Tag: September

  • Fringe: Review “Liberty”… The Fight for the Universe!

    Fringe: Review “Liberty”… The Fight for the Universe!

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    Fringe Fans…it has been an amazing journey, these five years of our beloved show.

    Fringe Letters of Transit Futuristic Banner - Click to learn more at FOX BroadcastingI have a confession to make; I have tried to prolong these reviews as long as possible so I can keep the show alive. In my heart I never want it to end, but alas as with all great things it must eventually come to an end.

    I am glad that the producers (mainly Joel) decided to break up the last two episodes into two separate ones. It makes it easier on this reviewer to be able to ease into the ending better.

    Click to visit and follow Joel Wyman on Twitter!Joel Wyman has often said time and time again that this show is about a family and with these last two episodes that has never been truer than now.

    I suspect though that he was not only talking about the on screen family, but the off screen one as well. There are parts in both episodes where that is shown to its fullest extent.

    I hope that you will forgive me if I get a little emotional when writing these reviews. This show has changed my life (and I suspect that I am not alone in that) in ways that I cannot describe.

    It has given me faith again in television as a medium that can move people and can unite fans worldwide. It has restored my faith in quality writing, acting and directing, it has breathed new life into the sci-fi genre that has lost a little bit of luster.

     

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    Liberty:Fringe S5x12-desperation in the lab

    Now on with the show….I like the opening and how the desperation and urgency of the situation is felt throughout the scene. There is always great banter between Walter (John Noble), Peter (Joshua Jackson) and Olivia (Anna Torv) when they tend to get into their rhythm together.

    It is always a treat because mostly Peter and Olivia are trying to decipher what Walter is saying. I love that Broyles (Lance Reddick) is still very much a part of their plan and that he is almost the shadow that mFringe S5x12-The Ravenoves between both worlds.

    I love that he calls himself the Raven instead of Dove, which reminds me of Edgar Allan Poe and his most famous poem “The Raven”. The raven has always been a mysterious symbol as well; it has been steeped in mythology for such long time. It is very fitting that Broyles make that comment.

    The scene with Windmark (Michael Kopsa) and Michael (Rowan Longworth) are great. It looks as if Michael has a slight smirk on his face, as if he almost pities Windmark in his attempt to extract information from him.

    I love that Michael gives Windmark a taste of his own medicine, that he shows Windmark what it must have felt like to have been Walter or Hastings when they were both in the chair and being questioned by him.

    Fringe S5x12 - Peter Flemming as the Loyalist Lieutenant“Liberty” features two very gifted guest stars that many science fiction fans will certainly recognize and we have covered at entertainment conventions.

    The first is Peter Flemming, well known for his roles in Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis. A veteran character actor, Flemming portrays an Observer Loyalist Lieutenant who reveals the detention location of Child Observer Michael’s unwittingly after Agent Broyles trickd him into thinking he is to provide an extra security detail at Liberty Island.

    Fringe S5x12-Windmark's nose bleed

    That boy is strong, yes he is an anomaly, and he is the one thing that will ultimately be the downfall of the Observers. Michael Kopsa is as always great as Windmark, you are almost cheering at how he gets frustrated to an extent that he cannot break Michael.

    I love how the answers to Windmark’s questions just bounce back at him, it makes it that much sweeter when you know that Michael is the clear winner in that ‘battle’. It makes me giggle to know that Windmark has been bested by a child. I find it interesting that he refers to Michael as “it” just as Walter did in a previous episode.

    Fringe S5x12-Echoed back

    Where Michael is being held seems like a fortress as the team stated, but as Peter quickly pointed out no building is impenetrable. The plan that arises from the desperation is one that this viewer was happy to hear.

    Leave it to Olivia (Anna Torv) to come up with the plan to save Michael. It has always been her ability to see the other side that has given the team its advantage. Only with the bridge closed how would they accomplish this, is the million dollar question? Only one answer…cortexiphan.Fringe S5x12-Fortress

    It seems that Fringe has harkened back again to old school, which I love. It brings back parts of the past episodes that have always been my favorites. Seeing the cortexiphan, brought back all the memories of Olivia entering the tank and all the amazing things she could do with it running through her system.

    Olivia was always unstoppable, not even a bullet (well, at least without Walter’s quick thinking) could stop her. Once she triggered it, stand back because she was not afraid to use it and use it fiercely.

     

    Fringe S5x12-CortexiphanA lot of fans were a bit frustrated with the lack of kick ass Olivia in this season, but when she did finally show that side of her again, it was great.

    Anna has always had the capacity to channel that rage into action and power. Just watch her body language when she is amped on cortexiphan, it is like she was a whole person again.

    Peter’s concern about the effects that the cortexiphan would have on Olivia is palpable. Olivia knows that he is worried, so is she, she knows that without Michael the plan is lost.

    Fringe S5x12 - Peter Kelamis as Doctor TobinThe second Stargate guest star making an appearance is the talented Peter Kelamis from Stargate Universe portraying Doctor”Tobin”. Tobin is called in to oversee the cortexiphan treatments given to Olivia in the lab warning she could be killed in the process if the dosage is too high. Naturally Walter overrides Tobin’s guidance and injects more cortexiphan into Olivia.

    I love that Olivia reminds him that Etta died so that they could finish the plan, “both feet in, that’s what we said”. His comment of “What if I lose you, too” is so lovely, it is filled with such love that it almost stops the scene. Josh again shows his talent, his eyes reveal his pain at the thought of potentially losing her, too. She and Walter are all Peter has left, they are all the family he will ever have, now that Etta (Georgina Haig) is gone.

    Fringe S5x12-What if I lose you

    The points that Peter make about the Alt-universe and what if things are not where they remember and what happens if…are all valid and add fuel to his argument of why Olivia should not cross over. All good points, but Astrid (Jasika Nicole) is smart enough to figure out just how to solve that dilemma.

    Walter and his brilliant inventions, it is because of that window that this whole mess started, but it is also the solution. Of course it doesn’t stop Walter from using yet another one of the wonderful (I will miss them) incarnations of Astrid’s name.Fringe S5x12-the Window

    Seeing Michael in the chair and getting a paralytic is frightening. It is such a telltale about what Nina (Blair Brown) had said in the previous episode about how the Observers are animals. The way that Windmark is still affected by Michael, that he has to leave the room because the blood is still leaking from his nose is almost his comeuppance of sorts. It is almost getting to Windmark and Kopsa is great at just showing a bit of frustration.


    Fringe S5x12-ParalyticThe scene when they finally get to Battery Park to find the proper space to set up the window, to me is when the episode shifts. The team has hope again (that word again!) they might just have the chance to pull their plan off.


    It is great to see Donald/September (Michael Cerveris) again. He has always had a wonderful part in the Fringe family as a somewhat outsider, but now that we know what really happened and the purpose he always served it makes his role in the ‘family’ a whole lot better.Fringe S5x12-The blueprints

     

    I like that we get to see Donald constructing the device that will help him travel to the future with Michael. His careful planning and precise details would make Walter proud if he were there helping him.

    It made me giggle, though because I could not help but think of that brilliant show (and one of Josh’s obsessions) Breaking Bad, on AMC. With Donald blending all the elements together, it just was hilarious, because it reminded me of the “cooking” that goes on when making meth.

    Fringe S5x12-constructing the device

    One of my favorite scenes (and there are a few in this episode) is when the gang head underground to help ready Olivia for the cortexiphan. It is an intense scene between all the main characters, you can feel the tension in the air, it practically oozes off the screen. Josh and Anna are fantastic in this scene, the care that Peter shows is perfect and the pain that Olivia goes through is visceral.

    When Peter is attaching the pads to Olivia’s chest, you hear her whisper to him “I’m okay”. It is such a sweet moment, because she knows him and what he is thinking without even saying it. Again, Anna and Josh are the epitome of brilliant.Fringe S5x12-I'm okay

    Watching Anna take each and every “shot” of cortexiphan was torture, but that was the point. You felt her pain, every shift or change of her body you could feel. Every time I saw the needle go into her neck it made me cringe. It was a perfectly constructed scene.

    That scene must have been so physically exhausting for her and everyone involved. Those scenes are never easy for actors to do, but I applaud her for being the trooper and barreling through it like the pro she is.


    Fringe S5x12-Olivia's painOne of my favorite things about this scene is Walter (John Noble). The ability that John has to turn his megalomania on and off at the drop of a hat is proof of his immense talent. His comment about the fact that he knows about cortexiphan and the effects is hilarious, but also a bit scary. That part of himself that he has been desperately trying not to have resurface does at times. Too bad Nina (Blair Brown) is not around to rein him in.

    “Sacrifice is hard, son, but you are no stranger to it,” is such a great line that Walter says to Peter. It has so much meaning, especially in the finale episode. It is basically a huge foreshadowing of what is to come and also a nod to the past and what Peter has lost in every time line.

    “Neither are you dad,” Peter answers him, and knows that Walter can relate in so many more ways than he could possibly imagine. The times that Peter calls Walter dad are few but when they do happen, it makes my heart swell. It is such a beautiful moment between these two men and it shows all over John’s face.

    Fringe S5x12-Sacrifice is hard

    I love that the images that are present in Olivia’s cortexiphan laden brain are of little Etta (Abagayle Hardwick) and the short time they had together. The fact that there is hope (that darned word) of them getting her back is one of the reasons, dare I say Fringe S5x12-Beautiful memorythe ONLY reason that Olivia is doing what she is doing. The notion that she will have not only her “perfect little soul” back, but her husband and her life back is the best incentive ever.

    The light in her eyes comment is funny. It gives Anna a chance to be snarky with Walter for once. It is also a tender scene with John and Anna embraces it wonderfully. Those two actors are always incredible in their scenes together. When you have two powerhouses going head to head it makes watching the scenes a whole lot better.

    Fringe S5x12-Bothersome lightThe moments of Peter saying goodbye to Olivia before she goes to the Alt-universe are beautiful. You can see in Josh’s body the worry and fear that is running through Peter.

    He does a great job of manifesting it and showing it through his eyes. I have always said that Josh is great at revealing his emotions through his eyes and in this scene there is no doubt. The “I love yous” are just perfection. I guarantee every Polivia fan was squealing with joy.

    Fringe S5x12-Watching Olivia go

    Hello Alt-universe! Hello Bolivia, damn she still looks great for being 50 years old. I am so happy that Lincoln (Seth Gabel)and Bolivia got married and have a son. I was a little confused by that since we all know that she had VPE and nearly died giving birth to Henry in the episode Bloodline. Maybe things changed or they found a cure, but nonetheless it is amazing. Seth Gabel aged well…it is so great to see him again, too. I love that the producers are bringing back cast members from the past.

    Fringe S5x12-Bolivia Older

    Am I the only one that got choked up and teary eyed when both Olivia’s hugged? I don’t know why it was such an emotionaFringe S5x12-Friends finallylly powerful scene for me. Maybe it was because of the now friendship that they had developed despite the history that we the fans know has been a part of their past. It is as if they are long lost sisters seeing each other again, Anna does an exceptional job, as she always does when playing both versions of Olivia.


    Fringe S5x12-Happy FamilyIt is a little sad to see her reaction to the picture Bolivia has on her desk, it is a reminder of what she once had with Peter and Etta and will hopefully have again…if all goes as planned.

    I was a little confused about how Bolivia knew about Etta and the fact that she was missing. I think there were a few scenes that may have been left out and that we will hopefully see on the DVD. I know that on twitter there were folks that had said that Bolivia and Lincoln’s son name was Trevor and that there was a scene that was shot but not shown. On well, let’s hope we get those in the DVD.

    I also love the fact that the cortexiphan is affecting Olivia as she sees her little girl again at three years old standing in Bolivia’s office. It is such a jarring sight, but great to see Anna’s reaction to it.

    Fringe S5x12-Images of Baby Etta

    The scene with Windmark and his superior in 2609 is great. That room is so stark; it is quite disturbing because it reminds me of a mental institution and the sterilization of what that represents. The baffling quandary of Michael and his advanced intellect is causing great concern for Windmark. He cannot accept the fact that Michael is far greater a threat than he could ever imagine.

    That Michael may be the cause of their downfall. I think that even though Windmark doesn’t say it he feels it and knows it somewhere in that Observer brain of his. “There is no greater danger than that which is unknown” as Windmark states, which has been a running theme in Fringe since the beginning of the show…the unknown.

    Talking about Michael like he is a thing is disturbing, asking that he be “disassembled and preserve the parts” is so creepy it sounds like something out of a Stephen King novel.

    Fringe S5x12-Future 2609

    Fringe S5x12-Like Old Times

    Olivia’s scene with Lincoln is great, I love that there is still a little reminder of the decision that she chose Peter over him; but that she is glad to see he has a wonderful family.

    Seth is great at that tension and he shows it well, but I think he will always love Olivia, but differently now. Bolivia’s comment about “her young ass” is funny and so cute to see Lincoln react, they are completely in love and it is beautiful.

    Fringe S5x12-Olivia's young assNow comes the kick ass Olivia that we all know and love and have missed (some fans have) dearly.

    When she arrives again, she is clearly disoriented and keeps seeing things. Her hallucinations are some of the things that Walter warned about and Olivia has to be extra careful and know which ones are real and which ones are not.

    Michael being wheeled to an examination room is eerily reminiscent of what happened to Olivia in the Entrada episode when Walternate wanted to vivisect her to see how her brain and the cortexiphan work. It is very interesting that Olivia was considered an anomaly to Walternate, a threat as well and look at what happened to her and how the show has almost come full circle again.

    Fringe S5x12-Michael on the table

    Olivia becomes her bad ass self as she roams through the halls looking for Michael, anybody that gets in her way gets taken out. You can clearly see the desperation and urgency in Olivia’s body as she races against time (literally) to get Michael and herself back where they belong. Anna is always at her best when she is in her kick ass mode; she has that confidence and swagger that has always made her great to watch as any incarnation of herself.Fringe S5x12-Finding Michael

    Rampaging through the hallway she fades in and out again, but after encountering an Observer and besting him, she charges toward her goal and finds Michael. The little smile that Michael has on his face when he sees her is sweet.

    Just because he does not speak does not mean that he does not feel or comprehend what is going on. The contrary is the case with Michael; he is more in tune with everything and everybody that he is beyond feeling.

    Fringe S5x12-Down but not out for the countWhen Olivia and Michael make their way to escape and are caught by the Observer, you think they are done for until the team of Dunham and Lee open fire in a carefully choreographed synchronicity that you are cheering for them.

    The last scene with both Olivia’s is bittersweet, again we say goodbye to the Alt-universe, we say goodbye to a part of Fringe that has always been a weird little part of the family.

    Without it we would not have our beloved show, love it or hate it but know that it will forever be our Red verse! Goodbye old friend you will be missed.

    Fringe S5x12-Perfect shot

    Anna once again does what she does best; she is perfection as she bids herself a farewell. I love Bolivia’s retort to Olivia’s statement of “You have a beautiful family” and she says “Thank you, go save yours”…watching it again I am getting teary eyed.

