Tuesday, October 25, 2005

What people are saying about David Hontiveros’ PENUMBRA novellas

“After reading (TAKOD), you may want to pack an extra flashlight, holy water, crosses, garlic, amulets, oracions, power objects and tools of protection spells on your next road trip. Oh, and you’ll want to make sure there is nothing wrong with the ignition on your car.” –Karen Kunawicz (Editor-in-Chief / Writer, Mango Jam)

“Dave came up with a harrowingly dark and creepy story (PARMAN) that kept me rooted to my seat, unwilling to do anything else until I finished it. He is one of those rare Filipino writers who I trust to come up with a satisfying and entertaining story each and every time. Can’t wait to read some more, Dave!” --Gerry Alanguilan, Artist/Writer Wasted, Humanis Rex

“A unique blend of action, dark fantasy, and high mythology, PARMAN is a wild ride amidst the forces of light and dark.” –Reg Ting, Editor, True Philippine Ghost Stories

“David Hontiveros delivers a penetrating eerie, well-paced thriller in CRAVING that unravels in a most ambitious and unique climax” --Jim Cliffe, Artist / Filmmaker, Tomorrow’s Memoir

“Even with out proverbial esoteric incantations, David Hontiveros unearths the gothis lyricism that lies hidden within the depths of traditional folklore with his dark, collective novella PENUMBRA—a literary trinity of lower-mythology stories set within the primordial, shadowy regions of the modern society. Be warned. These are not your usual `things that go bump in the night` stories. Remind yourself of proven rituals and prayers, and do not sit beside an open window. Garlic should come in handy, while guava leaves are good for the deep scratch wounds bleeding on your back.” --Paeng Sorillo

Monday, October 24, 2005

Chapter 2 of David Hontiveros'
Craving

The sun was just beginning to set, and Anne was on her way back to the house from her daily walk along the beach. Every other day of the week, Lester accompanied her, but today was Thursday, and Thursday was Clean-Up Day, so she went solo on Thursdays, careful to pack her cell phone in her canvas tote bag, in case of…

Just in case.

Anne sighed. She was so grateful for Lester, for his patience, his understanding. As difficult as this and the past two pregnancies had been for her, Anne knew it was doubly hard for her husband, who had no choice but to simply be there, by her side, unable to carry the whole burden on his shoulders.

Which she knew he would, without a doubt, without a moment’s hesitation, if he only could. But this was her burden, by virtue of gender and biology, this was hers, and she felt blessed to have Lester there, always, strengthening her resolve by his mere presence.

Anne smiled, a small, tender smile, as she walked along the dirt road leading up to the Doctora’s house, walked in the Daisy Duckzilla walk, as Lester had dubbed it. Anne had perfected a shuffling, shambling lope that was slow and awkward, but got her to where she wanted to go, safe, and in one piece.

“And that’s what it’s all about these days, huh, Junior?” she cooed, rubbing her stomach through the thin summer blouse she wore.

Dimly, she heard something.

She stopped, frowning.

There, off in the depths of the waist-high talahib to the side of the dirt road.

What sounded like a cat… yowling…

No. Not a cat. Not yowling.

Wailing. Crying.

“Oh, my God,” Anne whispered.

It’s a baby, she thought. It’s a baby that’s been abandoned, and it’s hungry and thirsty and how am I supposed to reach it? There could be snakes in there, and, oh! Snakes! And that poor baby! Lester!

And she began to dig through her bag, frantically. Then she noticed the crying getting louder, closer to her.

Frozen, she watched as the stalks of grass bent, and now, there was the sound of brittle snapping, and something (something?) crawled through the talahib, towards her, the crying definitely louder now, more insistent.

Anne backed away, slowly, her eyes transfixed, watching the swaying, the bending and snapping, marking the path, the trajectory.

And then the crying stopped. No winding down, no softening. Just a clean, dead stop.

But the grass was still being disturbed, upset by the movement, the resolute crawl of whatever it was.

Anne resumed the Daisy Duckzilla walk, a little faster now, pulling the cell out of her tote bag, the sound of crunching, snapping blades of grass deafening to her.

As she flipped her cell phone open, the giggling began, a high-pitched, lunatic sound.

She didn’t look back, didn’t wish or want to, she just kept walking, walking, her eye on the mango tree, which was yelling distance from the house, whispering the Hail Mary beneath her breath.

And though the giggling continued, an awful, manic noise, the sound of movement through the grass stopped, and Anne imagined blades of grass being pulled apart, eyes watching her, boring into her back.

