Tremors is a 2003 American television series created by S. S. Wilson, Brent Maddock, and Ron Underwood and based on the Tremors franchise. It serves as a sequel to Tremors 3: Back to Perfection. Originally airing with its episodes out of order on the Sci-Fi Channel, it was later aired in its proper sequence on the G4 Network.

Tremors
Title Card
Created byS. S. Wilson
Brent Maddock
Ron Underwood
Based on
Tremors
by
Developed byS. S. Wilson
Brent Maddock
Nancy Roberts
Written byChristopher Silber (staff writer)
StarringVictor Browne
Gladise Jimenez
Marcia Strassman
Lela Lee
Dean Norris
Michael Gross
ComposerSteve Dorff
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes13
Production
Executive producersNancy Roberts
S. S. Wilson
Brent Maddock
David Israel
ProducerMichael Gross
Production locationFox Studios Baja, Rosarito México
CinematographySteven Shaw
Running time180 minutes
Production companyStampede Entertainment
Original release
NetworkSci-Fi Channel
ReleaseMarch 28 (2003-03-28) –
August 8, 2003 (2003-08-08)
Related

Plot

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The story for the TV series picks up from where Tremors 3: Back to Perfection left off. It follows the residents of Perfection Valley attempting to co-exist with an albino Graboid (El Blanco) while dealing with problems caused by failed government experiments, mad scientists, or ruthless real-estate developers. When initially-aired by Syfy, the episodes were shown out of order, with Episode 1 ("Feeding Frenzy") and Episode 6 ("Ghost Dance") shown on the premiere night. The second episode produced, "Shriek and Destroy", was the final episode shown. This out-of-order airing required the re-editing of various episodes. Changes included a new opening sequence for Episode 5 ("Project 4-12"), which aired as the eighth episode. This episode also introduced the character Cletus Poffenburger (played by Christopher Lloyd). The re-edited episode explained Cletus' appearance in a flashback sequence, occurring prior to Episode 6, "Ghost Dance", which had actually aired as the second in the series.

Cast

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Cast Actor/Actress Character Episode(s)
Main Victor Browne Tyler Reed
Gladise Jimenez Rosalita Sanchez
Marcia Strassman Nancy Sterngood
Lela Lee Jodi Chang
Dean Norris W. D. Twitchell
Michael Gross Burt Gummer
Recurring J. D. Walsh Larry Norvel “Flora Or Fauna”, “Project 4-12”, “The Sounds Of Silence”, “The Key”
Christopher Lloyd Dr. Cletus Poffenberger “Ghost Dance”, “Flora Or Fauna?”, “Project 4-12”
Sarah Rafferty Dr. Casey Matthews “Flora Or Fauna?”, “Graboid Rights”, “Water Hazard”
Branscombe Richmond Harlowe Winnemucca “Feeding Frenzy”, “Ghost Dance”, “Project 4-12”
Robert Jayne Melvin Plugg “Feeding Frenzy”, “Water Hazard”
Nicholas Turturro Frank “Hit And Run”, “The Key”
Richard Biggs Roger Garrett “Flora Or Fauna”, “Water Hazard”
Guest Michael Harney Gene Fallon “Ghost Dance”
Jamie McShane Charlie Wilhelm
Melinda Clarke Dr. Megan Flint “Night Of The Shriekers”
Matt Malloy Dr. Harold Baines
Patrick St. Esprit Karl Hartung
Harrison Page Mead “Blast From The Past”
Stuart Fratkin Rosser
David Doty Mosely
Michael Rooker Kinney “Hit And Run”
Troy Winbush Max
Joel McKinnon Miller Red Landers “A Little Paranoia Among Friends”
Audrey Wasilewski Rosie Landers
Armin Shimerman Cecil Carr
Tinsley Grimes Mindy Sterngood “Graboid Rights”
Jeffrey Johnson Chad Ranston
Rebecca McFarland Dr. Ellie Bergen
Joan McMurtrey Dr. Donna Debevic “The Sounds Of Silence”
Vivica A. Fox Delores “The Key”
Richard Riehle Helmut Krause
Jim Beaver Sheriff Sam Boggs “Water Hazard”
Don Swayze Orville James
Pat Skipper Bill McClane “Shriek And Destroy”
William O’Leary George Meadows

Episode list

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Episodes are listed in the order they were originally broadcast. However, the Sci-Fi Channel did not like the episode "Shriek and Destroy" and aired "Ghost Dance" in its place. Various other episodes are also aired out of order.[1]

