Saturday, May 3, 2008

Friday, May 2, 2008
On "Lost": Was that an homage to "Master and Commander"?

Thursday, May 1, 2008
What happened to the "Lost" ladies?
All the women seem to have taken a back seat to the men this season.



Friday, April 25, 2008

"Lost" science: How the show operates on "Jurassic Park rules"
In an interview with Popular Mechanics, Carlton Cuse says that the science of "Lost" needs to be "right enough that that we kind of create a sense of believability to the story telling." Adds Damon Lindelof: "If something highly unlikely occurs, we try to offer up some grounding in the actual physical world that we understand in an effort to explain it—except in the case of things that don't potentially have a scientific explanation, which is where the show begins to go into its own territory."

Ben Linus, globe-trotting super-spy // Give this man an Emmy!
Michael Emerson: "Lost" is hurting my marriage // Desmond chats


Thursday, April 24, 2008


"Lost's" end date "changed everything" by giving writers a boost in the arm
"It was," says Damon Lindelof, "nothing less than the difference between not wanting to do it anymore and being thrilled to do it to the very end. It had become such an arduous task: how can we start working toward any of the things we've been doing for the last three years if we don’t know when we get to do them?"

"We really regret nothing" // Frank (copter pilot) got "Lost" on top of a Venezuelan mountain


and earlier...

ABC launches LOSTscape
Click here for ABC's new "unique, engaging, immersive" and NOISY environment where fans can interact with "Lost."


"Lost" producers on the season finale, the foot, and the very last scene
The final scene of the final episode has already been determined, Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindelof told reporters yesterday in a press conference on the season finale. As to why this season's last episode had to be two hours long, Lindelof said, "We had an eight-hour story plan that got condensed down to five (hours) initially, as a result of the strike, and in trying to cram all that story in … the finale, the rubber hit the road. And we realized that it all felt rushed and we were shortchanging our emotional moments, our character moments."




[ TV t a t t l e . c o m ]

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