Episode
#13: “Follow that Dinosaur”
Written
by Dick Morgan and directed by Dennis Steinmetz, this episode commences with
just another morning in the Land of the Lost, as the Tyrannosaurus Rex
nicknamed Grumpy attacks the Marshall family cave at High Bluff.
The
Marshalls awaken from their nightly slumber and realize that Grumpy attacks so
frequently because the make-shift curtain at the lip of the cave, designed to
keep out flies, is actually constructed out of ferns that young Holly (Kathy
Coleman) calls "Dinosaur Nip." Rick (Spencer Milligan), Will (Wesley
Eure) and Holly thus begin to clear the High Bluff area of the offending
material, dumping it over the high crevice that leads to Sleestak territory.
But there in the rocks, Will and Holly discover a dummy dressed in knickers and Revolutionary War-era jacket. In a jacket pocket is one half of a diary belonging to Private Peter Koenig, a soldier in General Washington's Revolutionary Army. He writes of his plan to exit the Land of the Lost through a hole in the Sleestak Lost City that leads "straight back" to New England. In fact, he believes that his buddy, Harry Potts, has already used the exit to return home.
Will,
Holly and Rick follow the clues in the journal to the Sleestak Lost City, where
the Sleestaks are currently asleep because it is their dormant season. They
find another piece of the journal and crawl through a cave to a lava pit, only
to realize that Koenig didn't escape, as they believed, but that he died when
the lava pit warmed the city and awoke the monstrous Sleestak.
His
last entry reads: "This is not the way out of this miserable, God
Forsaken land. Go Back! Leave the crawlie caves. The Sleestak awaken when the
devil's cauldron bubbles up..."
The Marshalls heed the warning, and barely escape the reviving Sleestak, but needless to say, are deeply disappointed that they have not found an escaped from this perfectly-balanced pocket universe.
"Follow
That Dinosaur" is a splendid example of Land of the Lost's excellent
story-telling for a number of reasons. First of all, it adds to the
"lore" of the land, and reveals how the Altrusians came to be known
as Sleestak. It was Pvt. Koenig who named them, after an officer in the army he
disliked, one "Joshua Sleestak." The episode also reveals it is
Koenig who wrote the warning on a pillar near the lost city: "Beware of
Sleestak," which was revealed in the first episode. These touches reveal
more background about the Land of the Lost, and also uncover
a great deal of its history. People have been getting "trapped" there
for centuries.
Beyond revealing some great background about the Land of the Lost, "Follow that Dinosaur" is a pretty suspenseful and dark 22-minute adventure for a show that aired on Saturday mornings. The Marshall family (including two children...) happen upon the corpse of their would-be savior, Pvt. Koenig, and the episode doesn't candy-coat his failure to escape this alternate world, or the details of his death.
Furthermore,
the episode is quite tense (and even a little scary...) as the Marshalls'
realize their predicament in the lava cave, and try to flee the city. All
around them, the frozen Sleestak begin to awake, ripping out of their cobwebs,
and beginning that trademark "hissing" sound.
I,
for one, will never forget the sight of these leviathans awakening, like
juggernauts, moving from their sleep pedestals and going after the family.
Tolerable terror, no doubt, for an adult, but as a kid, this kind of thing was
really fear-inducing, and I appreciate Land of the Lost for
aiming high; not being a "kiddie" show in any conventional sense.
There's more to like in the episode too, including a brief message about equality of the sexes (Holly's comment to Will that "Girls can do anything a boy can do,"). I also love how Rick Marshall demonstrates his trust in his children and encourages them to clear the offending ferns by themselves. His message is clear: he has belief in their abilities, and trusts them to be safe and get the job done. It's a positive role model of how parents can treat children, and in the process build self-esteem (rather than infantilizing them...). As a dinosaur buff and long-time fan of the series, I also like the fact that this is the episode where Grumpy crosses the crevice and finally has a smack-down with Big Alice. As a kid weaned on King Kong, The Land That Time Forgot and other such ventures, I was thrilled to see some dinosaur-against-dinosaur action.
But most of all, I love "Follow that Dinosaur" because I enjoy the (old) idea of finding a journal, following written maps, and exploring new and dangerous terrain in a jungle world. Derivative, perhaps of Journey to the Center of the Earth, the story is still very exciting, and its grim conclusion is chill-inducing. "Follow that Dinosaur" reveals new Land of the Lost history, involves its characters in a stirring adventure, features some creepy chills, and ends on a dark, even grim note.
Episode #14: “Stone Soup”
Written by Joyce Perry (who
also wrote "Time Trap" for Star
Trek: The Animated Series) and directed by Bob Lally, this
installment finds the Marshall kids growing increasingly combative as a long
draught -- and electrostatic storms -- continue to wreak havoc in the land of
the lost.
