Plus unlike Frasier or Beckett was from battle or doing their job. Where as Riley was cause of an accident.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Whose loss was more gut-wrenching?
Collapse
X
-
Janet's death made me the most sad. Assuming we count Weir's departures as a "death" then both of her's would about be as bad, since she left an even bigger void."First Weir, then Samantha Carter, and now, you! It's a pity you humans die or get reassigned so easily, or I might have a sense of satisfaction now!"
*You got the touch! You got the poweeeeer!*
"Arise, Woolseyus Prime."
"Elizabeth..."
Comment
-
Janet's death was more of a shock for me than gut-wrenching. She was a key figure in the SGC and her death was part of one of the most emotional episodes of SG-1 that showed the bravery and devotion to duty of those in the SGC. It showed the reality of what they were up against in their fight against the Goa'uld.
However, it was Riley's death in SGU that was the gut-wrenching one for me. More so because his death was a senseless one that could have been avoided in the first place. The fact he was liked by others on Destiny and that he asked Young to speed up his end made it much more harrowing to watch. Even now I find it hard to watch that episode.
Comment
-
Elizabeth's death (all of them. Well, I'm talking about our timeline's Elizabeth Weir). It was the real beginning of the end for the franchise, IMO. Elizabeth, together with John and Rodney was the core of the Atlantis spinoff and Atlantis was the end of the franchise as we know it. SGU is VERY good, but it's not actually Stargate...
Anyways, I think tptb were wrong about this decision, even if they were forced to act in this particular way
Comment
-
Originally posted by Krisz View PostHowever, it was Riley's death in SGU that was the gut-wrenching one for me. More so because his death was a senseless one that could have been avoided in the first place. The fact he was liked by others on Destiny and that he asked Young to speed up his end made it much more harrowing to watch. Even now I find it hard to watch that episode.sigpic
Stargate Destiny - Coming Again Soon
Comment
-
For me, it was Beckett.
The events of "Sunday" came out of left-field, with no time to prepare or brace the audience for what was going to happen. A genuine gut-punch.
Fraiser's death was telegraphed in the promos for that episode. I think they tried to cut the footage so it looked like O'Neill was going to die, but they hyped that a character was going to make "the ultimate sacrifice." That Janet would be the character was unexpected, but the audience was aware going in that someone wasn't going to make it and they could expect the tragedy.
Unexpected gut-punches are far more devastating.
Comment
Comment