But she still didn’t look back. She just walked, tote bag in one hand, cell phone in the other (in a skeletal, white-knuckled grip), leaving the giggling behind her, the Hail Mary still on her lips.

“… and blessed is the fruit of your womb, Jesus…”

And the giggling just went on, and on, and on…

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

A preview from David Hontiveros' CRAVING



Chapter 1

Lester awoke, and he could smell it.

The sea.

He smiled, stretching, positive the move was the right thing. And it wasn’t even like it was a permanent move, an uprooting of their lives in Manila. Just a vacation.

A vacation by the sea, to ease the stress and tension of Anne’s pregnancy. On her seventh month now, and both of them wanted so much to be optimistic, but here they were, cautious, careful. (The thrill of it though… enticing. To just up and start buying clothes and bottles and mobiles and rattles. But no. Not yet.)

Lester looked over at Anne, still asleep, her stomach bloated with life, with a Lester, Jr., healthy and whole. He had the almost irresistible urge to kiss the distended skin of her belly, but he reined in the urge, afraid he’d disturb her sleep.

He looked at his wife’s face, and saw peace there. Serenity.

During the day, awake, she would be her usual self, yes, with the occasional mood swings and cravings of the pregnant, but there would be a shadowed wariness in her eyes, as of a dog, slinking past a master it fully expects will kick it, though uncomprehending of its transgression.

They’d tried twice before, and both had been difficult, trying, and ultimately truncated pregnancies.

Anne wasn’t a particularly robust woman, and the infants had seemed ill-fated from the start: the first, without any forethought or consideration; the second, as a miserable consolation for the first one lost.

This one—Lester, Jr.—had been well-considered. Years had passed after that second miscarriage, and there had been many a midnight discussion in bed, in each other’s arms, before the decision, and the conception.

And now, now they were here, in the seaside village Anne’s O.B. Gyne, Doctora Teresa Milagrosa, hailed from, and they were holding their figurative breaths, waiting.

It was, in fact, the Doctora’s idea for Anne to be sequestered here, in her own home, so that her beloved patient could rest and relax and enjoy the process of motherhood. All was set, down to the specific nurses who lived in the village who could be called in when Anne’s time to deliver came.

Lester looked around the guest room, and was surprised to feel a strange level of comfort from his surroundings. It didn’t look like home, certainly not that, but it did look… lived in. He could see traces of himself in the room, traces of Anne, subtle marks—some, near-invisible—of their presence: a framed photograph here, a well-thumbed paperback there.

He looked out the window, the second floor room overlooking the dirt road which passed as the house’s front drive, and the gargantuan mango tree which marked the border of Doctora Milagrosa’s lot, its leaves and branches suggesting the intricate webwork of a vast maze, and for a moment, Lester allowed himself to be lost in its infinite windings, in its hidden depths and secret shadows. For a moment, Lester felt an utter, blessed calm.

Then, suddenly remembering today was a Thursday, Lester realized the Doctora was expected late afternoon tomorrow. (She’d long made it a habit to limit her Friday appointments to before lunch, so she could drive up to spend the weekends away from Manila.)

Lester got out of bed then, slowly, quietly, to start getting ready for the long day ahead, knowing he had to clean up around the house a little, if only to show their host that they hadn’t turned her home into a pigsty.

And Anne, alone in bed, stirred, her hand going to her belly, resting there, as if to shield her unborn child from some unseen, unknown menace.


CRAVING by David Hontiveros
Published by PENUMBRA (a Visprint imprint)
Cover art by Carlo Vergara

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

Que Horror!
By David Hontiveros

So it’s October, and Halloween’s a few weeks away, and I thought, Why not compile a list of the Ten Best Horror Films of the Recent Past?

The thing is, though there’s been a surplus of horror on the silver screen in the past few years, very few of these films are actually any good. Most are tired, formulaic retreads trundled out by Hollywood to provide instant (and ultimately, short-lived and ephemeral) gratification for the MTV generation.

Think about it: how many of the horror films you’ve seen in the past months can you actually still recall with any degree of accuracy, much less awe? How many do you think will be “classics” twenty years from now?

More so than ever it seems, Hollywood has been looking backwards, remaking not just the newest Asian horror film du jour, but horror movies from the heyday of the late 70’s and early 80’s. Evidence of this remake madness can perhaps best be seen in the list below, as two entries are actually remakes themselves; at least not all the recent remakes have been big fat losses.