Episode Number Original Order Title Directed By Teleplay By Story By Airdate Runtime
1 1 “Feeding Frenzy” Bradford May S. S. Wilson, Brent Maddock & Nancy Roberts March 28, 2003 45 mins
Tyler Reed, the new owner of Desert Jack's Graboid Adventure, arrives in Perfection and must help Burt Gummer determine why El Blanco is eating far more than he should. Meanwhile, Melvin Plug is trying once again to buy out Perfection, this time to erect a strip-mall called "Melville." Twitchell nearly forces Burt to kill El Blanco, but Burt spots a weird glinting light and shoots that instead, destroying the device that is driving El Blanco insane with hunger. The goon Melvin hired to do this demands payment after barely evading Burt and summons El Blanco when Melvin refuses, but is eaten by El Blanco before he can do anything else. Melvin is discovered by Burt, who scolds him, despite Melvin maintaining his innocence. Back in town, everyone accepts Tyler as part of the Perfection family.[2]
2 6 “Ghost Dance” Whitney Ransick S. S. Wilson & Brent Maddock March 28, 2003 44 mins
Rosalita encounters a green cloud in an abandoned silver mine. After miners are found to be severely dehydrated, Burt, Twitchell and Tyler investigate the mine to discover the gas themselves. Escaping from the cloud by using a bottle of water as a decoy, everyone regroups and Cletus, a scientist who worked in a nearby laboratory, deduces that it is a hydrophilic bacteria that was a project of the lab. After being boarded up, it came into contact with Mixmaster, a compound that blends non-human DNA originally used to create living weapons for the government. Knowing that it will be drawn to the town for moisture, they decide to trap it in a special container using a makeshift vacuum cleaner built by Tyler and Cletus because The National Guard was sent to evacuate all the townsfolk before a special surgical strike form a napalm bombing occurs. The creature is invulnerable to bacterial poisons and can only be destroyed by intense heat. Jodi and Rosalita stall them by summoning El Blanco and using him to block the road. Thanks to a distraction by Nancy and Cletus, the men finish the device and Tyler sucks the creature in. They then have Twitchell send it away for proper government storage. However, Cletus brings bad news; the cloud spreaded Mixmaster while traversing through the area. Soon, the wildlife and plant life will mutate into new creatures.[3]
3 7 “Night Of The Shriekers” P. J. Pesce John Schulian, Brent Maddock, & S. S. Wilson John Schulian April 4, 2003 44 mins
A government team in Perfection is training shriekers for rescue missions. But a storm shorts out the devices controlling them, and the shriekers run rampant, killing most of the team. The three shriekers multiply and each original shrieker leads its own group. The Perfectionites prepare to hunt down the shriekers before they can multiply or leave the valley, but are resisted by the project's lead scientist, who wishes to recapture them instead. Knowing better, the locals lure the creatures into a trap at Burt's home and start killing them. The scientist, however, destroys Burt's ammo to stop them. This forces Nancy, Twitchell and Jodi to flee to the safe room, but end up stuck there thanks to a bullet wedged in the hinge. The scientist flees to her truck and tries to coax one of the shriekers into it; however, its control collar is off, causing it to kill her and the driver. The last group tries to sneak up Burt's escape tunnel after trying to dig down into the bunker. Nancy throws a bomb into the tunnel, killing the last of the shriekers.[4]
4 3 “Blast From The Past” Michael Shapiro Babs Greyhosky S. S. Wilson, Brent Maddock & Babs Greyhosky April 11, 2003 42 mins
Things start going screwy when Tyler finds a foot near the side of the road and a hang-glider. Later, Burt and Tyler discover a delivery truck and the remains of the man who was supposed to be delivering Nancy's new kiln. With these attacks, Burt deduces that an ass-blaster is on the loose. However, before he and Tyler can go to work and kill the thing, two people from Vegas arrive. They reveal themselves to be hired hands for Sigmund and Ray, the magicians to whom Nancy sold the ass-blaster to in Tremors 3: Back to Perfection, to recover their ass-blaster, Messerschmitt, after poachers failed to kidnap it. However, they severely screw up their first attempt to capture the ass-blaster and one of the hired hands nearly dies. Realizing it is now too smart to be fooled by a ground trap, Burt decides to use a hang-glider to launch a snack for Messerschmitt. They end up successful and tie up Messerschmitt. Burt hands it over to Sigmund and Ray's hired hands to be returned to Vegas.[5]
5 9 “Flora Or Fauna?” Chuck Bowman Brent Maddock & S. S. Wilson April 18, 2003 43 mins
