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Perdus dans l'espace

Original title: Lost in Space
  • TV Series
  • 1965–1993
  • Tous publics
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
9.5K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,216
435
June Lockhart, Angela Cartwright, Mark Goddard, Jonathan Harris, Marta Kristen, Bill Mumy, Dick Tufeld, and Guy Williams in Perdus dans l'espace (1965)
Home Video Trailer from 20th Century Fox
Play trailer0:16
4 Videos
99+ Photos
Space Sci-FiAdventureComedyFamilyFantasySci-Fi

A space colony family struggles to survive when a spy/accidental stowaway throws their ship hopelessly off course.A space colony family struggles to survive when a spy/accidental stowaway throws their ship hopelessly off course.A space colony family struggles to survive when a spy/accidental stowaway throws their ship hopelessly off course.

  • Creator
    • Irwin Allen
  • Stars
    • Guy Williams
    • June Lockhart
    • Mark Goddard
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    9.5K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,216
    435
    • Creator
      • Irwin Allen
    • Stars
      • Guy Williams
      • June Lockhart
      • Mark Goddard
    • 112User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Primetime Emmys
      • 1 win & 5 nominations total

    Episodes84

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    Videos4

    Lost in Space: The Complete Series
    Clip 1:45
    Lost in Space: The Complete Series
    Lost in Space: The Complete Series
    Clip 1:15
    Lost in Space: The Complete Series
    Lost in Space: The Complete Series
    Clip 1:15
    Lost in Space: The Complete Series
    Lost in Space :Season 1 (1965)
    Trailer 0:16
    Lost in Space :Season 1 (1965)
    Lost In Space
    Trailer 1:43
    Lost In Space

    Photos1385

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    Top cast99+

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    Guy Williams
    Guy Williams
    • Dr. John Robinson
    • 1965–1993
    June Lockhart
    June Lockhart
    • Maureen Robinson
    • 1965–1993
    Mark Goddard
    Mark Goddard
    • Major Don West
    • 1965–1993
    Marta Kristen
    Marta Kristen
    • Judy Robinson…
    • 1965–1993
    Bill Mumy
    Bill Mumy
    • Will Robinson
    • 1965–1993
    Angela Cartwright
    Angela Cartwright
    • Penny Robinson…
    • 1965–1993
    Jonathan Harris
    Jonathan Harris
    • Dr. Zachary Smith…
    • 1965–1968
    Dawson Palmer
    • Monster…
    • 1965–1967
    Jim Mills
    • Saticon #1…
    • 1966–1968
    Harry Monty
    Harry Monty
    • Geoo…
    • 1966–1968
    Dee Hartford
    Dee Hartford
    • Verda…
    • 1966–1968
    Fritz Feld
    Fritz Feld
    • Mr. Zumdish
    • 1966–1967
    Sheila Allen
    Sheila Allen
    • Aunt Gamma…
    • 1965–1968
    Ron Gans
    • Alien Leader…
    • 1966–1967
    Ronald Weber
    • Alien Dictator…
    • 1966–1968
    Albert Salmi
    Albert Salmi
    • Alonzo P. Tucker…
    • 1966–1967
    Vitina Marcus
    Vitina Marcus
    • Athena…
    • 1966–1967
    Michael Rennie
    Michael Rennie
    • The Keeper
    • 1966
    • Creator
      • Irwin Allen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews112

    7.39.4K
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    Featured reviews

    7AlsExGal

    Forbidden Planet meets Seinfeld meets Gilligan's Island

    I don't know if combining Forbidden Planet with Seinfeld and Gilligan's Island is exactly on target, but there are elements of all three. I was in second grade when this show premiered, and I never missed an episode. The stories were always interesting to me, and even at age eight the character of Dr. Smith absolutely captured my imagination. There are aspects of this fellow that are so very interesting - here is a guy with a great deal of education who never seems to have learned anything from the mythology he is always reciting to everyone, as in "All That Glitters", my all-time favorite episode. He didn't remember the tragedy of King Midas when he was making his wish? His greed and his cowardice override any mental advantage he may have. He is truly the George Costanza of space exploration - whenever he stumbles upon a piece of good fortune he has to milk it for all it's worth until the whole situation turns on him. Then there are the children - Will and Penny. No matter what Dr. Smith does they still like the guy, and he does a lot. He bargains with aliens to take Will's brain for their experiments instead of his, and in another episode turns Penny into platinum, although he does feel remorse about the latter deed. In fact, the children are Smith's only friends. He is merely tolerated by the adults, and for good reason.

    Finally there is the "innocence and chastity beyond reason" element that was part of Gilligan's Island and is part of this show too. Despite the only natural and healthy attraction between Major Donald West and Judy Robinson, we are to believe that nothing really happens between the two for years on end. Also like Gilligan's Island, although the group's first priority starts off as finding a way to return to earth, eventually they settle into a kind of domestic tranquility and seem to make peace with their situation of being "lost in space".