Instead of watching Will and
Holly squabble, Marshall re-directs their attention. He starts making something
called "Stone Soup," a terrible concoction (a stone in hot water...)
that needs new ingredients (like potatoes, carrots, and onions...) to taste edible.
Holly and Will get roped into their Dad's stone soup ruse and start working
together to make a palatable dinner. While collecting ingredients out in the
jungle, they are nearly run over by a dinosaur stampede, and the two Marshall
kids seek shelter in a Pylon. To their horror, they find the matrix crystal
table has been disrupted by the Paku.
In fact, the terrible
draught in the land is being caused by the Pakuni, who "are
territorial by nature," according to Marshall. Being good shepherds
of the land, the Marshalls realize they must negotiate with the Paku to get the
crystals back and fix the pylon. However, the only thing they can negotiate
with is...stone soup.
In the end, as apocalypse
grows near ("it looks
like the end of the world," says Will...), the Marshalls succeed in
their quest and once again balance the forces of nature...causing a much-needed
rain storm. The Marshalls have achieved their goal of restoring the environment
not by strong-arming, not by attacking, but giving the Pakuni something they
want and need (food). Diplomacy, not saber-rattling, saves the day.
Along the way in this
episode, we also earn a few Pakuni words. "Opira" is Cha-Ka's word for "salt"
and "opima" is the word, apparently, for stone soup.
Episode #15: “Elsewhen”
"Elsewhen" by D.C.
Fontana (and directed by Dennis Steinmetz) has always been one of my favorite
episodes of the 1970s kid-vid series, Land
of the Lost. Even today, more than thirty years after it first
aired, I feel it poignant, intelligent and endlessly fascinating.
This story finds the
Marshalls exploring the Lost City of the Sleestak. The family heads to Enik's
cave to open the time doorway there (or to attempt to, anyway...). Rick
Marshall's experimentation at the matrix crystal table seems unsuccessful, or
so it appears. He opens up a misty gateway...but to which world? It's unclear.
Meanwhile, Holly wanders off
by herself. After an encounter with Big Alice, she discovers a deep cavern
leading hundreds of meters below the stone city. She spies a pylon key
ensconced on a cave wall by the entrance, and brings back Will and Rick to
investigate this anomaly. The Marshalls quickly find a "black hole"
in the cave and wonder if it will lead to a time doorway. The hole appears to be bottomless.
While her brother and father
research the black hole further, Holly returns to Enik's cave and is surprised
to encounter a beautiful young woman, Ronnie. Ronnie lovingly tells the young
girl things about herself and her future; things that Ronnie couldn't possibly
know, and Holly is able to use this knowledge to save Will and Rick from the
Sleestak, as well as survive a trip into that black hole (and conquer her fear
of heights).
In the end, Holly comes to
realize that Ronnie is actually an older or "future" version of herself;
that she came through the time doorway that Rick Marshall opened. "Cherish
your father and brother, Holly," Ronnie
warns the young girl in closing. "They won't always be there."
That message - that loved
ones die - is a powerful one that has always resonated with me; since I first
saw the show in 1974-1975. It seems like a particularly strong message for a
kid's show, but that's one of the things I love about Land of the Lost. Say what you want about it being a
"kiddie" program, but it deals with real issues in an intelligent
fashion, like the notion that friends, pets, and family don't...live forever.
I had the good fortune to
discuss "Elsewhen" with its creator, writer D.C. Fontana, back in
2001. "The idea
had been on my mind that it would be nice to know things as children that we do
as adults," Fontana said. "They[the producers] wanted to do a Holly story because
they didn't have too many. And so Holly's adult self came back to give her
younger self a warning, which was like 'If I knew then what I know
now...'"
I remember commenting to Ms.
Fontana that this was all "pretty heavy stuff" for a childrens' show, since it
implied Holly would lose both Will and Rick -- that they would die and
apparently leave her to fend for herself in the Land of the Lost.
Watching
"Elsewhen," all this material comes through so clearly (and not
cheesily), and I must say, I also appreciated the notion of that inexplicable
pylon key showing up. It is never explained why it is there, what it is
connected to, or what the purpose may be. I've always enjoyed the fact that
this mystery is not resolved. We are not always privy in life to answers, after
all, so why should the Marshalls figure it out? "I can't explain the
unexplainable, Holly," Ronnie
wisely tells Holly, and I think that's one of the undercurrents in this episode
as well.
Episode 16: “Hurricane”
Land of the Lost's "Hurricane"
is one of the series' finest (and fastest...) entries. Written by David Gerrold
and Larry Niven, the story finds a parachutist named Beau Jackson falling into
the pocket universe after Will fools with a pylon's matrix table. This
particular pylon is stationed atop a mountain peak, at the highest point in the
land...
