TV on DVD: "The 4400: The Complete Series"

There are a few series over the years who have gotten an unfair shakedown by their respective networks, canceled prematurely while still having a significant story potential in their bones. One such series is USA's The 4400, beloved by its small coterie of fans yet largely ignored by the general populace.

CBS Paramount Home Entertainment today releases The 4400: The Complete Series, which wrapped its run last summer on USA, in a handsome box set with a host of extras. I'm hoping that its sheer weight and heft (it's about the size of the last Harry Potter book) will entice some people who missed this smart and sophisticated series when it was on the air.

Conceived by Scott Peters and René Echevarria, The 4400 told the story of a group of people pulled from the timestream at various points in the 20th century who were then returned to the present day in a great ball of light that seemed to fall from the sky. Returned to 2003, these people (4400 in number) began to display a vast array of abilities, from seeing the future and healing to super-strength and empathy. Assigned by the Department of Homeland Security to investigate the cause of the returnees' disappearance and reappearance (and tasked with dealing with any legal issues stemming from their return), Agents Tom Baldwin (Joel Gretsch) and Diana Skouris (Jacqueline McKenzie) find themselves initially at odds with one another as Skouris doesn't trust the returnees and is fearful of the risk they pose to the general populace and Baldwin--aided by the fact that his nephew (himself the key to unlocking what put Tom's teenage son Kyle in a coma) is one of the returnees--is more trustful of these people and their situation.

While at its heart a sci-fi series,The 4400 is distinctly character-based, exploring what it would be like to disappear from your life and return, without having aged a day (and without any knowledge of what happened to you or that any time had passed), and dealing with the fallout from returning to a world and a life that had moved on without. In Season One, this is seen most clearly via the experiences of Lily (Laura Allen), who disappeared six months after the birth of her daughter and returns after twelve years to a family that doesn't include her: a tween daughter with no knowledge that she even existed and a husband who has remarried. It's also etched on the face of Richard (Mahershalalhashbaz Ali), who vanished in the 1950s from Korea while embroiled in a love affair with his white lover (who happens to be Lily's look-a-like grandmother) and discovers a world in which his forbidden affair is far more pedestrian today.

Which isn't to say that there's no sci-fi action going on here, because that's the furthest thing from the truth. Later seasons definitely play up the science fiction elements of the series' premise, introducing various warring factions in the future who are messing with the timestream to either prevent or ensure a catastrophic event and seeding people back into time in order to push civilization's development and achievements in particular directions.

But while sci-fi geeks will admire the series' logic-twisting storyline of time travel, human experimentation, and mutant abilities, drama lovers will appreciate the care with which each of the characters is developed and given its own weight. The cast is especially strong and one can't help but identify with each of the characters as they attempt to find their way in a new world order that is based on fear and mistrust (much like post-9/11 America). Ultimately, The 4400 is about people and their experiences and the series goes on to tackle such issues as government involvement in citizen's lives, religious cults, persecution of minority groups, and ideological war.

Extras on the box set include an introduction from series creator Scott Peters as he thanks the fans for their continued support of the series (a fan-generated effort to save the series sadly didn't pan out); The 4400: The Ghost Season featurette in which Peters discusses the genesis for the concept of The 4400 and takes the viewer through the series' development (including some areas where he thought the series went wrong); deleted scenes; audio commentary by Scott Peters and Joel Gretsch on the pilot episode and commentary by producers Ira Behr and Craig Sweeney on the series' finale; and featurette Promicin: The Moral Choice.

The 4400: The Complete Series will be released today for a suggested retail price of $99.98... or get it in the Televisionary Shop for only $66.99!

Ball of Light Flickers Out: USA Cancels "The 4400" and "The Dead Zone"

Following a post made yesterday by The 4400 creator Scott Peters on a USA message board, the cabler has confirmed that it has officially canceled sci-fi dramas The 4400 and The Dead Zone.

The move comes after months of speculation about the fates of both long-lived series; the season finale of The 4400 wrapped up several seasons' worth of storylines while leaving its plot somewhat open-ended. However, this writer clearly felt that USA had seen the writing on the wall (along with the giant mural of Jordan Collier) and was putting the genre series out to pasture.

"We wish we could keep all our great shows alive forever," said USA's Jeff Wachtel, EVP of original programming. "But we feel we need to give some of our new shows a platform to grow, and it's with great sadness that we say goodbye to two shows that had a great run and helped create the resurgence of original programming on our network and on all of cable."

The Dead Zone, which wrapped its sixth season, and The 4400, which ended its fourth, aired on USA as part of a sci-fi themed Sunday night block of programming that did seem conspicuously different from its mystery dramedies like Monk, Burn Notice, and Psych.

"We've had a great time bringing you this story and submersing you in the lives of all these incredible characters," creator Scott Peters wrote in a post on USA's message board. "I wish we could go on forever, but the party has come to an end."

To the cast and crew of this underrated gem, thanks for the gripping plots, memorable characters, and unexpected twists over the last four seasons. While I might be the minority, I will definitely miss The 4400. Dare I wish that one day we'll get a two-hour telepic to wrap up the saga completely?

What's On Tonight

8 pm: CSI: Crime Scene Investigation(CBS); Clash of the Choirs (NBC); Smallville (CW); Duel (ABC); Are You Smarter Than a Fifth Grader? (FOX)

9 pm: CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (CBS); My Name is Earl/30 Rock (NBC); Supernatural (CW); Grey's Anatomy (ABC); Don't Forget the Lyrics (FOX)

10 pm: Without a Trace (CBS); The Office (NBC); Private Practice (ABC)

What I'll Be Watching

9:30 pm: 30 Rock.

On tonight's repeat episode ("SeinfeldVision"), Liz returns from hiatus and continues to do battle with Jack, whose latest scheme involves insert clips from Seinfeld into new NBC programming; Liz deals with her feelings about breaking up with Floyd; Jenna's weight gain shocks the staff of TGS.

10 pm: The Office.

