Archive for May, 2008
SCI FI PI Interviews Christopher Judge
May 31st 2008
In the first part of a possibly three-part interview, Australia’s SCI FI Channel’s SCI FI PI talks with Stargate star Christopher Judge during his appearances at the First Contact Conventions in Sydney and Wellington. SCI FI PI wrote, “He talked about pretty much everything you could imagine, from his darkest fears, the highs (and lows) of Stargate, his experience as a writer, the two new Stargate films, his upcoming new series, Rage of Angels, all the way to golf with the kids…”
In one portion of the interview, Judge talks about writing for Stargate SG-1 and how supportive Brad Wright, Martin Wood, and John Smith were to his making the move from actor to writer. His script, “Birthright”, went before cameras with very few changes, something that rarely happens in the industry. It was Brad Wright’s support of him that finally led to his writing the pilot script for Rage of Angels, which he wrote in the four days following the announcement that SG-1 had been cancelled. Rage is meant to be a starring vehicle for Judge.
To read the first part of the interview, which covers the creation of Teal’c and how to pronounce “Jaffa” and “Goa’uld”, visit SCI FI PI: Teal’c Cuts Loose: The Ultimate Christopher Judge Interview. Make sure to check back for the rest of the interview that is soon to follow.
NOTE: Judge’s script was the pilot for an hour-long drama series for television, but recent statements from Judge and Michael Shanks, who is Judge’s production partner and co-star, have indicated that the script will be turned into a screenplay for a feature film. A television series is still possible following the making of the movie, which Shanks said he’ll be concentrating on after he’s finished filming his two episodes of Stargate Atlantis that he is currently shooting.
SCI FI Press Release Confirms July 11 Premiere
May 29th 2008
Finally, the SCI FI Channel has officially announced the Season Five premiere of Stargate Atlantis in a press release published at the NBC Universal’s “Media Village” website:
SCI FI CHANNEL ANNOUNCES SUMMER LINEUP OF HIT SERIES!
Lineup Includes Season Premieres of Scare Tactics, Stargate Atlantis and Eureka And New Episodes of Ghost Hunters InternationalNew York, NY — May 29, 2007 — This summer, SCI FI Channel features the returns of some of cable’s hottest shows! On the reality front, viewers can look forward to all-new investigations with the team from the immensely popular Ghost Hunters International as well as the return of the hilariously irreverent Scare Tactics, hosted by comedy superstar Tracy Morgan. The Stargate legacy continues with the premiere of the fifth season of Stargate Atlantis, and SCI FI’s record-breaking hit series, Eureka, will return at the end of July with its highly-anticipated third season.
[...]
Stargate Atlantis (Season 5 Premieres July 11, 2008 @ 10 PM) – As Stargate Atlantis moves into its fifth action-packed season, the team of intrepid explorers continue to face peril and uncertainty from within the vast reaches of the Pegasus Galaxy.
The series promises to keep things exciting by introducing a powerful new race, welcoming new cast members and forging new alliances, all while delving deeper into the mysteries of the Pegasus Galaxy. The new 20-episode season will include the series’ benchmark 100th episode.
Robert Picardo, known to fans as the International Oversight Committee rep Richard Woolsey, joins the Atlantis cast and assumes command of the Atlantis expedition. Reluctant to step into Colonel Samantha Carter’s shoes, Woolsey must deal with new responsibilities and find his way among the crew. The team, led by Lt. Colonel Sheppard (Joe Flanigan), Dr. Rodney McKay (David Hewlett), Teyla (Rachel Luttrell), Ronon (Jason Momoa) and Dr. Jennifer Keller (Jewel Staite), must adjust to his unique leadership style.
Fan favorite Paul McGillion, returns for five episodes to reprise his role as the beloved “Dr. Carson Beckett.” Amanda Tapping (“Colonel Samantha Carter”), and Stargate SG-1 star Michael Shanks (“Dr. Daniel Jackson”) will also appear as special guest stars this season.
[...]
