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51 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of my personal favorite seasons,
By Nielsen (Rome, GA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stargate SG-1 Season 5 Boxed Set (DVD)
I know this isn't everyone's opinion, but for me, each season gets better and better. Writers and actors get to know the characters and a story more when they've made over 100 episodes with them. (Episode 100 is included in this set, an episode where the writers just decide to mess around and have a good time)Season 5 introduces some very key characters and situations: All of these situations play key in the epic saga of the Stargate universe, providing for plot variations and new ideas in later seasons. The new ideas are still there. The humor is still there. Over 100 episodes in, Stargate is still going strong in this collection. I am looking forward to adding this 5th boxed set to my other four boxed sets. I enjoyed Season 6 even better. Season 7 is still blowing my mind. Let's have those as boxed sets soon as well.
34 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
SG-1 Season Five,
By cyclista (the Midwest) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stargate SG-1 Season 5 Boxed Set (DVD)
I think you're right, Selune, Jonas Quinn's first appearance was Season 5 in "Meridian". Jonas is unable to return to his own people after he discloses that Daniel became irradiated when he stopped a chain reaction that would have destroyed the planet. For those who liked Daniel, there is a featurette about him on this DVD set.The video is just as good as Season Four, and seeing SG-1 in widescreen anamorphic format is a dream. The Dolby Digital 5.1 audio is great. During some of the fights, I really feel as if I'm sitting right in the crossfire! "Wormhole Extreme!", which several have already mentioned is a tremendous episode, features cameo appearances by actual crew members as crew in the episode. If you're curious, here's the list: Extras: Wasn't there a Part 1 of 3 parts documentary "Timeline to the Future" on Season Four? I would think that Part 2 would be on this DVD set and I don't see it. I wonder if MGM/UA will follow up on this. Otherwise, this SG-1 Season Five DVD set is great, highly recommended to any SG-1 fan.
26 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Parker Lewis Can't Lose :),
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Stargate SG-1 Season 5 Boxed Set (DVD)
I agree with previous reviews that certain aspects of this season dragged a bit. However, I can understand the trepidation with which this season was made and some of the stresses they may have been under. Whatever the case, Stargate remains one of the best programs on television. Even the worst episode of Stargate (and there aren't that many) beats anything else on TV at any given time. One of the things I loved about this season was the introduction of Jonas (that was this season, right?). I loved him back on Parker Lewis Can't Lose and thought it was great that he was back on television. His part seems well scripted and the character has a wry humor that permeates each episode he is in. I love Daniel, but I love the character of Jonas, too. Not to mention, he's also easy on the eyes. ;) If anything, this entire box set is worth it for Wormhole X-Treme. I love that episode so much. The ending "outtakes" are just hilarious!!! It's funny to see the Delouis (spelled?)brothers both goofing around. Like the line "but I'm getting paid real money, right?" or something like that. Priceless. Stargate shows everyone that a science fiction show can be thought provoking and genuine in it's character development. It will always be a standard to which other sci-fi shows strive to meet, in my opinion. Anyway, take a look and enjoy. Even if it isn't the best season, it's worth the price to get it.
122 of 155 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Ignore the 'Amazon.com essential video' review at the top,
By A Customer
This review is from: Stargate SG-1: The Complete Fifth Season (DVD)
Forget TITANIC, the unquestionable champion of most oscar-honored film (11 in all) belongs to 1959's BEN-HUR. It is the pinnacle of all biblical epics. Critics and viewers alike have to admit that this film, telling about the adventures of a Jewish aristocrat in the time of Christ, is SOMETHING of a milestone, whether they love it, hate it, or feel it overrated in its acclaim. In my opinion, the belief that this film is overrated is simply not justified. Thanks to William Wyler, it avoids the handicap of some sword and sandal movies by successfully fitting both the dramatic and spectacular elements together, resulting in many memorable scenes of visual and emotional power: The nativity prologue, Messala's march into Jerusalem, the conflicting relationship between Judah and Messala, Christ giving water to the despairing Judah, the sea battle (even though you can tell those ARE model ships, the scene is still well done), Arrius' triumphant entry into Rome, the cleansing of the lepers, and, of course, the great Chariot Race. The production is excellent, the sets and costumes looking lavish and realistic at the same time, with the immortal epic music by Miklos Rosza playing throughout. As for the acting, for someone whose acting ability has been labeled wooden and stiff, Charlton Heston gives a great performance as the tortured title character. He is well matched by the superb Stephen Boyd as the ruthless and power-intoxicated Messala. The supporting cast is also fine, with Haya Hararret as Esther, Jack Hawkins as Quintus Arrius, and the delighful Hugh Griffith as Sheik Illdrean. All associated have truly made BEN-HUR an epic to beat all epics.
