Showing posts with label lost in space. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lost in space. Show all posts

Lost in Space - Season 2, Vol. 1 (1965) Review

Lost in Space - Season 2, Vol. 1 (1965)
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This is one great series that I have watched since I was a kid in the 70's during it's rerun period. The color on these episodes looks great! And the sound as crisp as ever.
I can Hardly wait for season 2 vol. 2 later this month!
This is highly recommended for all Lost in Space fans out there!


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Lost in Space - Season 2, Vol. 2 (1965) Review

Lost in Space - Season 2, Vol. 2 (1965)
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LOST IN SPACE began as a serious attempt at an exciting science fiction TV program. It was starting to degenerate into something quite different by the end of the first season and in the second season, the change was full blown. No longer was it a serious show. Indeed it was quite silly. "Campy" is the most common description.
The change in format resulted in changed characters. Dr. Smith started out as a sinister but intelligent villain but is nothing like that in the second season. In fact, he has become the star of the show. He is venal, selfish and not very smart but he is lots of fun to laugh at. Will is the other star of the show. He was always depicted as exceedingly intelligent but he seems to have a soft spot for Smith and the Robot, the third of the first tier stars. The rest of the group are little more than background characters. Penny has a few prominent roles but Judy might as well not be there. Sometimes she utters less that a dozen words in the course of an episode.
All of these stories are exceedingly silly and the "science" aspect is truly laughable. Pseudo scientific terms abound and are quite meaningless. All science fiction requires the suspension of disbelief but this series requires something more. It requires disbelief to be locked away safely where it has not the slightest possibility of intruding. In spite of this, the series works. It works because it does not take itself seriously. It is all done in fun and no one, even a child, could take any of it seriously. This is true in terms of story, special effects and, especially, aliens. Mostly, it is a vehicle to let Smith be a pain in the backside.
This set includes the following episodes:
The Questing Beast - a spacefaring knight in armor, complete with medieval camp, shows up looking for the questing beast. He takes Smith as a hostage and Will as his page. The basset hound wearing spectacles is a nice touch. The beast looks like a cross between a giant Muppet and Barney the dinosaur. She takes in Penny and gives lessons in elocution, manners and snobbish British etiquette. Will learns to be a cynic for a while and then everyone learns about chivalry, even Smith.
The Toymaker - another intergalactic mail order catalog is found by Will and Smith. Dr. Smith pushes the wrong buttons and becomes part of the catalog. Naturally, Will has to do the same thing. Meanwhile, a "fissure" threatens to crack the planet to pieces. It turns out that Will and Smith have been transported to the realm of a cosmic toymaker who thinks they are toys. When clerks from the store try to sort things out, chaos ensues. It's a normal episode.
Mutiny In Space - Dr. Smith tries an experiment in rain making. In doing so, he destroys the weather station. He is ostracized as a result. As he wanders off in a huff, he finds a damaged spaceship captained by an admiral who acts like a vestige of the Nelsonian navy and dresses like a refugee from Wellington's army, complete with tricorne. Will and Smith get pressed into the service of the admiral who was the victim of a mutiny which saw him cast away in the first place. His treatment of his pressed hands threatens to incite another mutiny. Square rigged space ships? This is pretty screwy even for Lost in Space.
The Space Viking - Dr. Smith is gifted with the gloves and war hammer of the Norse god, Thor. For Smith, these seem like the keys to satisfying his desires of avarice. This is especially true when a Valkyrie shows up to hail him as the most powerful of all. Unfortunately for Smith, and all around him, with power comes responsibilities such as battling frost giants and the like. He also comes between Thor and his wife, Brunhilde and a fight to the death is in order. Smith gets out of this by psychoanalyzing Thor into a babbling idiot. At least that part is realistic.
Rocket to Earth - An itinerant magician happens upon the space family Robinson. The problem is that Dr. Smith is the only one who can see or hear him. This leads everyone, including Smith, to think he is going crazy. It helps that the magician is having fun making Smith go crazy. Eventually, Will and the robot figure out that the alien is real but not a very good magician. He does, however, have a space ship reputedly able to reach earth. That leads Smith to try and get a job as a magician's assistant so that he can get a ride to Earth. The technical term, I think, is "sorcerer's apprentice". Smith is not a very good magician either but it is not his magical skills that make him an attractive employee. It is his "expendability". He probably would have been expended had it not been that Will winds up on the same ship.
