IMDb RATING
6.4/10
264
YOUR RATING
Karl Robinson, his wife, two children and an orphaned girl end up on a volcanic island after a shipwreck. Also on the island is Jeremiah Worth, who was abandoned there seven years earlier.Karl Robinson, his wife, two children and an orphaned girl end up on a volcanic island after a shipwreck. Also on the island is Jeremiah Worth, who was abandoned there seven years earlier.Karl Robinson, his wife, two children and an orphaned girl end up on a volcanic island after a shipwreck. Also on the island is Jeremiah Worth, who was abandoned there seven years earlier.
Browse episodes
Featured reviews
Great cast and beautiful location, but filled with annoying glitches that make it difficult to really get into it. There are way too many extreme close-up shots...poor direction.
Could use a Technical Director to ensure situations are believable...a pirate ship cruising along pulling a dinghy, with only a foresail up (and it's luffing) would be dead in the water. A flintlock pistol with an open frizzen is of no use and will not fire.
Things like this needed more attention.
It is early 19th century. The Swiss Family Robinson are sailing to the west Pacific for a new start. They get shipwrecked on a remote tropical island. It is Karl Robinson (Martin Milner), his wife Lotte (Pat Delaney), son Fred (Willie Aames), younger son Ernie, captain's daughter Helga Wagner (Helen Hunt), and whaler Jeremiah Worth (Cameron Mitchell) who was stranded seven years earlier.
There were a few Swiss Family Robinson during this time. Hollywood sometimes copy other kids' homework. I like the outdoor set. They seem to have built a lot of stuff. I question how this family build all this with limited resources, but that's fine. There is a bit of Gilligan's Island in this. There is also a 12 year old young Helen Hunt walking around here. She doesn't do much more than being the girl on the show except for a couple of episodes. There are some interesting guest stars. The show is episodic. I really like The Tiki when the family shows their colonial thinking. This show is fine.
There were a few Swiss Family Robinson during this time. Hollywood sometimes copy other kids' homework. I like the outdoor set. They seem to have built a lot of stuff. I question how this family build all this with limited resources, but that's fine. There is a bit of Gilligan's Island in this. There is also a 12 year old young Helen Hunt walking around here. She doesn't do much more than being the girl on the show except for a couple of episodes. There are some interesting guest stars. The show is episodic. I really like The Tiki when the family shows their colonial thinking. This show is fine.
During the height of the early 1970's,producer Irwin Allen scored two brilliant disaster epics like "The Poseidon Adventure"(1972),and "The Towering Inferno"(1974) which were huge runaway hits at the box office and Oscar winners. Since Allen was known for his TV shows of the 1960's he decided to come back to that terrain for the last time around. This show features a modern day family that is stranded on a island with nothing but their wits to stay alive. This show was on the same level as his other family adventure series "Lost In Space",but in this one the family faces off with deadly animals,mysterious cannibals,and dangerous pirates all in a modern day setting and this is not out in the far reaches of outer space,but in the far reaches of an deserted but deadly paradise. I had a chance to see this lost series on a sci-fi channel one evening,and it was highly enjoyable in some parts,but incredibly pathetic in others since when it was on the air,it only lasted one season(from September of 1975 to January of 1976). Look for a very young Helen Hunt(TV's Mad About You)as the Robinson's teenage daughter. Since Martin Milner(Officer Malloy from "Adam-12")was the star of the show,I wonder what he is doing now?
NOTE: This show was on Sunday evenings(where Allen once had his "Voyage" and "Land of the Giants" series on the same time slot at 7:00)on ABC,and in a blink of an eye,it was yanked right off the air by the competition "60 Minutes" in that cold winter of 76.
NOTE: This show was on Sunday evenings(where Allen once had his "Voyage" and "Land of the Giants" series on the same time slot at 7:00)on ABC,and in a blink of an eye,it was yanked right off the air by the competition "60 Minutes" in that cold winter of 76.
I barely remember this show. It wasn't on very long and was the last of the type of TV shows that Irwin Allen produced at 20th Century-Fox Television, starting with "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea." I don't know why Allen did this show, but it seems from the result that his heart wasn't it it anymore. Maybe it was because concept shows like this had just become to expensive to make. One thing I do remember well was that although the music was credited to Richard La Salle, much of it was lifted from Jerry Goldsmith's score to the original "Planet of the Apes" movie. Allen's "Lost in Space" TV show did the same thing with its music, much of it actually coming from Bernard Herrmann's scores to "The Day the Earth Stood Still" and "Journey to the Center of the Earth." Since all these shows and movies were produced at Fox I guess they could do these things in those days.
I really wish I could catch this show since it's not available on any streaming platforms or on DVD. I'm a huge fan of Irwin Allen's works like Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, Lost in Space, The Time Tunnel, and Land of the Giants. I also enjoyed the Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea movie. I was browsing through Irwin Allen's biography on Wikipedia-something I had read a while back-and I discovered that he produced this series. I was shocked that I hadn't come across it before, especially being a classic TV enthusiast. Fingers crossed that one day this series will be available on a streaming service like Prime Video.
Did you know
- TriviaThe erupting volcano seen in many an episode was actually a large miniature left over from the noted 20th Century-Fox financial disaster, L'Extravagant docteur Dolittle (1967)
- ConnectionsFeatured in I Love the '70s: Volume 2: 1975 (2006)
- How many seasons does Swiss Family Robinson have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Swiss Family Robinson
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content