SCI FI Channel is a television network where “what if” is what’s on. SCI FI fuels the imagination of viewers with original series and events, blockbuster movies and classic science fiction and fantasy programming, as well as a dynamic Web site (www.scifi.com
) and magazine. Launched in 1992, and currently in 93 million homes, SCI FI Channel is a network of NBC Universal, one of the world’s leading media and entertainment companies.
To read the rest of the press release, visit NBC Universal Media Village.
SGA S5: Bringing in Gender Balance
May 29th 2008
There will be more recurring characters in the City of the Ancients in this coming season of Stargate Atlantis, and most of these new characters are female so as to bring gender balance to the show’s cast.
Bringing gender balance to the show’s cast, both main and recurring, was one of the reasons for the introduction of Captain Alicia Vega, played by Leela Savasta and introduced in the season premiere “Search and Rescue”. Executive producer Joseph Mallozzi explained Vega’s introduction in a recent MGM interview, “With Carter gone, I said to Martin [Gero] during the hiatus that it would be good to introduce a female military character – like Lorne, a background character to use.”
In addition to Vega, Season Five will also see the introduction of an all-female team. Mallozzi confided in his weblog, “Over the hiatus, I pitched out the idea of introducing an all-female team as a means of addressing the male-female imbalance on the show. I would introduce them in an early script and whoever survived the episode could potentially be brought back as a recurring character.” This script is “Whispers” and is slated to air as the seventh episode of the new season.

Now, there will be another named recurring character to give gender balance to the role of Stargate Technician: Amelia Banks.
Banks first appeared last season in “Quarantine” and is played by Sharon Taylor. Mallozzi introduced Taylor to the readers of his weblog, “She first caught our eye playing the role of a replicator in the episode Lifeline. She had such a unique look that we brought her back as a real, flesh and blood member of the expedition. A line here, a line there, and then it was only a matter of time before something else struck us about Sharon. She’s damn good. We continued to bring her back, increased her face-time, and, as a true indication that she had really made it, finally gave her character a name: Amelia Banks. And the fact that Sharon is a black belt kick boxer and could probably kick all of our asses had nothing to do with it.”
Taylor’s return to the Atlantis sets is very similar to that of Savasta’s. Savasta started out with Atlantis portraying a different character in the “Tao of Rodney” before becoming Captain Alicia Vega in “Search and Rescue” and “Whispers”. Banks’ first Season Five appearance will also be in “Search and Rescue”, and she’ll be seen again in the mid-season two-parter, which is currently being filmed.
Just as Vega is the female counterpart to Lorne, who will be returning in Season Five, Banks will be the female counterpart to Chuck, the Canadian technician played by Chuck Campbell. But fans of the “Chucknician” need not worry—he’ll be returning in the new season as well.
Season Five of Stargate Atlantis premieres on the Sci Fi Channel on July 11, 2008, at 10pm ET/PT.
SGA S5 Spoilers: Casting for "The Lost Tribe"
May 28th 2008
The second episode of the mid-season two-parter for Season Five of Stargate Atlantis, “The Lost Tribe”, had a casting call for a new female commander of a Travelers’ ship named Katana. She’s the “very attractive, no-nonsense ship’s commander” who is sent by Larrin to Atlantis on an investigation. Sheppard ends up enlisting Katana’s help in rescuing Dr. Daniel Jackson and Dr. Rodney McKay from a facility built by the Altantian Ancient Janus.

Executive producer Joseph Mallozzi wrote in his weblog the announcement of the casting for this new Traveler: “Over the weekend, I promised to give you all the scoop on Katana, the Traveler who will be making her first appearance in the mid-season two-parter. Well, I’m pleased to tell you that Daniella Alonso has been cast in the role. Those of you not familiar with Daniella’s work may want to check out her 11-episode arc in season two of Friday Night Lights. She was excellent in FNL and is doing a wonderful job for us on The Lost Tribe.”
According to her IMDb record, Alonso was born in New York, New York, and started out as a model. She has had recurring guest starring appearances in One Tree Hill and Friday Night Lights.
