@@raven4k998as far as i was aware ZPMs are not rechargeable? They were consumable items. once burnt out, they are done, like a light bulb? correct me if i am mistaken
@@MinkieWinkle Yeah, the making new ones is beyond the abilities of the Humans. and the one time they tried to 'recharge' one , it nealry doomed another alternate universe.
@@zuzoscorner nicht ganz Richtig sie haben nie versucht eins zu laden Es war eine andere Art der Strom versorgung um ohne ZPS aus zukommen und an @raven4k998 ZPS lassen sich nicht aufladen und die Solarzellen hätten vermutlich länger wie 10000 Jahre gebraucht um die ansatzweise zu laden
The music that plays as the city rises is pure magic. Coupled with the structure rising to the surface in all its glory tickled the very essence of my imagination. I was so hooked!
Agreed! The soundtrack has a slightly different version of this piece called "The Rising". Among other things it's missing the beautiful choir parts present in the episode version, which is a bit unfortunate.
@@GtheMVP Yep, don't know why they decided to publish an alternate version of a magnificent piece on CD. But then again this happens often with soundtracks that they don't match the aired/theater version of the score.
However, if you look closely you can occasionally see some of the tower sections popping into existence as they "clear" the ocean surface. Maybe they should have left out those.
@@TorIverWilhelmsen Possibly, though they seem to be pretty easy to miss for the average viewer (I'm still trying to spot them) and honestly even some of the best shows and movies that use CGI have little issues like that. One of the most popular ones being that dinosaur that disappears for one frame in Jurassic Park.
i have bne3gun to believe that if a good show runs long enough it will get cancelled star gate Atlantis was one of those shows the original thundercats was another.
The special effects in Atlantis were amazing, bordering on cinematic quality... in a weekly TV show. The Atlantis control room was also the largest indoor set ever. Which also meant that SGA was _astonishingly_ expensive to produce, and why (when the 2008 subprime mortgage meltdown went full Chernobyl), it was canned faster than a ZPM-powered hyperdrive. This is part of why the end of season 5 is what it is - they were trying to wrap seasons worth of story lines up in two episodes knowing there would be no S6.
CGI programs have been constantly getting better. At this point, a fan/group of fans with suitable experience/processing power could probably render a 2020 version of this sequence themselves given enough time.
I liked seeing the civilisation that the time travelling Destiny crew' ppl built but were sadly mostly wiped out. I reckon if the show lived longer, we would've seen more of them :o how cool it is that humans had an even more advanced colony so many galaxies away thanks to Destiny.
One of the things I love about the Stargate franchise is that they know how and when to utilise CGI and practical effects, and on top of that the quality of both the CGI and practical effects is pretty damn good by TV show standards. Just to be clear, I'm not one of those people who believes that all effects should just be practical, however I am someone who can appreciate both CGI effects and practical effects if they're used in just the right way, and for live action TV shows it's both cheaper and honestly more futureproof to only use CGI when necessary. Could they have done these shots with just practical effects? Sure, but they'd have to get the scale of the city just right to prevent it from looking too much like a model and they would probably need a decent size tank to get away with the aerial shots of the city. Plus the one issue with using a model and a large tank is that you'd have to slow down the footage of the waves moving away from the city to make it look convincing. On top of all of that the lower camera angles might've been tricker with 2005 cameras even on a large model version of the city (assuming the model would be roughly the size of 3 people stood next to each other lengthways), not necessarily impossible but tricky, bear in mind that the video quality would need to be a good 1080p. I don't know what the budget for this show was but I wouldn't be surprised if most of it had already been spent on the different sets they used. Now just in case anyone feels the need to call me an idiot, I'll admit that everything I've said is based on my current understanding of special effects and I am in no way claiming to be a special effects expert.
Practical effects are fantastic, and CGI can seriously increase how brilliant they can look and be. Going full CGI can be very hit or miss though. IMO, it depends on what you're showing with that CGI. Something like this is absolutely beautiful... and yes, it's a little dated by today's standards, but still very beautiful... but imagine if they tried to do all the Wraith in CGI instead of having actors in practical makeup and props. It would likely look horrendous. Typically trying to render something realistically moving (like a person) usually is. Stargate, in each of its series, managed to lovingly balance both styles and merge them really well. It's why the show stands the test of time and still looks wonderful even today, over 10 years after the franchise ended (I mean the end of SGU... I don't count that other awful series that was on Amazon or so)
@@BYERE Using CGI character models for the wraith _could_ work, but the amount of detail needed to make them convincing would have to be on par with Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War and End Game, which wouldn't be easy to maintain for a TV studio with deadlines and a much tighter budget, especially if there's going to be whole mobs of them. I noticed in some episodes of SG-1 and Atlantis they would occasionally swap out the practical Asgardian models with CGI but I think that was just because they couldn't find a way to make the practical model walk without it looking like a puppet. My overall opinion when it gets to character models is that the safest bet is to only use CGI models if the show is animated or if the photorealism of the model is absolutely 100% convincing. Also, Stargate Origins was awful (assuming that's the show you meant).
