<![CDATA[io9: fringe review]]> http://tags.lifehacker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/io9.com.png <![CDATA[io9: fringe review]]> http://io9.com/tag/fringereview http://io9.com/tag/fringereview <![CDATA[Fringe's Dream Machine Turns Your Coworkers Into Cannibals]]> On last night's Fringe we learned that stealing dreams is not only addictive, it can make some people feel downright stabby. Plus, Walter flexes his mad scientists muscles using a naive FBI agent and a flask of chloroform.

Dream Machine: If I've learned anything from watching Fringe, it's that you should never, ever join a clinical trial. Earlier this season, it was those soldiers and their neurotoxin treatment that made them explode, and this week it was the guy who wants to hijack your dreams.

Our mystery of the week kicks off when a former sleepwalker suddenly thinks one of his co-workers is a demon straight out of Angel, and starts bashing his brain in. To add insult to crazy, the demon-seeing fellow soon dies of exhaustion. And later on, a restaurant chef walks through her kitchen at work, but instead of seeing tasty cow meat on the grill, she sees human hands and flips out, convinced her co-workers are cannibals. Much stabbing ensued.

Turns out both of these lucid dreamers received treatment for sleep disorders from a Dr. Nayak. Nayak implanted a chip in the brains of these once-disturbed sleepers (second note: if you do participate in a trial, never let them put a chip in your head). The chip was supposed to act as a sort of glandular pacemaker to regulate the thalamus, but Nayak actually used it to transmit their dreams to his brain. No dreams means no rest, hence the exhaustion deaths. But he can also trigger the dream state while they're awake, causing all those freaky hallucinations. But why steal dreams? According to Walter, it's a lot like being on LSD, but also highly addictive.

As much as a dream-stealing machine sounds like something out of a child's fairy tale, we actually get some cool visuals out of it and some classically villainous mad science. I'll take this over scorpion children any day.

Promise Me, No Students: Can we just dump Agent Jessup and adopt Agent Kashner instead? It's nice to see someone enter the lab who isn't as stoic as Astrid or Olivia (I mean, eventually someone had to vomit at the autopsy table). And he's so utterly unprepared for Walter that it's kind of adorable. Dude, he's not just some crazy old man. He's a mad scientist.

No More Nightmares: Every time Peter utters a single word about his childhood, I'm sure it's chock full of significance. Here, he tells Olivia about the nightmares he had as a child, and that Walter — in one of his rare moments of parental involvement — kept him from remembering the nightmares. I was almost disappointed that we learned the reason for this so quickly. Peter has nightmares about being snatched from his room by a man who both is and is not his father — that being the Walter of our universe.

Word Jumble: Olivia's bowling guru is still in the picture, and I guess we'll have to stick with him until we learn whether he holds the secrets of the universe. Bowling Guru has Olivia do an exercise where she obtains a seemingly random set of letters and then rearrange them into a coherent phrase — the phrase she needs to hear. I'm seriously looking for a copy of The Secret in that bowling alley. Anyway, Olivia cries when she realizes her letters form the phrase "You're gonna be fine." Sure, until that other universe comes crashing down on your head.

Astrid Watch: Did Walter just call her Asterisk again? Ouch.

Walter Moment of the Week: Definitely drugging Agent Kashner. No contest.

But it does seem odd after his heartfelt apology to hallucinogen-loving guinea pig Rebecca last week. In fact, between this and the Asterisk comment, it feels like Walter is regressing a tad.

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<![CDATA[Leonard Nimoy Explains Fringe's Final Storm]]> Last night on Fringe, we drank worms, did drugs, and stole cryogenically frozen heads. But more importantly, we finally got to see Olivia's visit to the other universe, and hear Leonard Nimoy explain all about the coming interdimensional war.

The Great Cryo-Caper: Agent Broyles nails it with the absurd Fringe quote of the night: "Why are shapeshifting soldiers from another universe stealing frozen heads?" Why not? It's weird, it's slightly gruesome, and it gives them an excuse to show dozens of disembodied heads rolling all over the ground.

Oh, but it has something to do with the plot, too. These universe-jumping warriors are looking for a certain head, but they don't know where it is or what it looks like. One of the soldiers just keeps shaving off small bits of hair, frowning, and then tossing the head over his shoulder like it's a piece of overripe fruit. A pity we don't get to see anyone stumble across this pile of unwanted heads; it would the perfect intro to a ratings-grubbing episode of Law & Order.

