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Lost Michael Dawson

Michael Dawson is a fictional character played by Harold Perrineau
on the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) television series Lost.
After losing a custody battle with Susan Lloyd (Tamara Taylor), Michael
does not see his son Walt (Malcolm David Kelley) for almost ten years.
They reunite when she dies, but on their journey home, their plane
crashes on a mysterious island in the South Pacific. Here Walt is
kidnapped by the Island's previous inhabitants, the Others, and Michael
spends his time trying to retrieve him. He is eventually successful,
and they leave the Island together, but the guilt over the murder he
had to commit to achieve this leads him to attempt suicide. He returns
to the Island on a freighter, but is killed when a bomb on it explodes.
Although initially skeptical about the role, Perrineau took it after
Lost creator J. J. Abrams told him more about it. Much of the first
season arc for Michael was rewritten; he was originally going to be
part of a love triangle with Korean couple Sun (Yunjin Kim) and Jin
(Daniel Dae Kim), but positive fan reaction to the couple meant this
storyline was dropped. After Michael leaves the Island in season two,
Perrineau knew he would return to Lost at some point; he felt there was
more to tell of Michael's story. He returned midway through season
four, and was then killed in the season four finale. Reception for the
character was mixed; however Perrineau's acting was generally well
received.
Arc
Prior to the crash
Much of Michael's life before the plane crash is shown in flashbacks
during "Special". Susan Lloyd leaves Michael after their son Walt is
born, and travels to Amsterdam with Walt. Two years later, Susan tells
him that she intends to get married again. Michael becomes enraged, and
is hit by a car, leaving him hospitalized for months. Susan tracks him
down at the hospital and tries to convince him to give up his parental
rights, so that her new husband can adopt Walt. Michael refuses, but in
the resulting custody battle Susan convinces him that it is the best
decision for Walt. Several years later, Susan dies, and her husband
asks Michael to take custody of Walt, who is now living in Australia.
Michael agrees, but just before the return flight, calls his mother and
asks if she can take Walt instead.
After the crash
Their plane crashes on an island in the South Pacific; Michael, Walt
and Walt's dog Vincent are among the survivors. After Vincent runs into
the jungle, Michael searches for him, but to no avail; it is later that
Locke (Terry O'Quinn) returns Vincent to Michael. Despite this gesture,
Michael is skeptical about Locke, and does not want Walt spending time
with him. After Michael is attacked by a Korean survivor, Jin, over a
gold watch Michael has started wearing, Jin's wife Sun approaches him
to explain that it is her father's watch, and in doing so reveals that
she speaks English. Michael begins constructing a raft, in hope that he
and Walt can escape the Island. After witnessing his completed raft
burned down, Michael blames Jin, but later Walt confesses that it was
him. Although Walt did not want to leave the Island, he has now changed
his mind. Michael and Jin bond after Sun reveals her ability to speak
English, and the two men begin work on a second raft. They offer the
final space on board to Sawyer (Josh Holloway). In the season finale
"Exodus", Michael sets sail with Jin, Sawyer and Walt, and not far from
the Island, they encounter a small fishing boat. The occupants of the
fishing boat are the Others, who have long inhabited the Island. They
kidnap Walt and destroy the raft.
At the beginning of season two, Michael and Sawyer are stranded in the
middle of the ocean, with Jin missing. They wash ashore and discover
Jin, then are knocked unconscious by one of the survivors from the tail
section of the plane. After convincing the tail section survivors that
they were on the same plane, they all return to the beach camp of the
fuselage survivors. Later, Michael offers to take a shift in the hatch
that the survivors have found. Here, he begins receiving computer
messages from someone who he thinks is Walt, who gives him directions
to where he is being held. Michael ventures off in search for him, but
moments after leaving the camp, two of the Others kidnap him and hold
him hostage. Michael is told to retrieve their leader, who is held
prisoner in the hatch, then bring Sawyer, Kate (Evangeline Lilly), Jack
(Matthew Fox) and Hurley (Jorge Garcia) to them, and they will return
Walt and let them leave the Island. In order to free their leader, Ben
(Michael Emerson), Michael kills Ana Lucia (Michelle Rodriguez), who is
guarding Ben, and then Libby (Cynthia Watros), because she walks in on
them. He succeeds in bringing the four requested survivors to the
Others, so Ben reunites him with Walt. Michael and Walt are given a
boat and coordinates to freedom, and they sail away from the Island.
