BWAAAAaaaahAAHAHAHahahaaaa…*ah-heh*…hahhhhh…
Best. Last Line. EVAR!
I mean, really, did you see the look in Ben’s big, bugged-out blues? Classic! Then, Locke smirks, smash-cut…*pah!*…”LOST.” That, my friends, is how you end an episode and leave ‘em wanting more. Truly, do you ever get enough of Locke and Ben? I know I don’t!
And what about Miles and Hurley? Much like Sawyer and Hurley in the pre-Sawyer-as-derring-do-er days, those two sure know how to provide some great comic relief doubling as being the in-show voice of the fans. Ahhh…good times, good times.
And Sawyer and Juliet! What great chemistry they have. How heroic, how noble, and how smart are they, eh? Truly the golden couple of the show right now, and not just for both being blondes.
Oh, wait… *le sigh*
I suppose I should mention Kate seeing as “Whatever Happened, Happened” was one of her centric episodes and all. And really, where does she get off having a second centric episode in the time travel season anyway? All right, all right. We’ll start with her, and then get to the good stuff, m’kay?
How can you have any pudding if you don’t eat your meat?
Thankfully, the Kate-related content of this episode wasn’t any kind of ’shipper’s delight. The more the ’shippers are tortured, the happier a girl I am. Ahh, schadenfreude…
And I do have to be fair to old ferret-face. She’s shown some character growth even if she hasn’t picked up any acting chops. Kate did The Right Thing™ at every step along the way of this episode, both on the Island and off it. Let’s break it down:
• She gave Aaron to the one person who should really him in Claire’s absence, Claire’s mum, thereby paying proper attention to her near-Claire experience. (Called it!)
• She told Carole the truth about Aaron and that the O6 lied.
• She told Cassidy the truth about the O6’s lie.
• She honored her promise to Sawyer to deliver the money for Clementine.
• She went above and beyond to save a poor tween boy who’d been shot, even if that boy grew up to become the Ben Linus we all love to hate.
• She never once reproached the suddenly contrite Roger Linus for his woeful lack of quality parenting.
• She delivered news back to a grateful Sawyer about Cassidy and Clementine.
• She even took the news of Sawyer’s “doing this for her (Juliet)” with its accompanying backhanded message about Kate’s prospects with Sawyer without even flinching.
• Even though we saw it in “316,” Kate still got on that plane to face up to her destiny on the Island.
So, this isn’t the same old “making messes and running away from them” Kate. We get it.
You want answers?
I want the truth!
You can’t handle the truth!
But there’s something even more important going on in there, in the off-Island bullet-points. Can you see what it is? No, it’s not that she’s going to be single for at least the foreseeable future, though I’m pleased as punch about that, too.
It’s that Kate has joined Hurley and Locke in a very exclusive club of off-Island people: those who’ve exposed the lie of the Oceanic Six. But why, you may well ask, is that important?
Because this little trend is putting into place something I think is going to be a very important plot development for Season 6. Call it the “815 Truth Movement.” To paraphrase the ever-pithy über-pilot, Frank Lapidus, you know those nuts that think 9/11 was an inside job? Well, this is like that…only real.
The list of people who know some or all of the truth about the Oceanic Six’s deception, or who will vociferously question their re-disappearance is growing. Carmen & David Reyes, Cassidy & Clementine Phillips, Carole & Aaron Littleton, Mr. Paik & Ji Yeon, and Waaalt could sure grab some media attention if they went and validated the conspiracy theories about Oceanic 815 that have already been hinted at by the “The Oceanic Six: A Conspiracy of Lies” bonus feature on the Season 4 DVD set. And none of them would be the sort to be silenced or placated by anything Ben Linus, Charles Widmore, or their operatives have to offer. (I’d have added Desmond, Penny, and wee Charlie, but I’m somehow sure they’ll be on the Island sooner than next season.)
There are also just too many on-screen instances of this sort of “loose end” being left now to ignore the evidence. I’d actually been pondering this going all the way back to Hurley’s original admission to his mom in “The Lie,” though I only brought it into these pages with my treatment of the last Kate-centric episode, “The Little Prince.”
