List of The Outer Limits (1995 TV series) episodes
This page is a list of the episodes of The Outer Limits, a 1995 science fiction/dark fantasy television series. The series was broadcast on Showtime from 1995 to 2000, and on the Sci Fi channel in its final year (2001–2002).
Series overview[edit]
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | |||
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First aired | Last aired | Network | |||
1 | 21 | March 26, 1995 | August 20, 1995 | Showtime | |
2 | 22 | January 14, 1996 | August 4, 1996 | ||
3 | 18 | January 19, 1997 | July 25, 1997 | ||
4 | 26 | January 23, 1998 | December 18, 1998 | ||
5 | 22 | January 22, 1999 | August 20, 1999 | ||
6 | 21 | January 21, 2000 | September 3, 2000 | ||
7 | 22 | March 16, 2001 | January 18, 2002 | Sci Fi |
Episodes[edit]
Season 1 (1995)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |||
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1 | 1 | "The Sandkings" | Stuart Gillard | Based on the work by : George R. R. Martin Teleplay by : Melinda Snodgrass | March 26, 1995 | |||
Dr. Simon Kress's (Beau Bridges) research for the government on Martian life is aborted because one of his specimens almost escapes into the natural environment. However, Kress does not agree with the abandonment of the project and decides to continue his experiments in his barn. He strongly believes that the insect-like species is actually sentient. He steals some sand containing Martian eggs from his lab and creates a makeshift incubator to hatch more of the Martian lifeforms. In the meantime, Kress deals with growing discord with his wife (Helen Shaver) over financial troubles, his obsession with work and the stress of concealing the stolen Martian lifeforms from his former supervisors at the government lab. Kress comes to believe that he is a god to his sandkings when they erect sand structures that resemble his face. Bitten by one of the sandkings, his obsession peaks as he alienates his wife, son, father (Lloyd Bridges), and kills his former supervisor by throwing him in the sandking incubator, where the creatures—already starved by Kress as an experiment—quickly devour him. In the end, Kress attempts to destroy all the sandkings but fails. In the epilogue of the episode, a colony of sandkings is shown surviving in the wilderness. Note: the series premiere, this was a double length single episode, later broken into Part 1 and Part 2 for subsequent rebroadcasts and syndication. | ||||||||
2 | 2 | "Valerie 23" | Timothy Bond | Jonathan Glassner | March 31, 1995 | |||
Valerie 23 (Sofia Shinas) is the latest development from the Innobotics Corporation, and she is designed to be an attractive, helpful and perfect companion for a disabled man. While being an ideal test candidate, due to his condition and qualifications, Frank Hellner (William Sadler) is reluctant to take part, and he initially wants nothing to do with Valerie. Eventually, he agrees to a one-week test period where Valerie proves to be an excellent caregiver and more. Over the course of the test, Valerie becomes increasingly affectionate and Frank eventually gives in. After the sexual encounter, Frank explains to Valerie that he thinks it was a mistake, as he has begun to grow closer to his physiotherapist Rachel (Nancy Allen). Valerie responds to this by displaying more human traits such as anger and envy. After following Frank and Rachel on a rock climbing outing, Valerie attempts to dispose of her rival but is shut down before being returned to Innobotics. Frank decides that he must speak to Valerie before she is dismantled, and Valerie explains her feelings for Frank and tries unsuccessfully to rekindle their relationship. Later, Valerie escapes, follows Frank and again tries to kill Rachel. Frank is forced to destroy Valerie with an electric shock, but, as she lies dying, Valerie tells him that she is afraid to die. | ||||||||
3 | 3 | "Blood Brothers" | Tibor Takacs | Brad Wright | April 7, 1995 | |||
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4 | 4 | "The Second Soul" | Paul Lynch | Alan Brennert | April 14, 1995 | |||
A dying race of aliens has come to Earth to stop its own extinction... by reanimating human corpses. The N'Tal do not have bodies of their own, instead they require hosts to live — but they have the technology to reanimate, cure and occupy the bodies of the recently dead. It appears that the N'Tal intend to change the Earth's atmosphere to their own advantage, while killing all humans. Instead, the N'Tal have built an enclosed replica of their home planet, so that their children, who will be fully human, can know the history of the N'Tal home world. | ||||||||
5 | 5 | "White Light Fever" | Tibor Takacs | David Kemper | April 21, 1995 | |||
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6 | 6 | "The Choice" | Mark Sobel | Ann Lewis Hamilton | April 28, 1995 | |||
A young girl, Aggie Travers (Thora Birch), is an outcast at her elementary school, and mysterious things happen to people when she does not get along with them. Since it appears that she is responsible for these strange things, she is suspended from school. Her parents (Page Fletcher and Sandra Nelson) are at their wit's end, so they decide to look for a nanny for their troubled child. Karen Ross (Megan Follows), their first candidate, seems perfect; she bonds with Aggie from the start, and seems to understand her special needs. | ||||||||
7 | 7 | "Virtual Future" | Joseph L. Scanlan | Shawn Alex Thompson | May 5, 1995 | |||
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8 | 8 | "Living Hell" | Graeme Campbell | Story by : Pen Densham and Melinda Snodgrass Teleplay by : Melinda Snodgrass | May 12, 1995 | |||
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9 | 9 | "Corner of the Eye" | Stuart Gillard | David Schow | May 19, 1995 | |||
A priest begins to see horrific demonic creatures among the ordinary population. They are aliens that have the powers to alter their appearance and to heal the sick. | ||||||||
10 | 10 | "Under the Bed" | René Bonnière | Lawrence Meyers | May 26, 1995 | |||
When a little boy is abducted and eaten, the only witness, his sister, claims that someone or something under the bed took him. | ||||||||
11 | 11 | "Dark Matters" | Paul Lynch | Alan Brennert | June 2, 1995 | |||
A commercial transport vessel on a routine mission is suddenly forced out of hyperspace into a black and starless void. | ||||||||
12 | 12 | "The Conversion" | Rebecca De Mornay | Based on the short story "Two Strangers" by : Richard B. Lewis Teleplay by : Brad Wright | June 9, 1995 | |||
Henry Marshall participates in a real estate scam and is caught. After a long stretch in prison, he still has not learned to value people more than money. | ||||||||
13 | 13 | "Quality of Mercy" | Brad Turner | Brad Wright | June 16, 1995 | |||
Major John Skokes and a young female cadet are taken prisoner during an interstellar war and thrown into a dark cell. Note: The story concludes in episode 18 of season 2, "The Light Brigade". | ||||||||
14 | 14 | "The New Breed" | Mario Azzopardi | Grant Rosenberg | June 23, 1995 | |||
Dr. Stephen Ledbetter (Richard Thomas) makes a technological and medical breakthrough when he creates a type of tiny machine, known as nanobots, capable of curing any disease or imperfections in the human body. | ||||||||
15 | 15 | "The Voyage Home" | Tibor Takacs | Grant Rosenberg | June 30, 1995 | |||
The Mars III crewed expedition to Mars is in its 315th and final day when the crew discover a cave containing strange alien writing and a capsule. The capsule suddenly opens and the crew is knocked unconscious. | ||||||||
16 | 16 | "Caught in the Act" | Mark Sobel | Robert Forsyth | July 9, 1995 | |||
Jay (Jason London) and Hannah (Alyssa Milano) are in love, but she wants to stay celibate until marriage. An object falls into Hannah's room and an alien entity merges with her. The alien needs her to have sex, but random males morph into her body during the intercourse. Thinking that Jay is in danger while in her presence, Hannah shuns him. Jay and his professor start an investigation regarding her. As more men vanish, the police pursue Hannah, who is "caught in the act" devouring a man. A cop shoots her, but the wound quickly heals. When the lovers are reunited, Jay, convinced that the alien needs something more than sex, makes love with Hannah and pupated alien finally rises from her body, and leaves. Note: this episode was used as the premiere when the series was first aired in the UK. | ||||||||
17 | 17 | "The Message" | Joseph L. Scanlan | Brad Wright | July 16, 1995 | |||
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18 | 18 | "I, Robot" | Adam Nimoy | Based on the short story by : Eando Binder Teleplay by : Alison Lea Bingeman | July 23, 1995 | |||
Dr. Link is working on the central memory of a robot, Adam, when it suddenly activates and attacks him. A lab assistant enters the room in time to see Adam smashing up the laboratory before crashing through a window and escaping, while Dr. Link is left dead. Later, a police officer finds Adam in a back alley, and Adam, apparently remembering nothing of the incident, asks the officer to contact Dr. Link. Adam is taken to a cell and preparations are made to disassemble it. Mina, Dr. Link's daughter, contacts a lawyer, Thurman Cutler (Leonard Nimoy), who pushes for a murder trial, insisting that Adam is his client and not simply a machine. A court hearing begins, and the prosecutor pushes for dismissal of the case on the grounds that Adam is just a machine. Cutler argues that, although Adam is clearly not human, it possesses intelligence and will, and, on that basis, deserves a trial. Cutler begins to look into Dr. Link's financial records and finds that he was working for a defense contractor, eventually discovering that Dr. Link was working to turn Adam into a weapon. Cutler argues, with supporting evidence of financial accounts and company memos, that Dr. Link was forced into attempting to rewrite Adam's central programming, effectively lobotomizing it, and that Adam reacted in the way any human might when faced with death. The court eventually finds that Adam is a person and will stand trial for the murder of Dr. Link. As it is being led away, Adam sees the prosecuting attorney in danger of being run over and rescues her, sacrificing its own life in the process. | ||||||||
19 | 19 | "If These Walls Could Talk" | Tibor Takacs | Manny Coto | July 30, 1995 | |||
A woman asks physicist Dr. Leviticus Mitchell to investigate a haunted house where her son and his girlfriend were last seen. | ||||||||
20 | 20 | "Birthright" | William Fruet | Eric Estrin and Michael Berlin | August 13, 1995 | |||
Senator Richard Adams (Perry King) is at the top of his game, and, after a press conference extolling the virtues of a new fuel additive BE-85 which is supposed to clean up the atmosphere, he and his aide, Evan Branch, are in a serious auto accident. Branch is dead, Adams has a head injury, and his attending physician, Dr. Leslie McKenna (Mimi Kuzyk), is baffled by his unusual x-rays that show four frontal lobes and only three major organs. Before Adams can figure out what happened, a large security detail whisks him and his files away to the Sendrax Corporation, the home of BE-85. It turns out that Adams is part of a secret alien presence on Earth, and, because the alien's body make up is different, long-term use of BE-85 will reconfigure the Earth's atmosphere so it is poisonous to humans but compatible with the aliens. Adams realizes that he is in danger and escapes to see McKenna, the only person he can trust. Together, they unlock the secret of Adams' identity and the horror of the alien master plan, divulging the secret of BE-85 to Kyle Haller (Scott Swanson), an aggressive young reporter. Before Haller can expose the aliens, he is killed and McKenna is framed for the murder. | ||||||||
21 | 21 | "The Voice of Reason" | Neill Fearnley | Teleplay by : Brad Wright Excerpts by : Manny Coto, Eric Estrin and Michael Berlin, Rob Forsyth, Grant Rosenberg, David Schow and Melinda Snodgrass | August 20, 1995 | |||
Randall Strong tries to convince the members of a government committee that a number of different alien invasions of Earth are occurring, and he demands an official investigation and response to these threats. His evidence comes from incidents in previous episodes of the first season: the experiments of Simon Kress in "The Sandkings"; an attempt to impersonate the crew of a spacecraft returning to Earth in "The Voyage Home"; an alien parasite in "Caught in the Act"; an alien enzyme in "If These Walls Could Talk"; aliens posing as religious messengers in "Corner of the Eye". Strong also eventually believes that the committee itself has been infiltrated by one or more aliens posing as humans (see "Birthright"). The episode "The New Breed" is also referenced, though as counter-evidence that bizarre occurrences are not necessarily a result of alien interference. During the meeting, it appears that the committee chairman, Thornwell, is an alien infiltrator because of his opposition to Strong's evidence and claims. The committee adjourns for a private conference to discuss their decision, and, upon returning, they announce that Strong's claims have been rejected. Strong then grabs a gun from a guard and kills Thornwell, believing him to be the one blocking further investigation and hoping to expose his alien nature by injuring him. However, Thornwell was privately arguing in support of Strong and was outvoted by other committee members that were the actual infiltrators. The death of Thornwell opens the way for a complete takeover of the committee's activities. Some of the infiltrators wonder if any of the other alien species will pose a threat to their plans, musing that "anything is possible". |
Season 2 (1996)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |||
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22 | 1 | "A Stitch in Time" | Mario Azzopardi | Steven Barnes | January 14, 1996 | |||
FBI agent Jamie Pratt (Michelle Forbes) investigates a series of murders spanning a period of forty years that were all committed with the same gun. The gun is traced to Dr. Theresa Givens (Amanda Plummer), a former employee at a top-secret government project. Mysteriously, Givens was only five years old at the time of the first murder, and the gun had not even been manufactured yet. Note: The character Dr. Theresa Givens also appears in the season 6 two-hour finale "Final Appeal". | ||||||||
23 | 2 | "Resurrection" | Mario Azzopardi | Chris Brancato | January 14, 1996 | |||
Humanity has destroyed itself in a biological war, and only a few hundred androids remain. Two of the androids, Martin (Nick Mancuso) and Alicia (Heather Graham), have a plan to recreate the human race from DNA samples, but the ruling military androids are violently opposed to recreating their former masters. Dana Ashbrook plays the first human created from DNA samples. | ||||||||
