I'm not gonna deny that it was pretty stupid of them not to even start with an outline of what they were going to do. That IS lazy, and it left them with some dumb plot twists and odd inconsistencies.Fox12 said:I'd give it an F.
A 1/10.
The writers admitted that they were told to just make some weird stuff up. There was never a plan, or a cohesive story, or even a desire to make everything fit. As a writer, I can say that this is the absolute height of laziness. There's really no excuse for that kind of behavior, and Lost really captures all the problems I have with most t.v. drama.
If they wanted to make a character study then that would have been fine, but it's clear that they considered the mystery a major draw. In fact, it was THE central conflict of the entire show. I would have been fine with a simple character drama, but that's not the route they took.TheVampwizimp said:I'm disappointed in the responses here. Everyone is so hung up on the answers that they are forgetting that they were not important. The mysteries were just the hooks, to get people to watch in the first place. What made Lost worth watching in the end was the characters.
Besides, is there any reason they couldn't plot out a proper mystery, besides laziness? They can have good characters AND good plot, it's not mutually exclusive.
I wouldn't say offended. Disapointed, maybe. I was young, but I remember liking the beginning of the show. I guess I just found it hard to care when I figured it wasn't heading anywhere. I do have an overwhelming dislike of J. J. Abrams, though, and this is certainly where it started. If the show had any strong points, it was despite his efforts,'and can be attributed to the rather strong acting performances and a handful of decent writers. But then the show floundered due to a lack of direction, which could have been easily avoided if they had simply plotted out where they wanted ago.TheVampwizimp said:I'm not gonna deny that it was pretty stupid of them not to even start with an outline of what they were going to do. That IS lazy, and it left them with some dumb plot twists and odd inconsistencies.Fox12 said:I'd give it an F.
A 1/10.
The writers admitted that they were told to just make some weird stuff up. There was never a plan, or a cohesive story, or even a desire to make everything fit. As a writer, I can say that this is the absolute height of laziness. There's really no excuse for that kind of behavior, and Lost really captures all the problems I have with most t.v. drama.
If they wanted to make a character study then that would have been fine, but it's clear that they considered the mystery a major draw. In fact, it was THE central conflict of the entire show. I would have been fine with a simple character drama, but that's not the route they took.TheVampwizimp said:I'm disappointed in the responses here. Everyone is so hung up on the answers that they are forgetting that they were not important. The mysteries were just the hooks, to get people to watch in the first place. What made Lost worth watching in the end was the characters.
Besides, is there any reason they couldn't plot out a proper mystery, besides laziness? They can have good characters AND good plot, it's not mutually exclusive.
But it's not unforgivable. You seem to be quite offended by their philosophy. I won't defend their methods, but in the end the came up with a really good show anyway. The messed up plot doesn't diminish how well they handled most of the characters. It sure worked on me, anyway.
Where do they say they were just making stuff up? I watched an interview where the creators actually said that before the pilot aired they discussed where the show would go in the broader sense, not the details, so it seems they had the broad strokes of the story figured out.Fox12 said:I'd give it an F.
A 1/10.
The writers admitted that they were told to just make some weird stuff up. There was never a plan, or a cohesive story, or even a desire to make everything fit. As a writer, I can say that this is the absolute height of laziness. There's really no excuse for that kind of behavior, and Lost really captures all the problems I have with most t.v. drama.
If they wanted to make a character study then that would have been fine, but it's clear that they considered the mystery a major draw. In fact, it was THE central conflict of the entire show. I would have been fine with a simple character drama, but that's not the route they took.TheVampwizimp said:I'm disappointed in the responses here. Everyone is so hung up on the answers that they are forgetting that they were not important. The mysteries were just the hooks, to get people to watch in the first place. What made Lost worth watching in the end was the characters.
Besides, is there any reason they couldn't plot out a proper mystery, besides laziness? They can have good characters AND good plot, it's not mutually exclusive.
I've read the writers comments where they basically admitted that a lot of the weird things in the show were just tossed in. Why was there a polar bear? Who knows. It shows through in the writing, though, they seemed to have dug themselves into a hole, which is why it jumped the shark towards the end.IOwnTheSpire said:Where do they say they were just making stuff up? I watched an interview where the creators actually said that before the pilot aired they discussed where the show would go in the broader sense, not the details, so it seems they had the broad strokes of the story figured out.Fox12 said:I'd give it an F.
A 1/10.
The writers admitted that they were told to just make some weird stuff up. There was never a plan, or a cohesive story, or even a desire to make everything fit. As a writer, I can say that this is the absolute height of laziness. There's really no excuse for that kind of behavior, and Lost really captures all the problems I have with most t.v. drama.
If they wanted to make a character study then that would have been fine, but it's clear that they considered the mystery a major draw. In fact, it was THE central conflict of the entire show. I would have been fine with a simple character drama, but that's not the route they took.TheVampwizimp said:I'm disappointed in the responses here. Everyone is so hung up on the answers that they are forgetting that they were not important. The mysteries were just the hooks, to get people to watch in the first place. What made Lost worth watching in the end was the characters.
Besides, is there any reason they couldn't plot out a proper mystery, besides laziness? They can have good characters AND good plot, it's not mutually exclusive.
It's "hip" to bash Lost after the fact, but it's a show that captured the imagination of a lot of people. Part of the appeal was trying to figure out what was going on, as they basically pulled one bit of weirdness out after another and every time they would show something it would just raise more questions. It was paced well, and did a good job of selling you on there eventually being some kind of central logic that would tie all the events together, but in the end while they did answer all the questions and tie it up they left a ton of things hanging or just forgotten, and the last season was pretty much a giant "huh, that's it?".heroofheroin said:As a whole what you grade the series? I just started watching it, and am on s1 ep 15. I think it's a great show so far, just not Breaking Bad or Sopranos tier.