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{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}
{{Infobox Television episode | Title = Orpheus
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2025}}
| Series = ]

| Season = 7
{{Infobox television episode
| Episode = 4
| Airdate = ], ] | series = ]
| Production = 704 | season = 7
| episode = 4
| Writer = ]
| airdate = {{Start date|2003|06|27}}
| Director = ]
| production = P268
| Guests = ] as Bra'tac<br /> Obi Ndefo as Rak'nor<br /> ] as Rya'c<br /> David Richmond-Peck as Jaffa Commander
| writer = ]
| Episode list = ]
| director = ]
| Image = ]
| photographer = ]
| Prev = ]
| editor = Brad Rines
| Next = ]
| music = ]<br>]
| guests = * ] as Dr. ]
* ] as ]
* ] as ]
* ] as ]
* ] as Jaffa Commander
| season_article = Stargate SG-1 (season 7)
| episode_list = List of Stargate SG-1 episodes
| image =
| caption =
| prev = ]
| next = ]
}} }}

{{TVep|Orpheus|Stargate SG-1}}
"'''Orpheus'''" is the 4th episode from the ] of ] ] ] '']'' and is the 136th overall. It was first broadcast on June 27, 2003, on the ]. The episode was written and directed by ].

In this episode, following one of SG-1's missions to another world through the ], ] (]) is seriously injured. No longer able to rely on the healing powers of his symbiote, Teal'c struggles with his rehabilitation and believes he has become weak. Meanwhile, ] (]) is struggling to piece together memories from his time as ] but fears that Teal'c's son ] and mentor ] are in trouble.

The episode deals with the repercussions of the ] episode "]", which sees Teal'c lose his symbiote.

==Plot== ==Plot==
{{sgspoiler|7}}
The ] is dialed by a desperate ], under fire and retreating, who relays this to ]. The guards in the gate room prepare themselves as SG-1 comes through, minus ]. He follows a few seconds later, chased by a ], who is quickly shot by the guards. When the pursuer is killed, Teal'c falls to the floor with a large wound from a ] in his stomach.


SG-1, who have been on a mission off-world, have dialed the ] to ] and advised ] (]) that they're under attack and are preparing to retreat through the gate to ]. Personnel in the gate room brace themselves, as ] (]), ] (]) and then ] (]) all rush out of the gate. ] (]) is the last to arrive, but before Stargate's iris is closed and able to prevent their attackers from following, an enemy ] soldier manages to come through and before being killed is able to shoot Teal'c.
Teal'c wakes up in the infirmary where ] tells him what has transpired and that more recovery is needed. While ] and ] describe their previous mission to Hammond, Frasier updates him about Teal'c's situation. Daniel visits Teal'c and wants to talk with him about his son, but Teal'c refuses to talk, so Daniel leaves. As he leaves, he suddenly hears mysterious voices. Some times later, Teal'c trains for his recovery while Daniel and Sam work out. They notice that Teal'c is rigorously training, perhaps too much, but he ignores their concerns. After making a full recovery, Teal’c begins to train more than ever, yet remains uncharacteristically taciturn.

Teal'c wakes up in the infirmary where ] (]) informs him that he was shot directly where his ] symbiote once was and as a result has suffered ] damage. After Daniel visits a taciturn Teal'c, who is reluctant to talk. As Daniel leaves the infirmary he hears mysterious voices. Some time later, Teal'c trains for his recovery while Daniel and Sam work out. They notice that Teal'c is rigorously training, perhaps too much, but he ignores their concerns. After making a full recovery, Teal’c begins to train more than ever, yet remains uncharacteristically taciturn. In the meantime, Sam and Daniel look over Stargate addresses because Daniel feels an inclination to recover a lost memory. He only knows it's connected with the wormhole generated by the Stargate. When he and ] visit Teal'c, he finally reveals that his reticent attitude is due to a weakness felt due to use of the Tretonin, and his teammates can offer no consolation.

To help himself remember, Daniel asks Teal'c to teach him Kelno'reem, a Jaffa meditation which aids in uncovering a memory regarding ] (]) and ] (]) who, together with other Jaffa, are working as slaves on an unknown world. Because Teal'c has no knowledge of this place, SG-1 contacts Rak'nor (]) to assist in their plight. In the meantime, Rya'c and Bra'tac witness an execution, at the hands of a Goa'uld serving Jaffa Commander (]), of several slaves too weak to work. At Stargate Command, Rak'nor identifies the planet as Erebus, a world controlled by the Goa'uld System Lord ] where prisoners are forced to mine materials for the construction of Goa'uld Ha'tak motherships. Rak'nor also tells them that Erebus' Stargate is protected by an energy shield, which Daniel recalls how to penetrate in another visions.

SG-1 along with Rak'nor and other Stargate Command forces embark on a rescue mission to Erebus, securing a position on a hillside looking down into the labor camp. During the night, Teal'c and Rak'nor sneak into the camp but are betrayed, captured, and tortured. The rest of SG-1, unable to do anything, decide to create a diversion. Sam and Daniel use a Ring Transporter to gain access to the nearby Ha'tak, which is under construction to place ], but cannot get to the Ring Transporter, which is under heavy guard. In the meantime, Teal'c enlightens Bra'tac and Rya'c about their plans to flee and the word is spread among the fellow Jaffa held prisoner in the camp. Rya'c is caught spreading the word by the prison guards, and is scheduled for execution when Teal'c begs to take his place. However, before he is killed, the C-4 explodes, plunging the mothership to the ground. The Jaffa Commander swiftly orders his Jaffa to the ship when they are deftly ambushed by the SG teams. As the Jaffa slaves rebel against their captors, Teal'c is able to kill the Jaffa Commander, and SG-1 and their allies take control of the camp before returning to Stargate Command. As Teal'c and Daniel meditate together they agree that for the first time they feel that they are involved in something important and that they belong in the Stargate Command.

==Production==
===Development and writing===

] wrote and directed the episode]]

