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Watch Stargate Atlantis – The Complete Fourth Season Online

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010
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Movie Title: Stargate Atlantis – The Complete Fourth Season
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Stargate Atlantis – The Complete Fourth Season is available for streaming or downloading.

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Although the right DVD position isn’t out as of the time I write this, the 4th season finished airing months ago and now since they have the page for pre-order up, I’ve been kinda itching to write a review.

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Well as this season starts off from the 3rd season cliffhanger, it is definately off to an awesome commence. Atlantis lost, adrift in spot and running out of power. To conserve energy, they shrink the shield down to a tiny fraction of the city and then what happens? …Atlantis runs into an asteroid belt! Then to regain more power, they actually raid the Asuran homeworld for ZPM’s using Dr. Weir! A very titillating beginning.

While the majority of episodes are hits, such as the episode where a disease causes everyone to lose their memories(Tabula Rasa) or the one where Teal’c comes for a visit(Midway) ; there are some that plunge short of their potential for giving more or are unprejudiced dreary plain! For example: the end-season cliffhanger! This is the first time I’ve ever been disappointed with an Atlantis cliffhanger, not leaving me anxiously exciting to peek how they net out of that spot, waiting for the next season. It ends with Sheppard and his team searching a building for Teyla, but it self-destructs and collapses in on them. (Zzzzzz…you know they survive it) A better map to kill the season would have been to leave Sheppard stranded 48,000 years in the future, revealing more about what happened in the galaxy in all that time and trying to figure out a draw to win support home with the McKay hologram’s unusual idea failing to work! Now that sounds like one hell of a cliffhanger!

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I reviewed season 3 as well, saying it gives potential for an awesome season 4. Does it live up to that potential? It comes conclude, but unfortunately no it doesn’t. Why? It impartial seems like the shows creators/writers aren’t willing to go all the device in some of the episode’s stories. For that matter, I can’t figure out what direction the reveal is headed in anymore; can you? (I rob the expose IS going in some direction)

At least this time around they gave more attention to the Wraith and to Teyla. The whole account arc with the Athosian people being kidnapped and Teyla’s search for them, both expanded, and renewed some interest, in her character. In my season 3 review I also stated my well-liked character is McKay, but even I am starting to secure tired of seeing him so mighty in every episode.

Dr. Weir was officially lost this season, then killed, then…kinda came assist? But fortunately we regained some broken-down faces. Dr. Beckett (or at least a clone) came abet at an ruin of the season episode. And while I liked having Samantha Carter as the Atlantis commander, honest like Dr. Weir in season 3, they didn’t expend her character enough!

Which leads us to season 5. SPOILERS AHEAD! I’ve read various sources about what season 5 of Atlantis will have instore for us fans & veiwers, and most have been confirmed. The biggy for me being that Samantha Carter (Amanda Tapping) will NOT be attend as Atlantis’ commander. (Due to the fact she’ll be staring in her have note, “Sanctuary”.) But she will arrive benefit for some guest appearances. Who’s replacing her? Richard Woolsey (Robert Picardo)! I have completely mixed feelings about his character, but he definately doesn’t have what it takes to yell Atlantis! So unless he grows a pair and proves himself as something other than a cowering beaurocrat, this alone makes me unsafe about season 5 as well as the future of the expose. Dr. Beckett and Dr. Daniel Jackson will guest star in some episodes, as well as 2 novel characters and an entirely recent run being introduced.

Don’t accept me outrageous, I peaceful really like Atlantis and am going to gain the season 4 DVD once it’s released, but I must say this is the first time I am risky about how the next season will win shape, or if it will even be any satisfactory? Let’s unprejudiced hope season 5 will reveal me atrocious!

The season 4 DVD plot itself will have the usual: commentaries, deleted scenes, etc. However, this will be the first Atlantis season DVD that will have a bloopers reel.

**UPDATE: Well, Season 4 came out today, I’ve got it and am watching it good now. Physical DVD-wise, the video and sound is unexcited sizable like seasons 2 & 3. Packaging is the same as well. The menus are different from seasons 2 & 3 DVD’s, but are calm cool-looking and are easy to navigate. (You don’t have to go through a lot of submenus to glean what you are looking for.) Hope this latest info helps anyone!

Surprisingly, season 4 of Stargate Atlantis is better than season 3–it is impartial about on par with season 2. Most of the storylines are decent, with some very appetizing ones; even with the mostly annoying characters, this season is tolerable.

Lt. Col. John Sheppard has deviated from his Jack O’Neill Jr. behavior, now becoming a standard yet spineless character; when faced with most women, he’s detached and weak-willed, barely standing up for himself–unlike his decisive attitude around men. Col. Samantha Carter, taking the position of Dr. Weir, is a suited and strong leader–at times, she is the only one to content up for the legal course of action. Dr. Rodney McKay, barely changing in the slightest, remains arrogant and smug; however, Carter can sometimes shut him up with a well-placed comment, which is quite satisfying. Teyla, although the victim of a sometimes pathetic situation twist, is very faintly better than she was in season 3, sometimes offering up Athosian wisdom for those in need. Ronon is, in my belief, the best character in the show: he is on occasion the only person with well-liked sense, and also tells it exactly like it is.

