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The
4400
The 4400 mixed
alien abductions with end-of-time speculation, using themes from
the X-Men and the then-future Heroes, to concoct a powerful mixture
that did not make it into a veritable hit series – unfortunately.
Philip Coppens
“The
4400” was a television series that was a mixture of “Taken”
– i.e. UFO abductions – and “X-Men” –
people with supernatural abilities – with a twist. The name
of the series originated from the number of people that are returned
next to Mount Rainier, Washington on August 14, 2004. By coincidence
– or not – Mount Rainier was the location where the
first “official” UFO sighting occurred in 1947, by
Kenneth Arnold, marking the start of the “UFO Age”.
Like all UFO sightings, the question is why ET doesn’t land
on the White House lawn or Times Square, and this question is
also posed in the series.
Upon their return, it becomes obvious that all of the 4400 people
had suddenly disappeared between 1946 and the present day. None
of them have aged, and none of them can remember anything about
what has happened during their disappearance.
What has taken them, is a beam of light; what returns them, is
a ball of light, a novel twist on the easier solution of an alien
spaceship. British UFO researcher Jenny Randles has written about
what she has called “time storms”, and – no
doubt coincidentally – the ball of light that returns these
people bears some resemblances to a time storm. Though often linked
with UFOs, Randles labelled them as such as they resembled storms
“and one of their most unusual effects is the apparent time
distortion.” They often form of a cloud that drifts and
one account goes: “It was a very strange cloud, moving just
above the surface, but definitely moving… As big as a large
house. There was an extraordinary pressure in the air around it.
The truck was literally vibrating.” Of course, none of these
“time storms” has ever abducted a group of people
for years, nor returned en masse.
As to the number: take 144,000, drop the first and last digit,
and you get 4400 – an altogether more manageable number.
The number 144,000, of course, is famous for being the number
of chosen in the Book of Revelation. In the Bible, these are the
ones earmarked by God himself for greater things, to lead Mankind
into a post-apocalyptic time. And that is precisely the mission
of the 4400 too.
The
series ran from 2004 to 2007 and was the brainchild of Scott Peters
and René Echevarria, both of whom came with an established
reputation in writing science fiction. The series maps the progress
the 4400 make following their return to “civilisation”,
as seen through the eyes of NTAC, the National Threat Assessment
Command (NTAC), a division of the Department of Homeland Security,
which is in charge of overseeing the 4400 and their reintegration
in society. The series specifically focuses on two NTAC agents,
Tom Baldwin and Diana Skouris, in a clear parallel with Fox Mulder
and Dana Scully – even retaining the initials DS –
of “The X Files”.
Unsurprisingly, many of the returnees have trouble readapting
into society, not helped by the fact that some of them realise
they have paranormal abilities, though some of these are of an
unusual nature. One 4400 markets his ability to loose weight,
with disastrous results. Another woman has blisters which release
the plague. Some abuse their power on purpose, like a 4400 who
creates a drug that makes people come face to face with unresolved
issues from a person’s past, while another 4400 terrorist
releases a signal at NTAC that makes men violent.
Hence, there is clear tension between how the 4400 will undoubtedly
change the human race – even though how is unknown –
whereas the rest of the world is both afraid and the government
trying to do everything to stop whatever is happening from happening
and preserve the status quo.
Once
the 4400 are released from quarantine, it is businessman Jordan
Collier who comes to meet some of his fellow abductees, and offers
them sanctuary: he is building Arcadia Estates, an enclosed community
of new housing, to provide homes for the 4400. To some extent,
it is a cultish-type of compound; at the same time, it is designed
to withstand attacks by those who are afraid of the 4400 and want
to kill them. The choice of Arcadia, of course, has a hint of
Nicolas Poussin and the mystery of the Priory of Sion, where Arcadia
is seen as an idyllic, time-less landscape, a refuge. However,
the idea of these estates is soon abandoned and substituted with
4400 Centres: safe-havens for the 4400, as well as information
centres where non-4400 can come and learn.
The 4400 Centres were clearly meant to resemble the Church of
Scientology. The movement is known to draw celebrities to its
“Celebrity Centers”, a technique also used by Collier
to promote the 4400 cause as soon as he has established his first
centre. Equally, the 4400 Center is depicted as marketing courses,
which leads the trainee through a series of levels, on par with
similar courses developed by Scientology. Equally, technological
devices are strapped on the course participants, on par with Scientology’s
E-Meters.
