Season 3, Episode 16 - The Ark
Air date: 2007
The team discovers the last of a civilization in suspended animation, whose survival is at risk when their station is critically damaged.
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(This topic is for people who have seen the episode to discuss it. If you don't want to be spoiled, don't read this topic.)
This was an ok episode. I liked how the people of the planet had used wraith tech to save there people from extinction by the wraith, and that they found another somewhat advanced human civilization in the peagaus galaxy.(This is my favorite part of Stargate) This episode felt similar to the episode "Lifeboat" from sg1. where the people were in suspended animation on a ship to save there civilization from destruction. There were of course no multiple personalities and the wraith drove these people to what they did, not a collapsing sun, this episode still reminded me of that episode from sg1.
This felt like a typical Atlantis episode. Mckay finds something interesting, turns it on and causes everyone big problems, they discover someone and the team gets seperated and then colonel Shepard saves the day at the last moment.
Whats with the Apollo mission's space suits? Why did they use those for this episode? why not use something cool and shiny
or some ancient space suits or something?
p.s. I do like that these episodes play in Canada 4 months before they play in America. Thank you Canada!
hmmph... ark wasnt that good...
and once again teyla is compromised ![]()
I was entertained by the ep. It did remind me of the Ark. I was just happy to see an episode after such a layoff.
I did like this Ep I liked the banter between Rodney and Sheppard I always enjoy that. I did like the Teyla stuff she is under utilized IMHO. I did find amusing that Rodney tried to get out of the bet he can't stand to lose can he.
Yeah I enjoyed the episode not my favorite episode but a fairly good episode.
Good episode, mainly because I've been on a part of the set. It's always funny when Rodney and Sheppard banter. Also Ronan's and Sheppard's "fight to the death" talk.
"yaaaaaayyyy faint hope" ah that made me laugh
This was a fair filler episode. Nothing really happened in it, but thats alright. I got a little bored, but I was content to watch it, overall.
We got to see Teyla do a bit more in this episode, so that was nice. Got to see Rodney whine...
My favorite part of the episode was when Weir asked Shep if he came to the infirmary to get his head examined... very nice...
I enjoyed this one, though i was somehow remind of that DR who episode in a similar setting (one with the black hole and the devil thing)
my favourite line was something a long 'you should have used a mac' sorry but i had to laugh
Teyla really should do a little more in the future and was good to see in this episode
I was confused when they showed the guy at the start in the shuttle with the door open > unless it had some shield tech or he was already dead with no air wouldnt it have decompressed?
My rating *** same as SG1 1011 even though it was filler i still enjoyed it
I found the episode boring tho I did want to see it. the comment about the mac and when ronan fixed his arm that was cool.
I liked this episode except for the part where Sheppard survives the re-entry after the asteroid exploded. I mean c'mon! And then to come to a perfectly safe landing without even so much as a cracked rib?
But other than that 5 minutes, I thought it was a really good team cohesion episode. It would've been much better imo if Sheppard had at least come away with some broken bones. Hell even show the damn ship depressurizing. Something!
That would've made it a great episode imo.
This episode was too weak for anything worthy of Stargate...
1. Didn't they conclude that there is no possible way of making heads or tails about the people inside that Wraith materialiser thing? How the frell did that guy manage to get that specific life sign out? And why was him out of all the 1,000 people the one to get out, why was he so special? And more importantly... The first guy got out and fainted because he couldn't hold it after being cramped in there, the second didn't faint... and why do you ask: Because they would have wasted time with waiting for him to recover too...
2. How could the ship survive through an exploding hollow asteroid hurdling at 20,000 miles or more per hour through the atmosphere... Answer: IT COULDN'T...
3. That landing the ship while an almost uncontrolled entry in the atmosphere reminded me of Star Wars Episode III... Actually it was just the same thing... And the camera job going to the ship was the same... Only thing is that R2 didn't seem to help Sheppard this time. ![]()
And they didn't take out any towers...
A poor excuse for an episode... Mark 12/100
That may be true but i enjoyed it, not the best the series has produced, but once you disregard the obvious physics problems its not so bad
farily decent episode. I loved the part about the mac. it really cracked me up
I really thing they should have more lines in there like that. But it also struck me as odd that they made that joke yet everyone in atlantis uses pc's. just thought it was funny
Not a awful episode but then again it wasn't a great one.
I loved Sheps face when Ronon popped his shoulder back into place.
This was simply a filler episode nothing more nothing less, nice to see lorne used in a different way than simply being the one to set up the episode.
