Meet Kevin Johnson
- Episode aired Mar 20, 2008
- TV-14
- 43m
Michael's journey from escaping the island to working as Ben's spy on Widmore's ship is revealed, as well as his mission. Ben tells Danielle and Alex to leave Locke's camp and go to the isla... Read allMichael's journey from escaping the island to working as Ben's spy on Widmore's ship is revealed, as well as his mission. Ben tells Danielle and Alex to leave Locke's camp and go to the island temple, but they are ambushed on the way.Michael's journey from escaping the island to working as Ben's spy on Widmore's ship is revealed, as well as his mission. Ben tells Danielle and Alex to leave Locke's camp and go to the island temple, but they are ambushed on the way.
- Dr. Daniel Faraday
- (credit only)
- Dr. Jack Shephard
- (credit only)
- Jin-Soo Kwon
- (credit only)
- Sun-Hwa Kwon
- (credit only)
- Kate Austen
- (credit only)
- Dr. Charlotte Lewis
- (credit only)
- Dr. Juliet Burke
- (credit only)
Featured reviews
In this episode, the saga of the despicable Michael is disclosed. The loser character betrayed his friends and killed Libby and Ana Maria in the island; lost the love and respect of his son; is unable to commit suicide; works for Ben; and betrays the Owner, the Captain and the crew of the supply vessel Kahana. It is impressive how destructive this character is, even full of good intentions. Locke is completely insane releasing Ben, but the greatest surprise is the calm behavior of Sawyer, passively accepting the command of Locke and the manipulation of Ben. The tragic fate of Karl, Rousseau and Alex is the great surprise of this episode. However, it seems totally out of the context and unnecessary to expose Tom as a gay. Is it a side effect of the great loss of audience? My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): Not Available
Note: On 14 April 2013, I saw this episode again on DVD.
Season 3 was for me a solid if uneven season, with many brilliant episodes but a few slightly underwhelming ones, an inconsistent first part of the season and containing one of 'Lost's' low points "Stranger in a Strange Land". Season 4 had a good amount to live up, and its first episode "The Beginning of the End", was a brilliant start. The following episodes between that and this were generally strong, with "The Constant" being a season and show high-point although "Eggtown" and "The Other Woman" disappointed.
The episode has much of what 'Lost' is all about. It's taut and thought-provoking, with utterly gripping and beautifully developed events. There are a fair share of revelations, ones that are not foreseen or clumsy, and shows plot progression rather than repeating itself or being filler.
Found that the ending, while shocking, happens agreed too suddenly and out-of-the-blue.
"Meet Kevin Johnson" has a great deal of tension and that there are little present-day island events doesn't matter outside of Ben and with Locke's camp. Michael's return is handled beautifully and intriguingly and doesn't waste the potential it had at all. The flashbacks are actually illuminating and very emotionally investable and avoid falling into soap-opera territory.
Can't fault the performances, particularly Harold Perrineau and Michael Emerson.
Nor the stylishness and atmosphere of the visuals, nor the effectively understated and chilling use of music, taut writing and the tightly controlled direction (one of the best of the season and perhaps of the show).
Overall, great. 9/10 Bethany Cox
The episode's flashback story was nicely set up, with further mythology reveals (more like hints, admittedly) and nice character-driven moments. There's some great scenes here, and overall I'd say that it's around as emotional and interesting as "Special" from season one, which I personally thought was a great episode. Stephen Williams did a fairly good job of directing the episode and it was nice to revisit some of the music Giacchino wrote for Michael's character. All in all this isn't my favorite episode of season 4, but it is still excellent, and in keeping with the generally high quality of the season, excepting "Eggtown" and "The Other Woman", and to a lesser extent "Cabin Fever", I suppose.
Did you know
- TriviaThe episode won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy or Drama Series (One-Hour).
- GoofsIn Catch-22 (2007), Naomi's helicopter crashes in the water, but in the subsequent episodes the freighter crew still has a helicopter, which implies that they had two before Naomi crashed. However, only one helicopter is present on the pad in this episode during the scene where Naomi is arguing with Frank Lapidus and Frank's scene with Kevin.
- Quotes
Miles Straume: Your name's not Kevin.
Michael Dawson: [stares at him] Huh?
Miles Straume: Don't worry. 80 percent of the people on this boat are lying about something.
- Crazy creditsThe Producers gratefully acknowledge the cooperation of the people of Hawaii and their Aloha spirit.
- ConnectionsReferences The Great Escape (1963)
Details
- Runtime
- 43m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1