A new episode of Damon and Carlton’s Lost podcast is online. This is the official description:
Naveen Andrews (“Sayid”) discusses the challenges of playing an Iraqi on network television and Executive Producers Damon Lindleof and Carlton Cuse discuss the episode “?”.
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Just listened to the podcast. Damon and Carlton discuss killing Ana-Lucia and Naveen talks a bit about playing an Iraqi.
If you didn’t understand a thing when Naveen talked about “ADR”, ADR stands for Automated Dialogue Replacement and means that the actors go to a sound studio and record all their dialogue again, trying to sync it to their lip movement on screen. This is done on almost every new movie and tv series to get the best possible audio quality.
Since most of Lost is shot on a beach and in the jungle, using the production sound would be very hard since sounds like waves and wind going through leaves and branches mess up the recorded sound.
did they say that there was a underwater hatch?
[quote comment="1921"]did they say that there was a underwater hatch?[/quote]
That was a fan question, I don’t think they commented on if there is a underwater hatch, they seemed to laugh it off.
When Jack and Locke are in the observation room, they must know that they are being observed also.
If the whole show is based on psychological/sociological experiments, part of the experiment must be to see who will obey an authority figure even when it goes against their moral beliefs. There were some experiments done on this subject to find out why some people would follow a leader like Hitler and perform evil diabolical acts against other human beings even when this was not part of their personality. Their experiment started with finding out who would push the buttons to “save the world” and then it moves on to performing more serious deadly suggestions or orders.
Idea: I wonder if Libby will “come back to life” as the girl supposedly did. Or maybe she is already on her “second life”; she is a very unusual character. As far as Anna L. is concerned, I am sorry to see her go. Even though she had an abrasive personality, she was a very strong person who couldn’t be made to bow down to authority without questioning.