    Of course, rewatching this series over forty years later, it is not quite as great as I remembered it, but it is still great fun and Smith is still a fascinating character. It's also interesting to see what people in the 1960's thought earthly civilization would be like in 1997. It's humorous yet somewhat tragic to see the optimistic viewpoint people had of the future in the 1960's pertaining to human nature. What the series' creators couldn't foresee is that today people are much more like Zachary Smith than the Robinson family - at least the people in charge of things are.
    8TheLittleSongbird

    Space has rarely been more fun

    The 1960s was a great decade for television, or so to me. 'The Addams Family', 'The Munsters', Doctor Who', 'My Favourite Martian', 'Batman', 'Star Trek', 'Bewitched', 'I Dream of Jeannie', 'Dark Shadows', 'I Love Lucy', 'McHale's Navy', 'Green Acres', 'The Avengers', and they are just a few examples of very good to classic shows from that decade.

    'Lost in Space' may be an uneven show, no this is not one of those rarities where there was not a dud episode throughout. Then again some of the aforementioned shows had rocky moments and inconsistency in their runs too, but it deserves to be mentioned in the same breath as the above. When it was good, it was very good and even more than that on many occasions. However, when it was not so good, it was pretty bad to embarrassing. Overall though, it was a very good and influential show that did a lot with a unique concept.

    Its best and most consistent season was the first. It had a darker and more sombre tone than the campier nature of the succeeding two seasons, with a real maturity, some suspense and sense of mystery and wonder. Yet it also didn't forget to be fun and full of adventure while treating its stories with intelligence and wit and its audience with respect. The monsters were mostly impressive in design and there were some memorable ones, likewise with the staging of the encounters with them, which were suspenseful and sometimes funny. There was a much better balance of characterisation, and the cast enjoy themselves without going over the top.

    However, 'Lost in Space' was at its weakest in the second half of Season 3, where it felt like a different show. While it was understandable for the tone to be lightened to gain more viewers, it did cause a wide divide quality-wise and like the lightning up was taken too far. Not completely unwatchable, with "The Anti-Matter Man" being among the show's better episodes. It was during this period where farce replaced endearingly campy silliness (say what you want about Season 2 being silly, and it was admittedly, but it was still at least entertaining and endearing), repetition and near-incoherence was all over, camp was taken to extremes and the characterisation lacked balance and got over the top in some instances with far too much emphasis on Dr Smith and the robot. Most of the show's worst episodes were in this period too, with "The Great Vegetable Rebellion" gaining infamy as a hilariously terrible episode for good reason.

    Visually, 'Lost in Space' looked good on the whole. Preferred it in black and white myself, being a little more atmospheric, but the colour has a 60s charm that holds up well. The sets are very imaginatively used and there are impressive special effects (as well as the odd hokey ones) for the monsters. The music is rousing and haunting with one of the most memorable main themes for a TV show that decade.

    Regarding the writing, a lot of it was funny, clever with its fair share of suspense and emotion before getting too silly in Season 3. Some of the catchphrases or memorable quotes are iconic, Dr Smith has the best lines often (especially the repeated ones). The stories were mostly highly engaging and made the most of a unique concept at the time, space has often been portrayed as being wondrous and mysterious and 'Lost in Space' conveys that very well. There are some interesting themes that it covers too, both in its ideas and topics that are of relevance now.

    Characters are not easy to forget, especially Dr Smith (regardless of whether he is used too much or a caricature later on, he is a fascinating character and has some of the best lines, he is a character we should hate but there is just something so lovable about him) and the robot and it is hard not to love the dynamic between them, or be endeared by Will. The cast do seem to be enjoying themselves thoroughly and that they know which tone they're going for.

    Jonathan Harris' Dr Smith is an unforgettable creation and a genre character landmark, anybody asked about what role they associate Harris with would most likely choose his role here. Very like they would with the roles of Adam West in 'Batman', Ray Walston in 'My Favourite Martian', Jonathan Frid in 'Dark Shadows' and Elizabeth Montgomery in 'Bewitched'. Equalling him, let alone topping him, is impossible, and even if achieved is a monumental task as proved (and nowhere near as successfully) in the film version three decades later. Guy Williams, Bill Mumy and June Lockhart are all very good as well and the robot and its dynamic with Dr Smith is one of the show's greatest pleasures.