The last heist didn't quite go as planned, though, and the frowning supersoldier was forced to kill one of his shapeshifting compatriots, leaving behind a corpse that bleeds mercury and one of those contraptions that let's them steal another person's form.

Flatworm Smoothie: Sometimes I suspect the Fringe writers are constantly working on an empty stomach, what with all the talk of flan and apple fritters. Olivia gets a less tasty treat in the form of Walter's world-famous flatworm smoothie (patent pending). Apparently, in addition to being every kid's favorite animal to chop to bits (how I loved to create two-headed planaria), flatforms have the ability to obtain the memories of other flatworms through ingestion. Walter thinks he can job Olivia's memory by having her swallow the sliced and diced wormies, while Peter thinks that's a load of worm-flavored crap. Olivia, of course, downs the entire glass before Walter can mention that he was going to mix the vile stuff with strawberries. Oh, Olivia, I know you must always prove you're tough and game for anything, but this impulsiveness is going to get you killed — and probably get the whole universe killed with you.

The Blending of Peter and Bell: Nina Sharp reminds us that two objects can't occupy the same space, but Peter and William Bell are certainly coming close, at least in Olivia's mind. First, when she looks at Peter, she has flashbacks to seeing Bell in the alternate universe. Then, when she's just coming out of her massive flashback seizure, she hears Peter's voice layered over Bell's voice. And both Bell and Peter ring similar bells, which serve as bookends to the seizure. I'm probably jumping the gun here, but is it possible that Peter and William Bell are the same person? After all, they're both geniuses, both have worked with Walter, and both have real affinity for Olivia. Could Peter have traveled back in time, assumed the name William Bell, and worked to prevent the "final storm."

Step Through the Plot Hole, Please: Okay, so now that the Fringe team has a dead shapeshifter on their hands, they can see that shapeshifter bodies contain boatloads of mercury. And that dead nurse they thought was the shapeshifter back in episode one? No mercury. Go team! But, why everyone doesn't immediately suspect Charlie, who supposedly shot and killed the nurse, of being the shapeshifter is beyond me. Walter might have an excuse since he's apparently high all the time, but what about our trained FBI agents and uber-perceptive Peter. Gah. Instead, they have to rely on Massive Dynamic to fix the broken shapeshifting device and reconstruct data on the last recorded shape.

Olivia and Peter Geek Out: Part of me adores the impressed look Peter gives Olivia when she reveals her knowledge of Invasion of the Body Snatchers. He's got a very non-sexual, sibling-ish crush on her. But part of me is bemused; is he still surprised when she raises her geek flag?

Hallucinogenic Experiments are Sexy: Walter actually gets some action this episode, and it's all thanks to his wacky unethical experiments. He meets up with Rebecca Kidner, the woman he once fed hallucinogenic drugs so she could identify people from other universes (who apparently have a certain glowing aura about them). Far from being upset about the things Walter did to her mind and body, she's grateful and more than a little turned on. When Walter tells her (rather unconvincingly) that he couldn't recommend subjecting her to more hallucinogenic drugs, she immediately and happily volunteers to be his guinea pig again. She even remembers where he keeps his salvia. How sweet.

Will'em and Livvy, Together at Last: Rebecca's psychedlic experience is interrupted by Olivia's flashback seizure. Apparently, the flatworms have kicked in and Olivia is remembering her visit to the alternate universe and her encounter with William Bell. It's a bit of an info dump, but a manageable one, and some of the revelations are a little cryptic:

-William and Olivia have cutesy nicknames for each other, or at least they did when she was a child.
-People who travel from our universe to the other universe often die in the process.
-The people in the other universe have dealt with this by creating hybrids that are part human, part machine. They are called the "First Wave."
-The supersoldiers are looking for their leader, who will have a mark that looks sort of like an omega hidden on his body.
-Bell believes a war is coming, which he describes as the "final storm."
-When Bell and Walter predicted the coming war, they tried to create an individual who could defend the gates between worlds. Out of all of the children Bell and Walter experimented on, Olivia was by far the strongest.
-Momentum can be deferred when traveling from one universe to the other, but it's only put off until your return. That's why Olivia came crashing out of her car windshield in the season premiere — because she'd been pulled out of a moving car and into the other universe.