In the ] opening episode, "]", ], portrayed by ] returned to the show as a main character, having been reduced to a reoccurring role in ].<ref name="shanks-return">{{cite web |title=Shanks Returns To Stargate SG-1 |url=http://www.scifi.com/scifiwire/art-sfc.html?2002-11/08/13.00.sfc |website=Sci Fi Wire |access-date=13 August 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20021208165119/http://www.scifi.com/scifiwire/art-sfc.html?2002-11/08/13.00.sfc |archive-date=8 December 2002 |date=8 November 2002}}</ref> With the character having died and ascended to a high plain of existence in the ] episode "]", he is ultimately "cast out" by the other ascended beings following his attempt to prevent Anubis from using his super-weapon in "]", and is stripped of his powers, memories and returned to flesh and blood.<ref>{{cite interview |last1=Mallozzi |first1=Joseph |title=053: Joseph Mallozzi Part 5, Writer and Executive Producer, Stargate (Interview) |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4EO6bFk9mMA |website=Dial the Gate |publisher=Gateworld |date=21 February 2021}}</ref><ref name="sevhev">{{cite magazine |last1= Cooper|first1= Robert C. | last2=Smith | first2=John | last3= Mullie | first3= Paul | last4= Kindler | first4= Damian |last5= Mallozzi | first5=Joseph |author-link1= Robert C. Cooper |author-link3= Paul Mullie |author-link4= Damian Kindler |author-link5= Joseph Mallozzi |title= Seventh Heaven |magazine= ] |publisher= ] |date= 2003|issn= 0960-8230 |interviewer=Steven Eramo |issue= Special 52 | page= 11 |quote= In Orpheus, Daniel Jackson and Teal'c must face up to some changes in their lives. "This was a requirement of the season in that we had some issues to deal with, the first being Daniel's return and what does he remember," says Paul Mullie. "Does he regret having been pretty much kicked out of the ranks of the Ascended? Daniel had all this power to effect change but he was also cast out after he tried to do just that. So basically he's trying to come to terms with being Human again and no longer having special abilities. The other issue was Teal'c being without his symbiote, which we kind of left dangling at the end of Season Six. The drug tretonin keeps his immune system going, bur it doesn't give him the same strength and regenerative powers that his symbiote did. Teal'c is a warrior. His whole culture is based on strength and charging into battle without really worrying about being injured because your symbiote will heal you. That's no longer the case with him. So we wanted ro do a story in which Teal'c is seriously injured and has to go through physiotherapy and the same type of painful recovery process that an ordinary Human being has to. He's still very much a more powerful physical presence than ordinary Humans bur he's nor the 'superman' he used to be, and he must learn to accept that." Adds Joe Mallozzi, "While Teal'c is trying to deal with that, Daniel is struggling with some unfinished business. He feels as though there's something very important that he has to remember and his and Teal'c's stories dovetail right in the middle of an off-world mission. Orpheus was written as well as directed by Peter Deluise and it turned our great."}}</ref> Following Daniel's return to human form, it was the suggestion of writer and co-producer ] that there should be some "residual memories" from Daniel's time as an ascended being.<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary">{{cite AV media |last1=DeLuise |first1=Peter |author-link1=Peter DeLuise|last2=Woeste |first2=Peter |author-link2=Peter Woeste|date= 2 February 2004 |title=] "Orpheus"|medium=] |language=en |publisher=] |volume= 32}}</ref> Mullie felt that it was a "requirement of the season in that we had some issues to deal with, the first being Daniel's return and what does he remember", and wanted the season to answer "does he regret having been pretty much kicked out of the ranks of the Ascended?".<ref name="sevhev"/> Executive producer ] commented that "Daniel wasn't just going to get his memory back and be ready to go next episode; these things are going to reverberate throughout the season", as well stating "we don't like to wrap everything up neatly at the end of one episode".<ref name="starmaker">{{cite interview |last= Cooper|first= Robert C.|date= January 2004|title= Star Maker |magazine= ] |publisher= ] |interviewer= Kate Lloyd |page= 35 |issue= 112 |issn= 1356-482X}}</ref> This gave writer Peter DeLuise his inspiration for what would become "Orpheus".<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/><ref name="sevhev"/> DeLuise imagined Daniel as having what he described as a "tortuous fragment of a memory" from his time ascended, whilst Mullie felt the character would also be "trying to come to terms with being Human again and no longer having special abilities".<ref name="comp7and8"/><ref name="sevhev"/> Shanks desire to see his character move away from a "passive observer" was also taken into account in writing "Orpheus", with Daniel Jackson becoming more "proactive" in pushing forward their cause in the episode and from this point onwards.<ref name="backtothegate">{{cite interview |last= Shanks|first= Michael|date= August–September 2003|title= Back to the Gate |magazine= ] |publisher= Mark Gottwald |location= Los Angeles |interviewer= Miwa Hirai |pages= 44-45 |volume= 35|issue= 4 |issn= 0145-6032}}</ref> DeLuise described the unravelling of Daniel's memory as "our door into the adventure" that eventually leads to Bra'tac and Rya'c, who have been imprisoned.<ref name="comp7and8"/>

Although the Daniel Jackson character was the catalyst for DeLuise's story, it was Teal'c that he chose to focus his episode on.<ref name="fallfrom">{{cite interview |last= Shanks|first= Michael |title= Fall from Grace |date= 2003 |magazine= ]|publisher= ] |issue= Special 52|pages= 38|issn= 0960-8230 |quote=for Orpheus in which our two characters share a strong spiritual bond. Daniel and Teal'c help one another reassert who they are and where their strengths lie. So that was a blast to do}}</ref> In the previous season's episode "]", Teal'c loses his ] symbiote, a creature which until that point was responsible for keeping him alive, and is forced to instead begin using an experimental drug called Tretonin.<ref name="sevhev"/><ref>{{cite interview |last1=Judge |first1=Christopher |title=A NEW DIRECTION |url=https://rdanderson.com/stargate/features/articles/2003-07-chris.htm |interviewer=Kate Ritter |website=rdanderson.com |date=24 July 2003}}</ref><ref name="almosthuman">{{cite interview |last= Judge|first= Christopher |title= Almost Human |date= 2003 |magazine= ]|publisher= ] |issue= Special 52|pages= 33|issn= 0960-8230 |quote=Orpheus deals with how the loss of his symbiote has affected Teal'c psychologically. "The actual filming of the episode wasn't much fun due to the weather, which was absolutely horrible. We did a couple of night shoots and those were pretty rough. That said, it was all worth it. I've watched a director's cut of the story and it looks amazing.}}</ref> DeLuise wanted to examine how this change had affected Teal'c, with co-producer Joseph Mallozzi explaining that they "wanted to do a story in which Teal'c is seriously injured and has to go through physiotherapy and the same type of painful recovery process that an ordinary Human being has to".<ref name="sevhev"/><ref name="almosthuman"/> DeLuise was also inspired by the popular ] of putting a character through their own personal hell, citing the episode "]" of his old show '']'' and the ] legend that it drew influence from of ].<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/><ref name="tvzone-deluise">{{cite magazine |last1=DeLuise |first1=Peter|date=August 2003 |title=The Primed Director|magazine=] |issn= 0957-3844 |issue= 166 |publisher= ] |pages= 48–53 |quote=Deluise took a page out of Greek mythology when he wrote Orpheus, which he also directed. "Usually stories with the word 'orpheus' in their titles are about characters going through their own personal hell," he explains. "In this episode Teal'c's hell is that he no longer has his symbiote. In the past, he sort of took it for granted and came to depend on the strength that it gave him. This included being able to incur severe injuries during battle and later heal rather quickly. However, no_~ that he's on tretonin, his ability to do this is severely curtailed. Teal'c isn't as strong as he used to be and of course in the Jaffa culture weakness is a major taboo. It's akin to death. So Teal'c kind of loses his mojo, if you will."Meanwhile, Daniel Jackson is having flashbacks to when he was ascended and realizes that at one point he witnessed the capture of Bra'tac and Ry'ac on an enemy planet. They're being worked to death at a labour camp and now Daniel 1s feeling guilty because he chose not to interfere. So he convinces SG-1 to mount a rescue mission and Teal'c has to rise to the occasion. The Jaffa warrior has no choice considering it's his son's life that's at stake, So they both have to experience these cathartic life-changing events. It's a pretty powerful story and one I'm really proud of."}}</ref> Orpheus' journey to the underworld of ] to rescue his wife ] were plot elements DeLuise adapted to his story, with Teal'c being the one who must journey to hell to save his son, Ry'ac and master, ].<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/> Whilst DeLuise had Teal'c sustain a physical injury, it was the physiological affects this would have on the character that he really wanted to delve into.<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/> DeLuise considered previous episode's including "]", where only the strongest Jaffa survive.<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/> Looking to expand upon this, DeLuise decided on the concept that Jaffa would use the same word for 'death' as they do for 'weakness', reasoning that "In Jaffa culture if one is weak, one might as well be dead", which would therefore see Teal'c fall into a state of "state of living death" following his injury.<ref name="comp7and8"/><ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/><ref name="our-joe">{{cite web |last1=Mallozzi |first1=Joseph |title=Chat with Writer/Producer Joseph Mallozzi |url=http://ourstargate.com/joem0405.htm |website=Our Stargate |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030621222757/http://ourstargate.com/joem0405.htm |archive-date= 21 June 2003 |date=5 April 2003}}</ref> DeLuise also wanted to give Teal'c actor ] the opportunity "to show weakness, and do some acting other than just cocking his eyebrow".<ref name="comp7and8"/>

===Cast===
{{multiple image|perrow = 3
|total_width=500
|align=right
|image1=Tony Amendola 2009.jpg
|image2=Obi Ndefo crop.jpg
|image4=David Richmond-Peck at Cruel and Unusual Premiere (cropped).jpg
|footer= ] (left) and ] (middle) respectively reprise their roles of ] and ] for the first time in season seven whilst ] (right) portrays the Jaffa commander.
}}