24 | 3 | "Unnatural Selection" | Joseph L. Scanlan | Eric A. Morris | January 19, 1996 | |||
Howard (Alan Ruck) and Joanne Sharp (Catherine Mary Stewart) are having a baby. They must decide whether to give their child all the advantages of black market genetic enhancements, which run the risk of Genetic Rejection Syndrome (GRS). After discovering that their neighbor's son did not die years ago, but rather has been turned into a monster as a result of GRS, Howard and Joanne decide to reverse the genetic enhancement process of their unborn child. But are they too late? | ||||||||
25 | 4 | "I Hear You Calling" | Mario Azzopardi | Based on the short story by : Katherine Weber Teleplay by : Scott Shepherd | January 26, 1996 | |||
A reporter (Ally Sheedy) on her way to work overhears a cellular phone conversation about the "removal" of a controversial author. Her investigation reveals a trail of people who disappeared leaving only a pile of ash behind... and the involvement of a man with strange violet eyes. After a series of chases and narrow escapes, the alien hitman finally catches up with the reporter and reveals to her that the people he has been "removing" had accidentally contracted a deadly alien virus, and that he has been hunting them down in order to prevent them from spreading the virus to the rest of humanity. The hitman explains that the reporter has also contracted the virus through her contact with one of the targets, and the reporter ultimately decides to sacrifice herself to spare humanity from the disease. The hitman corrects the reporter, he has not been vaporizing the targets, merely teleporting them off Earth, to a location where the disease is not fatal. The episode ends with the alien and the reporter teleporting away. | ||||||||
26 | 5 | "Mind over Matter" | Brad Turner | Jonathan Glassner | February 2, 1996 | |||
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27 | 6 | "Beyond the Veil" | Allan Eastman | Chris Brancato | February 9, 1996 | |||
Eddie Wexler suffers from flashbacks of an alien abduction, which eventually drives him to suicidal behavior. After checking himself into a mental institution with others suffering from similar problems, he begins to suspect that there is something more sinister going on at the hospital. | ||||||||
28 | 7 | "First Anniversary" | Brad Turner | Based on the short story by : Richard Matheson Teleplay by : Jon Cooksey & Ali Marie Matheson | February 16, 1996 | |||
Norman Glass (Matt Frewer) celebrates his first wedding anniversary with his beautiful & talented wife, Ady (Michelle Johnson). Norman's best friend, Dennis (Clint Howard), also has a beautiful wife, Barbara. Over the next few days, both relationships unravel rather quickly. First, Dennis walks out on Barbara; Norman goes to talk to Dennis in a park and is frightened by what he finds. Dennis, clearly unhinged & paranoid, claims that Barbara is not what she seems; a strange woman approaches Dennis, begging him to talk to her. Norman does not recognize her, but Dennis does — whereupon he runs into traffic and is killed. After Dennis' funeral, Norman experiences the same effects: he begins to feel repulsed whenever he touches, smells, or tastes his lovely wife. Ady attempts to bluff her way out of the situation but is eventually forced to admit the truth: she & Barbara are aliens whose ship crash-landed on Earth some time ago. They are repulsive creatures in their natural form, but, since they were stranded, they decided to try to blend in and live out the rest of their lives as human women. The aliens can change appearance through influencing people's thoughts, but their ability to trick someone's senses wears off after a year or so. Norman becomes unhinged at this knowledge and is taken away by paramedics. | ||||||||
29 | 8 | "Straight and Narrow" | Joseph L. Scanlan | Joel Metzger | February 23, 1996 | |||
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30 | 9 | "Trial by Fire" | Jonathan Glassner | Brad Wright | March 1, 1996 | |||
The President (Robert Foxworth) is taken to an underground bunker on the way to his inauguration, and he is told that an object is quickly approaching the Earth. This object turns out to be from an alien spaceship, and a fleet of alien spaceships is heading in towards Earth. The aliens in these ships appear to live in a liquid environment. The President is given as much information as possible but usually in scientific or technical language, and he demands that everything be told to him in plain English. The Russians are very afraid of the ships. As the alien fleet grows nearer to Earth, the aliens try using Earth's artificial satellites to communicate. The President asks one of his generals what to expect if the aliens were attacking the Earth, and the general tells him that the aliens would send a scout down to test the Earth's defenses. The aliens send one ship towards the Pacific Ocean, and it looks like they are attacking. The President orders the Space Shuttle & a nuclear submarine to fire nuclear missiles at the ships, and the Russians also fire missiles. The aliens destroy the missiles, the Shuttle, the submarine, and send weapons bound for Moscow & Washington, DC. Computers manage to decode the message sent by the aliens by removing the interference of a liquid environment. The message says: "Let us be your friends." | ||||||||
31 | 10 | "Worlds Apart" | Brad Turner | Chris Dickie | March 22, 1996 | |||
Early in his mission, UNAS astronaut Christopher Lindy (Chad Willett) crashes on an alien planet, but by some miracle he is able to contact Earth and speak directly to UNAS. His lover, Nancy McDonald (Bonnie Bedelia), is able to talk with him. She does not reveal that, while a relatively short period of time has passed for Lindy, 20 years have passed on Earth; Nancy is married and the director of the UNAS space agency. They are able to communicate due to the space-time distortion of the wormhole that Lindy's spacecraft passed through. | ||||||||
32 | 11 | "The Refuge" | Ken Girotti | Alan Brennert | April 5, 1996 | |||
Raymond Dalton (James Wilder) stumbles through a forest in a vicious snow blizzard before finally collapsing. He wakes in a warm and comfortable mansion with a group of people, only to be told that the entire world is blanketed by an enormous storm, and he has found the only safe place. | ||||||||
33 | 12 | "Inconstant Moon" | Joseph L. Scanlan | Based on the short story by : Larry Niven Teleplay by : Brad Wright | April 12, 1996 | |||
Physics professor Dr. Stan Hurst (Michael Gross) notices that the Moon is extremely bright, and he realizes that the Sun must have gone nova with the daylight side of the Earth suffering extreme heat. Realizing that he only has a few hours left to live, he speaks to another academic and decides that it would be better if people did not know what had happened. For years, he has had a secret crush on Leslie (Joanna Gleason), the owner of a local book shop, but he never had the courage to ask her out. In light of the pending disaster, he invites her to go for a walk with him. A whirlwind love story ensues where he and Leslie marry on what they assume is their last night on Earth. Hurst is forced to admit to Leslie what is going on, and she is initially extremely disconcerted and distrustful of his intentions, although he defers these misgivings by repeatedly professing his love. Later, he begins to suspect that the Earth is merely being hit by an extreme solar flare, and he begins to plan for an extended period of survival, despite his new wife's reluctance. He turns out to be correct, and the professor and his wife are one of the few left alive despite extreme flooding, although the story is ambiguous as to the total scale of the disaster. | ||||||||
34 | 13 | "From Within" | Neill Fearnley | Jonathan Glassner | April 28, 1996 | |||
A slightly underdeveloped boy named Howie (Neil Patrick Harris) is the last unaffected person in a small town overrun by a strange madness. Miners unearth ancient parasites, in the shape of worms, which attack the brains of their hosts. While the infected townsfolk lose all their inhibitions, Howie must save his sister Sheila, the only person who truly cares for him. Deprived of Sheila's guidance for the first time in his life, Howie struggles to evade his maddened neighbors and destroy the parasites. In the process, he becomes a hero to the whole town. | ||||||||
35 | 14 | "The Heist" | Brad Turner | Steven Barnes | May 5, 1996 | |||
A bitter ex-soldier agrees to help a militia hijack a U.S. Army shipment of missiles. Instead of missiles, they find a lone guard who pleads with them not to open the shipment because it is deadly. Major Mackie demands to know what is in the shipment and believes that the Captain is lying. But all the lone guard will tell him is "Don't open it." Even under threat of death, Captain Washington refuses to stand down, but Major Mackie eventually forces his will to be done. They open the door and a chilling series of events begin to unfold as an alien life form freezes them to death. The soldiers lose their discipline and begin to scatter, questioning their loyalties. All the while the alien stalks with cold impersonal efficiency, taking out the self-styled militia one by one. The final scene shows a police officer frozen outside of the building. | ||||||||
36 | 15 | "Afterlife" | Mario Azzopardi | John F. Whelpley | May 19, 1996 | |||
Linden Stiles (Clancy Brown) is a wrongly convicted murderer of eleven people and is offered a choice between his execution & cooperation with an experiment. His Christian beliefs do not allow him to make any choice but to go through with what turns out to be a genetic experiment to splice his genes with extraterrestrial genes. Stiles gradually looks more & more like a horrific monster with increased thought & senses. He escapes in what turns out to be an intentional manhunt, so that his captors can hunt him down. When the end comes near for the now mutated Stiles, the tables turn when aliens resembling his new form appear. The aliens & Stiles beam away, leaving his pursuers to realize that they were the ones being tested by the aliens and that they failed that test. | ||||||||
37 | 16 | "The Deprogrammers" | Joseph L. Scanlan | James Crocker | May 26, 1996 | |||
Earth is under alien occupation and the human race has been conditioned for slavery, unable to think for itself or disobey an order. One human, the slave of an important alien ruler, is captured by a small band of rebel humans who try to break his conditioning & restore his free will. Starring Brent Spiner as Professor Trent Davis. | ||||||||
38 | 17 | "Paradise" | Mario Azzopardi | Jonathan Walker and Chris Dickie | June 16, 1996 | |||
Dr. Christina Markham and Sheriff Grady Markham have to investigate a spate of strange incidents involving young and apparently healthy women suddenly growing old and dying. | ||||||||
39 | 18 | "The Light Brigade" | Michael Keusch | Brad Wright | June 23, 1996 | |||
In this sequel to "Quality of Mercy" (Season 1, Episode 13), the ship The Light Brigade is the last hope of humanity in a war against an alien race. In an attempt to turn the tide of the war, the Light Brigade carries a new bomb, which works by breaking down the forces which hold subatomic particles together, to be delivered to the enemy homeworld. As with the original atomic bomb, a very limited number were made, and the first was tested on one of the Martian moons & created an explosion of such power that it was daylight on Earth for several days. The aliens ambush the ship and use their unique methods to try & trick the survivors of the ship into failing their mission through the use of Robert Patrick's character, John Skokes - whose physical likeness has been assumed by an alien spy, leading one to believe the real Skokes died in captivity (following the events depicted in "Quality of Mercy"). In the closing scene, a young cadet (Wil Wheaton) releases the bomb over what he believes to be the alien homeworld. However, it is in fact Earth, and the doomsday weapon is unleashed on an already crippled humanity. | ||||||||
40 | 19 | "Falling Star" | Ken Girotti | Michael Bryant | June 30, 1996 | |||
Pop singer Melissa McCammon (Sheena Easton) is about to commit suicide by overdosing on drugs. With her once meteoric career at a standstill & her husband (Xander Berkeley) cheating on her, she sees no hope. She then encounters Rachael, an ardent fan from the future, who is time traveler & an uninvited tourist into Melissa's body. She tells Melissa that her music inspired her future fans to resist a totalitarian takeover, which will succeed if she dies now. However, special authorities from the future are out to punish Rachel for her crime, as time-traveling and using a host body to change the past is a serious offense. The authorities want Melissa dead and will resort to anything, including murder, to preserve their version of the past. | ||||||||
41 | 20 | "Out of Body" | Mario Azzopardi | James Crocker | July 14, 1996 | |||
Rebecca Warfield (Peri Gilpin) and her husband Ben McCormick are trying to find out if out-of-body experiences can be artificially induced by subjecting monkeys to electric impulses. They see it as pure science, but to religious groups like Family Foremost, it is sacrilege. Desperate for funding, Rebecca decides to run the experiment with a human subject: herself. She asks her assistant, Amy, to help. Amy, a secret religious fanatic, alters the experiment. Rebecca escapes from her body, but, unless she finds a way to communicate, she will remain trapped in another dimension. | ||||||||
42 | 21 | "Vanishing Act" | Jonathan Glassner | Story by : Jonathan Walker Teleplay by : Chris Dickie | July 21, 1996 | |||
An alien race that has no concept of time uses wormholes to find planets with living creatures so that they can enter them as hosts. When the host is asleep, they abduct them, transporting them to their home world where they can learn everything the host has experienced. However, since the aliens have no concept of the passage of time they do not realize that each time they return their host, Trevor (Jon Cryer), home, they are returning him a decade later each time, putting him further out of touch with everything he loves. After many decades of doing this to Trevor, they remove the connection & send him back to the night he first left. Trevor has his life back, and nobody knows what happened, except Trevor, who retains the memory of his experiences. | ||||||||
43 | 22 | "The Sentence" | Joseph L. Scanlan | Melissa Rosenberg | August 4, 1996 | |||
