Anyone who watched Lost knows
that one of the most important moments in its run came in Solitary. In it Sayid
encounters Danielle Rousseau, the Frenchwoman who recorded the transmission
that had been playing in a continuous loop for sixteen years. Danielle has been
living on her own ever since then and is clearly mentally disturbed by her
solitude. Throughout her ‘interrogation’ of Sayid she keeps saying that “are
you one of them?” When Sayid finally asks who she just says: ‘The Others’.
Eventually we will learn that
there is a population who have been living on the island long before Oceanic
815 crashed. The show will spend a lot of time talking about them and in Season
3 actually look at them in depth. But even when we see behind the curtain
there’s a lot we never know for sure about them.
For one: what do they call
themselves? The Others is the term Rousseau uses and the Oceanics more or less
adopt it for the remainder of the series. More often the survivors – and later
on the Tailies who have been pillaged by them – just use terms like ‘them’ and
‘they’. We later learn the Dharma Initiative referred to them as ‘the Hostiles’
and given how they behave towards everybody else, it seems the most fitting
term they’re ever given. Ben will refer
to them as the native population but we’ll learn later on that most of them
have been brought to the island.
Nikki Stafford will eventually
write that the Others aren’t really that different from the survivors and
that’s more accurate then she might have suspected at the time. One of the
major criticisms about the early seasons was how few questions the survivors of
the crash asked about each other or the island. The longer the show goes on, it
becomes very clear that the Others themselves don’t ask many questions once
they come to the island either. The clearest difference between them and the
Losties is that they believe they are there to protect the island from invaders
and yet paradoxically keep them from ever leaving. This is a contradiction that
none of the Others we meet, even among the hierarchy, ever see fit to answer.
And they are always defensive
about the horrible things they do to the survivors. Throughout the entire
series they will attack, abduct and even kill members of the Oceanic survivors
and each time they are called on it, they will essentially use ‘what-about you
guys?” on the survivors. The fact that we see at the opening of Season 3 Ben
send spies to a plane that has exploded to invade the groups, gather
intelligence and ‘don’t get involved’
never seems to matter. The idea of diplomacy never occurs to them – and
as we will learn when the island starts skipping through time in Season 5 that
has been the way of them for decades if not centuries.
There is no way to look at the
Others at any point and not think of them as something akin to a religious
cult. Indeed they even have a deity that they served blindly named Jacob. None
of them have ever seen him except for Richard, who asks as his mouthpiece but
his mere name is enough to shock them into obedience. We will learn that
they’ve been receiving ‘lists’ from him for decades and have all been blindly
following those orders for years, never even actually having to meet him.
During Season 3 it is implied that Ben has been talking to Jacob all this time
but we’ll eventually learn that this is a lie. It is the one that is clearly
the basis for Ben’s leadership – which by the time we finally meet him is
becoming shaky – and its worth noting that Richard is part of the group at the
time but he never contradicts Ben.
Eventually by the time we finally
learn Richard’s backstory in Ab Aeterno we will learn that Jacob has been
bringing people to the island for centuries for a larger purpose. However over
that period they have all died, whether at the hands of themselves or the Smoke
monster. Richard asks Jacob why he doesn’t step in and Jacob says simply if he
gets involved, it’s pointless. When Richard points out the obvious, Jacob
offers Richard a job – to be his representative on the island to deliver
messages between him and the people he brings. He grants Richard immorality but
he never tells him at any point in the next 140 years why he’s been bringing
people to the island in the first place. He has been assuring Richard that he
has a plan, one which he has a part into play in and at a point in the future
he will reveal it. Richard agrees to go along with this, right up until the
point he lets Ben and ‘Locke’ to see Jacob and as a result Jacob is killed. A
new group of people, represented by Ilana, have been told about this for years
and have come to the island along with the Oceanics for their own purpose but
we learn that Jacob has withheld critical information from them - including about what happened to John
Locke. Therefore by the time they get to Jacob’s sanctuary with this
information it is too late to do anything about it.
I’ve always had more than my
share of questions about the Others and they’ve only deepened with each
rewatch. But it wasn’t until I read Back to the Island that someone was
raised to me that even after twenty years had never occurred to me: Did the
Others have any real purpose at all?
Noel Murray asks this question
quite a few times in the episodes he reviews for episodes in Season 5 and 6.
His most succinct summation comes in the penultimate episode ‘Follow The
Leader’:
“What were the Others actually
doing on the island? Aside from the ageless Richard, the folks we see camped
out on the plains or usurping Dharma structures don’t seem to have much of an
agenda outside of protecting the island. They have a temple, but we don’t see
much worship. They have a hierarchy, but no one seems very happy about it.”
