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Netflix's Lost in Space Season 3

I think that was a deliberate choice by the writers limiting what the Robot could or couldn't say.

That's the point -- that it's too obviously a choice by the writers, since there's no good reason for it to be the case in-story. Everything in a story is the writers' choice, but you don't want the writer's hand to be too obviously puppeteering things, so ideally everything should have a logical in-story reason. This doesn't.

I don't know why they chose to do that considering Robot on the old show was way more talkative and could have actual conversations.

No doubt they wanted this Robot to feel more alien and mysterious. They just went about it in an inconsistent way.


It bugged me a little too but the show was good so I gave them a pass on that detail.

Of course, so did I, but that doesn't mean we can't talk about those details afterward. You're allowed to critique something you loved.


Also I am pretty sure they mention the year as being 2044 in the final episode

The video of the robot scanning Kelly was time-stamped 12/21/2044, and they said it was about five and a half years in their past. Since the Christmas Star hit 2-3 years before the series began, and the events of the series spanned a couple of years in all, that seemed to be saying that the video was just days before the Christmas Star, that SAR sent Scarecrow on what I'd guess was a kamikaze mission to cause an extinction-level impact on Earth immediately after discovering Kelly. But Kelly had been lost while Judy was an infant, so that would be maybe about 15 years before, give or take. So I was a bit off, it's the late 2020s, but that's still way too close to the present for that kind of technology.


Do you think they will return to Earth since they are building a new Resolute?

They did say that the new ship (I forget its name) would begin ferrying colonists from Earth again, including "Smith"'s sister Jessica. I don't think the Robinsons have any interest in returning with it, though, at least not to stay. Maureen might go with the ship because it's her baby, and the family might accompany her, but then they'd come back to Alpha Centauri.
 
In the mid-2020s? the fact that the Robot was only called "the Robot," or just "Robot" like a personal name. (Well, the original Robot was technically called B-9, but never onscreen, I think.)

The Robot was called Model B9 in the second season episode "The Ghost Planet".
 
The Robot was called Model B9 in the second season episode "The Ghost Planet".

Ah, okay. Thanks.


Anyway, I liked season 3 enough that I just started rewatching it. I figure I've seen the first two seasons 3 and 2 times, respectively, so I should see this one at least twice. And it's nice to catch bits of foreshadowing and context that are only clear with later knowledge.
 
Also to add to inconsistencies in the original the B9 robot learnt galactic law. It's actually stated by the Robot in one season 2 episode yet if he came from Earth, which he did where the hell did he learn that because to learn that it means Earth has contact with alien society.
 
Also to add to inconsistencies in the original the B9 robot learnt galactic law. It's actually stated by the Robot in one season 2 episode yet if he came from Earth, which he did where the hell did he learn that because to learn that it means Earth has contact with alien society.

Well, most of the original LiS was total nonsense, especially season 2, but I suppose it's possible he could've learned it from one of the many aliens the Robinsons encountered in the show before that episode.
 
Well, most of the original LiS was total nonsense, especially season 2, but I suppose it's possible he could've learned it from one of the many aliens the Robinsons encountered in the show before that episode.

I suppose.. I'll have to find the actual episode but he mentions being top of his class.
 
Most of 60s LIS was nonsense except season 1 that was actually not that bad.

Yes. Season 1 was pretty good to start out with, taking itself seriously as a family-friendly drama about survival in space. It took a more comedic turn as it went on, but it was still worlds apart from the inane campiness of season 2. Season 3 started out trying to take things a bit more seriously again, but eventually degenerated to inanity once again.

Part of the reason I like the remake so much is that it finally succeeded in being the family survival drama that the original was initially intended to be, and did it very well. I particularly loved how much it was about creative problem-solving.


Not that the show doesn't have some logic holes and errors. I realized last night that season 3 basically ignored the fact that the Jupiters don't have artificial gravity, except for the J2 when it has the alien drive aboard. Presumably the ring of Jupiters in the first four episodes was meant to be spinning for gravity, but the FX shots didn't seem to show it spinning, and the Fortuna was able to dock along its rim, which would have been totally unstable if it had been spinning. And at the end of 3x4, we see people standing normally inside Jupiters that have separated from the ring and shouldn't have any gravity, rotational or otherwise. It's disappointing, since season 1 handled the gravity issue pretty well. The opening scene of the series, with the family dealing cards in weightlessness, was very well-handled. (But then, I think the Resolute in season 2 had the same problem, since it still had onboard gravity even though its alien drive had been taken.)

I also had a problem with the asteroid field around the planet in 3x3. The idea in the script was that the collisions were creating enough meteoroid fragments to create a navigational hazard in orbit, which is a reasonable notion, but the way the FX shots rendered it as an impossibly dense field of huge rocks was ridiculous. Realistically, it would've more like trying to run through a battlefield in the middle of a firefight, hoping you didn't get hit by a bullet you wouldn't see coming in time. I'm sick of how so many digital FX artists today fill every shot with so much damn clutter. There's just too much stuff in the shots. It's particularly annoying in space shots. Space is supposed to be mostly empty. That is literally why it's called "space."
 
... it's nice to see an actual family friendly show that doesn't feel like watching a children's show.

This.

Finished S3 yesterday. Thoroughly enjoyed it. What the show set out to do, I thought it did very, very well. It was solid, consistent and - most importantly - fun. Sad to see it go, but I had the good feels at the end so if that's all she wrote, all good.
 
Sad to see it go, but I had the good feels at the end so if that's all she wrote, all good.

It told a complete story that worked well, but I do wish it had been longer. I suspect the third season being cut from 10 to 8 episodes might have led to certain things being glossed over, like a clearer explanation of how Smith survived last season's cliffhanger, or more screen time for Grant Kelly or other supporting characters.

The ironic thing is that, while the remake has the same number of seasons as the original, its total number of episodes is less than either season 1 (29 episodes) or season 2 (30 episodes) of the original. (Season 3 was 24 episodes.) If you count the unaired pilot "No Place to Hide," the original series had exactly 3 times as many episodes as the remake. Although a much smaller percentage of them were worthwhile.
 
The timestamp was just "44", but I thought in dialogue they said it was 2144. I might've misheard, though.

You didn't mishear, but you missed context. It's in episode 3x6 -- John and Maureen both read the video's time stamp aloud as "12/21/44," and in the following scene, Maureen clarifies it was "December 21st, 2044, just a few days before the Christmas Star."
 
You didn't mishear, but you missed context. It's in episode 3x6 -- John and Maureen both read the video's time stamp aloud as "12/21/44," and in the following scene, Maureen clarifies it was "December 21st, 2044, just a few days before the Christmas Star."
D'oh. Thanks for letting me know!
 
I have a DVD of season 1 so I'm starting a rewatch of that then season 2 and 3 on Netflix. I am hoping we get a disk of the other two seasons and if it's bluray I'll snag that as I have a bluray player now.

My favourite part of season 2 was a silly scene with Judy racing a chariot through the corridors of the Resolute.
 
I wonder if Nextflix are regretting cancelling it now given how well Season 3 has done for them?
 
My favourite part of season 2 was a silly scene with Judy racing a chariot through the corridors of the Resolute.

I have a hard time finding scenes of reckless driving entertaining, because I can't suspend disbelief about the danger that the drivers are subjecting pedestrians and other drivers to. I have the same issue with the POV car chase scene in episode 3 of Hawkeye, and the indoor buggy chase on the starbase in Lower Decks 2x5. (It's a really common trope, I guess.)
 
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