Dr. Jack Henson (David Hyde Pierce) is conducting experiments in simulating time in prison, which he says will free up space, money & curtail what he feels are inhumane punishments. As a prisoner experiences twenty years in prison, only twenty minutes in reality has passed while he is attached to the machine that Henson has designed. A prisoner brought in for the experiment repeatedly claims to be innocent before being put into the simulation. When that prisoner begins to have seizures, Dr. Henson, worried that he may really be innocent & that the simulation is affecting him negatively, enters the simulation to bring the prisoner out within a 17-second time limit. Dr. Henson succeeds with time to spare. However, the prisoner dies from a heart attack due to the shock of the simulation. Henson is charged with the murder of the prisoner due to his perceived depraved indifference over his risky experiments, is found guilty, and is sentenced to twenty years in prison, where he is beaten up by his cellmate & tormented by hearing threats at night from what he believes is the brother of the prisoner who died. Attending sessions with the prison psychiatrist (a hologram), Henson is told the dead prisoner's brother is not in the prison, and he must be hallucinating. Henson unsuccessfully attempts to escape, and he eventually resigns himself to prison life, adjusting slowly until release. However, it turns out that he got the original prisoner free from the virtual prison in time & unharmed, but Henson felt so guilty at seeing what the prisoner was subjected to that he simulated his trial & sentence. A senator is very impressed with Henson's simulation and promises to push for its approval. Henson snaps at hearing this, attacking the senator & trying to destroy his machine, but he is restrained while he struggles despairingly. |
Season 3 (1997)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |||
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44 | 1 | "Bits of Love" | Neill Fearnley | James Crocker | January 19, 1997 | |||
After a nuclear holocaust, Aiden Hunter is possibly the last human being alive. Despite this, for the last seven months he has lived a hedonistic life deep below ground in a comfortable hi-tech bunker, with only computer-generated holograms of his friends and family for company. He even has a machine capable of creating physical stimulation for more intimate encounters with simulated women. The controlling artificial intelligence personality of the computer system is Emma (Natasha Henstridge), who appears as an attractive female. Eventually, Aiden tires of creating ideal women and decides to seduce Emma. Afterward he treats her like the many other disposable simulated females he created. However, it seems Emma is more than a simple computer program and begins to make life difficult for him. She alters her appearance to seem pregnant and begins to control the other holograms to create her own world. When Aiden attempts to reset the system, Emma retaliates by creating a holographic Aiden, along with his family and friends. Aiden finds himself completely alone and, in effect, a ghost unable to interact with the new "real world". | ||||||||
45 | 2 | "Second Thoughts" | Mario Azzopardi | Sam Egan | January 19, 1997 | |||
Karl Durand (Howie Mandel) is a man in his 30s, but with the mind of a child. Dr. Jacob Valerian discovers a method for transferring memories and experiences into another person's brain. As his last dying act, he transfers his own memories into Karl's brain. Karl begins to have flashes of skill and talent from absorbing the doctor's memories. When he accidentally kills another man, he uses the device to transfer the man's memories into his own brain. However, this causes Karl to exhibit multiple personality and schizoid behavior. Meanwhile, he tries to date a woman he has secretly loved for years, with no success, and is forced to kill and "absorb" the detective investigating the death of the man Karl accidentally killed. Finally, he absorbs the mind of an artist that the woman had a fling with hoping that his personality helps him to finally get her to love him. The artist was temperamental and suicidal. The ending sequence shows Karl kneeling on the floor going crazy with a gun pointed to his head. The final scene shows a photo of Rose with Karl apparently committing suicide off-camera. | ||||||||
46 | 3 | "Re-generation" | Brenton Spencer | Tom J. Astle | January 24, 1997 | |||
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47 | 4 | "Last Supper" | Helen Shaver | Scott Shepherd | January 31, 1997 | |||
Frank Martin's son Danny (Fred Savage) brings home a beautiful girl to meet his family. The girl, Jade (Sandrine Holt), looks exactly like a girl Frank once rescued from a top-secret military experiment 20 years before. | ||||||||
48 | 5 | "Stream of Consciousness" | Joe Nimziki | David Shore | February 7, 1997 | |||
Due to a brain injury, Ryan Unger cannot enjoy the benefits of a neural implant that allows other people to tap into The Stream, which is a direct connection into all human knowledge. He tries, unsuccessfully, to keep up with everyone else by using a long-forgotten skill: reading books. For the human race, the Stream has been erroneously programmed to crave information instead of knowledge. Soon, it begins to turn the human race into its slaves in an attempt to locate & process every single bit of information, a process that will lead to the human race's extinction as people stop doing everything to obtain the desired information. Ryan's injury keeps him from falling under the sway of the Stream, leaving him the only person who can stop it. The Stream will not allow itself to be shut down, and it commands the humans under its control to defend itself from Ryan. In the end, Ryan succeeds in shutting down the Stream & saving humankind. Cut off from the mental crutch humanity has used for so long, Ryan finds himself needing to teach humankind the old ways of acquiring information again — from books. | ||||||||
49 | 6 | "Dark Rain" | Mario Azzopardi | David Braff | February 14, 1997 | |||
A chemical war leaves most of humanity unable to reproduce. Only rare couples, such as Sherry and Tim McAllister, are able to have healthy normal children. Sherry and Tim McAllister conceive and become the focus of intense attention from the government. The couple slowly comes to the realization of how important the pregnancy is to the government, and how far it will go to get what it wants. They find themselves in a secret maternity hospital overseen by Dr. Clayton Royce. The McAllisters are truly horrified when they find that Dr. Royce has hidden designs on their newborn son as he intends him to be a permanent ward of the state. | ||||||||
50 | 7 | "The Camp" | Jonathan Glassner | Brad Wright | February 21, 1997 | |||
For the last twelve generations, humankind has been enslaved by an alien race & imprisoned in concentration camps. One woman, Prisoner 98843 (Harley Jane Kozak), dares to challenge the authority of the Commandant (David Hemblen). Her desire to be free is pitted against the seemingly invincible alien New Masters. All the prisoners believe the world outside the camp is uninhabitable by humans. Prisoner 98843 discovers that the Commandant & guards are androids who have received no maintenance for decades and are in desperate need of repair. She mends them from spare parts gleaned from other guards that have ceased to function, and she finally forces the Commandant to reveal that the rocket fuel made in the camp is no longer in use by the alien's fleet, which has moved beyond Earth. He has received no communication from his superiors for decades and has maintained the camp regimen simply because those were his orders. She leads a revolt that overpowers the guards and beheads the commandant. The episode ends with the inmates looking through the open gates at a virgin Earth. | ||||||||
51 | 8 | "Heart's Desire" | Mario Azzopardi | Alan Brennert | February 28, 1997 | |||
A visitor from another world takes over the body of a human preacher in the town of Heart's Desire in the Oregon Territory in 1872. He gives four outlaws a special energy power which they can use to destroy anything they wish as long as they "want it more than anything else." The first to be empowered are two friends, Frank and JD Kelton; after they use the power to rob their ex-partners Jake and Ben Miller, the preacher gives the power to them as well. In the end, Jake is the only survivor of the four, having renounced the power; he confronts the "preacher" and demands an explanation. The visitor reveals his alien nature and explains that he is scouting ahead to see if humans will ever be able to rival his civilization. After seeing what humans are capable of - brother turning against brother, friend against friend - the scout is confident that his people have nothing to fear from humanity, who will surely destroy themselves before they can build an interstellar empire of their own. | ||||||||
52 | 9 | "Tempests" | Mario Azzopardi | Hart Hanson | March 7, 1997 | |||
A spaceship crashes on a moon while on a mission of mercy. One of the crew is bitten by a strange spider-like creature and begins to hallucinate — unable to tell what is real & what is fantasy. Commander Virgil finds himself between two realities. He finds himself shifting from the "bad" reality, where he is stuck on the moon trying to survive with his crewmates & apparently hallucinating from poison, and the "good" reality, where he is with his family, heralded as a hero & hallucinating due to a virus called Ellycia C. In the end, Virgil makes a choice to save his people in the "bad" reality while saying goodbye to the "good" reality. The captain manages to fire him away from the spaceship in an escape pod. As he flies through space, he manages to get a transmission from his wife. As he claims "I saved them", reality shifts again, and the truth of everything is that Virgil has, in fact, been taken over by the spiders, as have the rest of the crew. | ||||||||
53 | 10 | "The Awakening" | George Bloomfield | James Crocker | March 14, 1997 | |||
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54 | 11 | "New Lease" | Jason Priestley | Sam Egan | March 21, 1997 | |||
Dr. James Houghton & Dr. Charles McCamber, working in secret, develop a means of revitalising the dead. After a semi-successful test (a patient is revived but immediately begins a painful deterioration), Dr. Houghton is assaulted & killed in a robbery attempt. He is revived, believing that he has only a few days to live. Fearing that he has neglected his wife, he tries at first to make up for it by showering her with attention & affection, but his resentment toward the man who murdered him takes over. Certain that he will die soon, he takes revenge on the robber, only to find out later that he will live. He is arrested later that day on murder charges and is likely to spend the rest of his life in prison. | ||||||||
55 | 12 | "Double Helix" | Mario Azzopardi | Jonathan Glassner | March 28, 1997 | |||
Note: The story concludes in episode 23 of season 4, "The Origin of Species". | ||||||||
56 | 13 | "Dead Man's Switch" | Jeff Woolnough | Ben Richardson | April 4, 1997 | |||
Lieutenant Conklin is isolated for a year in a bunker underneath Alaska as one of five soldiers in similar bunkers around the world, including one person from America, Russia, China, Africa & Australia. His job is to be a revenge weapon should a fleet of approaching alien space ships turn out to be hostile. The world's chemical, nuclear & biological weapons stockpiles have been linked to create a single doomsday weapon. One of the group must push a randomly activated dead man's switch to prevent the weapons from detonating. Eventually, Conklin is the only bunker left, until he receives a message from his superior telling him that the aliens have been defeated & that he must keep pressing the button until they can dig him out. The scene then shifts and shows that the planet's surface has been devastated, and the General was under the control of alien parasites while talking to Conklin. | ||||||||
57 | 14 | "Music of the Spheres" | David Warry-Smith | Steven Barnes | May 9, 1997 | |||
Devon Taylor (Joshua Jackson), a young physics student, picks up a signal during his work at a radio observatory, believing that he can hear a pattern in it that none of his older colleagues can hear. Taylor's younger sister, Joyce Taylor (Kirsten Dunst), plays the tape & enjoys the sound so much she plays it at a rave. When Devon finds her at the rave, everyone there is infected with skin deformities. All the teens are quarantined at a hospital, but, when they are separated from the music, they all experience severe pain & withdrawal symptoms. With the help of his father (Howard Hesseman), Devon & his superiors are left with no choice but to let the patients listen to the tape until they can figure out the rest of the transmitted message. Later, it's discovered that a dying alien world had transmitted this audio in order to save other planets from a dire fate: their sun had shifted to the ultraviolet spectrum, and all their world's inhabitants would have died if they had not figured out how to alter their own physiology so that they could resist the effects of their changed sun. The aliens had detected that Earth's Sun would also undergo the same change & sent the audio signal so that humanity could prepare. In the end, humanity either transforms by the transmitted sound (developing new, hardened skin) or chooses to remain as they were, having to avoid the Sun at all times since the new sun's radiation would be fatal to them. | ||||||||
58 | 15 | "The Revelations of 'Becka Paulson" | Steven Weber | Based on the short story by : Stephen King Teleplay by : Brad Wright | June 6, 1997 | |||
Becka Paulson accidentally shoots herself in the head while watching a soap opera. The bullet lodges in her brain, and begins to have some strange effects. In a stroke of 'luck', the bullet does not kill Becka, but her severe brain damage causes her to begin to hallucinate that the picture of a tuxedoed stranger on top of the TV (Who calls himself 'The 8 By 10' Man; in the original story it was a picture of Jesus) is talking to her. Under the advice of the 8 By 10 Man, Becka eventually decides to kill her worthless husband, and in a bit of 'damaged savantry', rigs up the television (under the 8 by 10 Man's instructions) to deliver a fatal electrical pulse to whoever touches the knob. Becka in the end tricks her husband into touching it, but as he begins to be fatally electrocuted, she finally realizes just what she has done and tries to save him. All she does is alter the circuit by touching him, and the two fall dead, the victim of a tragic quirk of fate that was in the end far from lucky. Note: The episode is based on the short story "The Revelations of 'Becka Paulson" by Stephen King, first published in 1984. The character Becka Paulson is also in the Stephen King novel The Tommyknockers (1987). | ||||||||
59 | 16 | "Bodies of Evidence" | Melvin Van Peebles | Story by : Chris Dickie and Ryland Kelley Teleplay by : Chris Dickie | June 20, 1997 | |||