Now, as any Top Ten list is always, in the end, a subjective thing, bear in mind: I haven’t watched every single horror film ever made, so, it’s entirely possible I may have missed a gem or two. Also, my definition of “horror” is pretty broad, ranging from the extreme grand guignol of splatterpunk, to the delicate atmospherics of quiet horror.

So, without further ado, and working our way backwards in time…

2005

Dark Water: armed with an impressive cast, Walter Salles delivers, doing justice to Hideo Nakata’s original, transcending the idea of horror as genre/marketing category, and diving into the realm of horror as emotion

The Descent: written and directed by Neil Marshall (Dog Soldiers), this is intense and takes no prisoners; six female friends on a cave exploring trip in the Appalachians discover the multiple meanings of the film’s title

The Ring Two: Nakata’s remake of his own Ringu II turns out to be a better film than both the original, and its English-language predecessor, a slick Hollywood horror film with intelligence and depth

Upcoming Film(UF): the remake of The Entity, the English-language remake of Jian Gui (The Eye), and the film adaptation of the savage feminist thriller, Out

2004

Dumplings: quiet horror from Hong Kong way, brought to us by Fruit Chan, this ultimately chilling tale of the price women must pay in our patriarchal society won a number of Asian films awards

Saw: dark and malevolent, with twists and flips running through its blood-soaked frame, this is the Se7en I wish Se7en had been

UF: Saw 2, though it’s directed by Darren Lynn Bousman, while James Wan (director of Saw) is helming Silence

The Village: horribly misunderstood by the critics, reviled by audiences thoroughly misled by the trailer, this is about the horror of the metaphorical beast lurking outside the security of hearth and home, and of the lengths some people will go to curtail its advance

UF: Lady in the Water; think Splash, M. Night Shyamalan style

2003

Janghwa, Hongryeon (A Tale of Two Sisters): the best I’ve seen from Korean horror, here, director Kim Ji-woon deftly mixes the supernatural with the psychological; currently being developed for an English-language remake

UF: the non-horror Dalkomhan insaeng

2002

Cabin Fever: the film with the meanest streak of black humor on the list, directed by David Lynch protégé Eli Roth, this one’s pretty visceral and gets you to shudder and cringe in all the right places

UF: Hostel, The Box, the remake of The Bad Seed, and the comedy Scavenger Hunt

Darkness: Jaume Balaguero’s English-language debut with Anna Paquin and Lena Olin in a haunted house in Spain; the cinematography, editing, and scoring are brilliant

UF: Fragile, with Calista Flockhart as a nurse suddenly faced with children whose bones become brittle for no apparent reason

Honogurai mizu no soko kara (Dark Water): arguably, Nakata’s best to date, this ghostly tale of love and abandonment is, of course, the basis of the first entry on this list

Parting shot: Nakata takes up two slots (and a third is for the remake of one of those films)! Also, half of the list is made up of films that find their roots in the Asian horror film scene.

Parting shot 2: the other 2002 horror release that just got edged off the list is Danny Boyle’s 28 Days Later, which reanimated the zombie film, paving the way for Zack Snyder’s slick remake of Dawn of the Dead, and George Romero’s socially-weighty return to the Land of the Dead

Saturday, October 08, 2005

... and not a drop to drink
(Diving Back into Dark Water)
by David Hontiveros

Hideo Nakata's Ringu opens with an image of the sea, waves moving in its ceaseless, eternal rhythm. His Hitchcockian psychosexual thriller Kaosu (Chaos) has its title card set against a shot of rain. Even his first Hollywood film, The Ring Two, opens with images of water. If opening images are anything to go by, Nakata seems to have a yen for water.

If there is any credence to this notion, then actually having the word in a film's title, and having it as a central image, might just have been inevitable.

Once again adapting material by Koji Suzuki, as he did with Ringu, Nakata opens Honogurai mizu no soko kara (Dark Water) with a credit sequence whose backdrop is filthy water, immediately submerging the audience in the medium used by the tale's supernatural menace to spread its sinister influence.

Dark Water revolves around Yoshimi Matsubara (Hitomi Kuroki), a separated single parent raising a child on her own (as was the scenario in Ringu). This time around, the child is a little girl, Ikuko (Rio Kanno), who finds herself in the middle of a custody battle. And while this domestic crisis is on-going, mother and daughter move into a new apartment, where strange incidents immediately begin to occur, as a ghostly force seems to have found a target in little Ikuko.