17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Relapse,
By
This review is from: Stargate SG-1 Season 5 Boxed Set (DVD)
Sadly, the fifth season of Stargate: SG-1 broke the streak of progressively better seasons that had been going on ever since the first season. The year began with a cool premiere, "Enemies", but the next couple episodes sucked. For example, the episode "Beast of Burden", which deals with Daniel Jackson's (Michael Shanks) Unas friend, Chaka, was terrible. Personally, I also hated the episode "The First Ones" from last year which began the Chaka thread. I mean, I haven't seen episodes this bad since Season 1 (many of the Season 1 episodes, while good, are far inferior to the episodes of Seasons 2-4). Once you reach the third disc, beginning with the episode "Between Two Fires", the episodes become good again. However, the bad episodes weren't the only problems that this season faced. Jack O'Neill (Richard Dean Anderson) seemed to regress a little bit because he seemed a lot less tolerent of Daniel than he had been in the last two years (he does, however, reveal his true feelings about Jackson in the episode "Meridian"). Teal'c (Christopher Judge) and Dr. Janet Frasier (Teryl Rothery) were underused, as were the Asgard, who seem to have put politics ahead of real problems.However, when this season was good, it was REALLY good. There were some amazing story developments this year, beginning with the final demise of Apophis (Peter Williams), the Goa'uld System Lord who has been making life difficult for the SGC ever since the first season. Next, the Tollan, an extremely advanced race of humans who are allied with Earth, begin acting suspiciously, the SGC begins recruiting new officers, the motives of the Aschen from last season are revealed, the Tok'Ra are nearly destroyed, and the Jaffa rebellion begins to truly become a problem for the System Lords. And then, Daniel is brought to a System Lord summit where he has the chance to wipe out the Goa'uld threat forever, that is until he learns of the return of Anubis, an ancient System Lord who was banished for his horrific crimes. Also, we finally learn the origins of the Replicators. Finally, SG-1 must endure a change that they never thought would happen in the episode "Meridian", and then, Anubis and Osirus (Anna-Louise Plowman) reveal plans to attack the Asgard. But the most pivotal plot twist involves the new series-within-a-series, WORMHOLE X-TREME!!! Just kidding. This is a very important season, so despite its poor opening, I still reccomend it. Just be ready to be underwhelmed by the first few episodes. But after you get past those, enjoy! Some good episodes include: "Enemies", "Threshold", "Between Two Fires", "2001", "Wormhole X-Treme", "Proving Ground", "Summit", "Last Stand", "The Warrior", "Menace", "Meridian", and "Revelations".
51 of 65 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Season of Huge Changes,
By Jose (Bedford, New Hampshire) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stargate SG-1 Season 5 Boxed Set (DVD)
Wow! This Stargate Season really got to me. There are very few series that can risk so many changes (especially in one season) and keep the track of things without disappointments. This season sees the departure of a mayor character, the death (final death... mmm, 99.9% sure...) of the mayor big baddie of previous seasons, the annihilation of a powerful ally, politics and shades of grey, the rising of the new big bad nemesis of the series (in a very intelligent way), a lot of character development, conclusions to several story arcs of the past, interesting revelations and more... Perhaps what I most like about this season are the grate scripts (Brad Wright, Robert C. Cooper, Joseph Mallozzi and Paul Mullie were awesome that year). After the grate cliff-hanger of Season 4, "Enemies" came to be one of the best season premieres I have ever had the pleasure to watch. The directing style improved greatly (more visual language, more depth in the approach and very good storytelling). Episodes like "The Tomb" (grate suspense), "Threshold" (one of Tealc's best), "Between Two Fires", the awesome, huge and perhaps best two parter of the series "Summit" and "Last Stand", and the amazing Season Finalie "Revelations" (script, directing, acting... everything at its best) which was the first season finalie of the series with no cliff-hanger, make of this season one of Sci-Fi and Television's best. I loved Anna-Louise Plowman (Osiris) in "Revelations", the introduction of Anubis, the way the System Lords were finally approached as a group, and the intelligent twists the season gave to the series.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
SG-1 is still TV X-treme,
By swingreen "swingreen" (Brooksville, FL United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stargate SG-1 Season 5 Boxed Set (DVD)
Although I totlly understand the awkwardness fans felt over Daniel Jackson's (Michael Shanks') departure and the impact it had on the show, I think that the most objective opinion still ranks Stargate SG-1, season 5 as some of the best TV out there. Having said that, I had already grown fond of Jonas Quinn (Corin Nemec) in the role of Jackson's replacement on the SG-1 team by the middle of season 5.Without giving away too much for those who haven't yet seen season 5, I would like to say that I think fans will like season 5 for the development of new metaphysical themes and the emergence of a major new bad guy to fill the vacuum left by Apophis. The DVD set also comes with some pretty nice featurettes, including cast diaries, photo galleries, audio commentaries for each episode, and a "tribute", of sorts, for Daniel Jackson (which may turn out to be a little premature). My copy of the DVD set also came with a complimentary copy of the premiere episode of "Jeremiah", an apocalyptic sci-fi TV series, which appears to have just finished one or two seasons on cable. I have yet to view it, but the price is right. There was another neat little flier enclosed in the DVD case granting the owner to "SG-1 bucks" that may be redeemed at the online SG-1 store. Maybe I'll get one of those neat ball caps or a pair of sunglasses the team wears when they're off-world...
