Posts tonen met het label artikel. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label artikel. Alle posts tonen
maandag 16 november 2009
zaterdag 7 november 2009
Nieuwe film J.J. Abrams
Lees het online artikel over J.J. Abrams' nieuwe film.
Labels:
500 Rads,
artikel,
Films,
J.J. Abrams
vrijdag 23 oktober 2009
Evangeline Lilly gaat ook schrijven
Maar iets als Lost zou ze nooit kunnen, vertelt ze aan Digital Spy.
Labels:
artikel,
digital spy,
evangeline lilly,
Interviews
zaterdag 10 oktober 2009
Rebecca Mader heeft nieuwe rollen
Lees meer over Rebecca Mader's toekomst.
Labels:
artikel,
Hollywood Reporter,
rebecca mader
donderdag 1 oktober 2009
zondag 20 september 2009
maandag 14 september 2009
Lost in Iran
Er is een nieuw artikel verschenen over Lost in Iran.
Labels:
artikel,
Internationaal,
Iran
dinsdag 8 september 2009
Kleine seizoen 6 preview door Josh Holloway
Josh Holloway, who plays Sawyer, had this to say about the final season: "The material will finally make sense … maybe," he told Popular Mechanics. "I'll be sad to see it end, but it's gonna be magical."Lees hier het hele artikel.
Labels:
artikel,
Interviews,
Josh Holloway,
sawyer,
Seizoen 6
maandag 7 september 2009
donderdag 3 september 2009
Evangeline Lilly en make-up
Lees hier een kort artikel over Evangeline Lilly en make-up.
Labels:
artikel,
evangeline lilly,
Interviews
maandag 31 augustus 2009
Artikel over het 'nieuwe Lost'
De televisieserie FlashForward begint op 24 september in Amerika en wordt nu al het 'nieuwe Lost' genoemd. Klik hier voor een artikel over de serie.
Labels:
abc,
artikel,
FlashForward
zondag 3 mei 2009
Hoe gaat Lost eindigen?
Last Night’s ‘Lost’: How’s It Going to End?
As the castaways of Oceanic 815 celebrated the 100th episode of “Lost,” what did we viewers receive as party favors? Another episode in which the big reveal is that a supporting character is secretly the child of two other supporting characters. (Will we next learn that Ben is the son of the smoke monster and the four-toed statue?) And another episode in which the plot increments could be measured only at the sub-atomic level.
We’re now less than two weeks away from the “Lost” season finale — ostensibly the last major cliffhanger its creative team can cook up, before the show’s final season begins in 2010 — and yet events are unfolding so slowly, we have to wonder more than ever: Do the producers of “Lost” really know where they’re going with this thing?
When we met with Damon Lindelof, an executive producer and co-creator of “Lost,” not long ago to talk about “Star Trek,” we asked him how he and his staff were preparing for the final year of the show. Here was his (appropriately cryptic) answer:
There’s so much organizational power, especially now. The less episodes there are, the more you have to go, like, “Oh my God, we have to do this. When are we going to do that?” We always get asked iterations of the same question which is, “Are you making it up as you go along?” It’s a very complicated question to answer, but ultimately, we have all the story but we don’t know what order we’re going to tell it in. So it’s like “Pulp Fiction.”
There was always an option in past seasons which was, “Let’s hold it for next year. I don’t think they’re ready for that,” or “That’ll have more emotional impact later.” And then there are also actor deals to contend with – what’s the stable of regulars you can maintain at any one time? Next year, I feel like for the first time we’ll have the entire box of crayons to color with, without having to worry about the mechanics. All our ducks are in a row.
I think one of our biggest concerns is reaching the climax of the story too soon – you have to time it right, you have to walk that line between giving a steady supply of story and character pathos and mysteries being answered along the way, so that the audience doesn’t feel like it all comes in one big chunk. But then if you do it too soon, they kind of feel like, “I got everything that I cared about halfway through the season, so why am I still watching?” And it’s terrifying. Finally, we’re going to do it. There’s no excuses, we don’t get to say, “We didn’t get to end the show on our own terms. They kept us on the air three years longer than we wanted to be. Blah blah blah.” It’s like “Galactica,” you have to say, “Here it is, do you like it? I hope you like it.” There’s a lot of second-guessing going on. I think the show will end exactly as it began. There’ll be people who love it, there’ll be people who hate it. There’ll be people who’ll be confused by it, there’ll be people who love being confused. It’ll end on its own terms.
Did that answer all your lingering questions? Got any theories of your own about how the current season of “Lost” might wrap up, and where the show will go in its final year? Let us know in the comments below.
(Incidentally, in the scene when Charles Widmore comes to visit Daniel Faraday, did you wonder why the camera seemed to flash gratuitously on a back issue of Wired magazine? The Twitter-sphere is wondering, too.)
Source: NY Times
Labels:
artikel,
Damon Lindelof,
Seizoen 6,
The Variable
woensdag 22 april 2009
dinsdag 14 april 2009
Over het science fiction Lost
Een nieuw artikel over het science fiction Lost, lees het hier.
Labels:
artikel
woensdag 25 februari 2009
Artikel over Lance Reddick

Labels:
artikel,
la times,
lance reddick