An over-eager tourist named Larry Norvel wants to see El Blanco (even going as far as to rent out an entire trip for himself), but is met with disappointment. Meanwhile, the Perfectionites discover a strange, plant-animal hybrid created by Mixmaster, as well as a government team sent to study Mixmaster's effects on the valley. However, some of the team are killed by the highly powerful "stomach acid" of the hybrid, leaving their skeletons behind. At the end of the episode Larry asks Cletus about time travel experiments, a nod to Christopher Lloyd's previous role as Doc Brown of Back to the Future fame and they seem to get along well while talking about the concept. The Mixmaster plant is finally killed by Tyler using poison just before it can spread seeds, but one seed survives in Larry's car. However, when it falls to the ground, it is squashed underfoot by Burt, destroying the mutant plant for good.[6]
6 4 “Hit And Run” P.J. Pesce Christopher Silber April 25, 2003 44 mins
A Las Vegas mobster brings his disbelieving friend, Frank, to Perfection to see El Blanco in person. However, this backfires on him when he goes too far in trying to bring El Blanco out and ends up being eaten alive. To make matters worse, he held the key to a bank vault his mob was planning to rob. Frank vows revenge on El Blanco and to retrieve the key after calling in backup from a sinister member of the mob (Michael Rooker). However, things backfire yet again for the third mobster when El Blanco accidentally launches a harpoon through him due to Burt interfering with them. Frank vows to get the key back and tries again to kill El Blanco, but he is driven away by Burt. However, Frank is stuck to a rope El Blanco swallowed and is being dragged along as his punishment. Burt and Tyler later find evidence that he escaped, though.[7]
7 8 “A Little Paranoia Among Friends” Michael Grossman Babs Greyhosky April 11, 2003 42 mins
Over the last six months, people in Toluca, New Mexico, led by radio personality Cecil Car, have believed that aliens are responsible for the disappearances. However, it is actually a graboid eating people. Knowing better than the townsfolk, Twitchell sends Burt and Tyler to investigate. However, the townspeople think a conspiracy is going on and Burt was sent as a government plant to cover it up. The townsfolk even disable the seismographs Burt sets up to track the graboid, believing them to be government devices to repel aliens. Ultimately, Tyler invents a story that the graboid is an alien and eventually kills it with Burt's M82A2. The townsfolk accept them as heroes while still believing that Burt is a government agent.[8]
8 5 “Project 4-12” Chuck Bowman John Schulian June 27, 2003 44 mins
The story of the Perfectionites' first meeting with Cletus Poffenberger. When Project 4-12 escapes and runs wild in the valley, Cletus, Burt and Tyler hunt down the beast. In the meantime, Cletus reveals that 4-12 was a creature he created using Mixmaster and that his violent outbursts were from a lack of a certain chemical he could no longer find due to the violent natures of the animals 4-12 was made of. After a long hunt, Burt is forced to kill 4–12 with a homemade flamethrower, much to Cletus' sadness. 4-12 is given a proper burial by the townsfolk, hoping to cheer Cletus up a bit, allowing him to join the town's population.[9]
9 10 “Graboid Rights” P.J. Pesce Christopher Silber July 1, 2003 43 mins
Animal rights activists (including Nancy's college dropout daughter Mindy) arrive in Perfection to force the townspeople to leave, thinking they are harming El Blanco by being there. Meanwhile, El Blanco starts going mad for some unknown reason, even going to territories it normally avoids. It is ultimately revealed that one of the activists was poisoning El Blanco to prove her story for the head of the activists, but El Blanco accidentally swallows a fatal dose when he eats the lackey who had been leaving the poison out and beaches himself in town to die. Burt and the doctor manage to create an antidote and El Blanco is saved by Mindy, who tosses it into his mouth with her softball skills. With El Blanco saved, the activists leave town and Mindy is returned to college after dumping the activist leader, whom Twitchell has arrested for all the acts of vandalism and sabotage he had committed.[10]
10 12 “The Sounds Of Silence” Michael Shapiro Babs Greyhosky July 18, 2003 43 mins