    It is a beautiful scene between two characters (albeit the same actress) that shows just how much each has grown over the course of the five years and the different timelines. They are not so different after all. Anna’s talent is one of the things I will most definitely miss on TV, she is a rare gem.

    Fringe S5x12-Saying goodbye to Bolivia

    Fringe S5x12-Back safe and sound


    Arriving back with the team everybody breathes a sigh of relief, especially Peter. He has her back in one piece and he is glad. But the fight is not over as Olivia mentions that the Observers know she crossed over.

    The scene in the van when Peter and Olivia have their moment together it is so…perfect. There is really no other word to describe that scene, a photo of that scene was leaked on twitter and of course it set the fandom on fire. Now we know the context of what is was and are very happy about it.

    Windmark sitting at his desk as he asks the officer about how Michael disappeared is creepy. When he rats out Broyles you want to just scream, because that is very bad. But we all know that Broyles can most certainly handle himself..

    Fringe S5x12-Windmark's officeIt is so great to have the episode end with Donald going to see an old “friend”…December (Eugene Lipinski). I always liked his character, because he was always giving September the benefit of the doubt. He had a soft spot, so to speak, for the plight of September and the “family” he made himself a part of. The producers did a nice job of keeping that a secret too, I like how they are bringing back some of our favorite characters.

    Watching that scene again floored me, here’s why, I was so excited about seeing December again that I completely missed what September said to him. When I did watch it again and September said “Walter Bishop is back and we have the boy,” makes me think that this was always planned. That what happened has happened and that the timeline needed to get reset again on order for things to be as they were. It was a HUGE HUGE HUGE revelation and one that segues perfectly into the next episode. That last shot of the door closing revealing 513 was pure genius.

    Fringe S5x12-End

    Well, that is the end of this review of the second to last episode of Fringe ever. I hope you enjoyed the episode as much as I did and used enough Kleenex to warrant opening another box. I would love to hear your comments and remember Fringe is and always will live on …forever!

    Click to visit and follow WormholeRiders New Agency on Twitter!I hope you enjoyed my review and my previous news articles about my analysis of Fringe and I thank you for visiting WormholeRiders News Agency.

    Please feel free to leave a comment here or If you prefer, you may also click the social media icons below to share this news article or as many of our readers and visitors often do, visit the WHR on Facebook or me on Twitter by clicking the links or images avatars in this news story. See You on The Other Side“! Click to visit and follow Noz4a2 (Lori) on Twitter!

    Until next time,

    Regards,

    Lori

  • Fringe Review: Anomaly XB-6783764 Answers the Question!

    Fringe Review: Anomaly XB-6783764 Answers the Question!

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    Hello Fringe fans!

    Fringe Letters of Transit Futuristic Banner - Click to learn more at FOX BroadcastingI hope that you are surviving the hiatus. With the New Year just around the corner, so are the last three episodes of Fringe.

    It is bittersweet to know that so few remain, but also great because we will see the final battle unfold as it should be.

    Fringe S5x10 - Peter and Olivia working close togetherIt has been an interesting season; we have lost a few beloved characters, gained new ones and finally got back our beloved Polivia.

    It was questionable whether or not we would see Peter (Joshua Jackson) and Olivia (Anna Torv) back together, but last week’s episode showed us that their love is as strong as ever.

    Come January 11, 2013, the final battle will be waged and we will see what Walter has in store and what his plan has been all along. Hopefully by the end, all will be revealed and everyone will be satisfied. I am glad that we found out that question that had been burning on everyone’s mind…who is Donald?

    The answer was shocking to say the least, but a wonderful one at that. What else is in store for our beloved team? Only time and Joel Wyman will tell as he did in this appreciation video from December 13, recently re-tweeted by the great team at Fringe on FoxTV.

    We also include the latest promotional trailer courtesy of FOX TV below for your enjoyment.

     

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    Now…on with the review.

    Anomaly XB-6783764:

    Fringe S5x10 - Rowan Longworth as Michael the Child Observer MichaelI like the little boy who plays Michael (Rowan Longworth). He is doing a good job at conveying his empathic abilities, which I am sure again will be revealed more as the remaining episodes count down.

    It must have been hard for the team to get answers out of him, since he has yet to speak a word. It does also make you wonder what happened to the connection that he had with Olivia in the past. Will it be again or is it lost to time?

    Fringe S5x10 - Walter examines MichaelWalter (John Noble) plying him with candy is fun, no doubt a desperate plea on his part to try and find out why he is so important to the team. His frustration with Michael’s non verbal communication is evident.

    Walter suggests that they try and pry things from Michael’s mind via going into it as he did with September (Michael Cerveris).

    It always cracks me up when John gets outrageous, because he lets Walter’s madness bubble to the surface and just peak out; John always does it to perfection. I also suspect it would be a good excuse for Walter to use more drugs.

    Fringe S5x10-Candy little boy

    John also has the great ability, as we saw with Walternate, to have a sinister side to him. What he feared would happen, when he told Nina (Blair Brown) about becoming the man he used to be is starting to show through. Let’s hope that Walter, the one we know and love will still be intact by the end of the series. His God complex is surely starting to manifest and take over, hopefully Donald and our team can prevent that from happening.

    Fringe S5x10-Walter's Frustration


    It is so wonderful to see Blair Brown have such an integral part in this episode. She has always been a favorite actress of mine and I am glad that she is finally being utilized the way she should be. Nina’s intentions in this episode are what make this episode so epic. Blair had explained so well about her final decision being one that she had no choice in the matter.

    Fringe S5x10-Observer gadgetsThe gadgets that the Observers use harkens back to a past episode, Road not Taken, where Peter (Joshua Jackson) had used an old record player to extract sound waves from a window. I mentioned before that as diabolical and cruel as the Observers are they do have some of the coolest gadgets around.

    Windmark will stop at nothing to extract any and all information any way he can. I must give great praise to Michael Kopsa for playing Windmark with such evil intent that he makes it so much fun to hate him. He is truly one of those characFringe S5x08 - Georgina Haig as Ettaters that once his demise comes; cheering will be heard throughout all of Fringe fandom.

    I think that Nina, somewhere in the back of her mind, knows the eminent danger she is potentially putting herself and the team in, but the cause and what the outstanding Austalian actress who portrayed Etta (Georgina Haig), died for is more important.

    Finding a way to help the team is of the utmost importance to her and something she feels show owes Olivia (Anna Torv) and the team.

    Fringe S5x10-Walter's coldWalter’s snarky comments are abounding in this episode. Again, John manages to make us laugh even during the direst of situations. Having that extraordinary gift is something I as a director and a Fringe fan know is something to cherish. His comment of “I’m cold” reminds me of the countless times he has complained in previous episodes of the lack of warmth or food at crime scenes.

    Nina has always been a very mysterious character, never quite knowing if she is on the side of good or bad. She has toed the line a few times and has definitely done some questionable things in her time.

    Fringe S4x19 - William Bell in amber

    The fact that she is and I suspect always was a part of William Bell’s (Leonard Nimoy) and Walter’s inner circle speaks volumes about why she has always been shrouded in mystery. Why she has always had these weird connections, like Peter used to, to things that are not quite explained. How she knew Sam Weiss (Kevin Corrigan) and how she happened to mention this black lab that Massive Dynamic has.

    Fringe S3x12 - Sam Wiess discusses Peters vibrations

    Nina’s concern for Walter is evident as shown through the conversation with Peter. They are both worried about him and rightfully should be. The interesting thing is that Nina has seen Walter the way he used to be and knows all too well what reverting back to that state can do harm not only to Walter but the plan and the team.

    “Your father understands that anything worth fighting for comes with a cost” is what Nina ultimately tells Peter. How right she is, because this statement not only pertains to this particular episode but every sacrificial episode from every season. The priceFringe S5x10-Peter & Nina talk that they ALL have paid in one shape or form has brought them to this point in time. The picture of Etta plastered on the wall driving home the statement that Nina just told Peter.

    The black lab entrance is cool. Leave it to Nina to have a lab underground where all kinds of experiments are taking place. It is of no surprise what they find down there. It explains how Nina has been more than aware of how the Observers work and she has always been one step ahead.

    Fringe S5x10-Black Lab entrance
    Fringe S5x10-Thinking about Etta The scene between Peter and Olivia when he asks if she is thinking about Etta is great. Anna has a vulnerability about her that shows in her body language and she also proves how visceral she can be as an actress.

    Her maternal instincts are on alert with Michael ever since they found him and in a way he is helping her heal from losing Etta. Peter’s comfort is always ever present, in the way he interacts with her and the way he looks at her. Josh again displays his talent for compassion that Peter has shown since he fell in love with Olivia.


    Fringe S5x10-Walter with the ECOGWalter’s fascination with the ECOG device is a little disturbing, more so when he says to prep the subject and Peter corrects him that his name is Michael.

    Walter seems to be slowing reverting back to his old self, glimpses we have seen throughout this season. John again being the brilliant one to just give us enough of a shadow to know that something darker looms.

    One thing that I found interesting and that no one (at least not in my circle of Fringe friends) has brought up is what Michael represents. What I mean by this is that I cannot help but think of the Michael the Arc angel. If I remember anything of my Catholic schooling, it is that Michael led the armies of heaven against the forces of Satan and defeated them. To me that is what this Michael almost represents, he is the answer and the one that will be the one to ultimately defeat the Observers. It also makes me wonder why he would be so important to Walter if it weren’t for what Michael possesses. Why Donald was sworn to keep him safe, that Michael is indeed the one or dare I say weapon that the team has in their pocket, their ace up their sleeve, in a way.

    I maybe reading too much into it, but it was just weird that no one picked up on that. I guess that’s because science and religion do not mix very well, that Michael had to be shrouded (sorry for the pun) in something a little less obvious. I would love to ask David Fury who wrote this episode if that was what Michael represented in this episode or what Michael represents overall. I guess that is a question for Joel as well…his is the maestro after all.

    There have been many references to the Observers being like the Nazis and in some ways I can definitely see the correlation. Their methods mirror those that make them look similar to the Nazis, Windmark being the most sinister of them all. It is an eerie sight indeed, frightening to say the least.

    Fringe S5x10-Interrogation

    Of course Michael’s readings are off the charts, of course he processes things differently than the other Observers, and he IS different, like September (Michael Cerveris). He is the one that is the major cog in Walter’s wheel of a plan, without him the whole thing falls apart. He is an empath; he isn’t the cold, calculating Observers that we have seen (minus September of course). He is the chosen one, the one of great importance, the one that will lead them to the final battle with the Observers…sound familiar? That is where my theory of the arc angel comes in.

    The shot of the warehouse made me giggle out loud. It reminded me of the last scene in one of my most favorite movies, Raiders of The Lost Ark. I don’t know if that was intentional to make it look like that, but it was great fun to see. It also made me think that like the warehouse in Raiders, what secrets does this warehouse hold?

    Fringe S5x10-Warehouse


    The scene with Hastings in the interrogation room with Windmark is very reminiscent of what he did to Walter in episode one of Season 5. It does not matter to Windmark how he gets his answers as long as he is satisfied that is his main goal. By any means necessary.

    When Olivia informs Nina that she has been coFringe S5x10-the futurempromised that is when the episode really begins to shine. It is some of the best writing and acting that I have seen in a long time, mostly on Blair Brown’s part. Her decisions from this scene forward are ultimate and when the plan is set in motion there is no stopping her. She knew what she had to do as tough as a decision as it was it is what needed to be done in order to keep the team and Michael safe.

    I am so curious what Michael showed Nina when he touches her cheek and she reacts. I suspect it’s the future if they do not defeat the Observers. I hope that we will get a reveal about it so that we the fans are not left in the dark.

    The team needs to get back to the lab as soon as possible, especially knowing that Nina has been compromised and possibly put Michael in danger. What they do is brilliant; leave it to Peter, the reformed con man to think up that plan.

    It works and oFringe S5x10-Peter's planur beloved team escapes for the time being. I love that Peter can still hot wire a car; it just goes to show that those con man skills never die!

    Once the lab has been breached this is when one of the best scenes in recent memory takes place. Blair does some of her best work and it is so brilliant that it will be forever remembered for the power, but for also the end result.

    Fringe S5x10-Breached

    Fringe S5x10 - Windmark discovers Nina's experimentation on his kindWindmark discovering the experimented Observers is what sets him off. He calls Nina an animal…I thought pot calling kettle. When Windmark reads her he points out that she had mentioned the boy Observer, he is important to the fugitives, again my theory goes here. The fact that Windmark says that the boy is a chromosomal mistake leads me to believe that Michael has a power that is still untapped.

    That Michael is the one and only thing that Windmark is afraid of even though he lets on that he isn’t. Sometimes it is those mistakes or anomalies that turn out to be the very thing that we have been looking for the whole time.

    The ones that will save the universe, kind of like how Superman was an anomaly, a boy wonder and the power he possessed ended up saving the world. So was Jesus in his time, again religion comes into play, but only to make my point.

    Fringe S5x10 - Nina compares The Observers to unfeeling reptilesNina’s speech to Windmark about why Observers tilt their heads is so freaking brilliant I cheered when she finished. She was so on point that you almost wanted to high five her mechanical hand for the excellent job she did.

    What she pointed out was so true that it was eerie. The fact that the Observers had devolved instead of evolved is a testament to the human spirit and the relationships that we have. The way that we show love and compassion, the way we feel does not make us weak, if anything it is the one thing that defines us as humans.

    Her speech is the last hurrah she has before she makes the ultimate sacrifice. She did it for love, for the love of Olivia, love of Walter, Etta and I even suspect love for William Bell. Nina truly gets the last word, in your face Windmark!

    When she shoots herself, twitter went crazy! It seems that Nina after all these years had become a character that fans really loved and to see her commit the ultimate sacrifice stunned everyone, but also made her immortal to everyone. It was the second shot heard throughout all of Fringe-dom (the first being the one that killed Etta). Goodbye Nina, you will be missed, in more ways than one.

    Fringe S5x10-Nina's ultimate sacrifice

    The scene when the team discovers Nina dead is so heartbreaking, but John and Anna are the two that really shine in this scene. Even though Olivia does not show as much emotion as Walter did, does not mean the loss is not great. I was disappointed to see that fans were saying that Olivia’s reaction was not as powerful as Walter’s. I do believe they were wrong, dead wrong.

    Olivia’s reaction was perfect…for Olivia. What they failed to remember is who Olivia really is. She was never one to break down, on rare occasions she has. Olivia never thought herself worthy of love and always kept a distance so as to not get hurt. She had to develop the thick skin that she had in order to survive her life. I do believe that Olivia feels very deeply, probably more so than we do.

    Fringe S5x10-Finding Nina

    Fringe S5x10-Walter's sorrow

    Walter’s reaction was perfect as well. John Noble made a great point during one of his many Noble Intentions videos that maybe Walter and Nina’s relationship may have been deeper than we always thought. John always brilliant as usual moves you to tears. I also love what Josh does, how Peter comforts Olivia, but in a very soft, loving way.

