|
Doc, Let Me Know When It Dies
I’ve been trying to write this column for two days, and I
keep getting bogged down in trivia! So let’s try a fresh
start.
Over the course of several years, Stargate SG1 has
become one of my favorite science fiction shows. A spin-off
of the successful 1994 feature film Stargate, the
series starts out a year after the movie takes place, the
stargate program all but abandoned because no one could
figure out how to make the gate connect to anyplace but
Abydos, where the gate was believed to have been destroyed
by the bomb that Colonel Jack O’Neil (Kurt Russell) was
supposed to have set for detonation before returning to
Earth. Circumstances require a return to Abydos, where
Doctor Daniel Jackson (James Spader), who stayed behind, has
discovered a map showing gate addresses for many other
planets. And off they go. The series has had all the of the
elements necessary to a long-running successful television
science fiction show: actors who work together with the
right chemistry, decent plot lines and scripts, cool
equipment and good special effects, great love-to-hate-‘em
enemies, and enough new ideas introduced over the course of
eight seasons to keep the show fresh and exciting without
mutating it out of all recognition. It has even spawned its
own spin-off, Stargate: Atlantis, which while
significantly different from the parent, still retains
enough of the elements of the original show to appeal to the
fan base.
The team from which the series takes it name, SG1, is made
up of Colonel Jack O’Neill (admirably reprised for the
series by Richard Dean Anderson), Doctor Daniel Jackson
(excellently portrayed by Michael Shanks in the show), Air
Force pilot and astrophysicist Captain Samantha Carter
(Amanda Tapping), and for the mandatory alien that seems to
be a requirement in any space opera, the Jaffa named Teal’c
(Christopher Judge), human in appearance but also the
carrier of an immature form of the parasitic symbiotes known
as the Goa’uld. (The Goa’uld are the main bad guys of the
series, passing themselves off as gods and enslaving vast
numbers of people throughout the galaxy. Ra from the movie
was a Goa’uld. Just so ya know.) First but only one of many
stargate teams, SG1 is part of Stargate Command, a secret
Air Force command that was formed to oversee the stargate
program. SGC, still located in the Cheyenne Mountain
Complex, is headed by Major General George Hammond (Don S.
Davis), and is populated by extras and a number of more or
less important recurring characters.
One factor that adds to the realism of the show is the
attention to detail concerning things military. As a retired
Air Force master sergeant, it jolts me out my willing
suspension of disbelief when a TV show or movie portrays
glaring errors in military uniforms, grooming and
mannerisms. In general, the characters in Stargate SG1
are properly groomed, wear their uniforms correctly, and
follow military protocol. (Except for the pesky civilians,
but what’re ya gonna do?) Jack O’Neill is a maverick, but
knows how far he can push the envelope. General Hammond
plays it by the book, but also knows when it’s time to toss
the book out the window. Samantha Carter is a good officer
who knows the difference between personal initiative and
bucking the system for no reason. Teal’c, used to both
taking and giving orders, has no trouble fitting in the
chain of command. Even Daniel Jackson can usually tell when
argue with military bullheadedness and when to go with the
flow. I find that it contributed to the overall realism of
the story and makes it that much more enjoyable.
Starting out on the Showtime network, Stargate SG1
managed to survive and even thrive after its transition to
the Sci-Fi Channel and is currently in syndication on both
Sci-Fi and the Fox Network, while starting out just recently
with a brand new season on Sci-Fi.
Which now brings me to what I really wanted to write about.
What in the name of all the Goa’uld gods were the writers
and producers of the show thinking when they came up with
the misbegotten Frankenstein’s monster that they’re trying
to pass off as season nine? I thought Ben Browder was
absolutely great in Farscape, and that his co-star
from that show, Claudia Black, was excellent as a guest-star
in the season eight episode “Prometheus Unbound”. In the
first two episodes of season nine, Browder has been less
than inspiring and Black has been, well, bloody annoying. No
Jack O’Neill, no Samantha Carter, and don’t get me started
on Beau Bridges as the new CIC of Stargate Command. And
what’s the deal with Walter Harriman pulling the “Radar
O’Reilly” bit with the personnel records for the new
commander? Imitation may be the sincerest form of flattery,
but that’s ridiculous. Not to mention that it looks like
they’re bringing in a whole new set of false gods to start
fighting with, after the defeat of the Goa’uld and
liberation of the Jaffa toward the end of season eight. If
the storylines and the acting don’t improving in one heck of
a hurry, I predict that this will be the final season of
Stargate SG1.
Now I’ve finished venting, and I don’t even feel any better
about the whole thing. (Sigh.) I’ll probably continue to
watch the new episodes, as least for a few more weeks, to
give the buffoons who did this a chance to redeem
themselves, but right now I’m not holding out much hope. I
console myself with the thought that there are eight good
seasons to re-watch, and I have the first season on DVD, all
ready to go. If you haven’t watched Stargate SG1, do
yourself a favor and don’t start with this new season -
watch the old episodes in syndication, or buy/rent the first
season and do it right.
|