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Dharma Secret’s LOST-n-Found: A Blog Dedicated to the T.V. Show Lost

Spoilers: LOST Pictures from Downtown Honolulu

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Transmission Ryan has just posted these awesome pics that he took while Lost was shooting in downtown Honolulu. If you want to be sopiled, then you can view the pics here.

 

Those are great pictures, according to spoilerfix this is what is happening in the epi they are filming there, which all our spies say is 3X08!  Anyway, this is what spoilerfix says….

 

  • new 11/08 - Lots of filming activity this past week. Last week on Nuuanu Avenue, a bar interior and a London street scene (featuring 1995 concert posters and a military recruiting office). On Sunday, filming inside the Hawaii State Supreme Court Building, with its pillars and marble and hardwood stairs. On Monday, an interior shoot at “Stanwyck’s Antiques” (using the same space as Locke’s “Walkabout” tour office). But the big shoot is Tuesday, Nov. 7. Fort Steet Mall, a major pedestrian thouroughfare downtown, was transformed into a busy London city street. A London Underground entrance, black taxi cabs, a newsstand and red phonebooth, palm trees turned into noble oaks… Desmond exits Widmore Industries, upset, yanking off his tie and throwing it to the ground. He then comes across Charlie, strumming “Wonderwall” on the corner and collecting change in his guitar case. Then the conversation gets surreal. Desmond is having an epiphany, and seems delirious. “Remember the rain?  It happened before!” and “This is happening!”  He seems to be having one of his spells of deja vu. Last scene of the day.  Same London street, but perhaps a very different time. Desmond is no longer wearing his dapper suit, but rather, a drab coat and scarf, looking somewhat destitute. He’s wandering around the entrance to the London Underground, ranting like your typical neighborhood schitzo. He spots and sits next to an elegant, older, white-haired woman in a purple gown. They converse. Suddenly there’s a crash! People panic. It’s a construction accident nearby, and Desmond stands, distressed. The woman approaches calmly. She gives him a ring. He gives her money. She walks off. Source: The Transmission

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Off Topic: Your Theories About Heroes

Greetings Readers,
I just wanted to bring to your attention a great forum dedicated to the new NBC show Heroes.

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If you’ve listened to the Your Theories About Lost podcast, then you would be glad to hear that Chris and F_Stop_Blues are running the forum, and will be airing podcasts as soon as they get a steady flow of theories. If you are like me, and are a fan of the show Heroes, please feel free to drop by and share your theories, or participate in the discussions.

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LOST News: EW.com’s Christine Fenno on “Cost of Living”

An Article from EW.com by Christine Fenno

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The season 3 pattern continues: This episode, titled ‘’The Cost of Living,'’ answered a few questions (whose tumor?), raised a few questions (who’s the eye-patch guy?), and ignored many long-standing questions (how did Yemi and Eko crash on the same island?). When Juliet asked Jack to guess what she had brought him for lunch and he said, ‘’I'm not big on mysteries,'’ I wasn’t the only one who chuckled. We’ve digested a steady diet of them since the pilot aired.

The big mystery that this episode confirmed was whose tumor was on the X-ray: Ben’s. I don’t get how that jibes with the physical prowess Ben demonstrated in the previous episode, but I’m hoping the answer is coming soon. Once the cancer was out of the bag, Ben played the straightforward card and appealed to Jack’s mercy: ‘’I want you to want to save my life….All I ask is that you consider it.'’ And he added: ‘’Two days after I found out I had a fatal tumor on my spine, a spinal surgeon fell out of the sky.'’ If we take that line at face value (dare we?), it indicates that Ben and the Others played no role in the Oceanic crash, as some viewers have speculated.

On to the tantalizing mystery of Eye-Patch Man, who skulked into view on a Pearl station monitor. Is he an Other? Does the glass eye the Tailies found in the Arrow station (in season 2) belong to him? Nikki the newbie had the idea to fire up the additional monitors. Although she still hasn’t won me over (I kept wishing Sawyer would drop in and drawl, ‘’Pipe down, Daisy Duke'’) and Paulo’s pearl of wisdom about the Pearl’s john ('’The toilet still works'’) sounded random, the episode set them up to become more pivotal characters. Their couplehood definitely seems clearer now; my bet is they were on their honeymoon before 815 crashed.

