In
“Beautiful Downtown Atlantis,” the lost saucer emerges from a time warp in the
year 2385 AD, and is sucked into an ocean. It then arrives at the lost city of
Atlantis.
The
tyrannical ruler of the city, Nepto, captures Jerry (Jarrod Johnson) and Alice
(Alice Playden), and locks them in a dungeon to prevent the strangers from
leaving.
The
visitors soon learn that air pollution has forced Earthlings in this future
world to move underwater, away from the surface.
Worse,
Nepto wants to move into the saucer and turn it into his new “tele-beam”
studio. Fi (Ruth Buzzi) and Fum (Jim Nabors) will provide the entertainment.
This
week, as always, the lost saucer lands in the wrong place, not 1975 Chicago,
but some alien “future.” Here, the saucer docks at Atlantis, which worries Fum,
since he “is not programmed for swimming.”
The
under-sea location of the episode paves the way for a number of silly water-related
jokes. “He looks kind of fishy to me,”
says Fum, of Nepto.
Fi
and Fum also perform a musical number, “Beautiful
Downtown Atlantis,” before they escape from Atlantis by reversing the
magnetic thrust of the saucer.
The
moral of the week concerns pollution, of course. At the end of the episode, the
lead characters muse about the topic. “We
should warn people about what could happen if we don’t stop polluting the air.”
Pollution,
proved a key worry of the dystopian-obsessed first half of the 1970’s, the
subject of movies such as Soylent Green (1973), and Silent
Running (1972). On Doctor
Who (1963-1989), the John Pertwee era often worried about the topic
too, in stories such as “The Green Death,” and at least tangentially, “Inferno.”
This
Lost Saucer (1975) episode offers a child-centric approach to the
material, warning of what could occur, if humanity doesn’t change its ways. The idea of humans moving underwater after an
apocalypse was also “in the water” of the 1970’s, and a major plot-line in The
Spy Who Loved Me (1977).
As I’ve written before, the social commentary
in Lost
Saucer is certainly obvious -- often stated flat-out by the android duo
of Fi and Fum -- but that because of the juvenile nature of the audience, this
isn’t a big problem.
The
Lost Saucer is
silly, imaginative, and, rewardingly, about the things that matter (or that did
matter, in 1975).
No comments:
Post a Comment