7/10
Well.
I liked this better upon second viewing, but IO still feel it was sotr of a "meh". And I can't understand why they seem to have regressed, both with The Ark and The Game, back to the season 2 pattern insteasd of contiuing the fantastic episode quality they've had so far.
First, I was really glad it didn't end up turning up as another "Lifeboat", it seemed like that at some point... a bad enough episode on its own, it doesn't need an Atlantis version!
And.. well! they gave Teyla something to do. Now, taht wasn't that hard, was it?... However Weir and Beckett still had nothign to do.
Sheppard. once again, is the hero saving the day in a copmlpetely insane plan, I could live without that part - the problem with the entire episode - there was nothing exciting about it! So you have the teaser that starts at the end of the episode - yet again, how many tiems have they done it already this year? - I mean, c'mon, the beginning teaser was enough as it was to be "exciting", I can live without the promise of action. And the risk factor was compeltely ridiocuklous. Had they lsot the Jumper or been cut off in vaccuum or were about to burn out in the atmosphere... but all three? That's when it's overdone. And therefore, addnig the "lost the control room" schtick at the middle was one thing to much, I truely did roll my eyes at that - don't get me wrong, watching Rodney gets hysterical is always fun and David Hewlett, brilliant actor as he is, always pulls it off best - but come on.
Speaking of Rodney - why did they feel the ned to regress him together with the episode? He's elarned so much this season - enough that it showed in the Game. Why throw him back into the old "Rodney square"?
Oh, and yeah, one more thing - I'm stil waiting to hear why a civilisation on a different galaxy feels like decorating/ writing on its shuttles using the Greek alphabet
I didn't like this episode at all
67% Quite good. It was pretty science fictiony, which is a bonus and the characterisation was fairly strong.
SUPERAUTOMATION OF THE WEEK: Flick a few switches in a supposedly 1960s level of technology and suddenly powers goes up and life support comes on. They don't know they're born these days!
REPETITION OF THE WEEK: The in medias res opening is getting a little overused. In the case of 'Memento Mori' it wasn't so bad, but here, it is seems totally gratuitous.
DODGY EDITING OF THE WEEK: When the decompression happened, the cut to Teyla and Shepherd getting thrown off their feet happened some second after the first cut making it look a bit like a bunch of stunt men throwing themselves around.
NEW MECHANICS OF THE WEEK: Shepherd and Ronan are pretty strong. Those airlock doors are probably about 1½m² in size. When you're venting an atmosphere of close to an atmosphere, the weight on those doors would be over 100 tonnes!
NEW ASTRODYNAMICS OF THE WEEK: When an asteroidal moon decays in its orbit and enters the atmosphere, it apparently slowly falls vertically down rather than sweeping along at high speed as we would normally expect if the laws of gravity and the laws of inertia applied. Fortunately, the graphics later on were a little more accurate.
POOR RECRUITMENT OF THE WEEK: This civilisation doesn't screen its recruits very well. The operation was highly stressful and had a lot of risk. A guy who would commit suicide at the first sign of a personally afflicting setback is, as we saw, a liability.
GOOD CHARACTERISATION OF THE WEEK: I liked Jamus. He was a well executed character. I thought Teyla was strong opposite him too.
A poor episode with a poor plot. It was just a rehash of episodes like 'The Other Side' and 'Lifeboat' with very little else added in. The guy wanted to kill the remains of his race just because his wife and child didn't survive? Ok, his family is dead but it's a tad extreme to want to kill those who had nothing to do with their death. I found it unbelievable that Sheppard knew where to find the docking release on the shuttle only a few seconds after he sat in the pilot's chair, given that none of the controls were marked. It was unbelievable that the control room's window cracked after debris impacted it slightly yet the shuttle's cockpit could withstand flying through the debris of an exploded moon.
i've got no idea how anti gravity technology works but would it still have an effect in the compartments that had been depressurised. it doesn't seem realistic to me that makay was walking around like normal even when he was basically in a vacum?
Well, anti-gravity is pretty sci-fi anyway, but real gravity doesn't have any dependence on atmospheric pressure, so I don't see why artificial gravity should have any requirement on it. I can see where you're coming from though.
Well yeah, but anti-gravity is generally mind-boggling.
It's just like on the Discworld...
Real gravity is the reason our planet has an atmosphere at all... Given artificial gravity is fictional, we can't know how it would affect gas particles in the air... I don't think the two are related, least not in scifi so far.