    I made a point to someone that all the people in Olivia’s life, regardless of time line, whom she loves, always end up dead. That is my point as to why she always has that pain, it will always be behind her eyes, because she has gone through a hell that we can only imagine and never wish on another human being.

    Anna Torv’s talent is undeniable; her eyes are so perfect at revealing those emotions, just under the surface. John had made the point that her subtly is brilliant and that is what makes her so good. Olivia has a quiet strength that has always been there. She carries Fringe S5x10-Walter with the ECOGon through unbelievable pain, she is a survivor, and she is the very definition of the word.

    Where they find Michael is clever, obviously Nina made damn sure that Windmark could not find him and he was too hell bent on finding the fugitives that he did not bother to look any further. I love that once they find him and pull him out; he sees Nina and reacts as only an empath can. The single tear speaks volumes, bravo little one!

    When Walter dons the ECOG it is a great scene because at first the reaction to the questions are just nods. When Walter asks Michael why he was needed for Walter’s plan, and why he was important he does the same thing he did to Nina, touch her cheek and show her.

    The montage is beautiful, it is flash back of all past episodes and a virtual zoetrope of memories that Walter had either forgotten or repressed.Fringe S5x10-Michael shows Walter

    The final revelation to the question is what we have all been waiting for…the question that has been on every Fringe fans mind, who is Donald. I must say it was one of those moments when I audibly gasped! It was so wonderful to see Michael Cerveris again; he has been sorely missed in the fifth season. It was a little weird to see him with hair, but great nonetheless.

    Okay, well now we know who Donald is, what I want to know (and I am sure every Fringe fan on the planet wants to know) is how did Donald become September? Is the boy Observer possibly September? Was September another anomaly as well that somehow slipped through the cracks?

     

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    That would explain a lot about September and the significant role he played not only on the show but in the lives of Olivia, Peter and especially Walter. I know that Michael Cerveris said on twitter that his being Donald was the hardest secret he had to keep, but he loved the reaction of all the fans!

    When Walter finally tells the team that Donald is September they are a little perplexed, how that is possible I bet they are thinking. The look on Walter’s face is wonderful, almost like a veil had been lifted from something that was clouding his memory. He almost had a look of relief and nostalgia, as if to say to himself, now it all makes sense.

    Fringe S5x10-September is DonaldBeautiful, heartbreaking episode, I am conflicted about the fact that there are only three episodes left. I am happy that we do get to see the final battle between good and evil, but I also do not want to see our team’s story end. I am being selfish when I say that I want Fringe to go on forever.

    The good thing is that thanks to other mediums, Fringe WILL go on forever. I do hope that there is going to be more in the way of comic books and possibly a movie or two. Until then, we always have our DVDs and fan fiction to tide us over.

    It will be a hell of a final ride and this fan is desperately looking forward to it. Have a Happy New Year Fringe fans, see you in 2013 and remember that “Momentum can be deferred, but it must always be paid back in full!”

     

    Fringe Banner S5 The Observers - Click to learn more at FOX Broadcasting!

    Click to visit and follow WormholeRiders New Agency on Twitter!I hope you enjoyed my review and my previous news articles about my analysis of Fringe and I thank you for visiting WormholeRiders News Agency.

    Please feel free to leave a comment here or If you prefer, you may also click the social media icons below to share this news article or as many of our readers and visitors often do, visit the WHR on Facebook or me on Twitter by clicking the links or images avatars in this news story. See You on The Other Side“! Click to visit and follow Noz4a2 (Lori) on Twitter!

    Until next time,

    Regards,

    Lori

  • Press Release: Naddy & Kenn “On The Other Side” with Fringe’s Jasika Nicole by NDB Radio 7 PM PDT!

    Press Release: Naddy & Kenn “On The Other Side” with Fringe’s Jasika Nicole by NDB Radio 7 PM PDT!

    FOR IMMEDIATE DISTRIBUTION

    Hey Fringe Fanatics,Click to visit NDB Media for tonights Radio Show!

    Be sure to tune in TONIGHT!

    This evening is a very special LIVE appearance of NaddyCa Click to visit Jasika Nicole on IMDB!t and WR_Systems at NDB Media for a LIVE interview with Jasika Nicole with Nadine and I invited by the gracious hosts Roger and Richard of NDB with whom WHR has a strategic relationship in association with ArcticGoddess1 of Auroris Entertainment! YAY!

    Do not miss Jasika on NDB tonight at 7 PM Pacific/ 10 PM Eastern time! Click Jasika’s image to learn more about her career and so you can be ready for her NDB appearance!

    Click to visit NaddyCat on TwitterNaddy and I will be with NDB Media immediately after discussing Season 2 finale FRINGE theories, future episodes, Evil Alt-Olivia, The one and only Peter Bishop, Dastardly Walternate, Astrid Errr Astro, Alternate Universes, Wormholes, where is William Bell now? and maybe even a milk shake courtesy of “Gene the Cow” with The Fringe Report Dot Com’s fantastic and gracious hosts Ian, Levi and Craig before Jasika”s NDB LIVE interview! Click to visit WR_Systems on Twitter

    The Fringe “Gates” opens at 9:00 PM Eastern and 6:00 PM Pacific time followed by NDB immediately at 7 PM PDT / 10 PM EDT! How will you get to NDB and TFR?

    Simply click their banner logos here and your alternate reality self will be “Gated‘ directly to NDB and TFR where Naddy and I will see you “On The Other Side“!

     

    Click to visit The FRINGE Report Dot Com! Click to visit Fringe on FOX

  • Fringe Review: Season 2 – Over There: Part 2

    Fringe Review: Season 2 – Over There: Part 2


    Fellow Fringe fans,


    Well, this was it: the final part of the two-part Fringe finale which felt, in many ways, rather more like a movie than an extended episode of a television show. In many
    Fringe Banner Mini - Click to visit Fringe on FOXways this episode was the culmination of the last two seasons: we see the payoff in the way a number of threads which were started as far back as the pilot are woven together to bring a measure of closure to certain plotlines. Click to visit Fringe on 20th Century Fox Studios!And of course, in true Fringe fashion, for every answer we receive ever more questions arise.


    There were any number of things which I loved about this episode, many of which I Click to visit Warner Brothers Television!will enumerate after the recap, but there were a couple things which particularly impressed me. One of which, visually speaking, was the panoramas of the Other Side: they offer a particularly intriguing juxtaposition to our side, from the bronze Statue of Liberty to the misplaced Transamerica Pyramid.

    The Other Side


    Stylistically speaking, I quite enjoyed the way the story unfolded, although in this episode there was less jumping between the two Fringe teams given that our team has crossed over and there was a fair bit of establishment of the Other Side in part 1. As much as I enjoy seeing the team together, I often find that some of the most poignant scenes we have seen so far occur when the characters are split off into subgroups: most notably in this episode, certain scenes between Walter and Bell, and between Olivia and Peter.


    Recap


    Over There: Part 2 picked up pretty much right where Over There: Part 1 left off: Peter is going to meet with Walternate, Olivia has met up with Bell and they are trying to find Walter who has been shot, all the while the alternate Fringe division is trying to find our team.

    Seeing a ghost


    Olivia and Bell’s search for Walter leads them to the hospital in which he is being treated; this is also when Olivia learns that the alternate Fringe Division answers to Walternate as he is the Secretary of Defense. Her level of incredulity is quite amusing. After ascertaining that Walter is indeed in that hospital, Olivia and Bell split up: Olivia goes to find Walter, and Bell attempts to waylay Alt-Liv and Charlie – watching Bell (played by Leonard Nimoy) try to distract the agents by rambling about the technology which he has built for them is a favourite scene of mine. Olivia tracks down Walter and they meet back up with Bell. Alt-Liv gets quite the shock when, after realizing that Walter has escaped, she views the security camera footage only to see herself and a different version of Walter Bishop.

    “It was much worse here: the laws of physics were turned into mere suggestions” – Walternate


    In their first protracted conversation, at least to which we have been privy, Walternate explains to Peter that the reason that things are so bad on their side is due to the events Walter set in motion when he stole Peter all those years ago. Walternate explains that Peter can help them heal their world by using the machine and that he needs Peter’s help because of his understanding of our side’s technology: apparently we have made advances which they have not which would be helpful in understanding the Machine. (Keep in mind that we know that the Machine will harm Peter, and destroy our world.) Alt-Liv interrupts their conversation when she comes to question the Secretary about their doubles and Walternate tells her that she must never trust the “monsters”.  Walternate also seems rather interested in the fact that Peter knows “Agent Dunham”.


    Alt-Liv takes Peter to the apartment which Walternate has had set up for him and they have a rather interesting discussion about the differences between the two sides and between Alt-Liv and Olivia. Meanwhile, Bell, Walter, and Olivia discuss their options and come to an agreement about the course of action they must take: Olivia will go to find Peter, Walter and Bell will go to Walternate’s old lab to get the technology which they need to cross back over to our side.

    The Blight


    On the way to the lab Walter sees some of the effects of his actions first-hand when he witnesses “the Blight” which the shape-shifters have talked about and Bell tells him that it is his fault. While in the lab the two old friends begin to touch on some of the issues between them: Walter confronts Bell about being responsible for some of the deficits he now experiences resulting from having parts of his brain removed, but before they can resolve anything the discussion is tabled in order to get to work. They find the device to reopen the crack from when they crossed over, but Bell says to leave the power source to him.

    Faceoff


    Olivia lets herself into Alt-Liv’s apartment to ask for her help. A few differences between the two Olivias become apparent: unlike Olivia, Alt-Liv’s mother is still alive but her sister died during childbirth. When Olivia explains that she needs to find Peter because he is in danger, Alt-Liv assumes that they are a couple. Alt-Liv manages to get the drop on Olivia and the two of them fight; Olivia narrowly wins and dyes her hair to impersonate Alt-Liv. Alt-Charlie shows up and the two of them go to Peter’s apartment.

    “Bringing me back was never about fixing this universe – it was about destroying yours” – Peter


    Peter figures out that the Machine requires an organic interface and that he is the only one who can operate it. Olivia and Alt-Charlie meet up with Peter who clues into the fact that it is our Olivia when she tells him about the Parchment which was given to his father by an Observer and then takes out Alt-Charlie. After listening to Olivia, Peter realizes that Walternate lied to him: it was never about healing their world, but rather about destroying Olivia’s. Olivia and Peter finally discuss the fact that she knew he wasn’t from her world yet said nothing. Olivia tells Peter that he doesn’t belong on this side, he belongs on her side and that he has to come back because he belongs with her.

    Infiltration Achieved


    The alternate Fringe Division tracks our team by tracking Olivia since she is using Alt-Olivia’s identification. After a rather tense reunion, Peter and Walter go into the Opera House (where our team crossed over to the Other Side) to set up the doorway and Bell and Olivia try to hold off the alternate division. Bell tells Walter that he himself will provide the power for the others to cross over since he is so molecularly unstable from crossing over so many times. When our team crosses over it is revealed that during the brief time Bell was knocked out during the fighting, the alternate agents managed to capture Olivia: it was Alt-Liv who crossed back over with Peter and Walter, not our Olivia. The episode ends with our Olivia locked up, a captive of Walternate.


    Thoughts and Impressions


    I really do think that this was one of the best finales I watched this season – and I’m not just saying that because I love the show. There was enough payoff that it felt as though the story arcs leading up to the episode panned out, yet at the same time there were more than enough questions introduced to carry us into season 3. And that’s not even counting the fact that our Olivia is still stranded on the Other Side and our team has been infiltrated.

    The Observer


    As always the Observers present quite the conundrum. For instance, why was “our” Observer September on the Other Side? (You can clearly see him in the picture above). Something about which I am quite curious is if there are indeed more than one of each Observer given that it seems as though they instead travel between universes, which begs the question of how they do so seemingly unharmed. Or perhaps it is constant travel between universes that is to blame for their physiological differences. One of the reasons I think there might only be one of each is that they talk as though they experience events in both universes: the conversation we observed in Peter, wherein they discussed the fact that September had made a mistake by distracting Walternate before he found a cure for Peter, seems to be the basis for some of the conversations we have seen between September and Walter on our side. Or is it that the Observers, each iteration of them, somehow communicate with one another; that is, perhaps the Observers in our universe can easily exchange information with their alternate counterparts.


    Another curiousity which the Observers introduce is the Manuscript depicting the Machine. For some reason the parchment not only contains sketches of the Machine, but it also has genetic coding; also, the copy which September gives to Olivia in Over There part 1, seems to have almost been translated from a copy which Walternate possesses. But what I find the most curious is that Walternate tells Peter that the machine is “very old tech”, so who built it in the first place? Usually the only time we see the Observers acting directly to affect events is when they are correcting a mistake, so I wonder if they were somehow involved in the building of the device. We know that the Observers have technology that is rather unlike anything we have – we have seen numerous examples of it in use – and I have always wondered from where they got it; perhaps there is another universe from which the Observers originate.

    Desperate


    One thing which struck me in particular in this episode, in both episodes actually, was how our Olivia continues to display a rather uncharacteristic level of desperation (I discussed this in my review for Over There part 1, but everything reached a pinnacle in part 2). Olivia seemed younger, almost, than usual, especially when juxtaposed with Alt-Olivia. It is as if the façade she usually keeps up of hard-ass agent, which we normally only see dropped around Rachel and Ella, has been decimated by the recent events, not the least of which is Peter’s return to the Other Side. I think the reason she seems younger is that she seems much more vulnerable.


    Alt-Liv seems much less haunted by her past than does our Olivia; although, given that Olivia’s traumas started when she was 3 years old, you can’t really blame her. I also wonder if Alt-Liv’s mother ever married Olivia’s stepfather: if not, it would have spared Rachel and Alt-Liv an abusive father and Alt-Liv would not have shot him at the age of 9.

    “But in the end, you have to come back because you belong with me” – Olivia to Peter


    Ever since Jacksonville when we first saw that The Powers that Be (abbreviated to TPTB, fan-speak for those producers and writers who determine everything show-related) might be leaning towards actually starting some sort of romantic relationship between Peter and Olivia I have been rather undecided: I was never entirely sure where I stood with them as a couple. If you want to read what I had to say on that issue, you can check out these two reviews: here and here. But after watching this episode I think my worries were unfounded. It was never that I didn’t think it was plausible, but rather that with the dynamics of the team, particularly between Walter, Peter, and Olivia, I wasn’t sure that their relationship needed to change.


    If I may digress a little bit, one thing in particular which I noticed this past season, not just with Fringe but with most of the shows I watch, is that the “will-they/won’t-they” issue between characters has gotten rather old. I mean, it almost always happens to a certain extent, and I understand why it is often drawn out. But at the same time it feels as though in trying to beat the cliché (if you’d even call it that) of having two lead characters get together, most shows fall into a rut of sorts, and that has become the cliché. I think that TPTB on Fringe rather neatly sidestepped that whole issue without it feeling contrived: for one thing, it is rather obvious that even once Olivia returns to our side, there is no way that things could pick up right where they left off given that Olivia will be having to deal with her captivity and who knows what else will be introduced.


