Instagram has a lot of fun behind the scenes cast photos.....
https://www.instagram.com/p/BiAzTd6AB9q/
https://www.instagram.com/p/BiAzTd6AB9q/
Speaking as someone who lives in a country with mostly sane gun control laws (and who grew up around the military) servicing in the armed forces does not automatically entitle you to privately own and operate a lethal weapon. If you want one, you have to apply for a license just like everyone else.It's odd to me that Mr. Robinson, being military personnel, would need the approval of someone to "print" the gun. I could see him having sole access to the pattern (having the thumb drive) but why would he need permission to "print" it? He's military, I'd think the permission would be presumed.
Maxwell Jenkins is a twelve year-old actor who's given the task of being the emotional heart of the show as well as arguably the viewpoint character; he's at the center of the drama a great deal of the time. And he nails it.
Overall, the creators of the show appear to have known exactly what they wanted to create, worked it out and followed through in every detail, and produced a series that's absolutely successful in every way at achieving their apparent goals. This in itself makes the show a standout. And for my money, it was a show worth doing.
Is there some implied... "romance" between Don West and Judy? Because that feels awkward given then massive age difference between the characters AND the actors, but the flirtation and such is somewhat there.
Didn't expect it to go the direction it did in episode 10. However many points you want to subtract for the preposterousness of the last 90 minutes or so, it was delightful to have no fucking idea what would happen next in one of these fantasy extravaganzas - and more than that, to actually care.
Anybody asking for Smith's motivation, that's it right there. When she boarded the Resolute she stepped off a cliff. (Although if Don can shuttle back and forth for whiskey why can't they just send Smith home?) The Resolute captain might have been playing bad cop when he rather overtly threatened her, but Smith is certainly fighting for her life.After episode 8, I was down with summary execution for Smith.
That's pretty much perfect. I laughed everytime they introduced an echo to the original.It's absolutely nothing like the original Lost in Space and simultaneously exactly like the original Lost in Space.
That's NUTS. Bravo. RIP Debbie.For anyone unfamiliar with the original LiS, even Debbie is an homage:
A highlight to be sure.I must say the scene with Maureen's helium-fueled declaration is one I laughed real hard at and will remember.![]()
I don't think she ever does that. She always has a purpose and it's always about her. But no, there is nothing redeeming about her. I would sooner trust Gary Oldman's Smith.I'm kind of mixed on Dr. Smith, it'd have been nice if she was given some "redeeming" quality or something to latch on to her as a person and not just a sociopath. Fucking with people for the sake of fucking with them.
I get why it went the way it went but I think that they lost something with the Robot in the middle and they were never able to really bring it back. I never would have thought that in a show where all of the relationships and characters were so well done that the crucial story would really be an 11 year old and his Robot. We usually hate that kind of thing, don't we?I knew the robot would flip back to protecting Will, sort of wish it was done less... "randomly" and more from Will doing/saying things to it to convince it to help Will instead of Smith.
Right?Ummm... Why didn't Don's eyes naturally tear up from the irritant being in them?
I am totally convinced that they based that problem on this.
By showing it thinking of itself as part of the family in the "We're the Robinsons" scene along with its childlike understanding and discovery of the world that those scenes were hard to watch and the end didn't fully reset it back. In addition to just the general betrayal to betray innocent and trusting ones like Will and the Robot made it even worse though it didn't cement just how self-serving Smith really is.I get why it went the way it went but I think that they lost something with the Robot in the middle and they were never able to really bring it back. I never would have thought that in a show where all of the relationships and characters were so well done that the crucial story would really be an 11 year old and his Robot. We usually hate that kind of thing, don't we?
I didn't buy that as good science.I dunno. There's that kind of bizarre "science" in it that doesn't make sense, and then there's the dedication to science like the Hawking Radiation indicating a black hole.
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