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Tracker Episodes 1-22
Season 1 (2001)
(with Trivia notes)


Starring:
Adrian Paul (Cole/Daggon)
Amy Price-Francis (Mel)
Leanne Wilson (Jess)
Geraint Wyn Davies (Zin)
Richard Yearwood (Nestov)

Synopses courtesy of:
Steve Crow for TVTome.com

Episode 1- Pilot
Directed by: Holly Dale
Written by: Gil Grant
Guest Stars: Joanie Laurer 'Chyna' (Rhee), Geraint Wyn Davies (Zin)

An alien security officer comes to Earth to track fugitives from his planetary system who have taken over the bodies of Earthmen. Unfortunately, while they enter human bodies and thus have a knowledge of humanity, the alien bases his physique on a poster of an underwear model for the Cole brand.
Thus the alien ("Cole") is pretty much clueless about humans and human physiology. A passing bar owner, Mel Porter, takes pity on him and takes him back to her hotel. "Cole" quickly cobbles together some Earth technology to track one of the escapees, Rhee, who killed his wife and child. He defeats Rhee thanks to his "time-stop" abilities and removes her essence from the human body she inhabits. He also meets Zin, a scientific genius and alien who masterminded the escape. At the end Mel takes on
Cole full-time at her bar while Cole prepares to track more of the escapees.
Episode 2 - Cloud Nine
Written by: Grant Rosenberg
Directed by: Neill Fearnley
Guest Stars: Wayne Robson (Kaden)

Using his extrasensory powers, Cole figures out how Zin got his confederates into Chicago: by taking over the passengers on a train. Although Cole taps into the station's camera, he can't get a clear look at who they are. Meanwhile, an Enixian named Kaden is distributing an alien drug not only to his fellow criminals, but to humans as well. One of Jess' friends has a heart attack induced by the drug. Cole tracks the gas emissions caused by the drug production and follows Kaden to one of his traveling
drug-clubs. Displaying a new ability to temporarily change his body, Cole duplicates one of the guards and manages to get close enough to Kaden to capture his life force.
Episode 3- Roswell (aka Area 51)
Written by:Peter Geiger
Directed by: Michael Robison
Guest Stars: Nola Augustson (Roswell Waitress), Alejo Mo-Sun (Raahm)

Two brother/related Orsians, Raahm and Saahm, are trying to track down something from the Roswell crash site. Cole manages to capture Saahm, and uses his essence to intercept the mental transmissions from his "brother" with the aid of Earth-Jello. Following the messages, Cole tracks Raahm to Area 51 and tries to stop him from breaking into the military base and grabbing a crystal map. Raahm tells his brother to contact Zin so they can sell the map, but Cole intercepts the message. The two meet in the Roswell cafe, and after a confrontation meet out back to fight. Cole is vulnerable to cold, including a special spray can that Raahm has rigged up. However, Cole falls into a cloud of steam and revitalizes, and proves triumphant. However, Raahm no longer has the crystal map. Cole departs, unaware that the local waitress found it where Raahm hid it and it is now part of her Roswell "alien" collection of toys and gimcracks.
Episode 4-Trust
Written by:Peter M. Lenkov
Directed by: David Wu
Guest Stars:Richard Yearwood (Nestov)

Cole is in the middle of pursuing Trof (an Enixian) and about to lose his life when a concealed alien, Nestov, comes to his aid. Cole captures Trof and then prepares to capture Nestov, who asks
for his help. Nestov's host, Darian Fawley, was on the train returning with money from a kidnapping when Nestov and the others took over the people on the train. Now Nestov has the money but the rest
of the kidnappers are after him because he gave the money to Zin. Cole agrees to help. The kidnapping is still underway, with the kidnappers holding the girl ransom for yet more money. Cole and Nestov track down the girl, only to discover that she had created the whole scheme along with Nestov's host body to get money from her rich father. Cole captures the girl and her accomplice, but lets Nestov go in appreciation of his help...and as a future resource in his attempts to capture the other prisoners.
Episode 5- The Plague
Written by:Scott Peters
Directed by:Richard Martin
Guest Stars: Rod Wilson (Tev/Gordon)

