My father went to Giza and all I got was this lousy gate
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Author's Review
I was just out of high school when this movie first came out. I dont remember hearing much about it, but I hadnt really been to the theaters for a while. Years later, I would catch parts of it (usually the end) on Encore or The Sci-Fi Channel. It wasnt really until the fifth season of the TV show, Stargate: SG-1, that I really got into it. I knew the basic premise of the movie, so the show wasnt that hard to follow.
Stargate starts out in Giza, Egypt, in 1928. An archaeologist arrives on a dig site to see this amazing discovery. Theres a big ring with all of these symbols and no one has ever seen anything like it. As far as anyone knows, its the only one in existence. 60+ years later, Dr. Daniel Jackson is giving a lecture about ancient Egypt. He has all of these wacky ideas about alien influence. What few people there are walk out and Jackson has no idea why. As hes leaving the building, hes approached by a woman who wants him to work on a secret government project. He accepts, seeing as how he has little else to do. Hes being asked in to help decode the Stargate, which is now sitting under a mountain.
Then theres Colonel Jack ONeill, played by Kurt Russell. Hes getting over the loss of his son, who accidentally shot himself with the Colonels gun. Hes called in to oversee the military aspect of the Stargate program. ONeill and Jackson dont hit it off at first. ONeill is a military officer having to deal with the loss of his son; Jackson is a brainy researcher who isnt really even accepted in his own field.
Dr. Jackson finally gets the gate working and a probe is sent through. They discover a similar Stargate on the other side, along with a device for controlling it. The Stargate is a means of transporting people across space. The connection doesnt stay open for very long, so there isnt much information to go on insofar as the other planet is concerned. The deciding factor is Dr. Jacksons belief that he could get a team back. He, Colonel ONeill, and several others go through the gate to the other planet and are told to assess the situation and report back. The trouble is that Dr. Jackson cant get the team back. He had made the assumption that there would be instructions waiting for him on the other side.
To Dr. Jacksons amazement, they find pyramids similar to the ones on Earth, which supports Dr. Jacksons theories. The downside is that if they cant get back, he wont be able to tell anyone about it. Things start to look good when they find people living on the planet. Things take a serious turn for the worse, though, when Ra shows up. (For those that dont know much about Egyptian mythology, Ra is the Egyptian sun god.) Ra is played by Jaye Davidson, who you may remember from The Crying Game. Dr. Jackson discovers that Ra is actually possessing a host. Ra has simply taken on the persona of a god and has everyone on the planet worshiping him. Things get much worse when Ra discovers that ONeill brought a bomb with him; Ra decides to modify the bomb and send it back to Earth. The race is on.
Of Jackson and ONeill, I felt that Jackson was better developed in the movie. ONeill came across as a military zombie. Hes made a career in the military and doesnt seem to plan on making it back. Jackson, on the other hand, tends to be more optimistic. He thinks that theres a chance of getting home and wants to work towards that end. There is a great deal of naïveté in Dr. Jackson, which hes able to overcome to an extent.
The special effects are going to seem bad. There were times when the effects looked patchy or inconsistent. Some of the lower-budget effects came across pretty well. The movie is driven more by trying to make a coherent story than a vehicle for the special effects. The thing that the story had going for it was its overall simplicity. Get the gate working, go through it, and then get back in one piece. The technical explanations of the gate and what Ra is didnt really appear until the series began on Showtime.
I got the Ultimate Edition, which has both the directors cut and the theatrical cut. The difference is that the directors cut has a few additional minutes of footage. I dont know that youd even notice most of it. The real benefit is the other special features. You get the theatrical trailer, audio commentary and some behind-the-scenes stuff, which I found interesting.
Those that have seen the series are going to find some discrepancies. The gate program is housed in Creek Mountain in the movie, but in Cheyenne Mountain in the series. In the movie, Abydos (the planet that the team goes to) is in another galaxy whereas the series has it in our own galaxy.
Despite the inconsistencies and special effects, Im going to recommend this movie. If youre looking for a great movie, this is it.