"The Armory" | |
---|---|
Series Falling Skies Season 1, Episode 2 | |
![]() | |
Air date | June 19th, 2011 |
Writers | Graham Yost |
Director | Greg Beeman |
Producers | Steven Spielberg; Robert Rodat; Darryl Frank; Justin Falvey; Mark Verheiden; Greg Beeman; Graham Yost; John Ryan |
Starring | Noah Wyle; Moon Bloodgood; Drew Roy; Maxim Knight; Seychelle Gabriel; Peter Shinkoda; Mpho Koaho; Sarah Carter; Connor Jessup; Will Patton |
Episode guide | |
Previous "Live and Learn" |
Next "Prisoner of War" |
"The Armory" is the second episode of season one of the science fiction survival horror series Falling Skies. It was directed by Greg Beeman with a script written by Graham Yost. It first aired on TNT on Sunday, June 19th, 2011 at 10:00 pm.
Cast[]
Principal Cast[]
Guest Stars[]
Actor | Role |
---|---|
Jessy Schram | Karen |
Colin Cunningham | John Pope |
Bruce Gray | Uncle Scott |
Martin Roach | Mike |
Dylan Authors | Jimmy Boland |
Co-Starring[]
Actor | Role |
---|---|
Brent Jones | Click |
Daniel Petronijevic | Billy |
Brian Frank | Whitey |
James Collins | Cueball |
Notes & Trivia[]
- There are no notations or trivia available for this episode at this time. Be the first to add some! Just click on the edit tab under the section heading and start typing. This may include all out-of-universe as well as in-universe information relating to the episode. Acceptable notations may include:
- The production code number for the episode.
- Home video availability for the episode (VHS, DVD, Blu-ray, etc.), as well as which services provide digital download copies and/or streaming video services.
- The rating for the episode (TV-14, TV-MA, etc.)
- How many episodes in this series the director may have worked on.
- How many episodes in this series the writer may have worked on.
- Unique spelling or mis-spelling of selected cast and crew member, which may differ from how they are identified in other works.
- Character appearances and other annotations.
Allusions[]
- There are no allusions available for this episode at this time. Be the first to add some! Just click on the edit tab under the section heading and start typing. An allusion is an incidental reference made to a character, person, event or other miscellaneous piece of media that can be found somewhere in the episode itself. In most cases, this refers to characters or events from previous episodes.
Quotes[]
- There are no quotes available for this episode at this time. Be the first to add some! Just click on the edit tab under the section heading and start typing. The preferred format for quotes is an asterisk, followed by the character's name (bold and hyper-linked), semi-colon then the quote itself (without quotation marks. Quotes should be separated by four elipses (....) unless multiple quotes are used between characters as part of a conversation.