| Episode credited cast: | |||
| Craig Horner | ... | Richard Cypher | |
| Bridget Regan | ... | Kahlan Amnell | |
| Bruce Spence | ... | Zeddicus Zu'l Zorander | |
| Craig Parker | ... | Darken Rahl | |
| Jeffrey Thomas | ... | George Cypher | |
| David de Lautour | ... | Michael Cypher | |
| Jessica Chapnik Kahn | ... | Anna Brighton (as Jessica Chapnik) | |
| Phil Peleton | ... | Giller | |
| Rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Benson Jack Anthony | ... | Renn (archive footage) | |
| Jordana Beatty | ... | Rachel (archive footage) | |
| Anna Hutchison | ... | Bronwyn (archive footage) | |
| Jessica Marais | ... | Denna (archive footage) | |
| Maisy McLeod-Riera | ... | Princess Violet (archive footage) | |
| Andrew Robertt | ... | Ranssyn Fane (archive footage) | |
| Jason Smith | ... | Gryff (archive footage) | |
At night, Richard's healthy sleeps changes into a deep trance. Zed soon realizes he's under a rare spell from a great magician, using a short celestial constellation to enable long distance mind control, which can end in death. Indeed, Darken Rahl has been enabled to appear to Richard in any form, notably his step-family, to make him recall his quest as they claim it never happened, in an effort to make Richard tell where the missing box of Orden is hidden. Zed fears rightly he won't be able to break the spell magically, but something else does just before Darken finds out details. Written by KGF Vissers
When a planet or star is temporarily obscured by the moon, occultation of that planet or star by the moon is said to have occurred. What can NEVER occur is for a planet or star to appear IN FRONT of the moon in the shadowed portion of the moon, only to disappear behind the portion of the moon in sunlight.
Which is what happened in this episode. And every time it did, I was reminded that the writers and anyone else who saw this script failed to see a problem with something they should have known about by the age of 12 or much earlier. The moon doesn't shrink in size and regrow as it goes through its phases--we see the portion lit by sunlight. No star or planet can possibly pass between a planet and its moon without disastrous effects. Planets, even a smaller Mercury-sized one would have cataclysmic gravitational effects, and stars, even the smallest white dwarfs, even more so--and this episode had THREE such objects posed between the planet and the moon.
Here's the place where someone will tell me this is fantasy, and ANYTHING goes in fantasy. Wrong. Fantasy writing, good fantasy writing, changes some of the rules but not all the rules of existence, and then develops the story from there. Deus ex machina is not dragged out as needed except by the very sloppy. You do not make up the rules as you go along unless you are an amateur.
We live in a world dependent upon a complex network of communications satellites, and yet, there would seem to be scant understanding of basic--very basic--essentials of space science. Every time the three or fewer stars were shown vanishing behind a crescent moon, I was reminded of the uninformed nature of what had to be dozens of people, I was startled right out of the story and again left wondering how something so basic could have slipped past so many people. Good writing does not jolt one back to reality.
By the way, it's a clip show.