    I myself actually liked that that particular scene between Peter and Olivia was rather understated: it wasn’t really a centerpiece of the episode, even though it contains some rather huge character development. It actually quite surprised me in that I wasn’t expecting it to happen so soon, if at all. I think it is tempting to draw things out for as long as possible at times, but I have noticed that with Fringe TPTB are very good at moving things along at a pretty good pace without making it feel rushed.

    “But, you did cross universes twice to save my life. So that’s gotta count for something, right?” – Peter


    I was also a bit surprised to see Peter and Walter beginning the roads to reconciliation: I had hoped that they would start to mend bridges soon, but I feared it would be drawn out even more. Their final scene together (with Peter telling Walter that he’s trying to see things from Walter’s point of view, but he can’t yet) makes me wonder how much of the story Peter knows. I would hope that Walter has told him what happened 20 years ago, but it also doesn’t quite sound like Peter has the whole story. I really do look forward to seeing how this dynamic progresses. Before Peter found out the truth their relationship was the best it had ever been, yet we always knew it was tainted by the fact that Walter had the secret about Peter; however, now that everything is out in the open, I can’t wait to see how they go about rebuilding their relationship.


    I also find it interesting to consider the dichotomy between the two Walters: one a broken man who has lost memories and 17 years of his life, the other, for all intents and purposes, a general helping lead his country. And yet it is our Walter who seems to actually appreciate his son – even though Peter is not his biological son. You would expect Walternate to be more thankful for having his son back, but it seems all he wants him for is to work the Machine. I find it so neat that even though John Noble plays both Walter and Walternate, they are so very, very different – so much so that it is almost easy to forget that they actually are played by the same actor (physical similarities notwithstanding).

    Scheming


    Something I sometimes worry about with Fringe is that I read too much into a scene or moment. In this case, though, I don’t think I am: I found Walternate’s reaction to the fact that Peter knows Alt-Olivia, or rather, that he is familiar with “Agent Dunham”, to be incredibly telling. I think that this is when he began to devise the plan to send Alt-Liv to infiltrate their side given that she could slip into a trusted role. One reason I think this is the case is that I doubt Alt-Liv would be ready to pull off such a mission at last minute, and the alternate team’s reaction to the orders which they received in their communications devices did not seem to surprise them at all. This makes me wonder if Alt-Liv’s questions to Peter when she dropped him off were less simple curiousity about her doppelganger and more reconnaissance for a potential mission.


    I suspect that Walternate, or someone very similar, was who Walter feared he was on the path to becoming, thus prompting the bouts of neurosurgery. When Bell told Walter near the end of the episode that the surgery was at Walter’s request, Walter seemed quite taken aback, justifiably. But what begs the question is whether Walter indeed would have actually become what he feared. I argue that the fact that he had the foresight to actually comprehend that he was becoming something he could not tolerate would in fact distinguish him from Walternate. But at the same time, when Newton reconnected Walter’s brain bits in Grey Matters, we caught a glimpse at a very different Walter Bishop – Walter as he was before. And that Walter was not at all dissimilar to Walternate, at least superficially.

    “We’ve accomplished a lot together, Walter; but she may be our greatest achievement” – William Bell


    One of the most intriguing aspects of the Other Side is that it affords us license to ask the question “what if?” and to really examine the consequences of the smallest action. For example, whoever’s choice it was that led to the car accident that killed the alternate William Bell, it seems to have had quite the ripple effect. Obviously Massive Dynamic does not exist on the other side, even though Bell has ended up working with Walternate in order to gather intelligence, it is hardly the same. I suspect that Massive Dynamic is likely the reason for the fact that “we” have made some scientific advances which the Other Side has not – as Walternate discusses when he is talking to Peter.

    Not to mention the fact that we have yet to meet the alternate Nina Sharp who, if she met the Bishops through Bell, would never have had any reason to meet Walternate. I also think that Bell’s absence was the reason that Walternate couldn’t perfect the technology to cross over: when Bell and Walter go to the Harvard Lab, Bell describes how Walternate never managed to get the technology working, whereas Walter did – I can’t help but think that this was due to Bell’s influence. Another big difference: without William Bell, there would have been no Cortexiphan trials on the Other Side given that, as Walter states, they were Bell’s idea in the first place.


    I have always wondered about Bell and Walter’s attachment, if that’s the right word, to Olivia: it seems as though she was always their favourite in the Cortexiphan trials, and Bell was quite familiar with her when he pulled her over to the Other Side the first time. Walter’s relationship with Olivia is a bit easier to understand given that they have now been working together for a couple years and since returning to Jacksonville, the two of them have shared the burden of Walter’s secret. And then there are the moments such as in this episode when Bell claims that Olivia is, of everything they have accomplished – including crossing universes – Olivia is their achievement.

    “Connections that I used to be able to make so easily, and they just..they just dangle. Just outside of my reach” – Walter to Bell


    In some ways this episode was bittersweet given that we found out several months ago that Leonard Nimoy was retiring, and thus many guessed that William Bell would be making his last appearance. Part of the reason this was so bittersweet is that it was the first time we got to see Bell and Walter together, and it is likely the last. Though in a show with (presumably) multiple alternate universes, never say never. But I digress.

    I found that the more I saw of the two together, the more I wanted to see more of them. It really was fascinating to see the dynamics between the two old friends, particularly since Walter knows that Bell is, somehow, responsible for his current state. The culmination of this tension in the scene between the two at Harvard Lab was rather heart wrenching as Walter finally confronts Bell for his involvement. It is not only Walter’s side, but also Bell’s which makes this scene so compelling.


    Bell’s reaction is even more obvious when you watch the episode knowing that Bell acted in accordance with Walter’s wishes, but even the first time around it is apparent. I can only imagine the history between those two and so it must have already been a difficult decision for Bell to make, even though Walter wanted the surgery, let alone the fact that Walter now blames Bell for everything.

    “Walter, I will be the power… That should be enough to get you home” – William Bell


    The last moments between Bell and Walter are made even more poignant by the fact that these two friends have finally reconciled, only for one to sacrifice themselves. I find myself hoping that this scene will serve a dual purpose of showing Alt-Liv that perhaps Walternate was wrong: the people from their side are not “monsters” after all. I can’t imagine that she could see the kind of sacrifice Bell is willing to give, and the goodbye between the two friends, as something monstrous. Olivia has been more than willing to disobey orders if it means doing the right thing, and I am curious to see if Alt-Liv will waver in her convictions at all when she is faced with the very human people on our side. That being said, it strikes me that the alternate Fringe Division is much more militaristic than on our side, so it is likely that Alt-Liv is used to obeying orders without question.


    There were one or two things which bothered me a bit, though I’m sure it’s mostly just me nit-picking. First off, when Alt-Liv impersonates Olivia at the end she was initially wearing different clothes than our Olivia was. I suppose it’s possible that there was enough time between the explosion and when Alt-Liv woke Bell for her to change her clothes to what Olivia was wearing, but that struck me as a little bit unlikely. The thing that really got me was that no one thought to check that everyone was who they thought they were. That is, when Olivia first reunites with Walter at the hospital he had the forethought to make sure it was really her before he agreed to go with her. I suppose we can’t really blame Peter and Walter for not checking since they had no way of knowing that Bell had been knocked out. Bell, on the other hand, should have checked that Olivia was really her – especially since they were surrounded by the alternate Fringe Division, Alt-Liv included, and he had lost consciousness.

    “You taught me: there are as many atoms in the human body as there are stars in the sky” – William Bell to Walter


    My only real disappointments about this episode were that we didn’t see more of the alternate world’s Elizabeth Bishop (played by Orla Brady) who I really hope we see more of next season; and that we haven’t seen more of Alt-Astrid (played by Jasika Nicole). It is clear that there is something off about her, but the question is what? Given the regimented and almost mechanical way Alt-Astrid addressed Alt-Broyles I wonder if she has some sort of cybernetic implant facilitating better interfacing with technology. We know our Astrid is good with computers and linguistics, so perhaps those natural aptitudes have been augmented in Alt-Astrid.


    To be honest I will be rather disappointed if someone on “our” team doesn’t notice right quick that Alt-Liv isn’t their Olivia. As good an agent as I’m sure Alt-Liv is, I really don’t think there is any way she can pull off a full impersonation of Olivia given the small amount of information she actually has on her. Then there’s the fact that Alt-Liv literally walks and talks quite differently from Olivia. On the one hand, Ella and Rachel were around before Olivia crossed over and so perhaps they will be the ones to notice that something is off.

    However, Peter certainly has reason enough to be paying fairly close attention to Olivia, even more so than usual, so it wouldn’t surprise me if he figured it out. Especially after Peter’s speech to Alt-Liv when he told her about Olivia, I imagine that he knows her better than one might think. Given the fact that Fringe is often wonderfully unpredictable, our team will probably discover Alt-Liv’s true identity under some entirely different circumstances.


    One last thing I wanted to briefly mention is that I think I pegged the relationship between Alt-Charlie and Alt-Liv incorrectly in my review for part 1. We didn’t really have any reason to suspect that they were closer than just colleagues, but I wanted to mention it anyway. I thought that the conversation between our Olivia and Alt-Charlie in the SUV on the way to Peter showed us another facet of their relationship given that it mirrored almost word-for-word a conversation our Charlie and Olivia had in the pilot episode, and the fact that he calls her “Livvy”.

    After talking it over with my friend and fellow Fringie Sahar (check out her Fringe reviews here), I definitely think that they weren’t as close as Charlie and Olivia given that he was her confident and partner, but I still think they are closer than simply colleagues. I think it will be interesting to see how the more militaristic feel of the alternate Fringe Division changes the dynamics between the almost-familiar characters.


    WormholeRiders. Click to visit & follow WHR on Twitter!I would be remiss if I didn’t mention how blown away I am by the fact that all the cast members can so believably pull off portraying their alternate universe counterparts. It never ceases to amaze me to watch them, particularly John Noble and Anna Torv, switch between their different personas.


    If you ever want to chat Fringe, science, or anything at all, please feel free to emailClick to visit NaddyCat on Twitter me at the link below, or follow the link in the picture to my Twitter page.


    As always, thanks for reading!


    Nadine

  • Unparalled Fringe “Telephone” Video Event “Over There”!

    Unparalled Fringe “Telephone” Video Event “Over There”!

    Hey Fringe Fanatics,Fringe Banner Mini - Click to visit Fringe on FOX

    Alt-Livia is a BAD GIRL and Naddy is a good girl who has a fantastic report coming soon! In the meantime, here and now we will see and hear about a terrible  devastating FRINGE EVENT about “Telephone” streaming to you in a just a very few seconds from “Over There”!

    Over There Zepplin

    Fringe Over There Red

    What event? Well Alt Broyles knows about it! An entire restaurant filled with dead people after simply eating pancakes with Honey “B” maple syrup and listening to this song! Worst of all two ladies have apparently escaped who can still the “crack” that Walter and Gaga talk and sing about in that F______” reflection that has split asunder the universes! From Alt-Livia’s expression it appears that we all doomed?!?!

    Over There with Alt Livia stunned by her reality

    What the heck is going on? Well we at WHR know that it must be Newton and the evil minions from the “Other Side” who interfered with our “Ability” last week with The Fringe Report, but be sure to dial in Wednesday May 26 in evening for a special LIVE review of the fantastic Fringe season 2 “Over There” at The Fringe Report!

    Naddy's Over There Notes on Fringe Recruiting!

    Click to visit NaddyCat on TwitterTake your Cortexiphan NOW because Naddy and I will be there with a new recruit from WHR andthe detailed notes shown above prove it!! Let us all be there to discuss and chat about FRINGE theories about our already being “Over there” and getting back alive!

    ZOMG what do we all think about future Fringe episodes in season 3 with Walternate, Evil Bad Girl Alt-Liva, our poor imprisoned Olivia, Peter, and the “Real” Walter. AND what the dickens happened to William Bell and Alt-Astrid?And for goodness sakes is Alt-Livia as much or more of a “Bad Girl” than is Lady Gaga! Let’s consult with the Department of Defense. BUT oh NO below is Walternates reality not ours!

    Over There Dept of Defense in Distance

    Over There Bronze Statue of Liberty

    Over There with Alt Livia and Charlie

    Over There with our Dear Livia

    Over There with William Bell

    And while thinking (singing) about the crack in the realities with one of our fav hit songs “Telephone” by Lady Gaga in the Alternate Universes, Wormholes maybe even “Lady Gaga” will be able to help save the universes her FRINGE GAGA TELEPHONE EVENT (featured here) all brought to us by Adria the Click to visit and follow Kenn of #TeamWHR on Twitter!Cat and “Gene the Cow”! Tune in tonight to The Fringe Report Dot Com’s fantastic and gracious hosts Ian, L evi and Craig and their LIVE television broadcast perhaps Gaga will be able to call in this week too! YIKES!

    Included are several hot Fringe Finale screen caps from “Over There” including images with Walternate, Alt-Livia, William Bell, Alt-Charlie and  the fantastic events which culminated in being “Over There” last night!

    Over There in Walternate's Office

    Over There with Peter

    Over There with William Bell and Walter

    Over There with our Livia looking scared

    The Fringe Report Gate opens at 9:00 PM Eastern and 6:00 PM Pacific time! How to get there? Simply click the banner below to be “Gated‘ directly to The Fringe Report where Naddy, our secret recruit and I will see you “On The Other Side” at The Fringe Report if you click the banner of link!

    Click to visit The FRINGE Report Dot Com!

    Over There with Alt Livia

    Over There at Harvard University

    Over There Livia and Alt-Livia

    Over There the Gate activates before Walter

    Over There the Gate activates by William Bell

    Over There Gate Activation by William Bell

    Back Here with Alt-Livia's Tatoo

    Back Here with Alt-Livia in Comm Room

    Over There Walternate and Trapped Livia

    Over There Our Poor Trapped Livia

    Click to visit Fringe on FOX

  • Fringe Review: Season 2 – Over There: Part 1

    Fringe Review: Season 2 – Over There: Part 1


    Fellow Fringe Fans,


    As you all know, we have come to the end of season 2 of Fringe, and it’s bee
    n a pretty wild ride! I, for one, was waiting in eager anticipation for part 1 of the season finale and as usual, it delivered! I found that in the weeks leading up to the finale, FOX did a great job of releasing just enough teaser material to whet our appetites, but not so much that it ruined Click to visit Fringe on 20th Century Fox Studios!any of the awe-factor of the finished product.


    One reason I was so excited for this finale episode was that the filming of it
    looked incredible. As I’m sure you all know by now, season 2 was filmed in Vancouver, B.C ., and it was pretty neat seeing one of the major downtown streets all dressed up for the finale. Not to mention the fact that the big theatre (where they crossed over) is one with which I am quite familiar because it usually houses the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, and I have been there many times.


