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[spoilers] Lucas. Just Lucas.
24-11-2010, 07:57 PM
Post: #341
RE: [spoilers] Lucas. Just Lucas.
(24-11-2010 03:08 PM)WhiteSwan Wrote:  Normally I'm not someone searching meticulously for plotholes in a film or series, but here it's the basic storyline which is absolutely ridiculous. Which then makes me want to look out for all the other numerous major or minor plotholes. Maybe one day soon I will make a list of all of them!

How many volumes were you intending on writing? Big Grin
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24-11-2010, 08:08 PM
Post: #342
RE: [spoilers] Lucas. Just Lucas.
(24-11-2010 07:57 PM)BoHenley Wrote:  
(24-11-2010 03:08 PM)WhiteSwan Wrote:  Normally I'm not someone searching meticulously for plotholes in a film or series, but here it's the basic storyline which is absolutely ridiculous. Which then makes me want to look out for all the other numerous major or minor plotholes. Maybe one day soon I will make a list of all of them!

How many volumes were you intending on writing? Big Grin

Could I possibly aid you in this great endeavor? Angel

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RIP Carter Hall ~ Hawkman
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24-11-2010, 08:25 PM
Post: #343
RE: [spoilers] Lucas. Just Lucas.
(24-11-2010 08:08 PM)BravoNine Wrote:  
(24-11-2010 07:57 PM)BoHenley Wrote:  
(24-11-2010 03:08 PM)WhiteSwan Wrote:  Normally I'm not someone searching meticulously for plotholes in a film or series, but here it's the basic storyline which is absolutely ridiculous. Which then makes me want to look out for all the other numerous major or minor plotholes. Maybe one day soon I will make a list of all of them!

How many volumes were you intending on writing? Big Grin

Could I possibly aid you in this great endeavor? Angel

I'd be more than happy to meticulously pick S9 apart, perhaps we could send a copy to Kudos? Silba

Gnothi Seauton.
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24-11-2010, 11:09 PM
Post: #344
RE: [spoilers] Lucas. Just Lucas.
Another day, another dissertation. Yes, I do have a paying job. Why do you ask?

I mentioned I would come back to deal more directly with a couple of thought-provoking points, raised in the ‘How did you feel about season 9?’ thread, regarding Lucas’ need to define himself, and be defined, in terms of ‘normality’ and expressions of trust on the part of others. I also promised this would be a shorter post from me. I’m not sure I was entirely successful on that front. I should mention that this post does contain a short discussion on an incident from 8.4. I am keen not to impose on the excellent and interesting analysis of this episode being undertaken by Byatil. I hope I’m not trading on any toes here.

I wanted to return to the question of Lucas’ reintegration – in terms of both paid employment and emotional function – because it is such a vital element of his rhetorical purpose in seasons 7/8. The character of Lucas hardly represents the first occasion on which Spooks has explored questions pertaining to traumatic experience in the line of service. He does, however, represent the first occasion on which these questions have been addressed via the agency of a character presented to us in such an already compromised state. We never knew Lucas before he emerged, hooded and exhausted, from the back of a car on an industrial estate in Bexley. We can never know how capable he was. What we know of him by the end of 7.1 is defined in terms of damage and Harry’s awareness of the need for damage limitation. This is Lucas. We do not see him brought to this, reduced from a state of familiarity to one of disorientation and self-doubt (Tom, Adam in season 5, Jo, even Ros). Neither do we learn his character through sharing in the experience of all the tiny compromising decisions made in the course of an evolving progression (Ruth).

This is a bold decision on the part of the production, because it means we must appreciate the quality of what is different about Lucas, as we see him, based almost entirely on the ability of the actor to communicate the absence of a comparative value we will never encounter. It is striking, I think, how much of the criticism of the writing of Lucas’ character and history in seasons 7/8 tends to focus on accusations of under-writing. It has always seemed to me that what we see is, in fact, an incredibly rich and unusual kind of negative metadata: information about a lack of information. Richard Armitage’s performance – so often so quiet and still - reveals a man in an agonising dichotomy of conscious and unconscious isolation from not only everything he has been, but also everything he wants to be. Armitage has a rare ability to detail distance in his performance. This is something much more mature and intelligent, as you point out, BravoNine, than “brooding”. Rather, it is this acute representation of someone engaged in an almost physical effort to be a person in the world that lends such potency to Lucas’ awareness of, ability to respond to, and reconciliation with, what it is about him that is different now.

