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May 26, 2012

Stargate Atlantis: Be All My Sins Remember'd

by Richard Keller, posted Jan 5th 2008 4:30PM

Sheppard, McKay, Carter and Ellis

(S04E11) SPOILER ALERT!!! DO NOT READ PAST THIS LINE IF YOU HAVE NOT SEEN THIS WEEK'S EPISODE. I GIVE YOU FAIR WARNING.

Huh? What? Gah?

What the hell was that at the end of this week's Stargate Atlantis? I'll be honest, I didn't see it coming. Oh, I thought something was going to happen as the scene shifted to the area that the Replicator planet once populated -- I was thinking more along the lines like the nannites rebuilding the planet from scratch, like the Genesis Device from the Star Trek movie series. What I didn't expect was a ship floating amongst all of the planetary debris. And I certainly didn't expect the person sitting in the command chair to be someone fans thought dead as a doornail.

It was none other than former Atlantis administrator Dr. Elizabeth Weir. I really and truly thought that she was dead and gone. It was probably something that shouldn't have even crossed my mind since the show I am reviewing here is a science fiction program. The question is, though, which Elizabeth is she?

Is she the one true Elizabeth? Since it was revealed in 'This Mortal Coil' that the original Dr. Weir was killed maybe this isn't the original. Of course, Shep and the rest of the Atlantis team could have been told a fib. If this isn't the true Dr. Weir is it someone similar to the Weir from the previous episode? In other words, a Replicant created on another world. Well, since they created one of her already they may have had another Elizabeth ready to go in the wings. But, this one seems a bit darker in tone (from what I gathered in the five seconds I saw her on screen). I'm sure we'll get more information about her as the weeks progress.

Gee, three paragraphs about a five-second scene at the end of the show...and I haven't even talked about the rest of the 44 minutes and 55 seconds. For the most part I found this week's installment of Atlantis to be interesting and a good close to the events that took place in the first half of the season. It tied in a good many loose plot points, pulled characters together, and gave the viewers some sense of closure (we think) that at least one enemy of humanity is finished (for the time being, at least).

It was good to see Jill Wagner as Larrin once again. She had such a good chemistry with Sheppard back in the episode 'Travelers' that I was hoping the two would meet sooner than later. The same chemistry was there this time around as well. Sheppard definitely has a case of puppy love for Larrin. You can tell that just by the inflection of his voice and the way he speaks with her. Also, he seems to be a bit freer with the information when he's around her.

Nice to see Sam Carter back on the show. I think this was the first episode where we really saw how tough an administrator the colonel could be after she stared down Colonel Ellis after he verbally lashed McKay. Ellis is not my favorite character; he's a bit to brusque for me -- thinks his poo don't smell. Perhaps I'm still carrying over some dislike from when the actor (Michael Beach) played Jeanie Boulet's husband, Al, on ER. McKay showed him, though, as he was able to defeat the Replicators almost single-handedly.

There were a few things that I didn't like about this week's episode. First was the way that the Replicators were eventually defeated. Not the part about massing their cells into one gigantic inert ball, but the whole thing about triggering the neutronium to cause an explosion to destroy the Replicator's planet. To me, it sounded like a whole lot of techno-babble that was used in Star Trek: The Next Generation when there was no other way to get out of a situation. It seemed way to easy a way to end the storyline.

Another thing I didn't like was the use of Fran. The whole concept of a Replicator, designed by McKay, that was reasonable and willing to work with the Atlanteans, was totally underutilized. Yes, it could have become something where Fran became almost like Atlantis' Data, but I still wish we could have seen her for a few episodes more, at least.

A few other items from this week's episode.

  • This episode reminded me of similar ones from Deep Space Nine and Babylon 5. It was the concept of the alliance between different races that did it for me. Maybe that's why I am comparing this week's show to older science-fiction programs.
  • There were some great visual effects this episode. The battle around the Replicator home world was really quite good and showed how far the industry has come with these types of scenes in only a few years. Another good effect was Shep's jumper swerving all around the Ancestor ship in order to avoid crashing directly into it.
  • Colonel. Colonel. Colonel. Colonel. The early scene where Colonels Sheppard, Carter, Ellis and Caldwell get together and introductions are made reminded me of some of those early M*A*S*H episodes where the Captain and Colonel introductions fly fast and furious.
  • Teyla finally lets the rest of her team know that she's pregnant. I'm not too sure how much we'll see of the character now since Rachel Luttrell was actually pregnant during filming of the show (she gave birth to a son, Caden, back in October). I do know that she will be returning towards the end of the season.

