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- At the end of the first season, SG-1 is on Apophis's mother ship and are ready to blow it up, of course this means they'll die as well. Colonel O'Neill hesitates before hitting the detonator:
O'Neill: I guess I'm supposed to say something profound at this moment (Daniel, Teal'c, and Sam wait for his speech)...Nothing comes to mind. Let's do it. |
- The same episode: the way Daniel survived by having the presence of mind to use the Sarcophogus, then the rings, then the Stargate, all while he was still very badly injured was pure badass.
- How about just moments before, where Daniel, a civilian scholar with comparatively less combat training/experience than the rest of SG-1 goes Guns Akimbo on advancing Jaffa guards with an H&K MP 5 and a pistol, gunning down several of them before getting staff-blasted, and then still choosing to stay behind to cover his team's escape. Took a Level In Badass indeed...
- A perfect example of a Crowning Moment of Awesome can be found in the Stargate SG-1 two-parter episode "Reckoning" where Daniel Jackson turns RepliCarter's Mind Probe against her, essentially defeating a Hive Mind intellect in a battle of wills and temporarily stopping every Replicator in the galaxy dead in its tracks.
- "Gotcha!"
- A few scenes earlier, we have the moment when RepliCarter realises Daniel has reversed the connection and is in her mind. She gets an Oh Crap look and backs away, but:
Daniel: [Grabs her arm] Trying to leave? Sorry. A little more time in Danny's world. |
- Another example from the same episode: every week previously, something unauthorized comes through the 'gate, every week, the troops line up and train their guns on whatever is causing it, and every week it's something harmless and they stand down. Well not this time! The replicators come through and the bastards open fire, making this troper cheer. An understated CMoA, but a brilliant one, nonetheless.
- Just goes to show you why they do it every time.
- Season 7 Finale: Anubis's fleet, about to destroy the Prometheus and lay waste to the entire Earth, is suddenly destroyed by zillions of glowy squid things pouring out of Antarctica.
Crewman: What the hell was that? |
- Hammond's CMoA as well. Showing up in command of every ship Earth has at the final moment, pulling SG-1's bacon out of the fire despite the very real possibility that it'll be a suicide mission for all concerned. Afterward he had only minor cameos in the series, reinforcing the fact.
- Not to mention the fact that when it's clear that the Prometheus is heavily damaged and on the verge of exploding, Hammond orders a course set for Anubis's mothership, saying "If we go they go."
- Hammond's CMoA as well. Showing up in command of every ship Earth has at the final moment, pulling SG-1's bacon out of the fire despite the very real possibility that it'll be a suicide mission for all concerned. Afterward he had only minor cameos in the series, reinforcing the fact.
- Teal'c has the moment where he interrupts the thugs about to beat a teenager up over a fender-bender.
Lead thug: [Draws back fist. It's caught by Teal'c.] |
- Don't forget the part where he breaks a thug's fist by headbutting it.
- In that same episode, Teal'c KOed a thief from roughly 50 yards with a thrown eggplant.
- Season Eight - Vala stealing Prometheus single-handedly. Extra points for the Crowning Moment of Funny when she comes on to Daniel whilst dressed as a super-soldier with a really deep masculine voice.
- Conversely, this episode can also be seen as a pretty crowning moment of awesome for Daniel, given he holds Vala off on his own and without the use of a super-suit.
- In the Season 10 episode "Talion", Teal'c gets a scene which shows why you really don't want to make him angry:
Teal'c: In that case, there are some things you should know. The Ori do not ascend their followers. Arkad is a coward who will die by my hand. Also, I have planted an explosive device in your symbiote pouch. It is set to go off within a matter of moments. It is the same explosive that you used to kill twelve warriors, eighteen innocent bystanders, and two children who had gathered for a peaceful summit. |
- It was a scene inspired by a similar scene from Man on Fire, which if anything makes it even more awesome. To make it even better, Teal'c, having watched a lot of Earth fiction, probably saw that movie and was emulating it.
- Later in the same episode, Teal'c fulfills that promise by killing Arkad. After being shot with several staff blasts, getting his ass beaten with a sword-stick, then getting stabbed in the guts with a sword. He is dying on the ground when Arkad gloats that he killed Teal'c's mother. Bad idea.
- Samantha Carter got her moment when she blew up a sun! This repeatedly received Lampshade Hanging in the show as other people fully acknowledged it as her Crowning Moment Of Awesome.
Jacob: Come on, Sam. It can't be any harder than blowing up a sun. |
- Not on that scale, but Sam's original Crowning Moment of Awesome was her "reproductive organs" speech to Jack in the pilot, helping to establish that she was not going to sit back and be The Chick on this show.
