Friday, October 22, 2010

LOST on Twitter

A few days ago I launched a new feature here: a list of Twitter accounts of the crew, cast, and guest stars of LOST. After doing a search of the internet, I believe I am the only LOST fansite with this feature. If you know of anybody I have missed, or of anywhere else that has a similar feature, please contact me. Until then, enjoy this new feature!

Monday, August 23, 2010

The Eighteen People You Meet In Heaven


August 23, 2010. It has been three months since “The End” of LOST. Tomorrow the sixth and final season of LOST comes out on DVD, as well as “The Complete Collection.” So I thought now would be as good as any to write my review of “The End.” For 5 years, 8 months and 1 day (September 22, 2004 – May 23, 2010) I have been obsessed with LOST. It is a science fiction show with many mysteries. And so, with the end near, I am hoping that LOST will have a satisfying ending with some answers. But no, I was wrong. Because in the end it was not about the plane crash. It was not about the island. It was not about the smoke monster. It was not about the hatch. It was not about the DHARMA Initiative. It was not about the others. It was not about the freighter. It was not about the science team or the mercenaries. It was not about the rescue and return. It was not about the time travel. It was not about Jacob and the Man in Black. In the end, it was the stinkin’, “The Five People You Meet In Heaven.” For those who have never read the book or seen the movie, it is a story about an old man who is killed and goes to “heaven” where he meets five people who he had a great impact on their life. And basically that is what happens at the end of LOST. Jack dies and goes to this “heaven” as a church and reunites with his dad, Locke, Kate, Desmond and Penny, Sawyer and Juliet, Hurley and Libby, Charlie and Claire, Sun and Jin, Rose and Bernard, Sayid and Shannon, and Boone. And together, they go into the light which is Nirvana or enlightenment or whatever. And that’s it. And the end of their time on the island? Desmond goes into the magical electromagnetic light, uncorks the island, turns off the light, the island earthquakes, Smoke-Locke fatally stabs Jack, Kate shoots a now mortal Smoke-Locke in the back, he is thrown over a cliff and dies anticlimactically (not even a final wisp of smoke coming out of the gunshot wound), Jack goes down the cave, saves Desmond, turns the magical electromagnetic light back on (which has healing power and yet for some reason does not heal Jack), Jack is spit out, he walks to the bamboo forest where he woke up all those years ago, he sees the duct taped plane fly over head and he dies. The End. (And BTW, Hurley is now in charge of the island and the evil Benjamin Linus is his second in command. (Actually I am looking forward to “New Man In Charge.”)) And that is how LOST ends. This show of science fiction and mystery ended with this multi-religious feel good phooey. It took me a couple months to realize it, but the end of LOST was very disappointing. And yet, I can’t wait to own all six seasons on DVD.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Star Trek and LOST



NOTE: The following contains spoilers from JJ Abrams/Damon Lindelof's 2009 Star Trek movie.

Season Six of LOST has introduced a new way to confuse viewers: the "Flashsideways" alternate "What if Oceanic 815 never crashed?" reality.

The concept of the alternate reality is the basis of the new Star Trek movie, directed by JJ Abrams and Damon Lindelof.

A Romulan named Nero and his ship are sucked through a black hole and transported over 100 years into the past. Immediately Nero attacks the USS Kelvin, a federation starship. Among it's passengers are George and Winona Kirk parents of James T. Kirk.

25 years after the destruction of the USS Kelvin and the death of George Kirk, aboard the USS Enterprise, future captain Kirk, and current captain Spock are discussing the realization that Nero is from the future.

Kirk: But you say he's from the future, knows what's gonna happen? Then the logical thing is to be unpredictable.

Spock: You're assuming that Nero knows how events are predicted to unfold. The contrary, Nero's very presence has altered the flow of history, beginning with the attack on the U.S.S. Kelvin, culminating in the events of today, thereby creating an entire new chain of incidents that cannot be anticipated by either party.

Uhura: An alternate reality.

Spock: Precisely. Whatever our lives might have been if the time continumm was disrupted, our destinies have changed.


This is what has happened on LOST. The detonation of the hydrogen bomb (or something) created an alternate reality for the passengers of 815 and changing their destinies.