Showing posts with label Fringe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fringe. Show all posts

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Fringe — Episode 22 (Season 4): “Brave New World, Part 2 of 2”

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

The final episode of the penultimate season of Fringe. The universes are safe (again).

Fringe #422

The Plot: Peter and Olivia head back to Walter’s lab only to find Walter and Astrid missing. Soon after they arrive, Olivia receives a phone call from one of the victims she saved last week from the nanite attack. She tells Olivia she thinks she is being watched. Olivia agrees to head right over. It turns out that she is being watched, by September the Observer, but he falls prey to a second level cleric spell and is trapped.

Olivia and Peter arrive to find an empty house and a strange hole in the floor. Broyles calls and tells them Astrid is in the hospital, recovering from a gunshot wound. They rush to the hospital and learn about the warehouse where Walter was last seen. Peter and Olivia head to the warehouse and find September, still trapped. The woman Olivia helped last episode steps out of the shadows, holding a pistol. She makes it clear that is working for William Bell and her job is to get Olivia riled up. She shoots September, but due to his “super Observer speed,” he is able to catch the bullets. She then pulls out a special pistol, designed by Bell, which can shoot so fast the Observer can’t catch the bullets. She fires a shot, and sure enough, September is hit in the chest. She fires three more shots but Olivia catches them and throws them back at her, killing her. Of course, in the Fringe universe, no one stays dead forever, especially when they hold the clue to Walter’s location, so she is brought back to the Harvard lab, hooked up to a machine, and dragged back to life, temporarily at least.

The Fringe team learns that William and Walter Bell are on barge, presumably heading for the safe zone where the two universes will collide. They find the boat, but only Peter (and the satellites, apparently) can actually see it, because it is out of sync with our universe. Peter and Olivia (acting on their own, again), jump to the barge and confront William Bell. He tells them that Olivia’s powers are energizing the collision of the universes, and once begun, there is no way to stop it. Walter disagrees, then pulls out a pistol and shoots Olivia right in the brain, killing her. Without the required power, the universes immediately return to normal. Bell disappears (literally).

Walter rushes to Olivia, reminding Peter of what we only learned last episode, that Cortexiphan has healing powers. Using improvised surgical tools, he pushes the bullet out of Olivia’s brain, and miraculously, her wound heals.

As the episode ends, Congress increases Fringe’s funding, allowing them to add their own science department – a department which the now “General” Broyles asks Nina Sharp to head. Olivia is released from the hospital, but not before telling Peter that she’s pregnant. Meanwhile, September appears to Walter, telling him to warn the others about what is coming.

Fringe #422

1. I’ve Heard Of Soft Spots, But This Is Ridiculous
Skulls must be softer in the Fringe universe, because there’s no way a syringe, let along a letter opener, would be able to break through the skull that easily – if at all.

2. Just Ask Penn & Teller
The trick to catching a bullet is not just being fast enough to intercept it, but somehow arresting all its momentum without taking any damage. Super speed may solve problem number one, but not number two.

3. In A Case, Just In Case
That was one of the more blatant examples of Chekov’s Gun I’ve seen in recent memory.

4. Khaaaan!
I couldn’t help flashing back to Start Trek II and the Genesis device in the beginning of this episode, when William Bell was talking about how God created the universe in seven days but it took him [Bell] considerably longer. There is a similar quote in Star Trek II (only it takes them seven hours, not seven days).

5. ParadoxodaraP
A nice time paradox. When September told Olivia that in every universe she has to die, where did he learn this? From Olivia.

Fringe #422

Another good episode, but I have the feeling it could have been better. This two-part finale would have worked better a three-episode arc, so some of the key points wouldn’t feel quite so shoe-horned. Still, a good season overall, even if Charlie is still AWOL. The Fringe Doomsday Clock creeps back to 11:55.

Fringe Doomsday Clock

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Fringe — Episode 21 (Season 4): “Brave New World, Part 1 of 2”

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Better late than never. The Fringe team has their final confrontation with David Robert Jones and learns the identity of the real mastermind in an entertaining, albeit fairly cluttered, episode.

Fringe #421

The Plot: The Fringe Team is called in to evaluate a cluster of cases of spontaneous combustion at a nearby convention center. Walter initially suspects a viral infection, but when he realizes the infection was caught from the handrail on the escalator and locates the source, he determines the victims have actually been infected with nanites. Video surveillance shows that David Robert Jones planted the nanites in the escalator, but after looking over the nanites, Walter recognizes them as the work of William Bell.

In this universe, William Bell died in a car crash seven years before, but Walter is insistent that Bell must still be alive and tells the rest of the team that William visited him at St. Claire’s Hospital after he was supposed to be dead. A visit to the hospital shows no evidence of Bell visiting, but Walter keeps the sign-in log for good measure.

The viewers quickly realize that Walter is right and William Bell is still alive, and the Jones is working for him. After some clumsy metaphors about chess, Bell tells Jones that it is time to take out the Bishop. Soon, a bright powerful beam of light comes down from the sky, burning everything in its path. Walter and Peter realize that it is caused by satellites reflecting the sun’s rays and Walter is able to track down the source of the transmission controlling the satellite. Peter and Olivia head off to the transmission sight – antennas on two nearby buildings. They each climb to the roof of one building and shut down the transmitters, but Peter is jumped by Jones. Olivia is able to use her Cortexiphan abilities to take control of Peter’s body and beat Jones senseless. Jones then disintegrates into powder, remarking that he was the Bishop being taken off the board.