Byatil, I think you are right when you suggest Lucas is, in part, defined in terms of a:

(17-11-2010 11:30 PM)Byatil Wrote:  ...need to prove to himself that he could cope, and be "one of the best" again. His personal-identity at that point seems to be based purely on how he performs at work, and how he interacts with those around him.

I think also, Belle, that you conjure an excellent, and elegantly expressed, point when you say that Lucas needed:

(19-11-2010 11:15 AM)Belle Wrote:  ...to feel cared about, to feel trusted. He needed other people to trust him because he could not trust himself, he didn't know who he was and it's hard to trust a stranger.

I would suggest that there is an additional texture to appreciate here arising from the way in which these correlated needs are conveyed in the fabric of the character. It seems to me that Lucas places distinct and quite separate values on the three iterations of himself of which he is most fundamentally aware: the pre-Moscow Lucas, who no longer exists outside Lucas’ own functional memory, except in the largely unconscious gaze and recall of Harry, Malcolm and Elisabeta; imprisoned Lucas, who exists, and must only be allowed to exist, in the margins, but has tremendous value because it is this man who survived imprisonment at all; and post-release Lucas, who is learning as he goes how to be Lucas here and now. There is a quality almost of liminality about the way Lucas is written and rendered. Lucas is a man in transition, but he did not choose to be so. He has been forced by circumstance to abandon one state of being, while still being uncertain as to the nature of the state he will occupy as a result of that abandonment. Meanwhile, the threshold condition – the identity of the survivor – persists, even as the hoped-for identity of the confident operator struggles to assert itself.

Lucas, possibly more than any other principal character in the history of Spooks, navigates by a map of such intensely personal and painful experience that he is sometimes sent off course by his inability to make sense of it – to make sense of himself - in the landscape in which he is now expected to find his way. Armitage’s performance allows us often to see quite clearly all three iterations of Lucas present in the behaviour of the character. We are able, as a result, to appreciate the complex ways in which these iterations relate to one another in the mind of a man who is re-learning not only the extent to which he is able to act as Lucas, but also the extent to which he is able to locate that action in his ability to be Lucas. We can see, as well, indications of the very long way he has to go in his pursuit of this reconciliation.

Lucas inhabits a confused, and confusing, psyche, which we see made manifest in his interactions with the human company he has for so long been denied. We see it also in the ways in which he seeks to impose a kind of control on both his environment and his place in it. This is where we can appreciate the visibility of the survivor, evident in Lucas’ recourse to a number of sometimes conflicting coping strategies. He compartmentalises, of course; he is often unable to, or is unaware of a need to, describe or communicate his intent; his appreciation of personal risk is extremely compromised; his frustration and disappointment with himself is sometimes laid bare in the extent to which he is at times so very biddable. Survival for Lucas has been about more than resilience. It has required him to learn compromise, acquiescence and humility. Thus we see the condition of the survivor emerge as the mediator between the identities of Lucas’ pre- and post-Moscow selves. Two sequences suggest themselves above others as indications of this curious state.

In 7.6 we see a very complex and detailed exploration of this theme in a synthesis of writing, direction and performance. Following a night spent in a safe house with Dean and his mother, Lucas makes tea alone in the kitchen before being joined by Dean, who has experienced a restless night. Lucas’ attention to the act of tea-making is fascinating and frightening in the way it describes his institutionalised behaviour. Every individual action in the process of making tea is shown to be a tiny observance in itself, a way of marking time. There is no rush, no attempt to complete several actions in a united sequence. He does not fill more than one mug at a time with water; he does not add teabags to the mugs at the start of the process; he carefully returns the kettle to the hotplate before beginning the whole process again for the second mug; he keeps the spoon in his hand throughout; he even shows the mug of tea to Dean, asking for permission to continue, before placing it on the counter for consumption. This is a survival ritual.