Amongst
the 4400, a few have to stand out. One is Lily Moore, who has
become pregnant between her disappearance and return. Another
is Maia Rutledge, the youngest (aged 10), but apparently also
the first (in 1946) abductee, whose parents have died and is therefore
an orphan. Her ability is to be able to foretell the future and
she was the first 4400 who, in quarantine, was “diagnosed”
as having precognitive powers – which results in a series
of gruelling tests and procedures by the authorities, who want
to see whether – and how – they can duplicate these
abilities. She is then adopted by NTAC agent Diana Skouris, whose
colleague Tom Baldwin has got direct exposure to two other 4400.
One is his nephew Shawn Farrell, who in a remarkable twist of
fate, was with Baldwin’s son Kyle when the latter was in
the process of being taken in 2001. But Shawn pushed Kyle out
of the beam, resulting in his own abduction. Though Kyle was therefore
not taken, he spent many years in a coma, from which he was only
released once Shawn had returned and used his new healing abilities
on Kyle. Later on, Tom will become romantically involved with
another 4400: Alana. She can access people’s memories, but
also create total fantasy worlds. It are apparently the abductors
that have linked Alana to Tom, so that Tom’s mission can
be fulfilled against the backdrop of domestic bliss.
Tom Baldwin’s mission was first explained to him on Highland
Beach, where Shawn had been abducted. On the beach, Tom is brought
into an alternative reality, set on the same beach, where the
Future uses the body of his son Kyle to explain the plan the Future
has for our present. The scene, of course, is copied from “Contact”,
in which the purpose of the “giant time machines”
and the existence of other intelligences is explained to the time
traveller on a beach, with the aliens using the image of her dead
father.
The
first variation on the UFO theme is that by the end of the first
season, it becomes clear that the abductors are not aliens, but
humans from the Earth’s future. The 4400 are returned into
the timeline to avert some catastrophe the Future is trying to
avert.
For some reason, Kyle Baldwin is their messenger, though it is
unclear how he will fulfil this function or why specifically he
is chosen. Later, Collier himself will have a vision of the future.
He sees the “Last City”, “a thousand miles wide
with a wall one hundred feet high” – which is an unlikely
physical achievement, but anyway… It is inhabited by a “brutal
and powerful elite”, the last survivors from the catastrophe,
with everything on Earth outside of the Last City a wasteland.
It appears that from this era, the decision is made to try and
alter the timeline, so that this dire existence is circumvented.
However, Kyle, in some type of “possession”, kills
Collier, in an apparent effort that the normal timeline will be
followed. However, Collier’s body miraculously disappears
following his death, and he will later return, alive – like
a true Messiah. Meanwhile, Kyle’s father Tom Baldwin’s
role becomes clear when he is given the task (by “the Future”)
to kill Isabelle Tyler, the “divine offspring” of
Lily and Richard Tyler, who as a baby already portrays extremely
powerful supernatural abilities… and who could be seen as
fulfilling the archetype of the Whore of Babylon (though at first,
one might assume she might be a female Messiah). It is clear that
some people from the Future want the normal timeline altered,
by abducting 4400 people, whereas others have genetically engineered
Isabelle, apparently to intervene with this plan.
It
also becomes evident that Isabelle has a specific neurotransmitter
called promicin, which is nevertheless present, in smaller quantities,
in the brains of all the 4400. However, it is then learned that
the government, aware of the presence of this chemical, had secretly
dosed all 4400 with a promicin-inhibitor. When the 4400 suddenly
fall ill, the scandal is uncovered, but independent scientist
Kevin Burkhoff extracts blood from Isabelle (who was never given
the inhibitor) that saves the 4400 – and which marks the
start of the returnees uncovering their supernatural powers, the
“gift” of the Future, somehow meant to help them avert
the catastrophe.
How a group of 4400 people can avert a worldwide catastrophe and
change the future is explained through the so-called “ripple
effect”. The idea is that by reinserting the 4400 back into
the timeline, they will cause a change in their time, which will
ripple through the timeline, altering it, and thus avert the future
catastrophe.
During the third and fourth – final – season, a novel
twist is uncovered in the plans of the Future, already touched
upon: not everyone in the future wants to see the timeline changed.
And those have infiltrated the Future manipulators, and were responsible
for impregnating Lily and “creating” Isabelle, who
is meant to stop the timeline from being changed. Apart from Isabelle,
they have also sent back their own operatives, known as “the
Marked”. A marked person is injected with nanites (molecular
machines), which eventually take over the brain’s functions.