@@MythicSuns I thought the wraith looked great. Like much of the show, they can be hokey, but they do enough with them to make them a believable menacing force, especially that first encounter with Robert Patrick. I was shocked they did that.
Man this series was SOOOOOOOOOO Good. I am still sad they never gave it a proper end. The episode where you find out the city was originally destroyed is SO fricking cool.
Well, SG:U screwed Atlantis by not giving them a movie or two, and when SG:U couldn't measure up to its predecessors, that was the end of the franchise. To be fair to SG:U, the writing did get better towards the end but the damage was already done. It seemed to be having an identity crisis at the start and by the time they sorted themselves out, the network pulled the plug.
This series was shown in Argentina at 6 in the morning on a single channel and the episodes were consecutive. I got up at 6 in the morning to see her before going to school. Seeing this gives me chills. It is one of my favorite series.
Right at the beginning of a new adventure, you knew this was going to be that rare thing - a spinoff that's nearly as good as the original, capturing the same spirit of magic and adventure, but putting a new slant on things. We were so spoiled for good TV back then.
Replying to self as I can't edit: the first three seasons of SGA pretty much *were* as good as prime SG1. I didn't like the direction they took in seasons 4-5 though, season 5 was pretty bad, Vegas excepted.
Funny to think that the people who have only just started watching this show and have only got past the first two episodes have no idea how much involvement Elizabeth REALLY had in saving the expedition from drowning to death.
A City-Ship, capable of traveling across galaxies. Built millions of years ago by a race of beings dozens of millions of years old, known as the Ancients. The Asgard, one of the most technologically advanced species to ever traverse the stars, who's society was over 100,000 years old, paled in comparison.
I cant believe ive never noticed it, but the epic shots of the city raising to the surface was unique. As the city was floating up to the surface the shield had actually fully collapsed. Thats why theres the beauty shots of the city rising surrounded by water.
I want to live in this city ... never giving up on the hope that such a city could have existed long time ago and we will find those technologies under the Arctic ice
red17x it’s possible I theorize that we’re not the first evolution of this form like they sayin sg-1 I think we’re the second only a slave race made by the more advanced and somewhat evil race of pre humans
Im pretty sure someone is gonna build ocean cities in the future. Its another question of what people they will allow to live there, after all its probably gonna be billionaires who build and control those cities. If you wanna live in such a city in the future, just become rich enough and youll probably be able to make one and even be in charge of it.
Even if Atlantis existed (and we're not the first iteration of human civilization on Earth) it would have decayed into nothing but a couple of stones and some metal rod in the ocean floor, covered by algae, seaweed and coral. And that if Atlantis ever existed, which doesn't seems likely for the evidence we gathered. Doesn't seems likely. We still have some gaps covering centuries and even millenias, gaps where an entire civilization may have rise and fallen to oblivion. I wouldn't count on it, real history seems pretty straightforward but still... At this point I'm not gonna totally reject anything. Trust me, archeology is full of surprises.
@@arhskr81 "...keep in mind this is the race that built the Stargates. They did everything big." They wrote how and what Altantis tech had before making the esp. The Stardrive had the ability to make the City sink. I don't think they are that dumb...Like this esp to forget something foolish then that. It the most stupidest esp and you just gonna have to deal with it.
1:29 casually/calmly says "I'm dialing an address", Weir on a floor below among heavy noise and people screaming "no wait". Weir must have an amazing hearing.
The opening theme for this episode is unique (apart from the cold opens), since it's just an underwater shot during the credits that pans down to the city at the end. No indication at all of what's going to happen. Made this that much more spectacular when it first aired.
@@maj.stevencaldwell3522 no. There’s an episode where they discover a 10,000 year old Elizabeth Weir from an alternate timeline in a stasis chamber. She was part of the team that went to Atlantis, but unlike in this timeline, there was no failsafe and the shield just failed drowning everyone. Her and Shepherd escaped in a Jumper with a Time Machine in the back and teleported themselves 10,000 years in the past when the Wraith were besieging Atlantis and the city was under water and about to be evacuated by the Ancients. They were shot down and she was rescued. Shepherd did not survive the crash. She met a scientist named Janus. She told him what had happened to her and he got the idea to create a fail safe so that when the shield is on the verge of failing, the locking clamp releases letting the city rise to the surface. She stayed behind when the ancients had evacuated to rotate the ZPMs every few thousand years.
This is Weir! Where? Here. Weir is here? Yes Weir is here, where we’re? Yes, Weir is near here where we’re…just to be clear. I don’t see her? Well that’s weird.