Lucas them implicates Dean in this experience, essentially telling the young man the reason for his lack of sleep. The conversation turns to the financial problems being suffered by Dean’s mother, and Dean makes a passing reference to Beyoncé. Lucas cannot disguise his excitement at even knowing who Beyoncé is. He accomplishes a moment of humorous deflection, but cannot suppress the unaccountable delight in having made this miniscule connection to a world that carried on without him. He turns away and goes, with the spoon still in his hand, to retrieve a tin of powdered milk and reassert his control over his environment. Then he is made to confront the alien quality of even his pre-Moscow self when it becomes clear Dean has no knowledge of the purpose of Methodism. There is no part of Lucas that belongs in this room. He is all about difference. It is only when he hears the sound of a newspaper being pushed through the letterbox that he is able to inhabit again the iteration of Lucas that is learning to be normal and capable. He knows now where he is, what he needs to do, and who he needs to be.

Another, smaller, example of the extent of Lucas’ deference to his own condition of survival occurs in 8.4 when, following the meeting in his own flat with Oleg, and the confrontation in the same location with Sarah, Lucas calls The Grid to communicate the name of the Sudanese terrorist planning to bomb Central London. As he makes the call, he is agitated and struggling for control over his responses (we do not yet know the full reason for this). Having given Ros the name of the terrorist, Lucas places his ‘phone on the kitchen counter. Even as he begins to be overwhelmed by whatever it is that is he is experiencing in this moment, he still takes the time – still needs to take the time – to ensure that the edge of the ‘phone is parallel to the edge of the counter. This matters to Lucas and his survivor’s brain. It is the last chance he has to control what is happening to him, and he cannot afford not to take it.

Lucas lives in the spaces between iterations of himself: what he was, what he needed to become, and what he is striving to be instead – and because - of this. He needs desperately for someone to put a value on what it means to be Lucas, because until that happens, he will be adrift in these spaces.

Right: tattoos next, then I might have another look at 8.4...
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24-11-2010, 11:33 PM
Post: #345
RE: [spoilers] Lucas. Just Lucas.
Bloody hell Binkie, you continue to make fascinating points in your analysis!

(24-11-2010 11:09 PM)binkie Wrote:  Another, smaller, example of the extent of Lucas’ deference to his own condition of survival occurs in 8.4 when, following the meeting in his own flat with Oleg, and the confrontation in the same location with Sarah, Lucas calls The Grid to communicate the name of the Sudanese terrorist planning to bomb Central London. As he makes the call, he is agitated and struggling for control over his responses (we do not yet know the full reason for this). Having given Ros the name of the terrorist, Lucas places his ‘phone on the kitchen counter. Even as he begins to be overwhelmed by whatever it is that is he is experiencing in this moment, he still takes the time – still needs to take the time – to ensure that the edge of the ‘phone is parallel to the edge of the counter. This matters to Lucas and his survivor’s brain. It is the last chance he has to control what is happening to him, and he cannot afford not to take it.

...I really cannot fathom quite how you pick up on these tiny details. RA is such an intelligent actor, and I'm only just realising the full extent of the way he really 'becomes' his character. It's fascinating. These endless attempts to control the world around him, to try and make himself a permanent, living being who belongs there again. It's as if (as you say), he doesn't quite feel grounded in reality. He's still so emotionally caught up in these feelings of loyalty and betrayal that he's not quite sure who he is anymore. The fact that Kaleshnikov (was that his name?) spent so long trying to 'turn' him only rubs more salt into the wound; Lucas must have felt completely disassociated from his country, and indeed, from his own identity. The way he spits at Harry "If I don't have trust from MI5, from you... then I'll never really be home. Just back in England." really reiterates this sense of abandonment. He no longer has an identity outside of his job, because in Russia, all that matters is what he knows regarding his work with MI5. Through his time in prison, he has simply become a file of information. It's clear that he sees himself as someone who is undeserving of this imprisonment, as he has always been so loyal to his team and country. But when he arrives back on The Grid in 7.1... he seems to have lost this sense of patriotism because of his personal grudge against Harry. Even the way he seems so angry after Malcolm asks "Has it really been 8 years?" shows his intense frustration at his lack of worth in this new, strange world. In an episode from S9, he admits that he doesn't really have any personal interests. Films? Books? Music? Apparently nothing, aside from his coveted Blake book. He's just so void of any personality, he's allowed (or been forced to allow) his job to define him as a person. And he can no longer function correctly unless he is tasked. The fact that he apparently spends a lot of his time thinking about work (all of his time?) only further supports this. Without MI5, who is Lucas North? I don't think he ever really knows.

