Recently in Lost Category

LOST character sketches by Mike Wieringo: Jack, Kate, Sawyer, Locke, Echo

| | Comments (0)

Tom Brevoort (@tombrevort) on Twitter noted a sad anniversary today:  Mike Wieringo passed away 3 years ago at the young age of 44.  I saved many of his daily sketches over the years.

This set of sketches features the characters of LOST.  I was particularly thrilled to see Wieringo's interpretations from a TV show that obsessed me for 6 years.

KATELOST

Kate.

LOSTLOCKE

Locke.

Three more sketches after the break...

Damon Lindelof Interview on CBR TV

| | Comments (0)

Damon Lindelof was in Golden Apple Comics a while ago to sign some Ultimate Hulk Vs Wolverine collections, and Jonah Weiland was right there with a camera.

The interview is quite substantial, 30 minutes long, and covers many topics: his Ultimate Hulk/Wolverine story, Stephen King's Dark Tower, ambitions to create his own comic universe, and of course, LOST.

Lost Locations Hummer Tour in Hawaii

| | Comments (2)

Lost Tour Logs where Ana Lucia confronted Goodwin

I recently returned from a vacation in Hawaii (Oahu), where the big highlight of my trip was a Lost Hummer tour of the Kualoa Ranch on the northeast side of the island.  Kos Tours has exclusive access to the ranch, which has been privately owned since 1850.  The ranch has pristine green beauty and breathtaking views almost everywhere you look.  No wonder Lost uses many locations on this property!  We took the 2 hour Hummer tour, which was very well organized.  The guide was very well versed in Lost lore, and came prepared with Lost screen caps or movie clips to show us what happened at each location.  Above you can see my wife and I sitting on two logs, used in the season two episode where Ana Lucia confronts Goodwin.  We are trying to look angry, but just can't stop laughing.

Lost Tour Others Submarine Doc

The above picture was taken at the dock, used by the Dharma Initiative (as well as the Others) for the submarine.  Our guide had some neat photos of the submarine props that were placed in the water to make it seem real.

Lost Tour Picture with Hurley

One of the best locations was the one used for Hurley's Golf Tournament in season one.  We even got to take a picture with Hurley, as you can see here.  Of course, it isn't Jorge Garcia, it's a Todd McFarlane action figure!

Unfortunately, Lost wasn't filming the final season when we were there.  The guide told us of past sightings, like watching Jughead being assembled, and seeing young Ben walking around in a wounded condition.  I asked him about the Lost cast members.  As I suspected, actors like Terry O'Quinn or Michael Emerson are friendly, but Matthew Fox and Evangeline Lilly are very cold and distant.  I could tell this from various interviews the cast has given.  The guide said that Evangeline Lilly doesn't really care for the show and tried to leave Lost a few years ago.

I highly recommend the tour.  The 2-hour package was around $80 per person, and my wife, who is not a Lost fan at all, still had fun taking pictures at the gorgeous locales.  We did not get to see the famous Lost beach camp--that location is only available in the ten hour tour.  Check out the Kos Hummer Tours Hawaii website for more information.  Many thanks to Ryan from Lost the Transmission for recommending this company.  Nuff said.

Lost Connections: Dead is Dead and it means Dead, Brian K Vaughan

| | Comments (0)

Brian K Vaughan's Runaways

Brian K Vaughan is the talented writer of comics such as Y The Last Man and Runaways (see one of my old reviews here).  He's also a writer on ABC's Lost.  After reading Y, I listened to several BKV podcast interviews on Pop Candy and Fanboy Radio.  I made a Lost connection on the latter interview, where BKV mentioned the Runaways arc titled "Dead Means Dead", which took place in Runaways Vol 2 #19-21.

The Runaways arc title was a reference to Joe Quesada's infamous declaration that "dead is dead" in the Marvel Universe.  Gwen Stacy won't come back to life, Karen Page will stay dead, Bucky won't return...oh wait, that did happen!

In Runaways, this title was teasing the readers, as a major and beloved character had died in the preceding arc.  Would BKV bring her back to life?  We kind of hoped he would.