    Just a short note, before I get in to my recap and review: I apologize for my absence over the last several weeks. Final exam time hit, and then I got sick, so things have been a little crazy. Thanks for your patience, and the reviews which I’ve missed should be going up in the next several weeks.


    Recap

    Fringe Division of  the Other Side


    In, hands-down, one of my favourite opening sequences thus far in Fringe, we do not start with a Fringe event or our own team, but rather with the Fringe Division from the Other Side. From their headquarters in New York City, an anomalous energy signature is detected and we are introduced to the Other Team as they set out to investigate a breach: Alt-Olivia (Anna Torv), Alt-Charlie (Kirk Acevedo), and Capt. Lincoln Lee (Seth Gabel). Broyles (Lance Reddick) is still their commander, but he goes by Colonel, and the head of the team is Lee, and not Olivia.

    The Breach


    On the way to investigate the anomaly, we learn that Alt-Charlie is infected with some sort of arachnids, and that the event which they are going to lock down involves some sort of molecular deterioration. Lee begins to investigate the breach and discovers that it is “within quarantine” range and activates a quarantine device, to which Broyles requests that a Looker come to his office: the Looker in question is Alt-Astrid (Jasika Nicole), who performs a casualty assessment to determine whether they should implement the quarantine.

    Although cutting it close, which does not appear to phase Alt-Olivia and Lee at all, Alt-Astrid recommends against a quarantine.  Alt-Charlie finds a body which looks exactly like James Heath’s victims from Olivia. In the Lab. With the Revolver, and the team quickly realizes something is off given that the body has an alien $20 bill, and an invalid identification (which they refer to as “Show-Me’s”).

    Our People, on the Other Side


    As the camera pans back, we see our Olivia hiding with Walter, Nick Lane (who you should recall from Bad Dreams), and an unknown woman: “our” people are on the Other Side.

    The Observer, helping


    Following this revelation, we flash back 36 hours to find out the events preceding the crossing over: Walter (John Noble) is watching footage from the “Northwest Passage Motel” from Northwest Passage where Walternate told Peter (Josh Jackson) that he could take Peter where he belongs, and that Peter must make a choice because he cannot come back to “our” side. Olivia is drowning her sorrows at a bar, and is given a piece of paper by an Observer – presumably September (Michael Cerveris) – which shows Peter, a machine, and some sort of genetic coding.

    Peter and the Machine


    Walter realizes that there was something he was supposed to remember, something bad about Peter: that something terrible is going to happen to him. Walter realizes that this is what he was supposed to remember. An Observer visited Walter a couple years after he brought Peter over and told Walter that he must never let Peter return to the other side: that Peter would be responsible for the end of the world. Olivia is adamant that they must get Peter back, even though he chose to go to the Other Side.

    A way to cross over?


    As usual, when things get turned upside-down for Fringe Division, a visit to Massive Dynamic is in order. After a shouting match between Broyles and Nina (Blair Brown), to which Olivia quickly puts an end, Olivia explains to Nina that Peter has been taken and is in danger, and the paper depicts technology which looks just like Bell’s work. Nina explains that they haven’t made it on this side, but she doesn’t know about the Other. Nina takes them to see Brandon (Ryan McDonald) who explains some misconceptions about crossing over, as well as some problems: namely that getting there is all well and good, but whether your molecules will stay together once you get there, now that’s the problem. Massive Dynamic apparently has no way to stably cross, and Walter’s doorway would likely destroy both worlds, but Nina tells Olivia that she can. Olivia says that no, she can’t, because she cannot control her ability. Walter has one of his epiphanies, and realizes that with more of Olivia, or rather, more Cortexiphan children to provide more power, Olivia might be able to cross them over. Walter thinks that Olivia is the only functioning Cortexiphan kid left, but Broyles corrects this misconception.

    Sally Clark, Pyrokinetic


    Broyles takes Olivia to the Massive Dynamic Experimental Campus, where he explains that they were able to find a couple more children who were treated with Cortexiphan, and that Massive Dynamic believed they could train them to control and repurpose their abilities. Of the five whom they woke from drug-induced comas, three were successful: Nick Lane (David Call) can control his empathic transfers, Sally Clark (Pascale Hutton), whom we have never met before, is becoming a functioning pyrokinetic, and James Heath (Omar Metwally) can control his energy transfers. They return to the Federal Building in Boston, and Olivia notes the new construction which was authorized thanks to a list of demands by Peter (recall A New Day in the Old Town).

    “Horrible as it is to say, today is the day for which you were created” – Walter


    Walter meets James, Nick, and Sally for the first time since the Cortexiphan trials and he apologizes and explains his justification: that he and Bell believed that one day their world would need their guardianship and protection. Walter explains that they foresaw the day when both universes would be in jeopardy, but that he never imagined that he would be asking them to help him save his son. Nick comments that Walter is not the same guy he remembers; James contends that he is exactly the same. Broyles gives the team a night off before they are to cross over in the morning: James goes to the hospital to cure patients, and Nick and Sally practice Nick’s empathy in a more intimate setting. The next morning we see Olivia say goodbye to her niece Ella (Lily Pilblad) and her sister Rachel (Ari Graynor): she gives Ella a necklace which belonged to her mother, and hugs Rachel rather desperately. Rachel notices something is off, but it isn’t until she sees the necklace Ella has that she really figures out that something is very wrong.

    “Maybe you did damage us. But on the other hand, maybe you made us special: fate is a tricky thing” – Nick Lane to Walter


    Broyles is not happy with Olivia’s plan of action for crossing over, mostly since she doesn’t really have a plan for once they get to the Other Side. They are essentially going in to enemy territory without any intelligence or back-up. Olivia retorts that no, she doesn’t think it is a good idea, but no-one has a better one, so it’s all they’ve got. Broyles initially tells Walter he can’t go with them to which Walter responds that he cannot ask them to go if he is not willing to go himself. Upon Walter’s query to the team whether they are actually going to go through with the plan, Nick offers Walter the beginnings of forgiveness.

    Walter instructs Olivia, Nick, James, and Sally to form a circle “like they did when they were children” and talks them through the crossing-over process. When they get to the Other Side, James collapses and it becomes clear that he was the body which the Alternate Fringe Division found at the beginning. Sally too looks pretty badly off and is giving off smoke (as she seems to be losing control of her pyrokinesis), and Nick’s empathy is apparently on the fritz.

    “ZFT: the natural decay of our world” – Walter Bishop (aka Walternate), Secretary of Defense


    Alternate Fringe Division, after searching James’ body, scans the $20 bill into a database and we learn that the Other Side never had a President Jackson; the bill is a flagged item which draws the attention of the Secretary of Defense, Walter Bishop. Walternate is the Secretary of Defense, and has been supervising the efforts of Fringe Division. On the Other Side, Walternate wrote and published the ZFT in 1995 detailing the “natural decay” of their world. Walternate informs the Alternate Team that the tears in the fabric of their world – the Fringe events which they investigate – not only lead to a parallel Earth, but they are also man-made; he tells them that it was “our” world’s fault for initiating the pattern of destruction. Walternate tells them that the invaders are not peaceful and that they must be found quickly.

    Reunited


    Olivia, Nick, Sally, and Walter try to board a bus to take them to Central Park where they are to meet Bell, but to take the bus on the Other Side requires identification, so they need to walk. Peter wakes up after having been asleep for three days, likely as an effect of crossing over, and he goes to the kitchen to find his mother, Elizabeth Bishop (Orla Brady), making breakfast. After Elizabeth rambles a little bit, Peter hugs her. It’s hard to imagine what they both had to be feeling, given that Peter lost “his” mother 10 years before, and Elizabeth is holding her son for the first time in 25 years.

    “Things that might have been in our world, but weren’t” – Walter


    Our team is still trying to get to Central Park, and Walter posits that the reason Sally and Nick in particular are feeling such ill-effects from the crossing over was due to a flaw in the “human circuit” which may have been caused by one of them using their abilities excessively the night before – we know that it was James who was healing who-knows how many patients at the hospital. Sally notices a hotel on the skyline, the Grand Hotel, which was apparently supposed to be built in their world, but wasn’t. Olivia prompts them to keep walking, as perhaps Bell can help with the crossing-over effects.

    “In the end we have to take responsibility for our own decisions, the good and the bad” – Elizabeth Bishop


    Peter and Elizabeth share a conversation out in front of the Bishops’ house wherein they discuss Peter’s childhood on “our” side. Elizabeth just wants to know that her counterpart took good care of Peter. Peter reassures Elizabeth that yes, he was well taken care of, however the other Elizabeth was always sad and committed suicide 10 years earlier; Peter still feels responsible for her death. Elizabeth reassures Peter that we are all responsible for our own decisions. We also learn that Walternate is actually seeking Peter’s help on the machine, and Peter settles down with the blue prints.

    Nothing left to lose


    Our team finally makes it to Central Park, to the bridge where they are supposed to meet Bell, only to be set upon almost immediately by the Alternate Fringe Division. Lee fires at Sally who is readying a fireball, only to have Nick jump in front of the bullet for her. Olivia tries to keep him with her, but Walter flees when the shooting starts. Olivia takes out an agent, and ends up on her own. Lee moves close and recognizes Nick, and when he dies, Sally gives up: she lets loose and explodes, nearly killing Lee in the process. Alt-Olivia comes across Walter, and fires off a shot but is called away when she learns that Lee has been injured in Sally’s blast. It turns out that Alt-Olivia did actually hit Walter who manages to stumble his way to the front entrance of a hospital.

    Frank and Alt-Olivia


    We get a glimpse of yet another way that Alt-Olivia is very different from “our” Olivia when she returns home for the night to her significant other Frank Stanton (Philip Winchester). Frank apparently knows her team, because she tells him that even though he has third degree burns over 90% of his body, Lee is going to live: he’ll have to spend 3 months in a nanite regeneration chamber though. Apparently Frank doesn’t have clearance to know the details of the day, but he seems well-versed in Alt-Olivia’s work. Curiously, we discover that Alt-Olivia and Frank have matching tattoos, but the question is what exactly they mean.

    “My dear Olivia: I know you have good reason not to trust me but I’m afraid you’re going to have to…” – William Bell to Olivia


    Olivia makes use of a public kiosk and finds where Alt-Olivia lives – to what end I am not quite sure. Bell (Leonard Nimoy) suspected that she would go there, and he manages to find her there. Understandably, Olivia wants to know why he wasn’t at the park, but apparently he was too late. Bell tells Olivia that she needs his help, that Walter is in trouble, and that they are running out of time.

    The Machine


    On a rather chilling final note, we learn that not only has Walternate already started building the machine – in fact in it looks almost complete – but he also has the Manuscript depicting what will happen to Peter in the even that it is used. The episode ends with Walternate removing something from a casing near the machine, and heading out with it.


    Thoughts and Impressions


    I had heard in the weeks prior to Over There that the episode felt more like a movie than just a long split episode. After having seen it, I can say that there is definitely a cinematic feel to some of the shots and sequences, particularly in the scale and detail work given to the panoramic shots of the city.

    Alternate New York City


    I also very much enjoyed the style of story-telling in this episode, not that I don’t normally, but I loved that we got to see the Alt-Fringe Division’s side of the events and not just our team’s view. The device that was used in this episode, where they start off in the now but flash back to however many hours ago, is one which I find is often overused on television – not on Fringe, certainly, given that I’m fairly certain that this was the first time they’ve used it – but I felt that in this episode it was utilized perfectly.

    Starting the episode with the Alternate team was fascinating in that it helped to really establish our team in the place of the interlopers which creates a bit of a murky situation: I’m sure that we are all inclined to want to root for “our” guys, but then we meet this other team who is engaging and fascinating, yet they are, in effect, the enemy.  I’m very much looking forward to learning more about the Other Side; there is so much information packed into even the most simple of scenes that just begs for answers that I would like to see more development of the Other Side beyond part 2 of the finale. And, just for the record, I would most definitely watch a spin-off series about the Other Side’s Fringe Division.


    Speaking of the Alternate Fringe Division, one thing I enjoyed immensely was picking apart the differences between our beloved characters and their other-worldly counterparts.

    Alt-Broyles, still married


    I found Alt-Broyles to be the most similar to our Broyles, at least given what we have seen so far. The most glaring difference initially is that Alt-Broyles is married, whether to his first wife, or because he has remarried I have no idea – though I do assume it is to his first wife. I wonder if it is due to the fact that on the Other Side the work of Fringe Division, while classified, is a very real presence to the average citizen; it strikes me that, since they live in a world where natural and environmental disasters are the norm, Broyles’ wife may have been more sympathetic over the fact that he sometimes put his job first.

    I also found it interesting to notice that those in Fringe Division still seem to maintain their military rank – that is, Alt-Broyles goes by Colonel Phillip Broyles. Certainly slightly less concrete in terms of differences, but I noticed that Alt-Broyles doesn’t seem to have the same relationship to Alt-Liv as our Broyles does to Olivia: that is, while I’m sure he’s concerned about his agents, he doesn’t show any particular favour to Olivia. Broyles seems to try and look after our Olivia a bit, and he is quite protective of her whereas we haven’t seen any indicators of that sort of dynamic between their Alternate counterparts.

    Alt-Astrid, Looker?


    For someone who was only in the episode very briefly at the beginning, I found that Alt-Astrid raised a wealth of questions. First of all, when Alt-Broyles was trying to determine whether a quarantine was necessary, he called for a “Looker”; I really have no idea what that means, but I think it has something to do with the way she was able to analyze the data which was streaming in from the site. I wonder if Lookers involve some sort of cybernetics, given how she acted when she sat down at the computer. It also seems as though, while she is an agent, the Lookers are a separate division of sorts: Alt-Astrid did not quite treat Broyles the way I would expect an agent to treat a direct superior officer. Alt-Astrid was curt and impatient when Alt-Broyles kept pushing her for a determination on whether or not to implement a quarantine. Other than Alt-Olivia, Alt-Astrid is probably the alternate about whom I am most looking forward to learning more.


    As for Alt-Charlie, and Capt. Lincoln Lee, I found it more difficult to peg them. For one thing, we don’t know of a Lincoln Lee on Our Side, and while Charlie was very close to our Olivia, we didn’t really know all that much about him, though I would hazard a guess that Alt-Charlie isn’t married, given a comment that Lee made about a strip club when they were investigating the Breach. While I do think that Lee was joking about that, it was the fact that Alt-Charlie didn’t say something about being married that makes me think this. That, and I don’t recall seeing a ring. I also found it interesting that Alt-Charlie and Alt-Liv don’t seem to have the same close relationship that our Charlie and Liv had.

    “Nick?” – Capt. Lincoln Lee (Seth Gabel)


    While we never saw alternate counterparts of the Cortexiphan kids other than Olivia, I think it’s a fairly safe bet to say that Nick Lane, at least, also exists Over There because after he (accidentally) shot Nick, Lee recognized him and seemed rather horrified at having shot him.