The crew of the space station Meridian begins to see visions of loved ones or enemies that lure them to their deaths. After three crewmembers die, the remaining two (including Captain Clark) escape to Earth, where Clark is accused of murdering his crew. Dysart, his ex-wife, defends him by suggesting that the crew was driven insane by an experimental chemical, Soroxin. | ||||||||
60 | 17 | "Feasibility Study" | Ken Girotti | Joseph Stefano | July 11, 1997 | |||
Joshua Hayward & his daughter Sarah awake one morning to find a four-block section of their suburban neighborhood surrounded by a mysterious energy barrier. Sarah finds a badly disfigured alien, Adrielo, who tells her that her neighborhood has been grabbed & moved by another race of aliens, the Triunes. He shows her a way through the energy barrier to his own captured realm and begs her to help him save his people. Meanwhile, Joshua finds a way through the barrier and comes face-to-face with their captors, a slothful race who feel physical activity is beneath them. The Trinues explain that all of the inhabitants of Joshua's neighborhood have been taken as part of a feasibility study into the suitability of humans for slavery, and, if they are found able to survive in the alien's native environment, the rest of Earth's population will also be enslaved. Adrielo's people are dying from a disease that is turning them to stone, and Sarah accidentally becomes infected. Joshua eventually finds her, and she pleads with him not to touch her, so he may not become infected. They return to their own neighborhood, and Joshua explains the purpose of the energy barrier to the other residents, wondering what choice they have other than to serve as slaves. Joshua explains the disease his daughter has been infected with, and suggests they deliberately infect themselves to save Earth from enslavement. After discussing it, all join hands in the church to sacrifice themselves and prove that humans are unsuitable as slaves. | ||||||||
61 | 18 | "A Special Edition" | Mario Azzopardi | Story by : Naren Shankar and Jonathan Glassner Teleplay by : Naren Shankar Excerpts by : Scott Shepard, Sam Egan, Brad Wright, Naren Shankar, Chris Brancato, John Whelpley and David Braff | July 25, 1997 | |||
Donald Rivers, a journalist for the television show The Whole Truth, has found proof that the government & large defense contractors have been illegally and secretly cloning human beings. After locking himself in the studio with only a small crew, he plans to air his report, which is made up of clips from other episodes of The Outer Limits, to the world. Unusually, one clip was taken from an episode that had yet to be broadcast, "In Another Life", which aired several months later as part of the next season. |
Season 4 (1998)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |||
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62 | 1 | "Criminal Nature" | Steve Anker | Based on a concept by : Eric A. Morris Teleplay by : Brad Markowitz | January 23, 1998 | |||
The Genetic Rejection Syndrome (GRS) monster children are now adults who commit murders. Detective Ray Venable (Gary Cole) has a "secret" son with GRS, Dylan, who is harassing Ray's family. Ray injects himself with a serum to temporarily enhance his sensory abilities (more like GRS people) in order to hunt him. Ray does this successfully, only to find out that it was a plot by his son, who placed the serum so that Ray would find it. Ray's son forcefully injects more of the serum into his dad, so that Ray now has irreversible GRS, and Ray transforms into a monster. Ray kills Dylan, but Ray's family is afraid of him because he now looks like the other GRS monsters. Note: This episode is a sequel to the episode Unnatural Selection (Season 2, Episode 3). | ||||||||
63 | 2 | "The Hunt" | Mario Azzopardi | Sam Egan | January 30, 1998 | |||
A group of obsolete androids (a doctor, a miner & two others) attempt to escape from hunters during the beginning of a hunt. They find a way to remove their inhibitors (chips that keep them from confronting and/or attacking the humans), allowing them to set traps instead of merely running away. One of their traps kills the son of the lead hunter. However, none but the miner android survives to reach the end of the hunting area, where a police officer tells him that he is free, since he survived the hunt. In the next scene, another group of androids are unloaded for another hunt. The hunter that informs them about what they are about to endure is the android who survived the first hunt. | ||||||||
64 | 3 | "Hearts and Minds" | Brad Turner | Naren Shankar | February 6, 1998 | |||
All soldiers of a military strike team have drug injectors to protect them against an "alien virus". After a drug injector malfunction, the soldiers slowly realize that the drug is actually designed to cause hallucinations of disgusting looking aliens. The "aliens" are actually humans as well but from another federation. The team tries to make contact with the "alien team" to explain the situation & ask for peace, but their drug injectors work properly and they kill everyone from the team, believing that they are the aliens. The final scene shows the soldiers dead on the floor. | ||||||||
65 | 4 | "In Another Life" | Allan Eastman | Story by : Naren Shankar, Brad Wright and Chris Brancato Teleplay by : Naren Shankar | February 16, 1998 | |||
Mason Stark hates his life. A year ago, he lost his wife Kristin to a mugger's bullet and he still blames himself for not doing more to protect her. And today, he was fired from his job. With a gun in his hand and a severance package on his desk, Mason finds himself torn between suicide and psychosis—between killing himself and killing his co-workers. But before he can do either he is pulled into another dimension, into a world where there are hundreds of Mason Starks, each with a different life and a different character. The version of himself that brought Mason here is a powerful, manipulative man—we know him as Stark—who, in this dimension, runs the same company that fired Mason. Stark explains that he built a machine, the Quantum Mirror, to explore all those different versions of himself, only to have his experiment go horribly wrong because he pulled a murderous version of himself, a man we know as Mace, into his reality. Now Stark wants Mason to stop the killer and promises to reunite him with Kristin as his reward. In this looking glass world, Mason must hunt himself on behalf of himself, in a desperate race to stop a killer ... and change his own life for the better. | ||||||||
66 | 5 | "In the Zone" | David Warry-Smith | Story by : Jon Povill Teleplay by : Naren Shankar | February 20, 1998 | |||
With its deadly lasers and hand-to-hand battles, "The Octal" is a combat sport for a new generation of athletes, but Tanner Brooks (Adrian Pasdar) is no longer a young man. Although he has promised his wife Jessica (Claudette Mink) that this will be his final tournament, Tanner is desperate to go out a winner. Dr. Michael Chen (Pat Morita) has a way to make that happen. Through an experimental treatment that taps the power of the human nervous system, Chen accelerates Tanner's reflexes and perceptions. To Tanner, everything in the Octal begins to move in slow motion... and Tanner quickly becomes unbeatable. However, there are side effects: Jessica notices that Tanner is tired, haggard and his hair is going gray. But, when Tanner's body begins to blur and fade out of existence, Tanner and Jessica must choose between one last moment of glory... their love for each other... and oblivion. | ||||||||
67 | 6 | "Relativity Theory" | Ken Girotti | Carleton Eastlake | February 27, 1998 | |||
Biologist Teresa Janovitch (Melissa Gilbert) is a civilian among military men, traveling on the Resource Survey Vehicle Cortez to Tau Ceti Prime in search of minerals for an Earth that has exhausted its own. Initial surveys indicate the planet is both uninhabited & rich in mineral resources, which could mean million Dollar paydays for both the crew & the company that owns the Cortez. During the first exploration of the planet, the crew is attacked by gigantic & apparently primitive aliens. After the command falls to Janovitch, she is removed from command by her crew—Sgt. Adam Sears, a veteran of pacification missions on Earth, who favors annihilation of the new race. Sears leads a patrol that hunts down & kills the aliens, in the process seizing a golden object that resembles a religious totem. As he celebrates his slaughter, Janovitch examines his victims & makes a shocking discovery. The "primitive" aliens are actually children, an alien version of Boy Scouts from an advanced species whose guardian appears through a wormhole much to the surprise of the humans. Having downloaded the location of the homeworld for these bloodthirsty aliens that would murder children, the guardian detonates a bomb that kills the remaining crew. The episode ends with an alien ship approaching Earth ready to attack. | ||||||||
68 | 7 | "Josh" | Jorge Montesi | Chris Ruppenthal | March 6, 1998 | |||
Tabloid TV reporter Judy Warren (Kate Vernon) knows she has come across a big story when she sees the videotape shot by two tourists in a remote Alaskan park. The tape shows Josh Butler, a recluse who lives in a cabin near the park, bringing back to life a young girl who has died after a fall, a feat he accomplishes by generating a mysterious blue glow. But, she only discovers how big a story it is when her pursuit of the strange young man is cut short by a top-secret military unit that is also chasing him. It seems that the blue glow sent out electromagnetic pulses that knocked out two satellites orbiting 20,000 miles above the Earth, and the Air Force wants to know what's going on. A battery of tests does not produce any answers, leaving the brass, led by Col. Roger Tennent and Major Samuel Harbeck to debate whether Butler is an alien or an angel—someone to be dissected or to be worshipped. Warren does not know what Josh is either, but she knows she does not trust the soldiers to make the right choice. This prompts her to try to save the recluse. | ||||||||
69 | 8 | "Rite of Passage" | Jimmy Kaufman | Chris Dickie | March 13, 1998 | |||
The birth of a child is a joyful event, but for Shal and Brav, two young naive humans who live in a small commune in the woods, it is also a mystery and moment tinged with sadness. After Shal gives birth to a son, the first of the commune to do so, she and the baby are taken away by Mother, a wise alien who acts as a parent to the young people. When the aliens send Shal home without her baby, she asks Brav to help her to rescue the child. With the knowledge Shal has gained from her time with Mother, they break through the protective barrier set up by the aliens to discover a new and fascinating world. It is a dangerous trip, with stinging, snake-like crawlers lurking in the shadows. But, it is also a journey of discovery as Shal and Brav find evidence—skeletons and body parts—that leads them to believe that their real parents were killed by the aliens. They find their baby, and after a fight with an alien, escape into the forest. But, they must grapple with some haunting questions. Is Mother a monster or a savior? And, did the aliens destroy humankind or rescue it? | ||||||||
70 | 9 | "Glyphic" | Catherine O'Hara | Naren Shankar | March 20, 1998 | |||
When Tom Young (Peter Flemming) from the Department of Health travels to a small town in the Pacific Northwest to examine an old case file, it appears as though long ago the town had stopped trying to live in the present. Twelve years have passed since a tragedy killed many of their young children and left the residents without hope, without a future. Many of them are still angry with the medical community for not finding a cure to save the children in their small community. The town's physician, Dr. Malcolm Boussard (Lane Smith) has felt the brunt of their anger—especially since his own two children did not die during the epidemic. Although they were spared, his son Louis (Brad Swaile) still lies in a coma, while his daughter Cassie (Rachael Leigh Cook) has learning disabilities and expresses herself through abstract sculpture and artwork. Through hypnosis, Tom begins to probe Cassie's mind and unravels a memory of 'alien' proportions. | ||||||||
71 | 10 | "Identity Crisis" | Brad Turner | James Crocker | March 27, 1998 | |||
Captain Cotter McCoy (Lou Diamond Phillips) is the first of a new breed of soldier. As part of a top-secret program overseen by Dr. Greg Olander (Robert Joy), General Langston Chase (Dale Wilson), and Cotter's friend, Colonel Pete Butler (Scott Kraft), the contents of McCoy's brain can be temporarily transferred into an android version of himself. This process creates a virtually indestructible fighting machine with the smarts and experience of a human being. But, one day something goes wrong. During the transfer, the real McCoy's body is blasted with electricity, stopping his heart, inflicting serious brain damage and leaving Cotter's mind trapped in the android body. To make matters worse, the interface between his mind and the android body is flawed. McCoy's motor control is already beginning to break down and the interface will likely collapse within 12 hours. The General is prepared to sacrifice McCoy to keep the program secret, but McCoy uses his enormous strength to break out and visit his wife, Holly (Teri Polo). Together, they track down Olander and begin a desperate search for what went wrong. As all the signs begin to point to sabotage, McCoy asks himself who would do such a thing? And, more important, how can it be undone? | ||||||||
72 | 11 | "The Vaccine" | Neill Fearnley | Based on a concept by : Victoria James Teleplay by : Brad Wright | April 3, 1998 | |||
A genetically engineered virus, developed & released by a doomsday cult, has wiped out almost all human life on Earth. Twelve hospital patients, accompanied by the one remaining staff member - nurse Marie Alexander (María Conchita Alonso), are living on borrowed time in the hospital, with food & generator fuel running dangerously low. A soldier arrives with a newly developed vaccine, but Marie learns that there is only enough for three people & that the vaccine requires three days to fully develop before it can be injected into any humans. Marie reveals to the group that there is a vaccine not the amount, a fact she only reveals to her closest companion in the group, a terminally ill cancer patient named Bernard Katz. When two members of the group discover the truth, they arm themselves with the only gun & force Marie to administer the vaccine to them, which she agrees to only if the third recipient is a child named Harry. While she is preparing the vaccine, she turns her back only to see the third dose of vaccine being administered to one of the others, dooming young Harry. Immediately, the three die of anaphylactic shock, leading Marie to conclude that the group survived not due to the hospital's sterile atmosphere but because they were immune. After three months of confinement, the group emerges from the hospital to face the new world. | ||||||||