] portrays the stories ], a ] Commander. Serving the ] System Lord ], the character oversee's the Goa'uld forced ] on the world of Erebus. DeLuise based elements of the character off of ] depiction of ] from the film '']''. DeLuise wanted the character to be easily identifiable in shots and therefore had Richmond-Peck's hair ] ], whilst in order to "make him look more evil" the director opted to give him a white, "goopy" eye, having Peck wear a ].<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/> ], ] and ] all reprise their roles as rebel ] characters ], ] and ] and ] also returns as Dr. ]. ] ] Sheri Noel was cast as the ].<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/> ] is credited as ], whilst director Martin Wood makes a cameo as another Stargate Command technician.<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/><ref name="scifi-orpheus">{{cite web |title=Orpheus |url=http://scifi.com:80/stargate/episodes/season7/0704/ |website=scifi.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030719005003/http://scifi.com:80/stargate/episodes/season7/0704/ |archive-date=19 July 2003}}</ref> ] character ] was originally in the episode, but his scenes were ultimately cut out.<ref name="deleted-siler"/>

===Filming and post-production===

Peter DeLuise directed the episode, with ] serving as ]. Filming on "Orpheus" began in March 2003, overlapping slightly with work on the opening two-part episodes "]" & "]", which was concluding filming.<ref name="gw-jm">{{cite web |last1=Mallozzi |first1=Joseph |title=Joseph Mallozzi Live Chat |url=https://www.gateworld.net/news/2003/03/joseph-mallozzi-live-chat-2/ |website=Gateworld |date=14 March 2003}}</ref><ref name="tvzone52-art">{{cite magazine |date=June 2003 |last1= McGuire|first1= Bridget |last2= Robbins|first2= James |last3= Bodnarus |first3= Peter |title=The Art Department - Matters of Design|magazine=] Stargate SG-1 Season 7 Special|issue=Special 52 |publisher= ] |issn= 0960-8230 |page= 66 |quote=McGuire chuckles when talking about the next episode, Orpheus. "That was the show that nearly killed us". Every single department - effects, costumes, props, set decoration, etc. We were on location out in Maple Ridge, which is a long drive for some of our people. However, at the same rime we were shooting Orphe11s we were finishing up work on the two-parter. All these Jaffa were being used in this story as well as Homecoming. Actors that needed robe our in Maple Ridge were also needed back here at the studios. It took a bit of creative juggling of the schedules to make that all happen. "Orpheus is set in a naquadah mine on a Goa'uld planet. We built a big grinding machine that was supposedly used to process the naquadah that was being mined. The labourers lived in a tent camp that we set up in a big round pit. There was a 'death pit' filled with skeletons and mannequins dressed in rags and covered with dirt and blood. We also brought in some kiddie pools that our set decoration guys, Robert and Mark , surrounded with rocks and filled with coloured water and all sorts of nasty stuff to create what looked like bubbling tar pits. It was pretty neat."}}</ref> As well as filming on the shows standing sets at ], Jackson Pit; a disused ] in ], ] was chosen for the location of the Goa'uld labor camp.<ref name="tvzone52-10">{{cite magazine |last1=Lynn |first1=Smith|date=June 2003 |title=On the Road Again |magazine=] |issn= 0960-8230 |issue= Special 52 |publisher= ] |pages= 10 |quote= For Orpheus, we spent quite some time at Jackson Pit. It was pouring so we dug trenches in order to keep the rain away from the sets.}}</ref> Due to heavy rainfall, filming at Jackson Pit was particularly challenging for the both crew and the actors, with production designer Bridget McGuire describing it as "the show that nearly killed us", whilst Christopher Judge later reflected that "the episode wasn't much fun due to the weather, which was absolutely horrible".<ref name="tvzone52-art"/><ref name="almosthuman"/> The mixture of 50 ] and ]s were ferried between Jackson Pit and a location in ] for the film of the episode "Homecoming".<ref name="tvzone52-art"/><ref name="groupdyn">{{cite magazine |last1=DeLuise |first1=Peter|date=June 2003 |title=Group Dynamic |magazine=] |issn= 0960-8230 |issue= Special 52 |publisher= ] |pages= 14 |quote=In Orpheus, we had 60 costumed extras playing ragtag rebel Jaffa, all of whom had to be dressed and made to look scruffy," says director Peter Deluise. "It was a challenge to make sure they were all ready and in front of the camera at the same time. As if I hadn't already learnt my lesson. I did the same thing to myself again in Enemy Mine.}}</ref>
The crew had to dig out ]es to direct water flow away from the set, whilst stunt co-ordinator Dan Shea highlighted that a number of the performers kept slipping over and falling down during scenes due to the wet surface.<ref name="tvzone52-10"/><ref name="menatwork">{{cite magazine |last= Shea|first= Dan|author-link1= Dan Shea (actor) |title= (Stunt) Men at Work |magazine= ] |publisher= ] |date= June 2003|issn= 0960-8230 |issue= Special 52| page=8 |quote= We rehearsed some great fight choreography for Orpheus. These guys really worked their butts off. It was raining and they'd keep falling down in the mud and then have to get up and do it all over again. At one point, Brad Kelly had to jump over a mortar. His timing was slightly off, though, and the thing exploded just as he jumped over it. Fortunately, it wasn't one of our standard gas mortars, so all he got was a butt-full of sparks. We made sure to razz him for doing that}}</ref> In the pit itself, McGuire's production team designed and built a ] as the centre piece of the set, whilst smaller tents surrounded the mine itself. Set decorators also buried ] into the pit to create what looked like bubbling ]s.<ref name="tvzone52-art"/>

In constructing the cinematography for the episode, DeLuise and Woeste wanted scenes to be "more intimate", with DeLuise reasoning that he wanted to "look at how these people feel, rather than what they're doing", and so the subjects faces were often ] framed during scenes, which was achieved using ].<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/> Whilst most of the episode was shot on ], as was typical for the show at the time, the memory-recall sequences involving Daniel Jackson were shot on ] as Woeste wanted these scenes to utilize its more grainy aesthetic.<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/> Additionally a combination of ], ] and using flashes of the original 16&nbsp;mm film ] was employed by Woeste during post to make the sequences appear "removed from reality".<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/> In an earlier cut of the episode, there was originally a shot Teal'c's smouldering stomach wound, having staff-blast, however it was ultimately removed. Woeste and DeLuise also had shot additional scenes in the gym, however they were cut as Cooper felt they were "too ]-ish"<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/> Various scenes at the Goa'uld labor camp involved crowd replication, whereby around 40-50 extras were filmed, then redressed and repositioned within the ]. These different frames were then stitched together in post-production to make the crowd look far more populated.<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/> Art director James Robbins created concept artwork for the episode, in which the pyramid of the ] Ha'tak was "at least 50% bigger than what was in previous episodes" according to Lead ] animator Wes Sargent. Sargent liked Robbins scaled up version, and was allowed to entirely rebuild the CGI model of the mothership for the episode, basing it off of Robbins larger pyramid illustration.<ref name="wes-tsfw">{{cite interview |last1=Sargent |first1=Wes |title=Wes Sargent interview - 3D Lead Animator at Rainmaker studios |url=http://www.thescifiworld.net/interviews/wes_sargent_01.htm |website=The Scifi World |interviewer= Gilles Nuytens|date=26 October 2006}}</ref>