Mixmaster has created a deadly swarm of mutated insects that infest the valley and kill a herd of horses and two construction workers. Making matters worse, El Blanco is both driven away and kept away by the high pitched sound the swarm of bugs make to disorient their prey before devouring it. Being extra sensitive to high frequency sounds, El Blanco heads toward the base of the mountains to stay alive. Meanwhile, since Burt is out of town, Tyler must work with a woman who seems to have a lot in common with the survivalist, even though she claims they would dislike each other in person. Also, Larry is back, apparently to stay. Working together, the three trap the bugs in road tar using termite mating calls and kill them by lighting them on fire with gasoline. As a said nuisance, the townsfolk have to put up with Larry, who has decided to move to Perfection as it suits his taste in weirdness. After Larry helps kill the bugs, Nancy allows him to stay in Mindy's old room for a while, but plans to kick him out when he cannot find and/or build a place of his own.[11]
11 13 “The Key” P.J. Pesce John Schulian, Christopher Silber & Brent Maddock John Schulian, Christopher Silber, Brent Maddock & S.S. Wilson July 25, 2003 44 mins
Frank the mobster returns to Perfection to continue his quest to kill El Blanco and retrieve the key he swallowed, along with Delores, Max's old wife (and now his girlfriend) and an inventor Delores is tricking into helping them with a sonic weapon to stun El Blanco. Meanwhile, Larry encounters a strange creature in a barn and calls it an "Invisibat" as it exists, but cannot be seen. In the final battle, Delores is driven to El Blanco by Larry and the Invisbat and is eaten alive, while Frank runs away. He gets picked up by a mobster and is brought to Chicago to be killed for his incompetence in failing a simple mission. Meanwhile, Larry finds the key in graboid dung and puts it in a collection of metal detector findings, unaware of its true value.[12]
12 11 “Water Hazard” Chuck Bowman Nancy Roberts August 1, 2003 44 mins
Melvin has opened a golf course near Bixby called the Oasis, but its lagoons are filled with water stolen from Perfection Valley's water table and are contaminated with Mixmaster, which create a giant prehistoric type brine-shrimp that kills three people. Tyler and Rosalita get involved when, in desperate need of money, Rosalita takes a job at the golf course and Tyler, in the same situation, does the same, investigating the creature. Tyler is blamed for the deaths of two officers and spends the night in jail due to ignorance of the fact of monsters existing. There, he encounters the driver who stole the water, who reveals to him where he got it. Eventually, Burt gets the sheriff, an old friend of his, to let Tyler go, but is furious that Tyler tried to take care of the situation without him. Tyler ends up having to deal with it himself while Burt is gone and lays a trap with Rosalita and Twitchell's help in the river and kills the monster shrimp with dry ice as they cannot afford to let it into the rest of Bixby's water and contaminating it. Twitchell even helps by driving his car into the river to create a barrier against the shrimp. Afterwards, Rosalita yells at Tyler and Burt, reminding them that they are partners and have not been acting as such. The two men make up and Burt, who has earned a lot of money from a lecture he just gave, refuses half the reward money, saying Tyler earned it. The two then remind Rosalita that only the three of them know the truth about where Melvin's Mixmaster contaminated water came from and he would be desperate to cover that up. Rosalita uses this to blackmail Melvin for thousands of dollars in the end.[13]
13 2 “Shriek And Destroy” Jack Sholder Brent Maddock & S. S. Wilson August 8, 2003 39 mins
Burt and Tyler are contracted (and haggled) by Twitchell to go to Juniper, Arizona and eradicate a herd of shriekers that has appeared. But when the Fish and Wildlife Service send their top agent in, the operative dismisses Burt and Tyler from their job and heads to take out the remaining shriekers. After successfully killing five of them, the operative takes the sole surviving shrieker to a grain mill to be guarded until armed transport arrives to take it for study. At the town's Pioneer Day festival, the operative informs Twitchell of his success, but Burt and Tyler become enraged when they learn what he did. After scolding the operative, Burt heads to the mill, where the agent is eaten by the now-army of shriekers before escaping into a large pipe. Burt figures out that it leads to the fair, but he and Tyler run out of bullets. This prompts them to head to the house in town that has a "famous" gun collection, but it turns out to be Civil War muskets. When the local baseball team shows up, Burt organizes them into a firing squad that successfully kills all the shriekers. Burt returns to Perfection, where Nancy names the recording of their adventure "Shriek and Destroy" and Tyler is grilled by Jodi and Rosalita for being distracted by Ms. Juniper while recording and then being punched by her boyfriend.[14]