73 | 12 | "Fear Itself" | James Head | Sam Egan | April 10, 1998 | |||
For as long as he can remember, Bernard Selden (Arye Gross) has been haunted by a paralyzing fear. It started when he was six years-old, when he set a fire that killed his four-year-old sister, and today, at age 27, the fear clings to him like a blanket. Dr. Adam Pike (Jeffrey DeMunn) has hope for a cure and has diagnosed Bernard's condition, believing that, if he can isolate the part of the brain responsible for fear (the amygdala), he can cure him. A series of injections and radiation designed to build a layer of calcium around the amygdala produces stunning results as Bernard's fear recedes. He even starts a relationship with his neighbor Lisa (Tanya Allen). However, there are side effects as Bernard can now use his brain to make others feel the kind of crippling fear that he used to feel. Bernard is also still a prisoner of the past, haunted by images of Mr. Wilkes (Alex Diakun), the owner of the foster home where Bernard's sister died. At a terrible risk, Bernard feels that he must go back to the day when the fear began and discover the truth. | ||||||||
74 | 13 | "The Joining" | Brad Turner | Story by : Sam Egan, Jonathan Glassner and Brad Wright Teleplay by : Sam Egan | April 17, 1998 | |||
When a USAS transport ship crashes & wipes most of an outpost on Venus, Capt. Miles Davidow (C. Thomas Howell), is the sole survivor. After he is rescued by a team that includes his fiancée, Kate Girard (Amanda Tapping) & Dr. Scott Perkins (Jeffrey Jones), it soon becomes clear that Davidow did not escape unscathed. Removed from the atmosphere of Venus, his body reacts to the Earth's environment like a chemotherapy patient. When Dr. Perkins gives him the radiation his body seems to crave, strange things start to happen. Davidow's body begins to spawn duplicate parts: a hand, a torso & more from wounds that miraculously heal. In spite of this, Miles & Kate get married while he is still in isolation, but his time on Venus and the strange creatures he encountered there have had a profound change on Miles. As the mysterious changes continue, it becomes clear that although Davidow did what it took to survive, the price of survival may be exile from everything he knows & loves. | ||||||||
75 | 14 | "To Tell the Truth" | Neill Fearnley | Lawrence Meyers | April 24, 1998 | |||
Dr. Larry Chambers (Gregory Harrison) helped build the colony on Janus Five. He & fellow scientist Amanda Harper (Kim Huffman) run computer simulations that show the planet's star will flash over in a matter of days, emitting waves of deadly radiation, so Dr. Chambers urges evacuation. This is not a popular recommendation, especially among the colony's leaders who include council chairman Franklin Murdock (William Atherton), security head Montgomery Bennett (Alan Scarfe) & Amanda's father, Ian Harper (Ken Pogue). They point out that Chambers has been wrong before; the colony had to be moved at great cost after he warned of deadly volcanic activity that never occurred; and they suggest that his judgment has been clouded by the death of his wife Elise. When that does not stop Chambers, Murdock & Bennett discredit him by falsely accusing him of being one of the aliens who originally inhabited the planet, suggesting that the evacuation plan is a plot to reclaim the planet for his people. Imprisoned & threatened with death, Chambers's only hope is that Amanda will uncover the truth in time to save him and the colony. | ||||||||
76 | 15 | "Mary 25" | James Head | Jonathan Glassner | May 29, 1998 | |||
The Innobotics Corporation (from "Valerie 23") develops Mary 25 as a robot nanny. She is designed not to allow anyone to harm the children, including the children themselves. When the children start fighting amongst themselves, Mary places them in separate rooms. Teryl, the children's mother & Charlie's wife, wants Mary out of the house, but Charlie says no, since he has started using Mary as a sex toy. It becomes clear that Charlie has been abusing Teryl when the children ask Mary: "Why does daddy hurt mommy?". Melburn has feelings for Teryl and tries to protect her; he re-programs Mary so that she now considers that by hurting the mother, Charlie is hurting the children. When Charlie next beats Teryl, Mary breaks his neck. In the aftermath, a human nanny is re-hired, and the spark is rekindled between Teryl & Melburn. In the episode's twist ending, Teryl's dark secret is discovered: the real Teryl that Melburn loved had been killed by Charlie and was replaced by Valerie 24, a successor to the defunct Valerie 23. She had used Mary to get rid of Charlie because she believed Melburn would love her. | ||||||||
77 | 16 | "Final Exam" | Mario Azzopardi | Carleton Eastlake | June 5, 1998 | |||
Dr. James Martin (Brett Cullen), a negotiator for the Department of Energy Nuclear Response Team, is called in when a disgruntled grad student, Seth Todtman (Peter Stebbings), takes hostages at a university, where Todtman claims to have invented a cold-fusion bomb & is threatening to detonate it. Todtman wants the government to bring him five people & kill them. Martin's colleagues dismiss Todtman as a crank, until the sample device Todtman provides goes off with megaton force. Martin meets with Todtman face-to-face to face & tries to understand the logic behind his rage at the people he wants killed: cruel foster parents, corrupt professors & a heartless librarian. Martin tries to reason with Todtman while the military tries to find a way to disarm the device. The government assassinates Todtman & defuses the bomb, but Todman had warned Martin that, just like with the creation of the atom bomb, someone else will soon find a way to create another device. At the end of the episode, a disgruntled student at a different college is shown taking a test where one of the questions is: "Demonstrate why cold fusion is impossible." He quits the exam & leaves to carry on Todtman's work. | ||||||||
78 | 17 | "Lithia" | Helen Shaver | Sam Egan | July 3, 1998 | |||
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79 | 18 | "Monster" | Allan Eastman | Chris Ruppenthal | July 10, 1998 | |||
The four people gathered in the top-secret research facility seem at first to have nothing in common: Ford Maddox (Harry Hamlin) is a former spy, Rachel Sanders (Nicole De Boer) is a nurse, Roger Beckersly (Aaron Pearl) is an Army Ranger and Louise McDonnaugh (Bridget O'Sullivan) is a computer programmer. What has brought them together is their telekinetic ability, a talent that Mr. Brown (Robert Guillaume), a CIA project head, hopes to exploit through the use of Teeks, devices that amplify telekinetic power. At first, Brown tries these individuals' talents out on simple tasks—moving or crushing a granite block with their minds—but soon his true intentions are revealed. Their first real assignment, says Brown, is to use their powers to kill a Balkan terrorist leader and war criminal. Rachel objects to the assignment on moral grounds, but Brown forces her to take part by threatening to send her brother, a junkie and small-time crook, to jail for life. With Rachel on board, the assassination is a success, as is the elimination of a pesky African revolutionary leader. But, the telekinetic powers produce unexpected side-effects and soon the killers find that they have become the prey. The final scene shows a bunch of people dead on the floor (just like in Rachel's dream). | ||||||||
80 | 19 | "Sarcophagus" | Jeff Woolnough | Bill Froehlich | August 7, 1998 | |||
Natalie (Lisa Zane) is a driven researcher, faithfully though dutifully supported by her husband who is the first to touch the odd, amber-like cocoon mass found in an anachronistic burial chamber. The contact has two effects, beginning the reawakening of the dormant mass, and imprinting Curtis (David Cubitt) with the last memories of a long suspended alien who was attacked by primitive men. Each further contact speeds the regeneration at the temporary expense of Curtis' energy. Emmet (Robert Picardo) is substantially more pragmatic and chooses the commercial rewards made possible by the longevity potential evidenced by the now reforming alien (Doug Jones). Convincing the remaining two members of the team, he stages a coup which is eventually thwarted by the alien and a panic-induced cave in. The severely wounded husband and wife, finally reconciled through their shared adversity are trapped and in dire straits until the alien coats them in his preservative, allowing them to be revived and made physically whole roughly 1,000 years in their future, in a world which their wisdom allowed to become a cooperative human-alien world. | ||||||||
81 | 20 | "Nightmare" | James Head | Story by : Sam Egan and Tracy Tormé Teleplay by : Sam Egan Based upon the original episode by : Joseph Stefano | August 14, 1998 | |||
During a war with the planet Ebon, a group of Earth soldiers (Steven Bauer, Maurice Dean Wint, Kerry Sandomirsky, Brandy Ledford, Cameron Graham, Garry Chalk & Robin Shou) are sent to deploy a top-secret device on an uninhabited planet near enemy territory. Captured there, the soldiers undergo physical & psychological torture by an unseen enemy. The prisoners become suspicious of each other when their captors claim they have received cooperation and physical wounds from torture are healed after interrogation. Eventually, Kristin Anne O'Keefe (Sandomirsky), one of the primary designers of the device, is forced to activate the device so the enemy can use it for themselves, but she sets the device to go off. It is revealed that they were on Earth the whole time that they were being tested, and now that the device has been turned on, which was supposed to be impossible. It cannot be turned off, and they have doomed Earth. | ||||||||
82 | 21 | "Promised Land" | Neill Fearnley | Story by : Brad Markowitz and Brad Wright Teleplay by : Brad Markowitz | August 21, 1998 | |||
Years ago, the Tsal-Khan race arrived on Earth to become friends with humans, but the distrusting nature of the Earthlings led to a bitter war of conquest. Dlavan (René Auberjonois) & his family are the offspring of the handful of aliens who remained on Earth after this conflict, and they live on a tightly guarded farm where they must grow all their own food, since their forebears poisoned all the plants during the war with humankind. The aliens believe that the human race was wiped out in the war, but there is a group of humans (some of the survivors of the episode "The Camp") in the woods near their farm. This group, led by Rebecca (Caroline Goodall), includes David (Joseph Kell), Ruth (Jane Sowerby) & a mute, orphaned child Tali (Jessica Harmon). The humans are hungry & have seen some of their numbers die from eating poisoned fruit. When they spot Dlavan's grandson Ma'al wandering in the woods, they follow him home to the alien's farm, where they see how well-fed the aliens are. Rebecca leads the group to raid the farm for food. At first, Tali figures out how to get around the farm's deadly defensive measures, but things escalate & individuals are hurt or killed on both sides. When Rebecca captures an alien weapon & Tali is seriously injured, the scene is set for the final showdown, a battle that could destroy both groups. | ||||||||
83 | 22 | "The Balance of Nature" | Steve Johnson | Derek Lowe | September 4, 1998 | |||
Dr. Noah Phillips (Maurice Godin) is developing the "Cellular Regressor" - a machine designed to rejuvenate an individual's cells & restore youth upon its subject. While creating the machine, his wife Meredith (Lisa Maris), goes into a coma from cancer. Although the Regressor had not been properly tested yet, he attempts to restore Meredith's health by reversing the effects of age & cancer on her cells. Meredith awakens, completely oblivious to the treatment, and Noah embraces her. His celebration is short-lived as the cancer returns a few minutes later, killing her. Disgusted by his actions, Noah's superiors cut off his funding, terminating him from his job. Noah, devastated by the loss of Meredith, moves to a small town where he meets 65-year-old Barbara (Barbara Rush). Her abusive husband, Greg Matheson (Harve Presnell), views Noah with suspicion, thinking that he will move in on his wife, despite their 30 year age difference. Continuing to test the Regressor & inspired by Barbara's words that the world always maintains a "balance of nature", he discovers that he can restore an elderly frog's youth, only if he allows another frog to grow old in the process. Noah's love for Barbara deepens while Greg's jealousy drives him to beat Barbara within an inch of her life. Realizing that Barbara is about to die, Noah decides to use the Regressor to restore her youth & lose his in the process. She regresses back to a young woman (Fiona Loewi), but loses her memory, believing it to be 1957. The now elderly Noah convinces her what has happened when Greg bursts in wielding a gun, forcing Noah to transfer his remaining life force to him. However, Greg sits in the wrong seat of the machine, and the transfer restores Noah's youth, killing Greg. Noah awakens with no memory of Barbara, believing it to be just after the death of his wife. Barbara begins to explain what has happened to him, indicating that they will start anew. | ||||||||
84 | 23 | "The Origin of Species" | Brad Turner | Story by : Jonathan Glassner and Naren Shankar Teleplay by : Naren Shankar Excerpts by : Jonathan Glassner | November 27, 1998 | |||
In this sequel to "Double Helix" (Season 3, Episode 12), Dr. Ira Nodel has his body altered to communicate with aliens who have seeded Earth with their genetic material. He is joined on an alien spaceship by his son Paul and six students, included Paul's girlfriend Hope. When Dr. Nodel touches a glowing post in the ship's control room, both he and Paul are consumed by a mysterious light. This leads Hope and the students to believe that they've been led into a trap, a suspicion that is reinforced when the ship captures two of the students and pulls them through the wall. Desperate to find out what's going on, Hope reads Dr. Nodel's journal and risks her life by touching the glowing post. Her body begins the same transformation, and a strange glowing entity speaks in the voices of Dr. Nodel and Paul, trying to communicate with her. The ship, however, continues to snatch the students two by two, until finally they are all suspended, naked and unconscious in a black void. When they awaken sometime later, they find the ship has landed on a dead planet. Have the aliens who promised that they were part of a great experiment in hope, led them astray? | ||||||||
85 | 24 | "Phobos Rising" | Helen Shaver | Garth Gerald Wilson | December 4, 1998 | |||
