Lost
In November 1987, the Bésixdouze shipwrecked on the island with its crew of six scientists, including the seven-months pregnant Danielle Rousseau and Robert, the father of her unborn child. Over the next few months, Rousseau’s crew began to suffer a «sickness» inflicted by the Man in Black that caused them to act differently, and eventually, Rousseau killed them all, with Robert being the last to die.
Episode list
Flight 815 is shown successfully landing in Los Angeles with no crash on the island, but the survivors are simultaneously shown still on the island after Juliet detonates the bomb.
S6.E2 ∙ LA X: Part 2
Mon, Feb 1, 2010
The man impersonating John Locke reveals his true intentions.
S6.E3 ∙ What Kate Does
Mon, Feb 8, 2010
Sayid miraculously comes back to life, but his problems have only just begun. Sawyer escapes, and Kate and Jin go after him. Back in Los Angeles, fugitive Kate helps Claire as she goes into labor.
S6.E4 ∙ The Substitute
Sat, Feb 20, 2010
On the island, the being now occupying Locke’s body turns to Sawyer and promises to tell him why he’s on the island. Back in Los Angeles, Locke loses his job and encounters a number of familiar faces.
S6.E5 ∙ Lighthouse
Sat, Feb 27, 2010
Jacob sends Hurley on a mission across the island, but Jack must accompany him. In Los Angeles, Jack’s difficult relationship with his son is revealed. Meanwhile, Jin discovers that Claire thinks the people at the temple stole her son.
Bad title
The requested page title is invalid. It may be empty, contain unsupported characters, or include a non-local or incorrectly linked interwiki prefix. You may be able to locate the desired page by searching for its name (with the interwiki prefix, if any) in the search box.
Possible causes are:
- an attempt to load a URL such as https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/| (the | character is unsupported);
- an attempt to load a URL pointing to a «non-local» interwiki page (usually those not run by the Wikimedia Foundation). For example, the URL https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/meatball:WikiPedia will give this error, because the «meatball:» interwiki prefix is not marked as local in the interwiki table. Certain interwiki prefixes are marked as local in the table. For example, the URL https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/meta:Main_Page can be used to load meta:Main_Page. All interlanguage prefixes are marked as local, and thus URLs such as https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/fr:Accueil will work as expected. However, non-local interwiki pages can still be accessed by interwiki linking or by entering them in the search box. For example [[meatball:WikiPedia]] can be used on a page, like this: meatball:WikiPedia.
Retrieved from «https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Badtitle»
- Privacy policy
- About Wikipedia
- Disclaimers
- Contact Wikipedia
- Code of Conduct
- Developers
- Statistics
- Cookie statement
- Mobile view
A rift between brothers
Jacob and his brother were raised by the guardian until their teen years, when she finally took them to the Heart of the Island and explained her role in protecting it. There, the ghost of Claudia appeared to Jacob and told him the truth of what happened to her, which prompted a fight between the two brothers. Jacob’s brother chose to go live with the survivors of Claudia’s wreck for the next 30 years, while Jacob decided to remain with their adoptive mother, although the brothers stayed in contact.
Eventually, Jacob was made the new protector of the island, and later, his adopted mother was killed by the Man in Black after she burned his village to the ground. Before her death, she mystically prevented the brothers from ever being able to kill one another personally, so as revenge, Jacob cast his brother into the Heart of the Island. This transformed Jacob’s brother into a column of black smoke, although he could still assume his human form when he wanted to. Jacob and the Man in Black (who we’re going to call «the MiB») would continue to meet throughout the coming centuries, but their opposing views of humanity — with Jacob believing humans were good, and the MiB believing they were evil — kept them constantly at odds. Jacob would draw people to the island to succeed him, and the MiB would try to convince them to kill Jacob, which he believed would free him from the island and his altered form.
‘Guys . Where Are We?’
