Stargate SG-1 Season 1 Boxed Set | 
| Directors: Allan Eastman, Brad Turner, Charles Correll, David Warry-smith, Dennis Berry Actors: Richard Dean Anderson, Michael Shanks, Amanda Tapping, Christopher Judge, Don S. Davis Studio: MGM Domestic Television Distribution Category: DVD
List Price: $49.96 Buy Used: $7.00 You Save: $42.96 (86%)
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Rating: 305 reviews Sales Rank: 33323
Format: Anamorphic, Box Set, Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Dubbed) Region: 1 Discs: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 DVD Layers: 2 DVD Sides: 1 Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Number Of Discs: 5 Running Time: 981 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.5 x 3
ISBN: 0792849744 UPC: 027616859174 EAN: 9780792849742 ASIN: B000059TGH
Theatrical Release Date: July 27, 1997 Release Date: May 22, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Hollywood's film archives overflow with the carcasses of dismal movies based on lame '60s and '70s television shows, a syndrome that shows no sign of abating. But here's evidence that the reverse effect, turning a movie into a TV series, can have surprisingly positive results. Indeed, based on the 21 episodes produced for the first season of Stargate SG-1, it could be argued that this show is significantly better than the 1994 feature it's derived from. The central conceit of the original Stargate--the existence of an artificially created "wormhole" through which one can travel to different worlds light years away from Earth--was an intriguing one. In seizing on the obvious possibilities for expanding on that premise, series executive producers-writers Jonathan Glassner and Brad Wright have smartly retained some of the film's basic elements (its amalgam of myth and theoretical hokum, or the ongoing clash of wills between scientists and soldiers), while adding a variety of fresh ideas (including new characters, new locations, and a welcome dose of humor, much of it supplied by Richard Dean Anderson, MacGyver himself, who replaces Kurt Russell in the central role of Colonel Jack O'Neill). The result is a show with multidimensional heroes and villains and consistently compelling story lines (many of them introduced in the pilot and carried forward through subsequent episodes) balancing excellent special effects and production values. All this and full frontal nudity, too (at least in the aforementioned pilot). Who can resist? The first season is spread out over five DVDs; the 100-minute pilot shares the first volume with two other episodes, while discs 2 to 5 contain anywhere from three to five shows each. Sound and visuals (in widescreen format) alike will take full advantage of any home system's capabilities. But aside from language and subtitle options, bonus features are limited to brief featurettes that play like commercials and provide little in the way of background information or insight (there are no features at all on the first disc). Then again, if you really want to know what that symbol on Teal'c's forehead means, or why the nasty, parasitic Goa'ulds look a lot like the fledgling stomach monsters in the Alien series, there is no doubt a Web site out there just for you. --Sam Graham
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| Customer Reviews: Read 300 more reviews...
Great Purchase June 1, 2009 Mercedes Casas Item was shipped as promised and in great condition. Good customer service. Would highly recommend.
Would have 5 stars, except for the unnecessary nudity in first epi. May 30, 2009 Chiana (Doesn't Sparkle ;) (the Far Side...) Before I start, a warning for families watching: parents, you should watch the first episode before showing your kids so you know when to hit the 'skip' button. Luckily on my dvd player, since the full frontal is at the end of a 'chapter' when I hit skip I don't actually miss any show, it just goes into the next chapter and you really don't miss anything at all. Ok, on to the review! :) I absolutely love Stargate! Who wouldn't love O'Niell's snarkiness? He's hilarious, and slowly over the seasons his snark rubs off on his team mates, especially Daniel, who starts out a nerd but several seasons later is kinda sexy (if not still annoying at times, lol)! Stargate is a MUST for any scifi fan or if you're looking to get into it. Action, comedy, drama, it's got it all! Sure it gets a little 'silly' now and then, but what scifi doesn't? You'll be watching this again and again!