On tonight's repeat episode ("Fun Run"), Michael believes the Dunder-Mifflin Scranton offices are cursed after a freak accident in the parking lot and hosts a charity 5K run to draw attention to Meredith's rabies.

Welcome to Promise City: "The 4400" Takes a Great Leap Forward

It's rather depressing to me that the end of USA's seminal sci fi series The 4400 sort of came and went without very many people even noticing. Sure, part of that is what comes from airing a season (or is it series?) finale opposite the Emmys but the other is that The 4400 has long been overlooked by most people.

Which brings me to Sunday night's season finale of The 4400 ("The Great Leap Forward"), which played things rather like an episode of the old Twilight Zone, complete with a zinger of an ending that sort of tied things up in an unexpected way but left the door open for an eventual return to the concept, while also possibly being the very last thing we'll ever see of The 4400. USA, which was always a strange home for this daring, smart series, hasn't yet decided the fate of the series and is said to be in some discussions for ordering a fifth season of futuristic mayhem, but I wouldn't hold my breath.

Sure, there are still several dangling storylines: just what are Jordan Collier's mysterious abilities, which seem to include resurrection? Is Kyle's "ability" Cassie good or evil? Or both? Who were the other members of The Marked and are they still in power within the US government and several multinational companies? Will Maia's prophecy of 4400 concentration centers ever come to fruition? Were the "ghosts" that Maia visited in Promise City really those of her parents? Can Alanna ever be saved from the past? Will Diana and Ben ever get back together as they are fated to? And just what apocalyptic battle looms on the horizon?

In any event, I was happy to see that the series did resolve some of its ongoing storylines: restoring Tom Baldwin to his own persona after his "possession" by those tiny machines, The Marked; forcing Isabelle Tyler to make a decision about which side she's really on (and whether she's finally received redemption); and dealing with the fallout of Shawn's brother Danny taking the promicin shot. That last storyline is what propelled the plot of the finale, a decision which reverberated throughout Seattle as Danny unwittingly infected thousands of people with promicin, killing half and granting the other half with abilities in his wake. That weighty decision--to inject or not to inject--was taken out of the general populace's hands and decided for them, with shocking consequences.

The result? People were dropping like flies: patients at the hospital where Danny and his mother Susan were taken, NTAC agents back at HQ, people on the street. Some would remarkably be saved while others, standing next to them, were felled by this invisible killer. (Never was that 50/50 proposition more visual or terrifying.) One neat twist: that the writers wisely remembered that Diana had been injected with Kevin Berkhoff's experimental promicin trial waaaay back when and it rendered her immune to the promicin infection (but sadly once again left her on the outside of the group and rendered her useless to 4400 daughter Maia).

I loved seeing the NTAC agents deal with their newfound abilities: Marco being able to teleport (after seeing a location in a photo); Meghan has the ability to turn inanimate objects into plants; Garrity is a multiple man, etc. And I guess Meghan wasn't evil, after all. (Though I do wish the reveal of that had been a bigger deal.)

Much was made of the fact that the White Light's prophecy of a new and better Earth (and/or Paradise) would come when a long list of prominent citizens would take promicin, along with Tom Baldwin. The final scene between Kyle, who stepped up to lead Jordan Collier's movement during his abduction, and his father was fraught with tension and peril. Would Tom take the shot, as prophesied by that arcane text that Kyle holds so dear? And would that decision save the 4400 and the Earth... or doom them? We never do see whether Tom takes that fateful shot, but the final scene of the episode is nonetheless haunting in its implications: after Maia tells Diana that things will be better because the 4400 are now in power, we see a defaced Welcome to Seattle sign that has been vandalized to read Welcome to Promise City. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, the future is here. But is that a good thing?

It's an eerie and subtle coda to a series that has been more about the underlying current of fear and dread than horror movie mechanics. And should this truly be the end of The 4400, I like to think that it's the perfect Rod Serling-style ending: open-ended, divisive, and imaginative. If nothing else, it will keep the loyal fans of The 4400 guessing and pondering for the rest of their lives. Unless, of course, USA decides to wrap up the ambitious storyline definitively. Maybe then we'll finally get to learn just what Jordan Collier's abilities really were...

Tabula Rasa: Richard and Isabelle Share Some Family Time on "The 4400"

Richard Tyler is a bad-ass.

That's really all I wanted to say about this week's episode of The 4400 ("Daddy's Little Girl"), which finally brought the much-missed Richard Tyler back into the fold. I've missed Richard and Lily (she, obviously, for much longer) and I'm glad to see that the series' producers have decided not to drop last season's dangling plotline, in which Richard took off on his own after depowering his duplicitous daughter Isabelle.

So what does Papa Richard do as soon as he turns up in Seattle? Why, track down the errant Isabelle, kidnap her, and force her to drink a solution that begins to turn her back into an infant. Sure, Isabelle, er, grew up way too fast (literally overnight) but I couldn't believe that Richard would do something so devious as to rob his only child of her free will and trick her into starting over as a child.

Tabula rasa. Isn't it something we all wish we could have? Some might say that Isabelle is lucky and gets to start her life all over again, freed from the memory of the truly awful things she once committed (i.e., last season) and able to begin anew. Others might argue that none of us deserve the right to forget, especially not former mass-murderers. To remember is to suffer and that is Isabelle's just punishment for her crimes.

My jaw hit the floor when I saw Kyle pinned to the ceiling, thanks to Richard's 4400 ability. Meanwhile, I can't help but wonder is Richard Tyler now a friend or foe? Looks like we'll have to wait until next week to find out.

Next week on The 4400 ("One of Us"), Tom is forced to confront his nightmares about the future, Richard is visited by his dead wife Lily (!??!), and Kevin Burkhoff makes a discovery that could change that dreaded 50/50 proposition that is the promicin shot.

No Exit on "The 4400"

Existentialist Jean-Paul Sartre once wrote, "Hell is other people."

Never has that statement been more apt or more true than in the latest episode of The 4400 ("No Exit"), which shares its title with that of Sartre's most well-known work of literature, No Exit.

