“What if all of this
were happening for a reason?”
Any fan of Lost remembers
the first time Locke asked this question of Jack. It was in ‘White Rabbit’
during the first season. We knew very little about the survivors or the island
by that point, the biggest concern of the survivors was finding a water supply.
We weren’t yet clear that these two men would represent one of the major
conflicts of Lost by that point, either.
What we did know was that
there was something strange about the island. Locke had his reasons to think it
was beautiful, Jack had reasons to think it was hell. The question was about
whether the survivors of Oceanic 815 had just happened to crash on an island in
the Pacific or whether some other force would be involved. It would take pretty
much the entire series and a lot of deaths – including Locke’s own – for us to
learn that the survivors had been chosen by a guiding force to come that island
and that in fact ‘all roads lead here’.
In the penultimate episode
of Season 3 of Yellowjackets – ironically titled ‘How the Story
Ends’ -
in the present Van (Lauren Ambrose) is standing over the body of Miri
(Hilary Swank), another survivor who faked her death and was being held
prisoner by Shauna and the other survivors mainly because they had no idea what
to do next. Van stood over her Miri with a knife and Miri said something that
none of the other survivors in the present day were willing to acknowledge
about what they did out there. “You know none of this real, right?”
At the end of the third
season it’s clear Ashley Lyle and Bart Nickerson are asking using Miri to put
into words what may very well be the thesis statement of Yellowjackets. It
is the polar opposite of the question Locke posed to Jack and indeed it goes
against everything that Lottie, essentially the Locke of this show, posed when
she began to argue for ‘The Wilderness’ in the first season.
The consequences have been far greater since
they accepted her as The Queen: in the second season they committed their first
act of cannibalism and then engaged in their first hunt of a teammate. Lotte surrendered the crown to
Natalie (Sophie Thatcher) but the belief in the mysticism was fully embraced,
nevertheless. And by the time rescue arrive,
so many of them were committed to the myth that when it walked it,
Lottie’s first action was to drive an axe in one of the research team.
We’ve already seen that the
teenagers don’t care about survival any more or even really being rescued. They
abandoned morality when they sentenced Coach Scott to death when Shauna bullied
them into the verdict (I still think she set the fire, though the show hasn’t
confirmed it yet), planned to execute him until Lotte said a vision said they
needed him for rescue and then after Natalie killed them Shauna (Sophie
Nelisse) used it as a power grab, even though she’d wanted Scott dead in the
first place. There is now a fundamental divide in the survivors about whether
or not to go back but while at least some of them are trying to find a way to
cover up what they did, it’s clear Shauna is only interested in holding on to
power. She doesn’t care about any of the other survivors, she made it very
clear when she shot Mari, her biggest acolyte in the penultimate episode when
she tried to defy her. Shauna clearly just wants to be in charge and she’s more
than willing to kill anybody to stay alive.
By this point it’s clear
that more than a few survivors have come to believe that everything that ‘the
wilderness’ is just Lottie’s mania. It’s also clear quite a few other people do
agree with this but a kind of traumatic delusion has essentially hung over most
of the survivors. They don’t want to stay but they don’t want to go back. When
Van points out just how horrible the coming winter will be Tai (Jasmine Savoy
Brown) tries to deny it. Van makes it clear: “We ate a f---ing kid” Not even
that seems to deter Tai about it; by this point its very clear she is doing the
best job of compartmentalizing what happened.
It's also clear in the
present why there’s such a divide between Misty and the rest of the
Yellowjackets. During the end moments in the past in the penultimate episode
Misty (Samantha Hanratty) revealed for the first time that she’d kept the
transponder from the plane – which she had broken in the first place because
she felt she had friends. When Natalie (Sophie Thatcher) learned this fact, she
was justifiably furious: we will learn by the end of the season finale that rescue
could have come had she just revealed this initially, and everything in the
series could have been avoided. And it’s pretty clear that everyone who came
back eventually learned that truth and has justifiably been holding it over
Misty ever since.