    Alternate Olivia


    One of many aspects of this episode which I absolutely loved is how well it showcases the Fringe Powers that Be’s attention to detail: in an Alternate Universe, a seemingly-throwaway comment or panning shot of a scene can tell us so much. It also means that us less-casual fans who like to pick apart aspects of the show can spend way too long analyzing a single scene. One of many places that this is readily apparent is with Alt-Olivia. Perhaps it is also the fact that we “know” our Olivia better than some of the other Alternate counterparts whom we met, so the differences are even more glaring, but I find it fascinating what this episode told us, not only about Alt-Liv, but also about “our” Agent Dunham.

    Joking with her team


    Right off the bat it is obvious that there is something inherently different about Alt-Liv – and I’m not just talking about her hair. Simply in the way Alt-Olivia carries herself compared to our Olivia, as well as her interactions with her teammates. Capt. Lee is, evidently, her immediate superior officer – another difference, in that Olivia is the head of her team under Broyles on Our Side. Alt-Olivia also interacts with her team quite differently: she is more sarcastic and engaging, almost more open. Our Olivia is usually quite serious, so it was interesting to see the dichotomy between the two. We did see elements of this with our Liv’s interactions with Charlie before he died, but not to quite the same extent as Alt-Liv.


    I also wonder if Alt-Olivia was ever in the military: since the Alternate Fringe Division seems more like a paramilitary force than our team, their agents seem to use military ranks a fair bit: Alt-Broyles as Colonel, and Lee as Captain. This made me wonder if, since Alt-Liv doesn’t seem to have a rank, if she was ever actually in the service.

    Wearing colours


    A couple small things I noticed which spun me off onto pondering pathways were the fact that Alt-Liv is actually wearing colours, and a comment that Lee made about Alt-Liv’s will. What I mean is that on our side, Olivia rarely (if ever) wears colours: her wardrobe consists of darks (blacks and greys, mostly) and the occasional white shirt. While this may seem like a bit of a nit-pick, one thing that has been noted (I discussed it in a podcast with the wonderful guys from The Fringe Report ) is that the Cortexiphan subjects have an unofficial uniform of sorts: we saw this with not only our Olivia, but also with Nick Lane, Susan and Nancy Lewis, and James Heath.


    Now, it may seem like a bit of a leap, but given what we know of the history on the other side, I think it’s fairly safe to assume that there never were Cortexiphan trials; at least, if there were, I somewhat doubt that Alt-Liv was one of the subjects. This, naturally, leads me to wonder what Alt-Liv’s childhood was like compared to what we know about our Olivia. You may recall that we learned that Olivia’s father was military (and presumably died when Olivia was young), that her mother remarried, and Olivia’s stepfather was an abusive alcoholic who Olivia shot when she was 9 years old. I wonder if part of the reason Alt-Olivia is somewhat less serious than her counterpart is that she has had less of these admittedly-traumatic experiences. I also doubt that Alt-Olivia was ever involved with a John Scott, given her relationship with Frank.


    And considering her relationship with Frank, it seems as though Alt-Liv is a bit more lucky in the romance department than Olivia: in the pilot episode, Olivia tells John that she has “been bad at this” for a long time. And the fact that John Scott turned out to be a traitor (or so they thought for a while) partly contributed to the fact that Olivia is a bit more closed off.

    “Really? God, and I didn’t even update my will” – Alt-Liv


    The comment that Lee made to which I was referring a couple paragraphs back occurred in an exchange between Alt-Liv and Lee in which she made a comment on how she hadn’t updated her will and Nick said that Frank would just spend it all anyways. This made me wonder if Rachel and Ella even exist on the Other Side, or perhaps Alt-Liv is not close with her sister and niece. The reason I found this odd was that I figure that if Alt-Olivia did have family she would leave her assets to them especially given how close our Olivia seems to her own, but Lee implies that Frank would be the beneficiary. Perhaps this was simply a casual comment into which I am reading far too much, but I did find it curious.

    Alt-Olivia’s Tattoo


    Another couple more random things which set Alt-Liv apart: she doesn’t drink and she has a tattoo. Given the high amount of detail work on the tattoo, and the fact that her boyfriend Frank has a matching one, I very much hope that we learn more about the tattoos soon, if only to assuage my curiousity. Although, on closer examination, I wonder if Alt-Olivia and Frank’s tattoos are perfectly matching: the black portion of the tattoo certainly looks the same on both, but the red part looks slightly different. I found it difficult to tell from the angle of the shot what exactly the red part of Frank’s looked like. My guess at the moment is that they have something to do with a task force, or some sort of defense unit.

    Olivia: badass in every Universe.


    Funnily enough, given all their differences, Alternate Olivia lives in the same apartment that Olivia does on our side. Also, to no-one’s surprise, Alternate Olivia is just as hard-core as our Olivia when the time calls for it.

    “I can’t control it! Not on my own!” – Olivia


    Speaking of our Olivia, I found that this episode offered a glimpse at an interesting side of our favourite FBI agent both personally and in terms of her classification as a Cortexiphan subject. Bell once told Olivia that “of all the children that Walter and [he] prepared, you were the strongest” and it is clear that Olivia’s main talent lies in the ability to safely cross over. I assume that this is the reason that she was the only one unaffected from crossing over when James, Nick, and Sally were all severely affected.


    From what we saw in this episode I don’t think it is the fact that all Cortexiphan kids have that same ability to cross over, but that the circuit of four amplified Olivia’s ability. As Walter told her in Massive Dynamic, she cannot control the ability on her own, but with “more” of her, it may be possible: that is, with the additional Cortexiphan kids to provide the power  boost it becomes possible for her to exert a modicum of control over the ability.


    One thing I hope we may see in the future is, given Massive Dynamic’s success at training the Cortexiphan kids in their powers, that Olivia may start to learn how to really use her powers. Given the extent to which the Other Side has been developed, I think it will be focused heavily on next season, and it would be fairly useful for Olivia to be able to cross over in controlled jumps. I also think it would be pretty cool if Olivia could master whatever latent pyrokinetic abilities she has: if you recall, we learned that when Olivia was little she generated a massive explosion during the Cortexiphan trials, so clearly she has the capacity.

    “Walter, how do we get him back!” – Olivia


    We have seen before that Olivia stop at nothing to try and save someone whom she loves; we see this drive again, clear as day, when she goes to great lengths to save Peter. Yes, you read that right: I just implied that Olivia loves Peter. But if you are an anti-shipper (fan slang for a viewer who is against a romantic relationship between Peter and Olivia), please bear with me: I am not suggesting that she is necessarily in love with him. As I have said before, I am not entirely sure where I myself stand on the issue of a romantic relationship between the two. But there is absolutely no doubt in my mind that Olivia does love Peter – both Bishops, in fact, even given her past with Walter – and that they are indeed an odd family unit of sorts.  At the base of it, Peter has been Liv’s partner for the past year, and she has come to rely upon him and trust him a great deal, which is no small feat given her trust and control issues.

    “Stop it! Both of you! Peter is in danger!” – Olivia, to Broyles and Nina


    Olivia’s level of desperation can first be seen at the Bishops’ house when she takes the Manuscript left by the Observer to Walter. She is adamant that they find a way to get Peter back, managing to get through to Walter until he has a suggestion. When Olivia, Broyles, and Walter invade Massive Dynamic to speak to Nina – who is outraged at Broyles’ accusations – Olivia wastes no time in yelling at Nina and Broyles to remind them of what is really important: not the fact that their world is in danger, but that Peter has been taken and is in danger. True, Olivia could be trying to get through to Nina because she knows that Nina herself cares a great deal for Peter, as we witnessed in Peter, but I find it telling that Olivia focuses on the peril in which Peter has unknowingly found himself as opposed to the danger to their entire universe.

    “In which case you’re essentially invading enemy territory without a plan: you don’t know anything about the opposition, the landscape…” – Broyles, to Olivia


    For someone like Olivia who hates losing control, her plan to cross over and get to Peter smacked of desperation. Broyles was quick to point out that this was less than a good plan and that they were relying on the fact that not only did Bell get Nina’s message, which was certainly not a surety, but whether they can even trust Bell. Olivia’s plan of action is markedly different from her usual level-headed approach to her work. The only times we have really seen Olivia out of control, so to speak, are when someone she loves is threatened. Not only is she going into enemy territory, but they have no reliable intelligence on the state of affairs on the Other Side and realistically have no-one on whom they can rely. The crux of the issue is that she really has been backed into a corner and there really is no other option if she wants to try and save Peter. We know that Olivia has been protecting ‘her’ people since she was a little girl, and this is clearly no different.

    “No. I don’t think that this is a good idea. But you got a better one?” – Olivia, to Broyles


    I thought it was great to see Ella and Rachel again. Olivia’s interactions with the two of them prior to crossing over were quite telling: clearly she was saying goodbye. We learned in Unearthed that Olivia’s mother was religious, and that Olivia is not. Liv gives Ella a cross that belonged to her mother, Ella’s grandmother, and tells Ella that her mother said that it would “keep her safe” and so now she is giving it to Ella. As much as she is driven to solve the cases and track down the Pattern, I think that a large part of what drives Olivia is striving to make the world a safer place for the “innocents”, like Rachel and Ella.

    “She told me that it would keep me safe, so now I’m giving it to you” – Olivia, to Ella


    It doesn’t surprise me that Rachel picked up on the fact that something was wrong, even before she saw that Liv had given Ella the necklace. Olivia hugged Rachel goodbye, but definitely held onto her little sister longer than she would if she were going to see her again later that evening. The comment Olivia makes to Rachel about doing this more often, I assume she means the hugging, makes me a little sad for Liv given that if she doesn’t hug her own sister that often, she probably doesn’t get hugged much. And considering some of what has happened to Olivia in the recent past, she could certainly use more hugs!

    “We should do this more often; it’s nice” – Olivia, to Rachel


    I always enjoy when we get to see Olivia with her family since it allows us a glimpse at a side of her we don’t often see; she is much more open and at ease with them. I find it interesting that at times she almost treats Walter similarly to how she does Ella; rather ironic, considering her past with him. Although since Peter disappeared after learning about what Walter did, Olivia and Astrid have had to step up and take Peter’s place in taking care of Walter, leading to an interesting shift in their dynamic.


    Another showcasing of interesting dynamics was when Broyles told Walter that he could not go to the other side: I found it curious that Walter would appeal to Olivia rather than Broyles. I wonder if it has something to do with the fact that he figured that Liv could convince Broyles to let him go. But I think it says a fair bit about the relationship between Broyles and Olivia, that she is often able to persuade him, even when he doesn’t agree. When it comes down to it, he is her boss, and he could order her not to go, yet he doesn’t.


    I am still not entirely sure whether or not Peter knows that Olivia knew that Walter stole him. For someone of Peter’s deductive abilities it might not take him long to make the leap that once Olivia’s abilities were activated in Jacksonville, she would have seen him glimmering as he is from the other side.


    As a short aside, this leads me to the question of whether or not everything glimmers Over There for Olivia. If so, it might be rather distracting. But I digress.


    As I was saying, it would not surprise me if Peter had figured it out and felt betrayed all over again. Yet we have not really seen anything to suggest the fact that he is angry with Olivia. It seems like all his actions, running away, asking Broyles not to tell Walter where he was, and going with Walternate, were driven by the fact that he was running from the schism which has opened up between him and Walter.


    One of the many, many questions raised in this episode is why it is Peter who is needed for the machine. Walternate seems to have gone to great lengths to get Peter back for some reason involving the machine. And yes, one might argue that Peter is his son and he wants him back, but why has he waited 25 years to take action when the technology was clearly available on the Other Side. And if Peter is the one needed, why is he the only one who will do? It would not be unreasonable to think that if there were a different option Walternate would have found it, after all, why would he sacrifice his own son? So again, the question is, why is it Peter who is so important?

    Nucleotides on the Manuscript


    It wouldn’t make sense to me if it had to do merely with genetics, although I do think that may be part of it: there are lists of nucleotides on the manuscript, so genetics clearly plays some role. If you need a slight refresher, nucleotides are the basic building blocks of life; when they are joined together, they form the base units of DNA and RNA, in essence, what makes you, you. The question is, for what exactly do those bases code? The reason I don’t think it would make sense if genetics played the only role is because the Other Side is apparently incredibly technologically advanced, and clearly genetic engineering would not be beyond their scientists, in which case Walternate would surely have other options than to sacrifice his only son.

    Breakfast (Elizabeth and Peter)


    Although Walternate strikes me as being a bit evil, at least from what we have seen so far, I find myself liking Elizabeth Bishop more and more each time we meet her. I very much enjoyed Orla Brady’s performance in Peter, and once again she delivered beautifully. The scene in the Bishops’ kitchen was quite heart-wrenching, especially given Elizabeth’s obvious sorrow; for Peter as well it must have been surreal given that the woman he thought was his mother committed suicide 10 years earlier, about which he still harbours a lot of guilt. I thought the conversation between Elizabeth and Peter over breakfast was quite telling, and can easily be applied to our Walter as well, given his life thus far: that Peter is not responsible for his mother’s choice because we are all responsible for our own decisions, good and bad.


    There were far, far too many gems in this episode with regards to Walter, not surprising given Mr. Noble’s always-wonderful performance (I’m a slight fan), for me to discuss them all. I want to instead focus on two themes, of a sort, which really jumped out at me: choice and redemption.

    “He went over by his own free will…” – Walter, about Peter


    It goes without saying that we have seen a remarkable amount of development in Walter’s character since his release from St. Claire’s in the pilot episode, but Over There was almost the pinnacle of that change. In the past several “months” we have seen how much Walter has come to appreciate choice, and the freedom to live his life as he sees fit; I think that this freedom to choose on his own dove-tails with his more recent quest for independence so that he may one day live on his own again. I find this importance which he has come to place on choice so note-worthy because of the times in the past when we know he has exhibited disregard for an individual’s right to choose: consider the Cortexiphan children, and any number of experiments he and Bell conducted.

    Yet if you consider Walter’s experiences as of late, it is not so surprising: Walter has not been able to choose for himself for a very long time. He had no freedom at St. Claire’s, and Bell apparently robbed him of his right to choose when he performed brain surgery on Walter – I cannot imagine that Walter agreed to the surgery, because I cannot see someone like Dr. Bishop agreeing to voluntarily give up any part of his own mind. So the fact that Peter chose to go over to the Other Side is crucial for Walter in not wanting to pursue him, no matter how much he wants his son back. Yet, once again, Peter’s life is in danger.

    “What I did was inexcusable. Barbaric. The collateral damage has been extensive” – Walter


    When Walter finally meets Nick, Sally, and James for the first time since the Cortexiphan trials when they were children, he apologizes. To my recollection this is the first time he has actually done so, even to Olivia. Walter seems well aware of the fact that even though he and Bell had noble goals, that they knew the children would be needed, it still did not excuse what he did and it is clear he does not expect forgiveness of any sort. I continue to find it amazing that even knowing some of the terrible things Walter has done, I never fail to find myself sympathetic to him. Although I suppose it isn’t difficult to feel sympathy for Walter when he finishes the scene by saying that he’s “going off to have a bit of a cry.”