Gnothi Seauton.
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24-11-2010, 11:50 PM (This post was last modified: 24-11-2010 11:51 PM by binkie.)
Post: #346
RE: [spoilers] Lucas. Just Lucas.
(24-11-2010 11:33 PM)Byatil Wrote:  ...I really cannot fathom quite how you pick up on these tiny details.

I think you'll find that is the tragedy of the obsessive's brain!! I'd like to say I should find something worthwhile to obsess about, but I'm quite happy obsessing about this Wink

(24-11-2010 11:33 PM)Byatil Wrote:  He no longer has an identity outside of his job, because in Russia, all that matters is what he knows regarding his work with MI5. Through his time in prison, he has simply become a file of information.

That is a smart observation. What lends it an even more bitter quality is that he must surely have become aware, during eight years of imprisonment, that the content of the file was becoming less and less relevant with every day that passed. His value even as a commodity was being reduced every day he was in that place.
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25-11-2010, 12:00 AM
Post: #347
RE: [spoilers] Lucas. Just Lucas.
(24-11-2010 11:50 PM)binkie Wrote:  I think you'll find that is the tragedy of the obsessive's brain!! I'd like to say I should find something worthwhile to obsess about, but I'm quite happy obsessing about this Wink

Well, I think this is a more interesting show than most to obsess over at least! I do find myself reading the news these days and wondering what MI5 and the government aren't telling us. Spooks has at least given me insight into how unreliable anything the BBC says is!

(24-11-2010 11:50 PM)binkie Wrote:  That is a smart observation. What lends it an even more bitter quality is that he must surely have become aware, during eight yearsof imprisonment, that the content of the file was becoming less and less relevant with every day that passed. His value even as a commodity was being reduced every day he was in that place.

Indeed, he's a very tragic character. I'd go so far as to say your a-typical tragic hero; through no real fault of his own, he is thrown into a downward spiral... simply because he was too loyal.

Another interesting thing is that he never places any blame on the Russians for what happened to him. It's always Harry, or MI5, or England. His rejection of patriotism is very significant in my eyes. He seems to be disinterested in his country, yet he's still willing to die for it. Is this because he has nothing to lose? Or just another attempt at becoming the Lucas he used to be, back when he wanted to protect his country? Because to me, when he returns in S7, he only wants to return to MI5 for rather selfish reasons, once you scratch away the surface. We always view Lucas as a loyal, courageous man who is brave enough to die for his team. But could we actually say his work for MI5 post-Russia is more of a selfish indulgence? I'm assuming that in his mind, there are no other options. It's not as if he could just go home and get a job at the post office or something! Wink He needs MI5 to help himself understand who he is, yet tragically it only serves to confuse him further. He's trapped. He may have left prison, but he's now imprisoned within his own mind instead. And as we've seen... Lucas' mind does not look like a very pleasant place to be.

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25-11-2010, 09:37 AM (This post was last modified: 25-11-2010 09:38 AM by BoHenley.)
Post: #348
RE: [spoilers] Lucas. Just Lucas.
What amazing summaries! The more I watch and study it more closely (thanks to you) the more I think that Lucas has lost his (personal) identity, i.e. who he is, unless he's in action for MI5 - then he's Lucas. If we partly link the theme of S9 where he buried a former identity, then it does partly work (even if I don't like it). It's sad. But what a great acting vehicle for Richard Armitage. The closer you watch him, the more amazing is his acting. What an intelligent actor!
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25-11-2010, 10:59 AM (This post was last modified: 25-11-2010 11:04 AM by Belle.)
Post: #349
RE: [spoilers] Lucas. Just Lucas.
Waw, Binkie and Byatil, just as BoHenley said here above, your analyses are fantastic. Everytime I read them, I gain new insights on the true character of Lucas North! Thank you!

I find it striking what you say, Binkie, about Lucas being so meticulate about his actions.

