Lost Review: "Dead is Dead" (Episode 5.12)

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Locke and Ben are the Ares and Hephaestus of the Lost Olympus, and like true frenemies, the larger-than-life pair likes to stick close together, feeling each other out, watching each other, in "Dead is Dead." They're always on alert, and they have to be; when Locke let his guard down last, Ben clawed his way to control with a rope, a vacant hotel room and an airborne coffin....  read more

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Lost Review: "Whatever Happened, Happened" (Episode 5.11)

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Hurley held up his hand to his face in "Whatever Happened, Happened." When asked what he was doing, he replied, "I'm checking to see if I'm disappearing."...  read more

Found in: TV Detail

Lost Review: "Whatever Happened, Happened" (Episode 5.11)

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Hurley held up his hand to his face in "Whatever Happened, Happened." When asked what he was doing, he replied, "I'm checking to see if I'm disappearing."...  read more

Found in: TV, Reviews

Lost Review: "He's Our You" (Episode 5.10)

<em>Lost</em> Review: "He's Our You" (Episode 5.10)

Lost is a show of wide, sweeping spaces. In any given episode, the ever-moving camera will zoom in on characters from Los Angeles to New Zealand who are separated by as much as 30 years. However, with the exception of flashbacks, the drama between young Ben and Sayid in "He's Our You" played out almost entirely in a tiny underground cell....  read more

Found in: TV Detail

Lost Review: "He's Our You" (Episode 5.10)

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Lost is a show of wide, sweeping spaces. In any given episode, the ever-moving camera will zoom in on characters from Los Angeles to New Zealand who are separated by as much as 30 years. However, with the exception of flashbacks, the drama between young Ben and Sayid in "He's Our You" played out almost entirely in a tiny underground cell....  read more

Found in: TV, Reviews

Lost LOST Ads

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Hot Meteor design recently posted a series of old Dharma Initiative advertisements culled from the pages of various '70s and '80s magazines. They're perfectly executed and reminiscent of Watchmen's fantastic viral campaign. Those jumpsuits would be really nice (and totally creepy) for doing yard work....  read more

Found in: Blogs, Form&Function

Lost Review: "Namaste" (Episode 5.09)

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When Jack, Kate and Hurley ended up face down in the jungle at the end of "316," I assumed they had fallen from a plummeting plane. But when the plane made an emergency landing in this episode with few casualties, I realized my mistake. In "Namaste," the passengers look to Ben and ask where everyone has gone. His eyes glaze over in that sinister "you can't tell if I'm lying" look, and he answers, "I have absolutely no idea." They've gone off to the past....  read more

Found in: TV Detail

Lost Review: "Namaste" (Episode 5.09)

image not available

When Jack, Kate and Hurley ended up face down in the jungle at the end of "316," I assumed they had fallen from a plummeting plane. But when the plane made an emergency landing in this episode with few casualties, I realized my mistake. In "Namaste," the passengers look to Ben and ask where everyone has gone. His eyes glaze over in that sinister "you can't tell if I'm lying" look, and he answers, "I have absolutely no idea." They've gone off to the past....  read more

Found in: TV, Reviews

Lost Review: "LaFleur" (Episode 5.08)

<em>Lost</em> Review: "LaFleur" (Episode 5.08)

Like last week's "The Life and Death of Jeremy Bentham," "Lafleur" was a filler episode. TV Squad put it well: "when we first started watching Lost, it was like dumping a giant puzzle onto the floor. At this point, the entire puzzle is assembled, and for the most part, we can almost see the big picture, save for a bunch of pieces that are still missing. Lafleur was one of those pieces."...  read more

Found in: TV Detail

Lost Review: "LaFleur" (Episode 5.08)

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Like last week's "The Life and Death of Jeremy Bentham," "Lafleur" was a filler episode. TV Squad put it well: "when we first started watching Lost, it was like dumping a giant puzzle onto the floor. At this point, the entire puzzle is assembled, and for the most part, we can almost see the big picture, save for a bunch of pieces that are still missing. Lafleur was one of those pieces."...  read more

Found in: TV, Reviews

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