It's clear now Misty has
spent the last twenty-five years trying to both atone for her role in what
happens while denying her fellow survivors justifiable disdain. It’s also clear
no matter how much work she does to clean up the messes of the survivors
(something she’s repeatedly done over the series) they’re never going to either
appreciate her or even consider her one of them. It also explains why Misty has
been going to such lengths with Walter and everyone else to argue she has a
bond with them that matters; if she didn’t keep up the lie, she’d have to face
the truth about her role in what happened and she can’t do it.
But to be fair, neither can
any of the other survivors. Which brings me to the next point of this. Many of
them – particularly Shauna and Tai - have spent the last twenty-five years denying
their responsibility in what happened all those years ago. As a result all of
the survivors have been suffering from a toxic blend of survivor’s guilt,
trauma and massive paranoia. If Lost had characters who refused to share
information with each other led to horrible consequences, in Yellowjackets we
see the long term consequences. The survivors have done a much better job than
The Oceanic 6 did at maintaining ‘the lie’ in terms of how long they’ve been
able to cover it up. But the difference is from the moment they learned that
people stopped looking for them after a year – and more importantly to them,
that the world had moving on - many of
them began to develop a complex about being forgotten, anger at the world that
some have never let go. So there’s a very good argument that the whole reason
everything that’s happening in the present is for one reason: they want
attention.
There’s also a bigger
argument that the trauma has affected them so deeply – Shauna in particular –
that she sees enemies everywhere. Throughout the season Shauna has become
increasingly convinced that everyone was trying to get her – and tellingly her
alone. That everything that happened to her had a rational explanation – Misty
herself explained what happened with the freezer was an accident – has done
nothing to alter Shauna’s mindset one bit.
It's been fascinating to
watch Melane Lynskey during the third season. Shauna has been trying to deny
the horrible side of her for the past two seasons and she’s still doing it
throughout the third. Shauna has increasingly become reckless and more inclined
to embrace her violent and psychotic side, yet she still is determined to argue
that she’s the victim. She’s now convinced there is a massive conspiracy held
by everybody she meets about knowing the truth about what she did and
everyone else, not just her fellow survivors but even her husband and daughter,
are incidental. Like Walter White during his days as Heisenberg, she has become
convinced that everyone’s actions are all about her. She’s also made it clear
that ‘the only way to be safe is to be the last one standing’. That those
actions might lead to the truth coming out doesn’t enter her mind.
But she’s not the only one
convinced of that delusion. Throughout the season Tai (Tawny Cypress) has been
using the idea of ‘the Wilderness’ to argue that giving it what it wants has
been helping Van stay alive. Van was horrified by this and suspects Tai of
killing Lottie as a sacrifice. Tai denied it, but in ‘A Normal Boring Life’ we
saw her willing to smother a man with a pillow in an attempt to keep Van from
dying of cancer.
This led to the
confrontation at the end of How The Story Ends where Van had a chance to kill Melissa
but couldn’t bring herself to do it. Melissa took advantage of her lapse to
kill her with that same knife. Van’s death hit me hard, even though it
shouldn’t have come as a shock. Given her diagnosis – it was clear she was headed for hospice care
regardless of intervention – it was a matter of time before it happened. That
it was a violent death at the hands of one of her former friends shouldn’t have
come as a shock either: at this point every death that happened in the present
is a result of one or more of the
survivors.
And as the Season 3 finale –
fittingly called Full Circle – unfolds we see the hunt that unfolded in the
opening of the series through new eyes. At first it seemed to be a picture of a
united front; now we know from the start that it was an unnecessary tragedy. We
saw the animals being poisoned by Akilah (it’s still unclear at this point
whether she’s alive in the present) because she no longer believes Lottie’s
visions. Like Travis she is convinced that what is going on is a delusion and
that Lottie is leading it. We see Shauna doing everything in order to make sure
Mari is the target of the hunt, even though it has been rigged by Van this time
to make sure that Tai and she are safe. It’s now clear there was far less unity
to what happened then before and that in many cases division unfolded. While
this was happening we see the monster Shauna has no become with Melissa who
spent the season as her hanger on and now has lost any belief in her. Even when
she tries to kill Shauna at the end that doesn’t earn her respect: “I knew you
were boring,” she says echoing Jackie’s line.