The 4400 continues to be one of the trippiest television series on the air, consistently delivering stories that veer sharply from action one week to psychological thriller the next. This week's episode presented an interesting dilemma for the series' diverse characters as one by one, both 4400s and NTAC agents found themselves inside NTAC headquarters during a security breach.

This being The 4400, a series that thrives on paranoia and finger-pointing, each group believes the other to be behind the attack. The promicin-positive fear that this is the first step towards rounding up the 4400 while the NTAC agents believe it to be the opening salvo in a full-blown assault on their base of operations. But in order to survive, both groups have to work together to make it out of NTAC alive.

My first suspicion that not everything was what it seemed to be was when P.J. woke up, slightly more confused and bewildered than everyone else; he immediately seemed to be hiding something. And what clinched it for me that this was some sort of virtual world or alternate reality was when Meghan bit the dust. There's far too much going on behind her pixie face to kill her off right now. (Me, I'm convinced she's evil and working directly with The Marked or is one herself.)

Instead of granting its heroes typical powers like flight or pyrokinesis, I like that The 4400's writers have continued to grant promicin-positive characters interesting and complex abilities (like Kyle's spirit guide); P.J.'s ability was one of the strangest yet: he was given the power to create a virtual world (or "game" as he called it) in which the participants have to work together to overcome obstacles and survive. It's more or less a vastly complicated mechanism to bring people together in a time of division and force them to, well, get along. PJ wanted to bring the 4400s and NTAC together and did. It wasn't hell, after all, but a virtual state of purgatory where both sides had a chance to redeem themselves for past actions.

I still have a long-running theory that for most (or all) of the promicin-positive, their abilities stem from their own deep-seeded issues. Take a look at Kyle's, for example. Poor Kyle has never fit in, with either the 4400s, the so-called "normals," or his father's compeers at NTAC and has always lacked direction of any kind (hell, the kid's body was hijacked by someone from the future, who assassinated Jordan Collier); when he takes promicin, he literally creates a spirit companion that guides him through his mission. The same holds true for Diana's sister April, now working for NTAC; she was lied to by everyone and betrayed by Diana, who stole her boyfriend Ben. One dose of promicin and people are incapable of deceiving her. Coincidence?

But back to the episode at hand. What was Jordan wearing when he woke up at NTAC? Judicial or academic robes, perhaps? Or did the messiah-in-hiding pick them up at half-price at some prophet's warehouse sale? Odd, to say the least. I get that he's become this cult-like religious leader but I liked Jordan better before he started wrapping himself in holy cloth and just, you know, wore suits.

Just when did Isabelle grow a conscience? I'm glad to see that she's been deepened as a character now that she's been depowered (and escaped government custody), but considering that, as a mass murderer, she killed numerous people last season and attempted to kill an entire classroom of children, why did she show any compunction about using homemade weapons in order to escape NTAC? Color me confused.

On a different note, I am happy that the writers are finally dealing with the fallout from Diana and Marco's breakup last season. The breakup was unexpected and completely fractured a relationship that I had been rooting for, so it was reassuring (as well as rewarding) to see Marco and Diana finally have an actual adult conversation (as opposed to the awkwardness in "The Marked"). It's been a long time coming and I hope that these two can patch up their friendship. Ben's supposed to be some dishy catch, but to be honest, I prefer uptight Diana with nerd god Marco. (Yeah, I didn't reveal my geek allegiances there or anything.)

But who do you think Diana should end up? Ben? Marco? Or, hell, Tom Baldwin? Any takers?

Next week on The 4400 ("Daddy's Little Girl"), it's the moment we've all been waiting for as Richard Tyler (Mahershalalhashbaz Ali) finally returns to the series! Just what will he think of his baby Isabelle (who was, er, up until recently a baby) joining up with would-be-messiah Jordan Collier's movement? And why has he waited until now to reveal his whereabouts? Methinks I smell an agenda.

What's On Tonight

8 pm: How I Met Your Mother/The New Adventures of Old Christine (CBS); Singing Bee (NBC); Everybody Hates Chris/All of Us (CW); Wife Swap (ABC); Hell's Kitchen (FOX)

9 pm: Two and a Half Men/Rules of Engagement (CBS); Age of Love (NBC); Girlfriends/The Game (CW); Fat March (ABC); Hell's Kitchen (FOX)

10 pm: CSI: Miami (CBS); Dateline (NBC); Supernanny (ABC)

What I'll Be Watching

9 pm: Big Love on HBO.

HBO's polygamist family drama Big Love is back. On tonight's episode ("Circle the Wagons"), Bill turns to Nicki to get Barb and Margene on board his plans for Weber Gaming, Alby holds vigil at Papa Roman's bedside and crashes a meeting of the UEB, and Lois tries to get back on Bill's good side again.

9 pm: Hell's Kitchen.

No, I don't know why I am still watching this train wreck of a culinary competition. On tonight's season finale, Rock and Bonnie square off as they redesign two separate restaurants at Hell's Kitchen, prepare their own menus, and reunite with past contestants (including a teary Julia). Only one will walk away the winner and head chef at a Las Vegas resort that no one will ever visit.

10 pm: Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations on Travel Channel.

The third season of Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations continues as Tony teams up with Andrew Zimmern for a tour of New York City. Watch as they trade outrageous stories and visit old haunts! Marvel at how together and with it Bourdain seems after everything he put his body through in Kitchen Confidential!

Fighting the Numbers (and the Odds): USA's "The 4400" Panel

I've said it before and I'll say it again. I'm never quite sure why The 4400, a smart, slick series with sci fi appeal, somehow always gets overlooked, sitting there in the shadow of its sister network's series Battlestar Galactica.

So I was happy to see that the cast and crew of The 4400--including Jeffrey Combs, Jenni Baird, Conchita Campbell, Megalyn Echikunwoke, supervising produce Craig Sweeney, and executive producer Ira Steven Behr--returned to Comic-Con again this year to drum up some support for the series.

