February 2024

S M T W T F S
    123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728 29  

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Sunday, April 29th, 2007 07:42 pm
[personal profile] aurora_novarum’s recommendation to see Line in the Sand was a great one, so I trusted her enough to try this Daniel-free episode, too. I didn’t write down my reactions as I watched, so not only will this review be rather rambling, but it will also be out-of-order. Sorry. :) 

So, The Road Not Taken. An interesting premise, but a disappointing outcome.

First of all, I am convinced that this episode is supposed to come before Line in the Sand. This is Sam’s gadget that she was working on, that seemed to come out of the blue; and the references to Daniel seem much more immediate and post-Quest. So in my my mind, they accidently ran these episodes out of order, and in my personal SG-1 universe, The Road Not Taken comes before Line in the Sand. The extra time – two weeks of the ep itself, plus the weeks before the ep took place (as we learn in the AU) – makes character reactions in Line in the Sand so much more realistic, and it gives us Sam’s out-of-phase device. I admit that Sam does say, “And based on experiments in my reality, [the device is] one hundred percent Ori proof,” but that doesn’t have to refer to the incident in Line in the Sand; they might have been conducting minor experiments of some other kind. Try and convince me otherwise. :)

When I posted, way back when, about Pegasus Project, one of the things I specifically mentioned was my pleasure at how the writers gave us just enough Atlantis for non-SGA fans like me to follow along. This time, however, the writers seemed to assume that we would know about events taking place in the SGA-verse. So what happens to people like me, who don’t follow SGA? I have no idea what McKay’s “bridge” was, or who his sister is, or who Major Lorne was. There’s a vast difference between sprinkling tidbits for the SGA fans that they’ll pick up and enjoy without taking away from the SG-1 stuff; I’m sure there were lots of nuances in Pegasus Project that I missed, but it didn’t affect my ability to follow the episode. This time, they went too far, and I know I’m missing crucial information. And quite frankly, that’s unfair. If it was a SG-1 crossover taking place in an Atlantis episode, I wouldn’t even think of complaining; but this was an SG-1 episode, and I was left floundering.

I’ve discovered that it’s really nice not to be spoiled for upcoming episodes, because GEORGE!!! Squee-time, and out loud to boot. :) I was so pleased to see Hammond in the general’s chair, where he belonged! And it was a very familiar path that he was forced to tread – the necessity of following orders, but fiercely questioning the morality of those orders, and doing whatever he could to support his people.

I liked alt-Lee. He was compentent and intelligent, which he should be. I don’t mind comic relief!Lee if it’s in terms of personality, but I strongly dislike comic relief!Lee when they make him out as bumbling.

I’m going to have to meta this universe in a separate post, because there’s a lot of intriguing potential that we’re not quite seeing. Where’s Jack? Where’s Kinsey? Why is Sam only a major, and why doesn’t anyone seem to care that she’s dead? Is it horrible of me to say that I think that dumping Vala in Area 51 was actually quite intelligent of them?

Landry. I’ve never much liked him, so it was hardly a stretch to see him with this kind of behavior. I’m a little baffled, though, at the sudden and abrupt turnaround. He allowed Sam to go home because she made a pretty speech? Was this supposed to convince us that deep down, he’s really a good guy? Because all it did was convince me that deep down, he’s a man who is easy to manipulate.

I’m not quite sure how I feel about Sam’s dealings with McKay. The first time, her speech about “the Rodney McKay that I know…” was funny, especially because he called her on it so quickly. I have to admit that it was a distinct pleasure to get an AU where she isn’t married/engaged/mooning after Jack, but on the other hand, I would have liked at least a mention of Jack O’Neill. More on this in the inevitable meta post.

Mitchell was fascinating, because he was so different from the man we know, and it would have been relatively easy for him to get there. But that wig…! Is it the same one Daniel wore in Moebius or is that just a little too cynical? If they can manage nice hair extensions for Sam when the occasion calls for it, why not a decent wig for the men?

