I was a big fan of the original Lost In Space (I've never forgiven CBS for canceling it, especially when the show had improved so much in season 3 over season 2), with Star Trek and Land Of The Giants in second and third place.
I remember, at the age of ten, watching the "moon landing". Even at that age, and being a big SciFan fan, there was something that didn't "click", didn't look right, about the shadows and the camera angles.
I never got into advanced picture-taking or cinematography, then or now, so it wasn't that.
Jon Rappoport did an excellent analysis back in 2014. It took a bit to locate it today, as YouTube has been quietly deleting videos, and perhaps making it more difficult to find others. This is one that if you like it, you might want to download it for safekeeping.
I was a big fan of the original Lost In Space (I've never forgiven CBS for canceling it, especially when the show had improved so much in season 3 over season 2), with Star Trek and Land Of The Giants in second and third place.
I remember, at the age of ten, watching the "moon landing". Even at that age, and being a big SciFan fan, there was something that didn't "click", didn't look right, about the shadows and the camera angles.
I never got into advanced picture-taking or cinematography, then or now, so it wasn't that.
Jon Rappoport did an excellent analysis back in 2014. It took a bit to locate it today, as YouTube has been quietly deleting videos, and perhaps making it more difficult to find others. This is one that if you like it, you might want to download it for safekeeping.
https://youtu.be/_noA7-qY26A?si=dX8B8Nuc-GQ-lxkx