Quote:In 7.6 we see a very complex and detailed exploration of this theme in a synthesis of writing, direction and performance. Following a night spent in a safe house with Dean and his mother, Lucas makes tea alone in the kitchen before being joined by Dean, who has experienced a restless night. Lucas’ attention to the act of tea-making is fascinating and frightening in the way it describes his institutionalised behaviour. Every individual action in the process of making tea is shown to be a tiny observance in itself, a way of marking time. There is no rush, no attempt to complete several actions in a united sequence. He does not fill more than one mug at a time with water; he does not add teabags to the mugs at the start of the process; he carefully returns the kettle to the hotplate before beginning the whole process again for the second mug; he keeps the spoon in his hand throughout; he even shows the mug of tea to Dean, asking for permission to continue, before placing it on the counter for consumption. This is a survival ritual.

This makes me almost sure Lucas must suffer from some sort of compulsive dissorder. Maybe it's not depicted very detailed troughout the whole series, but I do feel like that's what is going on. It's a way to cope with the absence of total control on one's life, wich surely is the case for Lucas. He has no longer control on who he is, simply because he doesn't know it anymore. He longes to be the pre-russia Lucas, but somehow he lost that person whilst in prison.
Everything he does is a quest to try to become that Lucas again.
As Byatil said:

Quote:Another interesting thing is that he never places any blame on the Russians for what happened to him. It's always Harry, or MI5, or England. His rejection of patriotism is very significant in my eyes. He seems to be disinterested in his country, yet he's still willing to die for it. Is this because he has nothing to lose? Or just another attempt at becoming the Lucas he used to be, back when he wanted to protect his country? Because to me, when he returns in S7, he only wants to return to MI5 for rather selfish reasons, once you scratch away the surface. We always view Lucas as a loyal, courageous man who is brave enough to die for his team. But could we actually say his work for MI5 post-Russia is more of a selfish indulgence? I'm assuming that in his mind, there are no other options. It's not as if he could just go home and get a job at the post office or something! He needs MI5 to help himself understand who he is, yet tragically it only serves to confuse him further. He's trapped. He may have left prison, but he's now imprisoned within his own mind instead. And as we've seen... Lucas' mind does not look like a very pleasant place to be.

I also find this a very interesting point of view. He indeed never blamed the russians. Maybe because he knows they were just 'doing their job' so to speak. But, in his mind Harry and MI5 left him to rot, left him behind. Maybe Lucas thought he was more to Harry than just 'the job', maybe he thought they were friends (going trough so much lifetreatening stuff together must leave something of personal feelings behind) and being betrayed by a friend is one of the worst feelings a human can overcome.

It seems a right insight that he tries to be someone again trough his job, because he lost who he was in prison. The only one he knows to be is the imprisoned Lucas, but that is a too painfull personality to be, so he tries to be something else, someone who doesn't need to feel the terrible pain he had indured.
The sad case is: he doesn't know how to be 'a human Lucas' anymore, or at least, he feels extremely unsure trying to be a human, so he renders himself to that what he knows best, to what he feels secure and confident in : being an MI5 officer.
So, it is indeed a selfish action of Lucas to re-engage in the job as a Spook. (but I don't think we can blame him for this). He needs MI5 to be able to live, IMO, because he has no idea anymore what it is to be and feel alive when he's just Lucas North and not the MI5- officer. Every person has a drive to survive, and in Lucas' case it is indeed what he thought he needed to be alive, what destroyes him inch by inch. First by leaving him to die in prison for 8 years and secondly by not giving him the support and trust he aches for so desperatly!

I think we can see what Lucas feels for his country ( and also for Harry) is as a child being mistreated and abused by his parent. The child (Lucas) is hurt down to it's core but the need to feel wanted, to be approved of, to feel loved by its parent(England/Harry) is so much more stronger than the disgust and sadness (and maybe even hatred) it feels towards them. The child keeps defending, loving, wanting its parent, just because feeling hurt is always better than feeling nothing at all!

I also want to second the insights of my fellow posters here above, about the amazing performance given by Richard Armitage, it's through his skilled and intense acting we can see all this about Lucas, can't imagine so much insights would be rising if it wasn't for the total engagement this wonderfull actor had towards this very interesting, but sad character.

It's "a struggle for heaven and earth. Where there is one law: fight or die. And one rule: resist or serve."
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25-11-2010, 02:54 PM
Post: #350
RE: [spoilers] Lucas. Just Lucas.
Spooks 7,8 and 9 break my heart.
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