As for the episodes:

Adrift–5 of 10–We hold up where we left off in season 3, with the city floating in region and losing power. The whole of this episode is spent on creating and solving predicament upon problem: an asteroid belt threatens the city, as well as badly damaged power conduits and loss of shield protection. This goes on until it ends in a very unsatisfactory manner. I couldn’t encourage but mediate that a better solution could have been found to the main, crippling dilemma of this episode.

Lifeline–7 of 10–Even with the poor ending of `Adrift’, this episode finishes things up very nicely, with a gallant mission and valorous befriend from the wounded Dr. Weir. Rodney of course discovers something else that they could try to do while going through with their current mission; I expected things to go from dreadful to worse and their plans to fail, but thankfully everything went well, with the city actually surviving somewhat unscathed. This is a superb ending to a terrible pickle.

Reunion–8 of 10–Ronon stumbles upon three of his friends from Sateda (his home planet) and wonders whether he should leave Atlantis to quit with them. The Satedans are actually slightly dislikeable, being somewhat boorish and rough around the edges; they influence Ronon far too mighty at times, but they have an unpredictable secret that almost dooms Ronon. As with mostly all episodes focusing on Ronon, this is enjoyable–although it features some very unusual fight scenes…

Doppelganger–4 of 10–Sheppard touches a crystalline object on an alien planet and soon appears in everyone’s nightmares. The view slack this episode is interesting; but throughout it, I was laughing! Unintentionally, it becomes more of a murky comedy instead of horrific and inspiring. Something about Sheppard being the villain in each and every nightmare is actually quite comic.

Travelers–3 of 10–Sheppard is captured by a weird ship and tries to dash while dealing with the ship’s stereotypically graceful commander. This episode might actually outdo season 2’s `Grace Under Pressure’ in terms of being annoying. Larrin, the commander, is anything but military, even though she lives on her tattered ship; her hair is long and flowing, she wears tight dismal leather, and she saunters through the corridors like a fashion model. When she gets what she wants, her attitude is predictably smug–when she doesn’t catch what she wants, she becomes pugnacious and petulant, at one point stomping her foot and hollering like a twelve-year-old. All in all, this is useless.

Tabula Rasa–9 of 10–In an amazingly reliable and attractive episode, Rodney finds himself tied to his desk, with almost total memory loss, and exclusive instructions from a recording of himself. The explanation of the memory loss is logical and understandable; the adventures ensuing are bright and mysterious; the flashbacks to hours earlier are nice and enlightening; and it all serves to construct an episode I heartily enjoyed!

Missing–6 of 10–Teyla and Keller, traveling to exercise a day at the modern Athosian settlement, salvage that the people are missing; they encounter the base Bola Kai tribesmen wandering the planet and must camouflage for terror of assume and death. In this episode, Keller at last shows her mettle–after whimpering and moaning for most of the time, she finds her inner courage and faces a risky enemy. The largest jam with the episode, though, is that in all other season 3 and 4 episodes, I saw no mention of the Athosians being relocated to another planet. I have no concept when they got there!

The Seer–8 of 10–Still searching for the Athosians, Teyla seeks out a renowned seer–the leader of a group of people on another planet–and finds that he knows great about Atlantis’ future. Although the seer himself doesn’t have distinguished to do, his visions predict quite a bit of worry for Atlantis; meanwhile, the team finds themselves inextricably linked with the Wraith in order to fight the Replicators. With the amount of adventures involved–and the very limited amount of mistakes made–this episode is very reliable.

Miller’s Crossing–5 of 10–Rodney’s sister Jeannie is kidnapped and, in searching for her, Rodney stumbles into a trap. This episode gives Rodney and Jeannie a chance to argue and sulk, which they are both quite edifying at. Unbiased as in season 3’s `McKay and Mrs. Miller’, the premise itself is not very sound; the decisions that Rodney, Jeannie, and even their kidnapper invent are foolish; as a plus, Jeannie decides to call Rodney by his trusty name, Meredith, through the entire episode–even though he has already told her that he goes by the name of Rodney. Like before, this is rather worthless.

This Mortal Coil–9 of 10–After a outlandish drone from an unknown source crashes into the city, the denizens of Atlantis slowly launch to realize that there’s something modern going on. At the beginning, this episode is a game of `what’s nasty with this characterize? ‘ Once the truth is finally known–shocking not only the team, but myself as well–the team must work to avert grief and provide benefit…but those who need benefit are the most unlikely of people!

Be All My Sins Remember’d–7 of 10–Since the Replicators are attacking more and more planets, the team decides to resolve things once and for all. Larrin, clichéd commander of the Traveler warship, gets an appearance; when Sheppard comes to her–virtually groveling for her attend instead of candidly asking for it–she decides to tie him to a chair (apparently a running gag) . What’s nice is that Col. Ellis, commander of the Apollo, finally manages to give Rodney a part of his mind before they all go off to fight the Replicators. In the destroy, though a novel and horrible enemy is revealed to us in the audience, although the team knows nothing of them.

