"Stargate: Atlantis" Misbegotten (TV Episode 2006) Poster

(TV Series)

(2006)

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8/10
Treading on slippery ground
owlaurence4 August 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Misbegotten picks up right after the unexpected events in No Man's Land, and takes a lot of time to ask all the embarrassing questions that this raised. What do you do with a bunch of innocent humans that may revert to life-sucking monsters at any time? What about the ally who saved you but could also destroy you if he chose to? There is no easy answer and the plot fortunately doesn't try to offer one, so we're left exploring very grey and murky areas of morals and politics for most of the episode. I wish we had more time to explore the characters' reactions to what they are forced to do. (Though Ronon looks as if he's just *praying* for something to go wrong, allowing him to kill some Wraiths).

With such a philosophical episode, the pace is rather slow. Especially since a good part of it is devoted to Eizabeth's continued examination by Woolsey, who is turning out to be a good guy despite his difficult debut on SG-1. That particular subplot is not very interesting, but I appreciate that at the end of the day Elizabeth is saved because of a rather debatable bit of manipulation. It fits right in with the rest of the episode.

There are a few other noticeable things here: the team learns to fly a hive-ship (or to make it crawl anyway), and Carson's "brief" captivity at Michael's hands is going to be crucial in later seasons (I won't spoil that). Finally, there's Michael, who is becoming a much stronger character than he was when we first met him. He is a fascinating character with his inner conflict and arresting interrogations, and I really find myself siding with him during the first half of the episode. I also like to think that, had the humans trusted him that one time, he might have become a neutral entity, maybe even a tentative ally. However you look at it, they made him a monster far worse than any Wraith had ever been.
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2/10
They never learn
koofasa14 January 2021
This is another example of the extremely poor writing the producers came up with. First there is a plot point where they force someone to go through a species level conversion and then lie to the person about who/what they are. It turns out horribly because of the lie, not the conversation. So what do they do? They convert hundreds more and lie to them as well. Gee, whatever will happen the second time around? This sort of idiotic storytelling is no longer on television thank god.
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2/10
Unnecessary plot, annoying story line.
herthh26 December 2020
This entire recurring story-line with the Reyt called Michael is not plausible, and plain and simple a boring nonsense: Aliens morph in days from one form to another by the effects of ad hoc vaccine. Yawn... Atlantis with its stunning visuals could have become a long running cult series, challenging the Startrek series in every aspect. Instead we became that, and as expected, the series died off in season 5.
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