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Aaaaah, the season's over! *snivel*
CANON APOCAFIC! :D :D :D
(Actually, it's totally a canon version of "Freedom's Just Another Word ..." -- only with a fix at the end!)
And I loved it, from the creepy, wonderfully SF feel of abandoned, sand-covered Atlantis, to the way they carried the season's plot threads forward to an apocalyptic finish, to all the death scenes, which actually made me cry a little bit (especially Sam's) and that almost never happens for me, to Sheppard's expressions and his interactions with holo-Rodney. Poor, poor Rodney, the last one of the original group, devoting his life to creating a timeline where it didn't happen. Between his comment to Lorne about things not going so well on Earth, and the way they scaled back their Atlantis operations, obviously Earth is having its own (unspecified, fill-in-your-own) problems. Technically, Jennifer was right that he ought to move on, in a sane rational universe where time travel isn't possible ... I suppose you could easily create that as an alternate fork in this timeline. Though obviously, it's a good thing he didn't -- and I was thinking during her goodbye scene that an obsession with something scientific is probably exactly what Rodney does need to get him through the loss of his friends and his wife/girlfriend/partner and Atlantis itself. Though maybe not a 25-year obsession ...
Apocafic for the win! :D
(Here's an interesting thing to mull over, though. We never found out how Rodney died, which is understandable since the hologram wouldn't know, but ... something that occurred to me at the end is that there is absolutely NOTHING in the episode to prove that it wasn't the real Rodney, in Ascended form, pretending to be a hologram, kind of like the one in "Pegasus Project". We never saw how Rodney died, we never saw what his "Eureka!" moment of inspiration actually was, or how he got to Atlantis after talking to Lorne, and we have no way of knowing that what he told Sheppard at the beginning about the hologram setup wasn't just to throw off Sheppard's curiosity. Maybe he came back to Atlantis just to use the Ascension machine again. We just don't know!)
Anyway, I really loved it and I was SO glad to be completely unspoiled -- I didn't know a thing about it, so everything was a surprise, and I got that pleasantly cool spine-shivery feeling from apocalypse-Atlantis that is one of the things I love the most about science fiction. (They really should have checked to see if their sun was within a few thousand years of going red dwarf when they first landed on the planet, though, wouldn't one think?) I don't mind the "fix" at the end because, well, it was very obvious as soon as the situation became clear that they would fix it. I wonder if this was planned as the series ender back when they didn't know if they'd be picked up for a fourth season, because it could have then tied up (rather sloppily) in the last act and capped off the series .... I'm glad they didn't go that way, though; as a series ender, it's a little too much like Unending, really.
I'm deliberately not thinking too much about the cliffhanger, because -- it's such an h/c scenario, but I expect there probably won't be anything like that (no doubt they'll dig themselves out at the start of next season and carry on) ... so, not so much of a cliffhanger, really, compared to the ones they've had in the past! I just don't want to get up my hopes for h/c and emotion-filled reunions and then be disappointed. But ... wonderful episode, I loved it -- a great finish for the season.
Off to see what other people thought.
CANON APOCAFIC! :D :D :D
(Actually, it's totally a canon version of "Freedom's Just Another Word ..." -- only with a fix at the end!)
And I loved it, from the creepy, wonderfully SF feel of abandoned, sand-covered Atlantis, to the way they carried the season's plot threads forward to an apocalyptic finish, to all the death scenes, which actually made me cry a little bit (especially Sam's) and that almost never happens for me, to Sheppard's expressions and his interactions with holo-Rodney. Poor, poor Rodney, the last one of the original group, devoting his life to creating a timeline where it didn't happen. Between his comment to Lorne about things not going so well on Earth, and the way they scaled back their Atlantis operations, obviously Earth is having its own (unspecified, fill-in-your-own) problems. Technically, Jennifer was right that he ought to move on, in a sane rational universe where time travel isn't possible ... I suppose you could easily create that as an alternate fork in this timeline. Though obviously, it's a good thing he didn't -- and I was thinking during her goodbye scene that an obsession with something scientific is probably exactly what Rodney does need to get him through the loss of his friends and his wife/girlfriend/partner and Atlantis itself. Though maybe not a 25-year obsession ...