An Enixian terrorist named Tev infected himself with a disease back on the home system. Now that he's on Earth, he has to release the build-up of the virus in his system or die. He can only release the virus
by having intimate contact with a woman. The women themselves soon die of the plague. Cole gets wind of this when visiting the hospital on behalf of Jess. He recruits Nestov to help him, and the two of them and Mel manage to track the alien to a bar. They miss him the first time, and just barely get to the apartment of his next victim. The next night, Mel goes "undercover", and gets spirited away before Cole and Nestov can spot her. Cole manages to track her and Tev to his hotel room,  and defeats the guy and absorbs the alien life essence before he can infect Mel. Thanks to a blood sample, they can cure the surviving women.

NOTE: Rod Wilson also played the alien MABUS in the Series Finale of  the Scifi Series FIRST WAVE.
Episode 6-The Beast
Written by:Tom Chehak
Directed by:William Fruet
Guest Stars:Brenda Bazinet (Councilwoman Joan Elders), Conrad Coates (Councilman Prestin),  

A blind man is led into the middle of an intersection and left to be run over by his German Shephard. While picking up Mel from an aborted date, Cole senses the presence of one of his prisoners, and soon determines the German Shephard has been taken over by one of the last arrivals on the train..Medoran, Zin's bodyguard. Zin is putting his bodyguard to use, killing a councilwoman who stands in the way of his desire to have a district of Chicago rezoned. Cole tracks down the dog, which can shift forms into a werewolf-like humanoid, and manages to capture it.
Episode 7-Without a Trace
Written by:Tracey Forbes
Directed by:George Mendeluk
Guest Stars: James Gallanders (Rod Archer/Cole), Fulvio Cecere (Marco Sylvestri), Joseph Di Mambro (Sylvestri's Goon)

Mel is talking with Det. Bruno, and how he's being taken off the investigation into the mysterious disappearance of her boyfriend, restaurant owner Rod Archer. Cole overhears the conversation and takes on the form of Archer. Mel is understandably upset, but then realizes what Cole has done. Cole can't reverse the transformation, and decides to investigate Rod's disappearance. Several folks working for gangster Marco Sylvestri start gunning for "Rod", and then Rod/Cole gets grabbed by the Feds and dropped off at a home 50 miles outside Chicago, and informed he is a member of the witness protection program. Rod and the Feds faked his death so he could testify against Sylvestri. Rod has
started up a new life, which includes a wife and newborn child. One of the Feds is a mole, and tells Sylvestri of Rod's location. Cole and Mel anonymously get Rod and his family out of the house. Cole-as-Rod takes his place, and fakes being killed by Sylvestri. while grabbing a piece of evidence and sending the Feds anonymous information that will convict the gangster once and for all. Mel decides not to confront Rod, and Cole finds a way back to his "normal" form by rebuilding himself from the original underwear-model picture.

NOTE: For this episode only (as of 3/1/02), the opening credits for this episode feature Richard Yearwood in the fourth slot, and drop Geraint Wyn Davies. However, Davies appears in the opening credits in subsequent episodes and Yearwood disappears and reappears, so this may be a case where only "regular" actors who appear in the
episode get credited in that particular episode.
Episode 8- Children of the Night
Written by:Charles Heit
Directed by:George Bloomfield
Guest Stars:Tamara Hope (Tina), Mpho Koaho (Sirez/Jordan Baylor)

Cole spots a face on a milk carton of a missing boy, whom he recognizes from the video recording he took from the train station. He and Mel investigate and determine that an alien Nodulian is inhabiting
the body of the 15-year-old boy, and is luring unsuspecting teen street kids for his experimentation. The boy and another alien in a doctor's body are trying to extract chemicals for Zin. The Nodulian, an aquatic
creature, dodges their first attempt to capture him by taking refuge in Lake Michigan. Cole determines the alien needs certain elements to survive, and normal lake water won't suffice because of its high zinc
content. Cole tracks down the source for the proper chemicals the alien needs, and finds the base where the alien is performing his experiment. The doctor escapes but Cole captures the Nodulian in a net to prevent him getting back to the water, then extracts the alien life essence.

