A plane crash, a tropical island, a polar bear, a mad Frenchwoman, a series of repeating numbers.
A hole in the ground, a science project, a four-toed statue, the end of the world.
A smoke monster, a trek through time, a long-standing battle between good and evil, and an alternate universe where a plane didn't crash.
At some point in the next week or so, all these random pieces of information are going to come together into coherent whole. That's my hope, anyway. For 119 weeks, I have eagerly sat in front of my TV, remote control in hand, poised to leap into the strange and confusing world of LOST (created by Damon Lindelof, J. J. Abrams and Jeffrey Lieber.) I visit that world with a large group of fans. I'm thankful for them. I'd hate to feel this confused all by myself.
I'm thankful for another thing, too.
This show inspired my writing. It begged me to put things on paper whether they made sense or not. It helped me to trust the process; it taught me to ask "what if..." I accepted the challenge to view the blank page with a LOST perspective. I learned it is okay to take your readers on a ride, to keep some things a mystery, to take risks, to just write the damn thing and see where it ends up.
I'm not sure whether the LOST writers had it all planned from the beginning or if they've been making it up as they go along. What I know for sure is they've freed their imagination, and in so doing, have lit a fire under mine.
Not a bad way to spend a weeknight.
2 comments:
I've not seen any of this last season yet; I'm going to have to wait for the DVD release. Boo! I can't wait though. I've been hooked right from the beginning.
I'm sure my sister told me that the producers have said that the story was plotted out from the get go (she's strangely in the know about these things - I think she watches all the DVD extras and whatnot), which I found as inspiring as the crazy plots themselves.
I've been hooked right from the beginning, too. When it's all over, I plan to get the dvd's and start back at the beginning. Obsessed? Who, me?
Thanks for your sister's tip. It's really amazing to me how it's all (sort of) coming together.
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