There is absolutely no reason this city couldn't exist here on earth right now, in fact it makes perfect sense, submerge every time a storm comes you can out maneuver
So here's a question: how does the stargate know like 5 seconds in advance when there's an incoming wormhole? The stargate shouldn't be sure if the wormhole is coming to it until the 6th chevron, which leaves one chevron press and the big button before the wormhole opens.
Stargate travel is not instant, so the receiving stargate has plenty time to show an activation sequence after the sending stargate has finished dialing.
it's a tad more complex than that. An Einstein Rosen Bridge spans not only Space but also Time (as they are essentially the same structure). The concept of "now" is not synchronous over such a domain because there can be no external cause/effect external to the bridge. The sender and receiver have no other means to quantify when any particular event happened relative to the other so any perceived delay or indeed perceived preempting of an action is fundamentally meaningless.
That's actually a very good question lol. I faintly remember Carter saying the travel time was 3(and some fraction), so that's even less time for the receiving gate to activate. Although, it may not actually activate at the same time. Anyone who enters before the second Stargate activates is just stored in the buffer until it's ready. As for radio signals, I think this is instantaneous because the gate isn't actively converting and transporting the wave signals; the radio waves simply go through the wormhole and arrive nearly instantly. That, or the gate translates it into a subspace component, with the same effect.
They were not deep. If you go back and watch when they arrive and they notice that they're under water, you can clearly see the surface and the sunlight shining down. So they were in a few hundred feet of water at most. A good swimmer can dive that deep, maybe even without scuba gear.
@@michaelheath2866 although this is somewhat inconsistent since it was also stated that the ocean is really deep where they are later. But I would assume that the inside was pressurised anyway.
@@victorselve8349 Yes, the inside of the city must be pressurised, otherwise taking the gate from Atlantis (while under water) to a surface world would have serious consequences to the teams.
it always bugged me in the arrival scene that every short which wasn't the open stargate had a camera shudder. you'd think they'd have done that for those vfx shots just to keep it consistent.
the fact that it took time travel for this to actually succeed proves that the ancients were advanced but idiots. They never realized they could be a power failure ....
They realized that. But were assholes, that rather let the city be crushed by water, than having a failsafe in place for it to rise. Like sure, they were at war with the Wraith and didn't want the city to end up in the wrong hands (of their worst enemy), but they even refused to do something about the situation, AFTER Weir told them, that the city survived for 10K years and the Tau'ri (the Ancient's children basically) claimed it. Assholes, that's what they really are.
So, if the city rose because the shield was in danger of collapsing...why didn't we see the bubble the shield forms around the city? Instead we see water is actually on the city structure itself. And it can't be because the shield already collapsed, because the city would have immediately started flooding and the windows would have given way under the pressure.
Read_My_Feels991 I would like to think that is the case, except that I suspect the emitters couldn't make it an active layer just microns from the surface. Maybe it shut down completely just before surfacing? But, more than likely the effects department just overlooked it in favor of the admittedly cool look of the water coming off of it.
Read_My_Feels991 Argh. I forgot about the part where McKay said that some parts of the city was already flooded...so I guess it was probably collapsed down to just the central tower.
As nice as the "collapsed to form-fitting" idea is, the Atlantis shield is literally the _only_ lantean shield design explicitly incapable of it. It is able to do any variation on vaguely sphere-ish, up to and including a disc surrounding the gate, but form-fitting anything other than a borg sphere isn't something that's happening.
Read_My_Feels991 it was in... Actually, I can't remember where. I think I may have assumed. However, working by logic, it can be assumed as: The only form-fitting shielding used in the series is used by the Ancients, in the Auroras, Destiny, the personal shield, etc. In a city-ship especially, a form-fitting shield would be a boon, as(due to how gateverse hyperdrives work), there is actually enough room inside the raised Atlantis shielding for a small enough ship to hyperspace-jump inside the shields. However, the thing about gateverse shielding is that it is frequency-based. IIRC, the big deal about the Atlantis shield was that it was multi-layered, so it was able to have more frequencies covered at the same time. As stated above, it would be a good idea for a city-ship to have form-fitting shielding, and yet it didn't. (The dome-shaped shielding _may_ have been the trade-off for... the odd nature of Atlantis' shield, even if my recollection of that factoid of it's operation is incorrect.) Either way, however, there are a few more points that make it unlikely that, in this situation at least, the shields would have collapsed in to a form-fitting mode. A) Assuming that the form-fitting mode isn't the default form for the shields(as it is not shown anywhere else in the series, after the SGA team gains active control over the shielding), projecting a form-fitting cover over the city would likely take more energy than projecting a dome over the city(though this one is simply conjecture based on how dome-forcefields are theorized to work) B) Seeing how the dome was full of lighter-than-water air, a flat-surfaced dome full of air would rise to the surface considerably faster than a full-of-lots-of-places-to-catch-water-and-slow-them-down city full of notably less air, it would be more energy efficient for the shield to maintain the dome than to perform drastic reshaping of the field while keeping said field raised. C) Every time we have seen the Atlantis field raised, it has been accompanied by a constant, distinct shimmer in the air, especially noticable after activation or during/after holding back something(like, say, an ocean). The buildings of Atlantis in this are not covered in said shimmer.