- It was more awesome for O'Neill: Carter walks in assuming she'll be discriminated against, and starts talking sexual organs when nobody but her has 'em in mind. O'Neill, against the stereotype, rolls with it and says it's scientists he has a problem with.
- Since the re-release of this episode in 2009 ("Children of the Gods" the Director's Cut), Sam's "reproductive organs" line is removed. She wins the argument with more style this time.
- Which is kinda silly since now anyone who's only seen that version of the episode will be wondering why the show keeps making jokes about Sam discussing reproductive organs.
- Considering Kawalsky and Ferretti were already making jabs about her gender, Carter had every right to feel that she would be discriminated against. And if she also claims to have been in the military during the Gulf War, Carter was part of only 11% of women that comprised the military at that time. Today women still consist only of 14 to 15% and are still excluded from occupying certain positions. Perhaps her speech was directed at O'Neill, but it was for everybody. This was a great Crowning Moment of Awesome because not only did Sam make it perfectly clear that she is able to stand equal with the men, but that she is not ashamed of her gender or feels any need to be "one of the guys." For this troper, just the fact that she decided to stay in the military for so long despite what was probably years of discrimination is itself a Crowning Moment of Awesome.
- Since the re-release of this episode in 2009 ("Children of the Gods" the Director's Cut), Sam's "reproductive organs" line is removed. She wins the argument with more style this time.
- Also, you know. She's one of the most indispensable people in this universe, capable not only of holding a gun and ripping someone to shreds with it, but also to understand what all the technobabble means.
- When they're helping out the Jaffa resistance force, Carter is the one who steps up to demonstrate why the P90 is superior to a staff weapon. The leader is not convinced a female is better than they are. A Jaffa soldier steps up and shoots at a log suspended above the ground three times, missing once (and this is their best marksman). Carter steps up, and O'Neill has them sway the log just for an added challenge. Carter cuts the log in half with automatic fire, then cuts the (still moving) string holding the log up using a single shot. The leader can't say anything about her after this.
- Don't forget O'Neill's line: "The staff weapon is a weapon of terror. It is made to intimidate your enemy. This (lifts the P90) is a weapon of war. It is made to kill your enemy."
- There's "Emancipation", where she steps up to battle a tribal warlord and kicks vast amounts of ass, until she gets him on the ground with a knife to the throat and demands his surrender. And it doesn't hurt that she did all that to save a young woman from an "honor killing."
- Don't forget "The Quest", where she gives Ba'al an oh so satisfying slug to the jaw and forces him to fall in line.
- Samantha Carter and the Odyssey has another one in The Pegasus Project when she suggests passing close by a black hole to slingshot around it, drawing a pursuing wraith ship closer to the black hole and mess up its jammers, then beam a nuke aboard it hoping that the resulting explosion will activate a supergate they have been trying to connect with. Not only does it work, but the unstable vortex of the supergate also destroys a nearby Ori mothership: A Rube Goldberg chain of explosions.
- Jack's many, many awesome moments, like when, during Bra'tac's lengthy speech about "battling their way to the shield core", O'Neill busies himself with pulling the pin on some grenades, dropping them, and destroying the core, thus leaving them with plenty of time to get the hell out of Dodge. Followed by:
Jack: What now? |
- The non-speaking parts of the SGC get one in the season three opener, when General Hammond is seeking volunteers to rescue SG-1. He says anyone who wishes to go should take one step forward. Everyone steps forward in unison before he can even complete the sentence.
- Ba'al had quite a few understated Crowning Moments, but the best of them to appear before season 9 was when he teamed up with Sam and Jacob to unlock the controls to the Dakara superweapon:
Ba'al: [Indicates a panel] This one. |
- And, as far as the panel went, he was right!
- Jacob got a small one back when Ba'al's next guess was not so lucky.
- And, as far as the panel went, he was right!
- Oma finally getting off the bench in Der Waffle House and keeping Anubis out of our plane of existence.
- Three words: "I. Die. Free." Any time they are uttered by anyone qualifies.
- Another Hammond CMoA was in the season 2 opener. In the alternate universe, O'Neill was in command of SGC and he sent a nuclear bomb to the Jaffa homeworld, effectively killing a whole planet of innocent people just to strike back at the Goa'uld. When someone suggests the same thing in the regular universe, where Hammond is in command, he casually dismisses the possibility.
- Of course, you have to remember that O'Neill was a lot more desperate, less experienced in the ways of the Goa'uld, and didn't have the benefit of Daniel's moral compass until recently.
- Also, in the alternate universe, they had never been to Chulak, so O'Neill had no reason to think of it as anything other than an enemy base, whereas it really would have been nuking a good sized city.