Peter Glows: Walter is becoming more focused, but he may want to lay off the pot. After all, he should realize that once he triggered Rebecca's ability to recognize people from the other universe, that she would be able to see that Peter is from the other universe. She almost spills the beans to Peter, but catches herself at the last minute. Still, it's another step toward Peter figuring out what's up. Then again, maybe Walter is — consciously or unconsciously — just sabotaging himself.

Snow Globe Apocalypse: On Bell's orders, Olivia visits Nina Sharp to tell her about the final storm. Nina essentially reiterates what ZFT told us last season: that there will be a final conflict between the two universes, and only one universe will survive. After all, two objects cannot occupy the same space. She illustrates this by smashing two snow globes together. Then Olivia thinks, Hey, don't those snow globes look an awful lot like omegas? and she suspects Nina of being the shapeshifter. No, Olivia, it will be hidden on the leader, not held out in front of them.

Farewell, Fake Charlie: But soon reason (or more accurately technology) prevails and Fake Charlie is outed as the shapeshifter. After a battle of the supersoldiers, Olivia wins out and shoots Fake Charlie dead. Poor Kirk Acevedo. You will be missed.

The Head of the First Wave: Meanwhile, the other shapeshifter has found the head he was looking for. He shaves off a little hair to reveal the omega-ish symbol of the First Wave's leader, and then attaches it to a fresh new body.

Astrid Watch: Just a little Astrid this week, though she gets a nice joke with the "Walter Bishop Deli" line. And I did like it when Walter said he wasn't sure she wasn't a figment of his imagination, even if he meant it strictly in the scientific sense, because sometimes it does seem like Walter treats her like his imaginary friend.

Walter Moment of the Week: This week we learned that Walter smokes a little pot each night before bed and keeps a stash of salvia in his drawer. But the best moment had to be when he asked Peter if he could ride home with Rebecca (and hit him up for bus fare), only to turn around like a giddy kid about to have a playdate:

But at least we got a moment of self-awareness, too, as Walter apologized to Rebecca for the things he did in his wild and reckless scientific youth. And, he may not have gotten her into bed, but at least he's rewarded for his impulsive car ride with a kiss.

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<![CDATA[Humans and Watermelons Alike Explode on Fringe]]> Last night's Fringe started out with unusual bang, in the form of a literal human bomb. Soon the Fringe team is blowing up watermelons, traveling to Iraq, and reminiscing about Peter's childhood Playboy jigsaw puzzle. Spoilers ahead.

Initially, it looked like we were getting another stand-alone episode this week, involving a police officer who mysteriously crystallizes and explodes upon touching a nondescript briefcase, taking out the briefcase and everyone around him. While Walter and Astrid are putting Humpty Dumpty back together again, they discover that the exploded cop was injecting himself with something that likely turned him into a bomb. When Peter realizes the cop must have been injecting the serum as far back as his tour in Iraq, he heads off to Baghdad with a physically and cognitively unstable Olivia in tow.

We're probably meant to assume that, because this serum (known as "Tin Man") came to Iraq and happens to make people explode in very public places, Iraqi scientists were actively trying to turn people in human bombs. But no, no. The Iraqi scientist who created it had pretty unambiguously benevolent motives. He was trying to counteract the effects of a neurotoxin several of the soldiers were exposed to, and it just happened to make most of them explode. Bummer. And, if anyone is going around making soldiers explode, it's the psychotic colonel who was attached to the Tin Man project.

By using the serum to blow up a watermelon (prompting the ever put-upon Astrid to ban fruit from the lab), Walter is able to determine that a certain frequency is triggering the explosions, and by emitting a counter-frequency, the explosion can be prevented. Sure enough, the team manages to locate another former soldier injected with Tin Man headed for another nondescript briefcase; the explosion is averted and the colonel is apprehended. Everyone lives happily ever after.

Ah, but then comes the big reveal. This was about so much more than exploding watermelons and jaunts abroad. It was about the briefcases. The briefcases belong to none other than the Observer, or apparently multiple Observers, who pass their surveillance back and forth via courier.

The Observer(s): So now we know there are multiple Observers, and that they're passing information amongst themselves. No great surprise there, as we've seen the Observer talking on the phone to someone before. But is their purpose really to destroy us, as the colonel seems to suggest? And is that our Observer getting the briefcase full of pictures of Walter? And is that actually our Walter, or could it be the Walter from the other universe?

