No time to ponder that, let's leave both hatches of the airlock wide open so when the ship breaks through the ice the water can flood the place. Turns out it's great they rushed headlong out into the unknown, because the ship landed on an ice planet where you can't see their breath when they speak. You know, every other planet we know about. Except Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Let's all leave the synthetic gravity and human sustainable artificial environment and blindly rush out the airlock because every planet we've encountered has an earth-normal gravity, a non-corrosive atmosphere, protective suit range temperatures, and breathable air for our air tanks we forgot to check and are empty. Time to review procedures for evaluating an alien planet. Ship crash lands on an unknown planet, largely intact. A container no one - not the engineers who designed the ship, not the mechanics who built the ship, not the genius women onboard, not even the males onboard thought worthy of anchoring down. An impact causes the aforementioned container to slide into the leg of mom, breaking said leg. We have a ship with some sort of synthetic gravity that works on butts and containers, but not on playing cards. I'm generally satisfied with the episode, the season and the series overall. It's first season was, as I say, poor, which started the show of on the wrong footing and probably shook off a lot of the potential audience, which is a shame, because it's certainly rallied since then - only for covid to hammer out another year of production and leading to the decision to end now. I think this is indeed probably the right place to end the series. Visually, this series has to be one of the best TV shows we've had so far. The robot army careering down the corridors and especially when they are ensnared in the magnetic trap during season two are a particular highlight. There were some visuals across the run that really looked phenomenal. This first episode focuses mostly on the family, as they crash land on an icy planet following the destruction of their mothership. His wife Maureen (Molly Parker ) is a scientist involved in spaceflight programme and their three kids Will (Maxwell Jenkins) and older sisters Judy (Taylor Russell) and Penny (Mina Sundwall). In this version, the Robinson family consist of patriarch John Robinson (Toby Stephens), who appears to have been in the special ops of the Army, prior to his family's enrolment in the pioneering space colonisation programme. On the whole, I think the third run was really positive - though I did end up wishing that the resolution required something cleverer than what was provided. The second season of Netflix reboot of "Lost In Space" was vastly superior to its uneven first run in every respect. With great leaps in logic required to keep the writing going. I've written individual reviews for all 28 episodes of "Lost in Space" but though it would be nice to put something on the show page as well, as you're more likely to look here when it comes to deciding whether to start the show or not.
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