I've felt like rewatching Lost for some time now and I watched both
parts of the pilot today. I wrote a bit about what I thought. I don't know if I'll keep doing this, but I found it kind of fun. I guess I should mention three things.
1. I'm not the best at remembering details of something I've watched, so
I might make some mistakes in regards to what's to come.
2. This is written with the assumption that whoever's reading it has
seen the show, and there might be spoilers for the entire series.
Pilot Part 1
The year 2004... popular band Drive Shaft are having a comeback...
The sound in this show is awesome.
We're alone in a bamboo forest with Jack, the only things audible his
breathing, the swaying of the trees, a bird above, and this wonderfully
eerie musical score. After Vincent passes through, Jack runs through the
bamboo. He bursts out into the open, and then, as the camera slowly
pans left towards the crash site, silence becomes chaos and we're thrust
into the show.
The music is something special. We hear pounding drums and watch as Jack
helps pull a man with an injured leg out of the wreckage and begins
tending his wounds. He suddenly hears a very pregnant woman screaming
for help. As Jack looks at her, frozen with indecision for just a
moment, the drums drop out. He makes up his mind, shouts an order, and
the drums come back in, twice as aggressive. This really sets Jack's
character up, I think, and gives us a strong character to follow.
It's interesting to see the first appearances of all the main
characters. Shannon standing around screaming, Jin looking for Sun. I'd
just like to point out that the very first word out of Micheal's mouth
is "WAAAAAAAAAAALT!!" You get what you paid for with this guy. I found
naive Boone, with his cell phone and his pens, quite touching. Bringing
back a handful of pens, long after they'd be needed: "Which of these
work best?" An exhausted Jack, smiling: "They're all good." Naive
Shannon, on the other hand, is already annoying with her thinking the
rescue is coming any time. I like that we don't see Sawyer in the
initial confusion. Rather than save everyone ala Jack or look for loved
ones ala everyone else, he seems to have found the nearest pack of
smokes and distanced himself from the crowd.
Jack ends up meeting Kate a ways off in the jungle while he's examining
his injuries. Jack's story about the spinal surgery never fails to make
me cringe. Hey, look! Jack's got some tattoos... rather than think "they
must not have bothered to cover up that actor's tattoos", I'm extremely
curious about them! In fact, there is no mystery thus far introduced in
this show that I am MORE curious about than Jack's tattoos. If the
creators of the show don't explain this, I'm going to be ticked.
The sequence with the plane in the tree, where they have to climb up the
seats to the front, is some straight up Jurassic Park shit. Seriously,
at this point, who knows? It could be a T-Rex stompin' around out there.
I really like the guy who plays the pilot. I can't help it. I liked him
on Heroes and I like him here. In fact, I wouldn't have minded if he had
survived and been a cast member for awhile. I think him telling the
gang that they're 1000 miles off course and the rescue teams are looking
in the wrong place is the best reveal of Part 1. It's not as flashy as
the monster, but it's that kind of slower, scarier realization that I
like in a mystery.
Notes
- Nice bit of irony in Jack and Kate's first conversation. "You're not running now", says Jack.
- Rose says that the monster's noises sound "familiar". What's up with that? (I'm probably forgetting something here.)
Pilot Part 2
I feel sad for Michael, watching this again. He's just trying to take
care of his son, even if he doesn't always know the best way to go about
it (when he tells Walt that he can have a new dog when they get home,
"I don't want a new dog" doesn't even need to be said).
Right off the bat, Jack is very protective of Kate, wary when she wants
to go on the hike into the jungle. Their relationships seems to have
progressed quickly, but it feels real. I think this is mostly due to
their talk when she was stitching Jack up back in part 1. I think she
must have been touched by his "fear" speech, as she counted to 5 later
herself.
John Locke's friendship with Walt is wonderful. The only people who are
interested in sitting down and playing a game (or reading a comic) are a
kid and an old man. When Walt asks if Backgammon is like checkers, I
love the way Locke almost sneers "It's a better game than... checkers".
I forgot unlikeable Sawyer could be here at the beginning, alternating
between relentless insults and some very Han Solo-ish bravado: "I'm a
complex guy, sweetheart."
I love that this show, in its pilot episode, got so ambitious so fast.
I like to imagine that I'm watching this for the first time, knowing
nothing about it, having tuned in the second the pilot started. The
mystery, the sense of something being wrong, is introduced so gradually
and perfectly. Some people crash on an island. They discover that
something is knocking down trees and killing people. They find out that
they're 1000 miles off their charted course. A polar bear attacks. They
find a transmission that's been playing there for 16 years.
And then all of this is so perfectly encapsulated by "Guys... where are we?"
Sunday, 17 March 2013
Thursday, 14 March 2013
The Mad Dog Killer (1977)

The Mad Dog Killer (1977)
also known as Beast With a Gun
Really unamusing, pointless exploitation movie about a psycho killer (Helmut Berger) and a hot girl (Marisa Mell) who gets raped a lot. The killer goes around slapping, killing and raping, and that's pretty much it. Nothing really happens in this movie, and the only thing worth seeing is Helmut Berger's eccentric performance as the psycho. If I recall, it got slightly better towards the end, but still pretty dire. I'm surprised this has a 6.2 on IMDB, which actually caused me to expect something more entertaining (as did the fact that it's supposedly featured in Quentin Tarantino's Jackie Brown).
*½/****
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