More thoughts on DJ, having just rewatched it:
Mama always taught me, if you can't say something nice... So I'm trying to say this as nicely as possible
I'll just say, compared to most SG1, this episode always feels sort of... clunky... to me. This is especially true in the scenes with Jack/Jack talking to each other. (all the scenes with Jack/Jack) I find myself consistently wincing during them and it's almost a physical relief when the camera goes to one of the other characters. I don't know if it's the camera angles between the two or (I hate to say) RDA's acting against nothing (though I assume he does it all the time on the show), but I always *feel* like I'm seeing RDA alone speaking to a camera. There's no *connection* - for want of a better word - between him (either Jack or the robot) and the other characters in the scene. I like to think it's because normally RDAs non-verbal communication with the other actors is so strong that, when he's not really there filming it with them in real time, so much of that gets lost he doesn't even seem like Jack anymore. In fact, the only scene which bothers me in quite the same way as the scenes in this episode are the very first Daniel/Jack scene in The Shroud which also doesn't feel like MS and RDA were even in the same room when they shot it.
Other than that - and I'm not sure why this is, either, though maybe it's because I'm not emotionally vested in the robots and think it would be easier all around if they did just hurry up and die - I find this episode extremely difficult to get through (just ask my kids how many times I had to rewind because my mind wandered to other things while watching
). Like I said, have no idea why.
Though I am glad some of you said you loved this episode as it makes me feel better about expressing the fact I don't. Oddly enough.
EDIT: And rewatching did confirm my memory that I find Jack extremely subdued and far less *Jack* than he normally is. His jokes don't seem that funny, and his reactions to Sam seem flat, for want of a better word. It may be that's just carry-over from the other issues I mentioned above, though I find it to be true in the initial control room scenes when it's just RDA and so I suspect it's more than that, and so I do take it as indicative of the emotional processes he's going through to start to pull back from Sam.
Mama always taught me, if you can't say something nice... So I'm trying to say this as nicely as possible

I'll just say, compared to most SG1, this episode always feels sort of... clunky... to me. This is especially true in the scenes with Jack/Jack talking to each other. (all the scenes with Jack/Jack) I find myself consistently wincing during them and it's almost a physical relief when the camera goes to one of the other characters. I don't know if it's the camera angles between the two or (I hate to say) RDA's acting against nothing (though I assume he does it all the time on the show), but I always *feel* like I'm seeing RDA alone speaking to a camera. There's no *connection* - for want of a better word - between him (either Jack or the robot) and the other characters in the scene. I like to think it's because normally RDAs non-verbal communication with the other actors is so strong that, when he's not really there filming it with them in real time, so much of that gets lost he doesn't even seem like Jack anymore. In fact, the only scene which bothers me in quite the same way as the scenes in this episode are the very first Daniel/Jack scene in The Shroud which also doesn't feel like MS and RDA were even in the same room when they shot it.
Other than that - and I'm not sure why this is, either, though maybe it's because I'm not emotionally vested in the robots and think it would be easier all around if they did just hurry up and die - I find this episode extremely difficult to get through (just ask my kids how many times I had to rewind because my mind wandered to other things while watching

Though I am glad some of you said you loved this episode as it makes me feel better about expressing the fact I don't. Oddly enough.
EDIT: And rewatching did confirm my memory that I find Jack extremely subdued and far less *Jack* than he normally is. His jokes don't seem that funny, and his reactions to Sam seem flat, for want of a better word. It may be that's just carry-over from the other issues I mentioned above, though I find it to be true in the initial control room scenes when it's just RDA and so I suspect it's more than that, and so I do take it as indicative of the emotional processes he's going through to start to pull back from Sam.
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