In the larger sense, the only confirms to me that the off-Island world is actually going to be a major factor in the end-game rather than just fading into the background to focus solely on the on-Island chess-match, which I still think is all about finding out whether or not the time-stream can be altered after all…or else, in the words of the always-cheery Eloise Hawking, “God help us all.” Or is it the alteration that one side wants to perform that God needs to help us avoid? Alas, we have too little info as yet.
Oh, of course! It’s all about you, isn’t it?!?
Of course, one of the benefits of having the “present-day” storyline happening in 1977 DHARMAville (future site of New Otherton!) is that everything has become something of an extended Ben flashback, allowing us not to have to think about dramatically lesser characters like Kate too terribly much if we don’t want to.
And before we get into the heavier plot elements, I just want to take a moment to reflect on the fact that we actually, finally got to see a different side of Roger Linus than “abusive asshole” or “dessicated corpse.”
I have to admit that, after seeing Jon Gries playing far gentler souls like terminally shy savant Lazlo Hollyfeld in Real Genius and lovable techie Broots in The Pretender, seeing him be so mean to young Ben was causing me no end of cognitive dissonance. So it was a bit of a relief to finally see Roger express a positive human emotion by confessing to Kate his shortcomings as a father and expressing due concern for the life of his boy.
If only it weren’t a case of “too little, too late.” Just another one of the many poignant stories woven together on this crazy drama we all love so…
Now, in the latest performance of the predestination loop mambo, we have evil, cruel, nasty Ben bringing assassinified Sayid back in time to shoot young Ben so he can become cruel and nasty enough to want to do that to Sayid. (I’m still holding out for Hurley to be the one in whose voice The Numbers were being broadcast when Leonard Simms heard them…)
We also have Hurley raise his one good question in his dialogue with Miles about the nature of time travel—that of why Ben didn’t remember Sayid shooting him—only to possibly have a possible answer given shortly thereafter by Mr. Guyliner himself.
Annnnnd a big question about the mysteriously-migrating gunshot wound flip-flopping which side of the Prime Meridian of Ben’s hoodie it’s on between “He’s Our You” and “Whatever Happened, Happened.”
There’s already been a lot of wailing, gnashing of teeth, and rending of garments about both of these questions. Some people think that the “he won’t remember any of this” line was too facile in explaining why, as Hurley was curious to know, Ben wouldn’t remember Sayid as his would-be killer upon being tortured by Sayid as “Henry Gale” in the Swan hatch in 2004. And does it mean that Ben suddenly doesn’t remember anything before that point at all, making his lie about being born on the Island into his belief of the truth? Or else surely that means he actually remembers everything!
Well, I’m going on record to say that both are wrong. The only “all this” Ben won’t remember is being shot and handed over to the Others…and probably the day or two previous, in which he would have met Sayid. The rest of his fucked-up upbringing, including the fact of being brought to the Island at 8 years old, he’ll remember. After all, he’s still going to need a reason to still hate Roger enough to gas him up close and personal even though I’m quite sure Roger will moderate his parenting style upon miraculously getting his son back alive. And what’s more, some part of Ben, conscious or otherwise, is going to retain the memory of being shot by Sayid, adding fuel to the fire of Ben’s treatment of Sayid from 2005-2008. But I’m betting it suits the Island’s/Jacob’s/Smokey’s purposes for Ben not to remember Sayid clearly when he’s captured in 2004 despite having other foreknowledge of the time-tripping Lostaways in DHARMAville remain intact.
And to the “total amnesia” proponents I only ask this, did Robert and the other members of the French team forget their past lives after being mysteriously reprogrammed by the smoke monster in “This Place is Death?” Based on the intimate knowledge of their past together displayed by Robert in his final standoff with Danielle, the answer to that is a very clear “no.”
The whole world keeps spinning around me. All life is future to past, every breath leaves me one less to my last.
Now, about that gunshot wound…
A quick look at the screencaps is enough to show that this wasn’t a simple case of horizontal inversion, which is more common than you think in TV shows. Checking out Young Ben’s hair in both scenes nixes that. So we’re left with either a pretty colossal continuity error on the part of Lost’s costume and makeup people or else another one in an ongoing series of small alterations indicating that someone or something is somehow constantly changing the timestream in small ways, as in the case of the mysterious pictures on the stairs (pictured right) during Miles’ ghostly powwow back in “Confirmed Dead.” There have also been slight dialogue differences in each revisiting of the scene at the pier between the O6 and Ben, which strikes me as very odd since it’s not like they didn’t have the script for “This Place is Death” lying around to double-check against.
