News Archive for August, 2009

Aug 31 2009

David Blue Why One Syfy Series Isn’t Enough

Published by Stargate Archive Team under News

While chatting about his starring role in the upcoming series Stargate Universe, actor David Blue revealed his interest in working on a few of the other shows on Syfy. Blue is a longtime fan of the Stargate world, and he told us how thrilled he is to work with some of the stars of the earlier series.

When we brought up Amanda Tapping, who played Maj. Samantha Carter on both Stargate SG-1 and Stargate: Atlantis, Blue told us how amazing she is to work with. He said he would love to appear on both her current show, Sanctuary, and a show she frequently appears on, Ghost Hunters.

“First of all, I’m a huge sci-fi geek, and there are very few shows that I wouldn’t want to do something on … [Sanctuary] seems like a fun show. Especially with the way they shoot. And I actually got to pick her brain about it. And I keep meaning to ask her what it was like to be on Ghost Hunters. I would love to do that! It would be so cool! I watched her on the season finale, and it was so cool. I keep dropping the hint when I talk to Syfy. … Sanctuary would be fun … they have a great vibe.”

News article courtesy of SyFy Wire

Aug 31 2009

Why Lou Diamond Phillips Can’t Wait For Stargate Universe

Published by Stargate Archive Team under Interviews

Best known for his roles in La Bamba and the Young Gun movies, actor Lou Diamond Phillips will next be seen as Colonel Telford in Syfy’s highly anticipated new series Stargate Universe.

Lou Diamond Phillips“The landscape of the television and film industry is different these days,” notes Phillips. “It used to be if you were a film actor, you were exclusively a film actor, and you didn’t do television. I think things have evolved to a no-holds-barred arena where everybody goes between television and film as well as making guest appearances or doing reality shows. It’s interesting. You have Oscar winners carrying shows or doing miniseries.”

With genre credits that include Wolf Lake, Supernova, The Triangle, Bats, Mercy Reef, and The First Power, Stargate: Universe seemed like the perfect fit for Phillips.

“I have to be honest,” says Phillips. “In the pilot, I don’t appear that much, so it wasn’t what was on the page that was appealing to me. It was conversations with the creators, Brad Wright and Robert Cooper, that encouraged me that there would be more for me to do. I don’t want to mislead anyone who thinks I’m the star of the pilot or the show. That’s not the case. I’ve had a good relationship with Syfy in general, and a regular television gig wouldn’t be a bad thing for me right now, so I bit.”

Stargate: Universe finds a group of civilians and scientists trapped on the ship Destiny and trying to survive the rigors of space.

“It’s an interesting situation,” reports Phillips. “Telford was supposed to be the commander of the away group who is going through the Stargate into the ninth address, which is an address that has yet to be discovered previously. The base is attacked, and Telford is unfortunately relegated to Earth. As you know, the rest of the crew, led by Robert Carlyle and Louis Ferreira, end up stranded in the far reaches of space. Telford, whose entire mission was to be front-runner of this crew, is now incredibly frustrated with not being part of that. His mission is now to get these people home and to somehow get himself on that ship. He’s definitely a career military guy, and, at least presently, that seems to be his end-all and be-all.”

Furthermore, creators Cooper and Wright wanted Stargate: Universe to contain plenty of personal conflict as well as the requisite science fiction elements. For Phillips, that translates into a love triangle among Telford, Everett Young and his wife.

“I don’t know where it’s going,” admits Phillips. “That relationship was introduced, but it hasn’t been developed at this point. It’s part of Telford trying to get back on the ship, and at this point he will do anything to insert himself with the goings-on there. As you said, Brad and Robert have tried to create a more personal drama that hinges on the interaction between characters. It was really nice to have Telford’s very focused approach and his point of view coming from the military and what the government needs. That’s juxtaposed with Robert Carlyle’s very scientific, almost emotional approach to what’s going on aboard the ship. Some of the scenes I had with him in that episode I’m thrilled with and hope that’s the kind of stuff I’ll continue to do.”

LouSGU-thumb-525x366-23294The Stargate itself may be the iconic object that links the original 1994 movie and three spin-offs together, but Phillips hasn’t had the opportunity to step through it yet.

“Sadly, that’s part of Telford’s frustration and mine,” smiles Phillips. “The Stargate is not presently in his future; the only way Telford is able to get onto the ship is by using the stones. All he can do is transfer consciousness with other people on the ship, which is also what leads to the love triangle. I inhabit Col. Young’s body on occasion. Telford’s access to the ship is pretty limited, but I am hoping the writers figure out how to get me more involved.”

Interview courtesy of Sy Fy Wire

Aug 30 2009

David Blue & Lou Diamond Phillips Interviewed On The Red Carpet

Tv.com has two video interviews from the charismatic members of the Stargate Universe team David Blue and Lou Diamond Phillips straight from the red carpet.

You can watch both video interviews over at the official Tv.com website »

Aug 29 2009

Stargate Universe Aliens Wont Be Your Average Pegasus & Milky Way Aliens

Published by Stargate Archive Team under Interviews

Stargate Universe is about to boldly go where no other Science Fiction series has gone before, including Stargate SG1 and Stargate Atlantis. In a recent interview Brad Wright has discussed the plans for Stargate Universe, its direction and the non humanoid English speaking aliens.

