Fire + Water
- Episode aired Jan 25, 2006
- TV-14
- 43m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
7.2K
YOUR RATING
When Charlie's dreams lead him to believe Claire's baby's in peril, Locke suspects he may be using drugs again. Charlie's back story reveals a difficult relationship with his brother. Hurley... Read allWhen Charlie's dreams lead him to believe Claire's baby's in peril, Locke suspects he may be using drugs again. Charlie's back story reveals a difficult relationship with his brother. Hurley's encouraged to act on his attraction to Libby.When Charlie's dreams lead him to believe Claire's baby's in peril, Locke suspects he may be using drugs again. Charlie's back story reveals a difficult relationship with his brother. Hurley's encouraged to act on his attraction to Libby.
Harold Perrineau
- Michael Dawson
- (credit only)
Featured reviews
I dont get why this episode is rated as low as it is, perfectly fine episode....
10MinieC
Probably the most underrated episode of Lost. Great imagery, quite disturbing and it's quite amazing that they made us sympathize with Charlie despite his actions in this episode. The flashback tied in perfectly with what was happening on the island.
Seeing Charlie trying to save Aaron on the beach and then Locke hitting him and everybody else turning their back on him was gut-wrenching. We can really understand his actions in 'The Long Con' after this scene.
I don't watch Lost for the mythology or the action, I watch for the characters. And this was a great character based episode. We learned a lot about Charlie, why he's so attached to Claire and Aaron and how he desperately wants a family to take care of.
Seeing Charlie trying to save Aaron on the beach and then Locke hitting him and everybody else turning their back on him was gut-wrenching. We can really understand his actions in 'The Long Con' after this scene.
I don't watch Lost for the mythology or the action, I watch for the characters. And this was a great character based episode. We learned a lot about Charlie, why he's so attached to Claire and Aaron and how he desperately wants a family to take care of.
Lost is a great show, we all know it. However it shocked me to find John Lock stepping so far out of character to beat the living **** out of poor ol' Charlie, who was quite honestly just have a bad week. Other than that i found this ep rather random and found myself pitying Charlie, and questioning Locks motives..
Ah well
Hopefully in the weeks to come Locks intentions will prove the wiser, but for now, picking on a recovering drug addict just didn't seem so genuine, Even If Charlie was stealing babies left right and center throughout the show...
Ah well
Hopefully in the weeks to come Locks intentions will prove the wiser, but for now, picking on a recovering drug addict just didn't seem so genuine, Even If Charlie was stealing babies left right and center throughout the show...
Charlie has surreal daydreams with Aaron, and he believes that the baby is in danger. However, Locke believes he is using heroine again. Charlie clumsily advises Claire to baptize Aaron with Mr. Eko, while he recalls his past with his addicted brother. Hurley is attracted by Libby, who seems to correspond his affection and attention.
"Fire + Water" was a quite deceptive episode of "Lost". I felt sorry for Charlie, who is full of good intentions with Claire and her baby, but is absolutely misunderstood. The disappointment of John Locke with him is understandable, but his coward aggression is totally unnecessary. I do not understand why John Locke has not destroyed the heroine he took from Charlie. My vote is seven.
Title (Brazil): Not Available.
Note: On 29 March 2013, I saw this episode again.
"Fire + Water" was a quite deceptive episode of "Lost". I felt sorry for Charlie, who is full of good intentions with Claire and her baby, but is absolutely misunderstood. The disappointment of John Locke with him is understandable, but his coward aggression is totally unnecessary. I do not understand why John Locke has not destroyed the heroine he took from Charlie. My vote is seven.
Title (Brazil): Not Available.
Note: On 29 March 2013, I saw this episode again.
Yes this was before Breaking Bad, and Lost was in fact the Binge Series that started all modern Binge Series's, but let's just imagine that Breaking Bad's FLY episode basically relates to anytime a great show with surreal undertones simply goes overboard and dives off the overly-bizarre plank...
It's just not Drive Shaft (one of the lamest, most unbelievable fictional music bands) in diapers; Claire and Charlie's mom in bad CGI religious rendering; or the fact that the once very lovable Charlie, despite his heroin addiction, is given his own episode that lacks the other b-story's building as they should, since the entire series is made to push everything forward...
That alone makes it better than FLY being that it does involve other aspects and subplots, like Jack building his army with Ana, or Hurley's cute romance...
But, other than being redundant in the Charlie's addiction story, it's just an off-putting episode overall, and tries too hard to push the envelope, which wasn't needed on a show that folded the (binge series) envelope and mailed it successfully into inspiring future (and in many cases, superior) shows, like the aforementioned Breaking Bad, or The Walking Dead or Mad Men or... you name it...
It's just that, at this point, Lost was trying too hard to be original... and didn't have to.
It's just not Drive Shaft (one of the lamest, most unbelievable fictional music bands) in diapers; Claire and Charlie's mom in bad CGI religious rendering; or the fact that the once very lovable Charlie, despite his heroin addiction, is given his own episode that lacks the other b-story's building as they should, since the entire series is made to push everything forward...
That alone makes it better than FLY being that it does involve other aspects and subplots, like Jack building his army with Ana, or Hurley's cute romance...
But, other than being redundant in the Charlie's addiction story, it's just an off-putting episode overall, and tries too hard to push the envelope, which wasn't needed on a show that folded the (binge series) envelope and mailed it successfully into inspiring future (and in many cases, superior) shows, like the aforementioned Breaking Bad, or The Walking Dead or Mad Men or... you name it...
It's just that, at this point, Lost was trying too hard to be original... and didn't have to.
Did you know
- TriviaThe scene where Charlie's father chops off the doll's head (as a butcher in his flashback) was an homage to the Beatle's album "Yesterday and Today" (where band members were featured among slabs of meat and decapitated dolls).
- GoofsEko tells Claire that John's baptism of Jesus cleansed Jesus of his sins. But Catholicism holds that Jesus was sinless. This clearly shows that he has no formal training as a priest and only informally took over his brother's church. Due to this, his misunderstanding of the purpose of baptism and other complicated topics is understandable. After his brother's death and without formal training or a tutor, a lay individual such as Eko could mistake the sacrament of baptism as the only step to salvation.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Fire + Water: Anatomy of an Episode (2006)
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