    If you would permit a bit of a tangent, I wanted to mention an idea which a friend of mine, Sahar Sabati, proposed in one of her blog posts (I was having trouble finding the link, so feel free to click through to her Twitter page and ask her about it!): given the choice now, would those individuals who were involved in the Cortexiphan trials as children choose to take the drug knowing the good they might accomplish? Sahar drew the comparison to a wonderful novel called “Ender’s Game” by Orson Scott Card, also a favourite of mine, given that the focus of that novel is on children who are trained as soldiers to save the world.


    The parallel is very apt, especially given Walter’s speech on how he and Bell truly believed that they could foster the children’s talents and make them special and better prepared; that one day both universes would be in jeopardy and they would be needed. The situation becomes a bit cloudier given the fact that Cortexiphan needs to be administered to children, who cannot choose for themselves, nor would they comprehend the magnitude. But especially given what we know about Olivia and the lengths to which she will go in protecting people, I think she would take the drug. And what if the point were reached where your world and everything and everyone you cared about was being threatened and you were told that you would have been able to save them, if only they had given you this drug as a child. How would you feel then? I am not saying that I think the ends justified the means, or that Bell and Walter had any right to do what they did, but it is easy to see how they were able to convince themselves.

    Redemption


    I really do think that Walter never expected any of the Cortexiphan subjects to forgive him, yet Nick Lane does just that when they are getting ready to cross over. I think that this arc, of Walter’s involvement with the Cortexiphan trials, quite neatly parallels Walter’s actions with taking Peter as a boy. And, arguably, what he did to the Cortexiphan children was far worse, especially given the consequences in the present. And yet if they can find it in them to forgive Walter for his actions, perhaps there can be hope for Walter that Peter might one day forgive him – especially given the fact that Peter still doesn’t know the whole story: he did not give Walter the chance to explain the story behind the events to which Olivia was privy.


    Given the length of this post so far I am sure you have come to realize that I enjoyed this episode a great deal. Not that I don’t normally absolutely love Fringe, but this episode was something else entirely. I want to add a couple more things – more random observations that didn’t quite fit in anywhere else – before I wrap this up. And if you’re still reading this by this point, then I thank you for sticking with me! I still have so much more to say about this episode that I think I may have to write another piece about it at some point, but that’s an issue for another time.


    A very, very big question on my part is why the Observers are helping Our Side in this; at least, that is how it appears on the face of it. From everything we have seen so far, the Observers have a strict policy of non-interference in events, except when they must rectify some sort of mistake of their own making. Yet in this case, the Observers have clearly interfered: they told Walter, even though he didn’t remember, that Peter must never be allowed to go back to the other side, given the disastrous consequences. We know that it was September – who I have come to think of as “our” Observer given his involvement with the Bishops – who warned Walter all those years ago. Again, the question is why? Could it be that the consequences of Walternate’s machine are really that cataclysmic? Perhaps the Observers themselves are somehow responsible for the machine having been built in the first place and so now they are trying to fix that mistake.

    The Manuscript, original?


    I can’t help but think that the Manuscript clearly plays a key role which begs the obvious question of where Walternate got the Manuscript in the first place? Could it be that the Manuscript was a product of the Observers? The writing on the original, which we saw in Walternate’s possession at the end of the episode was not written in any language I recognized, but it did remind me a bit of September’s handwriting from the season 1 episode The Arrival. This yet again begs the question of who translated the Manuscript for Olivia and Walter: the writing on the “original” does not resemble the nucleotides which are evident on the copy of which our team has possession – is this yet another clue for our Fringe Division? Perhaps a helpful hint from our friendly neighbourhood Observers?


    Suffice it to say that I loved the glimpses of other-worldly technology in this episode, and I am immensely curious about what exactly the “Quarantine Potentiator” does. But one of my favourite parts was hearing Brandon give a more thorough explanation of what exactly it means to “cross over” and why exactly that phrase is a misnomer. I felt as though his explanation – that the Other Side is always present in the same place as ours, but that you must pass through our universe to get to theirs – wonderfully complemented Bell’s warnings to Olivia in Momentum Deferred and Nina’s description about the “Last Storm”.

    The West Wing, Season 11


    Of all the background differences on the Other Side, one which most tickled my fancy was the reference to the West Wing which, if you haven’t seen it, is a phenomenal show. If you aren’t familiar with it, the show ran for 7 seasons and finished in 2006. There were so many fascinating differences from the other side: apparently they never had a President Jackson, and instead it is Martin Luther King Jr. on the $20 bill, Richard Nixon is on one of their coins, the Statue of Liberty is in bronze, the Twin Towers of the World Trade Centre are still standing (which we first saw in More than One of Everything), and the Headquarters of the Department of Defense (and Walternate’s office) is on Liberty Island in New York – I assume that on Our Side the Dept. of Defense is in the Pentagon.


    One of the neatest differences can be observed in the map of the United States of America which fills Walternate’s wall. Unfortunately it is difficult to make out details in the episode, but the folks over at SciFiWire have a fabulous article compiling the differences between the map Over There and on our side which can be found here: http://scifiwire.com/2010/05/secrets-of-the-alternate.php. Personally, my favourite is the fact that Canada apparently got bigger: the state of Washington is called “Southern British Columbia”.


    One more thing I wonder about is the difference in locations of the headquarters of Fringe Division. The Alternate team’s headquarters is located in New York City, perhaps due to proximity to the Department of Defense, yet on Our Side, Fringe Division is located in Boston. Even more interesting, Alternate Fringe Division has the big fancy set-up which we can see at the beginning of the episode; that same room, though more bare-bones as it is in the process of being built, seems about to become our Fringe Division’s headquarters on our side, albeit in Boston. Broyles comments to Olivia that the reason they were able to get funding was because of Peter.

    Broyles, laughing


    Speaking of Broyles, I would be remiss if I didn’t mention one of my favourite scenes of Fringe ever: when Broyles takes Olivia to the “Monkey House” – Massive Dynamic’s experimental site where the Cortexiphan kids are being trained – Nick is so overjoyed at seeing Olivia that he transmits to everyone else in the room, except for Olivia, whom we know is unaffected by his empathy from Bad Dreams, and seemingly Sally, who I assume has some sort of resistance from her relationship with Nick. But it is the Nick’s effect on Broyles that is priceless. We have certainly seen Broyles smile before, but this was the first time hearing him laugh. And Lance Reddick certainly has an infectious laugh; I kid you not, I laugh every time I watch this scene. It was also rather amusing to see Olivia’s reaction to Broyles’ laughter.

    Olivia’s reaction to Broyles


    Before I finish this, I just wanted to discuss Bell for a little bit. First of all, I like him, despite myself. I have no idea where he stands, and it makes him one of the most intriguing characters. It is so hard to pin down his motives and really trust him, but at the same time there is just something about him and the fact that he fairly oozes sincerity that makes you want to believe that he is on the level. And so while I hope that we will see that Olivia’s trust in him is justified, I am not entirely sure that that will turn out to be the case.

    William Bell


    If you consider, for a moment, the events in Central Park: Olivia takes her entire team there and ends up being ambushed by Alternate Fringe Division, leaving Nick and Sally dead, Walter separated from Olivia and shot, and Olivia entirely on her own in this Other World. Not only does she not know whom to trust, but she literally has nowhere to go. I found it rather interesting that she would choose to seek out her doppelganger; I suppose if you can’t trust yourself, who can you trust?


    And yet the only people who knew where they were to meet Bell were Nina and Bell. So how did the Alternates know exactly where to ambush Olivia and her people? This ties back into the fact that Bell was the one who removed Walter’s brain bits (recall Jacksonville) and would have been the only person who could have possibly known where they were hidden, and yet Newton was able to somehow gain access to that information which, more than likely, had never been recorded anywhere. There are only two explanations with which I can come up: Bell willingly told the Alternates the information and is collaborating with them, for whatever reason; or the Alternates can somehow intercept Nina’s communiqués to Bell. This may explain some of the Other Side’s knowledge given that Nina has apparently been sending fairly regular communications to Bell over the years.


    In a more cynical moment, I wondered if Bell perhaps manipulated the entire situation in order to leave Olivia in a far more vulnerable position with literally no-one else to trust on the Other Side besides him. Although the fact that he seems to want to help her get Walter and the fact that she already trusts him anyway makes me think that Bell really is trying to help. I also find Bell’s attitude towards Olivia quite intriguing: why are both he and Walter so very fond of Olivia?

    “Spread out your arms, you remember how… I want you to think back to when you were just young children” – Walter


    One last thing – no, really this time: when Walter had the Cortexiphan kids trying to cross over, tells them to hold out their arms just like when they were little. This makes me think that Bell and Walter taught the children how to do this exact thing when they were in the Cortexiphan trials and used the other children to boost Olivia’s power just like they did to cross over. Obviously they never actually crossed the children over, but believe that they may have used this method to bring objects over from the Other Side.

    Evidently it is less destabilizing to the very fabric of reality – which Walter maintains he nearly destroyed opening a doorway to bring Peter across – and so chances are it could be done with minimal effects; the reason it would have caused a Breach on the other side this time, is because they had five people actually crossing over and the barrier between the worlds is already failing due to Walter’s actions.


    This might explain on of my slight issues from Jacksonville and the timeline for the Cortexiphan trials: previously, Walter has made it very that when he opened the doorway to get Peter in 1985 it was the first time he did so. Yet the Cortexiphan trials were from 1981 – 1983, and Bell and Walter obviously had objects from the Other Side given that Olivia was able to see the “glimmer”. The obvious question being where did they get the objects? If Bell and Walter had discovered Olivia’s talent for crossing over, they could have used this method to bring objects over from the Other Side.

    My only complaint with this episode was that it felt far too short; although, I find that that is usually the case when I’m watching Fringe. I thought that every single actor delivered a wonderful performance, though it was particularly interesting to watch how Anna Torv and John Noble portrayed the alternate versions of their usual characters. For Alt-Olivia it certainly seemed as though Ms. Torv carried herself differently and used a slightly different diction with Alt-Liv. For all that Walternate looks quite similar to our Walter, I found the differences between the two to be stark. It was quite fascinating to see such a very different character when just looking at Walternate, even though they are, for all intents and purposes, the same person.

    I think that this kind of story, with Alternate versions of very familiar characters, only really works when the actors can become someone different while still playing the same character; thus far, everyone has done a phenomenal job and I can’t wait until Part 2 airs this coming thursday. No, seriously, ask anyone who knows me – the wait is killing me! (I don’t even want to think about the summer break).


    Click to visit and follow WormholeRiders News Agency on Twitter!Given that, if you are reading this, you actually stuck with me throughout this monster of a piece (I swear I had no idea it would be this long when I started!), I offer you my sincere thanks.


    As always, thank you for visiting WormholeRiders News Agency. If you ever want to chat Fringe, science, or anything at all, please feel free to email me at the link below, or by following the link in the picture to my Twitter page.


    Naddy


    Nadine Ramsden

  • Fringe Review: Season 2 Episode 16 – Peter

    Fringe Review: Season 2 Episode 16 – Peter

    Fellow Fringe fans,

    Any episode following the stunner Jacksonville had to blow us away, and Peter certainly did notFringe-Banner-01c1 disappoint. I was a little concerned going into the episode because FOX had released several sneak peeks of key scenes, and so I was worried that I would be underwhelmed having already seen some of the scenes. I certainly need not have worried: not only was I completely enthralled, but once again I was blown away by the entire episode.


    Click to visit Fringe on 20th Century Fox Studios!One aspect about which I have heard some criticism is that the episode was a little too slow or that people missed the case aspect which we usually see. I, however, found that while Peter was indeed
    Click to visit Warner Brothers Picturesa bit slower-paced than some episodes in the past, it was exactly what we needed: the confirmation of what exactly happened to the Bishops when Peter was a boy, finally meeting Elizabeth Bishop and Carla Warren, learning what really happened to Nina’s arm, some hints as to Walter and William Bell’s rapport, and, most of all, the elucidation of how it all began.


    Recap


    The opening sequence, for once, was not outrageously weird – just rather fascinating. It was the first time we saw Walter’s window to the other side in use, rather than someone opening, or attempting to open, a doorway between the worlds. We have known since the pilot episode that Walter had worked for the United States military, but it was rather interesting to see him presenting his findings to a cohort of military leaders. Apparently, he and William Bell had been using the window for spying on the other side, and in the course of their espionage, had gleaned enough details about the technology of the other side to create duplicates. Interestingly, Walter told the Generals that the other side was about 30 years ahead of us – this makes me wonder, is Massive Dynamic so technologically advanced primarily because of the leg-up William Bell had with his access to the other side?

    First Glimpse

    First glimpse of the Other Side


    I found it neat to hear Walter finally start to explain how their window works: that the other side is always there, but it is only by means of the window which captures errant photons from the other world and stretches the membrane between the worlds that we can actually see it. As always, it is all about perception.


    Please bear with me for a moment while I go on a bit of a tangent from the episode recap. I like Walter’s explanation for the window because it fits rather well with how I imagine the multiple worlds in the Fringe universe: that there are infinitely many, and that they are separated by a theoretical wall, of sorts. Based on what we have seen so far, I propose that there are three types of mechanisms – not including Olivia’s natural ability of prolonged déjà vu – by which we can come in contact with the other side: Walter’s window, which stretches the membrane between worlds; Walter’s doorway machine, which opens a doorway between the worlds, presumably by pulling apart the membrane to permit travel through; and, finally, there is Newton’s method which, although based on Walter’s machines seems markedly different, acts more like pulling something through the membrane, rather than opening a doorway between the worlds.

    I submit that this partly explains why we have seen different side-effects of crossing over on different people: Walter and Peter seemed largely unaffected from their crossing over, while Newton’s method resulted in horrible deformations because the molecules were reassembled incorrectly. I assume that William Bell’s method is along the lines of Walter’s for crossing over, but Bell seemed to have some side-effects from crossing over; I think that Walter and Peter may have suffered some effects later given Peter’s comments in Unearthed that he was sick for much of his later years in school, and the fact that he suffered night terrors right around the time he would have crossed over until he was in his late teens.

    Need time

    “I need time, okay? I don’t even know how to begin to work this out” – Olivia to Walter


    Following our introduction to the window, we return to our present where Walter is trying to explain to Olivia why exactly she could see Peter glimmering at the end of Jacksonville. Very perceptively, Olivia tells Walter that they don’t yet know the price of his actions, and I think that this is likely more foreshadowing as to what we can expect to see later in this season. We learn that Peter wasn’t actually sick with a rare form of bird flu as Walter had said in In Which We Meet Mr. Jones, but rather that it was a genetic illness for which there was no treatment.


