John Billingsley |
Professor Miles Ballard |
Bill Cobbs |
Elmer Greentree |
Gabriel Macht |
Dr. Mark Gabriel |
Kevin J. O'Connor |
Warren Day |
Julianne Nicholson |
Marian Kitt |
Missy Crider |
Ellen 'Satori' Polaski |
Kristen Cloke |
Alison/The Woman |
Guest Star |
Wendy Moniz |
Eva |
Guest Star |
Mary Gillis |
Mrs. Paulsen |
Guest Star |
John Aylward |
Albert |
Recurring Role |
How It Ended (Read With Caution): The show's only reccuring character, Albert, proposed to Mrs. Paulsen, only to be shot done by the women he thought he loved. As for the cast, entrance demons in various forms killed them all. Warren went to the address of the guy who wanted to make his journal into a movie and when he discovered it wasn't there, he backed up into the street and was run over by a car. Miles, taking the directions of the Yale professor, was hit by a semi driven by the same professor. Satori and Mark, thinking they could be together now, attempted to sleep together, but ending up causing Satori's house to be demolished with them in it. Marian was strangled by her new roommate. Elmer flatlined in his hospital bed at the presence of Allison.
Marian: Are you saying Ava is not what she says she is?
Elmer: I'm saying be careful of the illusion.
Independent producer: This brilliant mainfesto is, for lack of a better word, Faulkner. It should be published. Since people don't read anymore, it must be a movie.
Elmer: You've got the guilt of a child that put its parent in a nursing home.
Kristen Cloke, who played Allison/The Woman, is married to series writer, Glen Morgan.
The title of the episode, "Life is For the Living", was said a numerous amount of times but only by the entrance demons.
This episode was titled at the beginning of the episode after the previously scenes instead of in the normal spot, after the first commericial break.
This is the only episode to show scenes from previous episodes at the beginning of the episode. All the scenes shown were from "The Ones That Lie In Wait" and the "Previously on The Others" line was said by John Aylward (Albert).
It's not clear if this was intended as a series finale or not, but it was promoted as just a finale, not series or season. It's lead-in "The Pretender" was also promoted as just a finale, and it ended. Whether or not it was intended to be the end, this episode serves as a satisfying ending. If it did continue, it would be tough dealing with everything that happened in the end.
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