I’m certainly not beyond believing that it’s easy to make mistakes from one episode to the next or even one day of shooting to the next on a show as complicated and intricately-plotted as Lost, nor even believing that at least some of the examples I’ve cited, or that others would cite, are in fact bloopers. But there are just too many of them and some of them are just plain too egregious to simply be errors. I’ve been saying it for some time now, but it bears repeating: the timeline of Lost isn’t fixed and fully fated…for the right people or beings.
Like the Island itself. And Desmond. And quite possibly Walt.
I mean, just think of the ripples through time it would have taken to ensure a failure to fire in both Michael’s and Keamy’s guns, preventing Michael from dying before his appointed time, for example. Or to orchestrate a rare bird smacking itself dead into the Lloyds’ window right as Walt and stepdaddy were talking about it all the way back in “Special?”
It’s just that for poor schmoes like the rest of our Lostaways, all they can do is follow along the tracks through time that only they can’t see.
You’re worn and used and you cant talk. Your flight has been postponed, now you must walk…straight up that hill, now you must push your own rock.
Which brings us to easily my second-favorite scene in the show: Hurley and Miles sounding a lot like arguing Lost fans with Miles playing the generally clued-in role and Hurley being mostly sans clue, aside from the insightful question about Ben’s memory that probably has nothing to do with time travel at all.
What Miles was trying to explain to poor, unequipped-to-cope Hurley was the difference between objective and subjective time (which I was busy defining way back at the beginning of the season, if you’ll recall). All of which makes me wonder why there weren’t more sci-fi geeks among the Lostaways. Maybe the Island didn’t want anyone around who could really explain things properly to the returned O6ers, hence the disappearance of Faraday.
But getting back to the point, it really is quite simple, as I’m sure the vast majority of the readers here will agree. But for the confused few, it’s quite simple…everything that the time-travelers experienced up to the point at which they were thrown back to the ’70s is subjectively “past” to them. They lived from their respective birthdates one day at a time until the Island started its time-skipping (in the case of the Left Behinders), or until the flash aboard an out of control Ajira 316 (in the case of the time-tripping O6ers). So, their existence in early 2005 or early 2008 is in no way contingent upon their surviving their experience in 1977.
But people who haven’t time-traveled to the past, but are merely the 1977 versions of people we know in the 2000s can neither die (e.g. Ben) nor be prevented from dying (e.g. most of the DHARMA Initiative) no matter what the time-travelers do. By the time we get to 2004 and the crash of Oceanic 815, Ben is alive and the DHARMA Initiative is dead, and that’s all there is to that.
Got it? Good. Miles was 100% right and Hurley was 100% wrong, as much as we love him.
That’s what the title is all about. Nothing that any of these people do during the DHARMA days can even possibly be anything different than what the future knows they did. No matter how “unpredictable” you try to act, your actions will inevitably be exactly what they always would be. And it’s that knowledge that drove poor Daniel Faraday quite mad after the last time-skip took him away from the mortal remains of Charlotte Lewis, which now resides forevermore on the Island in whatever ancient time that was when the statue still stood.
The only exceptions, as previously stated, are those special, exceptional “wild-cards.” But will their influence be enough to enable whatever alteration one side or another of the Great Game of Lost is trying to get away with? This is exactly why Season 5 is all about giving fate the edge, so that free will can be the fan-favored underdog going into the all-important Season 6.
Hello there, ladies and gentlemen! Hello there, ladies and gents! Are you ready to rock? Are you ready or not?

And finally we complete the circle and arrive back at that most triumphant episode ending. That better-than-classic-Lost moment we’ve been waiting for since “The Life and Death of Jeremy Bentham“…Ben getting an eyeful of one seriously resurrected Locke.
And it was all we could have hoped for and more.
We got some genuine-looking shock from The Man Who Always Has a Plan™, a righteous smirk and verbal smackdown from The Once and Future Island King™, and the setup for what looks to be a big-time, bad-ass Ben episode called “Dead Is Dead”…even if it should be called “Dead Is Dead (Unless You’re the Island’s Miracle Boy).”
So, is Ben’s look actual shock, as in “How can you be alive?!? I killed you!”? Or is it disbelief more along the lines of, “I knew you’d come back, but…holy crap, it actually happened! Now there’s something you don’t see every day.”? There’s only one way to find out, isn’t there. And even then, Ben might lie through his teeth.
