Lost In Space
This glossy makeover of the '60s TV series pays homage to its roots while
jazzing things up Hollywood style with sleeker duds and a Jupiter 2 that
literally sheds its unhip, boxy skin. The Robinsons are still out on an
intergalactic mission to find a suitable new habitat for humans. And all your
favorites are here: Professor John (William Hurt), wife Maureen (a fiery Mimi
Rogers), and their strong-minded children, Penny (an annoying Lacey Chabert
from Party of Five), now full of '90s teen angst; Will (Jack Johnson),
the ship's computer hack; and Judy (Heather Graham, playing the sexual opposite
from her Roller Girl in Boogie Nights), who keeps the drama interesting
by maintaining an on-again off-again flirtation with the ship's pilot, Don West
(Friends' Matt LeBlanc fitting well into a macho role).
Then there's stowaway Dr. Smith (Gary Oldman, forced to play the conniving
coward as a maniacal meanie), whose malevolent meddlings maroon the Jupiter
2 in outer space and fuel the film's thin hodgepodge of "out of the frying
pan and into the fire" conundrums. None of it adds up to much, especially after
the perplexing and convoluted "time bubble" sequence. About the only thing
that's presented with any purposeful consequence is the pandering set-up for a
sequel. At the Harbour Mall, Opera House, Showcase, Tri-Boro, Westerly, and
Woonsocket cinemas.
-- Tom Meek
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