And it’s clear that none of them
were ever considered as a replacement for Jacob either; not Ben, not Widmore,
not even Richard. So much of the fighting during Season 4 seems to be about
whether Ben or Widmore, both former leaders of the Others get to run it. Both
end up getting exiled from it as a result and both spend years trying to return
to it. But in the past we see that they both answer to Richard to some extent,
so what is that leadership really worth?
There are many ways to look at
this particular perspective and later on I’m going to look at their history.
But I think to start it’s worth starting with the Other who based on what we
see of Lost is the character who we get our first glimpse of Season 3
through and who more than anyone else gives us a window into the Others: Juliet
Burke, played exceptionally for three seasons by Elizabeth Mitchell.
If you’ll forgive some gushing
(and if I can’t do it here, where can I?) I always felt that Mitchell’s work on
Lost was at least the equal of Michael Emerson’s as Ben and on certain
occasion, even better. I’m not diminishing Emerson’s work – his work was one of
the great performances in the history of television and in a future article I
will elucidate on it. But the fact remains Emerson had a burden that Mitchell
didn’t. His character was from his first appearance and well into the second
half of the series essentially the antagonist of Lost, if not the
outright villain. His great gift which he used to extraordinary skill was not
just his ability to lie but to make the people who knew he was lying and that
he was untrustworthy doubt him long enough to tell another web of lies.
Juliet didn’t have that burden
because we knew her from the start. The opening of Season 3 shows us Juliet
playing Petula Clark’s Downtown (a song chosen, like most of Lost’s, for
dramatic irony), straightening up her home, cooking muffins which get burnt,
and preparing furniture for book club. It’s clear she’s trying to lead a normal
life; it’s also clear she’s very unhappy. The mood at book club is unpleasant –
one of her guests says that Carrie which she makes clear is her favorite
book, is one Ben wouldn’t read in the toilet. She takes this more personally
then you think and then a moment later the house starts shaking. Not long after
that everyone runs outside to see Oceanic 815 breaking apart in mid-air.
This not only establishes that
we’re going to be spending time with the Others but it really tells us a lot
about Juliet: she may be part of the Others community but it’s clear she’s not
exactly thrilled to be here. A lot of what worked during the segments on Hydra
Island in the six episodes that opened the season was watching the scenes with
Mitchell establish Juliet.
And what was clear was that she
was very different from the Others we’d met during the first two seasons on Lost.
Everyone we’d met seemed determined to treat the survivors as an invading
force who they could mistreat, kidnap and abuse with impunity. Juliet was
clearly willing to go along with these manipulations – we saw her tase Sawyer
and hold a gun on Kate when he stepped out of line – but she was the first
Other we’d met (with one exception) who seemed to less committed to this
cruelty than everyone else.
And while it was clear that
nobody was exactly happy that Ben was the leader of the Others Juliet never
bothered to hide it during those first six episodes. We saw her constantly
flaunting Ben’s authority in private and critically in public. When a fellow
Other was shot and Juliet was called in to save her – this was the first time
we knew she was a doctor – she realized she was in over her head and broke
protocol, calling Jack into scrub in. This clearly angered Ben and even her
husband but to Juliet saving a life trumped Ben’s rules. When Colleen died it
clearly broke her a little and even Jack was willing to console her.
So even before the first episode
centered on her the viewer was on Juliet’s side despite the fact she was
clearly ‘one of them’. When we learned that Not In Portland was going to give
the first flashback of an Other that Lost had ever given everybody was
thrilled. No doubt we thought we’d learn what Juliet had been doing as part of
the Others. And the opening minutes of the teaser seemed to play into that. We
saw Juliet on a beach crying. She walks into a building with flickering lights
and Ethan, the first Other we met says hello. She goes into the room and
there’s a woman sleeping and a record skipping and Juliet turns it off. The
woman stirs, it’s clear she’s ill and Juliet gives her some treatment. We’re on
the island.
But no. We’re actually in Miami
and Juliet opens the window and we see a plane fly by! The writers have tricked
us again. (I don’t know why we’re shocked that they can still pull this off.)
We’re going to learn how Juliet ended up coming to the island. And that just
makes her story even sadder. You see even by now we’ve begun to suspect that
everyone who got on the plane was being drawn by the island. Juliet is the
first person we meet who is brought not by the island’s needs but by The
Others. And more importantly she is the first person we meet who has
clearly been brought by false pretenses (it’s not until the end of the
flashback that she learns that the company she’s signed up to join is ‘not in
Portland’) and has been essentially held against her will. In the present she
tells Jack she’s been on this island nearly three and a half years (she was
promised she would only be there six months) and she wants the same thing that
Jack has been promised. She wants to go home.
Based on the flashbacks in the
episodes centered on her, the interactions she has with her fellow Others on
Hydra Island and the discussions she has about her time with them, there’s a
very strong possibility that Juliet was one of the last people that Ben Linus
recruited to be one of his people. And based on the conversations she has about
them over her three seasons as a regular it’s pretty clear that Juliet was
neither fully accepted by them. Perhaps it might have something to do with
seniority but it’s just as likely her own attitude towards the island didn’t
help.