And to thik about... that Atlantis surfacing was only possible thanks to Weir's "missdail" gate during "original" catastrophic city evac and landing in the past when ancients still WORKING there... 😏
I miss Stargate Atlantis... I will never get tired of this amazing scene !
shame they didn't just think of using the city's solar panels to recharge the zpm🤣🤣
@@raven4k998as far as i was aware ZPMs are not rechargeable? They were consumable items. once burnt out, they are done, like a light bulb? correct me if i am mistaken
@@MinkieWinkle Yeah, the making new ones is beyond the abilities of the Humans. and the one time they tried to 'recharge' one , it nealry doomed another alternate universe.
@@zuzoscorner nicht ganz Richtig sie haben nie versucht eins zu laden
Es war eine andere Art der Strom versorgung um ohne ZPS aus zukommen
und an @raven4k998 ZPS lassen sich nicht aufladen und die Solarzellen hätten vermutlich länger wie 10000 Jahre gebraucht um die ansatzweise zu laden
The music that plays as the city rises is pure magic. Coupled with the structure rising to the surface in all its glory tickled the very essence of my imagination. I was so hooked!
Couldn't agree more.
This!
Agreed! The soundtrack has a slightly different version of this piece called "The Rising". Among other things it's missing the beautiful choir parts present in the episode version, which is a bit unfortunate.
@@JariLaakso1 You need the choir!
@@GtheMVP Yep, don't know why they decided to publish an alternate version of a magnificent piece on CD. But then again this happens often with soundtracks that they don't match the aired/theater version of the score.
- We made all those 3D shots of buildings rising out of water for you to choose from, which ones do you want to go in the edit?
- Yes.
Glad they went with "yes"
To be fair, at least it's not the same spire rising over and over again, and the timing is due to the varying height of the spires.
Good choice
However, if you look closely you can occasionally see some of the tower sections popping into existence as they "clear" the ocean surface. Maybe they should have left out those.
@@TorIverWilhelmsen Possibly, though they seem to be pretty easy to miss for the average viewer (I'm still trying to spot them) and honestly even some of the best shows and movies that use CGI have little issues like that. One of the most popular ones being that dinosaur that disappears for one frame in Jurassic Park.
Press F for the original Atlantis crew who gave their lives to make sure that fail safe was put into place!
f
F
f
F
F
Such a crime we only got 5 seasons of this show - love to see it return.
i have bne3gun to believe that if a good show runs long enough it will get cancelled star gate Atlantis was one of those shows the original thundercats was another.
One of Stargate franchises greatest scenes!
I remember watching this for the first time in 2004. I was so hyped for this show. Even all these years later it holds up.
The special effects in Atlantis were amazing, bordering on cinematic quality... in a weekly TV show. The Atlantis control room was also the largest indoor set ever.
Which also meant that SGA was _astonishingly_ expensive to produce, and why (when the 2008 subprime mortgage meltdown went full Chernobyl), it was canned faster than a ZPM-powered hyperdrive. This is part of why the end of season 5 is what it is - they were trying to wrap seasons worth of story lines up in two episodes knowing there would be no S6.
@@erikkeever3504 Yeah, for tv standards at the time, it was top notch. This show and Farscape were a cut above most, only usurped by BSG.
If they ever restarted this franchise, I hope they remake this sequence in 4k. No changes, just greater detail.
CGI programs have been constantly getting better. At this point, a fan/group of fans with suitable experience/processing power could probably render a 2020 version of this sequence themselves given enough time.
@@Jokie155 We should petition Corridor Digital to take a stab at it
@@Soulindex and maybe a few other Stargate sequences that could use the love.
@@Tank50us the Battle of Antarctica for one
so sort of like what they did with star trek the original series?
God damn, this little scene makes me rewatch ALL OF THE STARGATES lol
Do it. I checked out all the SG1 and Atlantis DVDs from my library.
That just happened to me
Same here
I always loved this shot and its symbolism. A new power had arisen in the Pegasus Galaxy.
the only other scene in all of stargate that got me feeling this hyped was when we first c Destiny recharge itself
if this show does anything right its that everything the ancients built is awe inspiring
And when the city initiates the star drive or wormhole drive
Even in Stargate SG-1 ?
@@karimedouard5533 earth drone chair blowing up Anubis's fleet comes to mind
I liked seeing the civilisation that the time travelling Destiny crew' ppl built but were sadly mostly wiped out.