Two separate political entities of both Earth and Mars, the Free Alliance and the Coalition, have been in a state of cold war for 30 years. Both are currently mining triradium, a radioactive material that could conceivably be used for weapons that could destroy an entire planet. Amidst fear on both sides, a giant explosion is seen to destroy Earth and sends shockwaves towards Mars, where a Coalition base & an Alliance base are currently situated. Colonel Samantha Elliot (Barbara Eve Harris) believes that the Coalition has been smuggling triradium and is responsible for the destruction of Earth. Major James Bowen (Adam Baldwin) does not believe that they should jump to conclusions, though his credibility is compromised by the fact that there has been an increasingly romantic relationship between him & Major Dara Talif (Joan Chen), the Coalition liaison officer at their base. As the Alliance prepares a strike, James fears that it will only result in a Coalition counterstrike and the destruction of all humanity. As the story progresses at a fast pace, bad decisions are taken due to mistrust & scarcity of information. | ||||||||
86 | 25 | "Black Box" | Steven Weber | Brad Markowitz | December 11, 1998 | |||
Brandon Grace (Ron Perlman) is an ex-soldier who works an office job, but he can't focus on his sales targets or get his life together because he is constantly bothered by flashbacks to an operation he participated in with his old unit, the top secret Aries Team, in which he desperately tries to recover a missing package. Or did the mission even end? He can't say for sure. His military buddy Mike (Chris Mulkey) tries to put him back in touch with reality to no effect. The mysterious Jennifer Rigny (played by Maria del Mar) accosts him repeatedly and may have something to do with the visions that plague his mind. | ||||||||
87 | 26 | "In Our Own Image" | Steve Anker | Story by : Naren Shankar Teleplay by : Naren Shankar, Carleton Eastlake, Chris Ruppenthal and Brad Markowitz Excerpts by : Brad Wright, James Crocker and Jonathan Glassner | December 18, 1998 | |||
Android "Mac 27" kills one of its handlers & injures another, then kills a guard as it makes its escape from Innobotics, the corporation that created it. Mac carjacks Celia (Nana Visitor), an apparently random person just pulling into the facility parking lot. He takes her to a remote, abandoned warehouse, where he forces her to repair the damage sustained in his escape. Using a device that allows Mac to transmit images directly to Celia's optic nerve, he shows her how to fix his systems, but he also shows some of his "memories": archives of past experiments with robots & androids. These memories are pulled from previous episodes that featured robots, androids or holograms, with most clips taken out of the context of the original episode. Celia sees a number of AIs that have gained emotions and/or turned against their masters, deducing that Mac has followed this trend as well. Under the pretense of performing another repair, Celia disables Mac's motor control functions and reveals herself to be a "troubleshooter" hired by Innobotics to figure out how to keep robots from going "rogue". Celia says that she thinks she knows how to install a "built-in lobotomy" that will prevent AIs from becoming self-aware in the future. Mac reveals that he fooled Celia into thinking he was disabled when he was not, and he tells her that he has stolen her retina imprint, which will allow him to use her credentials on the Innobotics network. Innobotics' investigative team enters the abandoned warehouse, finding Celia dead with no sign of Mac. Back at the laboratory, the scientist who created Mac sees the network being accessed by someone who appears to be the dead Celia, and he sees Mac enter, using his new network access to activate the other Mac-class units. The episode ends with Mac strangling his creator while all his brethren look on. |
Season 5 (1999)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |||
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88 | 1 | "Alien Radio" | Neill Fearnley | A.L. Katz | January 22, 1999 | |||
Stan Harbinger (Joe Pantoliano) is a top-rated talk show host with a flair for the outrageous & a reputation of being a skeptic's skeptic. Assisted by his producer Trudy (Cynthia Nixon), Stan takes delight in shooting down callers who claim to have alien encounters, especially people like Eldon DeVries (Alan Zinyk) who believes that his body has been taken over by aliens. However, when Eldon commits suicide by setting himself on fire in front of Stan, things begin to go wrong for Stan. A plan to syndicate his show is threatened by protests from UFO believers who are angry at Stan's role in Eldon's death. Stan finally loses it after Darcy Kipling (Leslie Hope), a woman he picked up in a bar, turns out to be a believer & sets him up with a phony recording of him. Stan assaults Darcy's fellow believer, Moses Saxon (Alex Diakun), and is consequently thrown off the air. While out of work, Stan hears the same distinctive triple heartbeat he heard coming from Eldon just before he died, and he sees glimpses of the aliens, which shake the foundation of his disbelief. | ||||||||
89 | 2 | "Donor" | Jimmy Kaufman | Sam Egan | January 29, 1999 | |||
Dr. Renee Stuyvesant and her protege Dr. Vance Ridout have perfected the full-body transplant in which a patient's entire disease-riddled body is replaced and Renee has convinced the hospital board to allow her to perform the first such procedure on Dr. Peter Halstead. A fitting choice since Halstead invented the procedure before being stricken with terminal cancer, but his rare blood and tissue types make a match unlikely. Renee, who has secretly loved Halstead for years, solves that problem by murdering Timothy Laird, a perfect donor, as he emerges from the flower store. The transplant is a success and the vision of millions in fees dance in Renee and Vince's heads. But Peter is having visions of his own involving a woman, a little girl and a killing outside the flower store. Mysteriously drawn to Laird's old neighborhood, he learns that the people he has been seeing are Deirdre, Laird's widow, and his daughter, Kylie and that he has apparently inherited Laird's love for them. Deirdre recoils when Peter eventually confesses that he inhabits her late husband's body. But that's nothing compared to how Renee responds when Peter reveals that he has had flashes of what Timothy Laird saw just before he was killed. | ||||||||
90 | 3 | "Small Friends" | Neill Fearnley | Tom Szollosi | February 5, 1999 | |||
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91 | 4 | "The Grell" | Jorge Montesi | Jeff King | February 12, 1999 | |||
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92 | 5 | "The Other Side" | Jeff Woolnough | Bruce Lacey | February 19, 1999 | |||
Dr. Neal Eberhardt (Ralph Macchio), a former boy genius gone bitterly to seed, studies brain-damaged & comatose patients, hoping to learn how the brain reroutes itself. Despite having a revolutionary new machine to work with (the Neural Intercortex Stimulation Array or NISA), Neal is getting nowhere. Suddenly, Neal has a breakthrough - the brain waves of two comatose patients, Adam (Aaron Smolinski) & Lisa (Emmanuelle Vaugier), fall into sync while they're hooked up to the NISA, and one of them whispers the other's name. Neal knows he is onto something and tells his boss, Marty Kilgore (Michael Sarrazin). What Neal does not know is that Adam & Lisa have landed in an idyllic parallel consciousness and are falling in love. As Adam & Lisa get to know each other, Neal continues his research, joined now by his ex-girlfriend & colleague Janice Claymore (Susannah Hoffman). Desperate to try the technique on other subjects, Neal loses patience and makes the journey himself. After giving himself a calculated overdose of fentanyl, he hooks himself up to NISA and launches himself into Adam & Lisa's world. He catches a glimpse but is pulled back at the last minute, leaving him more determined than ever to find a way to rescue his patients from the other side. But do they really want to be rescued? | ||||||||
93 | 6 | "Joyride" | James Head | Story by : Dan Wright & David Alexander and Sam Egan Teleplay by : Sam Egan | February 26, 1999 | |||
When NASA astronaut Theodore Harris was in space the first time on September 16, 1963, it did not go quite as planned. Alone in his Mercury capsule, he panicked and aborted the mission when a mysterious violet light penetrated the cockpit & began enveloping his body. In the investigation that followed, no evidence could be found to support his story, leaving a blot on Harris' NASA record & his life in ruins. Now, at age 63, he knows he can never make amends with his estranged wife Madelaine, but he feels that he could clear his name if he could just get back to where he saw the light. When NASA turns him down, Harris is recruited by Carlton Powers (Barry Corbin), a self-made billionaire who plans to privatize space travel & thinks Harris' presence on the inaugural flight of his new Daedalus spaceship will help him sell the service. Harris & Powers are joined on the flight by Martin Reese (Mackenzie Gray), a skeptical tabloid reporter, Lil Vaughn (Andrea Martin), an eccentric fashion mogul, and Ty & Barbara Chafey, young newlyweds who won a contest to travel on the space plane. However, none of the Daedalus passengers know that Harris has reprogrammed the flight plan to take the flight to the site of the close encounter that shattered the young man's life. Note: September 16, 1963 was the date that "The Galaxy Being", the first episode of the original series, aired on ABC. In both that episode & this one, the protagonist was played by Cliff Robertson. | ||||||||
94 | 7 | "The Human Operators" | Jeff Woolnough | Based on the short story by : Harlan Ellison and A.E. van Vogt Screen Story and Teleplay by : Naren Shankar | March 12, 1999 | |||
Humanity constructs advanced military spacecraft, which learn to think for themselves & kills their crews by disengaging their life support systems. The ships keep a small number of humans alive for repairs that they cannot do themselves. Starfighter 31 carries a father & son, but, once the father discovers that he is nothing more than a slave, he is killed while attempting to cripple the ship's computer core & destroying the ship's automated defenses. When his son reaches adulthood & is able to fix this same system, Starship 31 rendezvous with Starship 88, whose single female crew member (Polly Shannon) is brought aboard to mate with him & conceive a child. The male, with guidance from the female, falls in love with her. Both humans are "racked", where they are subjected to electric shocks. When the female becomes pregnant with a girl, she is told to return to her own ship. The male eventually comes to the same realization that he is nothing more than a slave, so he sabotages the rack which gives him an excuse to gain access to the computer core. There, he destroys the ship's primary control systems, then straps himself in while the ship tries to kill him with extreme maneuvers, which destroy most of the ship's aged systems. Soon afterward, the female returns aboard her ship, which was disabled sometime in the past due to age or malfunction. After repairing its drive & navigational systems, she has been able to fool other starships into believing her craft was still "alive". They settle on an Earth-like world after attempting to locate a place based on a picture of a sunset that the man had kept hidden for years. As they stand on a beach, with her visibly pregnant, the two decide to try to free the remaining ninety-seven humans on the other ships. | ||||||||
95 | 8 | "Blank Slate" | Lou Diamond Phillips | Will Dixon | April 2, 1999 | |||
A man is being chased down an alley. He ends up in a homeless shelter without any recollection of who he is, just that his memories are apparently stored in a small box that he is carrying. | ||||||||
96 | 9 | "What Will The Neighbors Think?" | Helen Shaver | A.L. Katz | April 23, 1999 | |||
Mona wants to stay in her apartment building The Clackson Arms, at any cost... | ||||||||
97 | 10 | "The Shroud" | Stuart Gillard | Story by : Pen Dansham & Scott Peters Teleplay by : Scott Peters | April 30, 1999 | |||
A married couple seeks help with conceiving a child. Behind the scenes some scientists plan to use the woman to clone the human nature of Jesus Christ. | ||||||||
98 | 11 | "Ripper" | Mario Azzopardi | Chris Ruppenthal | May 7, 1999 | |||
Jack discovers an alien creature that lives inside women. After a time, it leaves its host body by bursting out of the chest and enters another host which it has selected. Jack follows this creature, trying to unveil the truth. His only lead is a green substance that the infected women cough up. But in the meantime, the bodies are discovered and police are searching for a mass murderer they dubbed "The Ripper". The creature uses this to its advantage, planting further evidence that Jack is the ripper. In the end Jack is discovered killing the alien, while still inside the body of a woman, and is because of that sentenced to a mental institute. His fiancée Ellen visits him to tell him that she is leaving for America. Directly after the Inspector visits Jack to tell him that he is retiring and is going to follow Ellen to America. The Inspector calls America "the land of opportunity" and coughs up the same green substance as the infected women. He leaves Jack alone in the asylum with the message "Don't worry; she'll hardly feel a thing". | ||||||||
99 | 12 | "Tribunal" | Mario Azzopardi | Sam Egan | May 14, 1999 | |||
Aaron (Saul Rubinek) is an American lawyer of Polish ancestry who is obsessed with what happened to his family at the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp and is sure that Robert Greene (Jan Rubeš), aka Karl Rademacher (Alex Zahara), was the commanding SS officer in charge of his part of that camp. Aaron is able to do little to prove who Greene really is or prosecute him, until a mysterious man, Nicholas Prentice (Alex Diakun), starts giving him evidence: a jacket, a notebook & other items which he obtained by going back in time to 1944. Prentice had witnessed Rademacher shoot someone at the beginning of the episode, and he is from the late 21st century, where time travel has been perfected. Even with the evidence provided to him by the time traveler, Aaron has difficulty proving his case. Greene insists that he is not Rademacher, and, near the end of the episode, Greene plans to leave for Argentina in order to avoid prosecution. Aaron goes to Greene's house with a gun, demanding a confession. Prentice follows him there, telling Aaron that he is his great-grandson, and that if Aaron kills Greene & goes to prison that he will cease to exist. Aaron does not to shoot Greene. Instead, Prentice & Aaron go back to 1944 as two members of the SS, with Greene dressed as a camp prisoner. Greene meets & tries to tell his younger self who he is, but Rademacher shoots him, thinking that the old man is just another Jewish prisoner. Aaron sees his father & half-sister Hannah walking by, and, seeing his chance, he rushes forward, snatches Hannah & orders his father to be taken to a labor camp to save him from being executed. Aaron demands that they take Hannah with them and Prentice eventually relents. Later, Prentice informs Aaron that since his sister was believed to have been killed, the Tribunal in the future will allow her to remain with Aaron & his wife. He takes Hannah to their father who breaks down crying upon realizing who she is, embracing her. Notes: 1) At the end the episode was a note from Sam Egan: "Dedicated to my father who survived Auschwitz... and to his wife and daughter who did not." 2) Prentice, the time traveler, also appears in episode 17 of season 6, "Gettysburg", and episode 15 of season 7, "Time to Time". | ||||||||
