
Title | : | Lost in Space Design: 'No Place to Hide' |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 0970760477 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9780970760470 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Perfect Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 80 |
Publication | : | First published October 28, 2010 |
Lost in Space Design: 'No Place to Hide' Reviews
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Lost in Space Design: No Place to Hide is a detailed look at the pilot episode of Lost in Space. The book lightly covers every aspect of production of the Lost in Space pilot from pre-production and Irwin Allen’s vision of it as a Swiss Family Robinson in space to the screenplay, to second unit filming, and interior diagrams of the Jupiter 2 (also see my review for Lost in Space: The Jupiter 2 Technical Guide).
I was born during the space race, it was part of my childhood to see the real-life lift-offs and splash downs of the space program from the Gemini program (the earliest I can remember) through Apollo, and I was also watching man’s leap into space on TV through Lost in Space and Star Trek. In reading the analysis of the screenplay included in Lost in Space Design: No Place to Hide it’s clear the writers of the show needed a basic course in science fact, such as, they didn’t even know the escape velocity a rocket needed to escape Earth’s gravity. But then, I’m sure to the average viewer of the time, the speeds and millions of miles in distance sounded right to them so it didn’t matter. One thing I found interesting is that Irwin Allen thought he WAS creating a scientifically sound show until a studio executive laughed during a screening, it was then that Allen fully committed to the entertainment value and left facts to the more Earthly space race.
Filled with production stills from the show, (including behind the scenes pictures), diagrams and color illustrations are enough to satisfy the die-hard detail oriented fan. Author Robert Rowe even goes to Red Rock Canyon in California to track down some of the actual locations used in shooting No Where to Hide.
For Lost in Space fans it’s a natural starting point to their discovering more about their favorite 1960’s space opera. -
This book is a very interesting account of the script and set designs behind “No Place to Hide”, the pilot for the TV series “Lost in Space.” The book includes many great photos and images taken behind the scenes, many of them in full color. The book lists the name of the instruments and systems on the Gemini 12 (aka Jupiter 2) and how the lower deck came to be. The book has a few wonderful surprises including three color cover images from the Gold Key Space Family Robinson comic books, as well as an image of the snow cat that the Chariot was made out of. There were a few items I would have liked to have seen included in the book, such as a full script and images of the original studio drawings.