Let's get the big news out of the way. Two former cast members are due to return to The 4400 this season; of all the casting changes over the past few seasons, I've noticed the loss of these two most acutely. (Stop reading right now if you're spoiler-adverse!)

Returnee #1: it's going to happen in Episode Nine and it's none other than Mahershalalhashbaz Ali, a.k.a. the telekinetic Richard Tyler, who has a reunion of sorts with his now grown daughter Isabelle in Promise Town... Oh and he might not be too happy to see Tom and Diana.

Returnee #2: Laura Allen. Yes, Lily is returning to The 4400 and she's apparently not (A) dead and buried, nor (B) an elderly lady played by Tippi Hedren. So just how is Lily alive and restored to her youthful looks? Your guess is as good as mine, but expect her return to happen close to the conclusion of Season Four.

Random fact that makes me question the sanity of USA executives: Behr said that USA asked the writers to downplay the promicin storyline and then based their entire promotional campaign--including a nifty viral site--around the ability-granting substance. Riiiight.

Speaking of the drug, which members of our illustrious panel would take the promicin shot, knowing that there's only a 50% chance of survival? "I already did," joked Combs, while Campell says no and Beard and Echikunwoke said that they would. (Me, I'm on the fence.) Behr notes that by the end of the fourth season it might not matter whether or not anyone WANTS to take the shot or not. Hmmm, ominous. (Please tell me Jordan is not spiking the water with promicin!)

Then again, it seems as though Combs' character, Dr. Burkhoff, has figured out a way to increase the odds of survival in an upcoming episode and has rigged something like a CAT scan to predict whether or not a person will survive the promicin dose.

Regardless of the outcome of Burkhoff's research, it seems as though there is a definite storm on the horizon and not every character will make it out of this season alive. "It's going to be a rock-em, sock-em finale," said Behr.

Battle for Promicin (and Viewership): Why Does No One Talk About "The 4400"?

I'm going to get something off my chest here, something that's bothered me for a long time now. I'm hoping that you, gentle readers, might be able to answer this question that's plagued me for a while now.

Why does no one seem to talk about The 4400?

There. I've said it. Sure, the series is watched by a rather devoted coterie of followers but it never gets the mainstream press in a way that, say, Battlestar Galactica or Heroes does. What is it about this little series that the press--and the viewing public--don't seem to embrace?

For those of you not in the know, USA recently launched the fourth season of this superlative sci fi drama, which poses questions of morality each week as it tracks the fates of 4400 abductees who return to their lives blessed (or cursed) with extraordinary abilities, the NTAC agents assigned to protect and investigate these people, and the baseline humans who have begun injecting themselves with a substance called promicin, which grants them 4400 abilities (or kills them instantaneously).

So my question to you, my readers, is this: why do you like/dislike The 4400 and why do you think that it doesn't seem to get much mention in press, online or otherwise?

(And for the devoted viewers out there: just what ability will Diana's sister April manifest? And how could that be tied into the title for next week's episode of The 4400, "The Truth and Nothing But the Truth"? Hmmm...)

Fear Itself and Spirit Guides on "The 4400"

If you haven't seen last night's episode of The 4400 ("Fear Itself"), do yourself a favor and stop reading now.

As for the rest of us, let me offer a big sigh of relief and say, Cassie (Tristin Leffler) was Kyle's ability after all!

It looks like several readers of this blog were correct when they surmised that the enigmatic Cassie--who seemed to be feeding the oft-misused Kyle Baldwin some rather interesting facts and theories over the last two weeks--was in fact Kyle's new found 4400 ability, thanks to his dose of promicin.

Whether Kyle will retain this ability (more on that in a second) or whether Jordan will soon rip it from him remains to be discovered. Regardless, I think it's a brilliant twist in a series that has already proven itself to be unpredictable and dangerous. I was hoping it wouldn't be another mind-trick from the future (god knows we've seen that enough), but rather a device to further Kyle's character and bring about a major plot twist in the process.

I'm a little confused as to what exactly Kyle's power is though. Cassie is somehow the embodiment of this power, a sort of red-haired, artistically-talented spirit guide (if we believe Kyle to be the shaman prophesied by the White Light) or a manifestation of his fears/desires/beliefs? Is she his superego, his id, or his inner demon? Has someone on the staff of The 4400 been reading a little too much Philip Pullman?

I'm not sure where I weigh in on this one, but suffice it to say I do think that she is propelling Kyle towards something, whether he wants to go there or not. Kyle must have half-believed the promicin overdose would have brought Shawn out of his coma otherwise he wouldn't have listened to Cassie. But at the same time, Cassie seems to know many, many things (i.e., the existence of White Light and the prophecy) that Kyle couldn't possibly know. So is she what she claims to be or is she something far more dangerous?

This being The 4400, I'd probably opt for the latter but regardless of who or what Cassie turns out to be, I'm just as hooked on this series as ever.

Next week on The 4400 ("Audrey Parker's Come and Gone"), when a promicin-positive woman with a new 4400 ability to astrally project from her body is murdered, she must use her ability to lead Diana to her killer, while Shawn decides to begin using his healing ability again and reopens the 4400 Center.

Messiah Envy: "The 4400" Returns

I'm always slightly baffled by the fact that The 4400, which returned to the airwaves last night with its fourth season premiere, is on USA. It seems more fitting that the series would air on sister network Sci Fi (where it has its second window, from time to time) than on the same network that brings us, say, Monk and Psych.

In any event, last night's season premiere of The 4400 ("The Wrath of Graham") pushed the story along and introduced us to some new characters while dealing with the fallout from last season, where prophet/lunatic Jordan Collier (Billy Campbell), newly returned from the dead, decided to begin handing out promicin to anyone who wanted it. Meaning that anyone on the street could suddenly manifest a 4400 ability. Or, you know, drop dead, as the stuff has a 50/50 survival rate.

