As ABC's 'Lost' returns for its sixth and final season, fans are hoping to finally get answers to all the questions that they were dying to see answered. If you watched a few seasons try catching the review show at 8 pm ET on the ABC.
As ABC's ‘Lost’ returns for its sixth and final season, fans are hoping to finally get answers to all the questions that they were dying to see answered. If you watched a few seasons try catching the review show at 8 pm ET on the ABC and see if you can get a possible explanation on time travel, ghosts, people coming back to life, people who don't age, and an island that can move?
The crazy television series follows the lives of plane crash survivors on a mysterious tropical island. A commercial passenger jet flying between Sydney, and Los Angeles crashes somewhere in the South Pacific leaving 71 survivors stranded on a mystery island. And what happens next?
Each episode features a storyline (a) on the island and (b) a secondary storyline from another point in a character's life. The time-related plot devices change this formula in later episodes.Lost sixth season with its 121 episodes will end in May 2010. Season six will consist of eighteen episodes.Here are some spoilers that may answer your crazy questions that you always had in mind about this mindless series:Perhaps Jacob is an immortal being whose deeds throughout history gave rise to myths all over ancient cultures. Perhaps Jacob's conflict with his unnamed nemesis – brother or father has fueled countless human wars somehow.Rumors are also making rounds that may the island on which the ‘Lost’ stars are stuck is not a geological creation, but is some kind of nature-covered machine. And there could be an alien spacecraft under the island which harnessed space-time to travel from another planet. Jacob could be its caretaker, guardian of the secret!Did that answer the questions? Well, if you have more patience then look out as the sixth unrolls. And in the words of Executive producers Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse they "always envisioned Lost as a show with a beginning, middle, and end," and that by announcing when the show would end that viewers would "have the security of knowing that the story will play out as we've intended."