“The Lost Tribe” is shooting concurrently with the first-part episode, “First Contact”, both of which were written by Martin Gero. Gero is also the director in charge of the second unit and has been putting together the Jackson-McKay scenes while director Andy Mikita takes care of the rest of the two-parter. “First Contact” will most likely air September 12, if the Sci Fi Channel shows all of the episodes from the first half of the season without a break starting July 11 (at 10pm ET/PT). Alonso’s episode will probably not air until sometime in January 2009 if Sci Fi doesn’t show all 20 episodes straight through but puts several months between the first ten episodes and the last.
For more details (i.e., spoilers) concerning these and other episodes, visit the Season Five episode index in the Stargate Wiki.
[Thanks to Joseph Mallozzi for the picture of Alonso in her Katana costume.]
SGA S5 Spoilers: "Outsiders"
May 27th 2008
“Outsiders”
The Balarans are survivors of Michael’s release of the modified Hoffan drug and have joined the village of another planet as a place of refuge where Dr. Beckett is working in a clinic. They considered their survival as a blessing until they learn that the Wraith are on their way to their new homeworld to wipe them out.
Details
The Balarans who survived the Hoffan plague that Michael released on their world have joined into another society on another planet. They have become friends and neighbors to the villagers, who are ruled by a Council and number about 600-700 people. Three of the Council are Elson, Jervis, and Renni. Two of the Balarans are Novo and Safaris.
The village has welcomed Dr. Carson Beckett and his work at the village’s clinic. He has shown nothing but kindness to both the villagers and the Balarans, those the Councillors call “outsiders”. Sheppard and his team visit the village to warn Beckett and the Council that a Wraith hive is on its way and to propose that the entire village evacuate to Atlantis for immediate safety and then relocate to a new world. Unfortunately, neither the “outsiders” nor the Council agree that leaving their homeworld is their best option.
Guest Characters
- Dr. Carson Beckett (Paul McGillion)
- Jervis
- Elson
- Novo (female)
- Renni (female, 30s)
- Safaris (male)
- Male Wraith
- Wraith Commander
Production
- Written by Alan McCullough
- Directed by (TBD)
- “Outsiders” Episode Guide.
SPOILERS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AS THE EPISODE IS IN PRODUCTION.
"Stargate Worlds" Establishes New Development Model
May 27th 2008

Stargate Worlds was represented by FireSky’s Joseph Ybarra at the recent ION Conference held in Seattle, Washington, on May 13-15, 2008. Gamasutra’s Wendy Despain and Mathew Kumar issued their report on Ybarra’s presentation in which he expressed the hope that future MMOGs developed by his company will follow a “television model”, which was established by Stargate Worlds, and present pilots for determining how accepted a new game will be. Just like with a television show, if the pilot shows promise, episodes will follow.
The development cycle of Stargate Worlds has been used as the foundation of the “television model”. The developers created the MMORGP using a development cycle similar to the way the actual Stargate SG-1 television show was produced, according to Ybarra.
“They would begin shooting in February and wrap in December,” Ybarra explained. “Each episode is about 40 minutes and only costs about $2 million to produce. Shoots last from three days to a week or two, and they’d front-load the time with the things they could count on like standing sets and established actors, so the vast majority of the time was spent in post production. To get this all done in one year they’d shoot episodes in parallel, too.
“Since they’d been doing this for ten years, they had this production organized down to a science — they could just repeat the process over and over again.”
With the use of established game-building technology (Unreal Engine 3 and BigWorld Technology), the developers of Stargate Worlds could function similar to the TV show’s production crew and focus their efforts on content. Creative director Chris Klug’s mantra is “show, don’t tell”, according to Ybarra, and so the team concentrated on telling “stories more like TV” where they present a more visual story than one based on text description.
“If you do this right, you extend the product life span through the regular content updates,” Ybarra expressed. “If you have a successful MMOG you’ll never stop making it — similar to Stargate making TV and DVD movies for more than 13 years.”
Ybarra is hopeful that the “pilot games” that they release will have the same kind of success, not only gaining an audience, but keeping that audience through the regular release of new content, just like with new episodes of a television series. Stargate Worlds is set to have a “predictable release cycle” of new content every six weeks. This schedule means that they will be working on updates in parallel, similar to how Stargate might film multiple episodes in parallel.