NOTE: Tamara Hope who plays Tina also played a alien in the Disney Channel film (Stepsister From Planet Weird).
Episode 9- Breach
Written by:Scott Peters
Directed by:Ken Girotti
Guest Stars:Paul Hopkins (Wes Tarver/Krace), John Furey (Dr. Ross Connelly)

Cole is pursuing an alien Nodulian, Kres, who is a "courier"/smuggler. Kres is captured by U.S. government agents and taken into custody. Cole eludes them and uses satellite photography to locate the military base they've taken Kres to. Cole breaks in and discovers Kres is being tortured by Dr. Connelly, who knows that he is an alien. The government knows all about the energy burst that brought the escaped prisoners to Earth, and that Kres has deserted "his" human wife and family after being
possessed. Kres is susceptible to heat, being an Nodulian. Cole is captured and subjected to the same treatment, which re-energizes him. Connelly realizes that and cools him down. Cole manages to escape using hypertime, but is captured with a fire extinguisher when Connelly lowers the base's air temperature. Kres has escaped from his cell and using an experimental hypertime simulator that Zin created, manages to free Cole. Cole has Mel download a virus into the base's computer, destroying all records of him and Kres. When they try to escape, Kres is shot and Cole is forced to take Kres' life force, leaving the host body dead. At the end we find out that Connelly's superior is in Zin's pay, and Connelly
is shipped off to the Arctic. As a subplot, Mel finds out her grandmother, who ran the bar, used it as a speakeasy and had a rather...wild reputation. Along with her grandmother's diary, she also finds a metal triangle that suggests her father and grandmother may have had connections to Cole's homeworld.

NOTE: Despite his opening-credit listing, Geraint Wyn Davies has only two lines of dialogue as Zin.
Episode 10-Double Down
Written by:Grant Rosenberg
Directed by:Holly Dale
Guest Stars:Chris Bondy (Jonas Carr),  Patrick Garrow ()

Zin has one of his henchmen in a woman's body, "Tanner," kill another one of the prisoners. The next thing is we see Cole in court being tried for the murder of the man. Zin rigged the security camera to show Cole killing the man, by hiring the billboard model that Cole based his physical body on. Now the court believes that the actor, Tony Montana, committed the murder. The unwitting Montana was sent off to Europe by Zin on a pretense, so the police arrested Cole, who they think is Tony Montana. Cole has no
papers or anything to prove otherwise. Mel finds Montana when he returns to the States, after he escapes from an attempt on his life by one of Zin's men, Zan, who wants to eliminate the final evidence. Mel links back up with Montana and Cole manages to switch places with him during a prison transfer. Now Montana has no idea what's going on and finds himself on trial with a friend of Mel's, the out-of-practice Jonas, defending him. Cole manages to get the original tape, then confronts Zan and defeats him. Cole transforms himself into Zan and presents the original tape showing Tanner committed the murder. The case is thrown out and Montana and Cole briefly meet up just so everyone knows there are two different people.

NOTE: Tanner is one of the fugitives though it didn't say or show what alien species she was - was most likely a Vardian, cause she hate Nodulains, and unlike Vax (who was a Enixian), she was able to see without dark
sunglasses. Plus, if she was Cirronian or Desserian she would have easily been able to escape from the courtroom.
Episode 11-Native Son
Written by:Peter M. Lenkov
Directed by:Robert Ginty
Guest Stars: Don Francks (Wahota Keene), Alex Karzis (Logan Dunn), Peter Mensah (Marak)

