L.E. McMurray
Resurrection (Stargate/Buffy)
Reviewed by Kathryn A on 1st January 2003 (4)
Yes, I had a peek at some of this year's Stargate Fan Fiction
Awards crossover nominees. This one opened promisingly enough:
He stood in the basement of the burnt out shell of a building. It was
out of the way and was also good shelter from the sun. His altar was in
the safest corner of the building. He wasn't going to let anything
happen to that. It was almost the time when his God would return. First
however he had to feed.
Unfortunately, while the plot had potential, the execution was somewhat
on the banal side. Or perhaps it was a tendency to be told the obvious:
"Nothing is more boring in Sunnydale than a Saturday night with no
monsters," Buffy Summers, the Chosen One, pouted slightly.
"On the up side though," her best friend Willow Rosenberg said, "No
monsters."
That might have been a fun bit of dialogue if we hadn't been whapped
with phrases such as "Buffy Summers, the Chosen One" and "her best
friend Willow Rosenberg". There are similar examples all the way
through.
Also I always get frustrated when I miss out on what I consider to be
the most fun part of a crossover: the bit where people try to explain
things to each other. But here, this is all I got:
"I know I'm probably asking a dumb question," Xander interjected, "But
who or what is Ra?"
"Ra was the Egyptian Sun God, the father of the rest of the Gods,"
Giles explained.
"And until a few years still alive," Daniel added absently.
The looked at him in sheer disbelief.
"Jack, I think we'd better explain who we are and where we work,"
Daniel said.
"Classified," Jack argued.
"Jack."
"NO."
"YES."
"NO."
"Gentlemen," Giles shouted over them, "How about this, we'll tell you
something highly secret then you'll have no qualms about telling us
what you do. Because I have a feeling we're going to have to work
together on this."
The door opened again and Buffy and Angel walked in empty handed,
"What's going on?"
Everyone got comfortable as each group explained who they were.
Personally, I don't really think that Jack would ever agree to tell
these complete strangers everything; he'd rather lie like a trooper.
(Why is it that nobody ever seems to take that option in crossovers?
Well, very rarely.)
Also, regarding the plot, while I did say it had potential,
unfortunately the central premise required a little more than "Oh they
can do this impossible thing because this is Sunnydale" -- we could have
done with a little more plausibabble (Like tech(Trek)nobabble, only not
about technology).