Em
06-03-2006, 13:46
Producers know how 'Lost' will end
Monday, March 6 2006, 04:18 GMT - by Neil Wilkes
Warning: This article contains spoilers about season two of Lost that some readers may prefer to avoid.
The team responsible for Lost already have the show's ending mapped out - even though it could run for another five years.
"We know what the ending is seriously," executive producer Carlton Cuse told The Sun Herald. "This is a show that demands an ending. We want to find out what is the fate of these people. Do they get off the island? What is the nature of the island? I mean there are some big fundamental questions that you want answered at the end of this show."
He added: "We do have an ending, we just don't know when we're going to get there."
Meanwhile, series co-creator Damon Lindelof described the current, second season as comprising "three acts".
"We thought about season two in three acts, almost like a movie. Act one was going to tell the story of the immediate aftermath of going into the hatch, the introduction of the people from the tail section and their journey back across the island.
"The second act was going to be the integration of these two people and then of course [there is] the third act that I'm not going to tell you anything about because we don't want to reveal it yet."
Monday, March 6 2006, 04:18 GMT - by Neil Wilkes
Warning: This article contains spoilers about season two of Lost that some readers may prefer to avoid.
The team responsible for Lost already have the show's ending mapped out - even though it could run for another five years.
"We know what the ending is seriously," executive producer Carlton Cuse told The Sun Herald. "This is a show that demands an ending. We want to find out what is the fate of these people. Do they get off the island? What is the nature of the island? I mean there are some big fundamental questions that you want answered at the end of this show."
He added: "We do have an ending, we just don't know when we're going to get there."
Meanwhile, series co-creator Damon Lindelof described the current, second season as comprising "three acts".
"We thought about season two in three acts, almost like a movie. Act one was going to tell the story of the immediate aftermath of going into the hatch, the introduction of the people from the tail section and their journey back across the island.
"The second act was going to be the integration of these two people and then of course [there is] the third act that I'm not going to tell you anything about because we don't want to reveal it yet."