Directed and written by Harrelson, the film utilized 30 actors, 14 locations across London, and a crew of over 250.
Other papers and books use the concept of being "lost" in London to discuss historical loss or social geography:
Stars Woody Harrelson, Owen Wilson, and Willie Nelson.
The film is the subject of academic analysis, such as the paper "Performative liveness in Lost in London: Cinematic streaming and the digital happening in globalising London" by Michael A. Unger and Keith B. Wagner, which explores its unique "live cinema" format. 2. Academic and Historical "Lost London"
Lost in London is a semi-autobiographical comedy-drama that achieved a major technical feat: it was shot in a and broadcast live into 550 cinemas simultaneously.
Based on a real "crazy night" Harrelson experienced in 2002, the story follows a fictionalized version of himself as he gets into legal trouble after a tabloid scandal, leading to a series of comedic and stressful encounters.
The phrase " Lost in London " most frequently refers to a groundbreaking 2017 film by Woody Harrelson, though it also appears in academic and cultural contexts.