What follows is a film with more ambitious aims than Ringu, and one of its triumphs is that Nakata succeeds in hitting the bull's eye dead-on.

Though Yoshimi is just as harried a single mother as Reiko Asakawa was in Ringu, Yoshimi has abandonment issues from her childhood, that she is anxious she not repeat in Ikuko's case. Ultimately, this is a bitter irony, given what Yoshimi is forced to do to resolve the central dilemma of Dark Water. Also, Ikuko is a far more normal child than Ringu's Yoichi, who emanated an unsettling, other-worldly maturity in his demeanor.

Thus, it is clear that Nakata strives to people the story with individuals, to steep the tale in as much reality as possible, before the supernatural slowly seeps into its fabric. Structure-wise, he even does away with the gambit of the creepy opening set piece, as seen in Ringu. In fact, Dark Water could have been played with the tantalizing possibility that all the strangeness was taking place in Yoshimi's head, a ploy perhaps of her scheming husband to gain custody of Ikuko. This isn't Nakata's tack, however. But given that the story could have been told from this angle, pitting the tension of a natural, rational explanation against a supernatural, irrational one, becomes a testament to the authenticity of the scenario; of its reality.

While in Ringu, there was already a strong feminine presence, with Reiko and Sadako (and, to a limited extent, Yamamura), in Dark Water, the masculine presence is nearly non-existent, with only Yoshimi's ex-husband, a helpful lawyer, and a couple of other males playing very minimal roles. As far as Dark Water goes, the feminine is near-ubiquitous, which seems only natural, considering the film's central image of water.

In the Chinese belief system, yin ("shaded") energies are feminine, as opposed to the masculine yang ("sunlit"). Yin is also water and darkness, while yang is fire and light. Thus, yin is the negative part of the equation, while yang is the positive, sadly reinforcing the sexist belief of women being the weaker gender. A proper balance between these two forces is believed to be a prerequisite for the perfect life.

So perhaps it is this imbalance in Yoshimi's life that brings down the misfortune in the first place, but what Nakata ultimately does in Dark Water, consciously or otherwise, is to short-circuit the whole yin/yang balance, proving that a problem can be faced and addressed without the need of a male presence. Yoshimi is able to protect her child, her maternal love giving her the strength to pay the hefty price for Ikuko's safety.

Nakata is also able to present us with one of the hoariest scenarios in horror, the haunted house, and still make the goosebumps rise. And he doesn't even need to rely on outlandish production design, as in Jan De Bont's terrible misfire, The Haunting, to make the setting a character in its own right. All we have here is an apartment building, run-down and gloomy. A cramped, creaky elevator here, a water stain on the ceiling there, a grotty water tank on the rooftop, and presto, instant creepy haunted house.

Another nice touch in Dark Water is that, ultimately, the ghostly presence isn't truly a malignant one: it is only because of its loneliness that it reaches out to the living, unknowing (or perhaps, unmindful) of the harm it is causing in its wake. This isn't some raging spirit who sets off a spiteful curse that claims lives indiscriminately, by pure chance. This is a wraith with very specific needs and desires, paradoxically making it that much more malevolent, even if its motives aren't.

In the process of telling his story, Nakata is able to raise the issue of just how damaging to a child's psyche abandonment can be. Again, ironic given the story's resolution; as in Ringu, the mother is forced to do all she can to protect her child, though safety in Dark Water comes at a far greater cost. Here is an ending that could quite possibly be a far more cruel thorn than
Ringu's cold-blooded climax, due to the element of self-sacrifice present.

It is evident that Nakata intended Dark Water to be a horror movie with substance, and that it is. With the upcoming Dreamworks remake starring Jennifer Connelly and directed by Walter Salles (opening in the US on July 8), Dark Water follows in the footsteps of Ringu and Ju-On in making the global audience more keenly aware of the current rennaissance in Japanese horror cinema.
Seepage (Taking in Dark Water)
by David Hontiveros

Walter Salles' English-language remake of Hideo Nakata's Honogurai mizu no soko kara, Dark Water, is finally upon us, and it turns out to be the most subtle horror film made since Fruit Chan's Dumplings last year.

From a script by Rafael Yglesias (based on the Nakata/Takashige Ichise script, which was, in turn, based on the Koji Suzuki novel), Dark Water is the tale of Dahlia Williams (Oscar winner Jennifer Connelly), a woman in the middle of a messy custody battle with her husband Kyle (Dougray Scott of Ever After and Mission: Impossible II) over their six-year-old, Cecilia (Ariel Gade).