12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best television has to offer,
By A Customer
This review is from: Stargate SG-1 Season 5 Boxed Set (DVD)
Stargate SG1 is the best television has to offer. Some say the later seasons - those after the third or fourth aren't as good as the beginning, and they are probably right. However, even when Stargate is bad, it's better than everything else on television. If you like action shows, Stargate is for you. Unlike most science fiction of the past twenty years, Stargate is not about the science fiction - the gadgets, the technology, the warp engines - it's main focus is a good story. No "Deus ex technologica" that happened so often in the last three Star Trek series. Meaning that the writers of the show are more interested in a good story than they are in writing a future physics textbook.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Breathtaking and true to life.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Stargate SG-1: The Complete Fifth Season (DVD)
Ben-Hur to me is the only film that I can watch over and over again. The story line is execellent, the script is out of this world, and costumes, and action scenes are totaly brillent(not to mention the chariot race). I also like the way they interact Jesus in the film, showing you that no matter what few moments you spend with Him, it will change your life. What an amazing film. Citizen Kane I am sorry to say does not compare to Ben-Hur.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Big Changes,
By
This review is from: Stargate SG-1 Season 5 Boxed Set (DVD)
Season five sees some major changes. New story lines are introduced. New characters and mythologies are introduced and an old character dies off. Maybe I am just suffering some from fatigue after watching 5 seasons straight through but the show does not seem as exciting any more. It is still highly enjoyable, however. I'm going to see the series through to the end.
Episode synopses follow: Enemies - Last season ended with a bang when the SG1 crew with a captured Ghoul ship blew up a star in an attempt to destroy Apothis and his fleet. They did blow up the star and the fleet but all is not well. The team was entering hyperspace as the star blew up and they were blown a LONG way away. Just to keep things interesting, Apothis and his personal ship were blown to the same destination. Apothis has Teal'c as a prisoner and is about to destroy the humans when "help" shows up. The new ship engages the ghoul mother ship but they turn out to be worse than Apothis. It is a replicator ship. That is the situation. The SG1 team has a set of simple tasks: Get home, keep the replicators from threatening home, escape from Apothis, and contend with a brainwashed Teal'c who is now loyal to Apothis. It's not going to be easy. Threshold - The SG1 team managed to make it back alive from the mission of the previous episode but there is still a big problem. Teal'c's brainwashing is still in effect and he still considers Apothis to be his god. The prognosis is not good and Teal'c's old mentor, Braytac, comes up with the only possible cure. It is an ancient Jaffa right which involves removing the symbiote and letting the patient remember past experiences. Most patients do not survive the procedure but it is the only hope. Teal'c proves as stubborn in illness as he is in life. There are a few flashbacks to earlier episodes but most of the flashbacks concern his days before the coming of the Earth people. It is an interesting piece of character development for the big guy. Ascension - The team is investigating a new planet which shows signs of high development and signs of destruction. They also find what appears to be a gigantic weapon. While she is investigating it, Maj. Carter is knocked unconscious. When she comes to, she seems to be fine but a little snippy. After going home, she encounters a strange man who keeps popping up. It seems that Maj. Carter has a stalker. He has the hots for her but there is something more. He is an alien who is only visible when he wants to be. He only wants to be visible for her. After a while, he becomes so enthralled with her that he permanently takes human form. Without others of his kind, he cannot return to his ethereal state. All of this takes place as the Pentagon is further investigating the weapon found on the planet. It is a BIG one. It turns out, the alien is the one originally responsible for building it. It destroyed the civilization of the planet and he was left behind as punishment. Now, he will do anything to stop it from being activated again. The Fifth Man - The SG1 team makes it through the Stargate in the middle of a firefight. Daniel, Maj. Clark and Teal'c get through to earth but O'Neill is left behind with the new lieutenant who had been wounded in the firefight. The rest of the team promises to return quickly with reinforcements. Those reinforcements will be a long time in coming. Nobody back at SGC has any idea who the mystery lieutenant is. They have never heard of him. They rightly fear that the SG1 team has come under the influence of alien mind control. They have, in a manner of speaking