingly secret lair and, just like the electromagnetic forces beneath what we used to call the Hatch, couldn’t resist tapping into this mind boggling force for the sake of scientific research. Upon biting off more than they could chew or deciding to play it safe, the Initiative built the dummy greenhouse, used the story of a “botanical research facility” in an effort to keep secrecy, and put the Orchid station well below ground, using the Vault to seal off the freezer and downgrade to smaller scale “silly experiments” involving “time traveling bunnies.” But WHAT ON EARTH does this have to do with polar bears?!? Well, think waaaaay back. Based on the cages from Kate and Sawyer's incarceration at the Hydra station (on the OTHER island), we know that DHARMA brought the bears there for some sort of experimentation. According to the blast door map in the Swan, supposedly it was to genetically tamper with them — to see if science could influence evolution so that the bears could acclimate to the drastic change in environment. But now that we think of it, wasn't that feeding system a little complex? I'd argue that they were training our non-rabbit furry white friends for something more, and as Charlie pointed out in one of his conversations with Locke, polar bears “are like the Einsteins of the bear community,” (Further Instructions). What were they being trained for, then? Well, the finale showed us the subterranean ice cavern which contained what will forever be known as the “frozen donkey wheel”... the mechanism used to “move” the Island. Knowing that behind that crank was all that “exotic matter” and not wanting to put a human to the task of making that wheel of uncertain fate turn, what's the next best option to be able to see what it will do? Like sending monkeys into space, the polar bears were a natural choice as animal test subjects. Think about it... Polar bears have natural dharkas (a.k.a. fur) that would allow them to stand the freezing cold bowels of that chamber which was not too dissimilar to the climate they live(d) in. And they're smart enough to figure out a complex feeding contraption, so they'd be able to learn how to turn a wheel. Oh, and did you see how long and hard Ben had to struggle (even with the leverage the crowbar provided) before he got that thing to move? Three words: polar bear strength. Now, for those of you who are skeptical, I’m not suggesting that the bears necessarily used the same ladders that Ben did in getting down to that chamber. I’m sure that, before the Orchid was finished and the Vault became the final seal between the station and that icebox, there was an easier, less steep way down there. Whatever the case, the higher ups of DHARMA, Halliwax included, were actually planning to use the polar bears to push that wheel of all frozen wheels below what became the Orchid from the start. And, furthermore, they succeeded. We know at least one test subject was used... landing in the Tunisian desert just as Ben did after his spin (The Shape of Thing to Come), eventually becoming the skeleton that we saw Charlotte with in her desert digging flashback (Confirmed Dead). Along with the bear bones she found a DHARMA collar with the Hydra logo, proving that either Sawyer or Kate was kept where our time traveler had once called home. A possible explanation for why the wheel-turners keep winding up in the Tunisian desert: maybe each spoke (and the amount of turning before touching the other side) corresponds to somewhere different, and Ben chose the same as his predecessor... Continued in Part 2...
__________________
"Dear diary: Still on this bloody Island... Today I swallowed a bug!"
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#2 (permalink) |
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The Journey Begins
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Part 2 of 7
That leads us to the next tantalizing deduction. If DHARMA used a polar bear to experiment with turning the FDW, and it wound up in Tunisia a la Ben, that can only mean that DHARMA previously moved the Island!!! I think they themselves were responsible for it being located in the South Pacific as it was for all of Seasons 1-4, and that when it appeared there it put the Black Rock inland where Rousseau and our Lostaways found it. It has been brought to my attention that the ship seemed to have virtually no wood rot or remains of sea life in it, and that the nature of the bodies and dynamite inside was such that the Black Rock was not an underwater wreck for a century and a half and simply lifted up by the Island. However, with the newly revealed time traveling nature of our favorite archipelago, there are still a few plausible scenarios I can think of that would accomplish getting that slaver inland. I’ll lay out the two I can think of here and let you decide if it’s one, the other, or some combination:
Continued in Part 3...
__________________
"Dear diary: Still on this bloody Island... Today I swallowed a bug!"
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#4 (permalink) |
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Gilgamesh
Survivor
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Woah. Nice explanation.
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__________________
Beware Ben the bunny boiler ... ![]() In marriage you need a full deck of cards. A heart to love the guy, a diamond to marry him, a club to beat him and a spade to bury him! ![]() I'm running from the clown... ![]() Back Where It Began - chapter 2 up now!
