Stargate Universe Recap 1.10: Justice

Your weekly dose of Stargate Universe recap is a little late this week. There was some unpleasantness on Friday night involving Christmas intoxicants. I won’t elaborate. Late Friday night has ceased to exist in my buffer. But, thanks to the miracle that is the internet, I have just finished viewing the best episode of SGU thus far, an episode called “Justice”.

I’m never sure what to expect when I tune in on Friday night (or Monday) for my weekly dose of Universe. To be honest, that uncertainty is one of the attractions of the show for me now. You just never know what you’re going to get. Since I must admit some emotional attachment to the show, I feel some nervousness and anxiety everytime I tune in. I want it to be good. I love the fact that the show is gradually getting better. It is getting better and “Justice” was the payoff to all of us stubborn stick-with-its.

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The angry bald guy has joined the choir invisible. He has shuffled off. He has been found by Sgt Greer with a bullet in the brainpan that looks by all appearances to have been self inflicted. There’s just one problem. No gun on the scene. Do we have a murderer? ABG was not well liked and it wasn’t the bald part that got him in trouble. In fact, as we are well aware, he even attacked a fellow crew member and had to be physically reprimanded by Colonel Young. Faithful viewers of the show all knew that something bad was going to happen to Mr. ABG or that he was going to be the bad that happened to someone else. We were warned. There was some considerable ham handedness in the way the writers telegraphed this fact but since Justice was so good I’ll forgive them. My, who could have had a motive in the killing of ABG? Greer was the initial suspect since he’s the other angry guy on the show but since he found the body he was pretty well exonerated. Dutifully, Colonel Young starts an investigation that begins with the innocent team (those with alibi) doing a crew quarters search. A gun is found, kinda, sorta, hiding in Colonel Young’s crib. He must have done it!

large-FullSize-sgu0110-0001xxNo. Obviously that’s ridiculous. You’re in this gigantic hurtling ship of mystery, full of dank, dark and alien hiding holes and you put the gun you just used to evacuate the brain of ABG in an air vent in your own quarters where even a height challenged nerd who didn’t have any interest in finding it can see it? Hmmm, you don’t have to be Spock to see that someone wants to frame Colonel Young. But surely, no one is going to buy that he did it. Not really. I think a better name for this episode would have been Doubt. Doubt is the crafty bit of work here. You don’t need Guilt when Doubt gets the dirty job done.

Camille Wray is thirsty for power. Did she frame Young? She is given the job to investigate Colonel Young after the gun is found. She is salivating. The Senators daughter is given the responsibility of the defence. It quickly becomes clear that there is no definitive way to determine what might have happened. Doubt is all the justice anyone is going to get. With this verdict, Young steps down as Commander and Camille Wray is appointed the new big cheese. Now, where is the intrepid Dr. Rush during all this you ask? Well, he is once again in deep study upon his latest fixation, the big chair of knowledge. To sit in the chair means brain cookage. Dr. Rush needs a volunteer for the chair. Colonel Young has forbidden Rush to show the rest of the resident Nerds the chair. Ah, but there’s a new Sheriff in town. Camille Wray is less of a judge of character than Colonel Young. Camille lifts the rules Young has set on the chair and gives the good doctor full command of the Nerds. Does Rush rub his hands together and laugh manically? Perhaps.

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The Nerds convene upon the big alien chair of ultimate knowledge. Rush sets the bait. Unless someone sits in the chair and gets power injected, everyone is going to freaking die, horribly. Also, whoever sits on the chair could be alive after AND a hero AND firm and fully packed with wicked ancient nerd powers that would really impress the fellas at the next Dungeons and Dragons evening (relax, I’m one of you). Do we have a volunteer? Oh you bet we do. Eli goes to fetch a snack for Franklyn and Franklyn does the inevitable. A little snap, crackle and pop later and Franklyn is crispy, en-coma-ed, but alive and even now digesting reams and scads of delicious alien know how.

Meanwhile, Eli has stumbled upon a deletion in the Kino showing that there was some footage taken by the floating ball cam during the death of ABG. Who done it? Nobody did. ABG, desperate for the sleeping pills that he was addicted to and jonesing for home, killed himself. So did the Kino show who framed Colonel Young? With Young exonerated from Doubt, he quickly resumes command and just in time, a gate opens up on another dusty world and an away team, shuffling along on the planet has found an alien ship, wreaked or crashed in the dirt. This was an amazing scene. This is what I want to see. Discover stuff! Rush and Young dash to the scene of the craft. Time is running short. The gate is about to close. Is there time to get into the crashed ship? It’s no ancients technology like the Destiny, it’s something new, something different and spiffy. Young faces Rush. Young know it was Rush that did the framing. There was Kino footage showing Rush leaving with the gun. If Rush knew how to delete the part where ABG offed himself you would think he would have deleted his own entry and exit. Maybe I’m being picky. Finally, Rush lets all the venom out. Yeah he did it and he’s not proud but not sorry either. Colonel Young just doesn’t get the big picture. Doesn’t understand his place in the proceedings, a stage where the bright light must inevitably fall on the Scottish noggin of Dr. Rush, a man that just wants the best for everyone. Rush throws down the gauntlet. It’s on and it’s staying on.

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Colonel Young makes a decision. One that I might have made myself. Rush has declared himself a mad and evil genius. Young pounds Rush hardily and then leaves him, under the shadow of the derelict spaceship, to presumably die. Great, great stuff. Does Rush know how to hotwire a non ancients busted up spaceship, nose down in pebbles? Oh I’m betting he does. Rush is now highly motivated. StarGate Universe has just reached escape velocity. I can’t wait to see what happens.