The term “Marked” is used, as the injection leaves
a tiny impression behind the left earlobe. The technique, of course,
is reminiscent of the Borg of “Star Trek: The Next Generation”
and the Goa’ulds of “Stargate SG-1” –
and dozens if not hundreds of other science fiction films and
series.
The Marked are discovered because Curtis Peck, a 4400 filmmaker,
can write the future as well as the truth, e.g. about who killed
JFK. The idea of the Marked was germinated by the… 4400
scriptwriters during the second season, but was only put into
effect in season 4, and would become the central theme along which
the entire series’ plotline would eventually develop.
Thus, it becomes clear that the Marked have taken prominent roles
in society, with one Marked, Drew Imroth, head of Ubient software,
clearly based on the real-life character of Microsoft founder
Bill Gates. Despite the clear spoof nature of the idea, it actually
worked quite well.
At the same time, it is clear that Kyle Baldwin, when he shot
Jordan Collier, was under the influence of the Marked and later,
Tom Baldwin will be injected with a substance that will make him
become a “Marked” as well.
Though
the 4400 are all re-entered at the same time, in the same place,
the Future makes minor adjustments. For example, it sends five
4400 children – including Maia – even further back
in time, where they will become involved with the development
of artificial petroleum and composite materials used in the first
lunar colonies, thus radically altering the timeline. But “the
Present” people realise something is wrong – that
Maia has disappeared. The Future eventually returns them, though
it is at that time that Tom Baldwin is told to “kill Isabelle”,
which will, however, only strip her of her abilities and render
her human, rather than the superhuman soldier she was engineered
to be.
In short, “the Future” has discovered that the ripple
effect is being negated by the Marked, and wanted to alter the
timeline again. Their ad hoc plan does not fully work, and the
Present asks for the “first altered timeline” to be
restored, to which the Future consents. In the end, Isabelle self-sacrifices
herself, thus revolting against the Marked who had created her,
and thus saves Jordan Collier, together with Shawn, her main target,
as they had been the leaders of the 4400 movement she was destined
to destroy.
In line with several fictional stories about contact with other
intelligences, the role of free will is therefore once again underlined
and as a subtle undertone, the difference between the Future and
the Marked is illustrated by the notion that the latter demand
complete submission of Mankind’s free will (taking control,
possession, of the human they take), whereas the Future holds
a dialogue with the Present to change it for the better.
Kevin
Burkhoff is the scientist who saved the 4400 and identified promicin.
His story begins when he is actually in an insane asylum, where
he develops a friendship with a 4400 woman, who forces her fellow
inmates to build a communication device, which is thought to contact
the Future, but which – miraculously – makes Burkhoff
rediscover his sanity. The question why he “went mad”
is never explained, but one can query whether somehow the Marked
had identified his brilliance and neutralised him, with the Future
re-activating him. He then experiments with promicin on himself
and almost dies, but instead is “reborn”, eventually
becoming the first non-4400 with 4400 abilities. It is, of course,
another great change of the original timeline, but one that the
series never seems to have underlined.
Once promicin was known to be the “superpower enabler”,
the government siphons development of it into a non-governmental
think-thank, Haspelcorp, headed up by former NTAC chief Dennis
Ryland. They extract the promicin from Isabelle, a massive 17432
units, to develop “4400 abilities” with specifically
selected soldiers – officially written off as having died
in combat – who will combat the original 4400 as part of
a secret project, run by Ryland. At a lower level, NTAC itself
is combating the 4400 too – trying to control them –
and also regulating the illegal substance promicin.
However, Collier intercepts the cargo of promicin (that originates
from Isabelle) and makes it available to the population of Seattle,
who are told that by taking the drug, they will develop superhuman
abilities. However, it is soon learned that roughly half of those
who take promicin, die – the state of the brain’s
corpus callosum is the key regulator, and indicator, whether someone
can or will survive the shot. Despite the many who die, however,
thousands survive and the amount of people with supernatural abilities
are now vastly expanding. The ripple has become a wave.