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#8 (permalink) |
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Gilgamesh
Survivor
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A few hundred I'd say
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__________________
Beware Ben the bunny boiler ... ![]() In marriage you need a full deck of cards. A heart to love the guy, a diamond to marry him, a club to beat him and a spade to bury him! ![]() I'm running from the clown... ![]() Back Where It Began - chapter 2 up now!
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#11 (permalink) |
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Sacrifice the Island demanded
Survivor
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: With Ben
Fave Character: Ben
Lost Item: Ben's Stick
Posts: 618
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Yes....
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Destiny, John, is a fickle bitch!! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r77sismAeCs http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6IJXz1pvnKI ^^Two of the best endings of Lost... |
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#12 (permalink) |
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The Journey Begins
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Part 3 of 7
With Widmore's comments on how the Island used to be/still is his, I have a sneaking suspicion that either a) he was a joint partner with Hanso, b) was the on-Island manager of the Initiative, or some combination of the two. Either way, since the Island moved and the Purge occurred he’s not been able to find it, until of course he explores the relation to the Black Rock that he somehow knows about. Widmore buys the ship's ledger at the Southfields auction that a consciousness-jarred Desmond witnesses in 1996 (The Constant), and from it he gleans enough about the location to send his motley crew and mercenaries on the Freighter… But not before having successfully planted a staged wreck of Oceanic 815 where he could claim he was searching for the Black Rock: in the Sunda Trench. There ya have it... Polar bears and the Island's tumultuous recent past. But I'd be remiss if I said that's all I thought of TNPLH. In all honesty, I keep returning to that Frozen Donkey Wheel, and those of you who listen to the official podcasts from Darlton know why. In previous seasons Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse (exec producers, writers, and the co-creator/show runner of the show, respectively) gave us the codename of the secret/momentous scene in the finales: "the Bagel" (Season 1), "the Challah" (Season 2), and "the Snake in the Mailbox" (Season 3's mindf*ck of a flash forward reveal). This year's finale, however, they practically handed the moment to us on a silver platter with "the Frozen Donkey Wheel," since that was, quite literally, what we saw used as the device to move the Island. Being the masterminds that they are, and seeing how amazingly genius it was to dare hiding that moment in plain sight, I began to re-evaluate some of the other statements that the dynamic duo have made publicly about LOST to see if anything else jumped out at me. Lo and behold, after seeing all the sci-fi that this show exudes, I have to point to what Darlton have called the series time and time again. Whenever the issue of canonicity has come up, the show itself has been referred to as the “Mothership.” Now, I know what you’re all thinking: the Island being a spaceship was a theory debunked by Damon ages ago. Well, I'll get to the truth of that towards the end, but for now I'll point to the following... Consider for a moment that The Powers That Be initially denied Aaron being a member of the Oceanic 6, leading to wild speculation about who the final member was right up until a promotional clip from ABC revealed him to actually count. The writers and show makers wouldn’t just acknowledge if someone figured out a key element of the series, plain and simple. They’ve said it themselves, and this has been further proven by the fan inspired theories reviewed by Darlton, where the two have picked and rated the speculation of fans not based on accuracy, but rather imagination. (Just look up “What is the Smoke Monster?” on Yahoo Answers and see who they picked out of 8,000 some-odd results, as well as their own comments on the matter… not to mention their more recent U.S. Weekly theory ratings.) In this latest installment of the show, Locke specifically said “It isn’t an Island…” to Jack. And though John may not know what it truly is (yet), or simply have called it “a place where miracles happen,” I bet he’s right about that first bit. Which brings us back to the Mothership. If the “Island” is really an spaceship which crashed on Earth in ancient, possibly even prehistoric times, that would explain quite a lot, to tell the truth. All the earthly vegetation and such could have built up on it from being derelict for so long, effectively masking the ship as the Island we’ve come to know and love. It would allow for various cultures [read: the Hostiles/Others] to have come across it and made it their home or some holy site, which would account for what appears to be the ancient evidence of human culture: the Ruins, the door to Ben’s Smokey-Summoning Chamber, and perhaps even the Temple and Four-toed Statue). And as it was so