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#tv: lost – @elijahwood on Tumblr

all shall fade

@elijahwood / elijahwood.tumblr.com

via. twenty. She read about the people she could never be, and the adventures she would never have.
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elijahwood
For me it was just a really big goodbye and easily heartbreaking. It wasn’t one of those things to think about it. Josh [Holloway] is really strong, so I was on this pulley, and I had them loosen the pulley so he’d really be holding me up, and it killed both of us every time. When my hand slipped from his, it was because he couldn’t hold on any longer. So that hit us with a real punch… We were broken-hearted and crying quite a bit. -Elizabeth Mitchell
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LOST is more than just a show; it’s an experience, and to get the most out of it, it requires repeated viewing and some extra reading, whether it be Lostpedia, Doc Jensen’s wild theories or one of the books Sawyer was seen reading on the beach. Most television shows are as simple as the viewer tuning in when the show starts, watching the episode until the credits roll, and then immediately moving on to something else. That is no way to watch LOST. Think of the show as an onion: its exterior consists of all the mysteries of the show, like the hatches and the numbers and Jacob’s cabin and Jacob’s list and Jacob himself and the smoke monster and the frozen donkey wheel and the time flashes that make the island skip like a broken record and the four-toed statue and the seemingly ageless Richard Alpert and room 23 and so on. It’s easy to be distracted by all of those things, many of which are firmly rooted in science fiction, but peel that onion and you’ll find some of the most basic human struggles like good vs. evil, free will vs. destiny, faith vs. science, life and death, survival, rivalries, redemption, and how all the best cowboys have daddy issues. These are things we can all relate to, and once that onion is peeled, you’re probably going to find yourself crying. LOST is more than just a show, it’s the greatest television experience the world will ever see.

To borrow an episode title from the show, Crit is the man behind the curtain of fuckyeahlost.com. He’s a 25 year old student from Boston. In addition to FYL, you should be reading his personal blog and following him on Twitter. (via hoechlbear, 815sentencesaboutlost) (via allshallfade)

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