You can read an excerpt of the interview below:

The original Stargate blazed a path through TV science fiction, but Stargate Universe must follow the searing intensity and urgency of Battlestar Galactica, Ronald D. Moore’s filmed-in-Vancouver allegory about war and politics that earlier this month won the TV Critics Association’s Program of the Year award.

After 15 seasons of doing something called Stargate, we wanted to do something new, something very different,” Wright admitted. “Other than the stargate itself, which is still very much at the core of our show, a lot of Stargate Universe is very, very different from the old series. We’re very, very proud of this, and excited to still be doing what is basically our 16th season of Stargate.’

Stargate Universe will take its visual template from the deliberately jittery, hand-held camera look of Cloverfield and realistic, set-in-present-day series like The Shield and Friday Night Lights – “We actually hired the director-of-photography of The Shield, Ronn Schmidt, to do our first three hours to help establish that look we were looking for,” Wright said. For more of a documentary look and feel, the Vancouver set at Bridge Studios has been designed to accommodate highly mobile film cameras, in much the same way Battlestar Galactica put viewers into the middle of the action.

One thing we decided, in our pursuit of realism, was to step away from rubber-faced, English-speaking aliens, and you will see none of those in the new show,” Wright said.

And fewer trees,” he added, in a wry nod-and-a-wink to southwestern B.C. – and Stargate SG-1’s – famously tree-lined look.

We will run into aliens. They’re just not going to be human, latex-faced, English-speaking aliens.

Cooper, for his part, felt it important that Stargate Universe not feel too self-referential – not that there’s anything wrong with that.

You can read the full interview here »

Aug 28 2009

Meet Stargate Universe’s Resident Geek David Blue

Published by Stargate Archive Team under Interviews

Brad Wright, the co-creator of Syfy’s upcoming Stargate Universe, told a Comic-Con audience that the show got not only an actor in the person of star David Blue, but also a technical adviser: Blue—who plays Eli, a genius slacker—has been a fan of the franchise from the beginning and has seen every episode of Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis.

“Our first day of weapons training, actually, we did it on the Atlantis set, in front of the Atlantis gate,” Blue told us in an exclusive interview, adding: “It’s hard when your castmates were not as huge fans beforehand, because you can’t geek out in front of them without feeling like an idiot. I kind of had to wait for lunch, when everyone walked away, and go to the Stargate and touch it and take pictures of myself in front of it.”

Stargate_Universe_David_Blue-thumb-550x335-23098Blue added, “I love any scene the Stargate is in. … When you see on Eli’s face that he’s really excited about the gate, that’s actually me. … I keep telling people that this place seems far too real, and the place is so cool, there’s no way we’re not government-funded. It’s just to throw people off the scent that this actually exists. … Somewhere up there, there are people on spaceships, and they’re going through Stargates, and these things are actually happening.”

SGU, from Wright and Robert C. Cooper, follows a band of soldiers, scientists and civilians who must fend for themselves as they are forced through a Stargate when their hidden base comes under attack. The desperate survivors emerge aboard an Ancient ship, the Destiny, which is locked on an unknown course and unable to return to Earth. Faced with meeting the most basic needs of food, water and air, the group must unlock the secrets of the ship’s Stargate to survive. The danger, adventure and hope they find on board the Destiny will reveal the heroes and villains among them.

“Stargate Universe takes place in the same world and the same universe as SG-1 and Atlantis, but essentially it’s a group of people who are brought on to do some research,” Blue said. “Scientists brought in to figure out this mythical ninth chevron address, … a nine-digit phone number, and nobody knows where it goes. And through a course of events, [he] ends up having to pick up and go, and the right people who are supposed to go on this mission to explore don’t necessarily end up going.”

Blue added: “You end up with a group of people who weren’t supposed to be there, … counting on each other, who aren’t necessarily the ones with the skill sets for survival … on the far side of the universe, trying to figure out how to survive. How to not die. How to not kill each other. And genuinely having to deal and cope.”

The show differs from previous installments in the popular franchise. “Unlike past shows, where you have rubber-faced, British-speaking aliens, it’s more about the ensemble cast,” Blue said. “The people you become invested in. Who you get to relate to and find catharsis in, … it’s great, because you can see all these new layers and levels to situations you normally get the chance [to see] in shows these days.”

SGU has been described as darker in tone then its predecessors, but Blue has a different way of looking at it. “I tend to say it’s not as much darker as it is more real,” he said. “And maybe that’s a pessimistic way of looking at the world, but I think that … reality itself is darker. It’s not just shiny, ‘Hey, we survived again! Woo-hoo!’ There are more levels, where you look at the person sitting next to you, and you start thinking to yourself, ‘Do I trust them today?’ And you look at someone sitting next to you and start to see a spark and go, ‘How do I really feel about that person?’ And when your life is being threatened, you tend to actually, in a weird way, find humor to make yourself cope. You can say ‘darker,’ because in some ways it is, … but when you really get down to it, it’s like everyday life. That’s kind of what I like about it.”