I reckon if the show lived longer, we would've seen more of them :o how cool it is that humans had an even more advanced colony so many galaxies away thanks to Destiny.
Spectacular music really adds to the awesome sight of the city rising to the surface.
Now, imagine a modern civilization on the surface seeing that pop up out of the ocean.
Hahaha that would be amazing
rizon72 if that I would point at it and say what the hell is that or what the fuck is that.
@Ean Porter It is a what if scenario. Just imagine it would pop up somewhere on earth.
@Eliška Mostecká Depends how close to the surface it shows up. if it´s near a coast then people can see you with binoculars so theres no denying then.
Impossible but à country of plastic is already here
One of the things I love about the Stargate franchise is that they know how and when to utilise CGI and practical effects, and on top of that the quality of both the CGI and practical effects is pretty damn good by TV show standards. Just to be clear, I'm not one of those people who believes that all effects should just be practical, however I am someone who can appreciate both CGI effects and practical effects if they're used in just the right way, and for live action TV shows it's both cheaper and honestly more futureproof to only use CGI when necessary.
Could they have done these shots with just practical effects? Sure, but they'd have to get the scale of the city just right to prevent it from looking too much like a model and they would probably need a decent size tank to get away with the aerial shots of the city. Plus the one issue with using a model and a large tank is that you'd have to slow down the footage of the waves moving away from the city to make it look convincing. On top of all of that the lower camera angles might've been tricker with 2005 cameras even on a large model version of the city (assuming the model would be roughly the size of 3 people stood next to each other lengthways), not necessarily impossible but tricky, bear in mind that the video quality would need to be a good 1080p. I don't know what the budget for this show was but I wouldn't be surprised if most of it had already been spent on the different sets they used.
Now just in case anyone feels the need to call me an idiot, I'll admit that everything I've said is based on my current understanding of special effects and I am in no way claiming to be a special effects expert.
Practical effects are fantastic, and CGI can seriously increase how brilliant they can look and be. Going full CGI can be very hit or miss though. IMO, it depends on what you're showing with that CGI. Something like this is absolutely beautiful... and yes, it's a little dated by today's standards, but still very beautiful... but imagine if they tried to do all the Wraith in CGI instead of having actors in practical makeup and props. It would likely look horrendous. Typically trying to render something realistically moving (like a person) usually is.
Stargate, in each of its series, managed to lovingly balance both styles and merge them really well. It's why the show stands the test of time and still looks wonderful even today, over 10 years after the franchise ended (I mean the end of SGU... I don't count that other awful series that was on Amazon or so)
@@BYERE Using CGI character models for the wraith _could_ work, but the amount of detail needed to make them convincing would have to be on par with Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War and End Game, which wouldn't be easy to maintain for a TV studio with deadlines and a much tighter budget, especially if there's going to be whole mobs of them.
I noticed in some episodes of SG-1 and Atlantis they would occasionally swap out the practical Asgardian models with CGI but I think that was just because they couldn't find a way to make the practical model walk without it looking like a puppet.
My overall opinion when it gets to character models is that the safest bet is to only use CGI models if the show is animated or if the photorealism of the model is absolutely 100% convincing.
Also, Stargate Origins was awful (assuming that's the show you meant).
@@MythicSuns I thought the wraith looked great. Like much of the show, they can be hokey, but they do enough with them to make them a believable menacing force, especially that first encounter with Robert Patrick. I was shocked they did that.
Man this series was SOOOOOOOOOO Good. I am still sad they never gave it a proper end. The episode where you find out the city was originally destroyed is SO fricking cool.
yeah, only sg1 got a good send off the other two got screwed over big time
Well, SG:U screwed Atlantis by not giving them a movie or two, and when SG:U couldn't measure up to its predecessors, that was the end of the franchise. To be fair to SG:U, the writing did get better towards the end but the damage was already done. It seemed to be having an identity crisis at the start and by the time they sorted themselves out, the network pulled the plug.
@@hawkeye5955 SG:U was closer to a soap opera than stargate. It did get better towards the end, but as you say by then it was already too late.
universe was awful.
from start to finish.
sg-1 got to run on far too long.
i love that.
atlantis still had so much left!
fucking heartbreaking.
So many Stargate moments. This is one of the best.
My god that's awesome. I love this show.
Agree had a great five season run
asianfireflie but it deserved (like most good shows) more seasons
samramdebest it did. damn SGU
J4Seriously an miss all three shows
This series was shown in Argentina at 6 in the morning on a single channel and the episodes were consecutive. I got up at 6 in the morning to see her before going to school. Seeing this gives me chills. It is one of my favorite series.
Right at the beginning of a new adventure, you knew this was going to be that rare thing - a spinoff that's nearly as good as the original, capturing the same spirit of magic and adventure, but putting a new slant on things. We were so spoiled for good TV back then.