Next week -- The Replicator threat is over (for now), but that still leaves the Wraith.

What version of Elizabeth did we see at the end of Stargate Atlantis?
She's the original, who was reprogrammed before the Replicators died.305 (55.1%)
She's another Replicator that was created in the city that was destroyed on 'This Mortal Coil205 (37.0%)
She's from a mirror universe where the Replicators rule the universe.44 (7.9%)

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cygnis77

I loved this show for many reasons other people have already stated, but especially for (1) Larrin (so gorgeous!)back and the sexual tension between her and Sheppard, and (2) Carter dressing down Col. Ellis defending McKay (who she used to detest on SG-1) was GREAT! And I like Carter with long hair (a bias of mine, I like women with long hair). I'm very sad to hear Carter won't be continuing in the series.

I hope to see Larrin back in as many episodes as it would work into the story arc(s). I think she's a fabulous actress and I loved her character immediately when I first saw her in the episode in which she premiered.

I personally like techno-babble....LOL... I know, I know, it's not popular with most people, but I find it fascinating most of the time. Not that I'd want a lot more of it, but I sure don't mind when they do it.

March 17 2008 at 7:02 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
jjm3.2007

"Be all my sins remembered" is an absolute 'Classic' Sci fi episode. It helps to see the previous episode- #310. This 2 parter is up there with the best Sg-1 episodes. I never thought I would warm up to this Stargate- "the next Generation" type show. But now since Sg-1 is finished I guess MGM has more money in their budget for better writers and special fx. Keep it up guys. At least it beat out "Battlestar" at thePeople's choice awards. Congrats, Space Brats!

January 15 2008 at 4:05 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Stacy

I just loved this episode....funny, cool special effects, enemies working together...But, I see your point about McKay. Every show can't end with McKay single handedly saving the day with some techno/science babble.

The colonels bit was funny, but it was McKay's, "really?" that made it hysterical.

Sheppard and Larrin were cute together, but I too don't get why he's so into her. He doesn't know her, she's had him beaten up and she's not an ally. (Her only concern is the advancement of her people. I can totally see her betraying Atlantis/Sheppard in the future if it would benefit her people.) Sheppard has proven time and again that he's a solider and is all about his team and keeping Earth & Atlantis save, why is he going soft for her?

Sheppard’s reaction to Teyla's pregnancy was spot on for him. I didn't think it was over the top. I did think, however, that it was out of character for him to not apologize later or even mention that he felt bad for being so harsh.

Even though Teyla's pregnant I hope we still see her in future episodes. I want to see the whole team react to her and the possibility of having children on Atlantis. With so many women and men living and working permanently on Atlantis isn't this a real concern?

I'm glad that Carter finally was given a purpose. Carter might as well not have been on for most of this season. Maybe now TPTB will bring her personality out more.

I'm not feeling the Fran love as some of you are. I think she served her purpose and there isn't any need for her or a Replicator like her for future shows. There already is one know it all, save-the-day genius on Atlantis, there isn't room for one more.

Finally, now that the Wraith (well one wraith) know where Atlantis is there should be even more cool battles to come.

January 14 2008 at 10:38 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Richard Keller

I could have sworn I put in Categories and Tags. Hm. I have updated that information so it can be reviewed in the future. Thanks for the notification.

January 09 2008 at 8:36 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
hz08

It seems you forgot to file this episode recap under anything (like Stargate etc...). I'm guessing that will make it nearly impossible to find in the future.

