Stargate Universe (often abbreviated as
SGU) is a
Canadian-
American military science fiction television series and part of
MGM's
Stargatefranchise. It follows the adventures of a present-day, multinational exploration team traveling on the
Ancient spaceship
Destiny many millions of light years distant from the
Milky Way Galaxy. They evacuated there and are now trying to figure out a way to return to Earth, while simultaneously trying to explore and to survive in their unknown area of the universe. The series, created by
Brad Wright and
Robert C. Cooper, premiered in the United States on
Syfy on October 2, 2009. The series featured an
ensemble cast and was primarily filmed in and around
Vancouver,
BC,
Canada. A second season of 20 episodes was announced by Syfy in December 2009.
[3] The first 10 episodes of the second season were aired in the United States beginning on September 28, 2010,
[4] and the final 10 were shown beginning on March 7, 2011.
[5] Syfy announced on December 16, 2010 that it would not be picking up
Stargate Universe for a third season and the Spring 2011 season would be the last to air on its channel.
[6]
The second season of
SGU ended as a semi-cliffhanger.
[7] To resolve this, a movie was planned; however, due to timing constraints,
Stargatewriter and executive producer Brad Wright announced on April 17, 2011 that the
SGU movie was not going to happen.
[8]
- Robert Carlyle as Nicholas Rush – The "ship's brilliant Machiavellian scientist"[9] whom producer Joseph Mallozzi had first mentioned in his blog in mid-November 2008 as Dr. David Rush.[10] The ship's crew believe Rush to be losing his mind, but he does things for a reason.[11]Carlyle explained in an interview that after Rush lost his wife to cancer, he became driven by the opportunity to explore the galaxy.[12]Mallozzi rectified casting reports in mid-December 2008[13] that Rush "is not the leader of the unplanned expedition. That honor falls to Colonel Everett Young. For now. But things could have a way of changing on board a ship manned by a disparate group with very different agendas...".[9] Although a confirmed main character,[14] Rush was not included in the initial casting character breakdowns.[15] Wright and Cooper intended the character to be very different from any previous main characters in the Stargate franchise, "somebody who is not the hero, not the villain, and more of a very flawed and complex person".[16] About a year before being cast, Scottish actor Robert Carlyle wanted to try something new in his career and approached television companies in Los Angeles. They offered him several parts, but Stargate Universe had the greatest appeal to him as "suddenly a drama [was] opening up in space, [and] in the past that was something that was slightly missing from the genre".[17] He was aware of the success of the Stargate franchise and had seen "quite a bit of SG-1, plus a bunch ofAtlantis".[18] Carlyle accepted the role because of Wright and Cooper's take on the drama and direction of the show, and he is "more than prepared" to play the character for possibly many years.[18] Carlyle keeps his Scottish accent for the role.[19]
- Louis Ferreira as Everett Young – Described in the initial character breakdown as a "handsome, capable, former SG team leader" in his 40s who holds the rank of Colonel. He is "like the Jack O'Neill of ten years ago" yet has sharper edges. At the beginning of Stargate Universe, he has been married for approximately five years and is the temporary commander of a secret off-world base.[15] Young is Rush's nemesis on the ship.[12]
The
SGU cast at Comic Con 2009
- Brian J. Smith as Matthew Scott – A 26-year-old skilled and well-trained Airman and junior SGC member holding the rank of First Lieutenant. He is "mentally unprepared for the urgency of the situation" aboard the ship. He was named Jared Nash in the initial casting call.[15] Before being cast, Brian J. Smith had been working as a stage actor in New York for a year and a half. Smith taped his Stargate Universe audition and was invited to a screen test in Los Angeles. He received the news of being cast a few days after the screen test.[20] He prepared for the role by doing military research. He had not seen theStargate TV series before being cast, but caught up with much of SG-1 afterwards.[16]
- Elyse Levesque as Chloe Armstrong – She is a "stunning and sexy" daughter of a US Senator, 23 years old, whose character is tested "after her father's tragic death and the dire circumstances of being trapped on a spaceship".[15] Her father (played by Christopher McDonald)[21] had political oversight over the Stargate project trying to dial the ninth chevron.[22] Before the producers settled on the final name, the character was named Chloe Carpenter[15] and Chloe Walker.[22] Levesque's "wonderfully nuanced audition" convinced the producers to cast her, as she demonstrated an "impressive range in two very different [and] demanding scenes."[21]
