lostzilla Expert Vidder
Joined: 14 Mar 2005 Posts: 7246 Location: Gallactica
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Posted: Tue Jun 14, 2005 8:47 am Post subject: The hatch filming and the rafties' fate |
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i read it on the fuselage. This is apparently where the hatch scenes will be shot.
http://talkstink.com/archives/2005/06/07/lost-in-diamond-head-studio/
Oh and this article from the trades says the rafties will survive. They will be back in season2.
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Also, for those fans pondering the fate of Michael, Jin, and Sawyer after the “Others†destroyed their raft and left them stranded fifteen miles off shore, don’t fret. Sources close to the show have confirmed to me that they will be returning next season, leaving open countless possibilities for next season’s plot lines. |
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http://www.dontalmostgive.org |
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lostzilla Expert Vidder
Joined: 14 Mar 2005 Posts: 7246 Location: Gallactica
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Posted: Sat Jul 30, 2005 10:29 pm Post subject: |
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Lindelof talk bout whats inside the hatch.
Quote: | From this article:
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment/orl-bk-housewiveslost072505,0,7669222.story?coll=orl-caltop
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Lost will plunge into the mysterious hatch in its first episode, series co-creator Damon Lindelof says.
"You will see everything that's in there. What is in there will change everything about how they live on the island," Lindelof says. "We are erring on the side of giving away too much as opposed to being too vague."
"I can guarantee you there will be people [viewers] who do not like what they find in the hatch," Lindelof says. "We found this door in the 10th episode of the show, and 13 episodes later they finally open it up. So what's inside has to be something big." Although the contents can be construed as science fiction, Lindelof rules out a few possibilities.
"There aren't aliens in there," he says. "There isn't a time-travel portal. They aren't going to find a ship they blast off into space."
The ill-fated voyage of the raft forms another major plot. "If they will reconvene with the main group becomes the story fodder of the first seven or eight episodes," Lindelof says.
The show will continue to examine characters' lives through flashbacks before the plane crash put them on a remote island. Those plots will include more on the marriage of Jack (Matthew Fox); the injury that put Locke (Terry O'Quinn) in a wheelchair; the rock-star existence of Charlie (Dominic Monaghan); the fugitive past of Kate (Evangeline Lilly); and the lottery lifestyle of Hurley (Jorge Garcia).
Michelle Rodriguez joins the cast as a passenger who was in the tail section and who survived elsewhere on the island. The recurring numbers -- on the flight, hatch and lottery ticket -- will become "the driving and fundamental plot point of the second season," Lindelof says. Viewers will know how the plane crashed by season two's end, he promises.
But Lindelof stresses the people are the main element. "The island just serves as a conduit to tell character stories," he says. "No one is really watching the show for the answers to those mysteries. They're watching to see: Will Kate and Jack hook up?" |
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Quote: | "Lost" executive producer Damon Lindelof said it's a "dream come true" to be producing a cult show that's been accepted by the mainstream audience, but he also feels viewers' pain, especially the pain of wanting answers to all the frustrating questions the series has posed.
"My own sense as a viewer is in conflict with my senses as a [TV show creator]," Lindelof said after winning Theater Critics Association awards for best new program and best drama Saturday night. "I want to reveal mysteries at a rate faster than we're going. I don't want to do the perpetual nine-season stall."
But he said it's difficult to judge that. He and co-creator J.J. Abrams know how they want the series to end, but, Lindelof said, "When you run a race and don't know where the end is," it becomes difficult to figure out how much to parcel out and when to do it.
He defended the May season finale, saying it was in line with the job of a cliffhanger: to make people anticipate the next season. But he does promise that within the first 15 minutes of the "Lost" season premiere, which picks up 30 seconds after the season finale, the characters will learn what's in the hatch that's been taunting them (and viewers) for months.
"You'll get a lot of answers in the season premiere," he said, "and a couple more questions."
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