Olivia's Guru: Kevin Corrigan, as Olivia's bowling alley guru, is trying to convince us he's the world's most boring cognitive therapist, trying to restore Olivia to her former self by making her score kiddie bowling and tie her shoes. When she's fed up with his Mr. Miyagi schtick, she pulls her gun on him. She's shocked she managed to walk without her cane, but I'm more concerned with her mental health, especially since she had vomit-inducing flashbacks earlier in the episode and it looks like next week the floodgates are going to tumble open.

A Little Bit of Astrid: She's still cleaning up Walter's messes, but it's nice to see Astrid say something to Walter and have him actually hear what she's saying. When Walter is predictably resistant to Peter finding them a new place to live, it's Astrid who very gently nudges him in the right direction. Plus, Walter even managed to acknowledge that he never shows any interest in Astrid's life beyond her cleaning and culinary abilities. Maybe now we can finally see her in the field?

Walter Moment of the Week: There are so many to choose from here. Aside from the thing with the watermelon, we learned that Walter had Peter assemble a Playboy jigsaw puzzle when he was ten as a sort of misguided anatomy lesson. But the best moment comes when Walter asks Peter to be a little more considerate of Gene:

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<![CDATA[Father-Son Bonding Over Fringe's Scorpion Baby]]> In last night's Fringe, a scorpion baby terrorizes a small town and reflects a father's desperate love. Also, Olivia learns the downside of superpowered hearing, and finds her guru working in a bowling alley. Spoilers ahead.

Last night's episode, "Night of Desirable Objects," had me really pining for ZFT. Now, those folks knew how to throw a freaky Fringe Science party. Compared to their antics, the exploits of a lone scientist who combines his son's DNA with that of a scorpion seem a bit ho-hum. But we did get some great X-Files-inspired moments, and the case provided a serviceable backdrop for the show's overarching mythology.

Leave it to Walter to bring in some visually weird science, replicating Olivia's car accident in an attempt to fling a frog into the alternate dimension. The frog doesn't have any close encounters with William Bell, but it looks pretty cool as it flies through the air.

But one can only indulge in so much amphibian abuse before a new Fringe case crops up. This time the team heads out to Lansdale, Pennsylvania, where the locals have been going missing. The local sheriff has had no luck solving the disappearances, perhaps because his records focus more on which victims liked wearing flannel than who in the town might be a monster-building mad scientist. Olivia's off her game, thanks to her emerging super-hearing powers, but Peter manages to charm the sheriff into handing over the records by complimenting his expensive fishing lure — the titular Night of Desirable Objects.

The records lead the team to Andre Hughes, a farmer with some sort of creepy crawly in the walls of his house and a dead wife and infant son. Suspecting that Hughes might have killed the pair (from Walter: "Finally, some good news!"), they exhume the casket, only to find that the wife's body is still inside but, once upon a time, the baby managed to tunnel its way out (just what I needed: nightmares about evil, superstrong infants). And Astrid and Walter quickly discover that mama had lupus, which would have rendered her unable to have children, and Walter decides that, logically, Hughes must have introduced scorpion DNA into his son's system so he could survive his mother's hostile womb (great, now it's evil, superstrong scorpion infants). Hughes has rather inconveniently hanged himself in the interim, but Peter and Olivia manage to locate the arachni-boy beneath Hughes' home.

The theme of fathers who go to the extremes for their sons is soaked through this episode, though it's heartbreaking how none of the characters are yet aware of its significance. Like Hughes, Walter is a man who did a terrible thing to have his son, but failed to connect with him. Even when Peter shows Walter his own Night of Desirable Objects fishing lure and tells him the story of the boy who bought it to go night-fishing with his father, Walter genuinely fails to understand that Peter is talking about himself. But now, of course, they both have the opportunity and the desire to reconnect, and that reconnection will make it all the more devastating when Peter learns his true origins. Even when Olivia comments on the lengths Hughes was willing to go to in order to have a son, it's not to anyone involved in this father-son tragedy, but to Evil Fake Charlie (who has been ordered to debrief her on the alternate universe experience she can't remember before killing her). All the information about this tragic irony is there, but the characters aren't in quite the right configurations to catch on.

