I cried, "Oh, Lady Midnight, I fear that you grow old, the stars eat your body and the wind makes you cold." "If we cry now," she said, "it will just be ignored."
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TV Q&A: LOST Co-creator Damon Lindelof reveals the secrets of Season Three’s second half—from the truth behind the Others to the return of Walt and Michael to that damn four-toed statue
By Sean T. Collins
Posted December 28, 2006 9:45 AM It’s coming.
After an intense six-episode “mini-season” that barely tided the show’s fanatical fans over, “Lost” heads back to a TV (and water cooler) near you on February 7, 2007 for 16 back-to-back, rerun-free episodes. But the show’s countless mysteries have kept us talking all season long. What’s the real story behind the sinister Others and their plans for prisoners Jack, Kate and Sawyer? Why was kick-ass character Mr. Eko killed? What really happened when the Hatch exploded? And what’s up with that four-toed statue, anyway?
Wizard had one choice—either give up working on the magazine and debate these questions full-time, or turn to the man with all the answers, “Lost” Co-Creator and Executive Producer Damon Lindelof, for guidance. So find a comfortable spot in your polar bear cage and sit back as Lindelof dishes the dirt on the best show on television.
WIZARD: The first six-episode mini-season is over. Did you guys accomplish what you set out to accomplish with it?
LINDELOF: I think that in many ways, yes, and in many ways we wish that we could’ve done more. Our über-goal in the first six episodes was to really begin to set up the mega-story of the season, which is who the Others are and what they want and why they took Kate [Evangeline Lilly], Jack [Matthew Fox] and Sawyer [Josh Holloway]. I think that we at least answered the third question. We feel that we told that story fairly compellingly and well.
The Others were such shadowy villains for so long before these first six episodes. Did you consciously shift gears on that by fleshing out Ben and Juliet?
Well, yeah, that’s always been what the show has done, which is that you sort of look at a character in one way and then suddenly you completely shift their perception.
By the end of the first season, one half of the audience was convinced that Locke [Terry O’Quinn] was a bad guy and the other half that he was a good guy. Now I think that everyone has come around to thinking that he’s a good guy, but they don’t really know him yet. So we’ve done the same thing with the Others, which is whether they’re villains or not—and I think that they’ve done a lot of villainous things—it’s our jobs as writers to explain why they’re doing those things in a real and emotional way.
[These Others] dress up in these hillbilly clothes in order to purposely deceive the passengers of 815 and they’ve abducted people and taken children. What does all that mean?
Those are the acts of a villain. So that is the secret recipe of “Lost,” which is, “Why do people do the things that they do, and can we give the audience an understandable explanation as to why they do the things they do?” That is the über-goal of Season Three as a whole.
Will we get explanations on the supernatural stuff like the smoke monster and Desmond’s new psychic abilities?
Right out of the gate in one of the early episodes, we are going to explain what is happening with Desmond [Henry Ian Cusick] and what the story function of that is. The monster is something that we use very sparingly on the show. We know what it is. We know how it functions.
It killed Eko! Why eliminate such a fan-favorite character?
We feel like the death story of Mr. Eko [Adewale Akinnouye Agbaje] accomplished really two things as storytellers. The first is that it told the audience that, “Yes, we are willing to kill characters that you love as opposed to characters that you just want us to kill, like Shannon and Boone or Ana-Lucia.” That was an important thing to do, because I can’t think of a character that was more beloved than Mr. Eko, at least in terms of Season Two. Secondly, we furthered the audience’s expectations for what the capabilities of the monster are. That is to say, is it just black smoke, or can it take the form of other things? What does it know about our people? What is its function—is it supernatural or is it technological? All of these things are still very much in play. I think we tend to use the monster when it relates directly to informing character, as opposed to just an arbitrary plot device that can move the trees around and make scary noises.
Two of your most prominent characters right now are Nikki and Paulo, the castaways who were introduced during the mini-season. Did you guys think that it was risky to introduce them that way?
Well, that is a case where the separation of the season actually hurts you, because Nikki [Kiele Sanchez] and Paulo [Rodrigo Santoro] are actually part of a larger story that has not yet quite activated itself, and what you have seen so far is really setup for the big payoff that happens in the middle of the season, around episodes 13 and 14. It’s just a scenario where all I can say is that we think the payoff of the idea is very cool, and you just have to trust us a little while longer.