but it is not the alien who is the really dangerous one. The real rat is a government investigator with a political motive. Red Sky - The SG1 team visits a new planet. It is not quite primitive but it is several centuries behind earth's level. The people there are worshippers of the Asgard. Freyer is their particular deity. They enjoy protection from the ghouls and everything seems fine until the team's visit. The SGC Stargate apparently bypasses a few safeguards. In this instance, their wormhole passed through the local sun, transporting some heavy elements that are destabilizing the star, thus dooming the locals. When they realize this, the SG1 team wants to help. They contact the Asgard only to find that Thor is unavailable, Freyer is not as likeably and that a treaty clause prevents them from helping. It is up to the SG1 team to save the planet. Unfortunately, they are hundreds, if not thousands, of years behind the technology curve to do so. Rite of Passage - Puberty is never easy. It is especially tough when you are the last member of your race and the ghouls once tried to blow up the earth by planting a bomb inside you. When you are also the result of a genetic experiment designed to make a better host for ghouls things just go from bad to worse. Cassandra was the young girl in whom a bomb was planted several seasons ago. Since that time, she has lived as the adopted daughter of Doc Frasier. She's becoming a young woman now and her body is changing. Its changing in even more ways that your average, hormone drenched teenager. There was a strange rite of passage for girls of her age back on her planet. When girls became fevered, they would go into the woods where they would be zapped into a ghoul lab for examination. They come back cured. Now, Cassandra can't get to the woods. She is dying. The only one who can help is a ghoul prisoner. It's a deal with a devil. Beast of Burden - "It is our custom to welcome visitors with a drink," says the alien. "It is our custom to drink," says Col. O'Neill. It's a hilarious line when it takes place but, unfortunately, there is little else that is truly enjoyable about this episode. Last season, the SG1 team visited the Unas home world where Daniel managed to make friends with an Unas that was planning on eating him. Since that time, Daniel has been studying the primordial Unas world by means of hidden video cameras. When reviewing the tapes, he is shocked to find that human visitors from another world have conducted a raid and have kidnapped Daniel's friend, Chaka. When they go to investigate, they find that he has been taken by slavers who use the Unas as beasts of burden on a planet that has all of the worst qualities of the American south. The slavery is ugly but the solutions are not as simple as one would hope. It's a good episode but it is not very much fun. The Tomb - The SG1 team investigate a new planet and this one has a few new twists. It has a Babylonian mythos instead of an Egyptian one. They also find a package of Russian cigarettes. This is troubling. It seems that while the Russians had a working gate for a few weeks, a team went missing. They were not an "authorized" team. They were up to some political skullduggery in the same manner that such things happen with all too much frequency to the American crew. A joint mission is sent out to rescue them. This seems to please nobody. Russians and Americans do not exactly have a good track record of working together. Things are made worse when they get locked inside the ziggurat (Babylonian pyramid) and find themselves stuck with a ghoul infesting an alien bug. Things probably could work better if there were not so many hidden agendas. Between Two Fires - The Tollans, an advanced race who have show a disdain towards earth, are showing signs of changing their policy of not trading technology to inferiors. In fact, they are willing to exchange a large number of ion cannons capable of destroying ghoul mother ships. Things are not as simple as they seem, however. There are vague warnings that the Tollan's offers will lead to the destruction of earth. There are competing factions at work within the Tollan government. Some of them seem to be in league with the really bad guys. The threats against Earth might be official Tollan government policy. 2001 - The episode opens with the SG1 team coming home through the Stargate with good news. They have found an advanced race which wants to share technology with earth. In return, they want access to the Stargate system. They have a gate but not a dialing device. It seems to be a deal which is too good to be true. Nobody is really suspicious except for Col. O'Neill. An embassy is sent to arrange a treaty. While the officials are doing the negotiating, Daniel and Teal'c do some background snooping. They learn that the race they are dealing with is the same one that was so dangerous that, an alternate reality version of O'Neill sent a warning back from the year 2010 to warn them. This raises the suspicion level. Unfortunately, the politicians get involved and mess things up for political gain. The aliens are out for conquest and a US senator is determined to