  • Andrea

    I must say, I wasn’t impressed with the first few episodes but I watched this one and read the episode summaries for the ones to come and I must say they all sound 10x better. No more of that silly “let’s just have an episode visiting earth”. I LOVED SG1 but couldn’t get into SGA. I think SGU has the potential to get much better and promises a very interesting second half now that we know all the basic information about each character.

    I think you did a good job with the review just one little bit I wanted to mention:

    “If Rush knew how to delete the part where ABG offed himself you would think he would have deleted his own entry and exit. Maybe I’m being picky.”

    He did delete it, he just didn’t know about Eli’s back up which is why they found the suicide and saw him enter the room.

  • endymi0n

    Instead of Doubt, how about Faith?

  • HuTheFoxHat

    I’ll admit SGU is hard to love as i’ve done with other shows but i feel it may be like a good chile when a slow burner builds up to being one hot fireball! It’ll be a show which when watch one episode at a time will bore the pants off you, but sit and watch a marathon session and you’ll be collecting your pants off the ceiling after they’ve been blown away(back to the chile lol)

  • Earl R.

    Earl shut the fuk up you pessimist sob i like the last ep nd i agree with steve. the show is gonna be amazing wacth!!

    • Dan

      Some one woke up on the wrong side of the bed Earl.R. I have to agree with the majority on this and been a long time Stargate fan this show is a weak excuses for Stargate . It try’s to hard to be Battle star and as all the other people have said the story’s are boring with too many holes in them . And has any one answered Earls question on how did the computer know he was right ? Ill leave this one to you Earl.R after you take you have picked up your dummy after the little dummy spit . Plus might want to use spell check as it looks like a 14 year old wrote that .

  • Psy

    Steve said: “I am convinced that those who do not like this show just want to see aliens and things blow up and all have a laugh at the end in 10 forward.”

    If you like soap operas its probably a good show for you, but I am defiantly not a soap fan.

  • http://www.(gerp?!?).com JoeC

    I’m an old sci-fi junkie from the earliest Star Trek to B5, to the Stargate series and on to BSG. I’ve been watching SGU, hoping that it will be my next fix.
    My evaluation of SGU is so far: heavy on the boring ‘Soap-opera’ and virtually none of the ‘Space-opera’ let alone sci-fi.
    Some slim glimers of hope were that so far they have resisted the urge to go to the self indulgent path of an Ori-like story line of the SG1 (in its death throes) and in ‘Justice,’ where we have at least the possibility of seeing some interesting space-opera sci-fi.
    Seeing Col. Young finally take out the trash was satisfing to an extent, but the apparant promise of the return of the mad-scientist/space-pirate Rush in the mold of the Pirate Roberts, chasing the treasure chest that Desitiny contains will be enough for me to keep watching for a while longer.
    Nice save writers of SGU!

  • Cravin Morehead

    The “haters” need to take another look. This can be developed into a great show!
    Lots of opportunity here, maybe the chair will give Destiny their own Rush like genius? The have a chance to explore some real co ed shipboard issues, not just sex…So I say lets give it a chance to grow and become the show we all want to see.

  • Waldo

    I actually love the show as of yet.

    Sorry to burst your pessimistic bubble but they are actually making a second season.
    and I think i know what will happen to rush.

    I saw an episode guide and it said something about the lucian alliance.
    so i think rush will ally with them and get back to the ship and “try” and take it over for the lucians.

    and the code in the game was part of an algorithm that rush had figured out before.
    and besides it was just translating ancient to english. then problem to answear.

    of course i don’t know how they got there but…
    thats what i know.

    and the scenes are kinda dark but i think it adds to the effect of the show.

    DAMN YOU IF YOU DON’T LIKE IT!
    let see how you would do if you were in that situation.

    Waldo

  • ozberg

    I watched this last week and thought the same – great great ending to mid season. I understand though that some of the original SG1 fans don’t like this show. I think this boils down to the fact that there is a bigger cast and less time to spend with them to create a closer bond. It really is a different show, and I do think it’s a good different. I watched all of BSG and didn’t love it all that much, especially on season 4. Some of the edge that they are bringing over is the right amount. BSG was a bit too damn dark I think. I think the SGU story is pacing itself nicely, its a very artistic show, with some beautiful scenes (like the sling shot around the gas giant and flying through the sun). Now that they have a few shows under their belt, the story can begin to fold in edges and tie things together.. for example, the planet with the alien creatures that looked almost like Goa’uld but attacked you like something from Aliens combined with a time travel twist – again very cool. Now the fact that Young left Rush for dead on that planet really has me salivating for the next episode. Rush will probably become a vindictive bastard and figure out how to get Destiny back and kill Young. I had a number of outcomes in my mind.

    1. He will use the gate to jump forward to the next planet on Destiny’s list. A guy like this doesn’t leave home without his gate address phone-book, but he’ll probably need something from the shuttle to make the gate dial.

    2. He fixes the shuttle and it is similar to a puddle jumper like in Atlantis. He uses this to try and catch destiny over the next few episodes. But I’m not sure Rush can pilot a shuttle.

    3. He gets into the shuttle and encounters a new alien race which is totally bad-ass, but aligns himself with them to get back destiny. My imagination here casts Rush into becoming one of these totally bad characters like in the latest Star Trek movie where the Romulan dude was on a total revenge rampage.

    Also, I always know a show is good when you can watch it more than once and not get bored. If you go back and re-watch the first half of season one, you can catch a lot of good script planning that ties itself forward into future episodes in the season.

    Overall, can’t wait for the next episode.