LOST’s 100th episode, “The Variable”, was a major event for the fans, cast and crew. This clip features multiple interviews discussing this milestone, plus behind-the-scenes footage of a production meeting and location set-ups.
The shoot-out at the Dharma barracks in “The Variable” was one of the biggest action sequences of LOST’s fifth season. Watch how the crew set it up, with commentary from Evangeline Lilly (Kate), Jeremy Davies (Faraday) and Eric Lange (Radzinsky).
Thanks to Rachel Sheehan from TV Guide for the heads up:
How do the producers of ABC’s Lost plan to make their grab for Emmys gold? TVGuide.com has the exclusive reveal of which six episodes they submitted for consideration in the Outstanding Drama series category.
As expected, both parts of the Season 5 finale, “The Incident,” made the cut. But which other four hours hope to be deemed Emmy-worthy?
Well, “The Life and Death of Jeremy Bentham” made the short list, as did the similarly Locke-centric “Follow the Leader.”
Rounding out Lost‘s Emmy reel are “La Fleur” (in which Sawyer went from con man to big man on the Dharma campus) and “The Variable” (which revealed Faraday’s dangerous plan to “save” the future).
With Lost‘s list now revealed, one big mystery remains: Can the 2005 winner for Outstanding Drama Series beat the six other contenders in this year’s race — Big Love, Breaking Bad, Damages, Dexter, House and Mad Men?
I was thinking about the choice of being able to take a pivotal moment in your life and change the event. I’m sure all of us have at least one moment in our life where you wonder, “what if…” But would you really change it if you could? Should the Losties mess with their fate? What if they were meant to die in that crash? What if Jack manages to change the future and instead of crashing on the island, the plane crashes in the ocean and they die? What does Jack have to go back to anyway that he’d want to change the crash? Wouldn’t he be better changing his actions with Sarah, his dad or the drugs?
1. I don’t think the Mrs Hawking does know what happens next (she tells Penny in the hospital). Let’s assume that she picks up the journal when she shoots Dan back in 1977. She has the events up until the time that Dan goes back and then shoots him. Now she doesn’t know what is going to happen because the journal ends.
2. Why would Dan think that Jack and the others don’t belong there in 1977? What does he know or what did he learn back in Ann Arbor that we haven’t learned yet?
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