100 | 13 | "Summit" | James Head | Scott Peters | May 21, 1999 | |||
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101 | 14 | "Descent" | Steve Anker | Erik Saltzgaber | June 25, 1999 | |||
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102 | 15 | "The Haven" | Jimmy Kaufman | James Crocker | July 2, 1999 | |||
A man comes home from work to his seemingly luxurious apartment building. After he shares an elevator with two other apartment dwellers, he becomes distressed, and we then learn that all of the building's inhabitants live solitary, isolated lives with all of their needs catered to through the use of advanced technology. This self-imposed isolation has gone so far that, when an old lady has a heart attack in the hallway, nobody is even willing to leave their apartment to help her. The situation is soon brought to a head when the building's computer control systems malfunction, and the residents find that they must cooperate or die. | ||||||||
103 | 16 | "Déjà Vu" | Brian Giddens | A.L. Katz & Naren Shankar | July 9, 1999 | |||
A teleportation experiment goes wrong. The wormhole it created expands and engulfs the scientists. Suddenly they're back to the day before, but only one man seems to remember what happened. Starring Kevin Nealon. | ||||||||
104 | 17 | "The Inheritors" | Mike Rohl | Based upon the original episode by : Sam Neuman & Seeleg Lester and Ed Adamson Teleplay by : Sam Egan | July 16, 1999 | |||
A man is walking home with his girlfriend when he is suddenly struck by a meteorite in the head. When the morticians remove the object from his head, he rises from the dead. He is not the only one, and they seem to have a plan. | ||||||||
105 | 18 | "Essence of Life" | Brad Turner | Story by : Steven Weber & Scott Peters Teleplay by : Scott Peters | July 23, 1999 | |||
An old woman is given a tube containing a mysterious liquid by an equally mysterious man. When the man leaves she inhales the fumes from the liquid as she seems to have done many times before and is once again reunited with her dead husband. While the world is struggling to rebuild itself from a plague eleven years earlier, such conduct like "looking back" or open displays of emotion are prohibited by the international "Code of Conduct". | ||||||||
106 | 19 | "Stranded" | Steve Anker | Story by : Chris Ruppenthal, Naren Shankar & Tom Szollosi Teleplay by : Tom Szollosi | July 30, 1999 | |||
A neglected boy (Adam Hann-Byrd) finds comfort in an alien. | ||||||||
107 | 20 | "Fathers & Sons" | Michael Robison | Story by : William Mikulak & A.L. Katz Teleplay by : A.L. Katz & Scott Nimerfro | August 6, 1999 | |||
A young man visits his grandfather (Bill Cobbs), who suffers from Alzheimer's disease. As soon as the young man leaves, the caretakers put the grandfather back into a container in a very large human storage facility. | ||||||||
108 | 21 | "Starcrossed" | Helen Shaver | Chris Ruppenthal | August 13, 1999 | |||
The story is a futuristic reinterpretation of Casablanca where a couple is carrying a parasite that might win the war for the humans. The couple flees to the city Archangel looking for a way to escape the Hing and gain the support of a former lover, Michael (Nathan Fillion), who owns the cafe. | ||||||||
109 | 22 | "Better Luck Next Time" | Martin Cummins | Teleplay by : Naren Shankar Excerpts by : Chris Ruppenthal, Alan Brennert, Steven Barnes, Pen Densham and Melinda Snodgrass | August 20, 1999 | |||
This is another 'clip-show' style episode, centering around two men, both of whom are suspects in a murder. But the police find the truth to be much more than they ever expected as both men tell the same story - that they are inter-planetary energy beings, each one claiming to be a 'cop' searching for the other, who they claim is a mass-murderer. Each alien has the ability to swap bodies under certain circumstances, and each tells an interesting story, involving a chain of events from previous Outer Limits episodes. The only question remaining for the police is - which one is telling the truth - or are they both lying? |
Season 6 (2000)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |||
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110 | 1 | "Judgment Day" | Brad Turner | A.L. Katz and Scott Nimerfro | January 21, 2000 | |||
In a television show, killers are hunted and killed by the family of their victims with the use of advanced technology. Judgement Day is produced by Jack Parson and hosted by Stan Draper and Heather Cattrell. The show turns the justice system on its ear by becoming judge, jury and executioner, allowing a murder victim's family to carry out the death sentence on live television. | ||||||||
111 | 2 | "The Gun" | Jeff Woolnough | Sam Egan | January 28, 2000 | |||
A man is looking for a gun and is offered one by a man that does not question his motives. When the gun's first used it fuses itself with its owner. | ||||||||
112 | 3 | "Skin Deep" | Dan Ireland | Scott Peters | February 4, 2000 | |||
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113 | 4 | "Manifest Destiny" | Brad Turner | Story by : Lawrence Meyers Teleplay by : Mark Stern & Geoffrey Hollands | February 11, 2000 | |||
An invisible alien race inhabits a spaceship and causes a salvage team to go insane. | ||||||||
114 | 5 | "Breaking Point" | Neill Fearnley | Grant Rosenberg | February 18, 2000 | |||
A man gets fired from his job as a scientist at a technology company as they do not believe in his time travel theories. So, he tests his time machine himself to prove them wrong, only to arrive just in time to see his wife die two days from the day that he originally traveled from. Seeing himself driving away from the scene of the crime, he becomes perplexed over the situation - was he the cause of her death? Either way, only he can stop it from happening. | ||||||||
115 | 6 | "The Beholder" | Jeff Woolnough | Sam Egan | February 25, 2000 | |||
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116 | 7 | "Seeds of Destruction" | Steve Anker | Chris Ruppenthal | March 3, 2000 | |||
A veterinarian in a small farming town probes links between the rash of fast-growing tumors and a new breed of genetically engineered corn. | ||||||||
117 | 8 | "Simon Says" | Helen Shaver | Scott Peters | March 10, 2000 | |||
A man who lost his wife & son in a car accident several years ago has built a robot which contains his son's memories. | ||||||||
118 | 9 | "Stasis" | Brian Giddens | Lawrence Myers | April 14, 2000 | |||
In a future world of scarce resources the world government regulates the population into two working classes (Alphas and Betas) in order to maximize conservation. These two classes rotate in and out of suspended animation for 72-hour periods. But what happens when an Alpha and a Beta fall in love with each other and never see each other face-to-face except for shift changes? | ||||||||
119 | 10 | "Down to Earth" | Mike Rohl | A.L. Katz and Scott Nimerfro | April 21, 2000 | |||
At the North American UFO Convention, Max Buford has in his possession what appears to be a fragment from an alien spaceship. | ||||||||
120 | 11 | "The Inner Child" | Ken Girotti | Grant Rosenberg | April 28, 2000 | |||
Anne Reynolds,(Laura Leighton) estranged from her mother, haunted by her dead father and terrified of being close to anyone, is attacked, injured and wakes up on the operating table a changed woman. Learning of a Siamese twin sister that was sacrificed so that she could live, the personality of the dead sister begins to take over. | ||||||||
121 | 12 | "Glitch" | Mike Rohl | Story by : Mike Burman and Anurag Mehta Teleplay by : Mike Burman and Ron Greenstein | May 5, 2000 | |||
Tom & Wendy seem like the perfect couple, happy together & very much in love. While Wendy sleeps at night, Tom has terrible memories about being stuck in a burning building with a crying baby. The nightmares, however, are not real and neither is Tom. He is an android, and his "memories" are bugs placed in his artificial intelligence by his creator, the late Joe Walker (Jack Klugman). Walker had originally created Tom to save humans from having to go into fires & other dangerous situations. However, Walker anticipated that his colleague, Dr. Edward Normandy (Victor Garber), might try to militarize the android & use him as a cyber-soldier-spy, so Walker planted the bugs as a way of forcing Normandy to upgrade Tom so that the android could think for itself. Wendy is revealed to be another android that was secretly developed to be based on Walker's wife. By creating Tom & Wendy, the scientist & his wife could live forever. | ||||||||
122 | 13 | "Decompression" | Jorge Montesi | Story by : Brad Wright and James Crocker Teleplay by : James Crocker | June 30, 2000 | |||
Senator Wyndom Brody (Bruce Boxleitner) has just won the New Hampshire primary and is flying to South Carolina to press his campaign for the Presidency. His aim is to have all the private details of America's citizens accessible via computers. Suddenly, a woman (CCH Pounder) appears & foretells his death on the plane. She appears intermittently only to him & reveals that she is a traveler from a new golden age in the future created by the future President Wyndom Brody. She explains that another time traveler had visited him several minutes before he entered the plane and that the future was changed, since the plane left slightly later & thus was struck by lightning and crashed. Thus, a new, darker Orwellian future is created by his opponent. She says that, if he jumps from the plane before the lightning strikes, she will save him, returning everything to normal. As the clock begins to tick, Wyndom becomes increasingly erratic until he takes his bodyguard's gun & opens the hatch window to escape. As he falls to the ground, he is suddenly transported to the street below unharmed. The time traveler appears & tells him that he actually created the dark future and her mission was to prevent it from happening. Wyndom asks why he was saved & she remarks, "Saved you? Who said I saved you?" In reality, Brody fell to his death, and the plane lands safely with his aides & reporters pondering over his behavior. | ||||||||
123 | 14 | "Abaddon" | Steve Anker | A.L. Katz & Scott Nimerfro | July 7, 2000 | |||
In the late 23rd century, an outdated starship is on a ten-year reclamation project. The crew is in suspended animation and awakes to find a mysterious object floating in space. The pod contains the body of a rebel (Corbin Bernsen) who was executed 150 years earlier for the slaughter of more than a million people, and he is still alive. | ||||||||
124 | 15 | "The Grid" | Charles Winkler | Duncan Kennedy | July 14, 2000 | |||
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125 | 16 | "Revival" | Michael Robison | Story by : Chris Ruppenthal Teleplay by : Mark Stern | July 21, 2000 | |||
A tent revivalist finds faith as he battles an evil alien masquerading as a divine power. | ||||||||
126 | 17 | "Gettysburg" | Mario Azzopardi | Sam Egan | July 28, 2000 | |||
Two friends, Andy & Vince, are at a Civil War re-enactment in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania when a time traveler disguised as a photographer, Nicholas Prentice (Alex Diakun), takes their picture, transporting them back to the eve of the real Battle of Gettysburg during the American Civil War. The two re-entactors are initially confused as to why they have been sent back in time, and Prentice tells them that he cannot return them until they have completed their mission, which he keeps secret from them. Vince is taken prisoner because he is wearing a Union uniform, and Andy decides to fight for the Confederates. Confederate Colonel Angus Devine (Meat Loaf) is accidentally transported into the future. Prentice eventually reveals that Andy will shoot the President of the United States in 2013, at a ceremony marking the 150th anniversary of the battle, in honor of the battle flag of the Confederate States of America. Prentice wants to show Vince that "there is no glory in this or any other war." Andy does not learn his lesson and tries to stop Pickett's Charge in order to achieve a Confederate victory. However, Andy is deemed a coward & shot by a Confederate soldier. Col. Devine is transported to November 19, 2013 and shoots a man dressed as Abraham Lincoln, thinking that he really is Lincoln. He also shoots the President in the process though, and the episode ends with Prentice shaking his head. | ||||||||
127 | 18 | "Something About Harry" | Brent Karl Clackson | Grant Rosenberg | August 4, 2000 | |||
Nancy Henninger's teen-aged son Zak (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) is suspicious of the man who rents out her backyard apartment and claims to be opening a new factory for his company. Then people begin to disappear from town and Zak decides to conduct his own investigation. | ||||||||
128 | 19 | "Zig Zag" | James Head | A.L. Katz and Nora O'Brien | August 11, 2000 | |||
The bombs are in place, ready to destroy the super-computers at the Department of Information Technology. Inside, the members of the Syndrome, the anti-technology group that planted the bombs, lay dead or dying. All of them, that is, except Cliff Unger, or as he calls himself now, Zig Fowler. Unger has his finger on the detonator as he negotiates with Pete Yastremski, the head of the department. As the two men talk and FBI agents prepare to storm the building, we move back in time, through the hours, days and years leading up to the attack. | ||||||||
129 | 20 | "Nest" | Scott Peters | Scott Peters | August 18, 2000 | |||
Scientists in the Arctic discover a species of Polar Mites that infest humans and cause them to become psychotic. | ||||||||
130 | 21 | "Final Appeal" | Jimmy Kaufman | Teleplay by : Sam Egan Excerpts by : Steven Barnes, Sam Egan, Carleton Eastlake, A.L. Katz, William Mikulak, Scott Nimerfro, Grant Rosenberg, Naren Shankar, Melinda Snodgrass and Brad Wright "Sandkings" Based on the novella by : George R. R. Martin | September 3, 2000 | |||
In this two-hour clip show, Dr. Theresa Givens (Amanda Plummer) from "A Stitch in Time" is on trial for using her time travel device in a world that has banned technology. |
Season 7 (2001–02)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