- David Blue as Eli Wallace – Named Eli Hitchcock in the casting call,[15] Eli Wallace is a "total slacker" in his early twenties and an "utter genius" in mathematics, computers and other fields. He is a social outcast with an "acerbic sense of humor", and lacks confidence in his intelligence. The character breakdown compares him to "Matt Damon's character from Good Will Hunting with a little Jack Black thrown in".[15] He was the main source of comic relief in the show.[11] David Blue, a self-declared fan of the science fiction series, has seen all SG-1 andAtlantis episodes.[16]
- Alaina Huffman as Tamara Johansen – Named Tamara Jon in the character breakdown, she is an SGC medic in her mid-twenties with off-world experience and the rank of First Lieutenant. Friends call her "T.J."[23] She finds herself the most medically experienced person aboard the ship after the death of the Icarus Base doctor in the pilot episode "Air" (according to co-creator Robert C. Cooper). She has a modest background, yet is "beautiful, tough, smart and capable", but also has a secretive past with another member of the Destiny's new crew. At the beginning of the series, she is overwhelmed by the lack of medical knowledge, experience, medicines, and supplies aboard the ship.[15] Mallozzi considered Huffman's audition in December 2008 "so good that, quite frankly, we would've been crazy not to cast her".[21]
- Jamil Walker Smith as Ronald Greer – In early casting documents named Ron "Psycho" Stasiak,[15] Ronald Greer is a "big, strong, silent" Marine with a mysterious past who lacks control over his temper in non-combat situations. The character breakdown compares him to Eric Bana's character "Hoot" in Black Hawk Down.[15] His rank is Master Sergeant.[24]
- Ming-Na as Camile Wray – Camile Wray is the first openly gay character in the Stargate franchise. She is the IOA representative on Destiny and supports civilian leadership on the ship. Ming-Na was credited as a regular character in the first two episodes. She was downgraded to a recurring character from then on until the episode "Justice", in which she returned and continued as a regular character.
[edit]Production
[edit]Conception
Stargate producers Brad Wright and Robert C. Cooper conceived
Stargate Universe as "a completely separate, third entity" in the live-action
Stargate franchise
[25] – as opposed to
Stargate Atlantis, which was created as a spin-off from the first series
Stargate SG-1. They wanted to produce a stylistically and totally different TV series with a more mature and fresh story approach so as not to get too repetitive.
[26] Wright and Cooper originally planned to write the pilot script for
Stargate Universe during the summer of 2007, making a 2008 premiere possible.
[25] Since their ambitions with the previous live-action
Stargate series were often restricted by the low budget and risked coming across as silly,
[26] they pitched the show as "an expensive series" to the
Sci Fi Channel (now Syfy) in the last quarter of 2007. Although the pitch was well-received,
[27] the project was put on hold because of the on-going work on
Stargate Atlantis and
Stargate: Continuum, and the
2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike.
[25][27] The series was given the official greenlight for a 2009 debut by Syfy on August 22, 2008, shortly after the cancellation of
Stargate Atlantis had been announced.
[28] Joseph Mallozzi explained that a new series would have lower salaries and licensing fees than a new sixth season of
Atlantis would have had.
[29] MGM co-funds the project.
[30] According to co-star
Robert Carlyle, each episode has a budget of $2 million US dollars.
[31]
Brad Wright pitched the series and its first five episodes to the
Stargate Atlantis writers and producers in mid-September 2008.
[32] Wright, Cooper, and
Carl Binder produce the show, while
Joseph Mallozzi and
Paul Mullie serve as writers and consultant producers.
[33] Stargate Atlantis writers
Martin Gero and
Alan McCullough contribute scripts, but are not part of the regular writer staff.
[34]New writers were initially sought for freelance scripts and possible staff positions.
[30] Author
John Scalzi was hired as a creative consultant, "a background rather than foreground sort of job".
[35]Most of the
Stargate Atlantis crew, such as stunt coordinator
James Bamford and composer
Joel Goldsmith, have moved over to
Universe.
[36]
[edit]Casting
Short character breakdowns for the series regulars (created for casting calls) leaked on the internet on September 17, 2008.
[15][37] Joseph Mallozzi explained the largely negative initial fan reaction
[14][32][33] as a passionate response to the preceding cancellation announcement of
Atlantis.
[33] Brad Wright dismissed negative comments as a sole reaction to the wording of the network; character breakdowns are written to aid casting directors and agents in the selection process, and "always sound shallow, and if they're written to appear 'deep' it's just ridiculous".
