Episode cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Colin Ferguson | ... | Jack Carter | |
Salli Richardson-Whitfield | ... | Allison Blake | |
Joe Morton | ... | Henry Deacon | |
Erica Cerra | ... | Jo Lupo | |
Neil Grayston | ... | Douglas Fargo / S.A.R.A.H. | |
Niall Matter | ... | Zane Donovan | |
Tembi Locke | ... | Grace Monroe | |
Trevor Jackson | ... | Kevin Blake | |
Kavan Smith | ... | Deputy Andy 2.0 | |
Chris Gauthier | ... | Vincent (as Christopher Gauthier) | |
Christopher Jacot | ... | Larry Haberman | |
Wil Wheaton | ... | Isaac Parrish | |
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Nevaeh Kidd | ... | Jenna Blake |
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Andrew Coghlan | ... | Grief Tech #1 |
Peter Ciuffa | ... | Grief Tech #2 |
With life back to normal, the Astraeus crew struggles to overcome their Matrix Eureka experience: what was real, what wasn't and what could become self-fulfilling prophecy.
The Astreaus crew is home and all are suffering to readjust to reality with Fargo in deep mourning. It is a largely quiet episode, and Fargo's reaction is the most realistic wIth Neil Grayston's performance being quite beautiful (he and Wil Wheaton steal the show in one vignette in particular). The crisis of the week is entertaining, but certainly an after-thought created to provide some action and amusement while the emotional fallout plays through. Way too much time is spent with the Astraeus rew blaming their non-Astraeus friends for what happened in the matrix. This is explained by an insistence that the matrix was so very realistic - but that runs thin. This episode certainly highlights that although Eureka is populated with geniuses, they are largely idiots when it comes to practical thought.