This geography is important,
because in the episode's most exquisite image (and indeed, one of the series'
best moments...), Will, Holly, Marshall and Beau gaze across the snow-covered
peaks of the land of the lost (using binoculars) and spy something interesting: themselves! Yep, they see themselves (from the
back!), looking across the land...a view which beautifully sells the concept of
a world that twists around itself, closed off, with no end and no beginning.
In this inventive episode,
the Marshalls must find a way to re-direct the floating time doorway (which is
cruising 50-60 meters in the air...) closer to Mr. Jackson, so he can be returned
home to his life in the far off 1990s...when we have space gliders and space
stations....
Also, there's another
problem. The time doorway opened while Mr. Jackson was on his space glider -
directing an atmospheric re-entry. That means that all the wind and turbulence from
the earth's upper atmosphere is gushing into the Land of the Lost and creating
the mother of all hurricanes. The environmental watchdogs of the closed
universe, the skylons thus put in an encore appearance to help out.
"Hurricane" also
boasts a great line from the Texan space pilot Beau (played with the right
amount of disbelief and humor by Ron Masak...).
Will tells him that one of
the dinosaurs, Spot, is "omnivorous," and Beau replies, "I don't much care where it goes to church..."
Episode 17: “Circle”
The episode finds Will,
Holly and Rick Marshall at a swimming hole by the swamp when Will locates an
underwater cavern that looks a lot like a chamber in the Lost City. The
Marshalls explore it and find the Sleestak...hibernating. Apparently, it's the dormant season for the giant
lizard people.
Then comes one of the
episode's highpoints: the monstrous Sleestak suddenly awake and chase the
Marshalls through the catacombs. If I were a little kid watching this sequence,
I'd run right up to bed and hide under the covers. The best moment in the
dramatic chase occurs when one Sleestak pursues Holly out of the cave and
swamp, and rises up out of the water like the shark in Jaws!
After escaping from the
Sleestak, Will makes it to the Lost City and finds Enik, who is "unable to leave" the Land of the Lost. It turns out there's a problem with
the time door. The "law of conservation of
temporal momentum has been reversed." Nothing can leave the Land of the Lost unless an
object of equal temporal mass leaves.
This imbalance must be
corrected, and it involves the Marshalls. Enik explains that they never really
fully entered Altrusia at all. Simultaneously, they are both stuck on the
rapids and stuck in the land of the lost - in essence straddling two
"realities." Let me just say that the manner in which the writers
resolve this temporal problem is quite clever, and essentially
"re-boots" the whole series.
When "Circle"
ends, our set of Marshalls have escaped from the Land of the Lost, and returned
home. But another set of Marshalls -- those trapped on the rapids -- have
entered. At the time, this was the writer's way of explaining a season of
reruns. A "new" set of Marshalls (without memory of their captivity
in the land...) would have all new adventures. Get it?
Of course, there are some
problems with this conceit. One is: wouldn't Cha-Ka be confused? Suddenly, the
Marshalls wouldn’t remember him or the other Paku and he'd have to start his
friendship with them from scratch. And wouldn't they wonder why he knows their
names, and speaks pidgeon English?
Another problem is the cave
at High Bluff. So far as I can tell, the first set of Marshalls didn't clean up
their cave before evacuating the Land of the Lost. That cave -- from evidence
in earlier episodes -- would have a broom, backpacks, pots and pans, and all
kinds of homemade Gilligan's
Island style gear. So technically, when
Marshall family # 2 arrives at the cave, they should find all of their stuff
already there. But this doesn't happen, for some reason.
Still, this is an intriguing
episode of Land
of the Lost, because it deals
with the concept of a time loop; but more succinctly a notion that is growing
more accepted in quantum mechanics today. Which is simply this: identity is not
linear...only our memory and concept of time (which is unreal) makes it feel that way.
So therefore, the Marshalls
on the rapids are distinct and different entities from the Marshalls in the
land of the lost. This is called the "timeless" theory in quantum
physics, and it's come a long way since 1975, but still, it's amazing that Land of the Lost - a
kid's show from thirty five years ago - plays with the concept.
Next Saturday, we begin Land of the Lost, Season Two, with "Tar Pit."
John I love the reviews of the original Land Of The Lost episodes. The Altrusia Land Of The Lost world that was created by the writers and production designers was truly believable. I was a boy in the ‘70s and I think that the live-action Saturday morning series back then were extremely impressive even by today’s standards. I appreciate that it was made intelligent. Your example of “Follow that Dinosaur” perfectly defines a rich history of the Land of the Lost. "Circle" was fascinately. Moreover, the live-action series Land Of The Lost(1974-1977), Ark II(1976-1977), Space Academy(1977-1978) and Jason Of Star Command(1978-1980) were milestone Saturday morning children dramatic programming.
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