
Bill Mumy and Mark Goddard grabbing a bite to eat while filming “Lost in Space”.

Bill Mumy and Mark Goddard grabbing a bite to eat while filming “Lost in Space”.

Back in 1978, I got my first exposure to anime through “Battle of the Planets”. The show was a bowdlerized version of a Japanese cartoon called Science Ninja Team Gatchaman (科学忍者隊ガッチャマン Kagaku Ninjatai Gatchaman).
The opening narration made comparatively little sense:
“Battle of the Planets! G-Force! Princess! Tiny! Keyop! Mark! Jason! And watching over them from Center Neptune, their computerized coordinator, 7-Zark-7! Watching, warning against surprise attacks by alien galaxies beyond space. G-Force! Fearless young orphans, protecting Earth’s entire galaxy. Always five, acting as one. Dedicated! Inseparable! Invincible!“
Still, even as a kid, I appreciated that this was quite a bit more sophisticated than American cartoons at the time.

Believe it or not, he’s walking on air: William Katt as The Greatest American Hero.

When Bruce Wayne met Penny Robinson. “Batman” star Adam West and Angela Cartwright from “Lost in Space”.

If, like me, you were one of the geekier specimens of Generation X, this is what your Saturday morning entertainment was like.