One of the ongoing themes of the series has been the battle between the haves and the have-nots, though those definitions have changed as the series went on. Some returnees wanted to return to their old lives as though nothing had changed since their abductions, jealous at the lives of the baseline humans around them. The 4400 were marginalized, objects of fear and loathing. But Jordan's decision has changed all of that. After constructing a public persona for himself before being killed, Jordan has shifted the position of the 4400 in a way that no one could have anticipated; not just as celebrities or heroes, but iconic representations of man in God's image. And now anyone can achieve that position, with a single dose of promicin.

It's no surprise then that two of the series' most malcontented characters--Kyle Baldwin (Chad Faust) and April Skouris (Natasha Gregson Wagner)--were seen at the end of Season Three about to administer a potentially fatal shot of promicin; if anyone was in dire need of a new perspective/reason to live, it's these two.

When Season Four begins, April's fate is still unclear. She hasn't been heard from in months, least of all by her sister Diana Skouris (Jacqueline McKenzie), ex-NTAC agent now living in Spain with her adopted 4400 daughter Maia (Conchita Campbell) and boyfriend Ben (Brennan Elliott). Diana's lured back into the NTAC fold with the promise of assistance in tracking down April, who has turned up on a list of people with promicin. Kyle, meanwhile, has just returned to Seattle after a stint of traveling only to find his father Tom Baldwin (Joel Gretsch) a crushed, wounded man, still holding out hope that the missing Alana (Karina Lombard) will return to him. Kyle DID take the promicin shot, we learn, but so far has yet to manifest any abilities. (Hmmm, make that a rather big SO FAR.)

What's going on with everyone else? Shawn (Patrick Flueger) is still in a coma, following the attack on him by ex-fiancee Isabelle Tyler (Megalyn Echikunwoke), who remains in federal custody as the government determines just what to do with the psychotic would-be destroyer of the 4400. Jordan is in hiding with Kevin Burkhoff (Jeffrey Combs) and schizophrenic Tess (Summer Glau), who is quickly unraveling at the seams. It's only a matter of time before Jordan is found as Tess' power is the only thing that is keeping the conspirators hidden. No sign of Richard Tyler (Mahershalalhashbaz Ali), though; but the fact that his loooooong name has noticeably disappeared from the opening credits makes me think we won't be seeing him anytime soon, sadly. NTAC Director Nina Jarvis (Samantha Ferris) is gone too; there's a new NTAC director, in fact: Megan Doyle (Jenni Baird), a blonde former think-tank member with a penchant for hanging up La Dolce Vita posters in her office to tick off her subordinates.

I thought that the case this week was an interesting one. A maladjusted youth (seeing a theme here) named Graham (Thank You For Smoking's Cameron Bright) takes a shot of promicin in the hopes of changing his lame suburban life and discovers that the promicin has made him into a god, one to be worshipped by the classmates who humiliated him and the girl of his dreams (who quickly offers up herself as a willing, er, sacrifice). Graham quickly seizes control of his Seattle suburb, setting up a fiefdom of converted worshippers (all dressed in his trademark black hoodie) who are more than willing to do his bidding, but Graham has bigger plans: he wants the world. The kid quickly takes over the military officers stationed outside his kingdom, goes on television to spread the Word of Graham, and sets his sights on taking down Jordan Collier.

We've always wondered just what Jordan's 4400 ability is and the series' producers have teased us with just enough information over the years. Is it an inability to die? To resurrect himself? Last night's episode lay down another piece of the puzzle as Jordan seemingly has the ability to draw a baseline human's promicin out of them and into himself, effectively robbing them of their abilities. He single-handedly takes down Graham with a touch, absorbing the kid's promicin into himself. Hmmm. I'm glad this ability doesn't affect the true 4400s, just the dosing humans, but it has some interesting practical applications and makes Jordan even more powerful than I had suspected.

Just who is Cassie, the mysterious artist who strikes up a series of conversations with Kyle? I'm very suspicious of her motives and why she's suddenly made contact with Kyle. He seems to be smitten with her until she suggests that Kyle overdose Shawn with promicin, as a possible means of waking him up from his coma. Hmmm. Her advice works a little too well for comfort as Shawn seems to flatline and then regains consciousness. Just how did Cassie know that would work? Is she a conduit to the Future? Or something else entirely different? I don't trust her a jot but Kyle's already fallen under her spell. (Did I mention how happy I am that Kyle is back? He's one of my favorite characters and obviously will have a big part to play this season.)

As for Alana, Tom has hit a dead end, until Megan tells him that Isabelle Tyler is now allowed to see visitors and she may have information about where Alana is, given her connection to the future. I'm very happy that the producers are keeping Isabelle around and that they have a gameplan for her, following her powers being taken away by her father Richard last season; just what that plan is I'm not entirely sure yet but I wouldn't discount this she-wolf from being the harbinger of doom that everyone makes her out to be. LOVED the reveal at the episode's end about just what happened to Alana as Tom discovers a 19th century French painting at the museum entitled "Alana in Repose," featuring, you betcha, his missing Alana.

That the Future would send her back in time like that definitely makes me think that they are mightily pissed off at Tom Baldwin and this is punishment for failing to kill Isabelle. And I, for one, can't wait to see what the Future throws at them next.

Next week on The 4400 ("Fear Itself"), Tom and Diana race to find a 4400 with the ability to bring people's fears to life, while Kyle's mysterious new friend Cassie leads him to a book containing a prophecy about Jordan Collier.

What's On Tonight

8 pm: Creature Comforts/The New Adventures of Old Christine (CBS); Deal or No Deal (NBC); Everybody Hates Chris/All of Us (CW); Wife Swap (ABC); The Simpsons/American Dad (FOX)

9 pm: Two and a Half Men/How I Met Your Mother (CBS); Age of Love (NBC); Girlfriends/The Game (CW); Ex-Wives Club (ABC); Hell's Kitchen (FOX)

10 pm: CSI: Miami (CBS); Dateline (NBC); Supernanny (ABC)

What I'll Be Watching

8 pm: Creature Comforts.

On this week's installment of the US adaptation ("Winter; The Zoo"), animals talk about life behind bars (ahem, the zoo) and what they do during the winter months.