Apocafic for the win! :D
(Here's an interesting thing to mull over, though. We never found out how Rodney died, which is understandable since the hologram wouldn't know, but ... something that occurred to me at the end is that there is absolutely NOTHING in the episode to prove that it wasn't the real Rodney, in Ascended form, pretending to be a hologram, kind of like the one in "Pegasus Project". We never saw how Rodney died, we never saw what his "Eureka!" moment of inspiration actually was, or how he got to Atlantis after talking to Lorne, and we have no way of knowing that what he told Sheppard at the beginning about the hologram setup wasn't just to throw off Sheppard's curiosity. Maybe he came back to Atlantis just to use the Ascension machine again. We just don't know!)
Anyway, I really loved it and I was SO glad to be completely unspoiled -- I didn't know a thing about it, so everything was a surprise, and I got that pleasantly cool spine-shivery feeling from apocalypse-Atlantis that is one of the things I love the most about science fiction. (They really should have checked to see if their sun was within a few thousand years of going red dwarf when they first landed on the planet, though, wouldn't one think?) I don't mind the "fix" at the end because, well, it was very obvious as soon as the situation became clear that they would fix it. I wonder if this was planned as the series ender back when they didn't know if they'd be picked up for a fourth season, because it could have then tied up (rather sloppily) in the last act and capped off the series .... I'm glad they didn't go that way, though; as a series ender, it's a little too much like Unending, really.
I'm deliberately not thinking too much about the cliffhanger, because -- it's such an h/c scenario, but I expect there probably won't be anything like that (no doubt they'll dig themselves out at the start of next season and carry on) ... so, not so much of a cliffhanger, really, compared to the ones they've had in the past! I just don't want to get up my hopes for h/c and emotion-filled reunions and then be disappointed. But ... wonderful episode, I loved it -- a great finish for the season.
Off to see what other people thought.
no subject
I also thought it was like Freedom, in many ways. And there was time-travel! Happiness :-)
I loved abandoned Atlantis - the way the camera moved through silent halls reminded me of the underwater footage of the Titanic. Heartbreaking. I loved everyone's stories - SAM! Samsamsamsamsam, oh, Sam, she was so awesome in this episode - not giving up, fighting for a ship, being a damn good commander, and everything falling apart once she was gone. And by god I am waiting for someone to write that SG-1 fic of the team's reactions to her death, back on Earth.
Ronon and Todd - !!! Loved their expressions just before they died, their mutual agreement. And again, I learned something new about the Wraith: apparently, they can be self-sacrificing, if the cause requires. And I'm thinking about the rational, smart Wraith here, not the drones.
Rodney was good here, both as hologram and flashback. And funny! The Zelenka line, his splinter. And I loved Lorne. In my mind, he's built an entire life back on Earth, and even if life there isn't perfect, he has a wife and kids and grandkids, and when he gives Rodney the go he's actually risking all of that, and it's a huge sacrifice but he decides to make it.
Sam's skepticism when John comes back is a bit overdone. After all, she has been through time-traveling experiences herself. More than once. But I'm not letting the details bother me.
Mmm, what else? I dunno. Woolsey's kind of an ass, I guess, as are the SGC and IOA, not to mention ungrateful. Earth's ass was saved be aliens more than once, and now they're abandoning Pegasus. But I guess humans will not learn.
All in all: a great, fun ending to the first season I've watched "live". I can't believe it's a whole six months till the sequel.
no subject
And I can understand Sam's skepticism, because she's got a whole city to be responsible for, and she knows they're up against an enemy who can create clones and mind-control them. (Alt-Sam was a whole WORLD of awesome, though, wasn't she?)
It was a great way to end the season. I wasn't disappointed, and spoiler-free is definitely better! (Even knowing that, though, I've decided that there is NO WAY I'm going to make it all summer without finding out the major spoilers that are floating around ... I managed to stay mostly unspoiled 'til the end of the season, but I know I won't make it until the new season airs.)