Lost In Space appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 2.35:1 on this single-sided, double-layered DVD; the image has been enhanced for 16X9 televisions. The picture looked consistently strong and displayed only a few minor issues.
Sharpness appeared excellent. The movie always came across as accurate and distinct. I noticed virtually no examples of softness in this tight and crisp presentation. Jagged edges and moiré effects created no concerns, and I also noticed no signs of edge enhancement. As for flaws, I saw some light artifacting and a couple of examples of grit, but otherwise the image remained clean and concise.
The movie displayed a nicely varied palette that came through well for the most part. Hues usually seemed rich and vibrant. Some examples of colored lighting appeared slightly heavy, but for the most part, I felt the tones were vivid and tight. Black levels looked deep and dense, while shadow detail appeared appropriately opaque but not excessively thick. Despite some small concerns, Lost In Space still looked terrific enough to merit an “A-“.
I also really liked the Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack of Lost In Space. The soundfield consistently presented a lively and engaging piece of work. All five channels received an active workout that used the different speakers nicely. Music provided good stereo imaging, while the effects materialized from all around the spectrum. Elements blended together efficiently and moved smoothly from speaker to speaker. Surround usage appeared excellent, as the rear channels added a great sense of atmosphere. The opening fighter battle offered demo-worthy audio, and the scene in which the spiders move about a ship also provided creepy environmental work, though I felt the surrounds could have dominated that latter scene a little more. Nonetheless, the track generally provided very well delineated and localized material that meshed smoothly.
Audio quality also came across as solid. Although a few lines betrayed a little edginess, speech usually seemed natural and distinct, and I encountered no issues related to intelligibility. Music sounded bright and bold and displayed fine dynamics and clarity. Effects seemed vibrant and accurate and suffered from no signs of distortion. Bass response appeared terrific, as the movie presented lots of tight bass that really kicked in nicely when appropriate. Overall, the soundtrack of Lost In Space worked very well.
Although Lost In Space hit shelves during the early years of DVD, it still holds up nicely when we examine its extras. First up we find two separate audio commentaries. The first comes from director Stephen Hopkins and writer Akiva Goldsman. Both were recorded separately for this edited track. Most of the time their remarks relate to the action onscreen, but they often veer off onto other topics, so it’s definitely not a strictly “screen-specific” piece.
Overall, Hopkins and Goldsman offer a very solid examination of the film. We learn about the project’s origins and hear about a wide variety of production issues. Hopkins dominates, as he goes over issues such as sets, effects, alterations made to the movie and a variety of problems encountered. Goldsman chimes in with similar discussions, but he mainly talks about changes effected to the original script. It’s a nicely upfront and honest track. While they don’t dish any dirt, we do get realistic appraisals of the concerns they experienced and things they would now do differently. Goldsman even relates some details of what direction a sequel would have taken. All in all, this is a very interesting and informative piece.
Next comes the “technical” commentary. It involves visual effects supervisor Angus Bickerton, visual effects producer Lauren Ritchie, director of photography Peter Levy, editor Ray Lovejoy, and producer Carla Fry, all of whom were recorded separately for this edited track. Bickerton and Levy heavily dominate the piece. The others pop up infrequently and occasionally offer some useful material, such as when Lovejoy chats about story alterations, but overall they remain firmly in the background.
Happily, Bickerton and Levy prove reasonably interesting and engaging during their portions. Obviously their comments stick strongly to technical elements, but their statements provide a nice education about their duties. Levy mostly relates notes about lighting, which sounds dry and can be at times, but usually his remarks give us a solid understanding of his work. Bickerton covers a wider variety of topics and informs us about all of the different effects challenges. Given the nature of the film, this means he goes into many areas, and he delineates the subjects well. They even criticize some of their work at times, with a particular negative emphasis on Blawp. While the technical commentary occasionally sags, it normally comes across as compelling and revealing.
If you examine the Jupiter II Crew domain, you’ll find a series of biographies. We get entries for actors Gary Oldman, William Hurt, Matt LeBlanc, Mimi Rogers, Jack Johnson, Jared Harris, Heather Graham, and Lacey Chabert as well as writer Akiva Goldsman, director Stephen Hopkins, and composer Bruce Broughton. These offer fairly good looks at the participants’ different careers. In addition, a pair of listings includes movie snippets. We find clips from Dark City (Hurt’s filmography) and Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (Rogers’ area).