help them to ensure his own election to the presidency. Desperate Measures - Major Carter is kidnapped and it happens right here on earth. Within the first few minutes of the episode, almost all of the old earth standard bad guys put in an appearance. So does a Jaffa, on earth. It is not Teal'c. It so happens that while the Russians had an active program, they captured a live ghoul in a jaffa. The ghoul has since matured and needs a new host. A rich American has arranged the kidnapping of Carter so that his private scientists can figure out how her ghoul was successfully extracted. The rich guy is dying and hopes to infest himself with a ghoul in order to get healed and then have the alien removed. Things do not go according to plan. Everyone has his own agenda. Very few of them are on the side of goodness and light. Wormhole X-treme - In an extremely fun episode last season, the team encountered a dweeb who thought he was an alien stranded on earth and who seemed to know way too much about the Stargate program. It turns out that he was right. He was an alien. He was part of a crew which deserted their own forces just before their final defeat and was hiding out on earth. His crewmates were not quite in the same league of dweebishness and neither were they taking part in his memories. The episode ended with the dweeb realizing who he really is and the others disappearing. This time they're back. The dweeb is now the technical advisor on a cable TV show that is WAY too similar to the Stargate program. Meanwhile, an alien ship is heading towards earth and it is identified as being made by the same race as the dweeb. SGC wants to know what is going on and the SG1 team is dispatched to find out. The problem is, the dweeb doesn't remember anything. He thinks he is just a TV writer. His former crewmates are lurking in the background, however, and it is certain that something is going on. It has its serious moments but, mostly, it is a comedy. Its great tongue in cheek stuff! Proving Ground - The SG1 team is assigned to train and evaluate a group of candidates for the Stargate program. The testing is brutal and Col. O'Neill is not will to cut any slack. He is just about to flunk his group of candidates when he gets a terrible message. The SGC has been overrun by aliens. Worse, he is wounded by some SG personnel who have been taken over. Now, he has to take back the facility with a bunch of trainees he was getting ready to flunk. A lot is riding on this one and things are not what they seem. 48 Hours - While beating a hasty retreat from a ghoul controlled planet, Teal'c takes one last shot at the ghoul ship piloted by Tanith. The shot is good but the ship crashes into the gate just after Teal'c steps through. The rest of the team has already made it home safely but Teal'c is still in transit when the connection is cut. Everyone fears that he is lost for good. Maj. Carter realizes, though, that the Earth gate has received the transmission. They just need the machine to put him back together again. Meanwhile, any activation of the gate will empty the buffer containing Teal'c. Everyone works on a solution. One team tries to negotiate with the Russians for a gate control device. An NID idiot tries to blackmail Gen. Hammond and offers the needed information in exchange for some ghoul devices. Maj. Carter tries to work out a technical solution while being impeded by a self righteous idiot. It is Col. O'Neill who saves the day, however. He lacks the finesse or style of the others but he has his own way of getting things done. Summit - The Ghoul system lords are in disarray as they struggle for supremacy amongst themselves. In an effort to divert their efforts into something more beneficial for themselves, they hold a summit meeting to try and divvy up the galaxy. This can be frightening but it yields opportunities as well. The Tok'ra conceive a plan to kill all the major players of the system Lords. They plan to infiltrate Daniel Jackson as a servant of one of them and let him release a poison that will kill them all. It's a workable plan but the plans do not survive contact with the enemy. There is a ghoul puppet master behind the scenes, Anubis, who has his own plot to wipe out the Tok'ra and take control of the System Lords. Having Daniel encounter his former lover as the host for one of the System Lords was not in the script either. It's a cliffhanger. Last Stand - The ghoul summit is not going as well as it could. They don't trust each other. They are further thrown into confusion by the appearance of Osiris who is serving as the proxy of Anubis. Anubis was so evil that even the System Lords would not deal with him. A deal has been offered to get back into their good graces, however. He offers to destroy the Tok'ra and take on Earth. The Tok'ra have pretty much been destroyed. Just a part of SG1 is left alive. Daniel, who is posing as the servant of one of the system lords, comes up with a plan to capture Osiris (who possesses his former girlfriend) and use her to find Anubis. Rescuing SG1 and what is left of the Tok'ra information base also seems like a good idea. It's hard to picture Daniel doing all