It’s
very rare to come across an episode of Land of the Lost -- in any season --
that I vehemently dislike and judge almost entirely worthless.
But
“Survival Kit,” the second episode in the third season catalog, certainly fits
the bill.
In
this story, an arrogant Cro-Magnon man, Malak (Richard Kiel), whom the Sleestak
apparently revere as “The Exalted One,” seizes control of the Land
of the Lost’s river and threatens to drown the denizens of the Lost
City unless he is continually brought “tribute.” He also wants a slave to serve him.
The
Marshalls see the Sleestak take their “survival kit,” after Uncle Jack recovers
it from the Marshalls’ raft at the bottom of the lagoon and Uncle Jack realizes
they must retrieve it because it contains medicine that can treat Holly (Kathy
Coleman), who is suffering from a terrible fever.
Accordingly,
Jack (Ron Harper), Will (Wesley Eure) and Chaka (Philip Paley) visit Malak in
his stone home, a structure also never-before-seen in the Land of the Lost, and
attempt to trade goods for their survival kit.
Jack treats Malak’s tooth-ache and tricks him with the “magic” of a
flash light before Malak acquiesces to his demands and also agrees to release
control of the river. Holly is healed,
and Malak is never seen nor spoken of again.
There
is so much wrong with this episode, it is hard to know precisely where to start…
But
first, let’s get to Malak. He is
apparently a long-time denizen of the Land of the Lost, but in two seasons
worth of episodes, there has been no
mention of his presence. One might
think his presence is important, since he -- like the Marshalls -- is a human being. At one point in the episode, Enik reveals
that the Sleestak live in fear of the time when the moons align and they must
give tribute Malak. So he has apparently
appeared before, and regularly at that.
Yet none of the Marshalls (or Chaka) have noticed Eegah hanging
around? Or made note of his impressive
home…which controls the river?
Then,
there’s the matter of the titular survival kit.
It apparently sank to the bottom of the lagoon when the Marshalls
arrived in the Land of the Lost, but as you’ll remember from the opening
credits of the first two seasons, the raft did
not land in the lagoon. It landed on
dry land. Remember the image of the family unconscious
in the raft, as Grumpy’s roar awakens it?
So
had did the raft -- on dry land -- sink?
And
while on the topic of the survival kit, how is it that Jack recovers it from
the lagoon so quickly and easily? Are we
to believe that Lulu is the only critter in Land of the Lost Lagoon?
It’s
hard to know which characters gets the worst of this particular story, but my
vote would go to Enik (Walker Edmiston), the evolved Sleestak from Altrusia’s
distant (but evolved) past. Here, he
misinterprets the Library of Skulls’ wisdom and responds by, essentially,
robbing the Marshalls’ temple for “tribute” items. A man who knows the great sweep of history
and who can control time doors is here thus reduced to stealing crockery to
appease a bully and cave-man.
By
the way, the Skulls in the Library pretty much reveal that Malak is not a god,
because Gods would not demand human things…like crockery. But Enik misses the clue entirely, and acts
as stupidly and irrationally as his Sleestak cohorts.
This
episode also reduces significantly the terror of the Sleestak, as they are held
at the mercy of a giant brute in a fur loin cloth. It’s a low-point not merely for Enik, but the
entire Altrusian race. I can’t believe
that ten or eleven Sleestak from the Lost City couldn’t overwhelm the guy or
his home.
The
cheapness of “Survival Kit” is also shocking.
We never even get one full-exterior shot of Malak’s home, which an is
important oversight considering that last week (“After Shock”) the Marshalls
and the Sleestak were fighting over the only real estate available: the Old
Temple. Only here, suddenly, Malak’s got
a man-cave, literally.
All
of this may read like nitpicking, but the obvious conclusion about “Survival
Kit” is that it is written with absolutely no
regard or respect for Land of the Lost
history. Malak surely would have
been noticed in years past if he was there, and I can’t believe it is an
established Sleestak tradition to kowtow to his demands. And we know -- from our lying eyes -- that Marshall raft never sank in the
lagoon.
And
worst of all, to dramatize this miserable, entirely unworthy story, Land of
the Lost must make a fool of the dignified, regal Enik, and even of his
menacing fellow-denizens in the Lost City, the Sleestak.
When
fans claim that they dislike the series’ third season, “Survival Kit” must be a
prime reason why. There’s absolutely no
attention paid to series continuity, detail, or even characters. It’s a dramatic low-point for a series that
had previously made it a point never to talk down to kids.
Next
week, another remarkably weak episode, “The Orb.”
John correct review of "Survaval Kit". I agree. I feel that in the third season they "dumbed down" the series by as you stated, no regard or respect for Land of the Lost history. This is how a series goes wrong and probably why a fourth season never happened.
ReplyDeleteSGB
You're right. I love the series, have since I first saw it in my early 20s. But, wow... I never finished the third season, and this episode is a not incosiderable part of why.
ReplyDeleteany episode from season 3 counts as Awful-
ReplyDelete