LOST: Cabin Fever

Lost's twelfth episode of the fifth season was titled "Dead is Dead".  Co-written by Brian K. Vaughan and Elizabeth Sarnoff!  This is the first full episode with the mysteriously resurrected John Locke.  How did he come back to life?  Honestly, I didn't pay much attention to the episode's title or think it was a mystery.  I just assumed the Island brought Locke back.  But it turned out the title was a big tip-off to a greater mystery.

If that wasn't enough, when Sun asks Ben what's going on, Ben replies:

"I've seen this Island do miraculous things. I've seen it heal the sick, but never once has it done anything like this. Dead is dead. You don't come back from that, not even here. So the fact that John Locke is walking around this Island... scares the living hell out of me."

Only in the last few episodes did it occur to me that everything wasn't right with John Locke.  Another big clue was the scene where Ben summons the smoke monster from that weird little tide pool next to his cabin.  Smokey never arrives, but Locke does emerge from the jungle.  At the end of the episode, Locke is conveniently separated from Ben when the latter meets Smokey for judgment.  When Smokey disappears, Locke shows up a few seconds later.

It's cool little connection between Lost and Runaways.  There's a lot of chatter on Lost podcasts about whether Locke will stay dead in season six.  I really like the character, but I hope the "Dead is Dead" rule is golden.  Nuff said.

Lost Theory on Richard Alpert & Smoke Monster

| | Comments (0)

I heard about the Lost Time Loop theory on the /Film podcast and discovered another fan through this site, one that makes fascinating videos outlining his theories.  I enjoyed this one "The Incident - Secrets and Theories" by Lost Questions and Answers on YouTube.

I'm not sure I buy the part about Richard and the Smoke Monster.  I would think Smokey could have killed Richard during the many times he's been outside the sonic fence.  The speculation about the statue getting destroyed and the women on the island being unable to conceive sounds plausible.  But do we know the statue existed in 1977 when Ethan was born?

LOST speculation...how many hours have I "lost" to this hobby?  2010 seems very far away.  Nuff said.

LOST: Cabin Fever

| | Comments (0)

Pictures courtesy of LOST Easter Eggs.

LOST: Cabin Fever

This was a stellar episode.  It's been a year since we saw Locke and Ben go into Jacob's cabin in Season Three.  Every since this new season started, I kept waiting to see when Locke would return.  Now that he's found the cabin, it just opens up more and more mysteries.

Christian and Claire are in Jacob's cabin.  I expected Christian to be there, based on the freeze frames posted on LostEasterEggs back in January.  When Claire disappeared in "Something Nice Back Home", I predicted that she would be in the cabin with Christian.  Are Christian and Claire alive or dead?  I think they are dead and somehow the island manifests the dead in order to speak with the living.  I just cannot imagine Claire willingly leaving Aaron to Sawyer.  Christian's situation is more complex.  In the Season Three finale there was that famous scene in the future where Jack said, "Go and get my father...".  In last week's Jack-centric episode, Christian appeared fleetingly before this mystery could be solved.  I'm still betting that Christian is dead, but I think it is pretty cool that this ties back to an episode in Season One where Jack follows his father around the island.  We thought Jack was hallucinating but now we know he wasn't.  Gotta get the Season One DVD set and watch that one again.

Locke has been "chosen" by the island since his birth.  I almost fell out of my chair when Richard Alpert showed up at the hospital where baby Locke was being incubated.  Again, this ties back to Season Three, where Alpert gives Locke a suggestion to have Sawyer kill his father.  I had the feeling that Alpert favored Locke over Ben and was trying to help him.  Now we learn that Alpert has been trying to help Locke since he was born!  Mittelos Bioscience is the company associated with Alpert; they recruited Juliet to do research on the island.  All Lost fans have been wondering why Alpert seems to be ageless, appearing in the past as young as he is today.  Is Alpert immortal, or is he using portals on the island to travel back/forth through time?  As for Locke himself, is the process of being "chosen" resemble how the Dalai Lama is selected?  It was eerily that Locke drew a picture of the smoke monster as a kid.  I love the moment when Locke says to his teacher "Don't tell me what I can't do!"

Matthew Abaddon in Cabin Fever

Matthew Abaddon tells Locke he should "walkabout".  If there's any character besides Alpert that I need to see more of, it is Matthew Abaddon.  I was stunned to see him pushing Locke's wheelchair.  How many of us thought he was going to dump Locke's paralyzed body over the stairwell?  It seems like Abaddon has a connection to the island as well.  Yet he apparently works for Widmore, having organized the Freighter expedition.  Genius casting by hiring Lance Reddick from the Wire.