this covert op stuff but he seems to be doing well at it. Fail Safe - This one seems to be strictly a local episode. An astronomer discovers a huge asteroid on a collision course with earth. It is big enough to extinguish all life and there are very few options for dealing with it. The Asgard won't help because of treaty considerations. The Tollans have been wiped out. The Tok'Ra are on the run after the last few episodes. Its looks like the Earth is doomed. Maj. Carter comes up with a plan to use a ghoul ship shot down on a distant planet to get a bomb to the asteroid. This will require getting to the planet, fixing the ship, getting it back to the solar system and placing the bomb. None of these steps is simple. Things get even more complicated when they learn some of the strange properties of the asteroid. Blowing it up might just make things worse. The Warrior - Teal'c and his old mentor, Bray'tac hear of an army of rebel Jaffa. They go to check things out and it is almost too good to be true. The army does exist and it is led by a First Prime who killed his own master, Imhotep. This guy is a charmer and has a way with words. Listening to him inspires all those who hear. He is preparing an army of rebel Jaffa. The SG1 team is sent to meet with this newcomer and see if an alliance can be reached. They offer food and weapons but the rebels are strangely disdainful of them. They prefer their own ways even though they border on suicidal. Col. O'Neill begins to trust the rebel leader less and less. He thinks that the guy is just trying to amass a personal power base. He is going to recommend against an alliance. Teal'c, though, is sucked in. He wants to believe. He is set to leave the SG1 team until he learns a terrible secret. Menace - The SG1 team finds a new planet that was at one time highly advanced but is now destroyed. The only thing of worth they find is an inactive android. It is lying on top of a slab in a "laboratory". They take it (her) back to SGC and manage to revive her. They want to learn what happened to her world. When the android is revived, she is incredibly human but shows the emotional maturity of a small child. Even so, she is still incredibly advanced. She also has an incredible ability. She can build replicators. She thinks of them as toys and she will defend her toys. Her toys will also defend her whenever she gets hacked off. She gets hacked off easily and throws tantrums like any small child. The Sentinel - Back when the NID was running its own renegade Stargate program, they visited a world which had an advanced ghoul defense system. The renegades wanted to investigate the system but the locals refused because it would violate religious taboos. They go to investigate it anyway. They think the left everything exactly like it was before but something has gone wrong. The Sentinel device is not working. The ghouls have invaded and are trying to get access to the same equipment. So far, a force field has stymied everyone but the planet and its people are being destroyed. The SG1 team is sent back to try to repair the matter. They take with them one of the renegades who is now sitting on death row. It is a race to see who can decipher the system first. Meridian - The team comes back from visiting a new world and Daniel is in trouble. The world they visited is at about the level of the US in the 1940s and they have just found their Stargate and a bunch of other neat stuff. Included in this stuff is a completely new element that makes what the gate is made of look weak in comparison. They are trying to make a bomb. The SG1 team has misgivings over this. They fear that they can destroy their entire planet. Still, the locals persist and the reaction goes out of control. Daniel saved the day, prevented the destruction of the planet and got himself a fatal does of radiation in the process. Most of the episode involves conversations between Daniel and the strange light being met several seasons ago. The discussions are about his future and whether he will live or transcend to something else. Revelations - The SG1 team is still in disarray over the loss of Daniel Jackson. Part of the trouble is that nobody is sure if he is dead or really gone on to something better. While the team is trying to come to grips with the loss, the Asgard finally put in an appearance after being incommunicado for several episodes where their help would have been invaluable. Thor has been captured by the ghouls. A renegade group of ghouls led by the shadowy Anubis and aided by Osiris have attacked an Asgard research outpost. The future of the Asgard depends on preventing the information contained there from falling into enemy hands. The SG1 team is enlisted to help gather the research and escape. Then they learn from Heimdall that Thor is still alive. A major rescue mission is mounted and, of course, nothing goes according to plan. The season ends on a different note, however, since this episode is not a cliffhanger. |
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Stargate SG-1: The Complete Fifth Season by Michael Shanks (DVD - 2006)
$39.98 $18.99
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