Ybarra hopes that the television and movie portion of the Stargate franchise will also benefit from Stargate Worlds just as the development of the game has benefited from the use of the “television model” established by those entities themselves. “MGM is seeing [Stargate Worlds] as an opportunity to get established in the Asian market more — where the show isn’t especially popular but MMOs are. The game may push more viewers to the show since they’re in sync with the canon. We’re working together with the show to sync the content up as much as we can.”
To read the complete article, visit Gamasutra: ION: Ybarra On Stargate Worlds’s Hollywood Model. To learn more about Stargate Worlds, visit their website.
Stargate Worlds is schedule to debut in the winter of 2008.
Beau Bridges Lands Role in ABC Pilot
May 23rd 2008

Zap2It and The Hollywood Reporter have announced that Stargate star Beau Bridges has won a role in an untitled comedy pilot from Kristin Newman (“How I Met Your Mother”) for ABC.
Bridges is joining Alyssa Milano and Meagen Fay in the pilot in which Milano, who also had a recurring part on “My Name Is Earl” along with Bridges this season, will play “a woman trying to break free from her overbearing family and unpleasant job.” Bridges will play her dad, who is divorced, while Fay (“Malcolm in the Middle”) will play his new fiancee.
Zap2It described Bridges: “A three-time Emmy winner (including one for ‘My Name Is Earl’), Bridges has also appeared in ‘Stargate SG-1,’ ‘The Fabulous Baker Boys,’ ‘The Agency’ and ‘The Positively True Adventures of the Alleged Texas Cheerleader-Murdering Mom’ (for which he [won] another Emmy).”
SCI FI WIRE: "Continuum" Made Character Suffer
May 23rd 2008
Spoilers Ahead!
SCI FI WIRE’s John Sullivan was one of the press who got to see a screening of Brad Wright’s Stargate: Continuum recently, and now he’s reporting his impressions from the movie. One such report zeroes in on the trials and tribulations of one Dr. Daniel Jackson.
Way back in August 2007, Michael Shanks did an interview with Dreamwatch’s Total Sci Fi about what happens to Daniel because Shanks wasn’t able to make the trip to the Arctic along with Ben Browder and Amanda Tapping. When Solutions originally reported the contents of that interview, we plastered the article with a “Massive Spoiler Warning”. So, if you don’t want to read more, turn back now!
Sullivan opens his report, “The upcoming straight-to-DVD movie Stargate: Continuum, based on SCI FI Channel’s original series Stargate SG-1, gave producers a chance to wreak havoc on a main character to serve the exigencies of the film’s location shooting. (Major spoilers ahead!)” … See, even he knows how massively spoilery his report is…
Details

“Writer and executive producer Brad Wright told SCI FI Wire that the script called for Daniel Jackson (Michael Shanks) to lose a leg—but not simply to serve the writer’s whim. Rather, Jackson had to become disabled to meet the needs of the production, which shot several scenes in the Arctic, when Shanks was unavailable,” Sullivan reveals.
The movie’s crew went to the Arctic in late March 2007 to film scenes with the U.S. Navy’s nuclear submarine USS Alexandria. At the same time, Shanks was filming his three-episode arc in Fox’s hit TV show 24. Brad Wright had to rewrite the scenes that were supposed to include him on a wrecked ship in the Arctic and on the ice floes. “I knew I had to separate Carter and Mitchell from Daniel,” Wright told Sullivan. “But he was on the boat! I didn’t know what to do. I thought, ‘How do I keep him there?’”
Wright’s solution came after doing research on exposure. All members of the cast and crew who went to the Arctic were given plenty of training on how to survive the extremely cold temperatures of the Arctic Circle. In the story, when Daniel, Carter, and Mitchell end up on the frozen ship with the Stargate in the cargo hold, they weren’t dressed to suit the colder temperatures.
“I called Ben [Browder] to discuss the script, and he asked what I was going to do with Shanks,” Wright continued. “I told him I fixed it by having him step in the water, and he gets frostbite. He asked, ‘What happens next?’ I said, ‘We cut off his leg.’ He said, ‘Man, you are harsh!’”