Joshua Keene, who works in a real estate developer's office, leaves a message for his grandfather's answering machine, and is then confronted by a mysterious man who hauls him up to the roof and drops him to his death. The grandfather, Wahota, an elderly Indian tracker, comes to Chicago and believes his son's death was not a suicide as the police claim. After he talks to Joshua's boss, Logan Dunn, the same mysterious man tries to kill him, only for Cole to intervene. Dunn (who we later learn is a Dessarian and the other man are both alien prisoners involved in some real estate scam for Zin. Cole confronts the killer, Marak(who is a Vardian and a old friend of Zin's), and imprisons his life energy as Wahota looks on. Wahota is pretty cool with the whole thing, and he and Cole team up to take out Dunn. Dunn flees into the woods, where Wahota's tracking skills prove useful. When Cole is caught in a strangle-noose trap, Wahota shoots through the rope with an arrow, giving Cole the break he needs to
capture Dunn. The two part, saluting each other as fellow Trackers. Meanwhile, back at the Watchfire Bar Jess is trying to raise enough money to avoid being deported when her visa runs out: Mel lends her the money.
Episode 12- To Catch a Desserian
Written by:William Wolkove
Directed by:William Fruet
Guest Stars: Julian Richings (Max), Joanne Kelly (Zareth)

With Nestov's help, Cole captures Vesser, who was using Nestov to hire supplies for a theft. A Desserian thief named Zareth is planning to steal something during an art exhibit. Through Det. Bruno,
Mel manages to wrangle an invite for her and Cole, although Vic thinks she was using it to set up a date with him. Cole is unable to locate Zareth, and then an assault team led by Max break in. Cole doesn't believe Max is Zareth, and sneaks off to investigate. Bruno is shot and critically wounded. Mel manages to grab a cell phone and call for help, while Cole discovers that the brunette who was the curator's escort is Zareth. Zin set up the theft with Max and his men so that Zareth could break into a vault and steal an ancient Egyptian statue containing an alien map of some sort. Cole intercepts Zareth but she fends him off with her chameleon powers and a can of nitrogen. Zareth shoots Max so that the police can arrest his men, providing a distraction for her to escape. However, Cole uses hyper-time to catch
up to her and capture her. He vows to investigate why Zin wants the map so badly. Once again, at the Watchfire Bar we find Jess who is waiting for word from her boyfriend in London as to whether he wants
her back or not.

NOTE: The title is a play on the '55 Hitchcock movie "To Catch a Thief", which starred Cary Grant as a (retired) thief.
Episode 13-The Miracle
Written by:Jeffery Cohen/Leonard Dick
Directed by:Robert Ginty
Guest Stars: Ellen Dubin (Abby Swenson), Rachel Skarsten (Jamie Swenson/Lontoria), Cameron Graham (Father Nicholas Franklin Creighton)

A young girl, Jamie Swenson, miraculously recovers from an illness and subsequently heals an electrocuted boy. This catches the attention of Cole, who investigates. Jamie has been taken over by Lontoria, a Cirronian prisoner (of the same race as Cole). who escaped from Satrap. She was a
political prisoner who thought Zin would give her a second chance on Earth, and she's been attempting to help humanity once she arrived. Zin (passing as a movie producer) wants her to use her powers for his own ends, and the local sheriff is another of the escaped prisoners. Cole is conflicted because
he and Lontoria were friends. Meanwhile, the local priest, Father Creighton, believes that "Jamie's" powers are God-given, and tries to give her refuge in a church. Zin and the sheriff go after Jamie and Cole intervenes, defeating the sheriff but being fatally wounded by an energy gun Zin employs that was
based on Lonotonio's weapon research. Zin is forced to flee and Lonotonio gives up almost all of her life force to heal Cole. He declines to take her life force until the other prisoners are captured: Zin has no use for her as a normal human so she should be safe...for now.

NOTE: Zin's assumed name of "Raven" may be an in-joke to either the vampire night club Geraint Wyn-Davies often visited in his former series, "Forever Knight", to the "Highlander: The Raven" spin-off from Adrian Paul's most famous previous role, or both. Rachael Skarsten and Tracker Series Regular Amy Price-Francis were both regulars on the short lived series Little Men. Rothaford Gray who played the Fugitive Sheriff is best known from the movies Revelation and Tribulation as Ronnie,and was also in the movie FEAST OF All Saints,which is based on the book by Anne Rice.
Episode 14-Love, Cirronian Style
Written by:Linda Ptolomy
Directed by:Michael Robison
Guest Stars: Neil Crone (Chuck/Sedra) Carla Collins (Dr. Janet Sullivann), Peter Keleghan (Rahne Sullivann), Tara Spencer-Nairn (Erica/Megda)

