I liked Lost In Space all the way through. It was a fun psychedelic romp. Comparing it to Star Trek is like comparing the DC Comics of the 60s to the Marvel Comics of the 60s-- they're completely different animals with entirely different intentions, but both can be enjoyed by people who like variety in their entertainment.
LIS is really two shows, though. The first five episodes, which were all derived from that unaired pilot, told the story of a pioneering family in space; if TOS was a wagon train to the stars, LIS was homesteaders out in the galaxy. The rest of the first season followed pretty much in that vein. The second and third season headed into the Alice-In-Wonderland territory that the show is remembered for. While I enjoyed both approaches, I really would have liked it if the themes and ambiance of those first few episodes had been maintained.
Succinctly put. There's a lot of cool stuff and ideas in Allen's creations, but then the execution gets sloppy.Irwin Allen was an instigator of many fun series in concept, but his execution was often something that belonged in a low grade sci-fi serial.
Even as a little kid I thought LIS was stupid.
Yup, the family in space thing is fundementally stupid compared to the extreme investment and importance of the mission. A ragtag crew picked for their expertise, yes, whiny ass kids and arguing parents in space, yawn.
And yet, everybody praises New Galactica, when at it's core, THIS is what it was about.
Lost in Space was a fun show. I have to admit, I don't understand this trend of bashing everything. Even the writers and producers of the shows they make are embarrased by them. Aren't we supposed to be, you know, FANS of this stuff?
Of course sci-fi needn't always be serious. Futurama and Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy and Wall-E as well as Star Wars come immediately to mind. Also Galaxy Quest. It's a matter of intent.
Of course I'm enjoying the show on some level, but nowhere is it written that I can't comment on missed opportunities. Or if the humour presented does it in a clever way or unintentionally.
Can't wait for Warped9's scientific analysis of "Bewitched."Lost in Space is awesome. its simply meant to be a fun show with no deep meaning or message.
As a child, sitting behind my mother on a motorcycle, zipping along at a hundred KPH, a few feet above the ground. No safety harness.John Robinson piggybacking his daughter Penny and her pet alien chimp on his jet rocket pack and yet they're not wearing any safety harness while zipping along at least dozens of feet off the ground!
Yup, the family in space thing is fundementally stupid compared to the extreme investment and importance of the mission. A ragtag crew picked for their expertise, yes, whiny ass kids and arguing parents in space, yawn.
And yet, everybody praises New Galactica, when at it's core, THIS is what it was about.
Lost in Space was a fun show. I have to admit, I don't understand this trend of bashing everything. Even the writers and producers of the shows they make are embarrased by them. Aren't we supposed to be, you know, FANS of this stuff?
We are. But doesn't mean we have to like everything that is under the label. I appreciate LiS, but outside the first season, the show falls apart.
Not trying to start a flame fight here, RandyS, but for a guy decrying "bashing", you sure take a shot at NuBSG whenever you can.
Revisited the early seasons of this quite some time ago. Loved it and it's still genuinely entertaining. No complaints. It still works exactly as intended. After the first season or two, though, it becomes basically pure silliness.Can't wait for Warped9's scientific analysis of "Bewitched."
i try not to think of the Great Vegetable Rebellion.And yet, everybody praises New Galactica, when at it's core, THIS is what it was about.
Lost in Space was a fun show. I have to admit, I don't understand this trend of bashing everything. Even the writers and producers of the shows they make are embarrased by them. Aren't we supposed to be, you know, FANS of this stuff?
We are. But doesn't mean we have to like everything that is under the label. I appreciate LiS, but outside the first season, the show falls apart.
Not trying to start a flame fight here, RandyS, but for a guy decrying "bashing", you sure take a shot at NuBSG whenever you can.
Carrot Man, that episode make Spock's Brain look like fine art.
This is a pretty good take on a new version of LIS. My only question (and it's not a criticism) is why would a government choose a family for any such initial starfaring mission rather than a group of highly trained specialists? Thats a big question for me in regard to the concept. Your idea somewhat gets around the question in a more reasonable manner.I always saw the Robinson's mission as more of a pathfinder than actual colonization.
It would work something like this: small ship with a small crew is sent to Alpha Centauri. They live there for a year or two to ascertain whether or not the planet is suitable for a major colonization effort.
If it is not, then they radio back a report, pack up everything, except a small automated outpost station, and fly home. Mission completed.
If it is, they send a report back to that effect, along with suggested landing zones and so forth. Alpha Control will then launch the main colonization effort, Huge ships dwarfing the Jupiter II carrying a thousand colonists or more each, would set out to do the actual colonizing. Perhaps as many as 20 per year. In the meantime the Robinsons are preparing for the incoming colonists.
If it were re-done today you'd have to drop the overcrowding element, as the parts of the world that are most overcrowded, South America and Asia, would not benefit from what is basically an American effort. Although I suppose you could make it an international effort instead, but that would undermine the sabotage angle forcing us to fall back on the navigational effor of the original pilot to get the ship lost in the first place.
As for Smith, geez what do you do about Smith?
First, in regards to the acting, that's simply the extent of Jonathan Harris's range as an actor. If you've ever seen him in other shows he does the exact same thing. More than five years before LiS he's was playing Smith as a Spanish Don opposite Guy Williams in Zorro. Comic Opera Villain was just what he did and pretty much all that he ever did. He just ramps it up or down as needed.
Second, if the Robinson's aren't going to just space him, he has to have an indispensible role in the expedition. The role that immediately suggests itself is, of course, doctor. Now the entire party would have been thoroughly trained in first aid and basic medicine, but if someone were to pick up some alien sickness, say a space version of maleria for example, having a trained physician would be invaluable. Thus the Robinson's would be compelled to keep him with them no matter what they might want to do when he fracks up.
Speaking of which, the frack ups would be more the result of his inexperience and the fact that he's untrained for this. The Robinsons would have had several years of training for this mission, training that Smith wouldn't have. He's also not really tempermentally suited for it, but he's all they have so they'll have to make the best of it.
On the Robinsons, I'd definitely play with their ages. John and Maureen would still be in their early forties. But Judy would no longer be their daughter, she would now be John's kid sister in her late twenties/early thirties, John raised her after their parents were killed in a car crash when she was still fairly young.
Penny and Will are the only Robinson children although both are now young adults with Penny about 23 and Will 20. All are college graduates with degrees in the sciences, Will having been a child prodigy got his BS at 16.
Don I'd leave pretty much as he was,the Air Force pilot/astronaut with a degree in geology, but dial back the hot temper a bit. He very clearly has a romance with Judy.
First, in regards to the acting, that's simply the extent of Jonathan Harris's range as an actor. If you've ever seen him in other shows he does the exact same thing. More than five years before LiS he was playing Smith as a Spanish Don opposite Guy Williams in Zorro. Comic Opera Villain was just what he did and pretty much all that he ever did. He just ramps it up or down as needed.
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