The Cave of the Wizards - Smith gets amnesia and that makes his mind receptive to being taken over by an alien force. Another blow to the head restores his memory but not before he utters a wish to have his own ship in the hearing of the alien machine. The result is an imperfect replica of the Jupiter II. Meanwhile, it looks like the Robinsons finally have the real Jupiter II ready for launch but there is a narrow launch window. That window is threatened when the aliens who are controlling Smith set him up as their ruler. This is another one that pushes even more than usual at credibility.
Treasures of the Lost Planet - Smith stumbles into a cave that seems to hold a pirate's treasure trove but is disappointed to find there is little of value. All he finds is a disembodied mechanical head. Meanwhile, Capt. Tucker, a space pirate from a previous episode shows up and Will has to rescue him from some other space pirates. It turns out that the head is the key to a great treasure. Gaining the treasure requires convincing the head that Smith is actually a craven, backbiting and untrustworthy pirate himself. It works.
Revolt of the Androids - Verta, an android from the celestial department store and a previous episode shows up on the Robinson's planet. She is still striving to become more human but her particular line has been discontinued. As a result, she is ordered to be disassembled. Failing to see the justice in the situation she flees and a destroyer android is sent after her. While Verta is being sheltered by the rest of the family, Smith, Will and the robot hook up with the destroyer who is having mechanical difficulties. They are unaware of Verta's presence and try to fix him up. Smith wants to use the destroyer to gain access to the cave of a monster that hoards rubies. Typical Smith avarice. The plan to save Verta involves convincing the destroyer that she is human. She does this by giving him lessons in being a human. It degenerates into a robotic love fest.
The Colonists - With as many visitors as they have, you would think that the Robinsons' marooned spaceship is located at Grand Central Station instead of some out of the way planet. In this episode, the family is trying to set up a series of communications relays when aliens destroy all of the equipment at once time. The source of the destruction is a princess from a race of women warriors and she does not like men. Furthermore, she has decided to claim the planet for colonists from her planet. The men from the Jupiter II are to provide the slave labor to make things ready. The women are to become members of the new society. Unfortunately, Penny seems to like the new regime. Smith, of course, tries to worm his way into the good wishes of the women.
Trip Through the Robot - Smith manages to push the wrong button damaging the electrical system of the ship. Unfortunately, Smith had neglected to recharge the robot for a few weeks and now recharging him could further damage the ship and put everyone in danger. To prevent danger to the Robinsons, the robot wanders off to die alone. Will and Smith follow after him to try to find a solution but are unprepared for what they find. The robot has wandered into a "dangerous area" and collapsed from lack of power. A strange gas causes the prone robot to grow to a huge size and that is how he is found by Will and Smith. They come up with an idea to go into the robot and "reverse the ions" to shrink him back to normal size. The interior of the robot turns out to be a dangerous area. I sure don't remember anything like this from engineering school.
The Phantom Family - While Dr. and Mrs. Robinson are off doing "something else" the family is attacked by an alien. Will happens to be out of camp at the time as well. When he gets back, he finds not his family but duplicates of his family. The alien wants Will to teach the duplicates how to be "real people" in exchange for getting his family back. Teaching the duplicates to be real is difficult except for the case of Dr. Smith. His duplicate is just as defective as the original and causes as much trouble. The duplicates are to be used by the alien to save his race. Since he is depending on Smith, his race is in trouble.
The Mechanical Man - A race of miniature robots that look just like THE robot kidnap Smith and demand that the robot be released from slavery. They want him to serve as their leader. The robot is torn between loyalty to his own kind and loyalty to his "Family". As it turns out, Smith has more of the qualities that the little robots want than the big one does so a little bit of transference is in order. Its kind of fun to see Smith sucking up to the robot but this episode is at the extreme end of the silliness spectrum.
The Astral Traveler - While trying to get out of a storm, Will and Smith duck into a cave for shelter. While there, Will finds a portal to a Scottish castle haunted by the friendly ghost of a laird executed for treason. After a brief tour, the portal reappears and will makes it back to his family. No one believes his story except for Smith who will, of course,...Read more›