===Cultural references===

The ] 2002 film '']'', although not directly named, is reviewed by Carter, with the character heavily criticising the fact the aliens weakness is water.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Mallozzi |first1=Joseph |title=May 19, 2011: Strange messages! Stargate: SG-1 Season 7 memories! |url=https://josephmallozzi.com/2011/05/19/may-18-2011-strange-messages-stargate-sg-1-season-7-memories/ |website=josephmallozzi.com |date=19 May 2011}}</ref> Numerous references are made by Jack O'Neill and Teal'c to the '']'' film series, with O'Neill believing Teal'c has lost his "mojo".<ref name="passion">{{cite interview |last1=DeLuise |first1=Peter |title=IN A WORD: PASSION |url=https://rdanderson.com/stargate/features/articles/2003-07-peter.htm |interviewer=Kate Ritter |website=rdanderson.com |date=25 July 2003}}</ref><ref name="comp7and8">{{cite book |last1=Gibson |first1=Thomasina |title=Stargate SG-1: The Illustrated Companion: Seasons 7 and 8 |date=2005 |publisher=] |location=London |isbn=1840239344 |pages= 14–15}}</ref> DeLuise based his choice of shots of the Jaffa running up the hill towards the Goa'uld mothership whilst under mortar fire on a scene from '']'' (1998), whilst there are also visual references to '']'' (2002) and '']'' (1993).<ref name="passion"/><ref name="gw-review"/> Nickolas Baric, who had appeared in numerous previous episodes as different ] portrays a soldier named Penhall, a reference to DeLuise's ''21 Jump Street'' character Doug Penhall.<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/> The tale of ] from ] ] informs parts of the story and title, with the Goa'uld world on which the labor camp is located named ], which is a "place of darkness between earth and ]", also from the mythology.<ref name="orpheus dvd commentary"/>

==Release==

===Broadcast and reception===
The episode was first broadcast on June 27, 2003, on the ] in the ] and achieved a 1.6 ].<ref name="gw-kickoff">{{cite web |title=Season Seven kicks off with 3-hour event |url=http://www.gateworld.net/news/archive/0304_generalnews.shtml#newsitem1051135446,52146, |website=Gateworld |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030625083006/http://www.gateworld.net/news/archive/0304_generalnews.shtml#newsitem1051135446,52146, |archive-date=25 June 2003 |date=23 April 2003}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=RATINGS: 'Orpheus' |url=http://www.gateworld.net/news/archive/0307_ratings.shtml#newsitem1058799164,91339, |website=Gateworld |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040416190440/http://www.gateworld.net/news/archive/0307_ratings.shtml#newsitem1058799164,91339, |archive-date=16 April 2004 |date=21 July 2003}}</ref> In the United Kingdom, the episode was broadcast first on ] on October 20, 2003, and attracted 660,000 viewers.<ref>{{cite web |title=Weekly top 10 programmes on TV sets (July 1998 – Sept 2018) |url=https://www.barb.co.uk/viewing-data/weekly-top-10/ |website=] |date=20 October 2003}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=STARGATE SG-1 RATINGS: SEASON SEVEN |url=http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/news/ratings.shtml#uks7 |website=Stargate SG-1 Solutions |date=24 April 2004}}</ref> It was later ] onto ] on September 19, 2004.<ref>{{cite magazine |date=October 2004 |title=TV Focus |magazine=] |issue=181 |publisher= ] |issn= 0957-3844 |page= 95}}</ref> In Canada, the episode first aired on September 30, 2004, on ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Listings for Thursday, September 30, 2004 |url=http://www.spacecast.com/listings.asp?date=9-30-2004 |website=Spacecast |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041215223029/http://www.spacecast.com/listings.asp?date=9-30-2004 |archive-date=15 December 2004 |date=30 September 2004}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Canada's SPACE will air new SG-1 |url=http://www.gateworld.net/news/generalnews.html#newsitem1092767283,14883, |website=Gateworld |access-date=8 August 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041013025524/http://www.gateworld.net/news/generalnews.html#newsitem1092767283,14883, |archive-date= 13 October 2004 |date=17 August 2004}}</ref>

Jayne Dearsley at ] awarded the episode 4 out of 5 stars, calling writer and director Peter DeLuise "the man who seems to know Stargate SG-1 better than anybody else". Dearsley felt as though the labor camp scenes in the middle of the episode lacked the urgency and danger needed, but believed this was made up for in the "huge battle at the climax" of the episode.<ref>{{cite magazine |last= Dearsley|first= Jayne|date= September 2003 |issue= 108|title= The Spoiler Zone - Stargate SG-1 ORPHEUS|magazine= ] |publisher= ] |page= 104}}</ref> Jan Vincent-Rudzki at ] bemoaned the ] of "warriors who lose their honour", and was of the opinion that "Teal'c just wallows too much in self pity", awarding the episode 6 out of 10.<ref name="tvzone52-15">{{cite magazine |first= Jan | last= Vincent-Rudzki |date=July 2003 |title=Reviews: Stargate SG-1 - G4 Orpheus |magazine=] |issue=166 |publisher= ] |issn= 0957-3844 |pages= 70–71}}</ref> The episode was recommended by Courtney Potter at ] as one of their 'best bets'.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Potter |first1=Courtney |title=Friday Best Bets |url=http://tv.zap2it.com/shows/bestbets/tv/bestbests_friday.html |website=Zap2it |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030624031350/http://tv.zap2it.com/shows/bestbets/tv/bestbests_friday.html |archive-date=24 June 2003 |date=27 June 2003}}</ref> Chloe Richards at ] called the episode "a standard Goa'uld drama and is served nicely by Judge and Shanks".<ref>{{cite magazine |last= Richards|first= Chloe|date= March 2004|title= Reviews - Stargate SG-1: Series 7 - Volume 32 |issue= 114|magazine=]|publisher= ]|issn= 1356-482X|page=65 }}</ref>

Response from contributors on ] ] was largely positive, with reviewer Alli Snow praising Christopher Judge's performance as Teal'c as being amongst the highlights of the episode. Another contributor, Lex, applauded the episode as a "master class in character development" in regard to the arcs of both Teal'c and Daniel, and praised DeLuise for fitting "vast and powerful" themes "into such a short space of time without any feeling of it being rushed or crowded".<ref name="gw-review">{{cite web |author1=Alli Snow |author2=Lex |title="Orpheus" Review |url=https://www.gateworld.net/sg1/s7/orpheus/review/ |website=Gateworld |date=2003}}</ref> Darren Rea of Sci-Fi Online awarded the episode 7 out of 10, and whilst they enjoyed Judge's performance, they were of the opinion that Teal'c "seemed a little out of character" in the episode.<ref name="vol32dvd">{{cite web |last1=Rea |first1=Darren |title=DVD Stargate SG-1 Volume 32 |url=http://www.sci-fi-online.com/reviews/dvd/04-02-02_SG1-32.htm |website=sci-fi-online.com |access-date=27 June 2021}}</ref>


===Home media===
In the meantime, Sam and Daniel look over Stargate addresses because Daniel feels an inclination to recover a lost memory. He only knows it’s connected with the wormhole generated by the Stargate. When he and ] visit Teal'c, he finally reveals that his reticent attitude is due to a weakness felt due to use of the ], and his team mates can offer no consolation.