Accommodating the Actor’s Absence

Rewriting the scenes was only the beginning of the response to Shanks’ absence from the Arctic shoot; there was a ripple effect of changes in costuming, props, and sets to explain Daniel’s separation and injury.
In the March/April issue of the Official Magazine, production designer James Robbins explained what he had to do in order to make Shanks’ studio-shot scenes fit with the rest of the footage taken on the submarine with the other actors. “We also had to build a wardroom for the submarine. When the guys went up to the Arctic, we shot some scenes on the sub, but not in the wardroom because Michael Shanks was unavailable at the time. So, during the off-season John Smith and Martin Wood flew down to San Diego and they got all these shots of the interior of the sub and the wardroom. Then from the photographs we were able to create a very convincing wardroom on the set. It married beautifully with the existing footage of Richard Dean Anderson in the real sub. He exits the set and we pick him up on the real sub from there. It’s seamless; it really worked beautifully.”
In addition to the wardroom, a portion of an ice floe was built to accommodate the separation of the three team members (see picture above of Shanks on that ice floe set). All of these changes were appreciated by Shanks, who told TV Guide’s Ileane Rudolf in an August 2007 interview, “We did end up building a frozen ship and part of an Arctic floe in a frozen soundstage in Vancouver. The temperatures in there were minus 7 (19 Fahrenheit) so we didn’t have to act that much because it was cold! As much as everybody raved about their Arctic experience, I was happy not to go, and happy that they brought the Arctic to me!”

Wright and Wood adjusted subsequent scenes to temporarily confine Daniel to a wheelchair. Amazingly, Wright found the best possible way to say thank you to a very special person through this change. “Charlie [Cohen of MGM] is arguably the biggest Stargate SG-1 fan we have,” Wright told the Official Magazine. “I know this for a fact because long before he was actually in charge of the show directly, when he was in a different department at MGM, Hank Cohen, who was then president of the Television Division, would bring me by to talk with Charlie to get his opinion on what we were doing with the show. I was always astounded by his depth of understanding of the series. He has even been an extra in Stargate Atlantis and played a cameo, a small cameo, in Stargate: Continuum! That’s Charlie Cohen, our boss at MGM, pushing Daniel down the corridor in a wheelchair. He loved doing it, and it’s great that he’s part of it.”
The Actor’s Adjustment

Shanks told Dreamwatch, “I went, ‘Oh, this is great. It gives me something very different to play with the character, where he’s thrust back into a changed reality with a missing leg and is forced to live his life as a normal civilian.’ So we get to see more of a dark, bitter aspect of the character than we’ve seen before. … And then the psychology of what goes into that — To be told to live your life missing a leg, as a normal civilian, can lead you down a dark path. The character has always been so idealistic and optimistic about things, so we see him go to a darker, bitterer place.”
Obviously losing a leg will have an impact on the way Daniel moves, and Shanks shared with Dreamwatch how he approached this acting challenge. “My grandfather, who actually fought in World War II, had been missing a leg. He’s gone now, but as a kid, I remember thinking in terms of what he had to deal with on a daily basis. This was a really great opportunity to access those memories and bring some of that back.
“Of course, I worked on the walk. It was a little bit tough, but we got through it. It was nice to play that realistic scenario as opposed to using your imagination and wrapping your mind around this possibility.”
The Finished Product
Sullivan wrote in a previous report to SCI FI WIRE, Continuum Expands SG-1, that we’ll see many character moments in the movie, “The film includes a scene in which Carter goes shopping and Mitchell returns to a farm he visited as a boy. Wright said he couldn’t have gotten away with such character drama in an SG-1 episode.” And as far as Daniel’s character moments are concerned, they’ll be evident throughout most of the film.

Wright told the Official Magazine about Shanks’ handling of Daniel’s plight, “He thought it worked and he understood. Actors love playing things. That man has been doing Daniel Jackson for over ten years and to have another side to the character, another facet he just grabbed on to, and he colored his performance quite expertly. When you’re watching the movie, you are aware that he’s had this loss.”