astutely pointed out to me, Darlton, when pressed for the location of the series ending, said “Somewhere just outside the Crab Nebula is where it will all end, geographically.” (The Crab Nebula, incidentally, seems to tie into some recent themes and characters of Lost… most notably in the form of Rudolf Minkowski — nephew of the space-time theorist Hermann Minkowski who our George was a nod to — discovering the star responsible for the nebula and noting that it had an extremely unusual optical spectrum, an observation eerily reminiscent of Daniel Faraday’s comment: “The light here… It just doesn’t scatter quite right, does it?”). More importantly, though, a spaceship would give precedence for (if not explain) much of the otherworldly things like the electromagnetism and time travel-causing negatively charged exotic matter. I dunno about the rest of you, but Ben cranking that wheel definitely sounded like it started something like turbines to me... and I couldn't help but remember most ships on Star Trek use "anti-matter" in their warp nacels to achieve faster-than-light travel). Can you say propulsion system? And don’t even try to deny that the smoke monster has been acting very similarly to the alien(s) of the “The Abyss” — (for those who don’t know, in the movie there was an alien made out of what seemed to be a column of water that began to mimic human form when one of the characters touched it, which afterward projected images of humanity’s barbarism to a hero in his final moments and then reanimated him for sacrificing himself to save its kind. Change the water to smoke. Sound familiar?) Jacob could even possibly be the last surviving member of the original crew suffering the time-ravaging affects of the crash, or maybe the ship’s malfunctioning AI navigation; a holographic representation (in human form) that’s actually the ship's systems. Comparisons with Rommie from TV’s “Andromeda” come to mind, though Lexa Doig is much more fetching than our ghostly cabin misanthrope. My thought is that the ship is from far into our own human future — so far in the future that it seems alien — in which case Ms. Hawking and the other enforcers of time are the people responsible for the Island, explaining and giving credence to her cryptic words to Desmond: “If you don’t [push that button], all of us are dead.” Take of this what you will, but rest assured that at very least the polar bears are a mystery solved, and be confident in the knowledge that DHARMA moved the Island to the Black Rock’s location, which Widmore used to track it down in the South Pacific. Whether you believe the rest of this and buy into a future human explanation, one thing is certain: We now know that many of the mystical and mythical elements of the show come from the bowels of the Island. The electromagnetism emanating from beneath the Swan, exotic matter far below the Orchid, and the tunnels/vents that are used to summon/release Smokey are all deep, dark secrets indicating that, if nothing else, the knowledge of what we’re dealing with will only be revealed by either taking a leap of faith or digging for answers... Continued in Part 4...
__________________
"Dear diary: Still on this bloody Island... Today I swallowed a bug!"
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#13 (permalink) | |
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NeveR Die?
Island Architect
Tournaments Won: 1 Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Locke's Heart
Fave Character: Locke
Lost Item: Crucifix
Posts: 17,023
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Very well written piece and an enjoyable read. I certainly agree that the Polar bear we saw in Confirmed Dead arrived in the desert via Dharma's dabbling. But i'm not sold on the idea of them pushing the wheel. It has crossed my mind since the finale, but at this moment in time I cannot picture a massive bear fitting in-between those narrow spokes and pushing/pulling the wheel. I'm not saying it's not possible..but I just can't see it: ![]() I do agree that the area below the Orhid (where all the exotic matter is) was a different landscape pre-Dharma tampering, and that the Vault was the final seal on the good stuff. However re: the Polar bear in Tunisia, my opinion is that it arrived there via the Hydra island and some similar yet non-wheel turning excersise. Just like Desmond was able to time travel without turning the wheel below the Orcid, i'm thinking that there is or was another way in which the Poloar bear was sent through space and possibly time. I think that the wheel was originally put there by an ancient civilisation..possibly what we humans would call 'alien', and Dharma used it as a prototype in a bid to replicate it's time-travelling effects on a far more 'reliable' scale. I also think that the wheel was difficult to turn not because it required 'polar bear strength', but because it was literally frozen in place after years of non-activity But who knows, perhaps the Polar bear was unwittingly sent to Tunisia by Walt (we know that the Others got "more than they bargained for" when they took him): ![]() His minds-eye has been known do to crazy things before..that coupled with the islands portal to Tunisia and his impressionable mind: ![]() Or perhaps Desmond.. ![]() That said, I do like your post..I don't agree with the method of the Polar ending up in the desert, but I do agree on other |