"Orpheus" was first released as part of the "Volume 32" ] ] on February 2, 2004, along with previous episodes "]", "]" and "]" which topped the ] the following week.<ref>{{cite web |title=TV On Video Chart Top 50 - 08 February 2004 - 14 February 2004 |url=https://www.officialcharts.com/charts/tv-on-video-chart/20040208/30/ |website=] |date=8 February 2004}}</ref><ref name="vol32dvd"/> It was then released as part of the complete Season 7 boxsets on October 19, 2004, in region 1 and February 28, 2005, in region 2.<ref>{{cite web |title=Season Seven gates to DVD! |url=http://www.gateworld.net/news/2004/10/seasonsevengatestodvd.shtml |website=Gateworld |access-date=8 December 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041209234808/http://www.gateworld.net/news/2004/10/seasonsevengatestodvd.shtml |archive-date=9 December 2004 |date=19 October 2004}}</ref> The episode, along with the rest of season 7 were first made available digitally in January 2008 through ] and ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Stargate expands iTunes, Amazon presence |url=http://www.gateworld.net/news/2008/01/istargatei_expands_itunes_amazon.shtml |website=Gateworld |access-date=8 December 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080115085500/http://www.gateworld.net/news/2008/01/istargatei_expands_itunes_amazon.shtml |archive-date=15 January 2008 |date=11 January 2008}}</ref> The episode, along with every other episode of the series, were made available to stream for the first time through ] in the USA on August 15, 2010.<ref>{{cite web |title=Entire Stargate television library now streaming on Netflix |url=https://www.gateworld.net/news/2010/08/entire-stargate-library-streaming/ |website=Gateworld |access-date=8 December 2020 |date=16 August 2010}}</ref> Director Peter DeLuise and cinematographer Peter Woeste provide the ] for the episode.<ref name="vol32dvd"/> The episode, along with the rest of the series has been ] for releases on various streaming platforms as well as the 2020 ] release.<ref>{{cite web |title=Stargate's HD Blu-ray Picture: Better Than The DVDs? |url=https://www.gateworld.net/news/2021/03/stargate-hd-1080p-bluray-picture-better-than-dvds/ |website=GateWorld |access-date=18 June 2021 |date=1 March 2021}}</ref> A deleted scene was posted on June 30, 2003, on the Sci-Fi Channel website involving ] talking to ] about the voices he's been hearing.<ref>{{cite web |title=June 30, 2003: Deleted scenes posted for "Orpheus" |url=http://scifi.com/stargate/whatsnew/index.html |website=scifi.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030714120619/http://scifi.com/stargate/whatsnew/index.html |archive-date=14 July 2003 |date=30 June 2003}}</ref><ref name="deleted-siler">{{cite web |title='Orpheus' deleted scene available |url=http://www.gateworld.net/news/episodeupdate.html#newsitem1057764005,55147, |website=Gateworld |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030801080148/http://www.gateworld.net/news/episodeupdate.html#newsitem1057764005,55147, |archive-date=1 August 2003 |date=9 July 2003}}</ref>
To help himself remember, Daniel asks Teal'c to teach him Kel No Reem, or Jaffa meditation, which aids in the uncovering of a memory regarding ] and ] who, together with other Jaffa, are working as slaves on an unknown world. Because Teal'c has no knowledge of this place, SG-1 contacts Rak'nor to assist in their plight. In the meantime, Rya'c and Bra'tac witness an atrocious execution, at the hands of a malevolent first prime, of several slaves too weak to work. At SGC, Rak'nor tells them about the planet in question. The planet’s Stargate is protected by an energy shield, much like SGC’s ], but Rak’nor is unable to provide a way past this defense. Coincidentally, to solve this problem, Daniel has a vision pertaining to Bra'tac’s capture, and discovers the key to penetrate the shield.


==References==
SG-1, SG-3, and Rak'nor embark on a rescue mission, planting themselves atop a hill overlooking the prison camp. During the night, Teal'c and Rak'nor sneak into the camp but are betrayed, captured, and tortured. The SG teams, unable to do anything, decide to create a diversion. Sam and Daniel beam up into the nearby ], which is under construction and near the planet’s surface, to place ], but cannot get to the ], which is under heavy guard. In the meantime, Teal'c enlightens Bra'tac and Rya'c about their plans to flee and the word is spread among fellow Jaffa. However, Rya'c is scheduled for execution when Teal'c takes his place. Before he is killed, the C-4 explodes, plunging the mothership to the ground. The first prime swiftly orders his Jaffa to the ship when they are deftly ambushed by the SG teams. The Jaffa slaves turn on their captors and the SG teams sniper several guards. During the rebellion, Teal'c is able to kill the abominable first prime, regaining his self-confidence. The combined force of the slaves and SG teams overwhelms and captures the camp.
{{reflist}}


==External links==
The group returns to SGC to care for the wounded. In the end, Teal'c and Daniel, together, meditate and converse about Daniel’s ascension.
{{wikiquote|Stargate_SG-1/Season 7#Orpheus|Orpheus (Stargate SG-1)}}


*{{IMDb episode|0709136}}
== Notes ==
*{{cite web | url = http://stargate.mgm.com/view/episode/2607/index.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100513002612/http://stargate.mgm.com/view/episode/2607/index.html | url-status = dead | archive-date = 2010-05-13 | title = Orpheus}} at the official ] Stargate site.
* The name of the soldier O'Neill switches weapons with, Penhall, is another inside-joke from director Peter DeLuise. The episode was written and directed by Peter DeLuise, who played Penhall on “].”
*{{cite web | url = http://scifi.com:80/stargate/episodes/season7/0704/ | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20030719005003/http://scifi.com:80/stargate/episodes/season7/0704/ | url-status = dead | archive-date = 2003-07-19 | title = Orpheus}} at ]
* (]). Distributed by ].
* at the fansite ]


{{Stargate episodes}}
== External links ==
* from StargateWiki. Visited May 7, 2006.
* from GateWorld. Visited May 7, 2006.
* from Moon-catching. Transcribed by Sarae. Visited May 13, 2006.
* from GateWorld. Reviewed by Alli Snow. Visited May 7, 2006.
* from GateWorld. Reviewed by Lex. Visited May 7, 2006.
* from GateWorld. Visited May 7, 2006.


] ]
]

Latest revision as of 04:49, 4 January 2025

4th episode of the 7th season of Stargate SG-1
"Orpheus"
Stargate SG-1 episode
Episode no.Season 7
Episode 4
Directed byPeter DeLuise
Written byPeter DeLuise
Featured musicJoel Goldsmith
Kevin Kiner
Cinematography byPeter Woeste
Editing byBrad Rines
Production codeP268
Original air dateJune 27, 2003 (2003-06-27)
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
← Previous
"Fragile Balance"
Next →
"Revisions"
Stargate SG-1 (season 7)
List of episodes

"Orpheus" is the 4th episode from the seventh season of military science fiction adventure television show Stargate SG-1 and is the 136th overall. It was first broadcast on June 27, 2003, on the Sci-Fi Channel. The episode was written and directed by Peter DeLuise.

In this episode, following one of SG-1's missions to another world through the Stargate, Teal'c (Christopher Judge) is seriously injured. No longer able to rely on the healing powers of his symbiote, Teal'c struggles with his rehabilitation and believes he has become weak. Meanwhile, Daniel Jackson (Michael Shanks) is struggling to piece together memories from his time as ascended being but fears that Teal'c's son Rya'c and mentor Bra'tac are in trouble.

The episode deals with the repercussions of the season six episode "The Changeling", which sees Teal'c lose his symbiote.

Plot

SG-1, who have been on a mission off-world, have dialed the Stargate to Earth and advised General Hammond (Don S. Davis) that they're under attack and are preparing to retreat through the gate to Stargate Command. Personnel in the gate room brace themselves, as Samantha Carter (Amanda Tapping), Daniel Jackson (Michael Shanks) and then Jack O'Neill (Richard Dean Anderson) all rush out of the gate. Teal'c (Christopher Judge) is the last to arrive, but before Stargate's iris is closed and able to prevent their attackers from following, an enemy Jaffa soldier manages to come through and before being killed is able to shoot Teal'c.

Teal'c wakes up in the infirmary where Dr. Fraiser (Teryl Rothery) informs him that he was shot directly where his Goa'uld symbiote once was and as a result has suffered spinal damage. After Daniel visits a taciturn Teal'c, who is reluctant to talk. As Daniel leaves the infirmary he hears mysterious voices. Some time later, Teal'c trains for his recovery while Daniel and Sam work out. They notice that Teal'c is rigorously training, perhaps too much, but he ignores their concerns. After making a full recovery, Teal’c begins to train more than ever, yet remains uncharacteristically taciturn. In the meantime, Sam and Daniel look over Stargate addresses because Daniel feels an inclination to recover a lost memory. He only knows it's connected with the wormhole generated by the Stargate. When he and Jack visit Teal'c, he finally reveals that his reticent attitude is due to a weakness felt due to use of the Tretonin, and his teammates can offer no consolation.