And how permanent will this loss be? Wright has penned other SG-1 time-travel stories, including one, “2010″, in which all of the team members die in an alternate future (and he had the story idea for “Moebius” in which a time-traveling team dies in Ancient Egypt). “But it’s fun to watch your characters sacrifice themselves for what they believe in,” Wright told Sullivan, possibly hinting at Daniel’s fate in the altered timeline in Continuum. “There’s a nobility of the character, and that’s fun to do in a time-travel story, because you know you can get away with it, and it will be OK.”
To read Sullivan’s complete article, visit SCI FI WIRE: Continuum Made Character Suffer. There is an additional spoilery hint in the interview there, so beware.
Stargate: Continuum makes its premiere on DVD and Blu-ray on July 29, 2008, in North America.
[Thanks to Andreas of Repro Images for the MGM Movie Stills.]
SGA S5: Welcome Back to Atlantis, Dr. Jackson
May 21st 2008

Michael Shanks was back at Bridge this week to film scenes for his two-episode appearance in Season Five of Stargate Atlantis. Dr. Daniel Jackson finally gets a well-deserved visit to the city that he discovered and do some research about the Atlantian Ancient Janus, the man who built a time machine out of a Puddle Jumper 10,000 years ago (“Before I Sleep”).
Dr. Jackson’s visit to Atlantis coincides with some interesting revelations about others who live in the Pegasus Galaxy. Both episodes of the two-parter (“First Contact” and “The Lost Tribe”) are written by Martin Gero and directed by Andy Mikita.
Apparently, being back on set to reprise his role was just like old times for Shanks and the crew as executive producer and co-showrunner Joseph Mallozzi reported in his weblog. Mallozzi says that he’s often asked what an actor is “like to work with” and shares his conclusion:
Who IS a pleasure to work with and who ISN’T? Well, the best way to find out is to query the people they work with. And I’m not talking about actors or directors or producers. I’m referring to those unsung heroes of the industry, the men and women who spend their every working day in their company. I’m referring to the crew, the people who make it all happen on-set and, in so doing, have to put up with that demanding actor, that quick-tempered director, or that overbearing producer with a disquieting penchant for karaoke and orange creamsicles. They, better than anyone, know what’s what. And they, unlike most, can’t be accused of having an axe to grind. They call ‘em as they see ‘em. I bring up this topic because Michael Shanks was in yesterday, shooting his scenes for the mid-season two-parter and the crew was Thrilled (note the capital T) to have him back. Apparently, Marty G. came across Michael holding court on set, exchanging anecdotes and happy memories with an appreciative gathering of familiar faces from his days on SG-1. Yep. How actors, directors, and producers gets along with/are respected by their crew will pretty much tell you all you need to know. FYI.
Stargate Atlantis is scheduled to premiere July 11 at 10pm ET/PT on the Sci Fi Channel. If episodes are shown every Friday from that date, “First Contact” will premiere on September 12.
Shanks Filming Movie in Hometown
May 21st 2008
Stargate star Michael Shanks is filming a new movie in his hometown of Kamloops, British Columbia. Shanks’s Official Website (MSOL) has details about the movie, Lost Treasure of the Grand Canyon, which is said to be “in the spirit of Indiana Jones.” And guess what? Shanks plays an archaeologist!
According to MSOL, Shanks will be co-starring with Shannen Doherty, who plays Sarah Jordan, the daughter of the professor leading an expedition into the Grand Canyon. His team has disappeared, and she “assembles a team to rescue her father and his colleagues from the clutches of the ancient Aztec warriors and their horrible serpent god.” Her father and his “team of Smithsonian researchers have stumbled across a lost walled Aztec city guarded by some evil spirits, including a ‘great flying serpent of death.’”
The movie is being produced for the Sci Fi Channel and is one of four movies in the Starz Fantasy Adventure Collection. To read more about the movie and its production, visit Michael Shanks Online: Movie News.
Shanks’s other TV movie that he filmed after the two Stargate direct-to-video movies, Living Out Loud, will be making its debut sometime around Mother’s Day 2009 on the Hallmark Channel.