Lost Season 3 Premieres Tonight!
I know some people have been annoyed by the lack of answers and the lack of clear direction involved with a show like Lost but I'm still completely and hate to say it, psychotic about our favorite survivors.
There's not a whole heaping helping of scoop out there to be found (not that I really want to know much) but one thing we do know is that the first section of this season (split into 2 chunks -- 6 episodes now, the remaining 16 when the show returns in 2007) will focus heavily on The Others. Expect a good amount of answers to who the hell they are and what they're up to before the haitus.
Henry Gale is now a regular cast member (much to my delight), as is Desmond (guess he survived the blast). New this season (so far) are three characters played by Kiele Sanchez, Elizabeth Mitchell, and uber hot Rodrigo Santoro.
The season 3 premiere features another Jack flashback (costarring Julie Bowen) and from what I hear its quite the tear jerker.
I found this helpful article from AP which details some of the basics and questions left after 2 seasons of Lost.
WHO ARE THE OTHERS?
They're creepy, wear fake beards and have captured Kate, Jack and Sawyer. Are they "the good guys," as one high-ranking Other said, or are they up to no good? Finally -- finally! -- that enigma will be addressed this season, producers have teased. They better deliver. Also, expect to see much more of bug-eyed Other/hatch escapee Henry Gale, played by new series regular Michael Emerson.
WHO WILL KATE FALL FOR?
It's about time, Kate. The freckled tough girl (Evangeline Lilly) will finally make a choice between doctor-leader Jack (Matthew Fox) and con man Sawyer (Josh Holloway). Early intel suggests Cupid's arrow is pointing at a Kate-Sawyer hookup -- they ARE a couple of good-lookin' outlaws. Why that coupling? According to an ABC press release, "Romance looms on the horizon as Jack's interests veer towards a mysterious woman, whose motives may be questionable."
WHY WAS LOCKE IN A WHEELCHAIR?
John Locke (Terry O'Quinn) lost of a bit of his faith last season, thanks to his frustration with entering that numbered sequence (4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42) on the keyboard every 108 minutes. Still, he can't deny the island's mysterious healing powers, which apparently cured his four-year paralysis and allowed him to walk again after Oceanic flight 815 crash-landed. Those powers -- and why exactly Locke was bound to a wheelchair in the first place -- will be explored this season, "Lost" experts say. One theory: Locke, who helped his deadbeat father withdraw stolen money from a bank, was handicapped by angry victims of the crime.
WHO IS THE FATHER OF SUN'S UNBORN BABY?
Pre-crash, a doctor said Sun's loving husband, Jin (Daniel Dae Kim), was infertile. There are three possible explanations for Sun's pregnancy: The island healed Jin's infertility (worked for Locke, leg-wise); the zygote formed inside Sun (YunJin Kim) but is neither hers nor Jin's (creepy!); or Jin is not the baby-daddy. That guy could be Jae Lee, who gave Sun secret English lessons. She was unhappy in her marriage, and planned to leave Jin and go to America.
WHAT HAPPENED AT THE HATCH?
In the season 2 finale, Locke, Mr. Eko (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje) and Desmond (Henry Ian Cusick) were all in the hatch when Desmond turned the fail-safe key to diffuse whatever electromagnetic energy was quaking the island (yes, that button-pushing chore actually meant something). An explosion ensued. The hatch door landed on the beach. Survival seems like a long shot -- but Eko and Locke are under contract. And Cusick is now a series regular. They gotta come out of this alive, if not somewhat -- somehow -- changed. Plus, ABC says Locke will team up with Sayid (Naveen Andrews) and others to try and rescue their comrades.
DID MICHAEL AND WALT ESCAPE?
The father-son duo, given a motor boat by Henry Gale, were last seen fleeing the island to destinations unknown. Desperate dad Michael (Harold Perrineau) betrayed his friends to save himself and his son, Walt (Malcolm David Kelley), who was kidnapped at the end of the first season by the Others. But don't be surprised if they return -- those "Lost"-ies aren't the luckiest group. Note that Perrineau is not a regular cast member this season, but could be back as a guest star. And Walt is way too intriguing to make a permanent getaway.
WHAT IS DHARMA DOING WITH THE KIDS?
The Others snatched Walt, Frenchwoman Rousseau's daughter, Alex, and a very pregnant Claire (Emilie de Ravin). In memories of her abduction, Claire was taken to a hospital-like hatch and given a shot in the belly. A teen girl, who might be a grown-up Alex, warned her that higher-ups planned to kill her and take her baby. That's pretty freaky, and so is another theory: That the Others -- those "good guys," remember? -- are a social utopian experiment by the scientist-led Dharma Initiative. This could explain why they steal innocent children who haven't been tainted by society.
WHO IS LIBBY?
Michael shot and killed her last season, but viewers haven't seen the last of Libby (Cynthia Watros). She'll keep appearing in characters' flashbacks, producers said, yet her back story -- she claimed to be a clinical psychologist and was supposedly among the plane's tail-section survivors -- is shrouded in mystery. In flashbacks, it was revealed that she lived in the same mental hospital as an unknowing Hurley (Jorge Garcia) and gave Desmond her late husband's doomed sailboat. Fan speculation has it that she might be a member of the Hanso Foundation, which funded the shady Dharma Initiative, or a private detective.
IS CLAIRE JACK'S HALF-SISTER?
That's the buzz -- and it appears to be so. After losing his medical license for operating while drunk, Christian (Jack's surgeon-father, played by John Terry) fled to Australia, where he drank himself to death after attempting to visit his secret daughter. It went down like this: He showed up at the house of a curly-haired, blonde Aussie -- Claire's lookalike mother? -- and boozily demanded to see the girl. The woman refused. Jack arrived Down Under to bring Christian's body back to the U.S. and, in a made-for-television twist, wound up on the same ill-fated flight as Claire.
CAN THE SHOW KEEP IT UP?
As many fans complain, "Lost" is more about the questions than the answers. It's confusing and captivating. At least some things were (sorta) cleared up in the finale of the dark and hatch-centric second season, which runneth over with sci-fi mysteries that had viewers scratching their heads. Thankfully, the Powers That Be heard the fan feedback -- and they're doing something about it. In a recent podcast posted on the show's Web site, a producer revealed he was influenced by complaints that season 2 was "too mythologically dense." Expect to see a lot about relationships in future episodes, including a dose of much-needed romance.
Lost premieres tonight 9pm on ABC
*followed by the pilot episode of The Nine
PS- Could that picture of Charlie look more disgusting? He's not an attractive man by any means. Plus, here he looks like LoTR Director Peter Jackson. Hello!
1 Comments:
I CAN'T WAIT! And you are right, "Charlie" is not an attactive guy but his character personality makes him more appealing. I am still in shock he reeled in "Kate" and why didn't she help him dress here? Tragic, yet amusing at the same time.
By Linz McC, at 10/04/2006 05:55:00 PM
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