It really does puzzle me that so many Gate fans are against the new show.
For me, Stargate has always been a mythology that has grown and become more complicated. My view of the new show is that it has successfully turned itself into a more serious drama. The show takes itself more seriously, it takes it's audience more seriously, and this show is a heck of a lot farther away from Wormhole Xtreme than SG1 ever was.
Yes, there's problems with the show, especially with some of the younger cast members. Every time Chloe's life is in peril, I get a warm tingly feeling of hope in my stomach. Riley's death scene, on the other hand, was one of the most horrifying yet beautiful scenes I've ever watched on a sci fi tv show. I also like how the writers have allowed the resonance of that scene to echo on. Watching Young's struggle to deal with his part in Riley's death along with everything else he's having to cope with was the most realistic portrayal of how a real human being responds in a situation like that, and a very honest performance of someone who's found themselves chained to alcohol as their only means of freedom.
Yes, it's similar to BSG. BSG was really among the first sci fi shows to put real human beings into the cast, rather than the derry-do, always-politically-correct-and-perfect-in-every-way space crews that we've seen in Star Trek and many others. As television shows have come through the years, they have become more and more complex, and each time the bar is raised all others have to raise their game too. That's why we have reboots and retellings. We just saw Doctor Who reformat itself, new actors, new production values, and the show gets a new lease of life. Stargate has just regenerated, it's left behind it's 90s tv show format of the show where the brave and always good and right heroes go through a mysterious stargate in a secret military base, where they fight flashy eyed bad aliens that are really snakes posessing a human host, and where their guns work on a "shoot once to stun, twice to kill, and can we please all try to remember to forget that 3 times is supposed to vapourise you in a bad screen wipe".
We still get to see Jack O'Neill, we can still have ratings boosting stars of old shows pop up via the stones, but we have a show now that isn't week after week of renaissance fairs and the same damn forest, there's no twinkly music at the end of scenes with one of the stars standing with a confused look on their face. There's no good guys and bad guys, there's no generic alien race pegged as the long term bad guys, with hoards of mindless soldiers appearing out of nowhere, just to be shot down by the good guys. Those are all good things to not have anymore.
Let's take Star Trek as a parallel example. Voyager was an attempt to just change the actors, change the ship, change the premise of the back story a bit, but otherwise it was the same format that Star Trek had always been. Heroic crew arrive at planet, meet the locals, some stuff happens, the bad guys are unmasked, the bold and righteous crew save the day in the nick of time, there may be a recalibration of the deflector dish involved, and we end with a heartwarming display of crew morale to close.
It's my understanding that a general feeling was that Voyager was one too many trips to the well, and that the show never dealt satisfyingly with the harsh realities of being stranded alone on the other side of the galaxy, and to think that it would still be going boldly with a shiny "just out of stardock" spring in it's step week after week was just unbelievable. Giant gouges were taken out of that ship on a weekly basis, but every week there she was, perfect as the day she rolled out of space dock. Power was on a minimum, but there was always enough for the crew to use away at the holodeck willy nilly, creating entire villages for the crew to get drunk in and have a dance with a holographic paddy. The dangerous and "bad" Maquis just shrugged their shoulders at the end of the pilot and put on Starfleet uniforms for the remainder of the show, with one of their most headstrong and anti Starfleet members as the chief engineer. And let's not even mention what they did to the Borg.
Stargate would have killed itself with another run around the forest with the crew dressed up in ye olde generic villager disguise. We didn't need another pet alien with comedic catchphrases and their quirky insight to our earthly customs. We needed a show that deepened the mythology, brought the production values up a notch to keep up with television in general, and gave us some complex, human characters dealing with their situation as more than just a backdrop.
And we needed Robbie Carlyle