To help himself remember, Daniel asks Teal'c to teach him Kelno'reem, a Jaffa meditation which aids in uncovering a memory regarding Rya'c (Neil Denis) and Bra'tac (Tony Amendola) who, together with other Jaffa, are working as slaves on an unknown world. Because Teal'c has no knowledge of this place, SG-1 contacts Rak'nor (Obi Ndefo) to assist in their plight. In the meantime, Rya'c and Bra'tac witness an execution, at the hands of a Goa'uld serving Jaffa Commander (David Richmond-Peck), of several slaves too weak to work. At Stargate Command, Rak'nor identifies the planet as Erebus, a world controlled by the Goa'uld System Lord Ba'al where prisoners are forced to mine materials for the construction of Goa'uld Ha'tak motherships. Rak'nor also tells them that Erebus' Stargate is protected by an energy shield, which Daniel recalls how to penetrate in another visions.

SG-1 along with Rak'nor and other Stargate Command forces embark on a rescue mission to Erebus, securing a position on a hillside looking down into the labor camp. During the night, Teal'c and Rak'nor sneak into the camp but are betrayed, captured, and tortured. The rest of SG-1, unable to do anything, decide to create a diversion. Sam and Daniel use a Ring Transporter to gain access to the nearby Ha'tak, which is under construction to place C-4, but cannot get to the Ring Transporter, which is under heavy guard. In the meantime, Teal'c enlightens Bra'tac and Rya'c about their plans to flee and the word is spread among the fellow Jaffa held prisoner in the camp. Rya'c is caught spreading the word by the prison guards, and is scheduled for execution when Teal'c begs to take his place. However, before he is killed, the C-4 explodes, plunging the mothership to the ground. The Jaffa Commander swiftly orders his Jaffa to the ship when they are deftly ambushed by the SG teams. As the Jaffa slaves rebel against their captors, Teal'c is able to kill the Jaffa Commander, and SG-1 and their allies take control of the camp before returning to Stargate Command. As Teal'c and Daniel meditate together they agree that for the first time they feel that they are involved in something important and that they belong in the Stargate Command.

Production

Development and writing

Peter DeLuise wrote and directed the episode

In the season seven opening episode, "Fallen", Dr. Daniel Jackson, portrayed by Michael Shanks returned to the show as a main character, having been reduced to a reoccurring role in season six. With the character having died and ascended to a high plain of existence in the season five episode "Meridian", he is ultimately "cast out" by the other ascended beings following his attempt to prevent Anubis from using his super-weapon in "Full Circle", and is stripped of his powers, memories and returned to flesh and blood. Following Daniel's return to human form, it was the suggestion of writer and co-producer Paul Mullie that there should be some "residual memories" from Daniel's time as an ascended being. Mullie felt that it was a "requirement of the season in that we had some issues to deal with, the first being Daniel's return and what does he remember", and wanted the season to answer "does he regret having been pretty much kicked out of the ranks of the Ascended?". Executive producer Robert C. Cooper commented that "Daniel wasn't just going to get his memory back and be ready to go next episode; these things are going to reverberate throughout the season", as well stating "we don't like to wrap everything up neatly at the end of one episode". This gave writer Peter DeLuise his inspiration for what would become "Orpheus". DeLuise imagined Daniel as having what he described as a "tortuous fragment of a memory" from his time ascended, whilst Mullie felt the character would also be "trying to come to terms with being Human again and no longer having special abilities". Shanks desire to see his character move away from a "passive observer" was also taken into account in writing "Orpheus", with Daniel Jackson becoming more "proactive" in pushing forward their cause in the episode and from this point onwards. DeLuise described the unravelling of Daniel's memory as "our door into the adventure" that eventually leads to Bra'tac and Rya'c, who have been imprisoned.

Although the Daniel Jackson character was the catalyst for DeLuise's story, it was Teal'c that he chose to focus his episode on. In the previous season's episode "The Changeling", Teal'c loses his Goa'uld symbiote, a creature which until that point was responsible for keeping him alive, and is forced to instead begin using an experimental drug called Tretonin. DeLuise wanted to examine how this change had affected Teal'c, with co-producer Joseph Mallozzi explaining that they "wanted to do a story in which Teal'c is seriously injured and has to go through physiotherapy and the same type of painful recovery process that an ordinary Human being has to". DeLuise was also inspired by the popular concept of putting a character through their own personal hell, citing the episode "Orpheus 3.3" of his old show 21 Jump Street and the Ancient Greek legend that it drew influence from of Orpheus and Eurydice. Orpheus' journey to the underworld of Hades to rescue his wife Eurydice were plot elements DeLuise adapted to his story, with Teal'c being the one who must journey to hell to save his son, Ry'ac and master, Bra'tac. Whilst DeLuise had Teal'c sustain a physical injury, it was the physiological affects this would have on the character that he really wanted to delve into. DeLuise considered previous episode's including "Rules of Engagement", where only the strongest Jaffa survive. Looking to expand upon this, DeLuise decided on the concept that Jaffa would use the same word for 'death' as they do for 'weakness', reasoning that "In Jaffa culture if one is weak, one might as well be dead", which would therefore see Teal'c fall into a state of "state of living death" following his injury. DeLuise also wanted to give Teal'c actor Christopher Judge the opportunity "to show weakness, and do some acting other than just cocking his eyebrow".

Cast

Tony Amendola (left) and Obi Ndefo (middle) respectively reprise their roles of Bra'tac and Rak'nor for the first time in season seven whilst David Richmond-Peck (right) portrays the Jaffa commander.

David Richmond-Peck portrays the stories antagonist, a Jaffa Commander. Serving the Goa'uld System Lord Ba'al, the character oversee's the Goa'uld forced Labor camp on the world of Erebus. DeLuise based elements of the character off of Ralph Fiennes' depiction of Amon Göth from the film Schindler's List. DeLuise wanted the character to be easily identifiable in shots and therefore had Richmond-Peck's hair dyed bleach blond, whilst in order to "make him look more evil" the director opted to give him a white, "goopy" eye, having Peck wear a contact lens. Tony Amendola, Obi Ndefo and Neil Denis all reprise their roles as rebel Jaffa characters Bra'tac, Rya'c and Rak'nor and Teryl Rothery also returns as Dr. Janet Fraiser. Amanda Tapping's stand in Sheri Noel was cast as the physiotherapist. Gary Jones is credited as technician, whilst director Martin Wood makes a cameo as another Stargate Command technician. Dan Shea's character Siler was originally in the episode, but his scenes were ultimately cut out.

Filming and post-production

Peter DeLuise directed the episode, with Peter Woeste serving as director of photography. Filming on "Orpheus" began in March 2003, overlapping slightly with work on the opening two-part episodes "Fallen" & "Homecoming", which was concluding filming. As well as filming on the shows standing sets at The Bridge Studios, Jackson Pit; a disused gravel pit in Coquitlam, British Columbia was chosen for the location of the Goa'uld labor camp. Due to heavy rainfall, filming at Jackson Pit was particularly challenging for the both crew and the actors, with production designer Bridget McGuire describing it as "the show that nearly killed us", whilst Christopher Judge later reflected that "the episode wasn't much fun due to the weather, which was absolutely horrible". The mixture of 50 background actors and stunt performers were ferried between Jackson Pit and a location in Maple Ridge for the film of the episode "Homecoming". The crew had to dig out trenches to direct water flow away from the set, whilst stunt co-ordinator Dan Shea highlighted that a number of the performers kept slipping over and falling down during scenes due to the wet surface. In the pit itself, McGuire's production team designed and built a bucket-wheel excavator as the centre piece of the set, whilst smaller tents surrounded the mine itself. Set decorators also buried children's swimming pools into the pit to create what looked like bubbling tar pits.

