Stargate

I Have No Idea What a ‘Space Milkshake’ Is …

by Mike Moody on December 3, 2011

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But I’m willing to try it …

Apparently this is a film, or a TV show, or a web series, or nothing but a potentially great sci-fi comedy epic that will never happen (?) starring Billy “Pippin” Boyd, Amanda Tapping, Lana Lang, and that guy who can’t act for shit from Sanctuary. I like the tone, I like the music, I like it when Billy “Pippin” Boyd shoves the Sanctuary Debbie Downer aside. I hope Space Milkshake gets made.

‘Stargate Universe’ is over. (Sadness.)

Syfy aired the show’s final episode on Monday (read my recap for AOL TV), and its pretty clear that the franchise won’t be bouncing back for at least a few years. It’s a shame, since ‘SGU’ was only starting to find its legs as a compelling, ambitious, arc-driven sci-fi drama, and ‘Stargate’ was one of the most consistently entertaining sci-fi brands of the last decade. Here’s hoping it’ll return some day in some form, and when it does, I hope I’ll be here to write about it again.

I interviewed ‘Stargate Universe’ co-creator Brad Wright and star David Blue about the series finale for a recent AOL TV feature. Below you’ll find text from a follow-up email interview I conducted with Wright about the show. The interview features Wright’s answers to specific questions about the finale that I didn’t use for the AOL feature in order to avoid giving away spoilers. Enjoy, ‘Stargate’ nerds:

Me: The final episode, to me, played like a series finale, thematically and emotionally. Is that what you were going for when you came up with this story and shot the episode?

Brad Wright: Actually we wanted it to be both. I had pitched the idea of putting the crew into suspended animation — with someone having to stay behind because one pod didn’t work — because I thought it made for an interesting reset of the earth side of things. A three year time cut would have been interesting. The story of the person that was going to be left behind was also a great opener for season three. But when we saw the Tuesday night ratings on Syfy we knew it might be the end. By having our leads come together for one last meal before going off into the void, we got a chance to see them as a team in the way we were always working toward. And by making the person left behind Eli, it brought the series full circle. Those two elements make it feel like a finale.

What was the most interesting or exciting aspect of this finale for you as a creator and as a viewer?

We all went down to watch the dinner scene. It was the last thing we shot main unit.    Nobody on the crew or in the cast wanted it to be the end. But we knew if it was, it was a fitting end. And I think the final shots of the series are very moving.  

We see the main crew members come together like a family in the finale. Was it always the plan to build to that?

Yes. It was always the plan for the wrong people to become the right people.  

How would the characters and their relationships have grown and changed in the third season?


I don’t want to say where we were going to go with the story. It didn’t happen, so the show is what it is now. I think a pretty decent two seasons of television.   

Earlier, we talked about your idea for a movie that would combine elements from all three ‘Stargate’ shows. Why did you think that would be the way to go to continue this story?

I intended to incorporate elements from both SG-1 and Atlantis to make it a “Stargate” movie and not just a “Universe” movie. The combination of elements also happened to be the only way I could think of compressing what was intended to be a longer series arc into one movie.

How do you feel
when you look back on the accomplishment of producing 15 years of ‘Stargate?’

I feel proud. But I’d by lying if I didn’t say it’s a shame SGU was canceled.   It deserved at least a final season, and where we were going with the story was very cool. Shepherding the final episodes through the post production process, sitting in mixes, etc, I kept thinking to myself “this show got canceled?” But business is business. And as I said to our crew members as we said our final goodbyes recently… “Time to start typing something else.”

The ‘Stargate’ stops spinning

by Mike Moody on May 11, 2011

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The Gate stopped spinning and Destiny went dark in the captivating ‘Stargate Universe’ season finale.

‘Gauntlet’ was a strong, densely plotted, emotional hour. It failed to wrap up all of the show’s many hanging threads, but I don’t think anyone expected ‘SGU’ to answer every single mindboggling question it ever brought up here, especially since it’s well-known that the actors and creators learned about the show’s cancellation after filming had wrapped.

But its no accident that ‘Gauntlet’ had an appropriate sense of finality to it. ‘SGU’ co-creator Brad Wright told me in a recent interview that the episode was designed to work as a season finale as well as a series finale of sorts. As the show’s ratings started to dip following the move to Tuesdays last October, Wright and crew figured that they should really make this season ender count. Read the rest @ TV Squad.

Impressive episodes like ‘Blockade’ are making this cancellation business really hard to swallow.

From start to finish, this was easily one of the most exciting and compelling hours of ‘Stargate Universe’ to ever hit the air. I don’t think there’s another show on TV right now that’s offering this kind of classic sci-fi shoot-em-up-fun mixed with genuine suspense, great character moments and an intriguing long-form story arc.

I’d be rejoicing about the show’s recent creative comeback if we had another season, or at least a TV movie or two, ahead of us. But, sadly, ‘SGU’ is a done deal. Well, at least it’s going out with style. Read the rest @ TV Squad.

‘Stargate Universe’ delivers a fine ‘Epilogue’

by Mike Moody on April 26, 2011

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This week’s episode of ‘Stargate Universe’ played like a love letter to the show’s fans. Seeing these characters grow old together felt especially poignant in light of the show’s cancellation and the recent news that the story will not continue with a TV movie or miniseries.

‘Epilogue’ was epic, ambitious and moving — exactly the kind of dramatic and clever sci-fi storytelling that viewers will remember for years to come. And it was funny too! Really, really funny. Read the rest @ TV Squad.

This week’s episode of ‘Stargate Universe’ offered a gripping and mind-bending sci-fi tale that thrilled and depressed me all at once.

I was thrilled to see the show — and the franchise — return to its science-fiction roots with epic space battles, plenty of Gate usage and a plot that hinged on time travel. This episode even offered our heroes a rare peek at a dramatic and perplexing “What if?” scenario.

It was shocking and exciting to learn that alternate versions of Destiny’s crewmembers had traveled back in time some 2,000 years and founded an entire civilization. But I was depressed two seconds after the episode ended when I remembered that ‘SGU,’ despite its recent creative winning streak, would be ending soon. Read the rest @ TV Squad.

Rodney McKay was out of sight, but this week’s episode of ‘Stargate Universe’ still inspired memories of the sunnier ‘Stargate Atlantis.’ A big, scary monster attacked our heroes during a scout trip and took two people captive, leading the team to embark on a dangerous rescue mission on an alien planet.

I make the ‘Atlantis’ comparison here because the plot of ‘The Hunt,’ at first blush anyway, felt like the same kind of well-worn sci-fi story that ‘Atlantis’ rehashed several times during its five season run: Alien creature attacks, important person is taken, others risk their lives to rescue them. But the comparisons pretty much end there. Despite some monster attack scenes and some so-so creature feature CGI, ‘The Hunt’ was less about reveling in sci-fi/action-adventure tropes and more about exploring Ronald Greer’s troubled soul. Read the rest @ TV Squad.