January 09 2008 at 8:25 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
dianaprince

Well I'm disappointed. I thought we had gotten rid of Weir for good. Maybe she could go and take acting lessons and then come back. She is the reason that I rarely watched SGA until she died. I yahoo'd and yippee'd all over the place when I found out Carter was coming and she was going to be gone.
Watching her/hearing her is like fingernails on a chalkboard for me. I try to block her out when she's in scenes. Or try to study her acting deficiencies and learn from them in my own stagework.
I thought that they might be considering bringing back the ORIGINAL actress that was Dr.Weir on SG-1: Jessica Steen. What happened with that actress? Dr.Weir was such a good character until Ms.Higginson pulled the switch.
Am I alone here? Is it just me that feels this way?
Is anyone else doing imitations of her squints and head nods, just like we do David Caruso's sunglasses on CSI: Miami ?
But now to the episode. Good. Maybe the wraith will become friends waaayy in the future, and their feeding will be taken care of by use of the death penalty. Prisoners sentenced to death - will go to the Wraith. ?

Geez, am I morbid this morning or what?

January 07 2008 at 4:01 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Becky

I agree with a lot of the positive comments on the episode (and the "Colonels" cracked me up, regardless if it's been done before), but I can't agree with the positive comments on Larrin. She's a glorified Mary Sue.

Tragic life. Suffers the same fate as the hero (being fed on) but survives and just shrugs it off. Beautiful. Smart. Young. The leader of her people. Kick-ass. But mostly . . .

Sheppard turns into an idiot every time he's around her.

He didn't see it coming when she kissed him and stole his gun? He didn't FEEL her stealing it?

He really couldn't get out of those ropes? C'mon. He managed to escape from Ronon's ropes in Tabula Rasa.

She's self-centered and will do anything to get what she wants, and he keeps trusting her anyway?

The writers took what could have been an interesting character and handed her every cliche in the book -- and Sheppard falls for it?

They may have good chemistry together, but unless there's a plot line coming up that explains why Sheppard's brains fall below his belt when she turns up, I just don't care about her.

January 06 2008 at 10:47 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Ian

Weir: Her final loyalties will consume many an episode IMHO. My guess is her hybrid kind will evantually make peace with the Atantis people, but not until a number of clashes have teken place, with the inevtiable cliff hanger as Weir holds the life of several Colonels in her hands.

Fran: No point in this twist if she isn't going to reappear about 3 more episodes into this season. She is essentially a hybrid herself.

The wraith. How are these friendly wraith feeding themselves?

Larrin: I was disappointed at the small part in this ep. Hopefully she will get more time soon.

SGA now has a problem. The replicators were changed to take on the Wraith and give the SGA a breather. What happens now?

January 06 2008 at 5:34 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Melissa

I thought that the episode was great. I was so happy that there was going to be a new episode that I could hardly wait. I thought that it was great when Carter defended McKay to Col. Ellis and the battle was great. At the end of the episode when McKay was going to delete the Replicator homeworld out of the database and they showed the screen and went back I thought that they were going to start regenerating or pulling themselves back together. Imagine my surprise when they showed a ship. In the back of my mind I thought no way and then they showed people in there and you could see someone sitting in the captains chair and I was like it has to be Dr. Weir. I was so excited it was great. I noticed that she had a somewhat darker appearance but I thought that it was wonderful. I think that maybe it is possible that she is going to help them start again and maybe help Atlantis defeat the Wraith. I think that being replicator herself - she survived all this, while the others did not was because they were not in the area when this all happened. Yes they all are made out of nanites, but if they weren't in the area they would not be affected by the pull that was created and been destroyed. Now if it is the real Weir and she is part replicator there are so many different ways that they can explore this and I think that it is going to be great, and she can in the end help them defeat the Wraith.

January 06 2008 at 4:38 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Willmore

My guess for next week's episode:

The 5 wraith ships that did not attack the replicator planet actually went to Atlantis. Ta-da-da, the team has to save the city ... again ... maybe this time they enlist a race of magical gnomes ... oh, wait, they already have the Asgard. Ok, then maybe they go Commando-style and infiltrate a heavily defended enemy position (Planet, ship, sandwich shop, whatever) go guns-blazing in order to fix some do-hickey that McKay came up with and save the day with seconds to spare.


Seriously, the last 4 years of Atlantis and SG-1 combined have been nothing but elaborate sci-fi cliches. I am waiting for Tek Jensen to pop up in an upcoming episode. What happened to interesting, serious sci-fi episodes, and yes that "serious" kidnapping one was somewhat interesting, but it wasn't really sci-fi, it was a melodramatic piece set in a sci-fi universe that would work unrelated to science. The SG-1 finale was fine, but it wasn't great. And these are individual episodes, it seems that the series has become nothing more than a simple action-adventure with sci-fi stuck on the side to make it fit in the Stargate universe.