Prometheus as Air Force One was seriously funny, although Daniel already ran around that ship in a suit in S8, so they’re sadly behind the curve.

It was a police state, but they allowed Sam to wander around so freely? That made little sense, although it was fun to watch her fight when they did get around to taking her in. And I laughed at loud at the gag, because I felt, like in The Quest, part 2, that we were getting distinct echoes of former behavior. I’ll just bet that Sam bit someone, ala her biting Jack’s hand when she woke up in prison in The Serpent’s Lair way back in the season opener of S2.

Sam did look beautiful, but what was the point of all the PR, feel-good stuff if 80% of the targeted audience was without power and couldn’t tune in anyway?

I have to admit it, though: my favorite parts were really the teaser and the tag. Watching Cameron march smack into the force field, because Sam had written the warning sign but forgotten to post it – that was so perfectly Sam. And they spent three weeks talking to an empty room. That is adorable on so many levels. They had faith she was there, and they remembered Daniel in Crystal Skull and Mitchell and Sam in Arthur’s Mantle, and they wanted to offer moral support… Happy sigh for teamy goodness. And their refusal to say what they talked about. And Vala’s hug. Go team!

So, to sum up – once again, an episode gave me a lot to think about. But a lot of it didn’t quite fit. And it takes very strong blinders to ignore the blatant political commentary and enjoy the episode on its own merits.

Off to write some meta, and then to read other people’s reviews! It was quite an effort not to click on many of the posts on my f-list. :)

Sunday, April 29th, 2007 07:53 pm (UTC)
they eventually used an Asgard transporter to beam it out of his head

Okay, I'm just going to stare at those words for a while.

they eventually used an Asgard transporter to beam it out of his head

Words fail me. Utterly.

Amazing how the Asgard made the hosts go through the Hammer on Cimmeria when the Hammer could've just beamed the little snakes into the Labyrinth on their own! And what a pity that we'll never ever hear of this incredibly painless way of freeing a host from a Goa'uld again.

How do they calibrate the beam, exactly? Separate the nervous system and blood and...

they eventually used an Asgard transporter to beam it out of his head

Okay. Giggling, here. :)
Sunday, April 29th, 2007 08:02 pm (UTC)
Um. At the time it seemed reasonable to me :)

They did say that Hermiod (their Asgard) had to take special care to calibrate the transporter beam just right - implied it hadn't been tried before (but I also got the impression no Goa'uld had ever been successfully removed from a host before...so yeah)

They mostly handwave it. I mean...Star Trek beams could have done it :)
Sunday, April 29th, 2007 08:08 pm (UTC)
To be fair, the Asgard do respect the Tau'ri's ability to come up with "stupid ideas." So while I didn't see the ep, and the events onscreen might contradict the suggestion, I could accept the idea that someone desperately threw the idea into the pool and a bemused Hermiod agreed to try.

Star Trek beams could have done it :)

Sigh. Yes, exactly. But SG-1 is supposed to be about people in our time doing extraordinary things, which is why I so dislike the prevalence of ships (not that kind of ship!) on the show. Maybe it's different in SGA, with all the Ancient gadgetry in Atlantis?
Sunday, April 29th, 2007 08:17 pm (UTC)
Hermiod is a bit cranky about having to work with the Tauri though (he's a permanent presence on the ship) so I'm not so sure...
He is highly amusing though.

SGA is a little different in that they do have more access to ships and shiny technology - even though it still feels like people from out time fumbling around with it.
Mostly they have a bad habit of running across Ancient experiments that failed miserably in horrible ways but were never destroyed or labeled "will kill you - do not use" and turning them on and almost or really dying. And yet I like it somehow...
Sunday, April 29th, 2007 08:25 pm (UTC)
Heh. Now I have Terry Prachett's Hogfather running through my head. I suppose the Ancients knew that putting up a sign that says "Do NOT TOUCH THIS UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES" just means that it'll get touched that much faster. :)