The other key plot point is Olivia's supersoldier powers, which manifested this episode in a that shiny new superhearing. It might be cool to hear conversations from far away, like having a built-in spy microphone, but it quickly becomes clear that it's also really annoying when you hear everything, including flies buzzing, soap bubbles popping, and all your neighbors' petty arguments and television sets. The morally ambiguous Nina Sharp seems to have anticipated that Olivia's body is becoming "foreign" to her, and has recommended Olivia see Sam Weiss, a fellow who can put her back together. Weiss, it turns out is comedic actor Kevin Corrigan, and he works in a bowling alley. Because if The Big Lebowski taught us anything, it's that bowling alleys are dens of wisdom and nefarious dealings, it follows that Weiss knows more about Olivia's issues than she does, asking if she's been getting "the headaches."

We also get a quick but significant appearance by Agent Jessup, who inspects Hughes home to find an important clue tucked into a Bible, and a note, apparently from Hughes' pastor, written inside. This is the second time we've seen Jessup with this sort of a Bible, and she regards it as a significant object. Have the Bibles appeared in episodes from the previous season? Are these calling cards related to the Pattern, or perhaps to the other universe?

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<![CDATA[A Shapeshifting Supersoldier Can't Stop Fringe's Birthday Celebration]]> Gene the cow put on her best party hat for last night's Fringe season premiere, an episode that brought us shapeshifters, transdimensional typewriters, a new team member, custard, and a kiss that revealed an unexpected alliance. Spoilers below...

At some point during this episode, Olivia says to Peter, "There really is no point where things just can't get weirder." And while, next to exploding people and man-eating parasite, a shapeshifting supersoldier seems perfectly mundane, the mysteries on Fringe just keep getting weirder.

So Olivia is back from her visit in the other dimension, having popped quite suddenly and dramatically out the windshield of her car. But she hasn't come back alone. A soldier from "Over There" has followed her (well, technically proceeded her) so that she can be interrogated and then knocked off the chessboard. And, to help him in this quest, he can be look like anyone he kills by placing a strange three-pronged device inside their mouth.

Meanwhile, all is not well for the Fringe Division. The higher ups don't see the team getting results and want to terminate the entire group, leaving Broyles struggling to defend it. And Peter's growing a bit weary of the dimension-hopping, evil scientist-chasing game and is ready to get out of dodge. And, when a doctor tells Peter and Walter that Olivia is irreparably brain damaged and won't wake up, he doesn't exactly have warm fuzzy feelings toward her work.

But then Olivia's own supersoldier abilities kick in, and she's healed up, spouting code words in Greek, and telling Peter that everyone's lives are in danger. This is enough to put Peter back in gear and taking charge. Soon we're watching an old tape of Walter's identifying the killer of a murder victim as the shapeshifting soldier from another dimension (complete with an ecstatic, drugged-out girl telling us, "He's from another universe, man."), and our intrepid Fringe investigators are soon on the soldier's tail.

This draws another character into the team's orbit as well. Amy Jessup, an FBI agent with the New York office, is instantly intrigued by the Fringe Division and gloms onto Peter faster than you can say "ulterior motive." Granted, she seems to fit in quite smoothly with the others, and doesn't bat an eye when Walter does things like reach bloody gloved finger into Astrid's custard mixing bowl (though he does receive a nice smack from Astrid), but red flags go up when she says she's been waiting for the Fringe team all her life — and what's the deal with Bible code she's typing up at the end? At least Peter cuts her down when she tries to bullshit him by quoting cliched Shakespeare. This is Fringe, Amy, not The Next Generation.

And it looks like we'll be seeing our shapeshifter around for a while, thanks to his killing poor, poor Charlie and taking his form. We'll probably be seeing more of his transdimensional typewriter as well, a device that seems to exist in both universes and which he uses to communicate with his higher ups in the other dimension. But who's on the other end, and what information do they hope to get out of Olivia?

Oh, and let's talk about this for a moment:

Once I got past my flashbacks to The Wire, this actually made a lot of sense. After all, it couldn't have been a coincidence that Olivia was hired to work in the Fringe Division. Does this mean that everything that happened last season — Olivia's awakening, Walter's reprieve, and Peter's reunion with his father — were all orchestrated by William Bell? Well, the man is a genius.

Also, there were some great Peter details coming out of this episode. It's sort of amusing to watch the writers wink and nod at the audience, even if some of those winks are a touch horrifying. Like when Walter tells Peter that Peter loved custard as a boy and just doesn't remember, it's a little jab telling us that this Peter, the Peter from the other dimension, isn't quite the same boy Walter lost. And a new mystery has opened up with the Greek blessing Olivia delivers to Peter when she wakes up, the same blessing Peter's mother delivered to him each night. Did Peter's mother know that Peter came from the other dimension? Is another version of her still alive Over There? And do the words have a greater meaning in the coming conflict?

