Blame Patrick Stewart. He’s the one who insisted on the Argo in Nemesis. Since then there seems to be cars everywhere
I’d say, I prefer it over the Matt Le Blanc movie, and it’s my definite version of the Lost in Space franchise for now.
Finished my rewatch. It's interesting how the climactic episode comes down to Will, the Robot, and Dr. Smith going off on the crucial mission while the rest of the Robinsons and Don sit and wait. It's like a sidelong homage to what happened with the original series' format, with those three characters coming to dominate everything while the rest of the cast was shoved to the sidelines.
The movie is a low bar to clear. I don't think it has many admirers. But yes, this is definitely the one version of LiS (aside from the Innovation Comics sequel series, maybe) that actually worked, and easily surpasses the original and the movie.
Also, Matt LeBlanc is the actor you think of in a film that also had William Hurt, Mimi Rogers, Heather Graham, and Gary Oldman? That's unexpected. (Although for me, Lacey Chabert was the real standout.)
It is a bit surprising how much the new series had in common with the movie, though. There's John and Maureen being estranged at the start; Penny being a charismatic wisecracker; and the migration to space being motivated by environmental cataclysm on Earth. It also had some ideas in common with the failed 2004 John Woo pilot, like John Robinson being a military hero instead of a professor, and the Jupiter 2 being one of numerous landing craft ejected from a larger mothership when it came under attack.
I still find it odd how much the new series rearranged the characters' professions compared to the original. Basically they turned Judy into Maureen (doctor), Maureen into John (engineer), John into Don (military man), and Don into a semi-Dr. Smith (morally gray con artist).
Having said that I think the movie gets maligned too much, I still have a soft spot for the movie version of LIS...
Finished the series tonight. I really enjoyed watching that, and I'm glad I rewatched Season's 1 and 2 before I jumped into Season 3. I really liked these characters, and I think Penny was my favorite character. I'm glad she had a role in the conclusion, even though I was a little surprised Judy seemed a little sidelined here. Maybe her big moment was a few episodes back with her and Maureen in the Jupiter after the crash. That was a great episode too.
I hope they do find a way to bring the series back, maybe as a miniseries or some movies. I kinda want to spend more time with these people, as they were really fun characters.
Judy had plenty of hero moments through the series, like running through miles of monster-infested desert to save John in season 2, and solo-climbing a two-mile-high cliff to find Grant Kelly. And I loved how no-nonsense she was -- in situations where you'd expect a big debate, she's just "okay, let's do this" and she's off.
I was just talking about the finale.
Not that there's anything wrong with that.![]()
Wow that last episode was... not very good. One good deed flips the robots from "evil" to "good" like the evil Krusty doll in Simpsons Halloween Treehouse. A dumb sacrifice/download into new body thing to trick the audience into feeling something.
It's not often a show utterly shits the bed in the finale episode (lookatchuuu, Enterprise), but yeah. Oh well.
That does make sense. It had a similar ultra-rushed feel to the Stargate Atlantis finale as well.
Nonsense! He added Hotness.I think the only thing I haven't liked was Penny's love triangle, especially with this Liam character who adds nothing to the show.
Don Cornelius(!) West and Debbie are hysterical.
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