Cole and Mel visit a retreat for bringing romance back into a marriage, on the trail of a telepathically paired set of Orsian convicts. pretending to be a married couples poses problems when the two have to pretend to be intimate, while they try to track the paired convicts, who have figured out a way to scramble Cole's attempts to track them. Suspects abound, but Cole manages to track them down, only to be knocked out and find out the whole thing was a set up so that the two convicts could get into the Watchfire Bar and release Cole's imprisoned lifeforce/aliens. With Mel's help Cole manages to escape and thwart the two just before they can succeed. The two resolve that they can't be distracted by
romance again.
NOTE: Only Amy Price Francis and Adrian Paul are listed in the opening credits, and only they appears as regulars in this week's episodes. Neil  Crone and Peter Keleghan are two actors from The Red Green Show
(a Canada-based sitcom that airs on PBS in the U.S.), and they make the second and third such actors to appear on Tracker. The first RG actor  was Wayne Robson (who appeared in Cloud Nine.)
Episode 15-Eye of the Storm
Written by: John G. Simmons
Directed by:Jon Cassar
Guest Stars: Jason Knight (Sydney Berkin), Saskia Garel (Gina Newcastle)

A mysterious alien breaks into Mel's bar during a heavy winter storm, as Mel and Cole arrive from the opera, interrupting him. Nestov arrives with a party of stranded travelers, and the invader blends in with the crowd. Various folks act suspicious until one man is killed, with an alien heart-stopping device. Ducking a newscaster and the arrived Detective Vic, Cole and Nestov figure out who is the intruder - one of the convicts, who was seeking the mysterious metal triangle that belonged to Mel's grandmother (from "Breach"). Cole defeats him and a skeptical Vic is none the wiser, but now Cole and Mel know about the triangle, which is written in ancient Vardian.

NOTE: So is Richard Yearwood in the cast or not? He's been listed as a credited opening regular in the past, but isn't listed in the opening credits despite what is probably his most extensive appearance to date.
Episode 16- Dark Road Home
Written by:Peter M. Lenkov
Directed by:Cal Shumiatcher
Guest Stars:Brandon McGibbon (Stevie), Kim Roberts (Miss Price),
Ron Kennell (Frederick J. Rappaport), Scott McCord (Rudy/Yahir), Thomas Hauff (Dr. Patterson)

Cole gets hold of a tape made at the train station when the passengers from the alien-intercepted train arrives. He identifies one of them as Yahir, an aide of Zin's who may have vital knowledge of Zin's plans and the metal triangle Mel's grandmother has. Yahir's body was that of Rudy, a mental patient who has since been taken back to the asylum. Cole poses as a mental patient to reach Rudy and cuts off his dosage so that he can be interrogated about Zin's master plan. Things go amiss when Rudy/Yahir
gains his memories back, drugs Cole, and tries to escape with Mel. Cole manages to escape with the aid of his fellow patients, and stops Yahir just in time, capturing his lifeforce before he can gain any information except that the triangle is a key of some sort, capable of letting the prisoners return home.

NOTE: Richard Yearwood as Nestov is back to opening-credit status, although he had less screen time then he did in "Eye of the Storm" when he didn't getting an opening credit.
Episode 17- A Made Guy
Written by:Charles Heit
Directed by:William Fruet
Guest Stars:Bobby Johnston (Trepp), Louis DiBianco (Tommy Fusco), Frank Chiesurin (Tony/Giusuppe/Cole)

Cole interrupts a mob transaction between Jimmy and one of the prisoners, Trepp. Cole captures Trepp and escapes, but realizes that Zin and the mob are connected somehow. Despite Mel's reluctance and with Nestov's assistance, Cole takes on the face of an obscure 20's mobster and goes undercover, using his techno-gizmos to give himself a cover story with Tommy, the head mobster. Zin and Tommy's gang are rivals, with Zin taking over their territory. Despite Jimmy's suspicions and Vic's interference, Cole manages to find out that Zin is drilling 300' down in several buildings in the downtown area. Tommy and his gang end up in jail, leaving Cole with another piece of the puzzle.
Episode 18-Fever of the Hunt,
Part 1
Written by:David Wolkove
Directed by:William Fruet
Guest Stars: Evan Sabba (Hunin), Juan Chioran (Suudor), Chris Bondy (Jonas Carr)