Here’s a Pearl-related question I’ve had ever since the scene when we first peeked inside. (Cue it up, those of you who own season 2 on DVD.) Entering the Pearl station for the first time, Eko glanced at a ceiling panel that had been torn away to reveal a camera aimed into the hatch. Why was the Pearl, which was designed to monitor other stations, being monitored? (Is Ben’s voyeur studio inside Hydra the real spy hub?) There was visible debris — is that from when staffers abandoned the Pearl? Some theorize that the Others are a ‘’breakaway'’ group of Dharma folks — if so, did the breakaway begin when the observers realized they were the observed? Locke’s loss of faith inside the Pearl may have merely echoed theirs. Imagine two Dharma minions finding that camera and bailing from the project. (The Pearl T-shirt worn by a skeleton in the polar-bear cave means they might not have gotten far.)

Meanwhile, inside Hydra, Jack — after a field trip to Colleen’s funeral — learned that Juliet’s feminine wiles had been part of Ben’s plan to ‘’break'’ him. (I disagree with Ben that Juliet resembles Jack’s ex — Sarah is more physically angular and emotionally one-dimensional.) The episode’s best scene was when Juliet stood behind Jack’s glass wall and played a movie (To Kill a Mockingbird, she said) that was actually a videotape of silent messages for him. As she earnestly spoke of saving Ben’s life ('’He’s a great man'’), Jack glanced at Juliet on the tape, holding up ten handwritten placards instructing him to ignore her speech, informing him that Ben is a dangerous liar, and asking him to let Ben die on the operating table — and make it look like an accident. The most provocative of her cards read, ‘’Some of us want a change.'’ (I hadn’t seriously considered that Ben was a cult leader with disgruntled disciples, but I will now.) Stunned, Jack played along. Could it be the birth of an alliance that unites castaways and some of the Others for the greater good? It better not be a trick, if only because Jack is overdue for some momentum. Let’s get him out of that aquarium!

Time to don your mourning garb. (White pajamas are all the rage — comfy, if not practical.)

Dearly beloved, we are gathered here to remember Mr. Eko, a Nigerian who spent his final days on earth marooned on a tropical island where he was fatally thrashed by a menacing, muscular entity made of black smoke. Eko was a passionate man. He will be remembered (okay, by me, anyway) for his perfect belly button and pretty eyelashes. His stature, and frequent silences, made him the most intimidating of Flight 815’s survivors. A formative milestone occurred when, as a young boy, he was kidnapped by gangsters who essentially baptized him into a life of crime (an event that spared his little brother, Yemi, that fate). On the island, Eko displayed a devout religious faith, but in the end, he was unrepentant for his so-called sins. Eko’s conscience haunted his final hours. Time and again, his primary survival tactic had been violence; he struggled to reconcile that with his (and others’) definition of goodness.

We already knew Eko was mistaken for a priest when soldiers tried stopping his small plane from taking off with smuggled heroin (and Yemi) on board. In new flashbacks, we learned that Eko continued acting on criminal urges — trying to sell the vaccines Yemi had procured and committing murder in Yemi’s church. Thanks to a preachy villager telling Eko, ‘’You owe Yemi one church,'’ we now understand why Eko tried building one on the island. I was moved when he knelt before the Yemi apparition and said, ‘’I did my best.'’ Whether we believe that or not, Eko believed it.

I’m ready for my own confession (it’s been over two decades since my last confession, yadda yadda): I have theories on just about everything on the island except the smoke monster. None of the explanations I’ve heard (psychic energy, a ‘’security'’ system) sit right with me. Locke hinted that the monster might be a devious shape shifter; he described ‘’a very bright light…beautiful'’ (to which Eko replied, ‘’That is not what I saw'’). Are certain castaways’ visions — Jack seeing his father, Hurley seeing Dave, Eko seeing Yemi — caused by a monster with shape-shifting and mind-reading powers? Are there good and bad monster twins (to fit my twin theme, introduced last week)? Any way you look at Smokey, the monster got Eko but good.