Finally, this episode left me hungry for some of Peter's birthday custard — preferably without the blood.

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<![CDATA[Is There More Than One Final Episode For Fringe?]]> In last night's season finale of Fringe, there were some reality-splitting revelations and at least one crazy-ass Abrams lens flare moment. And it was awesome, but confusing to the uninitiated. Allow me to explain. Spoilers!

OK, so here is what happened on the surface of the brain-twisting episode known as "There Is More Than One of Everything." Olivia and the Scoobies are investigating two related cases: The shooting of Massive Dynamic VP Nina Sharp, and a bizarre incident in New York where a truck barreled out of a shimmering hole in the middle of the street. Turns out there's a very obvious connection between the two things. Security footage reveals that Nina was shot by none other than notorious underground science terrorist Jones, who stole a secret mega-ultra-super power source that Massive Dynamic boss William Bell hid in her robotic arm.

Do not ask why Bell decided to hide his mega thing in his VP's arm, OK? You are watching Fringe, where we fight to stop alternate Earth from invading our own. But I get ahead of myself.

So Jones now has the mega-ultra-super (which is about the size of a USB memory stick) and is using it to power up his dimension-opening device, which is by the way run off Dell laptops. Can I just have a moment to say thanks to the Fringe science advisory team for showing a PC running something in a scifi series? I am so freakin sick of seeing Apples in these kinds of stories. Geeks know that the only drivers available for inter-dimensional peripheral devices are made for Windows and Linux, and it's nice to see the Fringe crew knows this too.

Anyway, back to my point, which is that Jones opened a dimensional doorway between our NYC Prime and NYC-1. Which is why a truck came barreling out of nowhere, and why later on another doorway opens in a soccer field and slices a guy's body in half when he gets stuck halfway inside Earth-1 just as the doorway is closing.

Given that Jones is a terrorist, and Sharp miraculously survived the shooting due to her Kevlar ribcage, it's time for the Scoobies to go on full alert. As Sharp explains, there are "soft spots" in reality where the doorway between worlds is likely to be the most stable, and it's a race against time to find out where they are because Jones is looking for them too. No, we still don't know why Jones wants to go to Earth-1, especially given that last week we found out it's full of bombed-out buildings and quarantine zones.

While all this is happening, Walter is looking for something he lost long ago. The Observer, that bald white guy who eats a lot of chili peppers, has brought Walter back to a cottage in Rhode Island where his family used to stay when Peter was little. The Observer says he has to find something there quickly, and that "there's more than one of everything," but can't tell him more than that because he's not supposed to intervene. Unfortunately, the mad Walter can't remember anything about what he might have hidden there. But fortunately (sort of) we find out that Massive Dynamic has backdoored every camera it ever sold. It's easy as pie for them to grab and search illegally through a bunch of surveillance footage to locate the missing Walter at the beach house and send Peter off to get him.

And Peter helps out by looking rakish and telling Walter a story about how he used to make pancakes when Peter was a kid. That reminds Walter of how he lost "something precious" when Peter was young and sick (though interestingly Peter doesn't remember being sick). And how he thought he could find that precious thing over in Earth-1, which he used to see all the time after taking tons of LSD with William Bell.

So sure was Walter that he could step through into Earth-1 from Earth Prime that he actually designed a "patch" gun to close doorways opened between the two worlds. Because if the two worlds are joined that would be bad, OK? And the patch gun is the thing hidden at the cottage that he needed to remember.

Anyway, he and Peter get the patch gun and race to the soft spot by a lake that everybody has found. There's Jones using his Dell to open doorways between worlds, and luckily Olivia and Peter stop him, closing the door between dimensions just as Jones has his head halfway between them. Ohhh, sliced head! Gross and cool.

And this is where things REALLY got weird. Are you ready for full understanding, my cosmonauts?

Now don't forget that Jones was part of ZFT, the underground science group funded and created by William Bell, whose sole purpose is to bring down society through the advancement of technology. The ZFT manifesto talks about how there are two parallel Earths (though sadly it does not actually use the DC Comics preferred terms Earth Prime and Earth-1). Earth Prime (our Earth) and Earth-1 (their Earth) cannot co-exist, and Earth-1 is more technologically advanced than Earth Prime. A time is coming soon when one Earth will destroy the other.