Replying to self as I can't edit: the first three seasons of SGA pretty much *were* as good as prime SG1. I didn't like the direction they took in seasons 4-5 though, season 5 was pretty bad, Vegas excepted.
still give me goosebumps
I love this scene. Gives me goose bumps all these years later. Wow what is it 14 years?
Loved this scene. I can see it over and over again.
i held my breath the first time i saw this scene and even today it makes me hold my breath in anticipation
Thanks to Janus and Elizabeth in the first reality, who made this rise to the surface of the city possible...
Still one of the most beautiful and dramatic moments a Sci-Fi
the score is fantastic
Perhaps the most beautiful moment in recent television history!
This scene still gives me chills to this day!
The music used for the city rising sounds like a riff on The Crack of Doom from LOTR
Funny to think that the people who have only just started watching this show and have only got past the first two episodes have no idea how much involvement Elizabeth REALLY had in saving the expedition from drowning to death.
they could havew made an entire series about exploring the city without ever having to use the gate, so much wasted potential
Don’t think I haven’t thought of that, that’s why season one is always my favorite!
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Such a great show, so well thought out. Way better than the current crap.
One of the best scenes ever in a Sci Fi series.
A City-Ship, capable of traveling across galaxies. Built millions of years ago by a race of beings dozens of millions of years old, known as the Ancients. The Asgard, one of the most technologically advanced species to ever traverse the stars, who's society was over 100,000 years old, paled in comparison.
What an epic show this was.
In my oppinion THE BEST moment of all world of stargate (SG-1, SGA, SGU, SGO, SG1994,...) with the greatest melody.
This scene will never get old
I cant believe ive never noticed it, but the epic shots of the city raising to the surface was unique. As the city was floating up to the surface the shield had actually fully collapsed. Thats why theres the beauty shots of the city rising surrounded by water.
The Shield is Collapsing🤣🤣🤣
“Personal… this is weird”… “yea no shit lady we are on a different galaxy!”
Now THAT is how you open a series. Damn what a scene.
That.was.epic.
I want to live in this city ... never giving up on the hope that such a city could have existed long time ago and we will find those technologies under the Arctic ice
red17x it’s possible I theorize that we’re not the first evolution of this form like they sayin sg-1 I think we’re the second only a slave race made by the more advanced and somewhat evil race of pre humans
Im pretty sure someone is gonna build ocean cities in the future. Its another question of what people they will allow to live there, after all its probably gonna be billionaires who build and control those cities. If you wanna live in such a city in the future, just become rich enough and youll probably be able to make one and even be in charge of it.
With its sensor systems and other tech, you may find yourself in Alpha Centauri's Self-Aware Colony instead - ua-cam.com/video/iwqN3Ur-wP0/v-deo.html
@@meganoobbg3387 I’ve played Bioshock and I wouldn’t go live in an ocean city lol!
Even if Atlantis existed (and we're not the first iteration of human civilization on Earth) it would have decayed into nothing but a couple of stones and some metal rod in the ocean floor, covered by algae, seaweed and coral. And that if Atlantis ever existed, which doesn't seems likely for the evidence we gathered. Doesn't seems likely. We still have some gaps covering centuries and even millenias, gaps where an entire civilization may have rise and fallen to oblivion. I wouldn't count on it, real history seems pretty straightforward but still... At this point I'm not gonna totally reject anything. Trust me, archeology is full of surprises.
Due to the sacrifice of the first Weir was this possible.
that was the dumbest episode ever!
@@KawaiiSoulB42 It was a great episode.
@@arhskr81 No It wasn't the ancient had that tech in the original lore. Q_Q
@@KawaiiSoulB42 No they didn't, Otherwise Atlantis would have risen in the original timeline. Again one of the best Atlantis eps.
@@arhskr81 "...keep in mind this is the race that built the Stargates. They did everything big." They wrote how and what Altantis tech had before making the esp. The Stardrive had the ability to make the City sink. I don't think they are that dumb...Like this esp to forget something foolish then that. It the most stupidest esp and you just gonna have to deal with it.
1:29 casually/calmly says "I'm dialing an address", Weir on a floor below among heavy noise and people screaming "no wait". Weir must have an amazing hearing.
The gate makes noises when you start dialling and she's next to the gate...
They all seem to have communications ear-pieces and throat mics, that probably explains it.
The gate lights up and makes noises when you dial
This never gets old
Coolest scene EVAH!!!
Those 4 notes when she says "we were hoping for another day"... f@ck man.... Joel you were a genius. Some of the best film or TV ever produced.
One of my favorites from this episode:
Halling: Halling
Sheppard: Halling? I don't know what that means.
Col. Sumner: It's his name...
it's his name...
It's not the city we want, but the city we need. ScyFy presents, the Dark City Rises.
The special effects in that were pretty good.
It's a good job that glass is strong enough to withstand the pressure of an ocean rushing towards it as the shield collapses.
