No Place to Hide (Lost in Space)
No Place to Hide is the title of the 1965 pilot episode produced for CBS to promote the television series Lost in Space. The episode was directed by Irwin Allen.[1] It was not broadcast for the first time until 1997, which is also the year of the fictional mission's liftoff. The theme music for this pilot was taken from the 1951 film The Day the Earth Stood Still.
Use of footage
The pilot features a single-deck, sub-lightspeed, interstellar, flying saucer spacecraft. Having no airlock, no seats for the pilot, very few controls at the front of the craft, no elevator, no landing gear, and a crew of just six. The ship did carry the familiar Chariot all-terrain vehicle, and the Jet Pack flying device.[2] Nearly all of the footage found its way into the first five episodes of the weekly series. Although there are obvious inconsistencies, the incorporation was nevertheless creatively carried out.[3]
Differences with later series
The craft was initially called the Gemini 12, and postulated to undertake a century-long flight to Alpha Centauri. The passengers were stellar in scholastic accomplishment, the children prodigies. Don West was a doctor of geology, and John Robinson's title was also "Doctor". The pilot contained no irritating Dr. Smith, nor the robot,[4] nor scary monsters,[5]but is about the "happy family" adventures of the Robinsons.[6]
Plot
The craft was damaged by a meteor swarm shortly after liftoff; the resulting damage sent the craft out of control and it was lost. The craft crashed on a habitable planet, and at some point after the crash, controlled regeneration awoke the six crewmembers. John Robinson was hopeful of a ship repair. After some weeks, they began to encounter problems of a serious nature that required them to abandon the spacecraft and hurry south to avoid a severe cold. After encountering a giant cyclops, discovering an abandoned castle in a cave, and proceeding with a perilous crossing of an inland sea... they reached a tropical sanctuary, where aliens observed them.
Release
The pilot was released as part of the VHS box set Lost in Space The Collector's edition in February 1995.[7]
References
- ↑ Dennis Fischer Science Fiction Film Directors, 1895–1998 0786485051 2011 p31 "No Place to Hide," Lost in Space (unaired pilot) (1965); "Rendezvous with Yesterday," ...
- ↑ Robert Rowe, Jack Hagerty Lost in Space Design: Designing the Lost in Space Pilot – A description of the making of the Lost in Space pilot, "No Place To Hide," researched from the Fox art department archives. 0970760477 2010
- ↑ Gary Westfahl The Spacesuit Film: A History, 1918–1969 2012– p117–121 Lost in Space “No Place to Hide”
- ↑ Cinefantastique ed. Frederick S. Clarke – 1998– Volume 29, No 12 – Page 27 "The cast of characters in the original, unaired pilot for LOST IN SPACE (entitled "No Place to Hide") Included neither the robot nor Dr. Zachary Smith. The Robinsons load the Chariot to move to a better..
- ↑ Film Score Monthly ed. Lukas Kendall – 1993 30–40 – Page 101 "Lost in Space evolved from the initial wilderness survival story into a children's adventure with monsters chasing after a boy named Will, his emotional Robot and the dastardly ... The unaired pilot ("No Place to Hide," minus Dr. Smith and the ..."
- ↑ James Van Hise Sci Fi TV from Twilight Zone to Deep Space Nine 155698362X – 1993 "In the original version of LOST IN SPACE there was no irritating influence. The story is purely about the adventures of the Robinsons ... This is not the happy family we saw in "No Place To Hide." Jonathan Harris was cast after his agent was ...
- ↑ Popular Science Monthly Feb 1995 "Begin with your first 2-episode video that includes the rarely seen pilot episode, "No Place to Hide""