Need (Stargate SG-1)
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Stargate SG-1 episode | |
---|---|
“Need” | |
Episode no. | Season 2 Episode 5 |
Guest star(s) | Teryl Rothery as Dr. Janet Fraiser Heather Hanson as Shyla George Touliatos as Pyrus |
Writer(s) | Robert C. Cooper, Damian Kindler |
Director | David Warry-Smith |
Production no. | 205 |
Original airdate | July 24, 1998 |
Episode chronology | |
← Previous | Next → |
"The Gamekeeper" | "Thor's Chariot" |
"Need" is an episode of the science fiction television series Stargate SG-1.
[edit] Plot
SG-1 finds itself on a planet watching raw Naqahdah being sent through the Stargate. They decide to try to obtain some of the metal for research. While they investigate the planet they see a large pyramind and some Jaffa. They then follow a woman through the forest, and Daniel Jackson rescues her when she is about to commit suicide. However she then starts to scream and Jaffa surround SG-1. The team is then brought into the pyramid and before the woman's father Pyrus, the ruler of the planet. However she is unwilling to tell her father the truth about what Daniel Jackson has done and Pyrus also doesn't believe the team that they come from a Goa'uld-free world. In the end SG-1 is forced into labor in the Naqahdah mines of the former Goa'uld planet, accused of attacking the princess.
SG-1 has to do hard work in the mines and while working they conclude that Pyrus isn't a Goa'uld and that the people in the Jaffa armor aren't real Jaffa. In the evening SG-1 attempts to escape the mines, but Jackson is badly injured in a rock fall due to pursuing shots from Staff weapons wielded by the pseudo-Jaffa. He wakes up in a Sarcophagus, and the princess who Jackson rescued, Shyla, tells him that he is destined for her. Jackson attempts to get SG-1 released, but the princess tells him that he will first have to earn the trust of her father, who believes that SG-1 are spies sent from the Goa'uld to retake the planet. Shyla asks Jackson to use the sarcophagus again on the grounds that it will make him feel better than ever, and he initially refuses, but ends up doing it to gain her trust. Jackson becomes increasingly deranged from perpetual use of the sarcophagus, and finds himself in an ever-deepening relationship with the princess. After agreeing to marry Shyla, who is about to become queen due to the senility of her father, Jackson secures SG-1's release. Jackson returns with the rest of SG-1 to Earth, promising that he will come back to marry the princess.
Upon their return to Earth, Jackson is found to be biologically unstable, apparently because of the somewhat narcotic properties of the sarcophagus. He goes through withdrawal, during which he is mentally unstable. He demands to go back to Shyla's world, saying that they are killing him by keeping him away from the sacrophagus. He attempts to escape, and eventually pulls a gun on Jack O'Neill, before breaking down and agreeing to remain on Earth and break the addiction.
After he has recovered, SG-1 returns to the planet, where Jackson persuades Shyla (whose father has finally died) to destroy the Sarcophagus and lead her people in a different way of life than her father did. She complains and fires a Staff weapon on the Sarcophagus. Afterwards she has to say goodbye to Daniel. It is also mentioned that Stargate Command intends to find an alternative method (other than slavery) for mining the Naqahdah, which shows great promise for military applications.
[edit] Notes
- In this episode it is for the first time mentioned that Carter can feel if a person has a symbiote inside him/her or not. This is due to the fact that she was blended with a Tok'ra.
- This episode establishes that continual use of the Goa'uld sarcaphagus leads to mental instability. Along with genetic memory, this is the primary explanation for the inherently evil nature of the Goa'uld race.
[edit] External links
- Official Stargate SG-1 site. MGM. Visited June 8, 2006. Most of site requires Flash.
- Screenplay (PDF). Distributed by MGM. Prepared by Casablanca Continuity. Retrieved on 2006-10-15. Linked to from Official Stargate SG-1 site. Also see Google's cache.
- Summary from SciFi. Visited June 5, 2006. Requires Flash.
- Summary from GateWorld. Visited May 7, 2006.