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The series follows on directly from the film, in season one's first episode Children of the Gods, Jackson is still living on the planet Abydos (at the end of the
original film, Jackson chooses to stay when the StarGate is temporarily closed) with his alien wife Sha're. Both Children of the Gods and the second episode The
Enemy Within are stong stories which pull together the main characters (Shanks as Jackson, Anderson as Colonel Jack O'Neill, Amanda Tapping as Samantha Carter and Christopher
Judge as the alien Teal'c) into a team. Unfortunately, some of the episodes that followed were less strong. Of course, this is hardly new ground for Sci-Fi fans who are used to
shows taking a while to shake down (remember how bad some of the early episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation were?), but the mainstream American press were less patient.
"You know, they look at Richard with his MacGyver fame and that's all he'll ever be to them," says Shanks. "They set out to dislike him to begin with, saying, 'Oh, he's in another medium and it's some chessy science fiction show'. I take that in my stride. That's fine to me because, as is proven, the more those people come around because America is wooed by popular opinion. And, the more successful the show has been- ever since it's launch- the more you hear writers back-pedalling. 'Well it's OK. It's pretty good. It's better than the movie but it's still cliched.' That was in Entertainment Weekly. After we hit syndication [the show has been airing in the US on the cable channel Showtime, but goes into syndication this autumn], who knows what they'll start saying. You can take all the American opinion in your stride."
Even if the mainstream critics do not concern Shanks, he does acknowledge there were problems with some of the earlier episodes. However, he goes out of his way to reassure fans that the show is
developing and improving. "In terms of the people who actually cared about StarGate- fans of the show that think we haven't found the right combination- well, we have a lot of time and space
to find a way," he says. "I'm not too concerned about us finding it. I think we have enough of a run at this to take our time and really tell the stories properly. I think we made mistakes in our first
season, as any new show is bound to do, and closer to the end of the show we were showing a constant improvement curve so I think we're on our way to satisfying that. I think I'm starting to enjoy the
stories that are being told a lot more as we get better at telling them." Arimin Shimerman (aka Quark in Deep Space Nine and Principal Synder in Buffy the Vampire Slayer) guested in the Season
One episode The Nox. "He had this great perspective looking at us almost as children because he was a mentor in a way," says Shanks, "being able to say, 'Oh, I remember that. I remember the early stages of a Science Fiction show.' We had that same
experiences to talk about." With StarGate SG-1 set to run for around six seasons, in the future Shanks may have the chance to be a mentor to somebody else starting out on a series. For now, though, he's happy to be learning
his trade, trying to develop his character while also wryly noting that sometimes the business of acting has to take second place to Special Effects ("Around here, we say, 'Is there enough gunk on the bug?'"). Not bad for an actor who was once
nervous of James Spader being nice.