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US: The "Lost" Master Plan *Spoilers for IRL and UK*

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  • 03-09-2005 8:57pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 4,787 ✭✭✭


    This is safe to read in that it has no season 2 spoilers,but there are major spoilers for IRL and UK viewers.

    LOS ANGELES (Zap2it.com) Those viewers who felt burned by the last few seasons of "The X-Files" and have wondered more than once what's going on with "Alias" are probably the same ones who have been fighting the temptation to become too attached when it comes to "Lost."
    Watching the extras on the first season DVD set (available Tuesday, Sept. 6) does nothing to assuage these doubts. Jack (Matthew Fox) was slated to die in the first episode? Kate was supposed to be on a quest to find her husband who went to the bathroom right before the plane blew apart? If those stories were left at the wayside, what else could be in a state of flux? Does anyone know how the polar bears got there? How about the monsters? The Numbers? The Hatch? The Others?

    According to executive producer Damon Lindelof, there's no need to panic.
    "The big questions we have the answers to, but we are running a race that has no finish line right now," he says. "If they said, 'We want you to do four seasons of the show,' we would have sat down and planned out 88 episodes."
    In other words, while the destination is set the journey could take some detours. Still, there's a limit.

    "That's what happened to Chris Carter," Lindelof explains. "People look at that show and go, 'I'm disappointed with the way "X-Files" ended,' but they did 200 episodes.

    "Chris Carter wanted to do four seasons and a movie, and the movie would have answered everything definitely. And Fox said, 'Great, you can leave the show, but we own the show and we're going to keep doing the show.' And he said, 'I'd rather run my own show into the ground then let somebody else do it.'

    "I respect that."

    Respect for the compromises that the entertainment industry demands doesn't mean that Lindelof and partners-in-crime JJ Abrams and Carlton Cuse are planning on dragging "Lost" out forever.

    "We have an ending for the show: we know when it is, we know how many episodes it is," Lindelof says, "but we have to talk to the Powers That Be -- the people that pay for the show -- in order to execute that.

    "I think it would be very hard if we did our ending for anyone to come in to the show after and continue."

    Work out your own theories as to what such a conclusive ending could possibly entail.

    Speaking of network involvement, what's with the promos? During the first season viewers knew that one of the main characters was going to die, but the ABC marketing department jumped the gun after Boone (Ian Somerhalder) suffered a horrific accident and trumpted his death before the fact. Then, they helpfully cleaned up a deliberately garbled radio transmission.

    "One of the things that is a constant fight in movies and television is not wanting to give away the show," Lindelof, who doesn't see the promos until they actually run, opines. "Marketing's job is to get people to tune in and our job is to not give it away, and that sort of puts us at odds."

    Getting more involved for the start of the second season, Lindelof says that he and the show's creative team worked closely with marketing to design the launch campaign, proclaiming the end result to be "very cool and very mysterious." However, once they are back into what he refers to as the "strum and drang" of writing, editing and dealing with the production of the show on a weekly basis they will turn over the reins.

    "Inherently, I have to respect what they do," Lindelof continues, "and I put my frustration aside because the way that they market the show and sold the show, I'm so grateful. So every once and awhile they'll do it in a way I don't approve of, but at the end of the day lots of people are watching and that's in no small part due to the fact that they built awareness."

    "Lost: Season One" will be released on DVD on Tuesday, Sept. 6. Season Two will premiere Wednesday, Sept. 21 at 9 p.m. ET on ABC.


Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 8,753 ✭✭✭qz


    Nice article, very interesting. Especially liked this:
    "We have an ending for the show: we know when it is, we know how many episodes it is," Lindelof says, "but we have to talk to the Powers That Be -- the people that pay for the show -- in order to execute that.


  • Registered Users Posts: 43,810 ✭✭✭✭Basq


    Excellent article there, tvnutz! Cheers for finding that!

    Very interesting stuff!

    I'v heard that before about how Lindelof knows exactly how the series will end - it's hard to know if he's being completely honest with it though! It's difficult to know how to plan to a end a show like 'Lost' with probably another 2 - 3 seasons in the bag!


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,787 ✭✭✭tvnutz


    Ye I wonder about that too :p lol Maybe they know what they want to do in general,just not specifics. And if you go into a show like Lost,do what they have done,and not know the answers then they are screwed. Making it up as they go along would not be wise!


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,676 ✭✭✭dr gonzo


    I actually think you guys have it the wrong wasy round, "lost" is a rollercoaster ride, twisting and turning constantly keeping the viewer on the edge, there is no way that the makers dont know how exactly to end it. Its completely random to us but every action to them is completely calculated......at least i hope it is.

    Oh crap, how much would it suck if they gave us some terrible reason for the goings on.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,753 ✭✭✭qz


    dr gonzo wrote:
    I actually think you guys have it the wrong wasy round, "lost" is a rollercoaster ride, twisting and turning constantly keeping the viewer on the edge, there is no way that the makers dont know how exactly to end it. Its completely random to us but every action to them is completely calculated......at least i hope it is.

    Oh crap, how much would it suck if they gave us some terrible reason for the goings on.

    Sorry, double negative. What do you mean exactley?


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,676 ✭✭✭dr gonzo


    yeh sorry about that, i should have posted seperately, i think that the writers do know exactly where the series is going, i just meant hypothetically if they didnt and the gave us a bad reason for whats happening on the island it would ruin everything.

    sorry for the confusion.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,139 ✭✭✭Sauron


    very interesting article.. nice find.


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