A final lament before I let Eko and his Jesus stick go: I’ll miss Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje — his acting was up there with Terry O’Quinn’s, Elizabeth Mitchell’s, and Michael Emerson’s. I guess he was the sacrifice the island demanded.

What do you think? Will Jack let Ben die on the operating table? Is Juliet trustworthy? Will the Pearl play a role in rescuing Kate, Sawyer, and Jack? And who’s the Eye-Patch Man?

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Theory: Patchy = Razinsky?

The general consensus on the forum is that the man wearing the eye patch in the survalence video that the losties saw could be Radzinsky. Although Kelvin has stated that Radzinsky killed himself, it is not out of the realm of possibility that Kelvin either lied, or was somehow made to believe that Radzinsky was dead.

I believe that benschmidt put it best:

Kelvin could have easily lied. This has been discussed a bunch of times. He lied to Desmond about a million things, why not Radzinsky? It makes perfect sense to me. Glass eye/film strip. Radzinsky cut the film strip=Radzinsky need a glass eye. I mean, I couldnt just see him being some random dude. The writers have more to it than that.

Although there is a mountain of evidence that says that Radzinsky is dead, anything could be possible on Lostie Island.

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LOST News: Ausiello on Eko’s Death

From Nov. 1st, Ausiello Report

Exclusive: Lost Execs React to Latest Death!I can’t believe the smoke monster killed Mr. Eko!

Sure, the stick-toting warlord wasn’t exactly my favorite character, but he was a fascinating creature, not to mention one of the last remaining survivors of that cursed tail section. Why did Eko have to go? That’s a question for Lost boys Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse, who addressed Eko’s passing — and the exit of his portrayer, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje — in an interview with yours truly earlier this week.

Ausiello: Another actor leaves Lost just months after he’s pulled over in Hawaii for a traffic violation. This is the part where you guys tell me there’s absolutely no connection.
Carlton Cuse: We actually work very closely with the Honolulu police department, and they have final script approval.
Damon Lindelof: Look, we feel very strongly about traffic violations, no matter how minor they are. All we can say is that Evangeline Lilly got a parking ticket last week, and she better not count her chickens.
Lindelof: The honest answer is, this story was sailing for months before his brush with the law — which was widely blown up by the press. What actually happened is not anything remotely illegal. (FYI: The charges were later dropped.)
Cuse: When Adewale came on the show, he didn’t want to make a long-term commitment to a series. We love him and so we agreed that he would come on the show and then we would find a time in which his arc would come to an end. And we sort of felt after a lot of conversations with him — most of which took place at the end of the spring last year — that we would finish his character somewhere in [these first] six episodes. And as we started talking about what was going to really help the drama of these six episodes, we thought, “Well, this is the perfect place to do it.” As we said, we all kind of went into this [with the idea] that it was only going to be for a limited period of time.

Ausiello: It’s no secret that Adewale wasn’t the most beloved cast member. Did that play any role in his departure? [FYI: In next week’s issue of TV Guide magazine — on sale Nov. 9 — my colleague, Shawna Malcom, reports that, per multiple sources, the 39-year-old actor had become an increasingly difficult presence on set, refusing to film scenes as scripted, insisting on rewrites and even “demanding” several times to be released from his contract.]
Lindelof: We don’t really talk about anything other than the creative decisions made on the show. If you’re hearing it from other people, you’re not hearing that from us. Not to mention, we’re in L.A. So we would never let that kind of thing determine the creative direction of the show. We’re all in the service of the story.

For more from Damon and Carlton, you may want to check out next Wednesday’s 100th Ask Ausiello. Because they may be two of the very special guests I’ve been alluding to. And in lieu of an expensive gift, they may be giving me some major-ass prattle about the rest of the season. (Tee-hee.)

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