Lost: Season One Movie Review
Lost: Season One Review

"Lost: Season One" Overview

Rating: NR
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : J.J. Abrams,Daniel Attias,Jack BenderProducer : Bryan Burk,J.J. Abrams,Jack Bender,Sarah Caplan
Screenwiter : David Fury,J.J. Abrams,Damon Lindelof,Jeffrey Lieber
Starring : Naveen Andrews,Emilie de Ravin,Matthew Fox,Jorge Garcia,Maggie Grace,Josh Holloway,Daniel Dae Kim,Yoon-jin Kim,Evangeline Lilly,Dominic Monaghan,Terry O’Quinn,Harold Perrineau Jr.,Ian Somerhalder
Agatha Christie wrote something in excess of 80 novels. Christie was a
practiced and a brilliant mystery taleteller, a commercial writer who exploited
her full and total grasp of the mystery genre to massive popular success. Each
plot was intricately realized, no facet of the mystery introduced that could
not be resolved. Such is the enjoyment of good mysteries: a confidence that
although clues and complications have confused us for now, in the end the
equation will make sense. We should not know the ending, but it should not be
impossible to work out. Lost, 2004’s hit about a group of plane-wreck survivors
milling about on a mysterious island, crashes and burns on its inability to
handle the genre Christie had mastered. Not so much a whodunit as a "whatisit,"
Lost never seems confident that it can provide the answers to the questions it
asks.
Before triangulating the discombobulating mystery that anchors Lost’s first 24
episodes, it is necessary to acknowledge the brilliance of the program’s
premise. An aircraft traveling from Sydney to L.A. crashes, and part of the
plane lands on an island somewhere in the South Pacific. Several survivors
emerge from the wreckage to take pole positions as the show’s cast, and slowly
but surely, as some semblance of society is established, we get flashbacks into
their previous mainland lives. This design leads to situations such as this:
Jack (Matthew Fox) is falling for Kate (Evangeline Lilly). However, as dramatic
irony would have it, the viewers know that Kate was actually a gun-wielding
fugitive in her pre-island life. Watch out, Jack! This conceit of letting the
audience in on the characters’ secrets while they mingle obliviously with each
other is Lost’s greatest power. Nevertheless, creator J.J. Abrams was not
content with just that.
There of course had to be monsters. No crazy island is complete without
monsters, and why not a few panda bears? The island, which is the mystery of
Lost as is the culprit of a Christie novel, is a fascinatingly overpopulated
creation. The cast is big enough, making flashbacks confusing, clichéd and
tedious as the episodes roll on. Charlie (Dominic Monaghan), the former rock
star had a drug problem and issues with his lead singer. Doctor Jack got into
medicine, because, you guessed it, his dad was a prominent doctor and it was
expected of him. The only thing keeping us afloat as we navigate our way
through the back-stories of Lost’s fourteen principles is the unoriginal
predictability of their histories. Cliché is perhaps a device against getting,
well, lost.
If I mentioned monsters and then trailed off into a riff about hackneyed
characterizations, forgive me, but I only mirror that which I review. As Lost
opens, with two brilliant episodes, a plane crashes, characters unravel and
monsters attack. For some time following, these monsters, cameramen on cranes,
continue to frighten the island’s new residents. Then, for episodes on end, the
monster disappears. As if the writers decided that the idea of monsters was too
difficult to resolve, a new idea, a French woman (L. Scott Caldwell) from a
previous wreck, appears. Then there are the mysterious numbers. Then the boy
who makes comic books come to life. Like sideways glances in an Agatha Christie
novel, the mysteries pile endlessly. None seem explicitly linked, and no new
twist seems to turn to anything previous. We never see the monster; and the
numbers, the boy and the French woman are never explained, nor one suspects
could ever be. The internet went wild with predictions about what might be
revealed in Lost when it first aired (all theories much more interesting than
anything the creators offered) and one suggestion was that these characters
were dead, and caught in Christian limbo. This is perhaps the exact location of
the pregnant but unborn ideas that complicate Lost.
Despite its frustrating nature, Lost has been an undeniable television
phenomenon. Its cast of castaways has much to do with this success. Dominic
Monaghan is charmingly inept as the former rocker and is well matched by
pregnant love interest Claire (Emilie de Ravin). Maggie Grace as petulant rich
girl Shannon and Naveen Andrews as former Iraqi soldier Sayid, are both blessed
with an unexpected chemistry and television charisma. However, Matthew Fox as
the lead is stunningly banal. Jack is a sturdy character, good and honest, and
entirely wooden. Fox seems not to have graduated from his days as Charlie in
Party of Five, where emotions were communicated in a bizarre Morse code of eye
squinting and sighs. Much of the dead weight Jack brings to the series is
lifted by a truly impressive production. The sets are dynamic and visually
interesting, the island is beautiful, and the direction is at times exciting.
This is perhaps the greatest regret one has with Lost. It could have been
great. With a little more confidence in where it was headed, and a pairing back
of its insistent need to complicate, Lost as a series may have lived up to the
promise of episodes like its pilot, "Walkabout" and its three-part season
finale. In these episodes, and in snippets of others, terror, sadness, and
genuine excitement are brought to the fore. Yet the ultimate feeling one comes
away with watching Lost is frustration. With Christie, the mystery moved
forward. With Lost, it stagnates. Though Lost begins with a glimmer of hope,
titillation becomes tedium all too quickly.
For fans of the series, this DVD is a must. There are deleted scenes, four
commentaries, and the art of Matthew Fox. Let us hope the art is more
interesting than the man.
I dropped a contact.
Reviewer: Joel Meares





