I'm fairly certain Cerberus is basically a good dog gone bad due to a lousy owner. If we're not careful, cities are going to start prohibiting the ownership of three-headed dogs to anyone but licensed breeders, and they'll have to post a bond.
Boxed Set, Vol. II: "It's a Cookbook...A Cookbook!!"
A topic for the discussion of Farscape, Smallville, and Due South. Beware possible invasions of Stargate, Highlander, or pretty much any other "genre" show that captures our fancy. Expect Adult Content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.
Whitefont all unaired in the U.S. ep discussion, identifying it as such, and including the show and ep title in blackfont.
Blackfont is allowed after the show has aired on the east coast.
This is NOT a general TV discussion thread.
I think that the most awesome part was the villagers carrying torches. As they gathered in the streets outside buildings with electric lights. And they weren't even going up to Castle Frankenstein with them -- they were just walking around town.
I'm hoping that the SciFi Channel will have a Saturday night movie with all their Saturday night monsters. Who would win in a fight between Mansquito, Manshark and Cerberus? Maybe a mad scientist will combine human and Cerberus DNA.... Ooh, or a manshark with three dog heads!
THAT CAN FLY!
I think that the most awesome part was the villagers carrying torches. As they gathered in the streets outside buildings with electric lights. And they weren't even going up to Castle Frankenstein with them -- they were just walking around town.
Was the UK involved somehow? It took me years before I figured out that characters in British kids' books didn't just have some sort of weird obsession with lighting their way with fire-on-a-stick, instead of using a flashlight like normal people.
Something just occurred to me about the "Aurora" episode on Stargate: Aquarium. Why did that ship full of Ancients have trouble with all the crew aging to the point of death over 10,000 years in their stasis tubes? Past stories have established that non-ascended Ancients could live that long—Moros from "Before I Sleep" roughly 10,000 years ago was apparently also Merlin and active on earth as recently as the 5th century AD. And that chick with no eyebrows was frozen in the ice in Antarctica for millions of years, and thawed out OK.
Except for the eyebrows....
Matt, you're using logic again. You know that's not allowed.
I think the writers must have forgotten that Ancients lived a lot longer than modern humans, and that Weir only aged maybe 50 years over 10,000 in the pod. Which, to be fair, I didn't remember for several weeks. (Though no one's paying me to remember this stuff, either...)
IIRC, the Atlantis dude told Weir that the stasis pod was experimental? If so, perhaps what was experimental about it was that it was intended for 10K worth of stasis -- maybe the stasis pods on the Aurora were intended for a shorter-term, and they actually aged the Ancients more than their non-pod lifetimes in the same amount of time.
::waves hands wildly about in what she hopes is a distracting manner::