Forced by economics to move into a rundown apartment block in Roosevelt Island just outside of New York City, Dahlia's life quickly becomes harried and strained as the weight from her troubled childhood collides with the unsettling events that begin to take place in her new home.
Connelly (who is amazing here, just as she was in Darren Aronofsky's Requiem For A Dream) submits an astoundingly naturalistic performance, and is merely the tip of an intimidating and effective thespic iceberg, which includes John C. Reilly, Tim Roth, Pete Postlethwaite, and The
Practice's Camryn Manheim. Even young Gade as Ceci is impressive.

And the kudos aren't just for the performers. There is the man behind the camera who must be commended as well.

What Salles has managed to do here is take his talent for presenting the audience with real, textured, and nuanced characters-- as those in his Oscar-recognized Central do Brasil (Central Station)-- and apply that strength to the ghost story template, producing a masterful work with potent emotional impact.

Taking the themes of Nakata's original-- love and abandonment, and how both are not necessarily mutually exclusive-- Salles gives us a horror film that manages to transcend the idea of horror as genre/marketing category, and enter the realm of horror as emotion. Salles' Dark Water isn't about the long-haired ghost and the sudden cheap scare to get the audience to jump in their seats. It's about the slow realization that horror (or at least the seed of it, its potential) is, in a sense, all around us, and that horror can wrench the soul just as much as grief can. Salles isn't interested in goose bumps and the shrill shriek followed by nervous laughter; he explores dread and anxiety, the fears we all face on any given day: will there always be someone who will love us, or will we be ultimately left, alone and alienated?

Now, if you're beginning to think this may not be your idea of a horror film, maybe you should listen to your instincts.

Since my exposure to horror at an early age (one of the pivotal moments, watching Richard Donner's The Omen in the long-gone and sorely missed Rizal Theater at age 8), I have had the distinct privilege of exploring its breadth and depth, in both film and literature, appreciating the shock metal grue of splatterpunk and the delicate atmospherics of quiet horror, and everything else in between; all the ghosts and psychopaths, werewolves and vampires, zombies and cannibals, and other assorted things that go bump in the night, which caper and twitter and twirl madly in the vast spectrum of the realm of horror.

Karen Berger, editor-in-chief and mother of DC's Vertigo line of comic books once said, "Horror is a great backdrop or platform to explore a lot of relevant modern-day issues. Neil [Gaiman] and a lot of the Vertigo writers used horror as a genre device to explore deeper things." She also went on to talk about using horror as a backdrop "... to explore the world in which we live, and the real disturbing aspects about society and humanity, and everyday life."

Horror is meant to be unsettling; it is there to jolt and jostle us out of our complacency, to counter-act the anaesthesized delusion of the Hollywood feel-good movie, where everything is solved by a song-and-dance routine to some golden oldie, and everyone is smiling and happy before the end credit roll. Horror opens our eyes. It imparts truths to us, however harsh or bitter those truths may be, in the hopes that we may have epiphanies, so we may better our selves and our lives.

Hideo Nakata, one of the premier talespinners of horror today, clearly understands this. Apparently, Walter Salles does too.

So, if you've an open mind as to what the word "horror" could mean to you, then get out there and take Dark Water in. And if not, well, there's always the next horror film, complete perhaps, with long-haired ghost, ready to glide into the multiplex sooner than you think.

Tuesday, October 04, 2005

An excerpt from David Hontiveros' NATAKDAN


On the Friday that I see her at the town square, she is with Emma. Sweating, sticky, skeletal Emma, the ravaged crescent of a watermelon ring still in her hand.

She is wearing dark glasses, the kind fashionable women in Hollywood pictures wear.

Of course.

Naturally, she would wear dark glasses on a Friday.

She sees me and smiles, that quick flicker of ruby lips over perfectly white teeth, like the gleaming flash of a blood-soaked butterfly knife-- the balisong of my faraway youth.

My name is Lito. Hers is Lila. Or at least, she claims it is Lila. I doubt that is real name at all.

My six-year-old, Jenna, clamps her little hand about mine, squeezing, her tiny nails, digging into the flesh of my palm, reminding me of a beetle scuttling across my open hand, its legs pricking my skin...

Jenna is staring wide-eyed at Lila. My daughter knows as well.

She is as scared of Lila as she is of me.

That's good.