In Building the Special Effects, we find a documentary about that area and Space. The program lasts 15 minutes and 54 seconds and mixes movie clips, rough effects footage, and comments from special effects supervisor Angus Bickerton, animation supervisor Mac Wilson, CG supervisor Lee Danskin, and Nick Lloyd of the Film Factory. The examples of effects material makes this show reasonably interesting, as we see a CG animation of the bubble fighter sequence and other CG shots. Wilson’s demonstration of computer puppeteering techniques used to animate Blawp also seems useful. Unfortunately, a lot of the material repeats what we heard in the technical commentary, which means we don’t get a lot of new information here.
For a collection of still galleries, we move to Production Design. It includes 10 separate sections of images, each of which includes between two and 18 drawings for a total of 50 stills. The material itself seems moderately interesting, but the presentation gets a little annoying; so many of the galleries include so few images that the interface becomes tiresome.
Within “The Television Years”, we get three separate components. Complete Episode Synopses indeed covers all three seasons of the series. Each listing includes the show’s title, airdate, guest cast, and a short narrative about the story. This is a cool little resource.
For some more text, we go to The Original Cast. It provides decent biographies for actors Guy Williams, June Lockhart, Marta Kristen, Angela Cartwright, Billy Mumy, Mark Goddard, and Jonathan Harris. Another feature that involves the actors, Q&A with the Original Cast lasts seven minutes, 33 seconds and includes information from June Lockhart, Angela Cartwright, and Marta Kristen. They chat about their memories of the show, continued fan interest, an old proposal for a sequel, and a few other topics. The program suffers from a bland talking head presentation – some footage or at least stills from the series would have been nice – but it nonetheless offers a moderately engaging little conversation.
For a glimpse of science fact and a potential science future, take a look at The Future of Space Travel. This nine-minute and 46-second featurette involves comments The Tree People’s Jeff Hohensee plus The Planetary Society’s Charlene Anderson and Andre Bormanis, and Dr. Louis Friedman. They discuss science fiction material that eventually came true as well as the truth of wormholes, the possibilities of Mars colonization, commercial spaceflight, and a few other subjects. The information provides a smattering of useful knowledge, but overall the piece seems a little dry and bland.
Next we find the music video for Apollo Four Forty’s “Lost In Space Theme”. A frenetic affair, it combines movie clips with heavily stylized images of the band. We also the film’s theatrical trailer, presented anamorphic 1.85:1 with Dolby Digital 5.1 audio.
More footage appears in the Deleted Scenes domain. This features 10 excised clips, and then entire segment lasts 11 minutes, 45 seconds. Accompanied by descriptive text to set up the snippets, this presentation seems quite interesting. I don’t know if any of the material should have made the final cut, but at least we find out what the women did while the guys explored the planet during the third act.
Lastly, Your Mission provides an absurdly unforgiving trivia quiz. The questions vary from pretty easy to freaky tough, and one wrong answer sends you back to the main menu. If you make it through to the end, I guarantee you’ll not even need to look at the questions for the first three rounds anymore; I had the correct replies memorized by the time I finally finished the stupid thing. If you do have the patience to make it that far, at least you get a reward: a 163-second gag reel. Better than most, this one provides some good quips from Oldman among other elements. I’m not sure it was worth the effort though.
Fans with the proper equipment can inspect some DVD-ROM materials. “Read the Screenplay” lets you do exactly that. Unlike more modern offerings, however, this one doesn’t provide video accompaniment; it strictly sticks with the text.
“Enter the Hypergate” sends you to a number of different planets and environments. “Create Your Own Planet” didn’t work for me, whereas “Penny’s Planet” allows you to read her journal entries. “Science” gives you a tutorial in many factual space-related concepts, while “Smith” lets you unleash your dark side through activities like “Destroy Alpha Prime”. The latter game seems surprisingly bloody, as it actually allows you to kill the entire Robinson family! The controls stink, but if you finally make it through and destroy the Robinsons, you’ll get an amusing reward.
“Mission Control” presents the Space website on the disc, while “3-D Game” will install a separate contest on your computer. “LIS Databank” includes information about the movie, those behind it, and the TV show, while “Robot” creates a program that allows the movie’s automaton to roam your computer screen. Lastly, “Lycos Search” offers an amalgam of links.
No one can call Lost In Space a classic film, and I definitely understand those who loathe it. However, I think the movie offers a reasonably exciting and entertaining piece of work that may not hold up to much scrutiny, but it still comes across as moderate fun. Although the DVD came out during the format’s formative years, it holds up incredibly well. Both picture and sound quality appear very positive, and the roster of extras includes a surfeit of interesting material. With a current list price of less than $15, Lost In Space offers a bargain.