One of the prisoners, a Desserian named Suudor, is duplicating famous serial killers like Gacy, Manson, and the Boston Strangler. Tracking him, Mel and Cole find he's taken a ticket to England. Coincidentally, Jess is in England with her ex-boyfriend. Suudor is planning to duplicate the acts
of the most famous serial killer of all time: Jack the Ripper. Worse, one of Zin's operatives is helping Suudor and gives him pictures of Jess and Mel. Suudor escapes Cole at a hospital and prepares to close in on the women... (to be continued...)
NOTE: We're back to the early-episode credits again, with Leanne Wilson and Geraint Wyn Davies. Mr. Wyn Davies isn't actually seen in the episode, however. Nestov is mentioned but Richard Yearwood doesn't appear or is
credited.
Episode 19-Fever of the Hunt,
Part 2
Written by:Grant Rosenberg
Directed by:William Fruet
Guest Stars: Evan Sabba (Hunin), Juan Chioran (Suudor), Chris Bondy (Jonas Carr)

Mel tries to dissuade Jess from meeting with Hunin in Whitechapel to get engaged, but oversleeps. Meanwhile Cole tries to track Suudor and runs afoul of Jager, one of a set of bonded Orsians. He defeats Jager but alerts Parker, his twin-Orsian. Suudor tries to kill Mel and Cole catches up to him
but is flash-frozen by Parker. It was a trap to lure Cole in. Suudor goes to kill Mel but Cole manages to recover enough to freeze time, rescue her, capture Suudor, and escape. It turns out Parker and Jager were not any of the escaped prisoners and that Zin already had an organization on Earth prior to the escape. And that Zin had some reason to lure Cole out of Chicago and to London...

NOTE: Geraint Wyn Davies is credited but does not appear. This episode is credited as a single episode, so some actors who appear in part 1 but not part 2 (or vice versa) are credited in both episodes. Chris Bondy even gets a post-opening credit listing in this episode, despite the fact we only see a recap-clip of him in the opening here. This would seem to be the last episode featuring Jess. Unfortunately it looks like we might get stuck with Laura as a regular, and she's even more of a ditz than Jess ever was.
Episode 20- Back Into the Breach
Written by:Grant Rosenberg
Directed by:Bruce Pittman
Guest Stars: John Furey (Dr. Russ Connelly), Paul Hopkins (Wes Tarver/Ramel), Deborah Odell (Dr. Collene Hampton)

The U.S. government project devoted to detecting aliens (from "Breach") is back in action. They are keeping the body of Wes Tarber, previously inhabited by the Nodulian Kres alive, and bring Zan (disguised as a "Dr. Armstrong") in to revive him. Zan succeeds by injecting it with the essence
of Ramel, who didn't get a body in the original takeover because there weren't enough humans on the train. Zin needs access to files in the complex and revives Ramel to get in good, but kills the general he's bribing when the general gets antsy. Meanwhile Cole is analyzing Mel's grandmother's key, which apparently opens some kind of "door" beneath the Watchfire. Ramel attacks Cole, who killed his brother previously, but Cole escapes. Cole sneaks into the complex, and finds out that a Vardian ship piloted by an "Arkin" crashed into Lake Michigan. A "Dr. Milos Sandborn" interrogated the alien and then disappeared before giving his files to the government. Zin wants the files and needs Ramel to help search. Nestov shows up to help, and they evade capture. Zin finds the exact location of the power source he's looking for (finding out it's beneath the Watchfire) and escapes, Cole captures Ramel, and Nestov gets to finish his Watchfire calendar shoot.
NOTE: Leanne Wilson is out of the opening credits (not surprising after last week's departure), and Geraint Wyn Davies is listed and does appear. Richard Yearwood appears but does not getting an opening-title credit, despite having done so (erratically) in the past. This episode is a sequel to the episode "Breach" (note the title) and features some extensive opening flashbacks/footage from that episode.  John Furey is credited in the opening, but only appears in clip-footage from "Breach." The excerpts' directors credited are John Stead and Ken Girotti, and excerpts written by Scott Peters. Other then a few mildly lustful glances in the opening sequence, and one relatively brief scene with Geraint Wyn Davies, Deborah Odell has very little screen time. One wonders why she gets an opening credit.
Episode 21-What Lies Beneath
Written by:Gil Grant
Directed by:Rene Bonnierre
Guest Stars: Myriam Sirois (Bridget)

