Decent episode which reminded me of SG-1's Scorched Earth
Ahhhhh, Raxor beat me to it.
Inconsistency: the AI says that it didn't mean to torture Shep because he was actually in control of his own hallucination. But Woolsey wasn't in control of the phony message that made Tamlyn Tomita's character change tactics. He didn't even know it was happening. I think the AI was lying to Shep and just liked smacking him around.After 2000 years in stasis, the poor thing was bored and maybe a little crazy.
The silicon based lifeform: why have it be humanoid? Unimaginative.
Inconsistency: the AI says that it didn't mean to torture Shep because he was actually in control of his own hallucination. But Woolsey wasn't in control of the phony message that made Tamlyn Tomita's character change tactics. He didn't even know it was happening. I think the AI was lying to Shep and just liked smacking him around.After 2000 years in stasis, the poor thing was bored and maybe a little crazy.
The silicon based lifeform: why have it be humanoid? Unimaginative.
It also said he could take more than any man he knew... Maybe Shep is just in to a little bit of tied up torture play, so he's had plenty of practice?
Inconsistency: the AI says that it didn't mean to torture Shep because he was actually in control of his own hallucination. But Woolsey wasn't in control of the phony message that made Tamlyn Tomita's character change tactics. He didn't even know it was happening.
They do have flashes of great characters in these fluffy, resettable ones they present. They always seem to have such great ideas, setups, and plans that they never make use of. Such a shame, they could be great, rather than just somewhat enjoyable fluff.The AI was trying to save Shep the embarrassment of realizing what it says about him that he'd choose that scenario. How could the AI know about Kolya, etc? The details of that scenario had to come from Shep, not just the general outline.
Even the detail about Shep imagining the scientists dead was revealing. Was that his passive-aggressive way of getting back at the woman scientist for rejecting him?
And the SG:A writers have presented Shep as being psychologically messed up in the past. They just haven't gone anywhere with it. They trot out this notion every once in a while, but it's too late to do anything with it now.
The AI was trying to save Shep the embarrassment of realizing what it says about him that he'd choose that scenario. How could the AI know about Kolya, etc? The details of that scenario had to come from Shep, not just the general outline.
Even the detail about Shep imagining the scientists dead was revealing. Was that his passive-aggressive way of getting back at the woman scientist for rejecting him?
The AI was trying to save Shep the embarrassment of realizing what it says about him that he'd choose that scenario. How could the AI know about Kolya, etc? The details of that scenario had to come from Shep, not just the general outline.
That's what I said. The AI had a general outline, but Sheppard provided the details. The AI was going to make him stay the hell off of Atlantis, but Sheppard's own subconscious is what made it so drastic. If it were Rodney who needed to be kept off of Atlantis, his hallucination probably would've been just a broken jumper with an excessively complicated tangle of burned out wires. Sheppard, on the other hand, wouldn't be convinced he couldn't do what he wanted unless he was bound, maimed, and demoralized by the scariest villain available.
Not sure that Koyla is the scariest villain available - Sheppard's repeatedly beaten him. Michael might have been smarter. It's a lot more plausible that he'd somehow made it on to the mainland.
Has Michael really had Sheppard by the balls as much as Kolya has? Michael never "killed" Weir, nor did he ever slowly torture Sheppard to death. Kolya is intelligent, methodical, and utterly goal-oriented. If an enemy has no more use to him, he'll simply kill them. Michael, on the other hand, is something of a brute and a bully. (Yes, yes, I know, he's really a delicate flower and wouldn't have harmed a soul except for all the people he would've eaten if only the mean ol' Atlantis crew hadn't had the temerity to try and find a permanent solution to the wraith problem, but now he's a brute and a bully.) Aside from the whole mad scientist angle, he's kind of stupid. To pick the freshest example, Kolya wouldn't have let Teyla live after he'd gotten the child, and he would've brought his own bomb to Atlantis.
Michael wanted to get back at the people who "wronged" him, with furthering his own personal goals coming in at a distant second. Kolya, while no doubt enjoying the opportunity to get some payback, never let that come before accomplishing his mission. That cold commitment always made Kolya far more intimidating a villain to me.
Did anyone get reminded of Adrian Conrad the moment Vanessa was introduced?
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