Sets the tone for the whole series May 4, 2008 L. King (North Smithfield, RI United States) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I have just gone back to have another look at season 1. I own all ten seasons, and wanted to look back over how it all began. This season truly sets the tone for the entire series. We meet important villains and friends, but more importantly, we learn of the whole conscience of the SGC. As the series takes off, each character is slowly fleshed out while the "situation" of the story is deepened as well. One of my favorite episodes is the Torment of Tantalus, which asks the very important question, What good is knowledge if you can't share it with anyone? Stargate SG1 is a sci-fi series that strikes the perfect balance between comedy and seriousness.
What television can be... March 27, 2008 James Wire (Stranded In, Iowa United States) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is one of the best Sci-Fi TV series ever and my list of them is very short. The acting is very good and the episodes are well written. With a little work each one could stand on its own as a movie. The characters are well played and consistant with themselves and each other. The end of the series with the tenth season was probably a good choice.
Through the Stargate September 4, 2007 E. A Solinas (MD USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Most TV shows spun off from movies are uninvolving and uninteresting ("Blade," anyone?), and hopefully die and are forgotten. That wasn't the case with the spinoff of the 1995 movie "Stargate," an okay science fiction movie that spawned an excellent television series, "Stargate SG-1." The first season is not nearly as brilliant as the ones that followed it, but it's a welcome change from distant space operas -- excellent writing, acting, and a sense of humor about itself and its characters. The Stargate has been inactive for a year -- until it is activated, and a bunch of Egyptian-styled warriors come through and kidnap a young officer. General Hammond (Don S. Davis) pulls Jack O'Neill (Richard Dean Anderson) out of retirement to learn what really happened on the planet of Abydos, and where these mysterious aliens have come from. O'Neill and a small team go to Abydos and find Daniel Jackson (Michael Shanks) who has been learning about a vast network of Stargates over the past year. But when Daniel's wife Sha're and brother-in-law Skaara are abducted by the same warriors, O'Neill, Jackson and Air Force scientist Sam Carter (Amanda Tapping) use the Stargate to venture to where they're being kept. What they find is an alien race who inhabits human hosts, the Goa'uld, and their ruthless slave warriors, the Jaffa. Carter, O'Neill and Jackson are captured by the powerful Apophis -- but to escape, they must have the help of an unlikely ally: Teal'c (Christopher Judge), Apophis' First Prime. Since Earth has now annoyed the Goa'uld, several exploration teams are formed to go through the Stargate and find weapons and allies. And SG-1 -- Carter, O'Neill, Jackson and Teal'c -- encounters some very strange problems: a plague that turns people into savages, a people who live only a hundred days, a Viking planet, a Stargate explorer stranded since 1945, a little girl turned into a bomb, the seductive Goa'uld queen Hathor, and coming back as robots. And when the military shuts down the SG program, Daniel reveals that the Earth is about to be destroyed by Apophis' armies... The first season of "Stargate SG-1" isn't the most impressive, though the last three episodes hint at the series' future greatness. And thankfully, it drops the usual space opera stuff -- instead we get Stargates, real military, and a very plausible reason why everybody in the galaxy (more or less) looks just like us. It's graced with kitschy Egyptian-styled sets, lots of shoot-em-up action from Marines and Air Force, and plenty of planets influenced by Earth cultures, like the Minoans and the Vikings. Best of all is the snappy dialogue, mostly from the tart-tongued O'Neill ("Temperature--ground 1700 degrees Fahrenheit. Air--seems to be in pockets, ranging from 1500 degrees down to 200." "Sounds like LA"). And the makers add some poignant and/or warm scenes, such as the eager Abydonian teenagers celebrating with O'Neill and his pals, Teal'c reunion with his outcast family, or Sam bonding with a doomed little girl. All the characters get these moments, which really makes them seem human. Instead of Kurt Russell's suicidal O'Neill from the movie, Anderson does a quirky, disrespectful, pop culture-lovin' guy with a hidden tragic past -- his "Cold Lazarus"double role is one of the best of the show. Tapping and Shanks are also great, as an enthusiastic geek and a smart, capable military woman. Sadly Judge gets shortchanged as the stern, honorable Teal'c, but he's brilliant when he's spotlighted. The first season of "Stargate SG-1" is not the best of the series, but it's still a solid, imaginative sci-fi story with some great writing and even better acting. A must-have for sci-fi buffs.
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