Last week, Walter discovered the lost "ethics" chapter of the ZFT manifesto, which makes it seem like William Bell might have had good intentions and that Jones and his buddies deliberately cut out the ethics part so they could be science dicks. Also, Bell and Walter did a bunch of experiments on kids using cortexiphan, a drug that helps you see between worlds, because they were not very ethical. Olivia is one of those kids, as are many others who are currently developing superpowers to become Jones' "soldiers" in the coming war between Earth Prime and Earth-1.

So there's your quick backstory.

Olivia has been wanting to meet William Bell, partly because she knows he's behind the ZFT freaks, and partly because she's really pissed about those childhood experiments on her brain. Once she's destroyed Jones, thus doing a favor for everybody, Sharp says she'll arrange a meeting for her with Bell. But Bell "isn't in this world," says Sharp. For some reason, nobody seems to guess what the hell she's talking about even though they know all that stuff I just recapped for you about the two Earths and the dimension doors. Whatever.

Sadly, Bell doesn't show up at the restaurant where Olivia is supposed to meet him, so she enters the elevator in a big huff after waiting a really long time. As the elevator goes down, there's an INTERDIMENSIONAL LENS FLARE borrowed straight from Abrams' Star Trek. This is the sign that Something Trippy is happening. Then a bunch of people appear next to her in the elevator very briefly, and flash out again.

When the doors finally open, she's in a shiny white hallway and a woman says, "Agent Dunham, welcome." OK, so she's obviously in Earth-1, now. She walks down the hall and meets William Bell at last (yes, he's played by Leonard Nimoy, yes that's awesome, etc.). He doesn't really say much other than that he's been wanting to meet her, and then the camera swoops out his high office window over NYC-1, where we see (big reveal) the Twin Towers shining in the sun. Actually, a pretty cool scene. So the season ends with Olivia and Bell on Earth-1.

Meanwhile, back on Earth Prime, Walter is sobbing in a graveyard. The grave belongs to (BIG REVEAL) Peter Bishop, his son, the wisecracking rake who doesn't remember being sick as a kid. You know what that means, right? Peter Prime died as a kid, in 1987, and Walter crossed over to Earth-1 and kidnapped Peter-1 for himself. Then he used his patch gun to cover up the evidence. So Peter is actually from Earth-1.

Here's where it gets REALLY complicated, though, Earth Primers. Remember how Olivia saw all those people flash into the elevator when she was heading to Earth-1? I think what that means is that there are a lot more alternative Earths - infinite Earths, if you will. Those people were traveling between them. And Olivia can see more than one of the Earths, which is why the city she saw bombed out and on fire last week was healed with its Twin Towers intact this week. Last week maybe she was seeing Earth-10, but Bell lives in Earth-1. See what I'm getting at? We're headed to a veritable CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS. Which warms the cockles of my nerdy little heart.

Also: A newspaper on Bell's desk shows that Obama is president of Earth-1 too. Nice to know some things never change.

So what do you guys think? Is it just Earth Prime and Earth-1 or are there infinite Earths?

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<![CDATA[Dimension-Hopping Conspiracies Explained, On "Fringe"!]]> All the conspiracies started to make sense last night on Fringe, in one of the most rewarding episodes ever for people who love the show's mythology. For those who don't, there were Trek jokes. Spoilers!

Let's untangle the tangled web at the heart of Fringe, shall we? First of all, show creators Alex Kurtzman, Roberto Orci, and JJ Abrams all worked on Star Trek, which is hitting theaters on Thursday. The writer of last night's episode, Akiva Goldsman, worked on some of the cheesiest flicks in the pre-Dark Knight Batman franchise, as well as inserting a little oomph into the I Am Legend and I, Robot scripts. So yes, it was bound to happen that one day these four supernerds would get together and spawn an episode so packed with in-groupy pop culture references that smacking is probably in order.

After the Ghostbusters reference, but before the random references to Arthur C. Clark's Childhood's End and a long discussion about how Stephen King coined the term "pyrokinesis" (relevant to last night's Special Power), we had a charming scene where a Random Internet Weirdo spills first the entire mythos of the Fringe series and then recaps the plot of the upcoming Star Trek movie, all in one go (see clip). Oh so cute, Fringies. Luckily, the actual plot of the episode was so fucking cool that I will forgive you JUST THIS ONCE for self-indulgent weenie-related activities.