[14]Robert C. Cooper replied to concerns of young age that the
SG-1 cast was also quite young in their first season. The producers were "looking for people who are a little more identifiable and contemporary," with an "everyman on the street point of view" after being challenged by the situation.
[37] Martin Gero considered
Stargate Universe as an ensemble show, more than the previous two
Stargate live-action series were.
[38]
Auditions were held in Los Angeles.
[39] The producers were looking for well-known names for the lead roles, but intended to mostly cast "either new faces, or people you've seen in other stuff but maybe aren't as aware of".
[37] BAFTA and
Screen Actors Guild Award-winning actor
Robert Carlyle was the first announced series regular in mid-December 2008.
[13] The casting of Louis Ferreira, David Blue, Brian J. Smith, and Jamil Walker Smith as series regulars was announced in mid-January 2009.
[40] The casting of Alaina Huffman and Elyse Levesque was announced in late February 2009, along with other actors whose status as regular or recurring cast has not been established.
[24] The cast is American (Blue, B. Smith, J. Smith, Ming-Na), Canadian (Ferreira, Levesque, and Huffman) and British (Carlyle).
[edit]Writing and filming
The writers started drafting stories for the first season in mid-November 2008.
[10] The
United States Air Force and
Marine Corps reviewed the scripts.
[34]The projected film start of
Stargate Universe was initially slated for February 4, 2009,
[41] but was moved to February 18, 2009.
[42] The show is filmed on stages 2, 4 (
Destiny set) and 5 (Icarus Base set) at
The Bridge Studios [43][44] (
SG-1 and
Atlantis had been filmed at stages 5 and 6)
[42] and on location in and around
Vancouver, British Columbia.
[41] "Air (Part 3)" was filmed in and around
Alamogordo, New Mexico from late April through early May 2009.
[45] Stargate Universe will show computer-generated worlds filmed in digital sets.
[14] Stargate Universe will have a markedly different shooting style for more reality and immediacy with inspiration from
Cloverfield, as if "a documentary crew were to ride along on this adventure to outer space".
[26]
[edit]Pre-broadcast marketing
Sci Fi Wire published concept art of the
Destiny in October 2008.
[46] The first promotional picture of the cast (out of costume and in casual clothing) was released on March 20, 2009.
[47] The same day, Syfy began airing thirty-second trailers of
Universe, showing various clips of the
Universe team aboard the ship and the
SG·U Stargate with the first visual effects.
[48] MGM revealed its revamped
Stargate Universe website on July 8 with an interactive virtual set tour of the
Destiny, interviews with the cast, character profiles and videos.
[49] Joseph Mallozzi began posting concept art and behind-the-scenes photos of the
SGU set on his blog afterwards. Brad Wright, Robert C. Cooper and most members of the main cast appeared at an
SGU panel at the
San Diego Comic-Con on July 24, 2009. Behind-the-scenes material is shot for future online and DVD use.
[16]
[edit]Premise and themes
Stargate Universe is set on the spaceship
Destiny, which was launched by the race known as the
Ancients from our galaxy several hundred thousand years ago.
[50] Several ships were sent ahead of it to seed the universe with
Stargates. The Ancients had planned on using its Stargate to board
Destiny when it was far enough out into the universe, but they eventually abandoned the project after looking into
ascension among other things. In order to reach this ship, an address would have to be dialed consisting of nine
chevrons, a possibility that had been unknown in the previous
Stargate series, due to energy constraints.
[27]
The series begins when a team of soldiers and scientists from present-day Earth escape through the Stargate and arrive on the
Destiny after their base is attacked.
[51] Many of its primary systems are damaged or failing, and they are unable to return to Earth or even maneuver the ship. However, the
Destiny periodically stops to dial the Stargate to planets with necessary supplies to repair the ship, and sustain human life.
[18][26] The writers have discussed the possibility that each season represents a voyage of the
Destiny through a different galaxy.
[52]
Stargate Universe is intended to appeal to both veteran fans and newcomers, being firmly entrenched in established
Stargate mythology without relying on it too often.
[26][32] It retains the familiar
Stargate themes of adventure and exploration,
[26] but focuses mostly on the people aboard the ship.
[33] SGU is also more
serialized than its predecessors, although the writers attempted to resolve each character story within the episode.
[26] There was a conscious effort to avoid making
SGU too serialized, with the serialization stemming mainly from character development.
[16] The industry described the show with the buzzwords "dark and edgy".
[26] According to Robert C. Cooper, the essence of the story is "that sort of fear and terror of a tragedy combined with the sense that there is hope for us in the basic ways in which human beings survive".