Keamy's device on his arm.  What is that thing?  I am betting that is a smaller, portable version of the sonar fence that kept the smoke monster away from the Others.  Keamy is truly the Big Bad this season.  He's just slaughtering people left and right to get back to the island.  Did you notice that when Keamy pulls the secondary protocol out of the safe, it has a Dharma logo on the cover?  Maybe Widmore backed the Dharma bums.

I can't wait to hear this episode discussed on my favorite LOST Podcasts:

LOST: The Transmission

LOSTCasts

LOST: Dharma Bums?

| | Comments (1)

Dharma Bums

Just thought of a weird LOST connection to Jack Kerouac. When I was in high school, I read Kerouac's books and was in that whole mindset of takin' off on the road and having adventures.

We've learned in Season Four that Ben uses the alias "Dean Moriarty" when he travels off the island.  As many LOST bloggers have noted, Dean Moriarty was the alias used for Neal Cassady in the famous beat novel by Jack Kerouac , On the Road.

And just today, my ancient stony mind remembered my second favorite Kerouac book, The Dharma Bums.  I liked this book because it took place in Northern California and one of the characters was based on Grass Valley poet Gary Snyder (Japhy Ryder), who won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry.  Kerouac also describes hearing Allen Ginsberg perform his famous poem HOWL (Wail in the book) in San Francisco.

Can't see any other LOST connection than the title, can you?  Nuff said.

LOST Via Domus Review

| | Comments (0)

LOST Via Domus

Let's not waste any time: as a videogame, LOST Via Domus completely sucks.  I have learned this because I have played the game to 100% completion, not once, but twice, on two game consoles.  Yet there may be a small minority of people out there who will enjoy playing the game.  Crazy people.  Like us.

Reading the previews about this game, I was very excited.  The LOST writers contributed a lot of good things to the game, helping to create a brand new character, Eliot, a survivor of Oceanic Flight 815 that we've never seen before.  The main problem is that Eliot has amnesia and people are trying to kill him.  This is really cool, because Eliot has his own flashbacks that you play through and his own mysteries that will be uncovered.  He has connections to Locke and the Widmore/Hanso conspiracy.  Eliot will explore many key areas of the island that we've seen in the first three seasons of LOST, from the Black Rock to the Hatch to the Others camp.  Due to what he learns about the Hanso foundation, Eliot is driven to escape the island and triggers a wild ending that appears to be approved by Damon and Carlton (Lost's showrunners).  Damon remarked on an ABC podcast that the Via Domus ending is not a dream sequence.  It echoes some of the time-bending island aspects that we've seen in Season Four.

However, the game play really sucks in LOST and it won't be worth it for most people.  Eliot really does not have very many moves in the game.  He shoots a gun, very briefly, in 2 scenes toward the end.  He runs through the jungle a lot.  Eliot can interact with the famous LOST cast members (Jack, Locke, Ben, Juliet, Kate, Sawyer, Hurley), but only a few of them are voiced by the real actors.  In order to barter for things like torches, lamps, guns, etc., Eliot has to collect stupid things like coconuts, papayas, and candy bars.  There are many levels in the game that are extremely frustrating, such as navigating through waypoints in the forest and ducking into banyan trees whenever the smoke monsters is around.  Navigating through dark caves, which you do twice, is also miserable, because there are no clues of where you need to go.  In order to get through the flashbacks, Eliot has to take pictures with his camera, at exactly the right angle and the right moment in time.

I am such a die-hard LOST fan that I just had to play it as soon as possible.  Gamefly had it readily available for the Playstation 3 and I received it a few days after it came out.  It was frustrating, but with the help of an IGN strategy guide, I made it to the ending.  Then I realized, this game may be one of the few that I can get 1000 achievement points on XBox 360.  I rented it for that console and in a few hours did receive the magic 1000 point achievement of my dreams.

Bottom line: if you are not crazy, don't buy it.  If you have to play it, then rent it.  Nuff said.

LOST Via Domus ending on YouTube

IGN LOST Via Domus Review

IGN LOST Via Domus Strategy Guide

LOST Via Domus XBox 360 Achievement Guide

Related Posts with Thumbnails