The original “Lost In Space” was a totally terrible show. A steaming pile of you-know-what.
So don’t you dare suggest that Netflix is committing TV sacrilege by updating the 1965-68 series with a 10-episode reboot.
The word “cheesy” could have been invented to describe the original, which ran for three seasons and 83 episodes. A product of its time, it began with a rather dark premise and quickly devolved into something campy and cornball.
It began as a show about an evil double agent, Dr. Smith (Jonathan Harris), sabotaging the Robinson family’s pioneering mission to another world. It quickly morphed into a show about a sniveling coward/buffoon, Dr. Smith; young Will Robinson (Billy Mumy— who makes a cameo appearance in the reboot); a goofy robot that spouted catch phrases like “Danger, Will Robinson!” and “That does not compute”; and a string of rubber-suited monsters-of-the-week.
If you have fond memories of “Lost in Space,” you clearly haven’t watched it since you were a child. It was, essentially, a kids’ show. And it was stupid.
Yes, I watched it when I was a child. But, like most kids, I watched a lot of bad TV. And even then, I knew
“Lost In Space” was no “Star Trek.”
So simply telling you that the Netflix version of “Lost in Space” — all episodes start streaming on Friday — is better than the original would be damning it with the faintest of praise.
A lot of reviews are describing the reimagined “Lost in Space” as “darker” than the original. To which I can only say — duh. Of course it is. The original was laughable and ludicrous. It’s not exactly a surprise that the reboot would be darker.