Pilot: Part 2
- Episode aired Sep 29, 2004
- TV-14
- 40m
IMDb RATING
9.1/10
9.8K
YOUR RATING
Having retrieved the plane tranceiver, a group of survivors try to transmit a signal, only to receive a strange transmission from another inhabitant.Having retrieved the plane tranceiver, a group of survivors try to transmit a signal, only to receive a strange transmission from another inhabitant.Having retrieved the plane tranceiver, a group of survivors try to transmit a signal, only to receive a strange transmission from another inhabitant.
Fredric Lehne
- Marshal Edward Mars
- (as Fredric Lane)
Jonathan Dixon
- Flight Attendant #2
- (as Jon Dixon)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Sayid and Sawyer are fighting, Sayid says "Ibn al-kalb", which translates to "son of a bitch".
- GoofsAfter Sawyer kills the polar bear, Boon says something like "Is this what killed the pilot?". But he doesn't know anything about it, the only people who know that the pilot was found alive and then killed by a monster were Jack, Kate and Charlie. Not a goof: considering that Charlie immediately replies " No. No, that's a tiny, teeny version compared to that", it is obvious that the pilot's death had been discussed earlier, off camera. I tried to post the episode's transcript as proof, but I got a message saying that you don't publish URLs. So, here's the dialogue in question from the Quote page: www.imdb.com/title/tt0636290/quotes/qt0449248
- ConnectionsFeatured in Desperate Housewives: There Won't Be Trumpets (2005)
Featured review
"Guys, where are we?"
The first part of Lost's pilot was intriguing, suspenseful and exciting. The second part is just the same, only it adds more mystery, setting events in motion for episodes (and seasons) to come.
After witnessing the brutal death of Oceanic Flight 815's pilot (Abrams regular Greg Grunberg), Jack, Kate and Charlie return to the camp with the plane's transceiver. Sayid Jarrah (Naveen Andrews) fixes the device and decides to find a spot on the island whee he can pick up a radio signal. He's joined by Kate, Charlie, the unreliable Sawyer (Josh Holloway) and siblings Boone Carlyle (Ian Somerhalder) and Shannon Rutherford (Maggie Grace). Meanwhile, Jack makes sure everyone else on the beach is fine, most notably the highly pregnant Claire (Emilie de Ravin), and a weird bond takes shape between Walt Dawson (Malcolm David Kelley), a young boy who's on the island with his father Michael (Harold Perrineau), and John Locke (Terry O' Quinn), a man who has "dark secrets" written all over him.
Abrams and Lindelof move the story forward with no rush, devoting approximately the same amount of time to each character. As such, we get juicy revelations about some (a flashback reveals that Charlie has a heroin addiction) and clues concerning the real nature of others (a person named after a famous philosopher? Hmmm...). It will take a very long time before everything adds up, but like in The X-Files, only five minutes are necessary to realize it will be worth every single second of it.
Oh, and as far as cliffhangers go, Lost is on par with 24: "Guys, where are we?"
After witnessing the brutal death of Oceanic Flight 815's pilot (Abrams regular Greg Grunberg), Jack, Kate and Charlie return to the camp with the plane's transceiver. Sayid Jarrah (Naveen Andrews) fixes the device and decides to find a spot on the island whee he can pick up a radio signal. He's joined by Kate, Charlie, the unreliable Sawyer (Josh Holloway) and siblings Boone Carlyle (Ian Somerhalder) and Shannon Rutherford (Maggie Grace). Meanwhile, Jack makes sure everyone else on the beach is fine, most notably the highly pregnant Claire (Emilie de Ravin), and a weird bond takes shape between Walt Dawson (Malcolm David Kelley), a young boy who's on the island with his father Michael (Harold Perrineau), and John Locke (Terry O' Quinn), a man who has "dark secrets" written all over him.
Abrams and Lindelof move the story forward with no rush, devoting approximately the same amount of time to each character. As such, we get juicy revelations about some (a flashback reveals that Charlie has a heroin addiction) and clues concerning the real nature of others (a person named after a famous philosopher? Hmmm...). It will take a very long time before everything adds up, but like in The X-Files, only five minutes are necessary to realize it will be worth every single second of it.
Oh, and as far as cliffhangers go, Lost is on par with 24: "Guys, where are we?"
helpful•70
- MaxBorg89
- Dec 14, 2008
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