A flashback during "Meet Kevin Johnson" reveals that they manage to
sail to New York City, where Michael hands Walt over to Walt's
grandmother. Michael then attempts suicide, unable to cope with the
guilt of his murders.Tom (M. C. Gainey), one of the Others, arrives,
and tells Michael he can redeem himself by saving the other survivors
from an imminent threat. Tom gives Michael a passport with the new name
of "Kevin Johnson" in order to infiltrate a freighter that is trying to
find the Island. On the freighter he receives a call from Ben, who
instructs him to send him information on all the crew, then to sabotage
the radio room and the boat engines. In his first season four
appearance, Michael meets Sayid (Naveen Andrews) and Desmond (Henry Ian
Cusick), who have managed to get from the Island to the freighter. They
tell the freighter's captain of Michael's true identity, who orders him
to repair the engines. During the season finale, Michael and Jin
attempt to disarm a bomb planted on the freighter. Michael slows the
bomb's detonation with liquid nitrogen, then tells Jin to leave, when
he is almost out of nitrogen. When the supply of nitrogen runs out,
Christian Shephard (John Terry) appears to Michael and tells him he can
go now. The bomb detonates, and Michael is killed in the explosion,
having achieved the redemption he had been seeking.
Characteristics
During season two, Perrineau stated "Michael's nicer than I expected
him to be. Or, he is nicer so far than I expected him to be ... I try
to take characters that I think are challenging and a little
complicated and hopefully really smart and thoughtful and
compassionate. I think Michael is all those things. He seems to have a
lot of bad luck." He defends Michael's behavior in season two, saying
"[Michael] keeps stepping into more trouble than he actually asked
for". Cynthia Littleton of Variety described Michael as "one of the
most interesting of the Oceanic 815-ers: flawed, tortured, hard to
read, volatile, fighting his innate talents, his own worst enemy, at
times, and at others, a totally stand-up guy." IGN's Chris Carabott
calls Michael "a natural at [being a father]." Many reviewers joked
about how frequently Michael shouts "Walt!", such as Alan Sepinwall of
The Star-Ledger, Erin Martell of AOL's TV Squad, and Joshua Rich of
Entertainment Weekly.
Development
When the producers were auditioning actors for roles in Lost, Harold
Perrineau was in the area.The producers called it a "natural move" to
have him audition.Although initially skeptical about the show, he took
the role when Lost creator J. J. Abrams explained more about
it.Perrineau was attracted to the role because "Michael's a guy that's
in a lot of conflict and we're not exactly sure why". In season one,
Michael was going to be part of a love triangle with Sun and Jin,
however this was dropped after positive fan reaction to Sun and Jin's
relationship. The storyline is revisited in the Missing Pieces mobisode
"Buried Secrets", which shows Michael and Sun almost kissing.Michael
and Jin were going to be enemies throughout all of the season, but the
producers felt Perrineau and Daniel Dae Kim had good chemistry, so the
storyline was changed to them becoming friends. Perrineau called
filming the first season "one of his best years as a working actor".
The second episode of season two was originally going to be Sawyer
centric, however this was rewritten "at the proverbial last minute" and
changed to a Michael centric episode. Perrineau received swimming
lessons in preparation for this episode. Perrineau was unaware that his
character had been captured by the Others until he was told Michael was
going to kill Ana Lucia and Libby.Perrineau described shooting the
scenes in "Two for the Road" where Michael kills Ana Lucia and Libby as
a "tough day". Lost writer Elizabeth Sarnoff explained that Michael's
storyline in season two is about "what a father will do to save his
son"; she noted "there's nothing worse than what he does". The last
scene shot of season two was Michael and Walt sailing away from the
Island. As it was a long camera shot, Perrineau had to sail the boat so
far from the pier, that by the time he returned, all the equipment had
already been packed away. He said, "It felt fitting, actually. Like;
that's it". Perrineau knew he would be back one day, but as the
producers did not reveal any details to him, he did not know when. He
is the first and only actor that left the show as "part of a grander
design to come back".
After leaving the Island in the second season finale "Live Together,
Die Alone", Michael was supposed to return in the season three finale,
but Perrineau was filming the pilot of Demons, so was unable to return.
Instead he returned in the seventh episode of season four, "Ji Yeon".
