Chain Reaction (Stargate SG-1)
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“Chain Reaction” | |
---|---|
Stargate SG-1 episode | |
Episode no. | Season 4 Episode 15 |
Guest stars | Patti Allen as Mrs. Kinsey Ronnie Cox as Senator Robert Kinsey Lawrence Dane as General Bauer Gary Jones as Walter Harriman Tom McBeath as Col. Harry Maybourne Dan Shea as Sgt. Siler |
Written by | Joseph Malozzi and Paul Mullie |
Directed by | Martin Wood |
Production no. | 415 |
Original airdate | December 13, 2000 |
Episode chronology | |
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"The Serpent's Venom" | "2010" |
Episode chronology |
"Chain Reaction" is an episode from Season 4 of the science fiction television series Stargate SG-1.
[edit] Plot
On an alien planet, SG-1 is ambushed by the Goa'uld. Major Samantha Carter manages to dial out and transmit the SG-1 IDC back to the SGC. On the other end, the SGC receives their radio call and Colonel Jack O'Neill's explanation of the situation. General George Hammond, in violation of procedure, orders the iris to be opened. Goa'uld energy blasts start coming through the Stargate, hitting the insides of the gate room. SG-1 makes it through just in time before General Hammond closes the iris.
In the debrief afterwards, O'Neill thanks Hammond for opening the iris. Hammond gravely responds that had he followed procedure, they would all have been dead. He then announces to the SG-1 team that he has decided to retire. O'Neill doesn't believe him and later tries to talk him out of it as Hammond is leaving his office. Afterwards, he exchanges personal words of farewell with each of the SG-1 members, including Teal'c: "On Chulak, when a great warrior retires from the field of battle, it is customary to sing a song of lament. Fortunately, we are not on Chulak."
The SGC is put under the command of General Bauer, who quickly turns the SGC on its head. He divides up SG-1, putting Teal'c in SG-3, the marine combat team, Dr. Daniel Jackson behind a desk, and Carter to oversee the development of a new naqahdah-enhanced bomb. O'Neill, after complaining, is asked to take a vacation and rethink his insubordination.
O'Neill, predictably, goes to see Hammond, who insists it will just take time to get used to the new CO. But after much coaxing from O'Neill, Hammond reveals that he was forced to retire by the NID, who threatened him by picking up his granddaughters from school one day.
Meanwhile, at the SGC, Teal'c leads a strike force to a Goa'uld-held world to gather more refined naqahdah for the "Doomsday device" that Carter is now working on. They return with one wounded, and Lt. Morrison dead, but a sufficient amount of naqahdah. Bauer doesn't care about the casualties, and is content that the naqahdah was retrieved.
O'Neill then goes to see ex-Colonel Harry Maybourne, behind bars where O'Neill had put him in "Watergate". He gets him out of jail, and Maybourne takes O'Neill to his apartment where they would hopefully be able to procure information from Maybourne's computer to blackmail the NID with. But Maybourne's access codes have been removed, and several minutes later, a black-ops team with mini-uzis and MP5K submachine guns bursts in. O'Neill and Maybourne barely manage to escape.
Carter finds out that the test planet for the naqahdah bomb has life on it, and protests, to no avail. The bomb is sent by MALP to the planet, with a secondary observation MALP following. Daniel bursts into the gate room, warning Bauer that the planet contains naqahdah in the soil, which will amplify the effects of the explosion. Carter realizes that this is why the planet was chosen in the first place; many Goa'uld strongholds are laced with naqahdah, and utilizing this fact may be to their advantage. However, in this case it may create an explosion that would consume the whole planet! Bauer insists that if this happens, the Stargate will be destroyed and Earth will feel no effects from the bomb.
O'Neill and Maybourne now have to blackmail someone high in the NID in order to get what they want. They go to Senator Kinsey's house, the politician who almost had the SGC shut down in the end of season one. Getting him to lead them up to his office, O'Neill holds him at gunpoint while Maybourne accesses his computer.
