He was put on the spot at an early age; the ability to do the dirty work like killing an animal on command. As a result of his upbringing, Sayid had a hardened exterior. He was not easy to know. His military service manipulated his skill set into an emotionless torturer. As such, he had no friends, merely comrades.
The only saving grace for our Iraqi character is that he clung to some form of personal honor to stave off the normal hatred of American eyes upon him. Those who mistrusted him did not know his back story (he never really shared the full extent of his deeds, and his own betrayal of his people by working with the American military). It was probably that guilt that led him into personal martyrdom. He could never be happy and he made it so. That is why he was obsessed with a woman he could never have, Nadia (and some would say that was because she was truly gone - - - tortured to death by his own hand.) That is why Sayid is the saddest character on the show.
He could have set a different path for himself. But he was consumed by his own personal wrought of having been controlled by so many other people that his actions became involuntary and sick. He hated himself for being himself. He knew what he was, and made that fact an excuse to keep other people at bay. When things got tough at the beginning of the castaways survival period, after confrontation, Sayid retreated to the jungle alone. He was captured by Rousseau, another bitter survivor of her own war with the island. The irony is that Rousseau's torture made Sayid realize how sad Rousseau was in clinging to a hope that she could never attain.
It seems fate had dealt Rousseau and Sayid the same conclusion: that if they were reunited with their true love (Alex and Nadia), those precious objects of affection would be cruelly taken away.
So it was his destiny to be a sad, lonely man.
On the island he gained the respect of a few people, including Jack, because Sayid had an unbelievable array of paramilitary talents. But he never really gained a strong friendship among the main characters. His cold demeanor probably influenced his time with the other castaways.
He knew he was a ticking time bomb. In the time flash arc, it was his savage state that burst on the scene when he shot (and presumably) killed young Ben. But that action had the unintended consequences of turning young, island reincarnated Ben into the monster that Sayid loathed and shot.
When Sayid himself was shot in the ironic island circle of life, he was taken to the temple just as Alpert had done with young Ben. In the temple waters, Sayid was reincarnated as an evil being. He struggled with it but knew it was his true self. He followed Flocke on his rampage of candidate murder, until Sayid decided to give up.
Sayid had a sad and useless ending on his island story. For a man with major military intelligence, taking the time bomb down the submarine corridor and NOT sealing the various hatch compartments was a serious lapse in common sense and the cause of his suicide. As a result, the entire ship was lost, including Sun and Jin.
Even in the finale, Sayid comes across with a sad result. He is paired not with Nadia, but with Shannon, a rich bitch manipulator for whom he had only a short island affair. If that was Sayid's only true love with a real woman, than that is very sad indeed. And no man on Earth could stand spending any amount of real time with the selfish and petty Shannon - - - so it is also sad that Sayid was cast to live in eternity with her.
Showing posts with label outsiders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label outsiders. Show all posts
Saturday, January 24, 2015
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
S6E9 JUNKYARD TURNSTYLE
I can see the importance of the Egyptian sets being diminished now that we have a clearer picture of the Jacob-MIB dynamic.
Jacob brings people to the island. Before 1867, Jacob left these lost souls to their own accord to deal with any interference by MIB. Jacob only brought invited people to the island. So at some point, he brought in Egyptians, lots of them, who brought with them their belief system to construct the temple and statue. What they did bring with them was a sense of "worship" to more than one god-entity, so that may be why the Egyptian culture lasted a long time on the island: both Jacob and MIB were worshipped by the people. And I suspect that even guardians of good or evil find it pretty cool to be worshipped by lower life forms, say, for several thousand years. But at some point MIB probably got bored with them and wiped them out, or Jacob brought competing souls to drowned out the earlier "native population."
It appears from Jacob and MIB's discussions, that Jacob brings a set of outsiders to the island to determine the question of whether good can prevail over evil. And once those outsiders have run the gauntlet of tests, temptations, corruption and judgment, they are discarded like old junk and replaced with a new set of outsiders to try the experiment over again. But there must have been some change in the "rules" of dealing with outsiders after Richard was given his job. Equal opportunity influence and the requirement of "free will" decisions by each outsider. I think the Dharma cult was brought in to see if technology could beat back evil in the end. That is why they were given decades to build their stations, conduct their experiments, to find enlightenment only to be tested by evil forces such as infertility, hostile enemies and their own power struggles.
The 815 cast is just another group of outsiders running through the hellish turnstyle of the Island.
Jacob brings people to the island. Before 1867, Jacob left these lost souls to their own accord to deal with any interference by MIB. Jacob only brought invited people to the island. So at some point, he brought in Egyptians, lots of them, who brought with them their belief system to construct the temple and statue. What they did bring with them was a sense of "worship" to more than one god-entity, so that may be why the Egyptian culture lasted a long time on the island: both Jacob and MIB were worshipped by the people. And I suspect that even guardians of good or evil find it pretty cool to be worshipped by lower life forms, say, for several thousand years. But at some point MIB probably got bored with them and wiped them out, or Jacob brought competing souls to drowned out the earlier "native population."
It appears from Jacob and MIB's discussions, that Jacob brings a set of outsiders to the island to determine the question of whether good can prevail over evil. And once those outsiders have run the gauntlet of tests, temptations, corruption and judgment, they are discarded like old junk and replaced with a new set of outsiders to try the experiment over again. But there must have been some change in the "rules" of dealing with outsiders after Richard was given his job. Equal opportunity influence and the requirement of "free will" decisions by each outsider. I think the Dharma cult was brought in to see if technology could beat back evil in the end. That is why they were given decades to build their stations, conduct their experiments, to find enlightenment only to be tested by evil forces such as infertility, hostile enemies and their own power struggles.
The 815 cast is just another group of outsiders running through the hellish turnstyle of the Island.
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
THEY'RE COMING
"They're coming!"
This was part of the cliff hanger story line from S5. Ben has just stabbed Jacob in the base of the statue, and Jacob gives New Locke (MIB) the warning that THEY are coming. New Locke (MIB) seems alarmed by the warning. Many questions, but the most important:
Who are THEY? The term means two or more people. One could quickly imagine Widmore, but his soldiers of fortune already came to the Island are were defeated. In addition, Widmore hinted to Locke that there was a war on the horizon which would mean outsiders attempting to take control of the Island. Could it be character(s) we already know, like Mrs. Hawking and the Brother from Desmond's monastery? In a religious context, could it be angels? In a reversal, could it be underworld demons? With the increasing number of Egyptian symbols, could it be the return of the last time traveling Pharaoh? What would the natives or Others fear the most? A return of the military? The return of the Dharma? More random people falling out of planes?
This was part of the cliff hanger story line from S5. Ben has just stabbed Jacob in the base of the statue, and Jacob gives New Locke (MIB) the warning that THEY are coming. New Locke (MIB) seems alarmed by the warning. Many questions, but the most important:
Who are THEY? The term means two or more people. One could quickly imagine Widmore, but his soldiers of fortune already came to the Island are were defeated. In addition, Widmore hinted to Locke that there was a war on the horizon which would mean outsiders attempting to take control of the Island. Could it be character(s) we already know, like Mrs. Hawking and the Brother from Desmond's monastery? In a religious context, could it be angels? In a reversal, could it be underworld demons? With the increasing number of Egyptian symbols, could it be the return of the last time traveling Pharaoh? What would the natives or Others fear the most? A return of the military? The return of the Dharma? More random people falling out of planes?
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