Exclusive interview
Related Sections: Interviews News Syfy Channel Top Stories
Meet Stargate Universe’s resident geek, David Blue

Brad Wright, the co-creator of Syfy’s upcoming Stargate Universe, told a Comic-Con audience that the show got not only an actor in the person of star David Blue, but also a technical adviser: Blue—who plays Eli, a genius slacker—has been a fan of the franchise from the beginning and has seen every episode of Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis.

stargate_universe7_jpg“Our first day of weapons training, actually, we did it on the Atlantis set, in front of the Atlantis gate,” Blue told us in an exclusive interview, adding: “It’s hard when your castmates were not as huge fans beforehand, because you can’t geek out in front of them without feeling like an idiot. I kind of had to wait for lunch, when everyone walked away, and go to the Stargate and touch it and take pictures of myself in front of it.”

Blue added, “I love any scene the Stargate is in. … When you see on Eli’s face that he’s really excited about the gate, that’s actually me. … I keep telling people that this place seems far too real, and the place is so cool, there’s no way we’re not government-funded. It’s just to throw people off the scent that this actually exists. … Somewhere up there, there are people on spaceships, and they’re going through Stargates, and these things are actually happening.”

SGU, from Wright and Robert C. Cooper, follows a band of soldiers, scientists and civilians who must fend for themselves as they are forced through a Stargate when their hidden base comes under attack. The desperate survivors emerge aboard an Ancient ship, the Destiny, which is locked on an unknown course and unable to return to Earth. Faced with meeting the most basic needs of food, water and air, the group must unlock the secrets of the ship’s Stargate to survive. The danger, adventure and hope they find on board the Destiny will reveal the heroes and villains among them.

“Stargate Universe takes place in the same world and the same universe as SG-1 and Atlantis, but essentially it’s a group of people who are brought on to do some research,” Blue said. “Scientists brought in to figure out this mythical ninth chevron address, … a nine-digit phone number, and nobody knows where it goes. And through a course of events, [he] ends up having to pick up and go, and the right people who are supposed to go on this mission to explore don’t necessarily end up going.”

Blue added: “You end up with a group of people who weren’t supposed to be there, … counting on each other, who aren’t necessarily the ones with the skill sets for survival … on the far side of the universe, trying to figure out how to survive. How to not die. How to not kill each other. And genuinely having to deal and cope.”

The show differs from previous installments in the popular franchise. “Unlike past shows, where you have rubber-faced, British-speaking aliens, it’s more about the ensemble cast,” Blue said. “The people you become invested in. Who you get to relate to and find catharsis in, … it’s great, because you can see all these new layers and levels to situations you normally get the chance [to see] in shows these days.”

SGU has been described as darker in tone then its predecessors, but Blue has a different way of looking at it. “I tend to say it’s not as much darker as it is more real,” he said. “And maybe that’s a pessimistic way of looking at the world, but I think that … reality itself is darker. It’s not just shiny, ‘Hey, we survived again! Woo-hoo!’ There are more levels, where you look at the person sitting next to you, and you start thinking to yourself, ‘Do I trust them today?’ And you look at someone sitting next to you and start to see a spark and go, ‘How do I really feel about that person?’ And when your life is being threatened, you tend to actually, in a weird way, find humor to make yourself cope. You can say ‘darker,’ because in some ways it is, … but when you really get down to it, it’s like everyday life. That’s kind of what I like about it.”

Blue said the show is part of a greater trend in television for shows to reflect the world around them. “Look at reality shows,” he said. “They want to feel like they’re a fly on the wall, watching a situation happen. So when you can do that with something that’s also sci-fi-related, I think it’s even cooler for the fans. Because it makes you feel more like the gate actually exists. Like it’s Wormhole Extreme, and these people are going to come and kidnap you any minute because they need your help.”

When I told him that I’d certainly be OK with that, he laughed and said, “Me too! And it happened! I’m actually calling you from a real spaceship.”

At Comic-Con, the show’s creators told the audience that viewers of SGU don’t have to be familiar with the earlier shows to watch. Blue agreed. “I think it’s great, because the truth is, a lot of my friends and family do not watch a lot of sci-fi, or specifically Stargate,” he said. “They keep asking me, ‘Should I watch it all?’ And I say, ‘Feel free to.’ It’s almost like easter eggs. But the truth is, you don’t need to. That’s one of the things I really love about Eli, my character. I’m there to be the audience. I’m there to be the heart and the eyes and the ears of the audience who are thrust into this situation they weren’t expecting to be in and have to go, ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa! What are the Ancients?’ And have it explained to them.”

But loyal fans will find plenty of references to earlier series, with familiar guest stars, inside jokes and “little tidbits” of information, Blue promised. “You can feel special on that note,” he said. “I hate to make this reference, but for some reason it’s sticking out. It’s kind of like The Muppets. You know how as a kid you watch, and you think it’s great and funny? … And then you grow up and watch and you go, ‘Oh, that’s a lot dirtier than I thought it was?’ It’s kind of like that.”

Interview courtesy of Sy Fy Wire

Next »