Network: The WB
Episodes: 110 (hour)
Seasons: Five
TV show dates: October 5, 1999 — May 19, 2004
Series status: Cancelled/ended
Performers include: David Boreanaz, Alexis Denisof, J. August Richards, Charisma Carpenter, Andy Hallett, and Amy Acker with Stephanie Romanov, Vincent Kartheiser, James Marsters, Christian Kane, Julie Benz, Mercedes McNab, Elisabeth Rohm, Daniel Dae Kim, Glenn Quinn, Keith Szarabajka, Sarah Thompson, Mark Lutz, Laurel Holloman, Vladimir Kulich, Jack Conley, Sam Anderson, Jonathan M. Woodward, Juliet Landau, John Rubinstein, Eliza Dushku, Matthew James, Gina Torres, and Adam Baldwin.
TV show description:
The Buffy the Vampire Slayer spin-off follows the brooding vampire with a soul, Angel (David Boreanaz), after he moves from Sunnydale to Los Angeles and founds Angel Investigations.
His agency seeks to “help the helpless,” defeat evil demons, and to save the souls of those who have lost hope.
He is assisted by half-human/half-demon Allen Francis Doyle (Glenn Quinn), self-involved Cordelia Chase (Charisma Carpenter), fallen watcher Wesley Wyndam-Pryce (Alexis Denisof), street-wise Charles Gunn (J. August Richards), geeky Winifred “Fred” Burkle (Amy Acker), and vampire Spike (James Marsters).
Episode #110 — “Not Fade Away”
Angel explains his recent behavior and briefs his team on his plan to kill all the members of the Circle of the Black Thorn. Marcus Hamilton (Adam Baldwin) calls Angel to an emergency meeting of the circle, where the other members express doubts about Angel’s loyalties. Angel proves himself to them by irrevocably renouncing his role in the Shanshu Prophecy, thereby giving up his chance to become human.
Back at Wolfram & Hart, Angel meets with his old enemy Lindsey McDonald (Christian Kane) and enlists him in the planned attack on the Circle. After telling the group that the plan will start that night, he encourages them to spend the rest of the day as if it were their last.
Angel visits his son, Connor (Vincent Kartheiser), who’s not supposed to know who he is any longer. Connor reveals that he knows that Angel’s his father; his old memories are now “mixed in” with his new ones. He understands and accepts Angel’s choices.
Feeling somber, Lorne has serious reservations about Angel’s plan and Lindsey spends the day with Eve. She’s suspicious of Angel even though Lindsey now trusts him.
Gunn spends his day helping Anne at the homeless shelter she maintains. Spike goes to a seedy bar, drinks heavily, and goes onstage to recite a poem that he first read in 1880. Wesley spends his day in his apartment, tending to Illyria’s wounds. He tells her that there is nowhere else for him to be. She offers to comfort him, taking Fred’s form, but he refuses her.
When the time comes, the team splits up to attack members of the circle separately, making plans to reunite if they survive their missions. As they leave, a troubled Lorne tells Angel that this is the last thing he’s going to do for him, and that they will never see him again.
Warned of the plan by Harmony (Mercedes McNab), Hamilton confronts Angel and is intent on stopping his killing of the Circle’s leader. Angel reveals he has already poisoned Archduke Sebassis and they start to battle.
Gunn, Spike, and Illyria kill each of their targets. Together, Lindsey and Lorne wipe out the Sahvrin clan. Then, as Angel had ordered, Lorne executes Lindsey. The lawyer is shocked that he would be taken out by a flunky and dies. Lorne drops his gun and leaves, declaring his debt paid.
Wesley is killed as he knocks out Cyrus Vail. As the former Watcher dies, Illyria comforts him in Fred’s guise and then kills Vail when Vail regains consciousness.
Angel is losing his fight with Hamilton, until Connor arrives to fight by his father’s side. Hamilton proudly announces that his blood runs with power, prompting Angel to assume vampiric form and drink his blood — acquiring enough of Hamilton’s strength to kill him.
Expecting a swift counterattack from the Senior Partners, Angel directs Connor to leave, then manages to rendezvous with his surviving allies — Spike, Illyria, and a wounded Gunn.
As an army of supernatural creatures descends on them in the night rain, Angel simply says, “Let’s go to work.”
First aired: May 19, 2004
What do you think? Do you like the Angel TV series? Would you liked to have seen a sixth season?
The show’s ending made me nauseated to extremes. The whole Cordeila/Connor/Angel love triangle was disgusting and the biggest mistake the producers wrote in right next to Fred’s death/Illyria thing. I appreciated how the remaining characters ran off to die in battle, with the rest of the show. Wesley’s death was stupid, Cordeila’s return was disappointing – she shouldn’t have become pregnant with ‘Jasmine’ in the first place. I missed Lilah’s character, and her situation with Wes. Spike had no business being there. I miss Lorne, Lorne was a cool guy. Doyle never should have died in the first place, but… Read more »
y is there only y did it stop right there in the middle of the series
I don’t think that there has ever been a better show on television than Angel. Still miss it.
Dear WB
Please bring Angel back on the air. I like that show a lot. & I like it even better when Buffy the Vampire Slayer comes on the show.
Sincerely
John Hill
they should start it back up with a movie because it would become popular again because of twilight and the new love of vampires.
I finished the last episode last night and was pissed how can you end like that? It’s left open like there’s going to be more and you don’t know how it would end
Because the battle against evil NEVER ends. Its ending was *perfect*.
im still waitning for movie is there another season for angel tv show i want ot see it
Check out the Angel: After the Fall comics. The story continues, and quite well.
There definitely won’t be a movie now that Andy Hallett (Lorne) has passed away. RIP, and thanks for bringing such a memorable character to life.
Hmmm, I’m still waiting for the movie…… 🙂
I love the show so much. Wish it didn’t have to end – especially the way the last episode played out. So much left open and unfinished. Whose ever itdea it was to cancel this series – YOU ARE THE MOST IDIOTIC HUMAN ALIVE. We fans have no closure. It left us hoping that there would be more to come; even though we knew there wouldn’t be.
Yes Colleen, the WB have their heads up their butts!
Joss and the writers didn’t have time to write a proper ending. The show was cancelled on such short notice that the storylines had to be wrapped up quickly. Otherwise, the storylines would have played out much different and much better. Thank you to Jordan Levin and the WB for having their heads up thier butts! Live on Corporate America!!
Nonsense. The ending to Angel was PERFECT, and summed up the show’s entire premise in a way that a “happy ending” with finality could never do. One of the major themes of the series is that the battle against evil NEVER ends–that no matter how many bad guys you take out, there are always more.
Angel had a perfect ending, and I wouldn’t have wanted to see it end any other way.
Nothing like tying things up in a pretty bow, even if it is the dumbest bow ever.
Seems so Steve.. I hated and loved that ending.. Oo I guess i just never wanted that show to end xD watched all episodes just now.. Sad that it ended but still was a good to end when your at top and not when whole show has dryed up or writes get idiotic..
Queen C – you obviously didn’t get the message:
THE FIGHT NEVER ENDS…
Brilliant finale, obviously only appreciated by people who understood the show itself.
Stupid Ending. Hate it when a show doesn’t even have a proper ending!