Difference between revisions of "Angels in the Night"

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*[[Jonathan Frakes]]: [[David Xanatos]]
 
*[[Jonathan Frakes]]: [[David Xanatos]]
 
*[[Ashley Laurence]]: Housewife, Woman, Female Commuter
 
*[[Ashley Laurence]]: Housewife, Woman, Female Commuter
 +
*[[Tress MacNeille]]: [[Margot Yale]]
 
*[[Salli Richardson]]: [[Elisa Maza]]
 
*[[Salli Richardson]]: [[Elisa Maza]]
 
*[[Frank Welker]]: [[Bronx]], News Reporter
 
*[[Frank Welker]]: [[Bronx]], News Reporter
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===Ending Monologue===
 
===Ending Monologue===
''"[[Timeline#994|One thousand years ago]], we lived in a world that understood our purpose. It was the age of [[Gargoyle]]s. [[1994|Ten centuries later]], we awoke to a world bent on our destruction. Somehow, we never lost hope, and today we come full circle. A new age has begun, and we live again."''
+
''"[[Timeline#994|One thousand years ago]], we lived in a world that understood our purpose. It was the age of [[Gargoyle]]s. [[Timeline#1994|Ten centuries later]], we awoke to a world bent on our destruction. Somehow, we never lost hope, and today we come full circle. A new age has begun, and we live again."''
  
 
==First Appearances==
 
==First Appearances==

Latest revision as of 14:40, 15 May 2025

This page is part of a series of articles on The Goliath Chronicles

Information in this article is apocryphal and should not be considered canon.


"Angels in the Night" is the thirteenth and final episode of the The Goliath Chronicles. It was written as the finale for the entire Gargoyles series. It originally aired on February 15, 1997.


Crew With the Voice Talent Of


Summary

Opening Monologue

"The yearning for renewal is universal. The human new year takes many forms, but each message is the same. The struggles of the old year die away, as unspoiled hopes of the new year are born. Sometimes, hope is all we have."

Ending Monologue

"One thousand years ago, we lived in a world that understood our purpose. It was the age of Gargoyles. Ten centuries later, we awoke to a world bent on our destruction. Somehow, we never lost hope, and today we come full circle. A new age has begun, and we live again."

First Appearances

Character

Miscellaneous

Continuity

The recording that John Castaway had of Goliath's threat was dialogue altered from his time in court. ("And Justice For All")

Discontinuity

Margot Yale's trusting of Castaway is questionable considering that he was arrested for endangering the city in "...For It May Come True".

Tidbits

Originally, the production team for The Goliath Chronicles intended to end the episode with the gargoyle and Elisa fleeing New York for good; Goliath and Elisa would move to Chicago (Elisa changing her name) and Brooklyn and Lexington would embark on their own world tour. Fortunately, Greg Weisman persuaded his successors not to use this idea.

This is the only episode in The Goliath Chronicles (apart from "The Journey") to include a Shakespearean reference (assuming that Titania's role in "...For It May Come True" doesn't count): Xanatos's line "Now you have two choices: to be or not to be."

There is a brief allusion to the rock band The Beatles when Castaway promises to award the informant Maxwell the "Silver Hammer" for his services (the Beatles had a song called "Maxwell's Silver Hammer"). The Beatles were known as The Quarrymen before they became famous.

See Also


<< Previous Episode: "Seeing Isn't Believing"