Still…”Hello, Ben. Welcome back to the land of the living.”
Brilliant!
Tags: Ben, Hurley, Jack, Juliet, Kate, locke, Looking at the Little Things, Miles, predestination, Richard, Sawyer
30 Responses to “Looking at the Little Things: 5.11 “Whatever Happened, Happened””
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Section Header References:
“How can you have any pudding if you don’t eat your meat?”
—Pink Floyd, “Another Brick in the Wall”
“You want answers?”
“I want the truth!”
“You can’t handle the truth!”
—Col. Nathan R. Jessep & Lt. Daniel Kaffee, A Few Good Men
“Oh, of course! It’s all about you, isn’t it?!?”
—Sir Alexander Dane (aka “Dr. Lazarus”), Galaxy Quest
“The whole world keeps spinning around me. All life is future to past, every breath leaves me one less to my last.”
—Dream Theater, “Pull Me Under”
“You’re worn and used and you cant talk. Your flight has been postponed, now you must walk…straight up that hill, now you must push your own rock.”
—Stan Ridgway, “Stranded”
“Hello there, ladies and gentlemen! Hello there, ladies and gents! Are you ready to rock? Are you ready or not?”
—Cheap Trick, “Hello There”
[...] You have to love a show that can actually one-up Buffy the Vampire Slayer for an “I’m back from the dead, miss me?” moment, which is exactly what Lost did with “Whatever Happened, Happened.” [...]
BEN AND LOCKE!!!
Best couple on the show, bar none. I vote for “disbelief”, Ben isn’t that gullible.
the Ben Linus we all love to hate
Speak for yourself, I’ve loved Ben from the get-go because I was a Michael Emerson fan due to his guest stints on other shows. I would have been completely happy if The Others had wiped the Oceanic 815 people off the face of the earth at the end of season 2 and the story continued on, only it was about The Others. I care more about Mikhail than I do for any of the 815 people except John.
Can I taste yo Juice!
I’m pretty certain “doing it for her” referred to Clementine.
How could Sawyer’s helping Kate carry a dying boy into the woods of an island in 1977 in any way be done for Clementine? How could that possibly benefit her? That makes no sense at all.
He’s pretty explicit. He says he had a talk with Juliet and he’s doing it for her.
Well, it’s not too far fetched. Perhaps he feels guilty for not having been there for his daughter and helping another kid is a way to atone for it. Many people instinctively feel more sympathy for children after they have become parents.
No way. Sawyer’s known about Clementine since from before he first came to the island on Flight 815. I don’t remember him doing anything particularly special for Walt or Aaron up until now (other than killing Tom, but he had lots of reasons for doing that).
I’ll never fail to be amazed at how parts of the fandom, no matter how explicit something is, will go off in totally the wrong direction on something. Of course he was talking about doing it for Juliet, just look at the context.
I am sorry and don’t mean to be totally rude but this isn’t in debate and the idea that sawyer meant clementine when he said I am doing it for her is asinine. At that point in the show clementine was not part of the conversation.
It was quite clear Sawyer’s implication was he was taking Ben to the Others for JULIET! End of debate.
I go for this: “I knew you’d come back, but…holy crap, it actually happened! Now there’s something you don’t see every day.”
Benny always has a plan (and a plain, too)
Hey Sonya, love the recap. I’m a constant reader at docarzt but very limited poster, however just wanted to say love the recap! You and Erika (over at DarkUFO) are by far my favorite recapers, love the humor. Also spot on about the classic feel of that ending with ben and johnny. Anyway cant wait for tomorrow! (In Australia)
It is always a joy reading your writings and that is something I can’t say for a lot of Lost related material.
I thought The Little Prince was Desmond-centric.
“Centricity” is a little harder to determine this year as almost all of them are multi-centric in some way. “Jughead” seemed more Desmond centric and I saw “The Little Prince” to be Kate/Aaron. But it doesn’t matter too much.
Sonya, thanks for another great post. It’s a long wait after the episode for your musings but it’s always worth it.
