"Stargate SG-1" Children of the Gods (TV Episode 1997) Poster

(TV Series)

(1997)

Parents Guide

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Certification

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Certification

Sex & Nudity

  • One scene of full frontal female nudity in the pilot episode "Children of the Gods" but NOT in all versions & here's the breakdown of which version has it and which doesn't
  • DVD versions of Season 1 will say that episode 1 ("Children of the God's") is rated R and the rest is unrated and these DVD versions will have the nudity scene in episode 1. The directors went back and made a standalone DVD with just the pilot episode ("Children of the Gods: Final Cut") and the DVD will have "Final Cut" listed on it and in this version they have removed the nudity, and if you watch it on most streaming platforms, including Vudu and Hulu, the nudity was cut out.
  • A scene of implied female nudity.
  • A prolonged scene of female full frontal nudity. Several closeup shots of the breasts. Pubic hair can be seen.

Violence & Gore

  • Some bloody contact, can be disturbing to sensitive viewers.
  • Several humans, Abydonians and Jaffa are hit with energy weapons which leave burns, cause the target to be thrown backwards. Similarly, many Jaffa are injured by human weaponry (automatic rifles etc.) This is not very disturbing due to the obviously evil alignment of the Jaffa.
  • Prolonged scenes of injured combatants, several of whom are covered in blood.
  • Frequent low-level violence; combat, beatings etc.
  • There are infrequent scenes depicting snake-like parasites entering and exiting human 'hosts' either through the neck or large holes in the abdomen, usually accompanied by screaming. Could be somewhat disturbing to more sensitive viewers.

Profanity

  • Infrequent uses of the word 'damn.' Nothing more.

Alcohol, Drugs & Smoking

  • One character drinks homemade Moonshine.
  • One character says that 'this beer is going straight to [his] head.'
  • No smoking or drug references. No drunkenness.

Frightening & Intense Scenes

  • The general tone of the episode is quite perilous, but any tension is defused by scenes of dialogue-based plot development or something similar.
  • There is a fair amount of blood and chaos in the opening fight sequence, as well as in most others.
  • A character walks into a room of captive people, kidnaps one and gives his subordinates the order to 'kill the rest.' The people immediately scream and the Jaffa open fire randomly into the chaotic crowd.

See also

Taglines | Plot Summary | Synopsis | Plot Keywords


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