The unsettling question above, posed by Charlie Pace (Dominic Monaghan) at the end of the two-part pilot episode, set the tone for the rest of the series. As Jack, John Locke (Terry O’Quinn), Kate Austin (Evangeline Lilly), James «Sawyer» Ford (Josh Holloway), Sayid Jarrah (Naveen Andrews), Hugo Reyes (Jorge Garcia), and the rest of the survivors scrambled to make sense of their unfriendly surroundings, this became the narrative driving force behind the first season(s) of «Lost.» That implicit promise came with expectations of answering tantalizing questions like: what makes the island so special? Will the survivors could find a way off of it? And would they even survive long enough to do so? Polar bears, smoke monsters, the possibility of sinister «Others» inhabiting the island, and the group’s ever-present suspicions of one another all combined to turn «Lost» into the weekly must-watch phenomenon that helped set the template for future pop culture hits like «Stranger Things» or «Game of Thrones.»
But the idea that we only cared about the inexplicable events of the island because it was happening to this specific group of characters was a reality that went unnoticed by far too many viewers at the time. The clever flashback structure that permeated each and every episode in the early seasons was meant to emphasize that fact, drawing a direct connection between the plot of any given episode and the interior lives of whichever character received the spotlight. Instead, many of us tended to focus on the shocking reveals, coincidental (or fateful?) near-misses between characters who didn’t know each other just yet, and breadcrumbs of clues that made the world-building of the show so compelling in the first place. It was a classic example of viewers missing the forest for the trees, latching onto the surface-level joys of the series and neglecting to pay enough attention to the impressive character-building going on right underneath our noses.
It’s true that the show itself became preoccupied by going down plot-specific rabbit holes in an increasingly trippy attempt to keep audiences engaged and ratings high, which shifts some of the blame off ourselves and onto Lindelof and Cuse’s storytelling instincts. At the same time, however, the one consistent aspect throughout the show’s run proved to be the ever-shifting dynamics and relationships between the cast. Back when it was normal for television to stretch beyond merely eight or 10 episodes a season, «Lost» took full advantage of every hour it had and put its characters through an ever-evolving journey that made their eventual fates resonate as much as they did. In that light, the profound disconnect between the two halves of the audience leading up to the conclusion can’t quite be rationalized by any neat-and-tidy answers.
So how do we explain the ending of «Lost»? I’m glad you asked.
Episode list
Charlie’s dying message casts doubt on the intentions of the people that Jack believes to be their rescuers. A power struggle ensues between Jack, who wants to leave the island, and Locke, who thinks that they’re supposed to stay.
S4.E2 ∙ Confirmed Dead
Wed, Feb 6, 2008
The surviving members of the supposed «rescue team» are scattered around the island. Once they are located, they reluctantly reveal that they are indeed not there to rescue the Oceanic 815 survivors.
S4.E3 ∙ The Economist
Wed, Feb 13, 2008
Sayid negotiates a deal with Locke to hand over Charlotte from the «rescue team,» so that he can get on their helicopter and reach their ship. Kate joins Sayid for the mission, but she decides to stay behind with Sawyer.
S4.E4 ∙ Eggtown
Wed, Feb 20, 2008
Kate goes behind Locke’s back to arrange a meeting between Miles and Ben, where Miles offers his terms for not giving Ben up to his colleagues. Locke discovers what she has done and banishes her from his camp.
Top-rated
S4.E5 ∙ The Constant
Wed, Feb 27, 2008
During the helicopter ride to the ship, Desmond’s consciousness begins jumping back and forth between present day 2004 and 1996. He is forced to find Daniel Faraday in 1996 in order to get answers and stop the jumps.
S4.E6 ∙ The Other Woman
Wed, Mar 5, 2008
Daniel and Charlotte leave Jack’s camp to fulfill their objective, and Jack and Juliet try to track them down before they are successful. Juliet’s romantic history on the island with The Others is exposed.
S4.E7 ∙ Ji Yeon
Wed, Mar 12, 2008
Juliet exposes Sun’s pre-island affair to Jin so that they won’t defect to Locke’s camp. Sayid and Desmond meet the ship’s captain and discover who is working on the boat.
S4.E8 ∙ Meet Kevin Johnson
Wed, Mar 19, 2008
Michael’s journey from escaping the island to working as Ben’s spy on Widmore’s ship is revealed, as well as his mission. Ben tells Danielle and Alex to leave Locke’s camp and go to the island temple, but they are ambushed on the way.