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LOST IN SPACE:SEASON 2, VOL 2 - DVD Movie

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Lost in Space - Season 3, Vol. 1 (1965) Review

Lost in Space - Season 3, Vol. 1 (1965)
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Season 3 of Lost in Space had a very ambitious start. You could feel the excitement of the new direction the show tried early in this season. From the exciting and grand new theme to actually going into space more often, Season 3 did start out very well. However, the lazy writing to "comedic villain" of the week started to creep up by the middle of this volume.
Season 3, Volume 1 features some of the best episodes of the third season and a few approach the best or at least the most ambitious of the entire series. We start out with the action packed "Condemned of Space" where we see the Robinson's lift off, dodge a comet, loose the Robot in Space and come across a frozen prison. We move on to "A Visit to a Hostile Planet" where we feature one of the best of the series (though logic is out the window) where our crew returns to Earth of the Past. We take a trip to a comical yet original premise in "Kidnapped in Space" and then the traditional "crash" in Hunter's moon. And even when stuck on a planet for a while, they to attempt new fresh ideas, most notably some bonding between Don and Smith in "Space Primevals." And bad creature effects aside, "Space Creature" gave us one of the deepest Lost in Space episodes to date.
Near the end of this volume, it would seem that the writers milked all they could out of the return to action and adventure and had to settle back to farcical fantasy and the results not very good. We get three episodes in a row that pretty much sign the death certificate of the entire series. "A Day at the Zoo" puts the Robinsons in a traveling Zoo. "Two Weeks in Space" features the Jupiter 2 as a resort for fugitive aliens, complete with a cash register and badminton equipment. And "Castles in Space", while starting strong, falls on its face with a silver Mexican, Don making a mannequin in the likeness of a Mexican woman, and the robot getting drunk. If it weren't for the excellent "The Anti-Matter Man", this volume would have gone out on a horrible note.
Season 3, Volume 1 is presented in broadcast order I believe. This is a welcome change because prior video releases did not have them in this order and we often had illogical order to them being crashed and then back in space. The DVD transfers are good but again, a remaster would have been welcomed.
Season 3 rates way above season 2 in terms of quality but because of hitting rock bottom with some truly dreadful episodes, the show alas was doomed. Volume 1 of Season 3 features the strongest of the entire season.

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Irwin Allen's LOST IN SPACE is classic sci-fi adventure at its best. Take the journey to this inspiring, intergalactic space odyssey with America's favorite space family in the 60's TV classic - LOST IN SPACE!Continue your collection with the first volume of LOST IN SPACE SEASON 3 on DVD today! Watch for LOST IN SPACE SEASON 3 VOLUME 2 coming in June 2005.

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Lost in Space - Season 3, Vol. 2 (1965) Review