Spoils of War–7 of 10–The team, led by a signal from Todd’s subspace tracking diagram, stumbles on a top secret Wraith outpost, where they will pick up many threats. Teyla finally gets a chance to befriend out, with as great courage as ever, while Sheppard, Rodney, and Ronon peep the facility. A Wraith queen is spotlighted and gets to screech and spit in the usual over-the-top manner. Although this episode is contrived in spots, it quiet is somewhat decent.

Quarantine–6 of 10–After the city mistakenly quarantines itself, many of the main characters catch themselves trapped together, giving them a chance to learn more about each other. We pick up that Dr. Zelenka raises pigeons; Dr. Keller graduated from college at age 15; and other assorted dinky tidbits. Rodney is of course featured prominently in this episode, as he is in almost all of them. The extremely valid fragment about this episode is that Dr. Zelenka finally gets a chance to do something well-behaved for the entire city. Otherwise, it’s the usual, mediocre at best.

Harmony–4 of 10–Sheppard and Rodney agree to shepherd a young princess on a rite of passage; in a reverse of Star Trek: The Next Generation’s `The Dauphin’, the girl–who bears the Earth name Harmony–develops a crush on Sheppard. This results in her acting somewhat like The Lord of the Rings’ Gollum, pretending to yowl in Sheppard’s arms while smirking at Rodney instead. She is the classic spoiled-brat child, not caring whether Sheppard or Rodney survive their mission, and explaining her actions with the words “I’m the queen!” Throughout most of the episode, I could observe all the major events coming easily. This is a light, very faintly comedic episode that is worth seeing only once.

Outcast–6 of 10–Sheppard’s father dies and he comes home to Earth for the funeral, but then finds himself in worthy deeper difficulty than he expected. His polished brother wears a appreciate suit and has perfectly coiffed hair; his ex-wife, even with her nightclub-style outfit, works implausibly for the Department of Homeland Security; strangely, Sheppard finds himself at a complete loss for words every time he encounters either of them. Otherwise, the main storyline–featuring Replicators, as well as an unexpected appearance by a weak supporting character from season 1–is decent at the very least. Of course, there are some chronicle points that I can seek coming…but then again, that’s legal for almost all the episodes.

Trio–8 of 10–Carter, Rodney, and Keller are trapped in a primitive Genii mine that is racked by tremors. Thankfully, Rodney doesn’t gain to point to grand of his very annoying tendencies in this episode, although contributing an concept on how to escape; Carter and Keller also do their separate parts, trying to catch out before the tremors demolish the mine. While this is the standard `a spot arises, and most attempts to solve it fail miserably’ episode, it manages to be inviting because of the interaction between the three characters. All three of them present themselves by draw of courageous actions.

Midway–10 of 10–With Ronon about to be evaluated by the IOA, Carter decides that Teal’c could swear the Satedan worthy. However, when times grow tough, Ronon and Teal’c must work together to build Earth. This is by far the best episode of season 4, featuring a top-notch crossover and frightening problems. There is a sizable (and regrettably short) fight scene between Ronon and Teal’c, featuring Chuck the gate technician taking bets on who will acquire. Even with the tribulations, the two warriors work well together; however, in the meantime, Sheppard and Rodney glean themselves in equal difficulty. I worship this episode not only because of Teal’c, but also because of the inspiring and plausible scrape. If only every Atlantis episode had the unbelievable writing this one does!

The Kindred, Fragment 1–6 of 10–In a slightly keen decline from `Midway’, Teyla finds herself having visions of Kanaan, the father of her child, and feels that she must search at a distinct village. In the meantime, a sudden plague is sweeping through the galaxy. Almost everything in this episode results in disaster; Teyla–while searching for her people–is captured, and Sheppard and the other team members win that a familiar and annoying villain is slack the plague. Todd, the jolly Wraith, gives them itsy-bitsy aid and asks for it in return, but in the kill his information does them no ample. The very last moment of the episode features a surprising return from a much-beloved character…

The Kindred, Section 2–7 of 10–While Teyla finds her people again, Sheppard and friends try to gather her with the encourage of the newly returned character (whose identity I will not dispute) . That person has quite a few health problems, which lessen his/her ability to help; in the meantime, Teyla learns more about the experiments being performed on some of her people. In the extinguish, information is gathered and the Athosians are rescued, but Teyla remains a prisoner. Even though the villain in this two-part episode now has the usual mad-scientist qualities, this episode is far from awful. The extinguish is tragic as the returned character takes his/her leave from his/her friends. Not abominable!

The Last Man–7 of 10–Sheppard comes through the gate and finds that he’s been sent 48,000 years in the future; naturally, Rodney–once Sheppard went missing–came up with a hologram of himself that is programmed to encourage Sheppard in any method possible. Most of the episode is taken up by reminisces of events taking status after Sheppard vanished–there are many things that go substandard, such as Michael predictably trying to steal over the galaxy. While Sheppard tries to earn a intention out of the future, the hologram of older Rodney tells him stories of Ronon, Carter, Teyla, Keller and Rodney himself too. This episode is apt because of its similarities to the Star Trek: Voyager series finale, but unfortunately the ending is rushed.

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