This episode explores one of the more interesting scientific notions of the show, the idea that this stranded ship can stay in communication with Earth through communication stones left by the ancients, which allow two people to switch bodies, no matter the distance. Body-snatching is hardly a new concept, but here for the first time we're allowed to experience it as a familiar and friendly technology. Earth orders Young to try a risky procedure that might get them home. When he balks, Col. Telford (Philips) exchanges bodies with him, and takes over. Rush sabotages the attempt, certain it will kill them all. The most fascinating part has Eli, Chloe, and Young interacting with their loved ones on Earth, in different bodies. They all handle it in different ways. Eli pretends to be a new friend of his, knowing his mom would never understand. Young has sex with his wife. Throw in a little Richard Dean Anderson, and away you go.
3 Reviews
Those Damn Communication Stones
jayunight8 January 2021
S1E7
syntory17 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
This episode was ok. The biggest problem I have with this episode is pretty much my same complaint about this whole series, there's too much time wasted on scenes and sometimes entire episodes where nothing is really happening that advances the story. This is another episode that's just filler. It's not that the episode itself is bad.....it's just that it is unnecessary and should have been cut from the series. Having the communication stones is too convenient and allows the writers to rely on them as a crutch. Again, not a bad episode, but I think SGU could have been so much better if episodes like this one were left out.
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