In
“Welcome Stranger,” a missile headed towards the Jupiter 2 is not the “alien
monstrosity” feared by Dr. Smith (Jonathan Harris), but rather a lost spaceship
belonging to lone space astronaut Jimmy Hapgood (Warren Oates). He left Earth
in 1982, and has been traveling alone ever since.
The
Robinsons welcome a friendly face from Earth, and John (Guy Williams) believes
it would be a good idea to send the children -- Will (Bill Mumy) and Penny
(Angela Cartwright) -- back to space with him.
John believes that only Jimmy can get them home, to Earth.
The
problem, of course, is that the children don’t want to leave their parents. Also, Jimmy isn’t certain he wishes to return home, and, finally, Dr. Smith believes that he is
the individual who should make the journey.
The
Robinsons get their first visitor from Earth in “Welcome Stranger,” in this
case a space cowboy who is also “lost in space.” Hapgood is a friend, not a foe, but his
presence raises an important question: would the children be safer with him, rather than stuck on an inhospitable
world?
Both
Maureen (June Lockhart) and John grapple with their own feelings of guilt about
Will and Penny. Perhaps they acted
irresponsibly in committing the family -- and non-astronauts -- to such a space
mission. Does Jimmy, therefore, offer
them an opportunity to rectify an error, to undo an act of vanity, or pride.
The
answer, of course, is negative.
“Welcome
Stranger’s” point is that members of a family belong together, whether on Earth,
or trapped on a distant world. So again,
Lost in Space gets right back to the heart of the show's premise: the courage required to
push the boundaries of the frontier, to settle in a completely new (and dangerous) territory.
Is
the final frontier a place for children?
Well, it must be, if man is to survive and thrive beyond the confines of
Earth. Families must learn to cope with
the unknowns together, and that is what this simple-straight forward episode of
Lost in Space is all about. There are some good, emotional scenes of drama here that involve Maureen and John making a difficult decision, and then trying to share it with the children.
There’s
a kind of gentleness, simplicity and innocence to this story which, in a way, ages it, I suppose. It would be exceedingly difficult to imagine a Star
Trek: The Next Generation (1987 – 1994) episode, for example, to committing to
a story organized around such a simple question about survival
in space, and the place of family.
The
episode’s “action” quotient comes from microbes that have landed on Jimmy’s
spaceship, and soon grow to gigantic size.
They nearly eat Penny before the episode is through.
These creatures are fanciful-looking and yet, because they are real (rather than CGI), there's also something very tactile or "real" about their monstrous presence. They are giant, slimy, and hairy. At first glance, they may seem unrealistic, but the more you look at them, the more menacing (and icky) they seem.
So right. Such a pleasure to see something CGI-Free like this. This episode like others in that first season was just terrifying as a kid to watch.
ReplyDeleteHow the heck does Hapgood propel himself around the universe, seemingly with an inexhaustible fuel supply?
ReplyDelete