His return was meant to be announced during Lost's slot at the 2007
Comic-Con International, however there were complaints at the
Television Critics Association Press Tour when ABC's President of
Entertainment Stephen McPherson commented that "some big announcements"
would be made at the Lost panel. Some journalists felt that any
announcements should be made to them at the press meeting, rather than
at a fan convention.[38][39] After numerous reporters asked about what
would be announced, Lost producer Damon Lindelof was contacted, and he
gave permission for McPherson to say Harold Perrineau would be
returning to Lost. At Comic-Con, Lindelof confirmed Perrineau would be
back as a cast member, not just for a flashback. Lost producer Carlton
Cuse said "Michael's story is for us one of the most becoming
storylines on the show because here's a character who ... undertook
some very extreme actions in order to basically get his son off the
Island, and then when he sailed off in that boat I think everyone was
very curious about what happened to him, what is his fate ... we really
feel that Michael's story will be a really compelling part of the
season." Perrineau was disappointed that he was brought back to the
show only to be killed, and that Michael does not get a chance to
reunite with his son, Walt, saying, "there are all these questions
about how [the writers] respond to black people on the show ... Walt
just winds up being another fatherless child. It plays into a really
big, weird stereotype and, being a black person myself, that wasn't so
interesting."Cuse responded "We pride ourselves on having a very
racially diverse cast. It's painful when any actor's storyline ends on
the show. Harold is a fantastic actor whose presence added enormously
to Lost". Perrineau later said he should have thought before making a
racial comment, and although he felt like that, he never discussed the
matter with the producers. Perrineau said that although he would be
happy to return to Lost, he would have to know what the storyline would
be.
Reception
Michael's first centric episode, "Special", was well received by
critics. Chris Carabott of IGN said "Michael's flashback is a heart
wrenching look at the relationship, or lack-there-of, between him and
his son Walt." He added "As Michael's life crumble around him, it's
Harold Perrineau's brilliant performance that really shines through."
Kirthana Ramisetti from Entertainment Weekly called it the best episode
since "Walkabout" because of Michael's character development. She said
"One of my favorite scenes of the entire season ... was Michael and
Walt bonding over the letters and the drawing of the sunburned penguin.
It was moving to see these two finally relating to each other as father
and son after everything they've been through." Michael's first centric
episode in season two was less well received. Mac Slocum of
Filmfodder.com said "it wasn't all that interesting". Entertainment
Weekly's Jeff Jensen called the flashbacks "among the poorest and most
clumsily integrated flashbacks we've seen so far", as he felt nothing
new was learned.He did not like Michael's on-Island storyline either,
noting he "got the sense that the actors and directors weren't quite
sure what to make of these scenes".Three episodes later, Jensen thought
Michael's "whiny dad act" became "increasingly tedious".When Michael
murdered Ana Lucia and Libby in "Two for the Road", Slocum called it
the "single biggest shocker in Lost history".C. K. Sample of AOL's TV
Squad wrote that although he suspected that Ana Lucia and Libby were
going to die, he thought what "was amazing was who shot them". Zap2it's
Amy Amatangelo described the double murder as "a brilliant move",
because "one of their own became one of them". She added it was "one of
the second season's most jaw-dropping moments". According to Perrineau,
it made fans "pissed off" with Michael. Jensen praised Perrineau's
acting, saying "Michael's bloody betrayal is hard to swallow, but
Harold Perrineau sells it". Perrineau co-won the 2005 Screen Actors
Guild Award for "Best Ensemble - Drama Series.
Joshua Rich from Entertainment Weekly had mixed views on the prospect
of Michael returning in season four, because although Perrineau was one
of his "favorite" actors, he liked how peaceful the series had become
without Michael constantly screaming "Walt!". IGN's Chris Carabott
called Michael's return "the worst kept secret in Lost history", but
still found his reveal "exciting".Alan Sepinwall of The Star-Ledger
found "a fine performance from Mr. Perrineau" in "Meet Kevin Johnson".
Sepinwall wrote that Michael's "struggle to deal with the guilt from
his Faustian bargain to save Walt was another moving example of how the
writers this season are really trying to build on the emotional impact
of everything that's happened before." Cynthia Littleton of Variety was
"really happy" to see Michael again, and wrote "Perrineau plays it just
right most of the time—no hysterics or scenery-chewing, just a man
trying to do the right thing, most of the time." Digital Spy's Ben
Rawson-Jones commented that "[Michael's] suicidal plight was well
conveyed and there were plenty of shocks and thrills along the way".
Before the fourth season finale aired, Entertainment Weekly's Jeff
Jensen ranked Michael being unable to commit suicide as the thirteenth
best moment of the season, but did add "This story line didn't match
the hype". Oscar Dahl from BuddyTV called Michael's death "the
culmination of a fairly lackluster story arc".
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