At the SGC, the bomb is set off. Exactly as Carter expected, the bomb starts a chain reaction, and the explosion destroys the observation MALP. The planet is destroyed, but the Stargate is not: the energy from the explosion provides it power, keeping the wormhole active, and transmitting deadly radiation through the Stargate back to the SGC. Carter orders the iris closed, but it will not hold forever. Carter urges the now in-over-his-head Bauer to order the evacuation of the base.
At a security station on level seventeen, Teal'c, Daniel, Carter, and Bauer monitor the gate room. Carter explains there's still a chance that the wormhole will collapse after the theoretical 38-minute limit. Otherwise, the radiation will melt through the iris, and even if they were to engage the self-destruct, the Stargate would most likely survive, and with the planet on the other side turned into a ball of plasma able to power the gate for months, even its burial under a mountain wouldn't stop the radiation.
In Senator Kinsey's house, Maybourne has succeeded in accessing the NID sites. Over threats and curses from Kinsey, O'Neill figures out that the password must be "Oscar", the name of Kinsey's dog. They get information that link Kinsey to numerous illegal NID actions, including Maybourne's Area 51 operation, the Russian operation from "Watergate", and the blackmailing of Hammond. O'Neill delivers his offer: re-instate Hammond, or he'll give the information to the press. Unfortunately, Kinsey's wife has meanwhile called the NID, who have just rolled up to the front door. While they don't dare come in with Kinsey's party guests downstairs, O'Neill and Maybourne have no way out.
There is a tense minute at the SGC when the 38-minute window comes and goes. Bauer declares for there to be no point in remaining, and starts to head towards the surface. The team follows him, but Teal'c turns and stays one more minute. At 38 minutes and 34.12 seconds, the gate deactivates.
When Senator Kinsey exits the house with O'Neill and Maybourne accompanying, NID personnel are prevented from moving to apprehend the pair by the press, whom O'Neill called to create a diversion. The press pester Kinsey about his presidential ambitions, and Kinsey launches into his usual politicking while O'Neill and Maybourne get away.
Later, back at the SGC, Hammond has been re-instated. He thanks O'Neill for what he's done and asks how he can ever repay him. Suddenly, there's a phone call for O'Neill from Maybourne; Maybourne emailed himself a copy of the incriminating evidence, and used it to get himself transferred to a prison on a tropical island. O'Neill hangs up the phone and tells Hammond that one day, he would like the General to "buy back my soul."
[edit] Notes
- The song of lament is possibly a loose reference to Star Trek, where one episode had Spock sing a song, an episode that George Takei, who played Lt. Sulu, considered to be a low for the series.
- Senator Kinsey's dog Oscar actually belongs to Richard Dean Anderson, which would explain why Oscar was happy to see O'Neill.
- According to the DVD commentaries, there are many references to the movie The Silence of the Lambs. As Lecter does with Clarice in the movie, Harry Maybourne refers to quid pro quo, should O'Neill really want to get help from him. Another reference is the final telephonic conversation between O'Neill and Maybourne, the latter calling from an exotic place, just as Lecter called Clarice Starling at the end of The Silence of the Lambs.
- This episode's plot is quite similar to the episode "Early retirement" (season 3, episode 12) from Richard Dean Anderson's other cult TV series MacGyver: the main character's superior is forced to early retirement and Richard Dean Anderson's character finally exposes the mischievous scheme and gets him reinstated. Don S. Davis (General Hammond) also played the stunt double for MacGyver's boss Dana Elcar (Peter Thornton), so even the actors are the same.
[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 (2000-11-20). Retrieved on 2006-10-15. Linked to from Official Stargate SG-1 site. Also see Google's cache.
- Summary from GateWorld. Visited May 4, 2006.
- Review from GateWorld. Reviewed by Debra Kraft. Visited May 4, 2006.