The 4400 1x1 90%

Joel Gretsch grounds the supernatural premise with raw grief and determination. Jacqueline McKenzie provides sharp, cynical balance. The real standout is young Conchita Campbell as Maia, whose eerie calm and prophetic drawings inject genuine dread.

Logline: When 4,400 missing people from the last 70 years suddenly reappear all at once aboard a mysterious comet, two government agents must unravel the mystery of where they’ve been—and why they’ve been brought back with strange new abilities.

The episode, directed by Yves Simoneau, wisely avoids camp. The visual effects (the comet, the healing touch) are restrained, keeping focus on character reactions. The pace is methodical, building mystery without over-explaining—a refreshing choice for a sci-fi pilot. The 4400 1x1

The central mystery deepens when Tom’s nephew, Shawn, accidentally kills a violent security guard during a scuffle—but then brings him back to life. The guard has no memory of dying, but a witness saw everything.

Meanwhile, the enigmatic (Billy Campbell), a wealthy businessman who owns the land where the 4400 appeared, offers the returnees sanctuary at his resort, claiming they are “the next step in human evolution.” Diana remains skeptical; Tom is torn between professional duty and protecting Kyle, who is struggling to reintegrate. Joel Gretsch grounds the supernatural premise with raw

The Department of Homeland Security scrambles. Enter (Jacqueline McKenzie), a skeptical, by-the-book agent, and Tom Baldwin (Joel Gretsch), an agent grieving his son’s disappearance six years ago—until he sees Kyle among the returnees. The two are reluctantly partnered to house, document, and investigate the “4400.”

As the government quarantines the returnees in a converted facility, strange incidents begin. A young woman named (Conchita Campbell), who vanished in 1970 as a child, draws cryptic pictures that predict future events. A former soldier named Richard Tyler (Mahershala Ali) exhibits enhanced reflexes and strength. And Shawn Farrell (Patrick Flueger), a teen who vanished in 1990, is shocked to find his girlfriend, Nikki, has aged and moved on. Logline: When 4,400 missing people from the last

The episode opens with a blinding flash of light. At a lakeside wedding in Washington state, guests watch in awe as a ball of light descends from the sky and deposits 4,400 people onto the shore, naked and disoriented. None of them have aged a day, though some vanished decades ago. Among them are Tom Baldwin, a modern-day Seattle construction worker, and Kyle, his son, who was taken at age 8 and is now biologically the same age as his father.

“They’re not refugees. They’re not victims. They’re something else.” — Diana Skouris “You’re telling me my son is older than I am?” — Tom Baldwin “What if they were taken to be changed? And what if they were brought back to change us?” — Jordan Collier

⭐ – A quietly compelling pilot that prioritizes human drama over spectacle. It asks: What if evolution wasn’t random, but returned to us? By grounding wild concepts in family grief and bureaucratic friction, The 4400 hooks you not with answers, but with the ache of its questions. The final countdown to Seattle’s destruction ensures you’ll queue up episode two immediately.

The episode ends with a chilling reveal: Maia’s final drawing shows a mushroom cloud over Seattle—and a date. Tomorrow.