As the season finale in the
present unfolds we finally learn who actually killed Lottie: Callie. What’s
clear is that Lottie was just as deluded in the present as she was in the past
and we can’t rule out the possible that what happened was a combination of
guilt and her illness. Was she trying to force Callie actions in that final
scene is unclear but her belief that Callie is what Shauna couldn’t be is very
much the sign of her own madness. Callie confessed her sins when confronted
first to Misty and then to her father and clearly felt remorse and guilt in a
way we have never seen in Shauna either as a teenager or in the present. And it’s
clear that Joel realized that he has failed his daughter and now knows the only
way to stay safe from Shauna is to get as far from her is possible.
It’s clear at this point in
the series that Shauna’s madness had completely overtaken her. In her final
confrontation with Misty she seems uninterested in what Callie might have done
and more about blaming Misty for her role in it. Shauna sees no responsibility
or accountability in what she’s done and that is very clear in her manifesto at
the end. Shauna’s statement in which she says that they haven’t remembering
what happened to them is not because of the trauma but because it was when they
were having so much fun, killing and hunting their friends, is a sign of how she
still refuses to acknowledge responsibility. By the time she was a ‘warrior
queen’ no one who was following her trusted
her or even liked her any more and as we have seen she was completely outwitted
by Natalie and her allies who managed to complete fool her long enough for
Natalie to summon rescue.
Indeed Tai’s memories at
the end of the episode are clearer. When she tells Misty that Shauna instigated
much of what happened, she is negating her role in it (something that she can
now do safely that Van is dead and in the ground) but is completely justified
about what is happening in the present. Adam’s death did come at her hand and
Van would still be alive had Shauna acted independently. Blaming her for what
happened to Natalie is a stretch but there is little doubt she’s doing it to
earn Misty’s trust in the present. And Shauna was responsible indirectly for
every death we’ve seen in the past this
season and she definitely did not want to get rescued.
The Season 3 finale more
than anything we’ve seen so far is the biggest confirmation that ‘The Wilderness’
in both timelines is all in the heads of the survivors which they use to their
own advantage to either maneuver for power or excuse their actions. And now
that rescue seems eminent (it almost certainly will happen at some point in
Season 4) a lot of the actions of the
characters in the present are perfectly logical.
Travis and Natalie were the
most damaged of the survivors in the present because they did were the most
fervent non-believers in the Wilderness while they were out there and have the
most guilt for what happened. The isolation from Misty makes perfect sense as
does Misty desperate attempt in the present to cling to the ‘trauma bond’
between them. It’s her form of denial for the fact that everyone knew her role
in their being there all that time and Natalie certainly never forgave her.
Lottie never truly got over
her delusion for the rest of her life, preferring to believe the idea of the
Wilderness then accept her own responsibility in all of the deaths that
happened out there. There is a possibility she set her own death in motion at
the end of the episode rather than face her role in it or that her own madness
told her it had to happen.
And it’s very clear to me
that Van basically never forgave Tai for what happened after the researchers
came along. It is not just that she denied the possibility of rescue initially
but that she decided to essentially sacrifice Mari for it – and didn’t feel any
real guilt about it even 25 years later – was too much for their relationship
to exist. Ironically Van’s death is at least partially Tai’s fault: it was only
when she reached out to Van that she was lured back into the madness, leading
her to die before her time – albeit not before that.
