Written by Matt Goldberg

This morning (or afternoon for us on the East Coast), there was an online roundtable with Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse, the two mad geniuses behind one of television's best shows, "Lost". It's an odd format because you're sending questions into a queue and you don't know if someone else has already asked it or if they'll even get around to your question. Thankfully, they did get around to the big one I had that only bothers me (I was selfish before I was a journalist so selfish wins): Why was Christian Shepherd's coffin empty when Jack discovered it back in season one? Yeah, us "Lost" fans can be a little obsessive over details.
But before the online roundtable, we were treated to a sneak peek at a couple of the features on the upcoming DVD for the fourth season of "Lost". The two special features we saw were the little joke intro to a segment with the flash forwards. I had already seen it this at Comic-Con but it was still hilarious. The other feature was a mock-conspiracy documentary about the Oceanic Six. It's a little tedious since we already know the truth but it does reveal that the three survivors who didn't make it to rescue were Charlie, Boone, and Libby.
I'd certainly like to thank Lindelof and Cuse taking an hour out their hectic schedules to answer our questions, no matter how banal.*
Below you can read the transcript of the Q&A and hopefully that will whet your appetite until "Lost: Season 4" hits DVD on December 9th. Those DVDs can tide you over until January 21st when the fifth season of "Lost" premieres at 8/7c on ABC.
Oh, and one final note: if you'd like to check out some of these features, come back later tonight and take a look at video including the music featurette and blooper reel among others.
*The coffin thing has been nagging at me for four years!
Q: By having shorter seasons now, do you feel the storytelling has become much easier -- or do you feel regret and often go "man, it would be great to have three more episodes?"
Damon Lindelof: The storytelling has never been easy... but we've always felt that "less is more." The complaint that we got most often in the first couple seasons of the show is that we were not moving the story forwards fast enough -- "stalling" -- which, unfortunately, is a necessary tactic when you're doing 25 episodes a year. The truth is that we actually liked those episodes low on incident ("Claire sends a message on a bird, anyone?"), but the show is much more fun to write when we can just power through and give you guys a hearty meal as opposed to a zillion little courses that never quite get you full.
Q: What's up with the four-toes statue and some of the crazy stuff that's happened over the years on the show ... are we ever going to get the answers to these questions?
Cartlon Cuse: Yes, more on the 4 toed statue to come! In fact (spoiler) the 4 toed state might come to life in the Zombie season. As we roll into the end of season 5 and certainly in season 6 the show will definitely be much more in answer mode.
Q: Are we ever going to get back-stories for Rousseau, Libby, and/or Walt or does that now fall by the wayside with only thirty-four episodes left?
Cartlon Cuse: Let's just say you will get more information about Rousseau and Walt at least. We can't comment about who will or wont get full-on flashbacks. Obviously as the story moves forward we'll be answering questions at a faster rate. But some stories -- like Libby's -- we feel are pretty much finished.
Q: With the end of the series looming in 2010, is a feature film being considered at all?
Damon Lindelof: The answer, Brian, is no. At least not by us. We've always felt that the show should definitively end the same place it started... on television. To bring our characters to some sort of cliffhanger where the audience gets none of the answers that they really care about and then say, "Now give us ten bucks. buy some popcorn and we'll give you the rest!" would pretty much be the worst thing ever.
Q: Now that you are close to being finished with writing season five, how does it feel to know you are so close to the home stretch in this odyssey? Has it brought out reflections or feelings you didn't expected either personally about the process or towards the storyline?
Cartlon Cuse: Tara, I think all of us who work on the show know what a special experience it is. Our ability to negotiate and end date to the show so far in advance was I believe unprecedented in network TV. It has given us a real sense of what the journey is going to be. Normally when you work on a TV show you never know when it is going to end. You're just trying to survive season to season until the proverbial horse drops out from underneath you. We're not quite far enough along yet to start to wax nostalgic, but I think we all recognize that we've had a chance to do something really extraordinary. I was watching all the bonus features and thinking about the special alchemy of LOST. You can do your best as a storyteller but on TV you also need a great cast, crew, directors, composer, etc. You really see on those features what a collaborative art form it is. We are truly blessed that this assembly of talent came together for this project. The journey of making a show over six years and the hourse it takes really makes you a family -- and we're about as happy and as functional a TV family as I've ever seen or worked with.
Q: Watching season four in one or two sittings, on DVD, do you think there's a break in style between the pre-strike and post-strike episodes?

Damon Lindelof: Hopefully not, Charlie. The fact of the matter is that we designed out -- at least roughly -- the entire sixteen episode season... planting flags as to what would happen where in the grand scheme of things. In that original design, there were a couple of episodes focusing more on the Freighter Folks (Faraday, Miles and Charlotte) that got pushed into this season, but more importantly, things like Jack's appendicitis and Keamy arriving at New Otherton and killing Alex happened SOONER than we had planned due to the collapsed schedule. I think if there's a sense of separation between the first eight episodes (ending with "Meet Kevin Johnson") and the final six hours, it's that the story is really moving at a much higher rate of speed than we're traditionally accustomed to.
Q: What television series imprinted you as kids the most growing up-that perhaps influenced your decision to make a career in smallscreen?
Damon Lindelof: Thanks for asking that question, April... because I was a TV JUNKIE growing up. Other than watching endless hours of cartoons (THUNDERCATS, VOLTRON and yes, SMURFS), I loved watching "grownup shows" with my folks... like DALLAS. Perhaps that's where I got my love for melodrama! The show that REALLY affected me, however, was TWIN PEAKS, which I'd watch every week with my dad. He'd tape the show on his VCR (remember those?) and we'd watch the episode AGAIN right after it aired in our quest to pull every last clue out of the show. The idea of a TV Show being a mystery and a game that spawned hundreds of theories obviously was a major precedent (that's a fancy way of saying we ripped it off) for LOST.
Q: You've mentioned Nikki and Paolo not hitting with the audience. How do you draw a line between making the audience happy and telling the story you set out to tell?
Cartlon Cuse: Devin, its now kind of a moot point. Moving forward it will be virtually impossible for us to adjust in-season to audience feedback. By the time the show premieres on Jan 21 we will have written 14 of the 17 hours and probably will be deep into the specific scene plotting for the finale. This season we're going to be completely relying on our on instincts and judgments -- combined with the feedback of our collaborators here on the show and at the studio and network.
Q: The story has really arrived at a point where the science fiction and fantasy aspects can't really stay in the subtext anymore, is this liberating for you guys as writers or do you wish you could go back to some of the science vs faith ambiguity of the earlier episodes?
Damon Lindelof: It actually IS liberating... but at the same time, the show constantly forces us to evolve. We CAN'T go back to the ambiguity of Season One because our characters have experienced so much since then. Carlton and I often talk about the STAND... how the story starts with something scientific, an epidemic that kills of 99% of the world's population... but slowly and steadiy transforms into a mystical tale where people are having prophetic dreams... and finally, LITERALLY ends with the hand of God coming out of the sky and setting off a nuclear device. Our story has always been about a journey... but just because we're embracing some of the more fantastical aspects of the island, doesn't mean we're completely abandoning the science vs. faith of it all.
Q: Will there still be flashbacks and flash forwards next season?

Cartlon Cuse: Hi Kelly. Yes, there will still be flashbacks and flashforwards but we are not limiting ourselves to those ways of transitioning between stories. We still love doing them and will when appropriate. There are still some cool flashbacks left to tell for our characters.