In constructing the cinematography for the episode, DeLuise and Woeste wanted scenes to be "more intimate", with DeLuise reasoning that he wanted to "look at how these people feel, rather than what they're doing", and so the subjects faces were often tightly framed during scenes, which was achieved using long-focus camera lenses. Whilst most of the episode was shot on 35 mm movie film, as was typical for the show at the time, the memory-recall sequences involving Daniel Jackson were shot on 16 mm film as Woeste wanted these scenes to utilize its more grainy aesthetic. Additionally a combination of desaturating, push processing and using flashes of the original 16 mm film negative was employed by Woeste during post to make the sequences appear "removed from reality". In an earlier cut of the episode, there was originally a shot Teal'c's smouldering stomach wound, having staff-blast, however it was ultimately removed. Woeste and DeLuise also had shot additional scenes in the gym, however they were cut as Cooper felt they were "too Baywatch-ish" Various scenes at the Goa'uld labor camp involved crowd replication, whereby around 40-50 extras were filmed, then redressed and repositioned within the frame. These different frames were then stitched together in post-production to make the crowd look far more populated. Art director James Robbins created concept artwork for the episode, in which the pyramid of the Goa'uld Ha'tak was "at least 50% bigger than what was in previous episodes" according to Lead 3D animator Wes Sargent. Sargent liked Robbins scaled up version, and was allowed to entirely rebuild the CGI model of the mothership for the episode, basing it off of Robbins larger pyramid illustration.

Cultural references

The M. Night Shyamalan 2002 film Signs, although not directly named, is reviewed by Carter, with the character heavily criticising the fact the aliens weakness is water. Numerous references are made by Jack O'Neill and Teal'c to the Austin Powers film series, with O'Neill believing Teal'c has lost his "mojo". DeLuise based his choice of shots of the Jaffa running up the hill towards the Goa'uld mothership whilst under mortar fire on a scene from The Thin Red Line (1998), whilst there are also visual references to The Pianist (2002) and The Three Musketeers (1993). Nickolas Baric, who had appeared in numerous previous episodes as different background characters portrays a soldier named Penhall, a reference to DeLuise's 21 Jump Street character Doug Penhall. The tale of Orpheus and Eurydice from Ancient Greek mythology informs parts of the story and title, with the Goa'uld world on which the labor camp is located named Erebus, which is a "place of darkness between earth and Hades", also from the mythology.

Release

Broadcast and reception

The episode was first broadcast on June 27, 2003, on the Sci-Fi Channel in the United States and achieved a 1.6 household rating. In the United Kingdom, the episode was broadcast first on Sky One on October 20, 2003, and attracted 660,000 viewers. It was later syndicated onto Channel 4 on September 19, 2004. In Canada, the episode first aired on September 30, 2004, on Space.

Jayne Dearsley at SFX awarded the episode 4 out of 5 stars, calling writer and director Peter DeLuise "the man who seems to know Stargate SG-1 better than anybody else". Dearsley felt as though the labor camp scenes in the middle of the episode lacked the urgency and danger needed, but believed this was made up for in the "huge battle at the climax" of the episode. Jan Vincent-Rudzki at TV Zone bemoaned the trope of "warriors who lose their honour", and was of the opinion that "Teal'c just wallows too much in self pity", awarding the episode 6 out of 10. The episode was recommended by Courtney Potter at Zap2it as one of their 'best bets'. Chloe Richards at Dreamwatch called the episode "a standard Goa'uld drama and is served nicely by Judge and Shanks".

Response from contributors on fansite Gateworld.net was largely positive, with reviewer Alli Snow praising Christopher Judge's performance as Teal'c as being amongst the highlights of the episode. Another contributor, Lex, applauded the episode as a "master class in character development" in regard to the arcs of both Teal'c and Daniel, and praised DeLuise for fitting "vast and powerful" themes "into such a short space of time without any feeling of it being rushed or crowded". Darren Rea of Sci-Fi Online awarded the episode 7 out of 10, and whilst they enjoyed Judge's performance, they were of the opinion that Teal'c "seemed a little out of character" in the episode.

Home media

"Orpheus" was first released as part of the "Volume 32" region 2 DVD on February 2, 2004, along with previous episodes "Fallen", "Homecoming" and "Fragile Balance" which topped the UK TV On Video Chart the following week. It was then released as part of the complete Season 7 boxsets on October 19, 2004, in region 1 and February 28, 2005, in region 2. The episode, along with the rest of season 7 were first made available digitally in January 2008 through iTunes and Amazon Unbox. The episode, along with every other episode of the series, were made available to stream for the first time through Netflix in the USA on August 15, 2010. Director Peter DeLuise and cinematographer Peter Woeste provide the audio commentary for the episode. The episode, along with the rest of the series has been upscaled for releases on various streaming platforms as well as the 2020 Blu-ray release. A deleted scene was posted on June 30, 2003, on the Sci-Fi Channel website involving Daniel talking to Siler about the voices he's been hearing.