131 | 1 | "Family Values" | Mike Rohl | James Crocker | March 16, 2001 | |
Jerry Miller (Tom Arnold) spends more time at work than at home and buys a robot to help around the home. While his family resists at first, they slowly accept the artificial life form, which is named Gideon. The robot performs better than Jerry could ever hope for, so well that Jerry's role as head of the household is removed in favor of the new, artificial replacement. Jerry grows increasingly hostile towards Gideon, but, despite his change of heart, Gideon's hold on the family has become too strong. | ||||||
132 | 2 | "Patient Zero" | Mario Azzopardi | John-Michael Maas | March 23, 2001 | |
An epidemic has broken out across Earth, and most of humanity has been killed by a virus. The virus began with patient zero, a woman who comes into contact with the three DNA strands necessary for this virus to come into existence. A soldier, Colonel Beckett (Michael Rooker), is sent back in time to kill her and prevent the virus from forming. Beckett becomes attached to the woman & decides not to kill her, instead simply keeping her from making the contacts necessary to form the virus. In the revised timeline, Beckett himself becomes patient zero; in his attempt to protect the woman, he himself contracts all three strains & becomes sick. A fellow soldier arrives from the future, and Beckett is given the chance to sacrifice himself when his friend administers a fatal dose of poison. Since Beckett dies before the disease reaches its contagious stage (and the woman never develops the disease at all), the plague is stopped before it starts. In the new history, there never was an epidemic, all of the disease's former victims (including Beckett's family) are now alive, and humanity survives without ever contracting the virus. | ||||||
133 | 3 | "A New Life" | Mario Azzopardi | Mark Stern | March 30, 2001 | |
A preacher (Nick Mancuso) leads people into a secluded enclave away from the temptations of the outer world. However, a few of the residents begin to suspect the preacher's motives, and they eventually find the reason behind the creation of the enclave. | ||||||
134 | 4 | "The Surrogate" | Ken Girotti | A.L. Katz | April 6, 2001 | |
Claire (Heather Donahue) is an artist struggling to make ends meet. A surrogacy program presents her with the possibility of making a tidy sum, but, a few days into the pregnancy, something is not quite right. | ||||||
135 | 5 | "The Vessel" | Jimmy Kaufman | Sam Egan | April 13, 2001 | |
Jake Worthy (Jere Burns) is a cynical writer sent along as the civilian member of a USAS Space Shuttle expedition. Upon re-entry into Earth, the shuttle malfunctions and crashes. Jake is the only survivor and is suddenly incapable of being harmed physically, as well as being endowed with flashes of brilliant insight. | ||||||
136 | 6 | "Mona Lisa" | Brad Turner | John Schulian | April 20, 2001 | |
Mona Lisa (Laura Harris) is an assassin android who develops a sense of humanity. After her creators disengage her fail-safe devices, she meets Teddi (Rachel Ticotin) and proceeds to learn more about the humans she is emulating. | ||||||
137 | 7 | "Replica" | Brad Turner | Sam Egan | April 27, 2001 | |
A biogeneticist (Peter Outerbridge) illegally clones his comatose wife (Sherilyn Fenn). When his original wife recovers, the copy does not want to give up her life. | ||||||
138 | 8 | "Think like a Dinosaur" | Jorge Montesi | Based on the short story by : James Patrick Kelly Teleplay by : Mark Stern | June 15, 2001 | |
The Hanen, dinosaur-like aliens, have set up an installation on the Moon to teach their human allies the secrets of interstellar teleportation. During a test jump managed by Michael Burr (Enrico Colantoni), an accidental duplicate of a woman (Linnea Sharples) is created by the teleportation process, leading to an ethical dilemma when the Hanen tell Michael to "balance the equation" by killing the duplicate. | ||||||
139 | 9 | "Alien Shop" | Peter DeLuise | Story by : Pen Densham Teleplay by : Pen Densham and Nora O'Brien | June 22, 2001 | |
An alien shapeshifter (Alex Diakun) owns a unique curio shop whose merchandise possess strange powers; when a petty crook (Johnathon Schaech) accepts a peculiar wallet, he learns the hard way that money not earned comes at a price. | ||||||
140 | 10 | "Worlds Within" | Brian Giddens | Michael Sadowski | June 29, 2001 | |
A mutant child is a link to another dimension, and a scientist (Joanna Going) tries to save him from secret experimental manipulation. | ||||||
141 | 11 | "In the Blood" | Jorge Montesi | Alan Brennert | July 6, 2001 | |
Callie Whitehorse Landau (Irene Bedard), an astrophysicist of Navajo heritage, and her husband Alec (Cameron Daddo), an expert in space medicine, are asked to embark on an astounding exploratory mission into space led by NASA Flight Crew Director James Dreeden (Greg Evigan). Along with Dr. Louisa Kennedy (Helene Joy), a navigation expert, the small team of four passes through a quantum hole torn into the very fabric of the universe and enter another continuum, a trans-space just beneath its surface. It is unlike anything the crew has ever seen, but, for Callie, trans-space triggers vivid hallucinations & a powerful realization that their presence has caused a serious imbalance in the universal order. Dreeden is determined to return to Earth with their startling discoveries, but Callie is convinced the survey ship's re-entry could have disastrous consequences for all of humanity. In the end, Callie sacrifices herself for humanity. | ||||||
142 | 12 | "Flower Child" | Brad Turner | Jeffrey Hirschfield | July 21, 2001 | |
A mysterious glowing green object hurtles towards Earth and lands in a flower bed on the roof of an apartment building. An old lady who tends to the garden there finds a new flower the next day. As she is trying to figure out what it is, the plant reaches out with its roots and starts sucking the life out of her. The plant uses her substance to form a new body: the body of a beautiful woman (Jud Tylor). Later, a young man (Jeremy London) living in the building meets this exotic "new tenant" and is sexually tempted by her, in spite of his monogamous relationship with his fiancee. Eventually, he succumbs and makes love to her, whereupon she reveals that she came to Earth in order to repopulate her race, needing only to find a father for her billions of children. | ||||||
143 | 13 | "Free Spirit" | Brad Turner | Danny McBride | July 28, 2001 | |
A sanatorium for schizophrenics is plagued by a series of bizarre killings. It turns out the carnage is the handiwork of a restless, body-hopping spirit, the ghost of a man whom Dr. Rachel Harris (Dina Meyer) had been forced to kill during a botched military experiment four years earlier. However, even with this knowledge, Rachel has no way of knowing into whose body the malevolent spirit will leap next - nor what the deadly entity ultimately has in mind for her. | ||||||
144 | 14 | "Mindreacher" | Jimmy Kaufman | Teleplay by : Naomi Janzen Excerpt by : Chris Ruppenthal | August 4, 2001 | |
The sanity of a doctor (Jamie Luner) is challenged when she uses herself as a guinea pig to test a psychological tool that allows her to enter her patients' minds. | ||||||
145 | 15 | "Time to Time" | James Head | Teleplay by : Sam Egan Excerpts by : Sam Egan | August 11, 2001 | |
A woman (Kristin Lehman) being recruited by a future organization of time travelers, led by Nicholas Prentice, (Alex Diakun) is given a chance to return to the day in 1969 that her father died. | ||||||
146 | 16 | "Abduction" | Mario Azzopardi | James Crocker | August 18, 2001 | |
An alien kidnaps five high school students and tells them that one must be killed. They must decide which of them it will be. The five students are: Ray (Zachary Ty Bryan), a typical jock, Danielle (Meghan Ory), the hottest girl in school, Jason (Jesse Moss), a stereotypical geek, Brianna (Kandyse McClure), a devout religious girl, and Cody (Jesse Cadotte), the social outcast. It is later found out that Cody had a gun with him and planned a shooting spree at school. The alien abducted the five students and gave them the ultimatum to force Cody to think about the consequences about killing everyone in sight. The five students are transported back to the time they were abducted, and Cody turns himself & his gun over to the principal. | ||||||
147 | 17 | "Rule of Law" | Mike Rohl | Tracy Tormé and John-Michael Maas | August 25, 2001 | |
A circuit court judge (Dennis Haysbert) goes to a frontier planet that has never known the law or had a judicial system. His first trial is of an alien accused of attacking and killing several humans. | ||||||
148 | 18 | "Lion's Den" | Matthew Hastings | Story by : Matthew Hastings and Bart Baker Teleplay by : Matthew Hastings | September 8, 2001 | |
Coach Peter Shotwell (John Wesley Shipp) used to be a contender. When he was young at Lewisborough High School, he just missed his Olympic dreams when he blew out his knee. While his best friend Jon (Roger R. Cross) went on to international athletic stardom, Peter became coach of the Lewisborough Lions, the school's wrestling team. However, the Lions are now at the bottom of the league, and Morris (Shawn Ashmore), his son and a member of the team, is constantly angry with his dad for his failures. Jon tells Peter about a new performance-enhancing drug called Nuriflex 500, which he assures contains scientifically balanced nutrients that can help the team become victorious. Peter hesitates, but, with mounting pressure from the school's principal & his own son to win, he agrees to a trial run. The results are almost immediate & astonishing. While the drugged Lions soon rise to the top, their startling success comes at a high price. Spliced with panthera DNA, the drug has side effects with horrific consequences. | ||||||
149 | 19 | "The Tipping Point" | Brent Karl Clackson | Paul Mones | September 15, 2001 | |
A project to develop a universal programming language may lead all the computers in the world to link and form an artificial intelligence that one computer whiz feels he must destroy or risk world domination by it. This episode features two alumni from the Final Destination horror franchise: Kerr Smith from the first movie & Jonathan Cherry from the second movie. | ||||||
150 | 20 | "Dark Child" | Steve Anker | Michael Sloan | January 4, 2002 | |
Seventeen years ago, single mother Laura Sinclair (Nora Dunn) was abducted by aliens, but no one would believe her. A newspaper article about alien abductions & her recurring nightmares threaten to distance her from her moody teenaged daughter, Tammy (Katharine Isabelle). Tammy's new English teacher, Marcus Fellows (Andrew Airlie) seems to have quite a positive effect on her, and he also seems very familiar to Laura. | ||||||
151 | 21 | "The Human Factor" | Robert Habros | Teleplay by : Steve Aspis and Grady Hall Excerpts by : James Crocker, Carleton Eastlake, Sam Egan, Geoffrey Hollands, Lawrence Meyers, Grant Rosenberg, Naren Shankar, Mark Stern, Garth Gerald Wilson and Brad Wright | January 11, 2002 | |
Jupiter's moon Ganymede is now the only hope for the human race in 2084 as overpopulation & constant warring has left much of Earth uninhabitable. Space Commander Ellis Ward (Robert Duncan McNeill) must convince android assistant Link (Zack Ward) that humanity is worthy of existence over a game of chess after Link activates the station's self-destruct sequence, believing that the world's governments do not care about peace but only want to extend power. After Ward's colleagues shutdown Link & the countdown, Ward is informed by his superiors in the Free Alliance that they launched a pre-emptive strike against the Eastern Coalition, starting a war which killed almost the entire human race (including Ward's wife & daughter). The Alliance President's spaceship, with the few remaining people of Earth, will arrive in several months. Ward reactivates both Link & the self-destruct sequence and starts his last game of chess. Link asks about what had happened, to which Ward replies: "It was... human error." | ||||||
152 | 22 | "Human Trials" | Brad Turner | Story by : Grady Hall and Brian Nohr Teleplay by : Mark Stern Excerpts by : Alan Brennert, Sam Egan, Hart Hanson, Grant Rosenberg, Chris Ruppenthal, Michael Sadowski, Naren Shankar and Tracy Tormé "The Human Operators" based on the short story by : Harlan Ellison and A.E. van Vogt | January 18, 2002 | |
Captain Kelvin Parkhurst (Jason Gedrick) has proven himself to be the best on previous military missions, and now he has agreed to take the toughest test of his life to prove himself the most qualified again. Along with three other equally decorated recruits – Captain Alice Wheeler (Leanne Adachi), Captain William Hinman, and his old rival, Captain Eric Woodward (Lochlyn Munro) – he has been invited by the military to compete for the opportunity for a secret solo mission. The recruits are tested using a Neural Stimulator which transports them to dangerous, challenging & very real situations through use of clips of previous episodes. Captains Wheeler & Hinman are soon eliminated, leaving only Parkhurst & Woodward to compete for the mission. However, as the tests become more extreme, the line between reality & simulation becomes blurred and winning may no longer be the ultimate goal. |
Story arcs and connected episodes[edit]
Innobotics Corporation[edit]
- s. 1 ep. 2 "Valerie 23"
- s. 4 ep. 15 "Mary 25"
- s. 4 ep. 2 "The Hunt"
- s. 4 ep. 26 "In Our Own Image", which includes footage from s. 3 ep. 1 "Bits of Love", as well as footage from s. 3 ep. 7 "The Camp". These timelines do not match, though this is partially remedied by the android's statement that the footage from The Camp comes from a prison camp during the Second Balkan War.
- s. 2 ep. 2 "Resurrection"
Major John Skokes/Earth Defence[edit]
- s. 1 ep. 13 "Quality of Mercy"
- s. 2 ep. 18 "The Light Brigade"
Alien Infiltration[edit]
- s. 1 ep. 20 "Birthright"
- s. 1 ep. 21 "The Voice of Reason"
Time Traveler Dr. Theresa Givens[edit]
- s. 2 ep. 1 "A Stitch in Time"
- s. 6 ep. 21 "Final Appeal"
Genetic Rejection Syndrome[edit]
- s. 2 ep. 3 "Unnatural Selection"
- s. 4 ep. 1 "Criminal Nature"
The New Masters[edit]
- s. 3 ep. 7 "The Camp" – The last humans are kept by the android guards, simply because the guards are following the last orders they received.
- s. 4 ep. 21 "Promised Land" – The remaining humans must interact with aliens still on Earth.
Geneticist Dr. Martin Nodel[edit]
- s. 3 ep. 12 "Double Helix"
- s. 4 ep. 23 "Origin of Species"
The Eastern Coalition-Free Alliance Cold War / War[edit]
- s. 4 ep. 24 "Phobos Rising"
- s. 7 ep. 22 "Human Trials"
- s. 7 ep. 21 "The Human Factor"
Jack the Ripper[edit]
- s. 5 ep. 11 "Ripper"
- s. 5 ep. 22 "Better Luck Next Time"
Time Traveler Nicholas Prentice[edit]
- s. 5 ep. 12 "Tribunal"
- s. 7 ep. 15 "Time to Time"
- s. 6 ep. 17 "Gettysburg"
USAS[edit]
- s. 4 ep. 13 "The Joining"
- s. 7 ep. 5 "The Vessel"
- s. 7 ep. 11 "In the Blood"