Amazon is providing a 50% low cost on Arrow Video’s upcoming 4K Blu-ray restoration of Misplaced in House. Lost in Space Limited Edition is accessible to preorder for less than $25 (was $50) forward of its September 2 launch.
Directed by Stephen Hopkins, the sci-fi movie starring Gary Oldman and William Damage wasn’t warmly obtained in 1998. To be honest, the original 1960s TV series it was primarily based on wasn’t a important success both. However, the movie and sequence had been business successes, and each are thought of cult classics at the moment. Netflix even created a reimagining of the unique sequence again in 2018 that ran for 3 seasons.
For those who loved the Netflix sequence however have not watched the movie, the brand new 4K Blu-ray version ought to be the easiest way to look at it going ahead. For longtime Misplaced in House followers, the Restricted Version, like all of Arrow Video’s restorations of basic movies, seems like a cool collector’s merchandise.
$25 (was $50) | Releases September 2
Restored in native 4K (2160p) resolution using the original camera negative, Lost in Space’s 4K Blu-ray edition was approved by director Stephen Hopkins. Along with retaining the original aspect ratio, the 4K edition supports High Dynamic Range–Dolby Vision and HDR10–as well as two audio options: lossless stereo and DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 surround sound.
The Limited Edition comes with a reversible sleeve and cover art: One side has the original theatrical poster, while the other (shown above) is a brand-new illustration exclusive to this edition–it looks awesome. You’ll also find an illustrated booklet with commentary from Neil Sinyard, original production notes, and multiple articles on the movie that originally appeared in American Cinematographer.
In addition to the premium packaging and physical extras, Lost in Space has a bunch of on-disc bonus content, including new interviews and archival featurettes from past Blu-ray and DVD editions. You can check out the full list of Lost in Space Limited Edition features below.
Lost in Space Limited Edition Bonus Features
Fans can watch new interviews with Hopkins, screenwriter Akiva Goldsman, supervising art director Keith Pain, director of photography Peter Levy, and others.
New Features
- Reversible sleeve and cover art
- Illustrated booklet
- 4K restoration from original camera negative, approved by director Stephen Hopkins
- HDR: Dolby Vision and HDR10
- Audio: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 / Lossless stereo audio
- A Space Odyssey: Interview with director Stephen Hopkins
- Lights in the Sky: Interview with director of photography Peter Levy
- A Journey Through Time: Interview with producer and screenwriter Akiva Goldsman
- Art of Space: Interview with supervising art director Keith Pain
- Crafting Reality: Interview with Kenny Wilson, former mould shop supervisor at Jim Henson’s Creature Shop
- Sound of Space: Interview with sound mixer Simon Kaye and re-recording mixer Robin O’Donohue
- Lost But Not Forgotten in Space: Video essay by film critic Matt Donato
More Bonus Features
- Audio commentary with Hopkins and Goldsman
- Audio commentary with Peter Levy, Angus Bickerton, Lauren Ritchjie, Ray Lovejoy, and Carla Fry
- Building the Special Effects: Featurette with Bickerton and animatics supervisor Mac Wilson
- The Future of Space Travel: Exploring the film’s vision of the future
- TV Years: Q&A with the original cast of the TV series
- Bloopers
- Deleted scenes

Misplaced in House cleverly tailored components from the TV present and tweaked them for the large display screen. The movie retains core premise of the TV series–which sees the Robinson household flung to a distant galaxy due to the machinations of Gary Oldman’s traitorous Dr. Zachary Smith–and provides new story components groundbreaking visible results on the time. Misplaced in House stars an ensemble solid that features William Damage, Mimi Rogers, Matt LeBlanc, and Heather Graham. This was a giant film for New Line Cinema on the time it premiered, marking a pivot from the studio’s historical past of manufacturing low-budget horror movies and well-received indie movies and into field workplace blockbusters.
New & Upcoming Arrow Video Restricted Version 4K Blu-rays
Arrow Video has a number of different thrilling releases on the horizon, together with 4K restorations of the 1997 superhero movie Spawn and a bunch of horror motion pictures. A few of the highlights: Creepshow 2, the 2003 remake of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, John Carpenter’s In the Mouth of Madness, and Ringu, the 1998 Japanese movie that was remade in North America as digital-Copy/dp/B0D9MK1NXD?tag=gamespot-preorders-20″ data-target=”true” goal=”_blank” rel=”noopener nofollow”>The Ring.
The entire motion pictures listed under are Restricted Version 4K Blu-rays. We have organized the checklist by launch date.