    Walter was using the window to see into the more-advanced alternate universe because, as he explained to Olivia, the other Walter – named ‘Walternate’ by our Walter – would be just as motivated to find a cure for his own Peter if he were sick, which he was. Unfortunately, before Walter could find a cure in this world, his own Peter died of the disease. After the funeral – at which William Bell was noticeably absent – we see Walter and Elizabeth struggle to come to terms with their son’s death. Walter shows his wife the window and, in an utterly heart-wrenching scene, tells her that he showed her so that she might gain some comfort from the fact that somewhere Peter would grow up and live a full life.

    Just not here

    “I want you to know that somewhere Peter will grow up, somewhere he will lead a proper life, somewhere he will be happy but just not here” – Walter to Elizabeth Bishop

    In what was arguably the beginning of the end, Walter continued to watch Walternate attempt to find a cure for his own Peter; however, just when a cure was found, Walternate was distracted by the Observer September and missed the reaction. Walter, devastated, decided that since he now knew the cure must travel to the other side and bring the cure to that Peter because he couldn’t watch his son die again. After an argument with Carla Warren, Walter’s lab assistant played by Jenni Blong, in which Carla said that to open a wormhole to the other universe would rupture the fabric between worlds, Walter built his device to cross over anyway.

    Observers

    “The boy is significant” – August


    There was a rather intriguing scene with the Observers where we learned that they do in fact actually make mistakes, and that September must correct the error he made in distracting Walternate from the cure. According the September, the moment was significant because Peter is somehow significant; however, in order to right the balance, the Observers are allowed to take action.


    In an attempt to stop Walter, Carla went to Nina for help, and the two of them followed Walter to Reiden Lake. We learned that Nina was apparently quite close to Peter – although this had been hinted at in the season one episode The Cure – and that Nina seems to be having a hard time dealing with his death. We also learned that Walter has a rather different view of William Bell than most people think: that Bell is only interested in power and does not really care about anyone else. Intriguingly, Bell had apparently been trying to convince Walter to open a doorway sooner. While trying to stop Walter, Nina grabbed hold of him, and when he crossed through to the other side and closed the doorway Nina was in close proximity and her arm appeared to dematerialize – thus confirming that Nina did not actually lose her arm to cancer as everyone had thought. Unfortunately for everyone involved, when Nina tried to stop Walter, the vial of the cure was broken.

    OtherPeter

    Other Peter (played by Quinn Lord)


    On the other side we saw Elizabeth Bishop teaching Peter how to do his coin trick in a scene paralleling one on our side between Walter and Peter, before his death. Walter went to get Peter and, since he didn’t have the cure with him any longer, told Elizabeth that he must take Peter back to the lab – promising her that he would bring Peter back. And at that point I firmly believe that he planned to do so. Walter and Peter crossed back over to our side, at which point the ice gave way; close to drowning, both Walter and Peter were saved by September who told Walter that Peter was important and had to live. Walter managed to cure Peter, still intending on taking him home, but Elizabeth came to the lab and saw Peter.

    Elizabeth and Peter

    “I saw in her what I feared most in myself when I saw him, and I couldn’t lose him again” – Walter


    In the end, Walter tells Olivia that he could not give his son up again; even though he had had every intent of returning Peter to his own universe, he could not face losing Peter again.


    Thoughts and Impressions


    One thing about the style in which the episode was presented which I particularly liked was that although it was a flashback, aside from the beginning and end sequences, Peter remained entirely within the flashback without narration. I enjoyed being free to draw my own conclusions from the events of the past rather than having it being coloured by Walter’s descriptions. I found that without any interruptions, it was easier to immerse myself in the flashback, and the emotionally fraught elements of the episode came through much better – the performances of the actors were left speak for themselves without any interference.


    As always, Michael Giacchino created another masterpiece with the scoring of the episode. We started off with an interesting variation on the opening theme; although, as neat as it was, I am rather partial to the usual opening sequence myself. At times we heard a similar theme echoing the new opening sequence. However, I found the music at its most powerful during the scene where this side’s Peter died, and during the subsequent funeral and scene between Walter and Elizabeth Bishop. I would advise you to go back to those scenes and watch them again and just listen to the scoring. Alone, the music is powerful enough, but when it is coupled with the performances onscreen, it is enough to blow you away.

    Funeral

    Funeral


    Speaking of performances, I assume that if you’re reading this review that you have watched the episode (if that isn’t the case, you really ought to go watch it!) and thus it goes without saying that not only did the actors deliver, but they were able to believingly convey the heartbreak of the loss of a child. One aspect by which I was particularly impressed was the interactions between the guest stars – namely, Jenni Blong and Orla Brady – and John Noble; since it was a flashback, we were technically meeting people with whom Walter had an established relationship, yet we were only meeting them for the first time. I think that it is a testament to everyone involved that the relationships between the characters came across as very natural and not at all forced.


    I really would love to see Orla Brady reprise her role as Elizabeth Bishop: not only because her relationship with Walter intrigues me, but also because I am extremely curious about what happened to Mrs. Bishop. I assume that she is now deceased because of a comment Walter made in The Bishop Revival stating “[Peter’s] mother, god rest her soul”, which is usually not something you say unless someone has died. Something I do find a bit curious is that there were several times, closer to the beginning of season one, where Walter criticized Peter for being ‘small minded’ like his mother; however, in this episode we clearly see that Elizabeth appears to accept some of Walter’s crazier science ventures quite readily – most notably, the fact that she got her son from an alternate universe after her son had already died. Given that, there was a scene which was repeated in both universes wherein Walter told Elizabeth that he needed her ‘not to doubt him’, which makes me think that there were times in their relationship when Elizabeth did doubt Walter.

    Crossing lines

    “There has to be a line somewhere. There has to be a line we can’t cross” – Carla Warren


    Crossing lines seems to be something of a theme, understandably, as Fringe deals with what happens when people – usually Walter and Bell – cross lines they shouldn’t: recall Olivia’s accusation to Walter in Jacksonville when she said that he and Bell were trying to find answers to questions they shouldn’t have been asking in the first place, and Carla’s assertion to Walter that there must be lines they shouldn’t cross.


    I found it particularly interesting to see Walter’s relationships with the women in his life in this episode – another one being that with his lab assistant Carla Warren. As we have previously learned, she was killed in a fire in the lab, an accident. And it was a result of this accident which resulted in Walter’s commitment to St. Claire’s. This fact alone, given that we know that Bell was somehow involved during Walter’s stay in St. Claire’s, makes me rather suspicious about the events surrounding Carla’s death and whether it really was an accident. Carla surprised me since, for some reason, I had always expected her to be a student, but given that she has three degrees in theoretical physics that is obviously not the case. In this episode she served as Walter’s conscience, so to speak, in trying to prevent him from opening the wormhole between the worlds. I found it fascinating to hear her and Walter arguing over religion since Walter’s views seem much less rigid now: we have heard him quoting the bible and debating on the matter of souls and higher powers before, and his views seemed much more open to considering religious views.

    Nina Arm

    “Help me!” – Nina


    As I have mentioned, this was the first time we learned that Nina did not actually lose her arm to cancer; rather, she was too close to the doorway between universes and got her arm caught. At least, that is what appeared to happen. One thing which initially confused me was that previously, when we have seen people catch body parts in interuniversal doorways, they have been severed cleanly when the doorway closes. In Nina’s case, her arm seemed to fluctuate between material and immaterial. I think this may be due to the cat that Nina may not have caught her arm completely in the doorway, but instead was in very close proximity – enough to cause substantial damage to her cellular make-up due to the fact that she came too close to the opening between the worlds without passing through.

    Nina and Walter

    Parallels


    There was a moment at the lake – and I am not quite sure whether it was intentional or not – but it reminded me remarkably of a scene in Of Human Action, when Nina was trying to get through to Walter to save Peter. This moment at the lake mirrored the earlier (or later, I suppose) moment, except for the fact that at the lake Nina was not able to get through to Walter to prevent him opening the doorway. The entire scene where Nina was trying to convince Walter not to open the wormhole was actually rather poignant: Nina comes off as being rather cold and aloof, but I think she just hides herself away rather than wearing her heart on her sleeve. At the lake, she begged Walter not to go and said how hard it would be for her to accept that Peter was gone. This begs the question of how close Nina was with Peter considering her familiarity with Peter earlier in season one.


    Speaking of Nina, I find myself wondering at her relationship with William Bell since she defends him so adamantly when he cannot return for the funeral of his good friend’s son. At times I get the feeling that she is almost reverent of him and she seems disturbed by Walter’s contentions that Bell is only about power and money. One thing I find quite curious is that Bell has apparently been pushing Walter for quite a while to open an actual doorway between the universes but that Walter has been resistant.

    Hypothermia

    Hypothermia?


    I think that perhaps a reason that Peter does not remember crossing over – even though he was 7 at the time – is because he obviously would have sustained hypothermia following his and Walter’s inadvertent swim in Reiden Lake. A symptom of hypothermia is memory loss, and since Walter and Peter crossed over just before falling into the lake, it may have interfered with Peter’s processing of the memory and so he doesn’t remember. Even if Peter did remember before, he would just remember his father coming to get him and take him to the lab, so if he woke up in the lab it would not seem strange. And if Peter does remember almost drowning in the lake, Walter has obviously told him the story about their “car accident” many times, and so Peter would just assume it was a car accident and would not inquire any further.

    The boy is important

    “The boy is important. He has to live” – September


    It seems as though every glimpse we are given of the Observers tells us much more about them – although that may be because we really don’t know much about them as it stands now. August, who fell in love with Christine Hollis, seems to have a better grasp on human nature than does December, who refers to movies as theories rather than entertainment. Interestingly, the Observers apparently do make mistakes, and although they aren’t supposed to interfere, they are required to do so to right an imbalance of their own making. Thus, the reason why September interfered to save Walter and Peter: he was righting the balance which he himself had caused by distracting Walternate. The Observers can seemingly travel between the universes without consequence as they were watching the movie on the other side, but September saved the Bishops on this side.


    I do hope that we learn why Peter is so important – if not soon, at least at some point. I wonder if it has something to do with the role he would play in Fringe Division and the fact that Olivia needs him. In Momentum Deferred, William Bell told Olivia to keep Peter by her side as she would need him in the coming war between the worlds. However, this theory is contingent upon Peter being in ‘our’ universe which likely would not have happened if September had not distracted Walternate. My other theory is that Peter’s significance may have something to do with the fact that Peter in ‘our’ universe is dead and so the theme of “there is more than one of everything” does not seem to quite apply in the case of Peter; however, if you accept the multiverse theory upon which we are operating, there would be an infinite number of Peters in an infinite number of universes.I suppose that most, if not all, Peters might suffer the same fate as Walter’s Peter due to the fact that the illness was genetic, thus all Peters would have it. Perhaps the moment where Walternate found the cure was significant because he was the only Walter Bishop to do so, and thus that Peter would have been the only Peter saved.

    The first hole

    “It was the first hole, Olivia. The first breach. The first crack in a pattern of cracks, spaces between the worlds” – Walter


    Walter obviously blames himself for being the cause of the events in our present, given that opening the wormhole between the universes weakened the wall between the worlds. Obviously the weakening of the wall at Reiden Lake was what allowed David Robert Jones to open a window in There’s More than One of Everything, and I suspect that it is what allowed Newton to pull the building through to this reality in Jacksonville – leaving aside the fact that Walter created the technology which Newton used.


    One thing I wonder is whether Walter’s statement to Olivia that Walternate was “equally motivated” to save his own Peter foreshadows an upcoming confrontation with Walternate. I can only imagine that Walternate would have been furious upon finding out that his son had been kidnapped by his alternate self, perhaps leading to Walternate becoming involved with, or even leading, the efforts behind the First Wave.


    I just wanted to mention several things which bothered me a little bit in this episode. First of all, if Peter was suffering from a genetic disease, a one-time dose of a drug would not ‘cure’ it; the only way to cure a genetic disease is through gene replacement therapy which is obviously not what Walter’s cure was. Any other cure would be managing the symptoms of the disease rather than a cure, and would require long-term treatments. This little quibble bothers me a fair bit simply because the science in Fringe is usually pretty accurate – relatively speaking. Also, the fact that it was a genetic disease contradicts what Walter told Peter in season one about him being sick with a rare form of bird flu when he was a boy; I assume that this inconsistency was because if Walter told Peter that he had a genetic disease, Peter would want to know more details, particularly about the cure.


    Something that struck me as a rather big inconsistency in terms of the established timeline is that Walter is very clear that the reason he opened the doorway between the universe for the first time was to save the Peter on the other side; however, Peter died in 1985 and the Cortexiphan trials in Jacksonville ran from 1981 to 1983. In Jacksonville, Walter tells Olivia that she was the first to be able to see the glimmer on objects from the other side, but that entails that they must have had objects from the alternate universe. So if Walter first opened the window in 1985 to save Peter, from where did the objects for the Cortexiphan trials come?


    One more slight nitpick I have is regarding apparent contradictions between what we just learned in Peter, and other information which we have gleaned throughout the series so far. One of these being that Walter has said before that the reason he opened the window the first time was because he had lost something extremely precious to him and that he thought he could take what he had lost from the other side; the view of Walter’s past which we were given in this episode certainly doesn’t seem to fit with that statement.


    Just an observation regarding something that seems slightly off: in August, when Walter met with August, he said that he had a “deal”, and asked the Observer not to take away his son. However, in Peter there didn’t seem to be any deal made between Walter and September – just the statement that Peter was important and had to live. Perhaps we simply haven’t been privy to the deal yet, as Walter may have made it with the Observer after Elizabeth saw Peter and Walter knew he could not give up his son again.

    To lose a child

    “You have no idea what it’s like to lose a child” – Walter to Olivia


    The crux of the issue is that no matter how much Walter tells Olivia about what really happened, it comes down to that crushing pain of having lost someone whom you love more than anything, and who can fault Walter for his actions? For being unable to watch his child die again? In some ways the tragedy – beyond the fact that his Peter was already dead – is the fact that Walter truly just wanted to prevent another death, but multiple factors intervened. I wonder if Walter promised the Other Elizabeth that he would bring Peter back to her because then he would feel as though he had to hold himself to the promise – no matter how much he wanted to keep his son.


    I just wanted to add one more thing: as much as I enjoyed meeting Elizabeth Bishop and Carla Warren, and seeing ‘young’ Nina, I felt as though John Noble carried the episode. I find it is not often, even with one of my favourite shows, that you could remove the other main actors for the bulk of an episode – those being Anna Torv and Josh Jackson – and still have one of the leads carry the show on their own. I think that part of it is due to the fact that we have ‘known’ Walter for longer and therefore can more easily connect with him emotionally in some of the scenes, but there is no doubt in my mind that it takes an actor of the calibre of John Noble to pull off such an episode.

    He knew he was loved

    “He knew he was loved… Didn’t he?” – Walter


    I found that the single moment which affected me most deeply was when Walter and Elizabeth were trying to come to terms with their grief. Elizabeth was worried that they hadn’t given him a proper life as he was isolated due to his disease to which Walter replied that they did the best they could and that Peter knew he was loved.


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    Thanks for reading!


    Nadine Ramsden

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