Obejrzyj pierwszy sezon kultowego serialu „Zagubieni”, który odniósł spektakularny sukces, zyskując sobie rzesze oddanych widzów oraz uznanie krytyki na całym świecie. Pełna napięcia fabuła i zaskakujące zwroty akcji sprawią, że nie będziesz w stanie oderwać się od telewizora! Poznaj niezwykłe losy 48 pasażerów pechowego lotu Oceanic 815, których życie odmieniła tragiczna katastrofa. Uwięzieni na tropikalnej wyspie rozbitkowie muszą połączyć siły, aby przetrwać i wrócić do domu, jednak szybko zdają sobie sprawę z tego, że miejsce, w którym się znaleźli, nie jest zupełnie opuszczone, a dziwne zjawiska i odgłosy dochodzące z dżungli świadczą o kryjących się w jej gęstwinie mrocznych tajemnicach. „Zagubieni” to serial inny niż wszystkie. To pasjonująca zagadka, którą każdy widz musi rozwiązać samodzielnie! Ty również spróbuj ją rozwikłać, śledząc 24 zagmatwane i budzące grozę odcinki sezonu pierwszego!
When it aired in 2006-07, Lost's third season was split into two, with a hefty break in between. This did nothing to help the already weirdly disparate direction the show was taking (Kate and Sawyer in zoo cages! Locke eating goop in a mud hut!), but when it finally righted its course halfway through--in particular that whopper of a finale--the drama series had left its irked fan base thrilled once again. This doesn't mean, however, that you should skip through the first half of the season to get there, because quite a few questions find answers: what the Others are up to, the impact of turning that fail-safe key, the identity of the eye-patched man from the hatch's video monitor. One of the series' biggest curiosities from the past--how Locke ended up in that wheelchair in the first place--also gets its satisfying due. (The episode, "The Man from Tallahassee," likely was a big contributor to Terry O'Quinn's surprising--but long-deserved--Emmy win that year.) Unfortunately, you do have to sit through a lot of aforementioned nuisances to get there. Season 3 kicks off with Jack (Matthew Fox), Kate (Evangeline Lilly), and Sawyer (Josh Holloway) held captive by the Others; Sayid (Naveen Andrews), Sun (Yunjin Kim), and Jin (Daniel Dae Kim) on a mission to rescue them; and Locke, Mr. Eko (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje), and Desmond (Henry Ian Cusick) in the aftermath of the electromagnetic pulse that blew up the hatch. Spinning the storylines away from base camp alone wouldn't have felt so disjointed were it not for the new characters simultaneously being introduced. First there's Juliet, a mysterious member of the Others whose loyalty constantly comes into question as the season goes on. Played delicately by Elizabeth Mitchell (Gia, ER, Frequency), Juliet is in one turn a cold-blooded killer, by another turn a sympathetic friend; possibly both at once, possibly neither at all. (She's also a terrific, albeit unwitting, threat to the Kate-Sawyer-Jack love triangle, which plays out more definitively this season.) On the other hand, there's the now-infamous Nikki and Paulo (Kiele Sanchez and Rodrigo Santoro), a tagalong couple who were cleverly woven into the previous seasons' key moments but came to bear the brunt of fans' ire toward the show (Sawyer humourously echoed the sentiments by remarking, "Who the hell are you?"). By the end of the season, at least two major characters die, another is told he/she will die within months, major new threats are unveiled, and--as mentioned before--the two-part season finale restores your faith in the series. --Ellen A. Kim
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