Weir being the leader of Atlantis was amazing. Sam was a very close second!
The artist that made this city coming out of the sea was breathtaking a beautiful city
This is what i would imagine if atlantis suddenly shows itself after many years
I wonder why the failsafe wasn’t programmed to float the city 30 seconds *before* failing, to avoid all the water drag and damage to the city.
The opening theme for this episode is unique (apart from the cold opens), since it's just an underwater shot during the credits that pans down to the city at the end. No indication at all of what's going to happen. Made this that much more spectacular when it first aired.
It was just so ironic that DR Weir saved her own life and the Expedition with that Failsafe Paradoxically.
This has got to be one of the greatest holy crap moments in history along with SG1 obliterating Anubis' fleet!!!
Just discovered this dhow. On the 3rd season. I like it
epic moment
These were later parts of the opening scene. :3
Now imagine you are sitting in a boat fishing and that city comes up out of the ocean and now you are many stories high in the air.
well fuck
Mike! I think I won the fish contest this year!
I love this scene. :-)
Very dramatic to be sure! A masterpiece!
a great scifi series
Joel Goldsmith really nailed it for this one...
“When the zpm reaches a critical state, the locks holding Atlantis to the sea floor will release and the city will rise to the surface.”
I thought it could be Electromagnets in the shield circuit holding large metallic ballast plates to the bottom of the city
I thought it was stardrive what raised it. Like, a portion of the power needed for the push was saved aside for the failsafe.
@@maj.stevencaldwell3522 no. There’s an episode where they discover a 10,000 year old Elizabeth Weir from an alternate timeline in a stasis chamber. She was part of the team that went to Atlantis, but unlike in this timeline, there was no failsafe and the shield just failed drowning everyone. Her and Shepherd escaped in a Jumper with a Time Machine in the back and teleported themselves 10,000 years in the past when the Wraith were besieging Atlantis and the city was under water and about to be evacuated by the Ancients. They were shot down and she was rescued. Shepherd did not survive the crash. She met a scientist named Janus. She told him what had happened to her and he got the idea to create a fail safe so that when the shield is on the verge of failing, the locking clamp releases letting the city rise to the surface. She stayed behind when the ancients had evacuated to rotate the ZPMs every few thousand years.
So what are the cities foundation to keep it afloat and not topple over.
Great show yep needed a movie
Ivanka2024 for POTUS, there were 2 movies.
Atlantis, the greatest city of humen being
This series get refresh in my mind
Well that's gonna be hard to hide when a pilot flies over and sees essentially Dubai in the ocean...
Thanks, alternate timeline Weir and Janus
This is Weir!
Where?
Here.
Weir is here?
Yes
Weir is here, where we’re?
Yes, Weir is near here where we’re…just to be clear.
I don’t see her?
Well that’s weird.
That moment yu think it's already finish while it just started
O Lovely Atlantis and SG1!
I miss dr. Weir ... she was the highlight for me togeher with dr McKay.
Beautiful ocean world
"He's just a boy"
Exactly, he should only know safe gate addresses.
Wow, hope this pilot gets picked up what a cool concept.
Based Janus
"Atlantis, this is Weird"
That thing flew over my house before. There were little craft tending to it and doing repairs. The ground hummed while it was overhead.
It doesn’t look like it but if you listen to incoming wormhole you can hear 9 chevrons
That reminds me, did they bring with them a whole team of janitor ? because they have a lot of work ahead of them
Daniel Jackson favorite city
There is absolutely no reason this city couldn't exist here on earth right now, in fact it makes perfect sense, submerge every time a storm comes you can out maneuver
So here's a question: how does the stargate know like 5 seconds in advance when there's an incoming wormhole? The stargate shouldn't be sure if the wormhole is coming to it until the 6th chevron, which leaves one chevron press and the big button before the wormhole opens.
Stargate travel is not instant, so the receiving stargate has plenty time to show an activation sequence after the sending stargate has finished dialing.
it's a tad more complex than that. An Einstein Rosen Bridge spans not only Space but also Time (as they are essentially the same structure). The concept of "now" is not synchronous over such a domain because there can be no external cause/effect external to the bridge. The sender and receiver have no other means to quantify when any particular event happened relative to the other so any perceived delay or indeed perceived preempting of an action is fundamentally meaningless.
is like phone. how your phone which number is calling you
If Stargate travel has that delay, why is radio communication via Stargate portal lag free?
That's actually a very good question lol. I faintly remember Carter saying the travel time was 3(and some fraction), so that's even less time for the receiving gate to activate. Although, it may not actually activate at the same time. Anyone who enters before the second Stargate activates is just stored in the buffer until it's ready.
As for radio signals, I think this is instantaneous because the gate isn't actively converting and transporting the wave signals; the radio waves simply go through the wormhole and arrive nearly instantly. That, or the gate translates it into a subspace component, with the same effect.