Nestov warns Cole that Zin has created a gun that permanently nullifies Cirronian energies, turning them into normal humans for good. The two break into one of Zin's bases and steal it...only for Nestov to turn around and shoot Cole with it! He also takes Mel captive and ties them up, then invites Zin into the Watchfire and gives him her grandmother's key. They manage to get free and when Mel wields the Collector (which can only be triggered by Cirronian energies) she activates it! Cole finally figures out
that Mel and her ancestors were part of a Migar breeding program. She "jump starts" him back into his energized state, while Zin unearths the vault beneath the Watchfire and goes down into it. Mel and Cole defeat Zin's henchmen (with Mel using the Collector on one of them!). Nestov reveals he was actually planning a triple-cross, and was hoping Zin would leave. Unfortunately, Cole determines the Vardian device is a universal-destructor unit that Zin plans to use to gain absolute power in the Mygar system. He goes down into the vault after Zin, and in a final fight locks Zin in the vault and recovers the power device. Cole and Mel go off to hide it, leaving Nestov in charge of the bar.

NOTE: Even for his last, substantial role of the season, Richard Yearwood doesn't get a main credit. Lady fans will appreciate the fact Mr. Yearwood gets to dance in his underwear, and that he looks rather...excited to have the experience. J.C. Kenny, who plays the newswoman on the Convenient Plot Point newschannel, is one of those unsung third-tier actresses who plays almost nothing except reporters and news anchors in movies and TVs. Myriam Sirois was in the Babylon 5 pilot/movie Legend of the Rangers, as Sarah Cantrell.
Episode 22-Remember When
Written by:Charles Heit
Directed by:Isabelle Fox
Guest Stars: Mpho Koaho (Sirez/Jordan Baylor), Juan Chioran (Suudor,) Tara Spencer-Nairn (Erica/Megda), Conrad Coates (Councilman Prestin), Paul Hopkins (Wes Tarver/Ramel/Krace), Joanie Laurer (Rhee), Scott McCord (Rudy/Yahir), Leanne Wilson (Jess), Rod Wilson (Tev), Joanne Kelly (Zareth)

After bringing in another escapee after some tests, Cole determines a way to zap all of the remaining prisoners off Earth and back to Sartop at the same time by remote. However, one of the currently held lifeforces is contaminating the process, and he and Mel desperately try to determine which one before the wormhole closes. Things get complicated when Cole is zapped by an energy burst and loses his memory. He gets it back with some prodding from Mel, and they identify the "contaminated" lifeforce just
in time and get rid of every remaining prisoner on Earth. Cole goes back, his mission completed. But when he returns, realizing his home is on Earth with Mel. But as they celebrate, we see the display screen show all the fugitive prisoners reappearing all over the U.S.

NOTE: Besides Richard Yearwood being listed as a post-title guest, Leanne Wilson is also listed as such since she only appears in clip/flashback. A typical season-ending "clip" show - usually done because of the series budget being used up by the end of the year. Pretty much every episode in the season is shown here. The ones that appear to be omitted (or are shown so briefly as to be pretty much moot as specific scenes) appear to be: Cloud Nine, Trust, Without A Trace, Double Down, Native Son, The Miracle, Eye of the Storm, and A Made Guy. Other than Ho Oyster Chow as Jezek, all cast members credited are only credited because they appeared in previous episodes and are shown in clips here. In reality this episode only has an actual "cast" of three people.
Synopses written by: Steve Crow (crow_steve@hotmail.com) and permission granted to reproduce here. Steve writes for:



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