Een nieuw video interview met Evangeline Lilly en Matthew Fox door Los Angeles Times.
Posts tonen met het label la times. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label la times. Alle posts tonen
woensdag 18 maart 2009
woensdag 4 maart 2009
John Locke is terug
Een artikel van internet dat gaat over John Locke.
Terry O'Quinn's Locke is back from the dead on 'Lost.' Really.Volledige verhaal: LA Times
At this stage of “Lost,””%20mystery no one actually believed that John Locke would remain dead, but still, it's satisfying to see him alive again. That is, alive in the way that you and I are -- not in flashbacks, and not in the way that the ghosts of Charlie and Ana Lucia appear to Hurley or the ghost or some supernatural semblance of Christian Shephard roams the island.
Labels:
John Locke,
la times
dinsdag 3 maart 2009
Artikel over het ingewikkelde Lost

The endless subplots and surprise revelations of the desert-island thriller "Lost" have driven viewers to embrace all sorts of theories about What It All Means. But maybe the answer lies close to home. At least if your home happens to contain DVDs of the 1960s spy sitcom "Get Smart."
"Lost" is in the middle of its fifth season, which some fans have described as one of its most challenging (or frustrating) ever. But it spoils nothing to report that much of the ABC series' mystery has depended on an unusual phenomenon in which electromagnetism causes the island to move, rendering it impossible to locate.
But was all of this actually prefigured in "Get Smart," Mel Brooks' classic parody starring Don Adams as the bumbling secret agent Maxwell Smart?
A friend of ours pointed out (half tongue-in-cheek, but still) that during the 12th episode of the fourth season, which originally aired on Dec. 21, 1968, Max and his new bride, Agent 99 (Barbara Feldon), are stranded on Schwartz's Island.
It just so happens that Schwartz's Island moves. And what do you know? In the center of the island sits ... a giant electromagnet. Freaky, isn't it?
So, is it all just coincidence, or do "Lost" producers Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindelof secretly worship at the shrine of Brooks and Adams?
"Yes, that is in the category of complete coincidence," Cuse e-mailed back when we ran the notion by him. "Never heard of that until now — among ALL the theories!"
Lindelof added: "But, for the record, we DO worship at the shrine of Mel Brooks and Don Adams!"
Some "Lost" mysteries are resolved more easily than others.
Bron: LA Times
vrijdag 27 februari 2009
Mysterieuze personages uit Lost

After 4 1/2 seasons, we've gotten pretty familiar with our most favorite group of island castaways since Gilligan and company. So familiar, in fact, that the producers have jettisoned the once de rigeur flashbacks into our main characters' pasts. We know all about Kate's daddy issues, Jack's daddy issues, Locke's daddy issues, heck we even know about Ben Linus' daddy issues. But even though we've had many questions answered, there are still a lot of slippery characters haunting the periphery of our favorite show on TV. Some of them seem helpful but probably aren't (Matthew Abaddon, played by Lance Reddick at left), and others exude an air of menace even while working on the side of the angels (Ms. Hawking). Here are our thoughts and speculations on the most mysterious characters in a series filled with mysteries.Lees hier het volledige artikel met de personages!
Labels:
la times,
personages
woensdag 25 februari 2009
Artikel over Lance Reddick

Labels:
artikel,
la times,
lance reddick