In
“Islands in the Sky,” Jupiter 2 approaches a habitable planet, and since the
Robinsons are “settlers,” not “explorers,” John (Guy Williams) decides that the
ship must set down…and his family must attempt to start a life. He dons a space suit and para-jets to seek a
good landing site.
Dr.
Smith (Jonathan Harris) sabotages the para-jets, however, and John plummets
into the atmosphere…and is believed dead.
The
Jupiter makes a rocky landing on the inhospitable planet, and Maureen and the
others immediately set about rescuing John.
They take the chariot vehicle to his crash-site, but don’t find him at
first, only a weird space monkey.
Later,
John is found, and the family is reunited.
“Islands
in the Sky” makes one fact incontrovertible: Dr. Smith has attempted the murder
of John Robinson. He has sabotaged his
para-jets, specifically. In later
episodes, Smith is treated as a nuisance and sometimes as comic relief, but in
this early iteration he is a bad, bad man.
“Islands
in the Sky” is the middle part of a larger story, and as such is a bit
undistinguished in terms of narrative. Still, there are a couple big moments that are worth noting.
The episode’s first big
moment, in my book, is the reveal of the chariot. This may well be my favorite piece of Lost in
Space technology. The chariot is a
futuristic family buggy, and it has an entirely transparent interior. This vehicle has captured my attention since
I was a small child, and I love the look of it. It's a wagon for the futuristic space pioneer, and I would love to drive one.
The second big moment in “Islands in the Sky” is the crash of the Jupiter 2 on the
planetary surface. The ship’s (terrifying) descent looks absolutely real, and not like some tiny miniatures were used on a fake set. The landscape and the vehicle in
distress look terrific. In part I feel this is true because of a focus on atmospherics. There's fog in the air, and sunshine coming down from below. Because of such touches, the crash of the J2 looks very authentic.
As for the space monkey, Debbie…she’s not as impressive in appearance as that great chariot. Instead, she’s just a monkey with big pointed ears. The monkey is actually wearing a hat appliance to accommodate for those ears, and it looks sort of ridiculous today
In
terms of “futurism” Lost in Space still embodies a kind of sexist world-view
despite being set in 1997. Here, the
female contingent of the family prepares dinner for the others. Will can’t
help? Boys are exempt from house work,
right?
And
speaking of Will, he shows something of his independent nature here, slipping
away without permission to repair the chariot.
There, he is confronted by the renegade robot, who once again is obeying
the orders of Dr. Smith. Still, we do
learn a little about the robot this week.
“I do not vote,” he notes at one point.
“I am not programmed for free choice.”
The "Islands in the Sky" episode also gives us our first look at the Robinsons' new home, a weird alien world of electrically-charged tumble-weeds and vegetation. Future episodes show us the planet's temperature shifts, and strange (gigantic!) denizens.
Next
episode: “There Were Giants in the Earth.”
Great episode. If only the Spacepod [season three] was operational in season one, then John would not have had to use the para-jets.
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And they named it PREPLANUS and it had a flat elpical orbit which took it close to its sun to get hot and far from its sun to freeze at tempetures well below zero
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