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having seen this for the first time, and with a 16 year perspective, I'm not too fond of it. It reminds me of about 10,000 forties through sixties movies about two bumblers who mix with serious types to save the day, from a Bob Hope, Danny Kaye, Abbott and Costello type with B heroes and villains. It seemed, as O'Neill would say, very cliched.
Speaking as a writer, to make something part of a dream is a very weak plot device, but it didn't seem to bother anyone on this thread.
It did have a lot of good lines, and Richard Dean Anderson plays a great annoyed straight man. Good one-liners, although not caring for Star Trek, I'm kind of lost on all the in-jokes.
And why is it those Mother ships never have ANYONE in the corridors??
A thought: it seems the most dangerous job in the universe is that of a To'kra or Ja'ffa warrior. They're always getting taken out.
well the trouble is they have lots of ships often and spread their people thin, throw in thousands of years of constant power struggles and they are always short of jaffa, servant goulds, and materials like naquadah,
they seem to have the same issue of the wraithe, all thier jaffa are exhausted early on in their conquests due to being 20 plus years to grow and train or if you send them too soon they tend to die, their wars and battles and skirmishes constantly cost them resources they dont have to spare, instead of buying expensive parties and stuff, they are constantly buying expensive things to be blown or to blow up other stuff from someone else... those battles are costing them their naquadah resources as well... so the gould are all sort of ..... well focused more on just relaxing and making sure no one has more then anyone else, thats why they dont exactly want to capture earth, because so many people would upset their thousands of years of balance of power which is as close to a truce or peace as they know how to live with etc
Hide-and-seek has been made illegal to play on the motherships. They kept loosing Jaffa.
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An attempt at making a mission-gone-awry episode funny. It works on certain levels. I giggled once and I'm rating an excellent because it's quite entertaining. The other guys is just Felger getting the other two into trouble, although Coombs takes the brunt of it.
Little going on but plenty of action to be had. Lots of Jaffa biting the dust again, or tasting pond-water. Funny though how fast Teal'c was all dried up after having been completely submerged. Or how the weather on the planet where Felger and his compatriots are investigating the ring transporter has sunshine in on place, and about a mile away there's a heavy cloud blocking the sun and it looks several degrees colder as opposed to warm and sunny. They weren't that far from the gate either cause Felger and his buddies had plenty time to run back to their research side and ring into the ship.
I'm rather intrigued what your definition of "a great annoyed gay man" is now.
Although I'm pretty sure you're aware he meant straight man in the comedic sense, the one who sets up the jokes but doesn't get to say the punch lines.
Seaboe
If you're going to allow yourself to be offended by a cat, you might as well just pack it in -- Steven Brust
Originally posted by Seaboe MuffinchuckerView Post
Although I'm pretty sure you're aware he meant straight man in the comedic sense, the one who sets up the jokes but doesn't get to say the punch lines.
Oh... ...I had no idea, but now I still want to know.
Another reason for "straight man" becoming an obscure reference is the dearth of stand-up comedy teams. Most stand-up comics work alone. In teams, there was usually one man who was the straight man and the other gave the punch lines.
Seaboe
If you're going to allow yourself to be offended by a cat, you might as well just pack it in -- Steven Brust
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