The biggest question to
answer in the past right now is who really set the fire? In the present the
only survivor who is still not accounted for in the present is Akilah. Her fate
will no doubt have to be resolved in Season 4 (assuming it happens, but given
the high ratings for Season 3 over all that seems a matter of time)
I should also mention I’m
not surprised at the backlash that seems to be online about some ‘fans’ of the
show who have argued either the pace is too slow or have problems with the
character arcs. Indeed 20 years after Lost dropped I imagine the
attention span of the TV fan show is shorter. I don’t know if this is just
frustration as to Paramount+ or Showtime for daring to only drop one episode a
week or the usual nonsense by fans who want all the answers at once and then
aren’t happy when they come. I’m inclined to think it’s the latter given that
no matter what the answers are they can never be better than the speculation
and we know that’s never going to change.
As for the attitude of some
fans about the changes in character arcs, well, this shows that no matter what
some female character does on any TV show, she’s damned if she does and damned
if she doesn’t. Skyler White tries to stop her evil husband to protect her
family? Out the knives come for Anna Gunn for being a killjoy. Walter White
goes from Mr. Chips to Scarface? Everyone loves it. Shauna goes from June
Cleaver to Elizabeth Bathory (google the latter if you don’t know it). How dare
they? The fact that Shauna is played as a grownup by Melanie Lynskey, who as a
reminder launched her career played a teenage girl who used her fantasy life as
an excuse to become a murderer in Heavenly Creatures, really should have
been the biggest blinking light as to the idea that Shauna hadn’t changed that
much as an adult then she was as a child. (The actors who are playing the adult
versions of the Yellowjackets were not cast by chance.)
And the possibility that
what’s happening in the Wilderness in 1996 and in the present has a completely
rational explanation? Well, that’s gotta piss off the fanbase who really needs
there to be some kind of supernatural presence on this show. In a sense they
want to think, like the question I posed at the start, that all the horrible
things we’ve seen are happening for a reason. Because if they aren’t, if
everything that’s happening in the past and is happening now, is just all in
the girl’s heads – then what does it say about the viewer that they love
watching a bunch of teenage girls hunt, kill and eat people in one timeline and
behave so horribly to everybody in another? If “we know that none of this is
real” then some viewers have to question why they’ve been enjoying this show so
much. They might have to ask questions about what kind of person that makes
them.
Perhaps that divide might
exist among the gender and sexual preferences of so many fans who’ve wanted to
consider Yellowjackets an antidote to all the series that have white
male antiheroes do horrible things and receive acclaim for it. Perhaps they’ve
wanted to have it both ways for awhile and ‘The Wilderness’ gives them an out
for loving this show so much. If that out is taken away, well, then we’re left
like Shauna at the end of the season, writing a manifesto acknowledging that
the horrible things she did were not
something she ashamed of but are actually the happiest memories of her life. What
does that say about her as a woman? What does that say about us as a species?
Better to say she’s a victim of bad writing then to admit our own darkness,
something that we’ve seen the characters wanting – even preferring – to give in
to then live with in the real world.
None of this, I should add,
has troubled me one bit watching the roller coaster that was Season 3 of Yellowjackets.
It remains very much a contender for one of the Best Shows of the Decade
and indeed the Emmys really need to consider it seriously for Best Drama in a still
relatively wide-open field. Those who still want more from this after
everything that they’ve seen this just go to prove that haters are gonna hate
and at this point, I knew they were going to be boring. Maybe there is no
reason for the actions in the past or the present but that doesn’t make me love
this show any less. Yellowjackets went out of its way to embrace the
insanity that was all things of both the original and the return of Twin
Peaks. And while Lynch sadly left us before Season 3 aired I think he would
tip his cap to everything Ashley Lyle and Bart Nickerson have done to this
point, including infuriating the fan base. “If you haven’t pissed off a
significant amount of your viewers you’re not doing your job right,” Lynch
would no doubt have told them. Mission accomplished. And I can’t wait for the
next season.
My Score: 5 stars.
No comments:
Post a Comment