Lost in Space - Season 3, Vol. 2 (1965)
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Well, the previous set was good enough so I decided to get this one too. After all, it's got "The Great Vegetable Rebellion".
I'll start with DVD quality:
Menu system: Uninspired but passable; what else is new?
Video: Given that the show is released for a niche audience these days, there are some scratches, blemishes, unrestored trailers, dust marks, film jumps, just like in the previous releases. It's overall acceptable and I've seen far worse for TV shows that were far more popular and beloved that cannot be blamed on the quality of the master analogue tapes. Still, more care into the restoration work would have been nice. I do hate film jumps and, quite frankly, this stuff - like all tv and media - should be preserved as a reflection of society at the time... it might be dated and somewhat sexist, but at least the Robinsons prove their moral superiority (and possibly stupidity) by rescuing Doctor Smith from himself every week... And you know Smith wouldn't be tolerated for one attosecond these days!
Audio: Great in mono, nothing to complain about here. Very passable!
As for the episodes themselves:
Target: Earth -- I loved the pre-credits teaser, even if the alien itself looks fairly disgusting (I wish I could cite a parallel, but I'm not keen on toilet humor...). While "Lost in Space" is typically pedestrian with its plotlines and a lot of its dialogue, I found this one to be surprisingly fun. Even Will (think "the original Wesley Crusher but isn't arrogant" ) is well handled. 7/10
Princess of Space -- a typical outing despite having a decent premise. It's not what I'd call innovative or adventurous, however. 5/10
Time Merchant - WOW!!!! While it still has a few "Lost in Space" logic/dialogue issues, and don't forget the show is made for children in the mid-1960s, this one is actually fairly intelligently written and well handled. (man, I wish more modern sci-fi would be as daring with its use of concepts...) Especially for 1967. Highly enjoyable and makes me grateful the series was allowed to run its final season to the end or else we wouldn't have gotten this one. Best of all is a worthy twist: Had Dr Smith not gone on board, the Robinsons would be in far worse trouble than anybody would have ever thought... The actual revelation alone makes this episode a winner, but I can't really knock it in any way, shape, or form. For LiS it's sublime and for general sci-fi for the time it's very ahead of its time. 10/10
The Promised Planet -- whew boy. Another planet where the Robinsons have to engage shallow antisocial hippies. This time it's not a gaggle of shiftless, selfish, bone-idle losers but kids who just want to dance all day in front of (or behind!) screens lit by a series of rotating colors. Oooh, psychedelic man! The excuse for this, folks? The inhabitants of this planet can't grow old. They need Will and Penny for a series of transfusions they think will allow them to grow old. (it's poorly explained but I got the impression they were going to drain the kids of their blood, which is actually quite frightening as a concept, even if it is somewhat silly. But those 2 minutes can't make up for 48 minutes of utter drivel.) In a certain mindset (try being very drunk or stoned, and forgive me if I don't partake...) it might be passable but this one is a true low point. And if you manage to sit through this one's ending unscathed, feel lucky. And that stupid, uninspired "acid trip" music gets stuck in your head too and I doubt the writer had that in mind... UGH! Never mind the one kid's voice who sounds like a total geek and un-hip. Worse, the one pudgy kid at the end who whines that he just wants to shave (!!!) tops it all as being the worst episode ever. 2/10 (why am I so generous? Because Dr Smith, as usual, is a hoot to watch!! And, of course, the 2 minutes' worth of fear at the end.)
Fugitives in Space -- Surprisingly good, if a bit lax on details. 150 degrees would be a fatal temperature, to say the least... There's some great makeup work however and the idea of Smith's and West's fellow captive that he can regenerate when killed must've been taken from "Doctor Who". Nicely put into context for what it's worth, but it's still "Lost in Space". Smith himself is very diabolical here and you have to wonder why the Robinsons would bother to keep him when he pulls really vile stunts like this... definitely more akin to his early season 1 persona rather than his ultimate cowardly clumpish self. 6/10
Space Bounty -- Why look, CBS's answer to the venerable Harry Mudd (Farnum B) makes a return appearance! While NOBODY tops Harry Mudd (except for possibly a certain Q), Farnum's always fun to watch. If only there was a 4th season, how many more episodes would they contrive him into? Smith forging Judy's name is what causes the hapless Robinson family to get wound up into Smith's shameless scheming this time. 7/10
The Flaming Planet -- as said by a flaming reviewer, this is a mixed bag. There are some nice ideas present: A dying race killed off by their own weaponary, the fantasy element of having somebody else take over (though WHY seems to be left unanswered), and a mutated life form that thinks Dr Smith is its daddy. It's an oddball, but surprisingly enjoyable and the ending, by "Lost in Space" standards, is almost educational by its prompting kids to whip out the dictionaries to learn the big words presented. :-) 7/10
The Great Vegetable Rebellion -- WHY DO PEOPLE HATE THIS STORY?! No wonder Guy "tripod" Williams and June Lockhart were having troubles trying to conceal their giggling, this episode is one I'd actually introduce TO potential fans. It's so novel, yet so off the wall and outrageously funny and knows, unlike many episodes from the previous seasons, how to work within its limitations and not end up looking dated, kitschy, or pastiche. This one is genuine fun. Never mind some double entendres that should have had the CBS execs pulling it from the airwaves (note the scene where Willoughby starts nibbling at leafy bits from Dr Smith (who had just been transmogrified into a gigantic stick of celery). They really get away with a lot and I was unstoppably rolling once they started talking about seeds, good grief!!!) This episode is a total riot to watch, and despite the behind-the-scenes issues it actually feels coherently put together. 10/10 and I'd rate it higher if I could!
Junkyard of Space -- notice the lack of Ms Lockhart and the general absense of Guy Williams. They were written out of this one because of their behind-the-scenes antics in "Vegetable Rebellion". It's got the potential to really be a gritty story, but for some reason it just seems average. 6/10
Ultimately, completists will buy this on the spot. It's a fair release, epsecially for the price. But there is some fun to be had in this 2nd and final set, moreso than in set 1 I'd discovered. It's a 60s kids show, but in some ways it tries to transcend its limitations and be more).

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It’s the third and final season of the far-out tales of TV’s most lovable space crew!Complete your mission with these intergalactic adventures!Join in as the Jupiter 2 crew attempts to finally return home to Earth, with more help from the wily Robot B-9, more antics from master meddler Dr. Zachary Smith, and of course, more "Danger, Will Robinson!" Along with out-of-this-world extras not available anywhere else, this collectable DVD installment of Irwin Allen’s LOST IN SPACE presents the final 9 episodes of America’s favorite space family.

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Lost in Space - The Complete First Season (1965) Review

Lost in Space - The Complete First Season (1965)
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I just wanted to express my appreciation to everyone who has posted a review here. I'm really flattered and happy to see the first season LIS DVD box doing so well. Of course I can't be objective about it, but the first season is definitely my favorite. It was a wonderful experience for me to make the show as a kid and it's a wonderful experience now to watch it with my kids and to see that it still excites and pleases people all over our woe begotten beautiful planet. So, on behalf of my fellow LIS cast members (who are still in touch with each other regularly and are still very much a "family") Thank you all for the kind words. Enjoy!
Bill Mumy

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Season 1 of the 1965 sci-fi favorite.

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