The original intended order of the episodes is the following; this is also the order of the episodes on the DVD set:

  1. “Feeding Frenzy”
  2. “Shriek And Destroy”
  3. “Blast From The Past”
  4. “Hit And Run”
  5. “Project 4-12”*
  6. “Ghost Dance”*
  7. “Night Of The Shriekers”
  8. “A Little Paranoia Among Friends”
  9. “Flora Or Fauna?”*
  10. “Graboid Rights”
  11. “Water Hazard”*
  12. “The Sounds Of Silence”*
  13. “The Key”*

*Episodes containing a Mixmaster subplot

Production

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Tremors: The Series was produced at the same time as Tremors 4: The Legend Begins. The show was mistakenly believed to be a replacement for the canceled Farscape, which led to a massive uproar from Farscape's fan base, despite the fact that production for Tremors had begun several months prior to the cancellation of Farscape.

Brent Maddock and S.S. Wilson had penned up a Tremors-based TV show as far back as 1993, under the titles Val & Earl: Monster Hunters, Tremors: The Lost Monsters, and Tremors: The Adventures of Val & Earl. Many plot and monster ideas from this failed television series would be recycled for Tremors: The Series, such as a giant shrimp, flesh-eating insects, and shriekers attacking an amusement park. Production took place at Fox Studios Baja Peninsula facilities and on locations in nearby Rosarito, Mexico.

The pilot episode premiered on March 28, 2003, and broke records for the Sci-Fi Channel, becoming the network's highest-rated debut episode for a new series, and becoming one of the most-watched events in the history of the channel. While the show would continue to perform well, the number of views per episode drastically declined over the ensuing months, failing to hit Farscape's projected prime time air slot demographic numbers and was eventually deemed too expensive to continue. Tremors was canceled after one half-season of 13 episodes.

After a review, comparing the episode numbers and episode names using the series purchased on iTunes and cross-referencing it with the episode information listed in Amazon Prime video, it seems that both locations have matching incorrect information in that the episodes are numbered in order that they were broadcast (not correct chronological order for continuity). It also appears that the series is no longer available for purchase/download from iTunes or Amazon Prime video as of 11 April 2021.

Home video release

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Half of the show was made available on iTunes in September 2008 but many episodes were still missing. It was later made fully available on Hulu and through Amazon.com's Unbox video download service in November 2009, with several episodes finally becoming widely seen for the first time since their original airings six years prior.

On March 9, 2010, Universal Studios Home Entertainment finally released the complete series on a three-disc DVD set. The set contains all 13 episodes in their original production order and no bonus features. The set also contains the re-edited version of the episode “Project 4-12” with the alternate beginning and ending scenes.

Cancelled revival

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In 2017, Syfy announced that it had ordered a pilot episode for a new television series in the franchise.[15] Kevin Bacon was hired to reprise his role from the first film. Vincenzo Natali was set to direct the pilot.[16] The following year in April, Bacon said via his Instagram account that "the network has decided not to move forward".[17]

References

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  1. ^ "The Ultimate Tremors FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions". Stampede-Entertainment.com.
  2. ^ "SCIFI.COM | Tremors". June 7, 2004. Archived from the original on June 7, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  3. ^ "SCIFI.COM | Tremors". June 7, 2004. Archived from the original on June 7, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  4. ^ "SCIFI.COM | Tremors". June 7, 2004. Archived from the original on June 7, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  5. ^ "SCIFI.COM | Tremors". June 7, 2004. Archived from the original on June 7, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  6. ^ "SCIFI.COM | Tremors". June 7, 2004. Archived from the original on June 7, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  7. ^ "SCIFI.COM | Tremors". June 7, 2004. Archived from the original on June 7, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  8. ^ "SCIFI.COM | Tremors". June 7, 2004. Archived from the original on June 7, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  9. ^ "SCIFI.COM | Tremors". June 7, 2004. Archived from the original on June 7, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  10. ^ "SCIFI.COM | Tremors". May 2, 2004. Archived from the original on May 2, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  11. ^ "SCIFI.COM | Tremors". June 7, 2004. Archived from the original on June 7, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  12. ^ "SCIFI.COM | Tremors". June 7, 2004. Archived from the original on June 7, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  13. ^ "SCIFI.COM | Tremors". June 7, 2004. Archived from the original on June 7, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  14. ^ "SCIFI.COM | Tremors". June 7, 2004. Archived from the original on June 7, 2004. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  15. ^ Stanhope, Kate (June 26, 2017). "'Tremors' Reboot Starring Kevin Bacon Lands Syfy Pilot Order". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 19, 2017.
  16. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (August 22, 2017). "'Tremors': Vincenzo Natali To Direct Syfy-Blumhouse Reboot Starring Kevin Bacon". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved August 22, 2017.
  17. ^ Bacon, Kevin (April 27, 2018). "#Tremors Sad to report that my dream of revisiting the world of Perfection will not become a reality. Although we made a fantastic pilot…". Instagram. Archived from the original on December 24, 2021. Retrieved April 30, 2018.
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