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Spoilers: Lost Co-Creator Talks About Season 2

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  • 01-08-2005 7:51pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 9,225 ✭✭✭


    from mediavillage.com

    Sensational Sneak Preview of Lost
    By Ed Martin

    What's in Store on Television's Most Talked About Drama
    "Who survives [the raft attack], how they survive, where they end up
    and how they reconnect with the other characters" will drive the story

    Beverly Hills, CA - From the opening moments of the first episode of
    its sophomore season, Lost won't waste a minute in providing further
    information about the major storylines on the show. What's at the
    bottom of that tunnel? Who are the Others? What the heck is the island
    all about, anyway?

    "Right out of the gate we're addressing some of the big mysteries of
    the island," Lost co-creator and executive producer Damon Lindelof
    tells MediaVillage.com. "We'll go right inside the tunnel, and what
    you'll see in there changes everything."

    Indeed, whatever they discover in that tunnel "will change the
    fundamental state of existence" of the characters, Lindelof continues.
    Viewers won't see quick glimpses of strange things but rather will get
    a good long look around.

    "We're erring on the side of giving away too much rather than too
    little," Lindelof says. "They found that hatch in episode 10. Thirteen
    episodes later they opened it up. It's got to be good."

    What the characters won't find inside, Lindelof promises, are aliens, a
    time travel portal or "a ship they can blast off in." Whatever is in
    there will involve those mysterious numbers that led to Hurley's
    lottery win and streak of bad luck in that character's famous
    backstory.

    "Right from the start, in the season premiere, the numbers become a
    fundamental plot point for the season," Lindelof says. "People aren't
    going to be disappointed in how we use them."

    He says the producers of the show wanted to make certain that whatever
    the characters find inside the tunnel will be "great, cool and risky."
    But, Lindelof cautions, he can "guarantee some people are not going to
    like what they find in there."

    While some characters are exploring the tunnel, others will be dealing
    with the aftermath of the destruction of the raft and the kidnapping of
    little Walt by a band of creepy men who are presumed to be among the
    community of Others on the island.

    "Who survives [the raft attack], how they survive, where they end up
    and how they reconnect with the other characters" will drive the story
    through the first seven or eight episodes next fall, Lindelof adds.

    Lindelof also confirms that the character played by newcomer Michelle
    Rodriguez will be someone who was seated in the back of the plane when
    it exploded and has been living on another part of the island. He will
    not say whether she has been living alone or with other survivors.

    He also says that Boone, the one main character who died last season,
    will definitely stay dead. "So many times in genre shows when you kill
    someone off they come back. On Lost the rules are different. When
    you're dead, you're dead!" Lindelof declares.

    The other big nagging mysteries in the story - why did Ethan kidnap
    Claire, what happened to her while she was held prisoner, what if
    anything happened to her baby - will be addressed later in the
    season, Lindelof says. "But we have bigger priorities first: The hatch
    and Walt's kidnapping."

    He says the story about the kidnapping of Walt is especially intense,
    because "a child taken from a parent by strangers is the scariest thing
    of all." When the Others take Walt, there is no Amber Alert, no Fox
    News Channel and CNN reporting the story, nowhere for his father to get
    help. There is only fear, frustration and rage. Early episodes,
    Lindelof says, will deal with the repercussions of this harrowing
    incident.

    "That is the big mystery of the island," Lindelof explains. "Who are
    these other people and what do they want?"

    Lindelof welcomes ABC's decision to move Lost from 8 to 9 p.m. ET on
    Wednesday, because more people are available to watch television. He
    also thinks the show is "very intense" and says, "children should not
    be watching," which they are apt to do at an earlier hour.

    "By the finale of season two viewers will know why the plane crashed,"
    Lindelof says. He envisions Lost running "somewhere in the neighborhood
    of 4-5 seasons."

    "I know what the ending [of the story] is," he concludes. "At a certain
    point you can only stall [the audience] so long."

    http://www.mediavillage.com/jmentr/2005/07/25/jmer-07-25-05/

    Sounds great, i cant wait! only 51 days to go....


Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 48 Bawpsherep


    Thanks for posting that Call_me_al! Very interesting stuff indeed! Lots to think about there...

    The countdown to Season 2 continues!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,842 ✭✭✭steveland?


    /me wets pants in anticipation...


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,312 ✭✭✭mr_angry


    Come on "intensity"!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,842 ✭✭✭steveland?


    That is indeed an excellent little piece btw... nice work call_me_al


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,374 ✭✭✭Gone West


    /me dies of anticipation


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  • Registered Users Posts: 55,470 ✭✭✭✭Mr E


    Great read... I can't friggin' wait.....


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