S4.E9 ∙ The Shape of Things to Come
Wed, Apr 23, 2008
The team from the ship attacks Locke’s camp looking for Ben, with Alex as a hostage. The doctor from the ship washes up on shore at Jack’s camp and Faraday provides some distressing news.
S4.E10 ∙ Something Nice Back Home
Wed, Apr 30, 2008
Juliet is forced to perform an emergency appendectomy on Jack, Jack’s post-rescue relationship with Kate is revealed, and Sawyer, Claire, and Aaron head back to Jack’s camp with Miles.
S4.E11 ∙ Cabin Fever
Wed, May 7, 2008
Locke, Ben, and Hurley continue their search for the cabin so that Locke can talk to Jacob. Back on the boat, Keamy prepares to take off again, this time for an all-out assault on the island.
S4.E12 ∙ There’s No Place Like Home: Part 1
Wed, May 14, 2008
Ben, Locke, and Hurley go to The Orchid, only to find Keamy and his men already there. Jack and Kate go after the helicopter and come across Sawyer in the jungle. Sayid comes back to the island with a rescue boat and goes after them too.
Episode list
Jack, Kate and Sawyer are kidnapped by the Others, who reveal themselves as more sophisticated and savvy than anyone guessed.
S3.E2 ∙ The Glass Ballerina
Tue, Oct 10, 2006
Sayid’s attempt to rescue Jack, Kate, and Sawyer from the others jeopardizes Sun and Jin’s lives. Ben makes Jack an offer which may be too hard to refuse.
S3.E3 ∙ Further Instructions
Tue, Oct 17, 2006
Locke experiences visions of Boone, leading him to a new mystery on the island.
S3.E4 ∙ Every Man for Himself
Tue, Oct 24, 2006
The Others perform a sadistic medical procedure on Sawyer in order to prevent him from causing any more mischief.
S3.E5 ∙ The Cost of Living
Tue, Oct 31, 2006
After Mr. Eko has a vision of his dead brother, he sets out to return to the site of his plane crash.
S3.E6 ∙ I Do
Tue, Nov 7, 2006
Kate desperately tries to protect Sawyer from The Others. Juliet uses her as a pawn on Jack to get him to perform surgery on Ben.
S3.E7 ∙ Not in Portland
Tue, Feb 6, 2007
Sawyer and Kate struggle to escape the island while Jack sabotages Ben’s surgery. Juliet’s deal with Jack to kill Ben on the operating table is exposed.
S3.E8 ∙ Flashes Before Your Eyes
Tue, Feb 13, 2007
After Desmond saves Claire from drowning, Charlie and Hurley suspect that he can see the future, so they come up with a plan to get some answers out of him.
S3.E9 ∙ Stranger in a Strange Land
Tue, Feb 20, 2007
A power play ensues between Jack and Ben as Juliet’s future lies in the balance. Kate and Sawyer deal with the consequences of their escape.
S3.E10 ∙ Tricia Tanaka Is Dead
Tue, Feb 27, 2007
Having returned to camp, Sawyer’s help is enlisted by Hugo, who has an obsession with retrieving an old VW van found on the island. More events in Hugo’s life are also revealed, showing what brought him to be on the doomed flight.
Источники:
https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0411008/episodes/?season=6&rut=33d9a7fdb5925e9860084d734b20ecb3b35dd17836bcb7839b9880ff3d370b71
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lost_season_1&rut=445ec17e4dbf84f1c9cd41529bdaff12d014e760bf1834032861ffff8857e508
https://www.looper.com/170109/the-entire-lost-timeline-explained/&rut=2b411aa938d0e071272f86649d021f2b7eb606de5fce75eadb1551a149f41343
https://www.slashfilm.com/613072/lost-ending-explained-no-they-werent-dead-the-whole-time-but-they-werent-really-living-either/&rut=6fbe0a94acc413a7a4bb64815ad193a24245b432c9a8e191d9b7d911cdfb8113
https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0411008/episodes/?season=4&rut=783a161ac942c6b4d748af310aba99902b8f904f4bdf1c310dd68dece3daad56
https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0411008/episodes/?season=3&rut=c26e2212f2c51b42a8566c569487178ee065ef64d4a657e2a09d5a76fba00539