That’s understandable because
Juliet was recruited to resolve a fertility issue with the women on the island:
pregnancy was a death sentence if you conceived on the island. During her three
years nine women died under her care and no matter how much she made it clear
she couldn’t solve the problem on the island Ben refused to let her leave until
she did. She was essentially held hostage by Ben who told her that her sister’s
cancer (which had gone into remission before she left) had returned and that if
she stayed on the island Jacob would cure it.
But by that point we know how
manipulative Ben is and that he is more than willing to lie to his own people
to serve his needs. It is far more likely that Juliet’s sister’s cancer never
came back and Ben spent the next two years using it as something to hold over
her. When she found a tumor on his spine she accused him of lying to her about
her sister’s cancer being cured. He showed her Rachel in Miami playing with her
two year old son Julian and claimed her cancer went into complete remission.
But he needed to keep Juliet on his side and he probably just used that as
emotional blackmail too. At one point during Jack’s captivity she tries to
persuade him to do the surgery by saying if Jack were to let him die, no one
would mind. This turned out to be a fabrication on her part but its still
completely understandable: by that point Juliet probably wouldn’t have minded
if he died under the knife.
Juliet clearly never committed to
the dream that Ben had been telling his people about Jacob. in a flashback when
the two of them are having dinner Juliet asks why they took Zach and Emma, two
children from the tail section. Ben says almost absently: “Jacob wanted them.”
Juliet changes the subject, not because Jacob’s name has the same effect on her
as everyone else but because she’s been on the island long enough to know that
there’s point arguing when Jacob’s name is mentioned. Tellingly in all of her
conversations with the rest of the survivors once she joins their camp she will
tell many secrets about her time with them but she never mentions Jacob at all.
During the final season Sawyer learns about Jacob for the first time which
means Juliet never shared that with him. She clearly thought it was a lie that
Ben had spun.
The reason that I always trusted
Juliet, even during the second half of Season 3 when Jack brought her back to
the camp, was that while she engaged in some of the what about-ism when she was
challenged by the Oceanics she remained fundamentally honest. When Sayid
demanded she tell him what they did, she looked him right in the eye and said:
“If I told you, you would kill me.” She didn’t deny how horrible her people
were or pretend that the rest of the survivors were as bad. She knew how
horrible her people were and she didn’t hide it. It is true that she had her
own agenda and was engaged in deception with Ben but even when she talked about
it with him in the final flashback, we could see she clearly hated herself for
doing it.
Juliet was there to find out if
any of the survivors of the crash were pregnant, something we already knew.
When Sun confronted her on this in D.O.C. she was clearly shocked and
immediately told her what would happen to her. She took Sun to the Staff station
to find out if Sun had conceived on the island (I’ll deal with that in a
different story) and when she did she left a message to Ben about her progress.
But after she turned the tape off she said: ‘I hate you.” Not long after that she confided in Jack she
was a double agent and told him that the Others were going to come to the camp
to abduct Sun and all the pregnant women. Three years of losing patients and
the prospect of another woman dying was too much for her. From that point on,
she was firmly on team Oceanic.
We already know that during this
period Ben’s grip on the leadership of the Others is beginning to loosen, in
large part because he has a tumor on his spine on an island where no one gets
sick. While this is going on Richard has begun to look towards Locke as
‘special’ and its clear the moment John shows up in the camp that the rest of
Ben’s people think so too. Ben is clearly using Juliet as a last-ditch attempt
to hold on to his power. When she betrays him at the end of the season - an event that leads to ten of his people
being killed on the beach – it’s a blow he can never recover from, and one of
my few disappointments of Lost is that the two never interact again.
(Well, in the present.)
But perhaps the most telling
thing that makes it clear Juliet was never truly an Other comes in Season 5
when she has become part of the Dharma Initiative. She knows that a thirteen
year old Ben is part of the Initiative (boy I’d have loved to see that meeting)
but she seems to have dealt with it – until Sayid shoots Ben and leaves him for
dead. The only doctor available at the time she does everything in her power to
save the life of the young Ben, including helping Kate had him over to the
Others to save his life. It’s not until they’re on their way to the hostiles
that Sawyer asks the question why they would save the boy who when he grows up
will do everything in his power to make their lives miserable, Juliet most of
all. According to Sawyer she tells him: “It’s wrong to let a kid die, no matter
who he grows up to be.” By that point we get our final confirmation on
something we’ve known for a long time; despite what Ben said about her Juliet
was never truly “one of us.”
That is the clearest perspective
of what the Others was from the last person we know was a follower of any kind.
In the next article I’m going to deal with the leaders of the Others and how
they may have never led much of anything.