    Overall, an uneven show but a very entertaining one and a very good one at its best. 8/10 Bethany Cox
    BumpyRide

    Three Cheers For Bug Eyed Monsters

    I'm glad to say that "Lost In Space" had a big influence on my childhood while growing up. Countless hours were spent "playing" Lost In Space in our basement. I barely, barely remember the first run except that the robot scared me, so I truly came in during the first syndication run. At age 42, I still enjoy all of Season One. The Magic Mirror, My Friend, Mr. Nobody, and Follow The Leader are all great examples of this show. It's unfortunate that the other two seasons went the way of Batman and became just plain silly and cartoonish. However the first season had action packed space adventure, a crash landing, jet packs, laser rifles, the chariot, scary monsters including the Cyclops and fantastic music by John Williams, (the best music ever created for TV in my opinion.) The Jupiter Two sets are still fantastic and believable today, including the fabulous creation of the Robot. The ensemble cast was excellent, and I for one wish that Smith had remained evil and menacing during the run of the show. It may not have been as intellectual as Star Trek but it was good, clean, scary fun!
    8asalerno10

    SERIES OF DIFFERENT QUALITY IN THE THREE SEASONS

    One of the most memorable TV series of all time but whose quality was quite uneven in the three seasons that it lasted. The first season was without a doubt the best, it focused on the adventures of the first family of space settlers who departed from Earth to a planet called Alpha Centaury. Dr. Smith, a collaborator of the project and at the same time a spy in the service of an enemy power, enters the ship to sabotage it, but is trapped in it at the last moment, so the ship will drift in space. Riddled with danger. There were excellent stories in the first season, Dr. Smith was a Machiavellian villain who only thought of himself and did not hesitate to betray the Robinsons in order to achieve his goals. The problem arose in the second season, the series competed directly with Batman, which had quickly established itself as an instant success, in order not to lose audience LIS began to copy Batman's camp style and this greatly reduced its content, the series became childish and even silly at times, the stories focused exclusively on Will Robinson, the Robot and Dr. Smith who had already lost his twisted character to become a buffoonish character. For season 3 the production tried to make a change of direction and return to the quality of the scripts of season 1, a new intro was made and a space capsule was added with which they could descend on other planets without the need to land the ship . The quality was an improvement but they were never able to get back on track. Despite all this, the series is a highly recommended classic.
    thommickel

    The best show from TV's greatest decade

    I guess I'm alone in my views these days, but I've never agreed with the critics (or the vast audiences) that adore contemporary TV series like "Seinfeld" or "Friends."

    For me, the best decade for TV (by a million miles) was the 1960s. It was truly a unique decade for television. Series produced then are totally unlike anything produced previously or since. I don't know what it was (perhaps someone spiked the water back then), but TV in the 1960s was unique. There was a certain sense of wonder, a certain sense of the fantastic---and a definite 60s vibe of surrealism that crept into every show from "Green Acres" to "Batman" to "Gilligan's Island."

    And for my money, the best show in TV's greatest decade was "Lost in Space." It's impossible to describe what watching this show was like in the 1960s. It's an experience that simply can't be re-produced today. For a start, America was still an optimistic nation and we had an ambitious space program that would soon take us to the moon. For everyone who was young in the 60s, it seemed highly plausible that, we too, would get a chance to ride a rocket into space within our lifetimes. Little could we fathom that, after 1972, America wouldn't even land a person on the moon for 35 long years.

    Today's TV shows are stiflingly dull and seem to be created by committees that cynically use focus groups to create their sterile product. "Lost in Space" is a million miles away from this creative process. In fact, it's the total opposite (and all the more brilliant for this).

    The greatest science fiction always had a sense of wonder and mystery. "Lost in Space" captured the mystery of space---indeed, the show itself was actually quite bizarre. It's a far cry from the over-rated "Star Trek," which, instead of giving us a sense of mystery, followed an (increasingly stale) by-the-numbers formula.

    And "formula" is precisely what one did NOT get in viewing "Lost in Space." Indeed, this show is so strange that, viewing it today, it seems like a relic from a lost civilization. It's hard, in fact, to really even fathom who the producers were targeting as their audience.

    Naturally, there are cynics who hate this show, and fall over themselves pointing out the plot holes and the ignorance of "realism." To those folks, I say: Chill out. Even TV's "realistic" shows are NOT as realistic as they hyped to be. "Star Trek," for example, has plenty of flaws in its science. Even a highly-praised show like "ER," the medical drama, has plenty of inaccuracies (as any medical professional will tell you).

    In many ways, "Lost in Space" does a wonderful job of capturing the essence of what made the 60s the greatest decade of the 20th century for TV, film, music, and culture in general. It's something we'll never re-capture in today's stale culture, dominated as it is by dull, overpaid celebrities. We've gone a long ways downhill from The Beatles to "American Idol."

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      June Lockhart had the biggest parking space on the 20th Century-Fox lot because she would often drive her favorite vehicle to work - a 1923 fire engine.
    • Goofs
      The Robot is mounted on tracks. Yet in close-ups when it moves with a normal walking action and it is possible to see the actors legs move in the lower parts of the suit.
    • Quotes

      Robot: Danger, Will Robinson! Danger!

    • Alternate versions
      A pilot episode was filmed that did not include either Robot or Dr. Smith! This film was not broadcast in 1965 but was shown on TV and released to video in the 1990s.
    • Connections
      Edited into The Man from the 25th Century (1968)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 18, 1991 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Lost in Space
    • Filming locations
      • Red Rock Canyon State Park - Highway 14, Cantil, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Irwin Allen Productions
      • Jodi Productions Inc.
      • Van Bernard Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color

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