- In "Secrets", Colonel O'Neill confronts Heru'ur on Abydos. Heru'ur has his shield up and can't be shot. As he prepares to blast O'Neill with his hand device, O'Neill nails him right through the hand with his thrown combat knife. Damn.
Heru'ur: You dare challenge me?! |
- In "Forever in a Day", Shar'e got one, as depressing as it was. The fact that she figured out how to send a message to Daniel through the hand device was really awesome.
- Not to mention when Teal'c and General Hammond fly a Goa'uld "needle threader" (a Stargate-sized glider) through the Stargate in order to rescue SG-1 and other characters, who have been captured by a Goa'uld. Hammond has control of the weapons and gets to blow up rows of towers putting a force shield in place, while Teal'c, the pilot, avoids every bit of return fire. What does Hammond have to say about this? "Yee-haw!" The look on Teal'c face is priceless.
- In "Beachhead", Vala got a CMoA - while practically every important person in the Stargate program was debating what the hell they should be doing to stop the supergate, she came up with a risky plan and put it into action, all by herself. The stunned expressions are perhaps the most obvious sign that even the characters thought it was a Crowning Moment of Awesome.
- She stole a ship no one knew was there and took down something powered by two black holes with a plan no one else had even considered. she out-awesomed damn near everyone that episode.
- How has Thor not been mentioned? His speech (read, subtle threat) to the representatives of various world powers in "Disclosure" to convince them not to take the Stargate out of Hammond's control was nothing but awesome.
Thor: It is the opinion of the Asgard high council that Stargate Command should be left in the very capable hands of General Hammond and his team, and while our continued friendship with Earth is not contingent on that, it is preferred. |
- Thor's appearance also doubles as a CMoA for Hammond. Kinsey has spent the entire episode throwing the SGC's failures in Hammond's face. Hammond makes one phone call (figuratively speaking) and their greatest ally beams into the meeting just because Hammond asked him to. Even Kinsey has to admit how thoroughly he was owned. "Well played," indeed.
- Also in "Disclosure", Kinsey is trying to argue against Thor, and addresses him as "Commander Thor". Thor interrupts him with "Supreme Commander", effectively shutting Kinsey up. In two words, Thor demonstrates that no, Kinsey is not talking to a flunky, but to a powerful government official, and that Thor would brook no familiarity from someone as low as Kinsey.
- Thor's first appearance also counts. Earlier on in the episode the crew make contact with Thor via hologram to ask for help and he kind of disses them off and sends them on their way. In the end SG-1 are captured and the Goa'uld appear to be victorious, and suddenly this huge mothership shows up and casually beams the entire Jaffa army away.
- Not just the army, it takes the Pyramids (Goa'uld landing site) as well.
- Chevron Guy Walter might not have gotten much to do in the main televised series, but an entire Expanded Universe Big Finish audio adventure was dedicated to Walter generally being awesome and single-handedly saving the Stargate from an alien attack that involved massive bolts of lightning funneling through the command center and gate room. And after all this? Walter simply explains...
I'm no hero. I just press buttons. I'm just... the Chevron Guy. |
- Vala mal Doran as the world's most effective waitress in "Memento Mori". "You took 'em both down without even breaking a sweat!"
- Janet Fraiser in "Heroes", doing...well, what Real Life military doctors do all the time.
- The guest character in that episode, the documentary filmmaker Emmett Bregman, gets a CMOA at the end of the first act. It's a Crowning Moment The Reason You Suck Speech. Saul Rubinek's heartfelt delivery really sells the moment.
Bregman: Why is that camera off? You don't know what you're doing here. Maybe I know what I'm doing here. These people are risking their lives for us! I want to see what they're going through, even if they don't want us to! And I want other people to see it! What do you think they're doing out there? Protecting and defending secrecy?!? That's the world of Mao, the world of Stalin, the world of secret police, secret trials, secret-secret deaths! You force the press into the cold, and all you will get is lies and innuendo! And nothing, nothing is worse for a free society than a press that is in service to the-to the military and the politicians, nothing! You turn that camera off when I tell you to turn it off! You think I give a damn what you think about me? You serve the people? So do I! |
- Janet Fraiser gets another, much subtler one in "Serpent's Song," when she singlehandedly in four words explains the entire Hippocratic oath. Martouf sees Janet giving Apophis an injection of morphine to ease his pain. This dialogue ensues.
Martouf: He is your enemy! |
- When, in the season 9 episode "Prototype", Daniel proposes killing Khalek. Made even more awesome if you watched a really early episode right beforehand. This was a guy jumping out at all aliens just to say "Hi!"