I turn Lila's smile, reveling in our conspiracy, enjoying the pain of Jenna's nails against my skin.


Read the whole tale in the first issue of STORY PHILIPPINES.
Now available in bookstores and magazine shops.
Php 120. 40-pages. Full-color.
Secrets, Mysteries, and Lies (Discovering Lost)
By David Hontiveros

An eye opens. A pupil contracts. A suited man, scratches on his face, awakens in a bamboo grove.

Thus do the mysteries of Lost begin.

Co-created by J.J. Abrams, creator of Felicity and Alias, Lost is the story of 48 survivors of a crashed airliner, who find themselves stranded on an island of menace and enigma. It’s been glibly described as “Survivor meets The X-Files,” and on the one hand, that’s an acceptable enough description, but on the other hand, is terribly reductionist; Lost is a show that could, potentially, be far more than either. Already, it’s been nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Dramatic Series, and took the second spot on Time’s Ten Best of 2004’s TV selection.

One of the best aspects of Lost is the manner in which it’s structured. Past the two-part Pilot, each episode does two things, and it does them well. First, each episode advances plot; second, it spotlights a particular character (or pair of related characters), showing us through flashbacks, who these people were before the crash, and the set of circumstances that led to their being on the ill-fated flight.

Excellent story structure is then wedded to sharp, astute writing (by a team of writers, many of whom have a Minor in Sociology) and one of the best ensemble casts working on television today. Though the show’s leads could conceivably be identified as Matthew Fox (Party of Five) and Evangeline Lilly (Kingdom Hospital), there are approximately 14 major characters, whose personal stories weave in and out of the bizarre events on the island as the episodes progress.

One of the beauties of Lost is that the mysteries aren’t limited to the island goings-on, but extend to these individual’s pasts, to the secrets of who they were before the crash afforded them a chance to start again, a theme central to episode 3, “Tabula Rasa.” These are people who suddenly find themselves in an extreme situation where society needs to be rebuilt, a situation where sometimes, the old rules just don’t apply, where the old allegiances no longer have any bearing.

This is, then, the Survivor aspect of the show. (And, if it’s one thing I can thank Survivor for—which has long overstayed its welcome—it’s for whatever sort of role it may have played in the development of Lost.) The group dynamics, the in-fighting, the cliques, the friendships, rivalries, and enmities—which is, I imagine, where the Sociology Minors come in handy.

What’s more, these are complex characters, who ultimately belie the façade we readily see: Jack, the responsible doctor and reluctant leader; Kate, the self-assured, capable heroine; Sawyer, the redneck scoundrel anti-hero (Josh Holloway)—they, and the 11 other main characters of Lost, prove, sooner or later, to be far more than what they seem, which is, of course, the way it is in real life. And it’s in that divide, at some point between who we really are, and who others think we are, that we can find the best true self we can be.

This complexity of character is achieved with the solid union of script and performance found in Lost. And though the most familiar face here will probably be that of Dominic Monaghan (Merry, from Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings trilogy) as Charlie, member of the one-hit wonder Driveshaft, the other ensemble players are nonetheless extremely talented and skilled in their craft.

Reportedly, Yoon-jim Kim, who plays Sun, originally auditioned for the part of Kate, and though she wasn’t right for the role, Abrams and company were so impressed by her, that the character of Sun was written into Lost, expressly for her. (Also, the role of Charlie was originally a 40-plus year old has-been rocker, but because of the impression Monaghan left on Abrams, was re-written to better fit the young actor.)

That tangible reality of these characters’ humanities is then off-set most effectively by the weirdness of the island, the X-Files part of the equation. Clearly though, Lost is a far more ambitious undertaking than The X-Files. Whereas The X-Files was episodic in nature, with its string of mythology episodes running through it, Lost is one continuous story, Season One chronicling the first 40 days on the island. Its mysteries are connected to the island, and they steadily build, week in, week out. Ultimately, the pay-off is going to have to be huge, given the high stakes of the set-up. Lost cannot afford to fizzle the way The X-Files did towards its end, not the way it’s building itself up.

Luckily, J.J. Abrams seems to be on a roll. With the modest success of Felicity, and the monster hit of Alias under his belt, he’s gone on to help create a brilliant melding of strangeness and humanity in Lost, a show that is quickly gaining popularity and a loyal following, a show about mystery and reality, and the mercurial point where both converge, a place where we get the chance to see the best (and worst) in ourselves, as individuals, and a collective race.