I definitely agree with the sentiment that “The Lie” is starting to unravel in a big way. I could see the season 6 premier being entitled “The Unraveling” the way we are headed at the moment. I believe the truth will come out. I don’t foresee all of the Oceanic survivors just keeping the lie going forever and smirking when they walk past each other in the real world. Nope, the world is going to find out about the Island. A war is coming. Who will be on who’s side? It’s not Widmore vs. Linus. It’s the World vs. The Island.
I don’t foresee all of the Oceanic survivors just keeping the lie going forever
Um, how can they, they’re gone from “the real world”, possibly forever. Jack, Kate, Hugo, Sayid and Sun (I’ll give Aaron a pass) are done in 2008, it’ll be the people they spilled their guts to that let the cat out of the bag.
It’s the World vs. The Island
Gawd, I hope not, that would be really lame because, simply, The Island can always move with a turn of the frozen donkey wheel, we’re suddenly supposed to believe it’s a fixed target?
If everyone that now knows the truth back in 2008 starts to put the pieces together, and they will, people are going to be looking for the Island. Not just 10 people. Hundreds, thousands. A place with magical healing properties? Not everyone is interested in keeping the Island safe. In fact, destroying the Island maybe be the way to save the rest of world.
The Island is not some fixed target but with the right amount of money, it will be found again. Heck, we already know there’s a way to find when and where it will be via the off-Island Lampost. And as the lie unravels in 2008, people are going to start digging in Ann Arbor, too. The Island becoming a bigger part of the rest of world seems very logical to me as a direction for season 6.
Well, OK, if you put it that way, it all makes sense!
No, seriously, I hadn’t thought it like that, it makes a perfectly coherent storyline for Season 6.
Re: Hurley recording the numbers that eventually drive Leonard Simms insane
I can just imagine poor, good hearted Hurley putting a special message in there just for him: “Hey, Mr. Simms, Dude, I know you don’t know me yet but I come from the future where you’re in a nuthouse. Well, we’re in one together, me because I see people who aren’t there, and you because you heard this message. Sorry, dude. Oh, I have a warning for you: never play these numbers in the lottery! Later, dude!”
Re: Ben’s “Loss of Innocence”
At this stage in his life, there really is only one thing that’s keeping Ben from completely losing it — the belief that hiding somewhere beyond the fence, living amongst the hostiles, is his dear departed mother.
I think that what Richard means is that Ben, in the process of being ’saved’ will also be clued into the fact that the apparition he saw and was so desperate to chase was in fact not his mother, but a manipulative trick of the island. Parallel this to how Eko, the island’s Man of Faith, gave up his quest for redemption when confronted with his Not-Brother. Ben Linus will be forced to sacrifice his greatest wish for his life, and in the process shred whatever faith he had in DI morality.
I’m getting a strange feeling that pretty soon something is going to happen to break the consistency in the time travel that’s being experienced, or at least reveal that it might possible ala Daniel. If he knows that you can’t change the past, then why would he tell Charlotte not to come back? Maybe when Daniel finally shows back up he’ll tell everyone what he’s been doing this whole time and maybe he’s found some kind of way to break consistency. It just seems like since they’ve finally established the consistency so well that something mindblowing will happen to make my head explode.
Sorry. I’m not to internet/computer savvy, but what the hell does “shippers” mean?
I didn’t even know what lol meant until a year ago.
Pulled from urban dictionary:relationshipper; One who believes there is, was, should, and could be a relationship between 2 characters in a certain fandom.
A fan devoted to a paticular couple/pairing in a fandom. Usually fanatical.
“Shippers” is one of those idiotic fan terms that people who think they’re hip use, even though it just makes them sound like dorks. It refers to people who believe two characters should be in a relationship. Those who bash “shippers” usually come off as pedantic and self-impressed.
Sonya, I’m surprised you didn’t comment on the fact that Claire’s mom is supposed to be in a permanent vegetative state, and that the woman to whom Kate gave Aaron is, therefore, likely not to be Carole Littleton.
Two excerrts from Lostpedia:
Claire was involved in a car crash which caused her mother to fall into a coma for five years…
…Carole revived from her coma sometime after the crash. After the rescue of the Oceanic Six, she attended the funeral of Christian Shephard…
Not much detail, but it looks like has been adressed at some point. I don’t know when, must have missed it…
excerpts*
[...] Looking at the little things – Whatever Happened, Happened [...]
Nice article, but I feel ad hominem attacks on the actors, (eg, “old ferret face”) detract from the overall quality of the writing.