08 December 2009 Lost: The Complete Fifth Season Released on DVD Lost: The Complete Fifth Season on DVD is set to be released on December 8, 2009, but you can pre-order your copy today on Amazon.com! The 5-disc DVD box set is packed with special features, including: 7 Lost on location, A Day with Josh Holloway, Los Angeles crew tribute with Michael Emerson, the 100th episode, Time Frame and Continuity, Bloopers, and Deleted Scenes. The set is available for you to pre-order at Amazon.com. Also available for pre-order is Lost: The Complete Fifth Season on Blu-ray.
Welcome to Lost-TV, the first unofficial fansite for the hit ABC drama series Lost. The show, created by JJ Abrams (Alias) and Damon Lindelof, premiered 22 September
2004 and will return to our screens for its sixth and final season sometime in 2010 (date and time have yet to be announced). The site itself was launched on 20 March 2004, even before the series was picked up. To contact the webmaster, send
an email to webmaster@lost-tv.com.
Announcements and Exclusives
The Complete Fifth Season of LOST on DVD Available to Pre-Order at Amazon.com! Lost: The Complete Fifth Season on DVD is set to be released on December 8, 2009, but you can pre-order your copy today on Amazon.com! The 5-disc DVD box set is packed with special features, including: 7 Lost on location, A Day with Josh Holloway, Los Angeles crew tribute with Michael Emerson, the 100th episode, Time Frame and Continuity, Bloopers, and Deleted Scenes. The set is available for you to pre-order at Amazon.com. Also available for pre-order is Lost: The Complete Fifth Season on Blu-ray.
LOST to Return for Season Six in 2010 Lost will return to our television screens for its sixth and final season in 2010! Stay tuned for news from ABC on when and what time Season Six of Lost will be making its debut. If you need something to tide you over until then, then watch FlashForward, which starts airing on ABC on September 24, 2009 at 8pm Eastern/Pacific, 7pm Central. The show's cast includes two Lost cast members, Sonya Walger (Penny) and Dominic Monaghan (Charlie). Visit our partner site FlashForwardTV for more information on that series.
Transcript for March 15 Show of Fictional Frontiers with Sohaib Now Available
The transcript for LOST-TV's third monthly appearance on the radio show Fictional Frontiers with Sohaib, held last Sunday, March 15, 2009 at 11:00am ET, is now available online. Fictional Frontiers is a live one-hour journey through the comic/novel, film, and television universes. Seeking caller opinions, host Sohaib Awan will engage listeners in one-on-one debates and discussions. In addition, Fictional Frontiers will tap into its reservoir of industry guests for insights into upcoming trends and projects. In Episode 39, LOST-TV celebrated its fifth anniversary with a live segment featuring webmaster and site creator Master Xander, as well as monthly guest, staff member, and forum moderator Scott Gotschall. The transcript is now available here, and you can listen to it here. Check out past transcripts at our exclusives section.
News and Updates
Friday, July 16, 2004
Honolulu Star-Bulletin - Family-safe thrills in store for isle-based ‘Lost’
"Lost," ABC's castaway drama that begins principal photography today in Mokuleia, might be too scary for some children, so the producers/creators of the show will edit some of the more frightening scenes before the two-hour pilot airs in September.
The producers are concerned that the content could be too violent for children watching the show in the early 8 p.m. prime-time slot, sources said. The show is the saga of 48 plane crash survivors stranded on an unnamed Pacific island populated by at least one person-eating monster.
The show is produced and created by J.J. Abrams (ABC's "Alias") and Damon Lindelof (NBC's "Crossing Jordan").
Abrams told the Television Critics Association last weekend in Los Angeles that "certain things ... we're going to have to adjust, not just for the time slot, but to air at all." He also indicated that the network hasn't asked producers to make the edits.
Costs for the "Lost" pilot are estimated to have cost $10 million to $16 million, but the result is high production values in a gorgeous tropical setting.
The first hour of the two-hour pilot features horrific and realistic plane crash scenes and explosions, beach wreckage and the "monster," which is not the show's star, Abrams said.
"If you have a monster ... you call it a monster ... then it's sort of disposable and silly and feels kind of irrelevant or gimmicky," he said. "If you have something that represents terror and represents fear and represents sort of the darkness of this place, to me that's incredibly valuable."
Abrams also said that "Lost" guest stars will not suddenly wash up on shore in each episode, but are featured in flashbacks to the survivors' lives before the crash.
Abrams, who is on Oahu preparing for filming, was not immediately available for interviews, but sources said two episodes will be shot simultaneously and directed by Jack Bender, another producer on the show.
The pilot opens with Matthew Fox ("Party of Five"), who plays the physician Jack, waking up on a tropical beach after an accident. Moments later, the viewer sees that it's a plane crash. The pilot episode uses flashbacks to show the plane ride and learn more about the passengers stranded on the island.
When Jack starts walking around the beach, he sees the L-1011's wreckage and bodies littering the area. Survivors include a pregnant woman.
A male passenger is sucked into the wing's spinning jet engine turbine, then someone else is impaled by shrapnel. Without warning, the plane's fuselage collapses and explodes in a fiery ball.
The survivors move away from the wreckage, then try to figure out what to do. They realize their predicament when they notice that the aircraft's nose is missing, as well as the plane's black box and transceiver, which rescuers would need to find them.
A woman named Kate helps stitch Jack's cut, then reports seeing smoke in another area of the island.
The group hikes through the jungle to search for the cockpit, where they find one of the two pilots barely alive. But he's suddenly wrenched from the cockpit by something very big that no one sees.
The transceiver's battery is nearly dead and doesn't provide much of a signal. A few survivors hike a steep climb to a ridge top to see if a signal can be reached up there.
The transceiver gets a small signal -- a distress call in French -- but they soon learn that it's been repeating for more than 15 years.
SOURCE: Honolulu Star-BulletinPermanent Link | 9:44 AM