- In the show, SG-10 was trapped on a planet being destroyed by a black hole, the one Carter later used to blow up a sun. In a pair of novels set five years later, SG-1 manages to rescue them, something widely acknowledged within the SGC as one of their crowning achievements.
- Tomin, faithful follower of the Ori, tells off a Prior with an objection most epic:
Prior: I'm disappointed, Tomin. It seems you have begun to question the will of the Ori... or is it the unbeliever under your tutorage that has corrupted you? |
- The Prior's completely mature response, of course, was to do exactly what Tomin was arguing against, just to show that he could.
- Note that Tomin made a third appearance in The Ark of Truth. Apparently the Prior was so blown away by Tomin's awesomeness that he didn't just force-choke the shit out of him for saying that. Moreover, the Prior indicates that Tomin did not stop at that speech, which means Tomin has been getting away with this for months.
- Three separate events together contribute to President Hayes' Crowning Moment of Awesome during the two-part season seven finale, "Lost City":
- When he stands up to Anubis' threats:
Anubis: You bring destruction upon yourselves. |
- Which leads to a CMOF when he turns to his cabinet and asks, "Too much?"
- When he refuses to flee to the Alpha site:
Kinsey: Mr. President, it's time to go to the Alpha site. You can stay in contact and give any or... |
- When he forces Kinsey to resign:
Hayes: Dr. Weir? |
- This can also be seen as Kinsey's "Crowning Moment of Defeat".
- Mitchell. The time they were posing as corn drug dealers and got captured brought several great moments for him.
- How can we forget the time that Mitchell disguised himself as the leader of the Lucian Alliance and got the two space mafia ships to open fire on one another?
- The Battle of the Supergate is one for the Ori. They defeat a dozen Ha'taks, two Tau'ri battlecruisers, and an Asgard warship with no significant damage.
- Fail Safe. A giant asteroid is about to crash into the Earth. Important personnel have been relocated offworld. As the last group is about to leave, Major Davis gives a funny look after Hammond orders Davis and Sergeant Harriman to report to the Alpha Site. Hammond's reply? "I haven't been relieved of this command, Major". THAT is how you go out with style.
- As much of a Tear Jerker as "Heroes" was, this troper never gets tired of seeing the SGC kicking the collected rear ends of the Goa'uld in force after an SG team gets pinned down by Jaffa.
- Major Marks gets one when Daniel tells him he should be ready to fire.
Marks: I'm ALWAYS ready to fire. I just need to push this button. |
- Which kinda lampshades that apparently Daniel's idea of how to command a starship was still influenced to a degree by Earth science-fiction serials.
Daniel: "Sorry, I just thought that's what you're supposed to say." |
- The entire first couple seasons: MacGyver INSPACE whilst simultaneously somehow beating various crazy advanced aliens at their own game...
- Carter asks Ba'al why he resents working with her - if it's because she's human or a woman. He says it's a little of both. She punches him in the face.
- Also this exchange in the Season 10 Episode "The Quest." As part of a test, they must rescue a little boy (who turns out to be a hologram) from a cage.
Ba'al: He's tiny! Tell him to squeeze through the bars. |
- Small one from "Heroes, Part 2" that doubles as a CMOH. SG-1, -3, and -15 have come back through the gate with several wounded and Dr. Fraiser's body. We see Carter storm past Emmett Bregman's documentary crew in tears. The SGC's public affairs officer tells them to stop filming, and Bregman rips him a new one for trying to shut down a media project that casts the SGC (and its sacrifices) in a positive light.
- The alternate universe Sam from "There But for The Grace Of God" is being held at staff-point by a dozen Jaffa. She convinces them to hold fire by telling them she has a dimensional-control device and is willing to hand it over to Apophis. The Jaffa take the device, and then she whips out a grenade and tells them she also wants to blow them all to hell. Cue explosion.
- Season six, Episode 11 "Prometheus" A news reporter manages to wrangle access to a classified air force project "Prometheus" in Nevada she got wind of, in exchange for her silence and her source. As her entourage steps off the elevator, she's visibly awed by what she sees. Majestic music starts up as the camera swings around, giving viewers a look at Earth's first battlecruiser. Carter says "This is Prometheus... Otherwise known as the X-303." Also CMOA for Earth's scientists. Two years ago the only ships Earth truly had were the X-301s built from Death Gliders, still only fighters incapable of deep space travel, and that project ended in failure. Now they have this.
- Dr. Lee, surprisingly enough, gets one in The Fourth Horseman. He successfully invented a device capable of stopping Ori Priors from using their powers, which saved many lives and played a critical role in defeating the Ori in the ensuing war.