Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Stargate Atlantis Episode Details!


Episode 5x06 "The Shrine of Talus"


In new interviews with GateWorld, Wright and Atlantis co-star David Hewlett ("Rodney McKay") revealed details about the story and the impact it is sure to have."My favorite script of all time is 'The Shrine of Talus,' [which] Brad Wright has just written," Hewlett said. "It's good to have Brad. It is the one that is going to blow everyone away. It's unbelievable. It's a wicked acting piece. Kate [Hewlett, David's sister] is coming back -- we've got Jeannie back. It's just brutal. It's a total tear-jerker."


In the episode, Rodney McKay suffers from an mental affliction that rapidly robs him of his memories and his identity."It is the inverse of 'Flowers For Algernon,'" Wright revealed to GateWorld. (In the award-winning novel by Daniel Keyes, a man with an IQ of 68 has experimental surgery to increase his intelligence -- but the effects gradually begin to wear off.)


"McKay ends up suffering from the effects of something that is very common among the very old in the Pegasus Galaxy that is equivalent to fast on-set Alzheimer's, that is called 'Second Childhood' in the Pegasus Galaxy. And he very quickly not just loses his memory, but becomes quite childlike.


"Interestingly, the first symptom is that he's a wonderful person," Wright said. "Nobody notices that there is something wrong at first, because they all like it -- until it is too late to operate."Ronon comes up with an idea, and the story takes off from there."The episode clearly gives Hewlett a large range to play, as the most brilliant person in the Pegasus Galaxy loses everything that he feels makes him who he is, and as McKay interacts with his friends and his sister.


"For McKay it's fantastic, because there is this whole deterioration thing happening," Hewlett added. "It is the one that I am, without a doubt, the most looking forward to right now.""It's a character study for practically everyone in the cast, and David gets to play as an actor in a very big way," Wright said. "I've heard it from a few folks reading the script that it has choked them up. Hopefully it has the same effect on the audience when they see the scenes. It's moving."And everything is OK ... I don't kill anyone!"


Source: Gateworld

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