The
third episode of Land of the Lost’s final season, titled “The Orb,” is only a
slight improvement over the disastrous second installment, “Survival Kit.”
Here,
Enik (Walker Edmiston) is transformed suddenly into a clone of Mr. Spock, adopting
the term “logical” no less than seven
times in a twenty-two minute span. I
counted, because the use of the term became so egregious after the first couple
of uses.
Of
course, “logic” is Spock’s buzzword, derived from his planet’s obsession with
logical behavior. Why should Enik -- the
resident alien of Land of the Lost -- suddenly adopt this obsession with “logical”
behavior? In all of Land of the Lost history,
in every Enik episode -- if you added them up -- he wouldn’t have used the word
logical seven times. It’s insulting here,
and even as a kid I knew that Star Trek was being ripped-off. I felt cheated, but also baffled. Enik was a well-established, well-defined character
by the third-season. Why was he being
re-written as a Spock clone?
In
“The Orb,” the Sleestak spontaneously decide to eradicate all humans in
Altrusia and believe that the key to doing so involves a mystical Sleestak orb
that will plunge the world into total, permanent darkness. Unfortunately, this plan -- making it
permanently night -- was also at the heart of “Blackout,” the second-to-last
episode of Land of the Lost’s second season. There, the Sleestak used a secret second
clock pylon to freeze time.
So…in
a relatively short span, the Sleestak have forgotten they already attempted
this plan...and it didn’t work the first time.
Permanent midnight in Altrusia means, as that episode explained, that
the moths that fertilize Sleestak will die in the cold. Permanent night is thus
a death sentence not for humans, but for the Sleestak race.
Alas,
there’s no sense of continuity between this installment, and “Blackout.”
In
hopes of acquiring the orb, the Sleestak capture Enik and Chaka (Philip Paley)
in the hopes that the Marshalls will come for them and retrieve the orb from
the God in the pit. Fortunately, Will
(Wesley Eure) happens into a pylon that no one has ever seen before, and it
unexpectedly grants him invisibility.
Invisibility,
it turns out, is quite handy in stealing the orb and releasing Chaka and
Sleestak.
Long
story short: the writing here is just unbelievably bad. Forget Enik’s aping of Mr. Spock. Forget the fact that the Sleestak strategy
was just attempted…five episodes ago in terms of chronology.
But
isn’t it awfully convenient that Will should develop the power of invisibility
just when that one, specific power can solve the crisis of the day? In a sense, all of dramatic writing is about fashioning
manufactured crises, but a problem arises when there is so much contrivance
involved. That’s the case with “The Orb.” The contrivances stack-up.
On
top of all these concerns, “The Orb” is the second episode in row in which
Holly (Kathy Coleman) has virtually nothing of consequence to do. There is a case that could be made that she
is the true main character of Land of the Lost, but the third
season so far simply dismisses her as a little girl, and lets Will and Jack do
the heavy lifting.
And
in terms of Jack (Ron Harper), one can see why he proves necessary to the
series in this episode. He brings a long
a new influx of important equipment from matches and antibiotics to flare guns
and flashlights. All those items,
incidentally, make it much easier to solve the problem of the week. That established, the moments with flares
lighting a dark Altrusia are memorably wrought.
I’m
a long-time admirer of Land of the Lost, and not one to
dismiss the third season out of hand. But between “Survival Kit” and “The Orb” one
can detect that the series is on a fatal downward slide.
Next Week: "Repairman."
John I think that season three of LOTL including "The Orb" episode define why there was not a season four. It has to be that the writers got 'lazy'. They just wanted to recycle previous episodes and just steal the use of 'logic' from the extremely popular reruns of Star Trek in '76. The worst thing that can happen is when a series gets another season and the writers just do not use the prior seasons to build the history on. As a LOTL fan since I was a boy in the '70s I have to include this season because there were some good moments in some episodes and, of course, the casting of Ron Harper. John, I am sure if you were a writer on a series like LOTL you would not waste any scripts with inferior content.
ReplyDeleteJohn, on another subject, I saw on another blog[Space:1970] that ARK II season two was proposed to CBS as an animated series.[Wow!] I would have watched it in '77-'78.
SGB