Category Archives: Season 6

Sneak peek #1 for the LOST Finale

Here’s the first sneak peek for (gulp) the finale.

Oh, LOST, I don’t want you to be over!

Sigh.

Anyway, what we’ve got here is Jack, Sawyer, and a Biblical metaphor:

Promo for the Finale

Anyone know who is narrating this?

LOST Untangled 6×16 What They Died For

Puppet Dr. Chang, soon to be out of a job as an untangler, untangles the penultimate episode of LOST:

Poll: What did you think of 6×16 What They Died For?


The last official ABC LOST audio podcast

In the last (so sad!) official audio podcast, Damon and Carlton talk about listening to the scoring of the music for the finale, the polarized fan reaction to Across the Sea, “this is what answers look like,” “every question will lead to another question,” that they just did a DVD commentary for Across the Sea which will explain why they made the decisions they did for that episode, and the alternate endings that will be on the post-Finale Jimmy Kimmel show.

They say that they are done with the mythology — Across the Sea was the last of it. From now on, it’s going to be all about the characters. Damon said “Everyone you know and love is going to feature prominently in the next three-and-a-half hours of the show.”

Damon mentions how Across the Sea was a departure because it was about a bad Mommy when so much of the show before had been about bad Daddies. He says that one of their jokey titles for the episode had been “I’ll Just Sit Here in the Dark.” Ha!

They answer (and sometimes sidestep) viewer questions of varying seriousness: What did Locke say when he was unconscious in the sideways world? How could Jacob kill his brother if they were unable to hurt each other? (The answer was that he didn’t hurt him directly.) Did Smokey kill the author of “Bad Twin”? Is the water in the pool in the temple the same as the water in the cave that Jacob is protecting? Was the tortoise on the beach an incarnation of Vincent? Was the drawstring in the last episode an anachronism? Do Damon and Carlton secretly hate each other? What is their favorite podcast moment?

Great podcast, worth listening to: May 14, 2010 official audio podcast

Damon and Carlton talk to the New York Times

Damon and Carlton

Some highlights of the interview published May 13, 2010:

1) Damon and Carlton are asked the question that comes up in almost every interview — how much of the end did they know when they started?

What’s interesting is that Carlton gives an answer that I don’t think I’ve seen before:

CARLTON CUSE: The literal last scene of the show was something that we concocted very early on in the first season of the show.

I’d read an interview, earlier, where they said that they came up with the ending between the first and the second seasons. So this is new info (for me, at least) that they had thought up the very last scene so early.

Carlton then goes to say something more in line with previous interviews:

But the last episode is an amalgam of ideas that started with our first mythology conversations in the first season when we realized after the pilot came out and the ratings were huge that the show was going to go a long time.

I’m getting very excited now, to see the finale, especially since it sounds like we will be kept in suspense until the very last moment. It’s going to be a long wait, for that moment to come — three-and-a-half hours, if you watch the recap show that will precede the finale, to get to that very last scene.

2) Damon talked at some length about redemption as a theme:

Q. Your show traffics in a lot of big themes — fate versus free will, good versus evil, faith versus reason, how often Sawyer should be shirtless. Ultimately, what were the most important themes for you in this series?

DAMON LINDELOF If there’s one word that we keep coming back to, it’s redemption. It is that idea of everybody has something to be redeemed for and the idea that that redemption doesn’t necessarily come from anywhere else other than internally. But in order to redeem yourself, you can only do it through a community. So the redemption theme started to kind of connect into “live together, die alone,” which is that these people were all lone wolves who were complete strangers on an aircraft, even the ones who were flying together like Sun and Jin. Then let’s bring them together and through their experiences together allow themselves to be redeemed. When the show is firing on all pistons, that’s the kind of storytelling that we’re doing.

I think we’ve always said that the characters of “Lost” are deeply flawed, but when you look at their flashback stories, they’re all victims. Kate was a victim before she killed her stepfather. Sawyer’s parents killed themselves as he was hiding under the bed. Jack’s dad was a drunk who berated him as a child. Sayid was manipulated by the American government into torturing somebody else. John Locke had his kidney stolen. This idea of saying this bad thing happened to me and I’m a victim and it created some bad behavior and now I’m going to take responsibility for that and allow myself to be redeemed by community with other people, that seems to be the theme that we keep coming back to.

This seems to bolster my Oedipus LOST theory, which I’m thinking now may be wrong in the details, but may be right in some overarching kind of way. In that theory Jacob redeemed himself by bringing the LOST-ies to the Island and helping them to redeem themselves, in order to atone for a long-ago crime.