Bloopers, kid is like hey give me a chance. Shepard response be nice she is bigger.
Question...how did the avoid the bends coming up like that 🤔
They were not deep. If you go back and watch when they arrive and they notice that they're under water, you can clearly see the surface and the sunlight shining down. So they were in a few hundred feet of water at most. A good swimmer can dive that deep, maybe even without scuba gear.
@@michaelheath2866 although this is somewhat inconsistent since it was also stated that the ocean is really deep where they are later.
But I would assume that the inside was pressurised anyway.
@@victorselve8349
Yes, the inside of the city must be pressurised, otherwise taking the gate from Atlantis (while under water) to a surface world would have serious consequences to the teams.
Second time's the charm.
Todd ,вы где
it always bugged me in the arrival scene that every short which wasn't the open stargate had a camera shudder. you'd think they'd have done that for those vfx shots just to keep it consistent.
So the entire city just floats in place??
How does the team on the other side know when the shield is down and it’s safe to transit?
They transmit a identification code through the wormhole
They wait for a responding signal. Radio frequencies were the only thing that can go through an inbound wormhole.
the fact that it took time travel for this to actually succeed proves that the ancients were advanced but idiots. They never realized they could be a power failure ....
They realized that. But were assholes, that rather let the city be crushed by water, than having a failsafe in place for it to rise. Like sure, they were at war with the Wraith and didn't want the city to end up in the wrong hands (of their worst enemy), but they even refused to do something about the situation, AFTER Weir told them, that the city survived for 10K years and the Tau'ri (the Ancient's children basically) claimed it. Assholes, that's what they really are.
So, if the city rose because the shield was in danger of collapsing...why didn't we see the bubble the shield forms around the city? Instead we see water is actually on the city structure itself. And it can't be because the shield already collapsed, because the city would have immediately started flooding and the windows would have given way under the pressure.
Read_My_Feels991
I would like to think that is the case, except that I suspect the emitters couldn't make it an active layer just microns from the surface. Maybe it shut down completely just before surfacing? But, more than likely the effects department just overlooked it in favor of the admittedly cool look of the water coming off of it.
Read_My_Feels991
Argh. I forgot about the part where McKay said that some parts of the city was already flooded...so I guess it was probably collapsed down to just the central tower.
Revan2908 or it failed on the way back up to the surface so by the time they were near the top the water was actually up against the buildings
As nice as the "collapsed to form-fitting" idea is, the Atlantis shield is literally the _only_ lantean shield design explicitly incapable of it. It is able to do any variation on vaguely sphere-ish, up to and including a disc surrounding the gate, but form-fitting anything other than a borg sphere isn't something that's happening.
Read_My_Feels991 it was in...
Actually, I can't remember where. I think I may have assumed.
However, working by logic, it can be assumed as:
The only form-fitting shielding used in the series is used by the Ancients, in the Auroras, Destiny, the personal shield, etc. In a city-ship especially, a form-fitting shield would be a boon, as(due to how gateverse hyperdrives work), there is actually enough room inside the raised Atlantis shielding for a small enough ship to hyperspace-jump inside the shields.
However, the thing about gateverse shielding is that it is frequency-based. IIRC, the big deal about the Atlantis shield was that it was multi-layered, so it was able to have more frequencies covered at the same time.
As stated above, it would be a good idea for a city-ship to have form-fitting shielding, and yet it didn't. (The dome-shaped shielding _may_ have been the trade-off for... the odd nature of Atlantis' shield, even if my recollection of that factoid of it's operation is incorrect.)
Either way, however, there are a few more points that make it unlikely that, in this situation at least, the shields would have collapsed in to a form-fitting mode.
A) Assuming that the form-fitting mode isn't the default form for the shields(as it is not shown anywhere else in the series, after the SGA team gains active control over the shielding), projecting a form-fitting cover over the city would likely take more energy than projecting a dome over the city(though this one is simply conjecture based on how dome-forcefields are theorized to work)
B) Seeing how the dome was full of lighter-than-water air, a flat-surfaced dome full of air would rise to the surface considerably faster than a full-of-lots-of-places-to-catch-water-and-slow-them-down city full of notably less air, it would be more energy efficient for the shield to maintain the dome than to perform drastic reshaping of the field while keeping said field raised.
C) Every time we have seen the Atlantis field raised, it has been accompanied by a constant, distinct shimmer in the air, especially noticable after activation or during/after holding back something(like, say, an ocean). The buildings of Atlantis in this are not covered in said shimmer.
I hope atlantis will be back one day
Anyone k ow where i can watch this series?
1:16 "RISE ATLANTIS!!!"
And to thik about... that Atlantis surfacing was only possible thanks to Weir's "missdail" gate during "original" catastrophic city evac and landing in the past when ancients still WORKING there... 😏