![]() We actually brought in a flying rig which, I believe, is one of the most advanced ones you can get. “The actual shooting of this episode was difficult because there were a lot of stunts. He was hilarious in it and brought so much to the role. He’s apparently human and appears to be wearing a homemade outfit, but nevertheless seems to possess miraculous powers. He drops out of the sky, grabs the person we’re chasing and flies off, so we’re left wondering where the hell this guy came from and how he can fly. “In Hero, our people are on a mission to track down an Abnormal when all of a sudden they’re thwarted by a guy in a neoprene suit. So when I came on Sanctuary there was a chance for me to do the same. There were people who were sort of the go-to guys for that Martin Gero and Brad Wright, in particular, and Rob Cooper also wrote a couple of great comedy scripts and Carl Binder wrote one, too. There was always humor embedded in the dialogue in Stargate, but it was rare that I got to write a comedic script. “It’s a fast-paced and humorous episode, which I never really had the opportunity to do on Stargate. “ Hero was a really fun script to write,” says McCullough. In his first one, Hero, Chris Gauthier, best known as Walter in Eureka, plays an ordinary man who is transformed into an unlikely costumed crusader against crime in the show’s fictional New City. He joined Sanctuary as a writer as well as co-executive producer and penned four scripts for the show’s second season. When Stargate Atlantis‘ TV run was brought to an end after five years, series writer/producer Alan McCullough, who had previously served as a writer/story editor on Stargate SG-1, relocated from the Pegasus Galaxy to take on a new creative challenge. Photo by Jeff Weddell and copyright of Sanctuary 2 Productions ![]() Writer/co-executive producer Alan McCullough in his Sanctuary digs. ![]()
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