An idiotic choice on the part of the company releasing this version.I see that the series is being reissued on DVD and in widescreen.
https://www.amazon.com/Lost-Space-D...watch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1547069295&sr=1-16
LiS looks better in black and white.
This one? (Can I link Amazon pages?!?)There is a definitive release of LIS on Bluray, and that is absolutely the thing to buy if you want the show on optical disc. The 35 mm negatives were scanned in 1080p HD for this set, the aspect ratio is right, and the list of extra features is amazing. Over eight hours of extras. They even threw in the 1973 cartoon (only one episode was made). You want the box called Lost in Space: The Complete Adventures.
The original DVD run from years ago had a very low-quality picture even for DVD, and apparently was made from the same SD master that was used for VHS tape releases. Avoid this old edition. This new widescreen DVD run might be mastered from the newer, HQ source material created for the Blu-ray, but even so it won't be as good as the Bluray set, which is without question the best release LIS will ever get.
This one? (Can I link Amazon pages?!?)
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Lost-Space-Complete-Adventures-Region/dp/B011QLB4B0
Is this the show that had the War with the Carrots and Celery?
it felt a little too cheap-goofy and that feels worse when people say the first few episodes were the ones that were kind of/trying to be serious.
Gerrold was always angry. At everything. All the time. It almost became funny as the decades wore on.“Star Trek writer David Gerrold, in his book "The Trouble With Tribbles," scolded Lost in Space as being, "A thoroughly offensive show. It has probably done more to damage the advance of science fiction as a serious literary movement than all of the big bug movies ever made." Gerrold's comments echoed the party line of many readers who took their science fiction seriously.”
https://lostinspace.fandom.com/wiki/The_History_of_Lost_In_Space
Oh, I agree. Even now, he is still bitter about so many, many things.Gerrold was always angry. At everything. All the time. It almost became funny as the decades wore on.
I see that the series is being reissued on DVD and in widescreen.
https://www.amazon.com/Lost-Space-D...watch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1547069295&sr=1-16
Young people and people who prefer to see shows fill their 16:9 TVs will like this version.
But that's stupid. That's like saying people will only like the Mona Lisa if it's chopped up to have the same aspect ratio as Guernica. Different cinematic works are designed to be shown in different aspect ratios, and there is no sane reason to force them into ones they weren't meant to be shown in. This is even worse than the colorization fad of the '80s-'90s, because at least that just put an overlay of color on the original image without removing portions of it or warping its aspect ratio. You could just turn down the color on your TV to a minimum and it would look like it was originally meant to look, with the proper composition. This is a far more drastic corruption of the image.
I mean, good grief, the whole reason widescreen TVs were introduced in the first damn place was so that people could watch widescreen movies as they were intended to look instead of having to get the sides of the image chopped off to fit a 4:3 ratio. So it's downright insane and self-defeating to go right back to chopping off large pieces of the original image to make them fit a widescreen ratio. It's missing the whole point of the format.
Love? No.
Yeah... loved it as a kid, but can't even bear to watch an episode now. But lordy, I still love the ship! And I stand by my opinion that Marta Kristin was one of the most beautiful women of the time. A friend had dinner with her at a con last year, in fact, and she's still a knockout.
Yes, I first saw it as a young boy only in reruns on a local UHF TV station.
I have always enjoyed the original Lost In Space(1965-1968) for the entertainment that it was.
- Season one is both black & white and the majority of the episodes are great.
- Season two is only for the extreme fans all others should avoid.
- Season three had episodes that I enjoyed as much as season one, e.g. , "Space Creature" featuring the only episode with a tour of all three decks of the Jupiter 2.
Is this the show that had the War with the Carrots and Celery?
“Star Trek writer David Gerrold, in his book "The Trouble With Tribbles," scolded Lost in Space as being, "A thoroughly offensive show. It has probably done more to damage the advance of science fiction as a serious literary movement than all of the big bug movies ever made." Gerrold's comments echoed the party line of many readers who took their science fiction seriously.”
https://lostinspace.fandom.com/wiki/The_History_of_Lost_In_Space
But the show existed back when many other shows existed, some of which were more mature ("Star Trek").
Though he also wrote the Tribble episode, a throwback to comedy relief or doing homage to Batman's camp, which was all the rage at the time and is seen in many "best of" lists. Makes me wonder if he wrote it out of spite.
One weird flaw in the early episodes I thought was pretty noticeable was Dr. Smith would try to demand and pressure the others to return to Earth but the premise was the characters didn't even know where they were and thus how to return to Earth, they couldn't if they wanted to, I guess Smith was just being irrational but it felt more like inconsistency.
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