[26] The planned increased levels of drama are balanced with humor to avoid pretentiousness. The differences between
good and evil are meant to be less apparent, as the ship is populated with flawed and unprepared characters who are not supposed to go there.
[26] According to Brad Wright, the show should "hopefully explor[e] the truly alien, and [avoid] the rubber faced English-speaking one[s]". There are aliens, but not a single dominant villain race like
SG-1's
Goa'uld and
Atlantis'
Wraith.
[14][26]
[edit]Broadcast and release
[edit]Home video release
Season | Originally aired | Product | Episodes | DVD release date | Blu-ray release date |
Season premiere | Season finale | Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | Region A | Region B |
| 1 | October 2, 2009 | June 11, 2010 | Stargate SG-U: 1.0[53] | 10 | February 9, 2010[53] | N/A | N/A | February 9, 2010[54] | N/A |
Stargate SG-U: 1.5 | 10 | July 27, 2010[55] | N/A | N/A | July 27, 2010[56] | N/A |
Complete Season 1[57] | 20 | October 5, 2010[58] | July 5, 2010[57] | January 12, 2011[59] | October 5, 2010[60] | July 5, 2010[61] |
| 2 | September 28, 2010 | May 9, 2011 | Complete Season 2 | 20 | May 31, 2011[62] | July 4, 2011[62] | November 2, 2011[63] | N/A | N/A |
| 1–2 | October 2, 2009 | May 9, 2011 | The Complete Series Collection | 40 | N/A | August 29, 2011[64] | November 2, 2011[65] | N/A | N/A |
[edit]Awards and nominations
Robert Carlyle won Best Performance by an Actor in a Continuing Leading Dramatic Role for the first season episode “Human” at the
2010 Gemini Awards.
[69]
[edit]Critical reception
Metacritic summarizes the response as "generally favorable reviews" for SGU's first season, but with several critics showing reservation.
[70]
Stargate Universe was well received by several major media publishers upon airing of the pilot episode. Mike Hale from
The New York Times was generally positive towards the pilot episodes, saying the
Stargate franchise was "catching up" with the long-running
Star Trek franchise. Hale also agreed with
Syfy's promotion of it being an "edgier"
Stargate.
[71] The Boston Globe reviewer Joanna Weiss also reacted positively towards the pilot episodes, saying it felt like "early
Lost", while the story arc followed the patterns of
Battlestar Galactica.
[72] Mark Wilson from
About.comgave the episode four-and-a-half stars out of 5, saying
Universe accomplishes what
Stargate Atlantis was not able to, and said it was "exceptionally well made" compared to other shows.
[73] The
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette both praised the show, calling it "intriguing", for not abandoning its premise as
Star Trek: Voyager did and criticized it by pointing out that the characters spend "far too much time wandering a desert planet" in "Air (Part 3)".
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette summarized their review by saying that, "given time,
Stargate Universe may become worth watching if it develops its characters and continues to mine its premise for stories."
[74] David Hinckley, a reviewer from
The New York Daily News gave the episodes four out of five stars, saying that "Eli's not the only one playing a high-stakes game here."
[75]
Among reviewers who were negative towards the new installments was Maureen Ryan from the
Chicago Tribune. The reviewer wrote that the "gloomy, underwhelming
Universe seems to have ditched many of the elements that the previous "Stargate" shows had, notably camaraderie and a sense of adventure, without adding much in the way of narrative suspense or complexity." The only characters she felt were "worth following" were Eli Wallace and Nicholas Rush.
[76] Vince Horiuchi from
The Salt Lake Tribune, while not overall positive to the series, said the cast and characters were a "little more likable and interesting" than previous entries in the
Stargate franchise.
[77] Reviewer Laura Freis from
Variety concluded her review with "Sure,
SGU is grittier, darker and psychologically deeper than previous versions. But so far, it's also a lot less fun." While negative towards the show, she called
Robert Carlyle an "excellent" actor.
[78] The Hollywood Reporternoted a lack of "intelligent" and "surprising stories" and was overall negative towards
Stargate Universe, and even more so on the previous
Stargate franchise releases.
[79] The show has also been criticized for its similarities to the reimagined
Battlestar Galactica.
[80][81][82]
In its second season, SGU had declined in viewership ratings.
[83] This decline was attributed to its change in timeslot (from Friday night to Tuesday night, and then again to Monday night) and by what series co-creator, Brad Wright, claims:
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