9 pm: Big Love on HBO.

HBO's polygamist family drama Big Love is back. On tonight's episode ("Writing on the Wall"): Bill is forced to rethink the latest Home Plus advertising campaign when a billboard is defaced with anti-polygamist graffiti; Wendy pays Barb a visit; the family forgets Nicki's anniversary; Roman makes his move to divide and conquer the Henrickson clan by forcing Joey to betray Bill.

9 pm: Hell's Kitchen.

No, I don't know why I am still watching this train wreck of a culinary competition. On tonight's installment, the teams must switch gears as they prepare a breakfast service for army personnel, while one would-be chef is taken ill (gee, Aaron?).

Promicin Time: "The 4400" Returns This June

Is it just me or does it seem like forever since we checked in with the returnees over on The 4400? (Was it only just last summer? Seems like a lifetime ago.)

Fortunately, USA Network today announced a return date for the time travel series, set to enter its fourth season. Mark your calendars for June 17th at 9 pm, when Season Four of The 4400 kicks off on Sunday nights (making the separation from Battlestar Galactica a wee bit easier).

As previously announced, Billy Campbell will return to the series on a full-time basis as the enigmatic Jordan Collier, joining fellow stars Joel Gretsch, Jacqueline McKenzie, Patrick Flueger, Conchita Campbell, Megalyn Echikunwoke, and Chad Faust.

When last we saw the returnees, Jordan had stolen the stockpile of promicin and planned to distribute it to anyone who wanted to become a 4400. One such person was Tom Baldwin's son son Kyle (Faust) and Diana's sister (Natasha Gregson Wagner), both of whom seem poised to inject themselves with that unpredictable chemical.

I don't need Maia to tell me that I cannot wait for June 17th!

Promicin Exchange: Sinners and Saints on "The 4400"

Plus ca change, plus ce la meme chose. The more things change, as they say...

I can't believe that this season of USA's abductee drama The 4400 has come and gone already. I spent the entire summer catching up on what has now become one of my favorite shows (though I sorely miss Lily and Kyle, but more on that in a bit) and can't believe I've reached the end of the road... for now anyway. I already miss Tom Baldwin (Joel Gretsch) and Diana Skouris (Jacqueline McKenzie) and I don't know about you but that ending made me a little... weepy. (In the most manly way, of course.) Putting aside that three-hanky ending, I would be remiss if I didn't bring up some of the momentous, um, moments in this week's finale ("Fifty-Fifty").

I love the little 4400 cabal created by Jordan (Billy Campbell). Or at least its inner circle comprised of Jordan, Tess (Firefly's Summer Glau, here magnificently lucid), and Kevin Burkhoff (Jeffrey Combs). This little troika, I think, has the potential to become next season's power villains. Or heroes. Depending on your point of view and definition of "grey." Speaking of which, Jordan is totally off his rocker. At least, I think so.

One of the series' strengths has been its knack at keeping you guessing as to the motivations and machinations of its most enigmatic character, Jordan Collier, who has transformed from ruthless capitalist to cult leader to Messiah, who might just be the savior of the so-called 4400... or their damnation. (Jesus? Or Judas? Take your pick.) Was he resurrected to save humanity or end it altogether? And how exactly was he resurrected? (And which future faction wanted him dead?) And better still: what exactly is Jordan's 4400 ability? It was a fantastic twist that Jordan went after the promicin itself and plans to distribute the entire stockpile to any willing human volunteers. Of course there is that pesky fifty-fifty chance that volunteers will develop abilities... or they'll die within 48 hours.

I think I'd opt not to take the promicin, even if a diluted version seems to have had no permanent effects on mad scientist Kevin Burkhoff, the "father" of 4400 technology. But Devon wasn't so lucky. The first volunteer and president of the I Heart Jordan Collier Fan Club, Devon ends up having a massive aneurysm and dies in Shawn's arms as even his healing abilities can't save her. Poor, poor Devon, going from bedding Jordan to becoming his first sacrifice. I've missed seeing her this season and think that she should have become a larger part of the show, becoming Shawn's right-hand, er, woman.

Diana's sister April (Pasadena's Natasha Gregson-Wagner) seems to have no such qualms about taking the promicin, especially after Diana stole her boyfriend Ben (Brennan Elliott). Jordan's whole plan hinges on the fact that the volunteers are lost souls that he's saving and offering a second chance at life as 4400s and no one seems to be quite as lost as April. Other than Kyle Baldwin (Chad Faust), that is. I can only hope that Kyle's presence at the end of the episode signifies his return to the series (he's sorely missed). That shot of him holding a syringe containing promicin makes me believe that he injects himself; he was almost a 4400 (no thanks to glory-hog Shawn) and has been used and abused by nearly everyone since he emerged from his coma in Season One. Kyle as a willing 4400 just makes sense. And it also puts him squarely on the opposite side of a battle from dear ol' dad, Tom. The lines of combat are swiftly being drawn...

Speaking of combat, I am glad that Tom had the stones to finally take down Isabelle (albeit in a less-than-permanent way). While I wish that Isabelle's arc from naive insta-adult to psychotic would-be child-killer was a bit smoother, I think that the end result was worth a little choppiness. Tom does his best to take her down but it's Richard (Mahershalalhashbaz Ali)--using his newfound telekinetic ability--who administers that mysterious future injection into his beloved (and freaky) daughter. And then Tom hesitates for a second before shooting her. Isabelle's powers may be gone (for now, anyway) but it doesn't mean that she's any less dangerous than before. If anything, she now truly has nothing holding her back from destroying the 4400. Not even Shawn (Patrick Flueger), whom she ruthlessly put into a coma after "interrogating" him at Dennis Ryland (Peter Coyote)'s behest. I can only wonder what Lily would have done and who she would have supported, given this turn of events. (Something tells me that she would have sided with Isabelle, even though she's clearly EVIL.)

