Lost in Space

Reviewed by: LadyChaos

November 24, 1998

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I tried to watch "Lost in Space" with my daughter, but didn't make it even halfway through before I had to turn it off. Daughter didn't protest, really. What a piece of crap. Are there any up and coming directors who actually know how to direct action so that the audience doesn't become completely disoriented?

I'd re-title it: "Lost in the Screen-Space."

Whatever bad things people have to say about guys like Tarantino, at least he knows how to place the camera and plan his shots in such a way that the audience has a clue as to what's happening. Do studio execs have a clue as to why it's a bad idea to mindlessly hire commercials directors? (I don't know if the director of Lost in Space was a commercials director, but he certainly showed all the bad habits of one, just like that moron who directed The Rock.)

And what a putrid script! It was so bad it bordered on camp (which would have been better than what it was). William Hurt has indeed hit rock bottom by giving the nod to doing this one. Gary Oldman did not could not save it, not by a long shot.

The girl who played Penny was interesting. I think she has potential.

This was an example of why high-tech films will always be bad when constructed from the "top" down, that is, starting with all of the various effects, explosions, gadgets, hardware updates, etc., that the studio hopes to see in the movie to tantalize the audience, and then building a story around all the anticipated wizardry. (Several of the effects, btw, were unintentionally campy-looking.)

The film would have been a lot more fun if, instead of taking the Star Trek lead and ultra-modernizing the whole look of the show, they had begun with the assumption that the look of the film would be almost identical to that of the old TV series; without any computer effects to rely upon, the challenge to write a good script would have been all the greater.

 

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