In
“The Oasis,” a drought imperils the Robinson settlement.
Even
the water conversion units that Don (Mark Goddard) has installed in the desert can’t
keep up with the family’s demand for water.
Dr.
Smith (Jonathan Harris) makes the problem exponentially worse by taking a
shower, using up all but two gallons of the water reserve.
Desperate
and angry, the Robinsons go out in search of water, and find an oasis in the
jungle.
There,
the water tastes strange and toxic, but several moist, mango-like fruits are growing. John (Guy Williams) insists that they test
the fruit before sampling it, but Dr. Smith and Debbie both break the rules and
try the fruits
Smith,
believing the Robinsons have poisoned him, heads off into the desert alone.
Back
at the camp, Debbie grows to colossal size after eating the fruit. The
Robinsons realize that the same thing could happen to Smith. He will soon be a giant.
Maureen
(June Lockhart) goes to the over-grown Smith and attempts to convince him to
return to camp.
“The
Oasis” is a not-particularly compelling episode of Lost in Space (1965 –
1968), and one that demonstrates the series’ propensity to veer towards outright
fantasy.
Here,
Smith eats an alien fruit that transforms him into a giant. Despite the overtly fantastic elements of the
episode, the special effects are handled with remarkable aplomb, and several
well-staged trick shots sell visually the concept of a giant Zachary Smith.
Additionally,
this is a strong episode for Maureen Robinson, who demonstrates her forgiving
and sympathetic character. Again and
again, she takes the initiative -- though always asking permission from John --
as a go-between for the two camps, the Robinsons and Dr. Smith. Maureen acts as a peace maker and as a friend
to both camps, and does so without ego or self-interest.
Less
intriguing, and far less believable are the family’s reactions to Smith’s
departure. Once more, Smith does something absolutely selfish -- taking a
shower and using twenty-two gallons of the family’s water supply -- and when
the family responds with irritation, he doesn’t even apologize.
Then,
when he believes he has been poisoned, Smith swears to kill the Robinsons. He sabotages and steals the last water
conversion unit device. If he is going to die, then they will die too, he
swears.
That’s….pathological.
Yet
the Robinsons all mope about the camp, and discuss how much they miss Dr.
Smith. They ponder the ways they could have been nicer to him, or more
accommodating to him. Maureen has a sympathetic speech here about she considers
Smith an “injustice collector,” and
that basically, he’s harmless.
Only
he’s demonstrated time and time again that he isn’t harmless.
One
episode back he tried to sell Will to fifth dimension aliens.
Several
episodes back, Smith sabotaged John’s rockets (or para jets), so he would
crash-land and die on the planet.
And,
as mentioned above, in this adventure Smith sabotages the family’s technology
so that its members will suffer a “lingering” death.
So
why are the Robinsons’ so damn blind regarding Smith? He’s an absolute danger to the family’s
survival, especially on the frontier, and it makes no sense to romanticize him,
or consider his antics “cute.” They owe
him absolutely nothing.
For
me, this aspect of the series is the biggest stumbling block Lost
in Space features at this point, and going forward too. It’s not like Smith bumbles into trouble, is
contrite, and learns from his mistakes.
Contrarily,
he seeks out trouble, is a coward, tries to extricate himself by any selfish
means possible, and never learns a thing.
He just goes out and does the same thing again.
It’s
Smith’s fault he eats the berries and his fault the water is almost gone. The
Robinsons are not out of line to be irritated, angry with the guy. They could
die from thirst.
Still, one artfully-composed shot in the episode explains the Smith vs. Robinsons conceit perfectly. In the foreground of the frame, sits Smith, self-satisfied and facing the camera. Far behind him, in the background, is the family. They are watching him. He is ignoring them. He is not only the paramount figure here in "The Oasis," but the paramount figure in the series.
In
terms of questions of believability, there’s another funny aspect of “The Oasis”
to consider. When Smith grows to giant
size, his clothes and boots grow with him.
How did the chemical properties of the alien mango manage that?
Still,
it’s far preferable to ask this question than to be confronted with the specter
of a giant, naked Dr. Smith.
Remember, this is the mid-60's. The Robinson's continual forgiveness of Smith is an (admittedly ham-handed) attempt to both attempt to show that middle-class white Americans can tolerate 'the other', and have Smith stand in as a proxy for social issues that do not change (as opposed to the environmental issues that pioneers change) and must be endured.
ReplyDeleteIt's ham-handed in that in any Earth society, Smith would have been tried and convicted for many of his deeds, though probably not for using water.
Later, he's just a buffoon.
This one was the beginning of the end for me. Even science fiction has to be rooted in some kind of reality for it to work. The Robinsons' should have rightly killed Smith. That they didn't meant that they weren't the best choice for the mission.
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