Now, I'm a fan of the series, but if the quality of the writing, and the acting doesn't improve this show won't go anywhere. Dr. Weir being back is not a step in the right direction. I know she was a fan-favorite of many, but I have no idea why. She's not a sci-fi actor, there a certain acting style required to be able to speak the sci-fi lines and not look like you're talking in a foreign language and she flat-out can't do it. She would have the same concerned look on her face whenever she heard of trouble in the galaxy, so to speak, and the same exact look when she was being told the solution to that trouble. It's that slightly raised eyebrow with concerned eyes, classic. It break the 4th wall, but it makes me smile inside when I see her do it.

Coming from SG-1 to Atlantis there is a tremendous step-down in acting ability. Hewlett's McKay is just about the only nice thing about the acting. But Flanigan couldn't act his way out of a can and his charisma, charm and wit all seem forced and manufactured, as opposed to the somewhat believable Richard Dean Anderson as O'Neill. And as good as McKay is, he's no match for Dr. Jackson. Teal'c and Ronon are a push since neither can act, and are essentially elaborate cannon fodder. Amanda Tapping isn't great, but she knows the character. The character was better written in the past, but there's nothing she can do about that.


In the end, this long ramble was simply to say, that the series has been on a steady decline since before it began, and hopefully the talented writers and producers find a way to right the ship. How hard is it to write good sci-fi? Battlestar Galactica manages to do it every week, and they don't even have 15 races to juggle around with ... kill one, bring another to life, kill them, bring the first ones back from the dead ... but this time with a dark twist ... genious.

January 06 2008 at 5:07 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to Willmore's comment
hz08

I agree almost completely with your comments. Although, I would say that to some extent that Stargate Atlantis has been more responsible with the types of stories they take on than SG-1 was/is with seasons 9-Ark of truth. Atlantis has had some really great wraith episodes now and then and though they haven't really handled the Replicators that well, they have at least made them interesting. But they haven't been on more than they could chew. They haven't wasted a great juicy steak (Vegans can replace this with something more suitable) by choking down on it. Not the way SG-1 did.

The Ori arc from SG-1 was terrible. They were basically ascended Goa'uld (which would have made more sense had they actually been ascended Goal'uld but I digress). Which essentially took what had the potential to be a great unique new interesting godlike super villain and condemned them to the life of rehash. Is there any reason for them to be lying about ascension? I mean just because they're honest and really nice to their followers does that give them the right to annihilate the rest of us and our Ancient protectors? I certainly don't think so. But alas since they didn't do that, aside from the team's chemistry and Vala it seemed there wasn't much reason to watch the show.

In season 10 they teased us with Adria suggesting she might be an interesting character with the potential to save the Ori arc from the realm of Goa'uld redux. And for two episodes she threatened to deliver on such promise. But then she too, quickly degenerated into the generic cliched void of bad sci-fi villainy.

The final indignities suffered by this character in the penultimate episode exemplify your point: "kill them, bring [them] back from the dead ... but this time with a dark twist ... genious." Indeed, and in this case all in one episode!

I doubt they gave any serious thought about what the effects of ascending Adria (which the writers teasing us in her early episodes clearly indicated she was a true believer) would have on the character. Organically from the story, one would think discovering that Origin was a lie would have a transformative effect. (A la, the "Operative" from Serenity). Which would of course make it more dangerous since if she opts to make Origin "nicer" and more compelling and thereby cause it to spread like wildfire. As believing an Origin would have numerous tangible benefits that would comfort people in a way never before possible. But even if her motives are pure there still is that pesky problem of her thereby achieving absolute power.

Would this be Goa'uld redux? No. Would the Ancients and Tau'ri just stand by and idly watch as the newly revitalized Origin takes over the place regardless of it's newfound moral center and stated intentions? Given the fate of the Asgaard among other things on the Ancient's watch is their nothing Adria can say to criticize their non-interventionist ways? Can Adria be trusted with absolute power?

Will the writers even go there? I think the answer to all of the above is No. And that's unfortunate. But as far as I can tell Atlantis hasn't done anything quite that bad (yet).

January 06 2008 at 10:11 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply

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