It all depends on how strong their gravity field is. We can perfectly speculate that the field is not strong enough to keep gas in. We don't know if stepping out the window would necessarily throw anyone floating into space, they could return back in just as well, although artificial gravity is reproduced in some Sci-Fi shows by the rotation (somehow) of the target object, so by stepping out...
Another episode about people in some sort of suspended animation, which has been done before on SG1 and Atlantis. There was nothing exciting or new about it and it was fairly average.
The episode quality in first half of season 3 was a lot better, it seems to have dropped off a bit in the second half.
Like many others, I didn't care much for this episode. The whole suspended animation thing is over used and made it feel like I've seen the episode already. Adapting Wraith tech was kind of interesting, but nothing really came of it.
Also, the design of the re-entry vehicle bugged me. A bubble cockpit didn't seem realistic on a vehicle like that.
I have nothing new to add to the discussion except to express my disgust as well.
*Sheppard knowing how to fly the ship? Don't think so.
*The reentry into the atmosphere? Iffy at best.
*Crashing onto the ground and NOT exploding? Right.
*The suicidal guy? Whatever. He should never have been brought onto the program and shouldn't have been the one intergraded first (talk about piss poor planning! 5 generations' work down the drain).
On the other hand, Teyla and Jamus had great scenes and she really was the one to be stuck in there with him. I think that if they'd focused more on that, instead of the unrealistic plot they did focus on, it'd have been a much better episode. Not every one needs to be action oriented. Sometimes it's the character interaction that's best.
And on a side note, whatever happened to Teyla's people? Are they still on the continent on Atlantis? Weren't the kicked off by the Atlantians return?
Remember that Flying is pretty simple. Shep wasn't fighting a battle at all. There is a throttle and rudders and a the primary flight controls. Once you know what they are, it's not terrible difficult. That's why he could fly a jumper or a 302 with no training. We've seen this before with Jack.
It was designed for atmospheric rentry, what was iffy?
Not everything that crashes explodes. That's over dramatization and overuse of special effects. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ywqqxLafdAA
One thing about this episode bothered me. Either they didn't explain it, or I blinked and missed it.
Jamus told Herick that he postponed the second shuttle leaving by a day. Jamus said there were riots once the people knew about the shuttles. Jamus said the Wraith came. Jamus said they attacked all the Wraith ships with nuclear weapons as soon as they landed. Jamus said the fallout would kill his people and make the planet inhabitable for years.
With all that, how did Jamus get to the moon base, and be incorporated into the device? Herick was already there and in the device. That is why Herick didn't know that the second shuttle didn't follow him. Now we saw Jamus incorporate both Teyla and himself into the device, so he knew how to do that part, but how did he get there?
Best line: Mckay saying "you should have used a Mac"!!
One thing that struck me wrong was that Herick, who supposedly spent his entire life working to help people, became a kind of improbable deus ex machina by essentially sociopathically (okay, so maybe that's not a word), leaving innocent people to die who were there to help him. Wow...that sentence was a little convoluted. Sorry!
I did find it unusual that the poor Scientist Guy cracked so completely all at once, almost ending his entire race.
Scotty is stuck in the transporter again, huh? They re-used too many old storylines for this one IMO. I'm ready for next week to move the story along a bit...
I don't recall the door closing.
If he was pulling it against the current of air, it would have been highly difficult to close, otherwise it would have slammed shut on its own.
Soooo not my favorite episode. It was rather boring in parts. Reminded me too much of several other episodes. However, I never grow tired of seeing Rodney girl-out when somethin bad happens. lol
This was not a good episode in opposite it was the wors ever (if you ask me) - It reminded tooo much of several other episodes - it was boring, and i think Teyla could easily get t he gun from the old man.
I think that the wals in a space shutle are bulet proof.
Off course there's a risk of getting shot, so is the risk to burn in the atmosfere - with all of your friend abord.
Wouldn't a bullet proof shuttle be extremely heavy? Ok, in space that wouldn't be a problem but on re-entry, it wouldn't make for good flying.
It's like,
"Why not make an entire airplane out of that blackbox material?!?!?!"
"Well sonny Jim, it is because the plane wouldn't be able to fly..."
We don't even know that this race was all that advanced. They "borrowed" some of their technology from the Wraith, but overall, that station didn't look all that advanced.
IP was referring to the shuttle though which was built to ferry the people back down to the planet hence they must have built it with a re-entry and landing in mind.
Pretty nice episode I really like it
the moon was sooo alike as Phobos
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