To
achieve the ripple to wave effect, and why Seattle is chosen as
the “navel” of the 4400, is explained in the episode
“The Starzl Mutation”. The plot is as follows: a flaw
in a radiation machine in a Seattle hospital to treat cancer patients
has resulted in a small mutation of the 11th chromosome, which
is labelled the Starzl mutation, after the company that made the
machine. The mutation is replicable, and therefore passed onto
the children of those who had been exposed to the defective machine
throughout the five years its malfunction went unobserved –
or uncorrected. The mutation itself is harmless, but it is soon
learned that when a “Starzl mutant” and a 4400 were
to create offspring, the child would be promicin positive. In
short, the 4400 were returned to Seattle because within the normal
population are people who, if marrying a 4400, will have children
with 4400 abilities.
However, it is then also clear that the wave effect is not created
as such, but by the distribution of promicin amongst the people
of Seattle.
That
the wave might become a tsunami is made clear when Collier takes
a destitute area of Seattle and transforms it into “Promise
City”, “the New Jerusalem”, where the wasteland
is transformed into an urban paradise, due to the proper application
of 4400 abilities. When Collier settles in Seattle, the title
of the episode is actually called “Till we have built Jerusalem”.
Indeed, the area that would become Promise City is described as
one of the most polluted areas in the United States and with 4400
abilities, is transformed into a lush garden environment. It is
therefore implied that the catastrophe that will happen, is an
ecological one, and that it can be averted.
The
threat of an imminent ecological catastrophe is of course a much
perpetuated political message of the 21st century, and thus formed
a logical theme for The 4400 scriptwriters. In Collier’s
final speech, he includes: “We will make [the Earth] whole
again. Using our abilities, we will heal its toxic soil. We will
cleanse its polluted waters. And we will turn this blighted place
into a garden.”
The scriptwriters were equally inspired by the events of 9/11:
NTAC is a division of the Department of Homeland Security, which
was created after 9/11 and a “4400 Commission Report”
is produced, no doubt on par with the “9/11 Commission Report”.
The quarantine of the 4400 bears parallels to Guantanamo Bay and
other detention centres for people the US government has identified
as potential enemies – which the 4400 continuously are seen
to be. However good or innocent they appear to be, several of
them are known to be terrorists and the government, of course,
has to wonder who precisely “the Future” is and what
their plans truly are. Furthermore, some of the 4400 do decide
to become terrorists, though they – and the 4400 –
would see themselves as freedom fighters. The Nova Group is there
specifically to defend the 4400 from the government, by organising
terrorist attacks to promote the 4400 cause.
The
tsunami is unleashed when one promicin taker Danny Farrell develops
his ability, which is oozing promicin, exposing Seattle to the
drug, resulting in not only 9000 deaths, but an equal amount of
people with 4400 abilities. Amongst those exposed and transformed
are most NTAC agents, who have by default gone to the other side.
The promicin plague has also incapacitated the police force and
hence with business as usual in Seattle non-existent, Collier
and his followers (including Kyle Baldwin) are asked to take charge
of Seattle.
In his “acceptance speech”, Collier pledges to build
a better future – and the whole of Seattle becomes Promise
City. Jordan Collier, the man who has survived death, returned
and led his people to a new world has now truly fulfilled his
messianic destiny. Still, the scriptwriters underlined that originally,
they did not intend to give him a name that had JC – Jesus
Christ – as initials, and that it was only from season three
onwards that they played the Messianic trump card on his character,
to become “the Preacher”. Just like Jesus in his days
and so many Messianic pretenders today, the question is whether
Collier is “just” a lunatic cult leader, or whether
he is indeed the true Messiah – the question never truly
answered, though both options are possible and not mutually exclusive,
of course.
At
the very end, it is clear that when Shawn and Kyle traded places,
Shawn, with the ability to heal, seemed to take prominence, even
become Collier’s second in command, and eventually taking
control of the entire 4400 movement. But once Kyle has taken promicin,
he will develop into Collier’s second and even leader of
Promise City. Interestingly, he becomes a true shaman, who attains
a spirit guide, Cassie, who knows what needs to be done, so that
the plan can be fulfilled. She actually reveals to Kyle a book
of prophecy of a cult that existed a century ago and foresaw precisely
what would happen. The unasked question is whether this group
is part of another doctoring of the timeline, or not. Of course,
a shaman is a messenger, and thus, Kyle has indeed fulfilled his
role as the messenger of the Future.
At the very end of the series, it is Kyle who tells his father
Tom Baldwin that it is now time for him to take promicin himself.
Whether he ever did or not, remains unknown. The original timeline
of taking the project into a fifth season never materialised,
and an alternative timeline of just four seasons was instead created.
However sad for its many fans and producers, for a series that
was about altering timelines, it must have seen like divine irony
– or a prank played by the Future?
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