Back in his lab, Walter, with help from Astrid, cow’s brains, and an EZ Bake oven, determine that Bell did visit the asylum, leaving behind a trace of his favorite snack – almonds – on the sign-in log. Walter and Astrid head off to the almond warehouse in an attempt to track down Bell. They succeed too well – finding both Bell and some armed goons – and Astrid receives a gut shot as the episode ends.

Fringe #421

1. Flame On!
Not quite classic spontaneous combustion. In this case, only their cheeks and respiratory system (or maybe GI system) burnt up – they didn’t all spontaneously burst in to flame.

2. Forget Minute Rice, Try Our Minute Cultures!
That’s way too short an amount of time to declare an area free of airborne germs. Well, unless you’re using a tricorder. Mabey Nimoy brought one with him.

3. Must Be Empty, And Very Understaffed
St. Claire’s hasn’t reassigned the room, or at least cleaned the desk, in the four years since Walter left?

4. And Lets Not Forget the Foreshadowing: Almonds = Cyanide
If William didn’t sign the page of the ledger, then why is his almond-residue on it? And why is only his snack on there? Surely someone else had eaten before touching the ledger.

5. My Get Rich Quick Plan Continues
Tonight’s episode is just more proof that the best way to make money in the Fringe universe is to own empty warehouses.

6. Don’t Try This At Home Kids
It’s not that easy to relocate a shoulder — in fact, I doubt Peter would have the strength to do it the way shown — especially with a posterior dislocation like Peter suffered. (Now if Peter has suffered multiple posterior dislocations before, his shoulder could pop in and out of socket easier than normal, though with all the fights he’s been in, you’d think we’d have seen that before.)

7. Have A Bigger Party, There’s More Than Enough XP To Go Around
It never occurs to Peter and Olivia they might need back up? They have access to an entire FBI division, after all.

8. Loaves and Fishes Lemon Cake and Pigs Brains
Cortexiphan now has regenerative properties? Hasn’t seemed to do much for Olivia in the past, though it does completely restore that tissue lemon cake really easily. Forget telekinesis, Walter has solved the world’s hunger problem.

Fringe #421

A good episode, but there was enough here to spread it out over another episode. The Fringe Doomsday Clock remains at 11:54.

Fringe Doomsday Clock

View the original article here

Friday, June 15, 2012

Fringe — Episode 20 (Season 4): “Worlds Apart”

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Another episode of Fringe, more Cortexiphan Kids (haven’t they all died by now?) and another change to the universal status quo

Fringe #418

The Plot: Just as the Fringe Teams from both universes are meeting to discuss Walter’s thoughts about David Robert Jones’ master plan, a series of twenty-seven earthquakes occur across the world – both worlds, actually – at precisely the same time. Walter determines that Jones has somehow set off these earthquakes to adjust the underlying frequencies of both universes to bring them together in an attempt to recreate the Big Bang. The team suspects that he’s using amphilicite, but they quickly discover he’s actually using some of the children dosed with Cortexiphan by Walter years ago. They capture one of the Cortexiphan Kids (this sounds like a Saturday morning cartoon about crime solving kids sponsored by a pharmaceutical company) and learn that Jones has told them they are fighting a war against the other universe. With only an hour left before the next, and cataclysmic, series of earthquakes, the teams decide their only option is to shut down The Machine and separate the universes. Everyone says their goodbye to their counterpart – Peter stays in our universe and Lincoln stays in theirs – and the machine is stopped and the bridge between the two universes disappears.

Fringe #418

1. The Easy Way Out
Early in the episode, Olivia says the only option is to destroy the bridge. Certainly there are plenty of other options. Just off the top of my head: kill Jones, kill or otherwise stop the Cortexiphan Kids, or do something to increase the integrity of the universe. Shutting down The Machine is the easiest option, but hardly the only one.

2. Needs A Band-Aid
Why, once the bridge is destroyed, would the other universe no longer be in danger from the Fringe events they suffered since Walter’s original breach? (Other than the writers trying to soften the blow of all but abandoning them.)

3. Geocentrism For The Win
Apparently Ptolemy was right, and the Earth is the center of the universe(s).

4. Common Sense
With all the issues with the Cortexiphan kids in the past, you’d think they’d be kept under surveillance. Especially since we’ve learned Jones has been playing with the stuff..

5. No Bridge, But Other Fords Remain
It’s not like Jones has ever needed the bridge to cross over (though it may have helped the Cortexiphan Kids in their part).

6. A Surefire Money Maker
If ever end up in the world of Fringe, I’m going to invest in empty warehouses.

7. Alternotes
FringeNo rainbows.

Fringe #417

The re-separation of the Universes was well done, but the rest of the episode was just OK. The Fringe Doomsday Clock remains at 11:54.

Fringe Doomsday Clock

View the original article here

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