References

  1. "Shanks Returns To Stargate SG-1". Sci Fi Wire. November 8, 2002. Archived from the original on December 8, 2002. Retrieved August 13, 2021.
  2. Mallozzi, Joseph (February 21, 2021). "053: Joseph Mallozzi Part 5, Writer and Executive Producer, Stargate (Interview)". Dial the Gate (Interview). Gateworld.
  3. ^ Cooper, Robert C.; Smith, John; Mullie, Paul; Kindler, Damian; Mallozzi, Joseph (2003). "Seventh Heaven". TV Zone. No. Special 52. Interviewed by Steven Eramo. Visual Imagination. p. 11. ISSN 0960-8230. In Orpheus, Daniel Jackson and Teal'c must face up to some changes in their lives. "This was a requirement of the season in that we had some issues to deal with, the first being Daniel's return and what does he remember," says Paul Mullie. "Does he regret having been pretty much kicked out of the ranks of the Ascended? Daniel had all this power to effect change but he was also cast out after he tried to do just that. So basically he's trying to come to terms with being Human again and no longer having special abilities. The other issue was Teal'c being without his symbiote, which we kind of left dangling at the end of Season Six. The drug tretonin keeps his immune system going, bur it doesn't give him the same strength and regenerative powers that his symbiote did. Teal'c is a warrior. His whole culture is based on strength and charging into battle without really worrying about being injured because your symbiote will heal you. That's no longer the case with him. So we wanted ro do a story in which Teal'c is seriously injured and has to go through physiotherapy and the same type of painful recovery process that an ordinary Human being has to. He's still very much a more powerful physical presence than ordinary Humans bur he's nor the 'superman' he used to be, and he must learn to accept that." Adds Joe Mallozzi, "While Teal'c is trying to deal with that, Daniel is struggling with some unfinished business. He feels as though there's something very important that he has to remember and his and Teal'c's stories dovetail right in the middle of an off-world mission. Orpheus was written as well as directed by Peter Deluise and it turned our great."
  4. ^ DeLuise, Peter; Woeste, Peter (February 2, 2004). Stargate SG-1 "Orpheus" (DVD commentary). Vol. 32. MGM Home Entertainment.
  5. Cooper, Robert C. (January 2004). "Star Maker". Dreamwatch (Interview). No. 112. Interviewed by Kate Lloyd. Titan Magazines. p. 35. ISSN 1356-482X.
  6. ^ Gibson, Thomasina (2005). Stargate SG-1: The Illustrated Companion: Seasons 7 and 8. London: Titan Publishing Group. pp. 14–15. ISBN 1840239344.
  7. Shanks, Michael (August–September 2003). "Back to the Gate". CFQ (Interview). Vol. 35, no. 4. Interviewed by Miwa Hirai. Los Angeles: Mark Gottwald. pp. 44–45. ISSN 0145-6032.
  8. Shanks, Michael (2003). "Fall from Grace". TV Zone (Interview). No. Special 52. Visual Imagination. p. 38. ISSN 0960-8230. for Orpheus in which our two characters share a strong spiritual bond. Daniel and Teal'c help one another reassert who they are and where their strengths lie. So that was a blast to do
  9. Judge, Christopher (July 24, 2003). "A NEW DIRECTION". rdanderson.com (Interview). Interviewed by Kate Ritter.
  10. ^ Judge, Christopher (2003). "Almost Human". TV Zone (Interview). No. Special 52. Visual Imagination. p. 33. ISSN 0960-8230. Orpheus deals with how the loss of his symbiote has affected Teal'c psychologically. "The actual filming of the episode wasn't much fun due to the weather, which was absolutely horrible. We did a couple of night shoots and those were pretty rough. That said, it was all worth it. I've watched a director's cut of the story and it looks amazing.
  11. DeLuise, Peter (August 2003). "The Primed Director". TV Zone. No. 166. Visual Imagination. pp. 48–53. ISSN 0957-3844. Deluise took a page out of Greek mythology when he wrote Orpheus, which he also directed. "Usually stories with the word 'orpheus' in their titles are about characters going through their own personal hell," he explains. "In this episode Teal'c's hell is that he no longer has his symbiote. In the past, he sort of took it for granted and came to depend on the strength that it gave him. This included being able to incur severe injuries during battle and later heal rather quickly. However, no_~ that he's on tretonin, his ability to do this is severely curtailed. Teal'c isn't as strong as he used to be and of course in the Jaffa culture weakness is a major taboo. It's akin to death. So Teal'c kind of loses his mojo, if you will."Meanwhile, Daniel Jackson is having flashbacks to when he was ascended and realizes that at one point he witnessed the capture of Bra'tac and Ry'ac on an enemy planet. They're being worked to death at a labour camp and now Daniel 1s feeling guilty because he chose not to interfere. So he convinces SG-1 to mount a rescue mission and Teal'c has to rise to the occasion. The Jaffa warrior has no choice considering it's his son's life that's at stake, So they both have to experience these cathartic life-changing events. It's a pretty powerful story and one I'm really proud of."
  12. Mallozzi, Joseph (April 5, 2003). "Chat with Writer/Producer Joseph Mallozzi". Our Stargate. Archived from the original on June 21, 2003.
  13. "Orpheus". scifi.com. Archived from the original on July 19, 2003.
  14. ^ "'Orpheus' deleted scene available". Gateworld. July 9, 2003. Archived from the original on August 1, 2003.
  15. Mallozzi, Joseph (March 14, 2003). "Joseph Mallozzi Live Chat". Gateworld.
  16. ^ McGuire, Bridget; Robbins, James; Bodnarus, Peter (June 2003). "The Art Department - Matters of Design". TV Zone Stargate SG-1 Season 7 Special. No. Special 52. Visual Imagination. p. 66. ISSN 0960-8230. McGuire chuckles when talking about the next episode, Orpheus. "That was the show that nearly killed us". Every single department - effects, costumes, props, set decoration, etc. We were on location out in Maple Ridge, which is a long drive for some of our people. However, at the same rime we were shooting Orphe11s we were finishing up work on the two-parter. All these Jaffa were being used in this story as well as Homecoming. Actors that needed robe our in Maple Ridge were also needed back here at the studios. It took a bit of creative juggling of the schedules to make that all happen. "Orpheus is set in a naquadah mine on a Goa'uld planet. We built a big grinding machine that was supposedly used to process the naquadah that was being mined. The labourers lived in a tent camp that we set up in a big round pit. There was a 'death pit' filled with skeletons and mannequins dressed in rags and covered with dirt and blood. We also brought in some kiddie pools that our set decoration guys, Robert and Mark , surrounded with rocks and filled with coloured water and all sorts of nasty stuff to create what looked like bubbling tar pits. It was pretty neat."
  17. ^ Lynn, Smith (June 2003). "On the Road Again". TV Zone. No. Special 52. Visual Imagination. p. 10. ISSN 0960-8230. For Orpheus, we spent quite some time at Jackson Pit. It was pouring so we dug trenches in order to keep the rain away from the sets.
  18. DeLuise, Peter (June 2003). "Group Dynamic". TV Zone. No. Special 52. Visual Imagination. p. 14. ISSN 0960-8230. In Orpheus, we had 60 costumed extras playing ragtag rebel Jaffa, all of whom had to be dressed and made to look scruffy," says director Peter Deluise. "It was a challenge to make sure they were all ready and in front of the camera at the same time. As if I hadn't already learnt my lesson. I did the same thing to myself again in Enemy Mine.
  19. Shea, Dan (June 2003). "(Stunt) Men at Work". TV Zone. No. Special 52. Visual Imagination. p. 8. ISSN 0960-8230. We rehearsed some great fight choreography for Orpheus. These guys really worked their butts off. It was raining and they'd keep falling down in the mud and then have to get up and do it all over again. At one point, Brad Kelly had to jump over a mortar. His timing was slightly off, though, and the thing exploded just as he jumped over it. Fortunately, it wasn't one of our standard gas mortars, so all he got was a butt-full of sparks. We made sure to razz him for doing that
  20. Sargent, Wes (October 26, 2006). "Wes Sargent interview - 3D Lead Animator at Rainmaker studios". The Scifi World (Interview). Interviewed by Gilles Nuytens.
  21. Mallozzi, Joseph (May 19, 2011). "May 19, 2011: Strange messages! Stargate: SG-1 Season 7 memories!". josephmallozzi.com.
  22. ^ DeLuise, Peter (July 25, 2003). "IN A WORD: PASSION". rdanderson.com (Interview). Interviewed by Kate Ritter.
  23. ^ Alli Snow; Lex (2003). ""Orpheus" Review". Gateworld.
  24. "Season Seven kicks off with 3-hour event". Gateworld. April 23, 2003. Archived from the original on June 25, 2003.
  25. "RATINGS: 'Orpheus'". Gateworld. July 21, 2003. Archived from the original on April 16, 2004.
  26. "Weekly top 10 programmes on TV sets (July 1998 – Sept 2018)". Broadcasters' Audience Research Board. October 20, 2003.
  27. "STARGATE SG-1 RATINGS: SEASON SEVEN". Stargate SG-1 Solutions. April 24, 2004.
  28. "TV Focus". TV Zone. No. 181. Visual Imagination. October 2004. p. 95. ISSN 0957-3844.
  29. "Listings for Thursday, September 30, 2004". Spacecast. September 30, 2004. Archived from the original on December 15, 2004.
  30. "Canada's SPACE will air new SG-1". Gateworld. August 17, 2004. Archived from the original on October 13, 2004. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
  31. Dearsley, Jayne (September 2003). "The Spoiler Zone - Stargate SG-1 ORPHEUS". SFX. No. 108. Future plc. p. 104.
  32. Vincent-Rudzki, Jan (July 2003). "Reviews: Stargate SG-1 - G4 Orpheus". TV Zone. No. 166. Visual Imagination. pp. 70–71. ISSN 0957-3844.
  33. Potter, Courtney (June 27, 2003). "Friday Best Bets". Zap2it. Archived from the original on June 24, 2003.
  34. Richards, Chloe (March 2004). "Reviews - Stargate SG-1: Series 7 - Volume 32". Dreamwatch. No. 114. Titan Magazines. p. 65. ISSN 1356-482X.
  35. ^ Rea, Darren. "DVD Stargate SG-1 Volume 32". sci-fi-online.com. Retrieved June 27, 2021.
  36. "TV On Video Chart Top 50 - 08 February 2004 - 14 February 2004". Official Charts Company. February 8, 2004.
  37. "Season Seven gates to DVD!". Gateworld. October 19, 2004. Archived from the original on December 9, 2004. Retrieved December 8, 2020.
  38. "Stargate expands iTunes, Amazon presence". Gateworld. January 11, 2008. Archived from the original on January 15, 2008. Retrieved December 8, 2020.
  39. "Entire Stargate television library now streaming on Netflix". Gateworld. August 16, 2010. Retrieved December 8, 2020.
  40. "Stargate's HD Blu-ray Picture: Better Than The DVDs?". GateWorld. March 1, 2021. Retrieved June 18, 2021.
  41. "June 30, 2003: Deleted scenes posted for "Orpheus"". scifi.com. June 30, 2003. Archived from the original on July 14, 2003.

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