After Isabelle's attack on the 4400 Center, where she nearly killed everyone inside (including the cutest little precog ever, Maia), Diana decides that she's going to leave the Pacific Northwest and head someplace safer. Namely Spain. Ben has been offered a job there and Diana is taking Maia (Conchita Campbell) away from the madness of Jordan, Isabelle, Dennis Ryland, and the 4400s. She and Tom have a truly bittersweet moment on the steps of his house as she says goodbye and I couldn't help but get a little teary... especially as Diana has truly grown on me in the last three seasons of the show. I may have thought she was a "wet blanket" originally, but she has become the heart and soul of The 4400. But fret not, Diana and Maia will be back next season, though I had no idea that Maia's heart-breaking prediction about Alana would already come true...

With Shawn out of commission and Kyle wandering the country, the only family Tom truly has left (discounting, yes, the sister and kooky nephew) is his girlfriend Alana (Karina Lombard). United by an eight-year relationship they had in an alternate reality of her creation (yes, you read that correctly), Alana and Tom have had their ups and downs (doesn't help your relationship when your girlfriend is a fugitive), but no sooner does Tom say goodbye to partner and friend Diana then Alana is disappeared (again!) but a shimmering ball of light that whisks her off of her suburban street into the ether. Why has she been taken again? By whom? And for what purpose? Tom was able to bring Maia back into the timeline before, but something tells me that the future is not going to help him on this one. I'm curious as to why Alana was taken at this moment and whether or not Tom (or the audience) will be seeing her next season. I hope so because I don't want Tom to become a dour loner again...

But then again, the more things change, the more they stay the same. Even for Tom Baldwin.

What's On Tonight

8 pm: Big Brother: All-Stars (CBS); Fear Factor (NBC); Gilmore Girls (WB); According to Jim/According to Jim (ABC); Celebrity Duets (FOX; 8-10 pm); Major League Baseball (UPN)

9 pm: Rock Star: Supernova (CBS); Law & Order: Criminal Intent (NBC); Gilmore Girls (WB); According to Jim/According to Jim (ABC)

10 pm: 48 Hours (CBS); Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (NBC); Primetime (ABC)

What I'll Be Watching

9 pm: Eureka on Sci-Fi.

The whimsical new sci-fi drama that's more Northern Exposure than Stargate. On tonight's episode ("Blink"), Zoe meets Allison's son (remember him?) while Stark pits two research teams against one another. Like you'd expect anything less from him...

11 pm: Love Soup on BBC America. (10 pm ET)

The whimsical British romantic drama, starring Black Books' Tamsin Greig and Lois & Clark's Michael Landes and written by Jonathan Creek creator David Renwick, returns with another new installment tonight. In tonight's episode ("Take Five"), Alice's neighbor develops a crush on her, but he already has a live-in girlfriend; meanwhile, Gil arranges a date with a fellow writer.

USA Picks Up Fourth Season of "The 4400"

The announcement is official. The returnees will be, well, returning.

As alluded to earlier today by yours truly, USA Network has ordered a fourth season of The 4400 consisting of thirteen one-hour episodes. The series is scheduled to return to USA Network in summer 2007 with production slated to begin in Vancouver early next year. The current season (the series' third) wraps up on Sunday at 9 pm.

"This show continues to thrive creatively from year to year," said USA's executive vice president of original programming Jeff Wachtel, who made the announcement. "We're looking forward to another season filled with intriguing characters, unique twists and incredibly suspenseful storylines."

And there you have it. I'll be tuning in to see The 4400's season finale on Sunday. That is, unless I'm somehow able to obtain a copy of the finale a little earlier...

"4400" Reasons Why I Love This Show

Well, okay, maybe not 4400 reasons...

Every once in a while, a few series turn up that I wish I watched, but because of scheduling or time constraints (my televisionary obsessions are legion) or lack of space on my TiVo, I just don't get around to watching. USA's fantastic drama The 4400 was one of those series. You'll notice the past tense there.

Fortunately, I have a friend (she knows who she is) who usually beats me senseless until I finally give in and begin to watch the neglected series in question. Nine times out of ten do I end up falling in love with the program. She was right about Battlestar Galactica (now easily one of my favorite series ever) and she was right about The 4400 as well. I bow before her televisionary tastes.

I recently sped through the first two seasons of The 4400 over the past few weeks, hoping to catch up to the general populace's place in the third season. While I haven't quite gotten there quite yet, I did manage to reach the two-hour season premiere of Season Three last night. (Whew.)

For those of you who aren't watching--and after this, you've got no excuse as the first two seasons are available on DVD--The 4400 is a unique twist on that familiar alien abduction series. Over the last century, people were taken from their quotidian lives, in what seemed like a random pattern. A little girl from the 1940s, a soldier in the Korean War, an insurance salesman. But here's the twist: they weren't kidnapped by aliens, but by other humans from the future. And 4400 of them (hence that wacky numerical title) were returned to the present day in a great ball of light, sent back to prevent a great tragedy in mankind's future. Not one of them had aged a day, but many of them were returned with superhuman abilities: the power to see the future, to heal, to kill.

That mysterious ball of light deposited these travellers in the Pacific Northwest and the 4400 quickly became the responsibility of the Seattle branch of the National Threat Assessment Command (NTAC), who quickly took them into quarantine while they decided what to do with these returnees. Two field agents were assigned the task of monitoring the 4400 and investigating any crimes committed against (or by) these returnees. Agent Tom Baldwin (Joel Gretsch) has a personal stake in this ongoing investigation: his nephew Shawn (Patrick Flueger) is one of those returnees (gifted with the power to heal and to kill) and the "abduction" that took Shawn also left Baldwin's son Kyle (Chad Faust) in a three-year-long coma. Baldwin is assigned a partner in Agent Diana Skouris (Jacqueline McKenzie), a former scientist drafted into the field who plays yin to Baldwin's yang.

Eventually released into the general public, some returnees attempt to go back to their old lives, with mixed results, while others fall under the spell of the charismatic multimillionaire Jordan Collier (Billy Campbell), an abductee-turned-cult leader who created The 4400 Center, a refuge for any returnee, which quickly turned into a powder keg of unrest and hokey mysticism.