3) Carlton talked about the relationship between Sawyer and Juliet, how it started as a “what if” question, how they were doubtful the idea would work, and how, in the end, it took on a surprising life of its own:

And lo and behold, this thing blossomed forth that no one was expecting, which was there was sort of a mature kind of love between these two characters.

It’s a good interview, well worth reading the whole thing: The Men Who Made ABC’s ‘Lost’ Last

Eerie similarities between “The End” by The Doors and LOST

The promo for LOST 6×16 What They Died For is one of ABC’s best promos ever, with a soundtrack snipped from the great rock classic song The End by The Doors, and arresting visuals, in blue and white, which make the LOST-ies look as if they are all underwater and/or trapped inside glass.

When I first saw the promo, I thought the choice of song was clever, an obvious good fit. “This is the end …” The Doors sing, and indeed, this is the end, alas, of LOST, and the end of the ride, for us, the fans.

I didn’t think more about it until commenter Doug left a mind-blowing comment on my Oedipus LOST post:

With The Doors’ “The End” being used at the end of tonights episode, this pretty much confirms this theory. “The End” lyrically is based on Oedipus and contains all of the images in the song. Read the lyrics.. It’s all there. The blue bus, the snake, the goldmine, etc…

Wow. Thanks Doug!

It is all there. But what are we to make of that? How can the eerie coincidences be explained?

Is it because we might expect certain cultural icons of the late 60s/early 70s, the era of both The Doors and the Dharma Initiative, to show up often — icons like a blue VW bus?

Is it that the song and the show both use symbols, such as snakes, and mythological stories, such as that of Oedipus, which often appear in many of our stories?

Or could it be that the many similarities between The End and LOST are because the LOST writers actually patterned their show after the song? (That last one seems unlikely, but file it in the “you never know — anything might be possible” folder).

I’m inclined to think that the similarities arose because both Jim Morrison, writer of The End, and the writers of LOST were fascinated by mythology.

Here’s what Jim Morrison said in 1969:

Every time I hear that song, it means something else to me. It started out as a simple good-bye song probably just to a girl, but I see how it could be a goodbye to a kind of childhood. I really don’t know. I think it’s sufficiently complex and universal in its imagery that it could be almost anything you want it to be.

Here are the lyrics to The End — and some screencaps from LOST:

This is the end
Beautiful friend

Sawyer losing his grip on Juliet in "The Incident"

This is the end
My only friend, the end

Of our elaborate plans, the end
Of everything that stands, the end
No safety or surprise, the end
I’ll never look into your eyes…again

Can you picture what will be
So limitless and free
Desperately in need of some stranger’s hand
In a desperate land

Lost in a Roman …

Latin-speakers in "Across the Sea"

… wilderness of pain

The 815 pilot in the tree -- the smoke monster's first victim

And all the children are insane
All the children are insane
Waiting for the summer rain, yeah

There’s danger on the edge of town
Ride the King’s highway, baby
Weird scenes inside the gold mine
Ride the highway west, baby

Ride the snake, ride the snake

Smokey

To the lake, the ancient lake, baby

The pool in the temple

The snake is long, seven miles
Ride the snake…he’s old, and his skin is cold

His skin is cold

The west is the best
The west is the best
Get here, and we’ll do the rest

Kate arriving at the LAX airport (on the West Coast!)

The blue bus is callin’ us
The blue bus is callin’ us
Driver, where you taken’ us

Hurley driving blue vw van LOST

The blue bus

(The “blue bus” in the song may have been a reference to the draft for the Vietnam war.)

The killer awoke before dawn, he put his boots on
He took a face from the ancient gallery
And he walked on down the hall
He went into the room where his sister lived, and…then he
Paid a visit to his brother, and then he
He walked on down the hall, and
And he came to a door…and he looked inside
Father, yes son, I want to kill you

John Locke and his father Anthony Cooper in LOST 3x19 The Brig

Locke and his father, Anthony Cooper, in 3x19 "The Brig"

Mother…I want to…f**k you

C’mon baby, take a chance with us
C’mon baby, take a chance with us
C’mon baby, take a chance with us
And meet me at the back of the blue bus
Doin’ a blue rock
On a blue bus
Doin’ a blue rock
C’mon, yeah

Kill, kill, kill, kill, kill, kill

This is the end
Beautiful friend
This is the end
My only friend, the end

It hurts to set you free
But you’ll never follow me
The end of laughter and soft lies
The end of nights we tried to die

Jack on bridge railing, about to jump off

This is the end

Click on pictures to see their source.

Related Posts with Thumbnails