And that's when everything starts to get really interesting. I won't get into the details because I don't want to give away any more deliciously intense plot twists, but let's just say that they involve the creation of alternate universes, assassination attempts, possession, terrorism, and a really creepy 4400 with the ability to spread a fatal plague through blisters on her hands and another who can turn men into adrenaline-fueled killing machines by emitting a pulse. Seriously.

However, The 4400 is not a show about people's wacky abilities and the way they use them to fight crime or gain profits or become superheroes. It might be a series that on the surface seems like science-fiction, but it's most definitely grounded in the real world. Or more specifically, the post-9/11 world that we all inhabit. The 4400 is a brilliant metaphor, in fact, for the age of terrorism and sleeper agents and government involvement in everyday citizens' lives. The 4400 were sent back to the present day with a specific mission to save the future, but the governments of the world have another agenda for these returnees. And, as we all know, it's human instinct to destroy the things we fear or do not understand... and these returnees are no different.

The 4400 is also a series about finding one's way in a confusing and constantly changing world. Many of these 4400 don't understand their own role in this "mission" and the audience is invited along on their journeys of self-discovery. Maia (Conchita Campbell) is a little girl, stolen from sixty years earlier, who has been returned with the rather unsettling gift of precogniton, an ability which has made her an outcast to nearlyt everyone she meets. Like Captain America, Richard (he of the longest screen name ever, Mahershalalhashbaz Ali) returns to a world he scarcely comprehends; a solider in the Korean War, he's now a young man while all of his compatriots are dead or old men. He finds a kindred spirit in Lily (Laura Allen), a young mother whose child is now a pre-teen and whose husband has remarried after her disappearance. That Lily has been returned, now pregnant, is one of the most important plot threads in the series and one that sadly is somewhat tied up in that third season premiere in one--no, two twists that I didn't see coming. While I think that one of those twists is a very interesting direction to take the series in, I am deeply saddened by the other and curious as to where that decision came from.

While the producers of The 4400 had hoped to conceal the series' central mystery (namely who took the 4400) until much later in the series (like the fifth season) instead of revealing the future humans connection in, well, the fifth episode or so, I think that it's freed the show from some pitfalls that befell a similar adbuction drama, The X-Files, which buckled under the weight of its own mythology. Instead, we're completely aware of the "who" and the "where" in the series' central conceit, but not the "how" or the "why," and it's those mysteries that I find all the more compelling. Some of the returnees have been given abilities that are more of a curse (blister girl) than a gift; others are innately evil, like the serial killer who can turn others into killers by showing them a single photograph. However, Baldwin and Skouris, aided by techie Marco (Richard Kahan), believe that there's a ripple effect going on, that each of these 4400 somehow affects everything around them in a way that's not always immediately clear. However, these future humans must have been able to see this intricate butterfly effect from their vantage point in the future, even if their machinations aren't so apparent to Baldwin and Skouris.

While the entire cast of The 4400 is top-notch, the series is anchored by the subtle performances from Gretsch and McKenzie, who gracefully inhabit their roles as unorthodox federal agents while never deviating into familiar Mulder-and-Scully territory. While Gretsch's Tom Baldwin is all action and movement, McKenzie's Diana Skouris is pure methodology, parsing connections between disparate ideas or events. While Skouris was a bit of a wet blanket in Season One, the producers have fleshed out her character beautifully, giving the audience a look at her home life. Additionally, her relationship with adopted daughter Maia has given her character added depth and allowed her someone to bounce ideas and emotions off of. Linking them together was one of the most important moves that the producers did and through that relationship I've come to not only understand Skouris' motivations but also fallen in love with her along the way. To me, Diana Skouris is the heart of The 4400, even moreso than Maia or Shawn or Lily.

I'm really curious to see where Season Three takes our federal agents and our returnees. That third season opener alone is filled with so many potential storylines for The 4400 that I can't quite get it out of my head. But fortunately I've got eight more episodes on my TiVo to catch up on and that makes me deliriously happy this morning. Even though it might be a show dealing with the vaguaries of time travel, I won't have to wait very long to get my next fix. And, with the first two seasons of The 4400 conveniently available on DVD, neither do you.

The third season of "The 4400" airs Sunday nights at 9 pm ET/PT on USA.

What's On Tonight

8 pm: Two and a Half Men/How I Met Your Mother (CBS); Psych (NBC); 7th Heaven (WB); Wife Swap (ABC); Hell's Kitchen (FOX); One on One/All of Us (UPN)

9 pm: Two and a Half Men/The New Adventures of Old Christine (CBS); Treasure Hunters (NBC); 7th Heaven (WB); Supernanny (ABC); Hell's Kitchen (FOX); Girlfriends/Half and Half (UPN)

10 pm: CSI: Miami (CBS); Medium (NBC); One Ocean View (ABC)

What I'll Be Watching

9 pm: Hell's Kitchen.

On tonight's installment of the FOX culinary competition show ("3 Chefs"), it's down to the final three chefs, one of whom will actually win their very own restaurant at the Red Rocks Resort in Las Vegas. So who will the final two be? If it's not Keith and Heather, I'll eat at Hell's Kitchen. Seriously.

10 pm: Life on Mars on BBC America.

It's the third episode of this brilliant (and British) mind-bending mystery series that stars State of Play's John Simm as Detective Sam Tyler, a modern-day copper who wakes up in 1973. On tonight's episode, it's another mind-bending mystery for Sam as he investigates a 1973 stabbing in the very home where he lived in 2006. Yes, lived. The verb tenses on this show only seem to get more confusing...

11 pm: Lovespring International on Lifetime.

The improvised comedy returns with a brand new episode tonight. On tonight's installment ("The Last Temptation of Steve"), foot fetishist Steve is tested by a mole from the psychiatric board, while Alex confronts Whoopi Goldberg on the set of Ghost 2. Seriously, you can't make this stuff up, people.