Basically, we're getting to the bottom of secret renegade science group ZFT (short for "destruction through technological progress" - don't ask). We learned last week that William Bell, the mysterious owner of megacorp Massive Dynamic, is funding ZFT's crazy experiments that all center around creating supersoldiers via a drug called cortexifan. And we know that Vague Agent Olivia Dunham ate some cortexifan as a kid, and has recently started developing spooooooky powers.

And last night, in "The Road Not Taken," we learned that William Bell also wrote the ZFT manifesto, though apparently a special chapter he included about ethics was excised from the version that's been circulating to the science terrorists via 4Chan. We also met yet another set of cortexifan victims, a pair of twins who have (yes) pyrokinesis. One has blown herself up accidentally, leading to a fringe unit investigation, and the other is slowly losing control of her burny powers.

But what's truly cool is that Olivia has started manifesting one of the other side-effects of cortexifan that we hadn't seen before: She's dimension-hopping. Because remember, there are two parallel Earths and one is slightly more advanced than the other. And they are about to go to war, hence the need for soldiers, hence the cortexifan, yadda yadda. As Olivia investigates the burning twins, she starts seeing visions of that parallel Earth, where apparently Boston has been bombed to hell (see first few seconds of the clip - pretty creepy). Also, in the parallel Earth, both of the fire twins are dead (only one is dead in our world), there are giant quarantine zones (unexplained), and Broyles has moved his desk (oh noes!). Plus, Olivia's phone is red instead of black. So things are more dangerous and stylish in Parallel Earth.

As Olivia and the Scoobies race to figure out William Bell's connection to ZFT, asswipey sexual harasser Harris butts in and tells them to stop investigating. Then he orders a psych consult for Olivia, just to mess with her. Thankfully the Harris harassment subplot ended last night, when we discovered that he's in on the ZFT experiments on the fire ladies. He helps kidnap and experiment on the remaining twin, and the Scoobies catch him red-handed. Quite literally. When he tries to trap Olivia in a room with the soon-to-blow firestarter, Olivia helps her to redirect her fiery urges - at Harris. Boom! That was truly awesome.

But not nearly as awesome as the parallel universes coming together, or Massive Dynamic VP Nina Sharp showing up at Broyles' house late at night with like a million pictures of the Observer. Apparently he's been showing up all over the place, and Sharp says mysteriously, "Remember last time that happened?" Indeed, crazy things are happening. After Walter discovers the missing ethics chapters from ZFT while alone in his lab, the Observer pops through the door. With a sad look, he takes off his hat and says to Walter, "It's time to go." And Walter walks out quietly with him, leaving the ethics chapter behind.

I love the little Name of the Rose flourish in that subplot, the idea that there is this crucial missing book that changes our entire interpretation of everything. Hopefully that ethics chapter won't meet the same fiery end as Aristotle's book about comedy!

So where does this leave us, Fringe freaks? Walter has disappeared with the Observer, after admitting to Olivia that he doesn't remember anything about the experiments done on her and the other cortexifan kids. Olivia is seeing another dimension, where violence is everywhere (maybe the war has begun?). We know for sure that the goal of ZFT is to create supersoldiers for the interdimensional war (though we also know that some of the ZFT types are also just showoffs who like to engage in "bizarre acts.") And - in the last breathless seconds of the episode - we see Sharp getting shot by ninjas in her apartment.

Seriously, except for the Star Trek thing, this was a truly awesome episode with a lot of payoff for those of us who have been glued to the set every Tuesday night, looking for answers. Can't wait for the finale next week, when hopefully there will be some serious interdimensional fu!

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<![CDATA[Spinal Fluid With A Side of Syphillis, on Fringe]]> Nothing like a little recreational spine-severing, Syphillis-engineering, and more hints about a secret underground science society known as ZFT. That's why last night's Fringe made us feel all grody-happy inside. Spoilers!

Fringe is scoring well on the tightly-plotted-o-meter - last week's episode, authored by Akiva "I, Robot" Goldsman, was scary and awesome. And this week's episode, "Midnight," kept bringing on the biological horror with a vampiric creature whose lust for spinal fluid took us one step closer to cracking the ZFT conspiracy.

For those who just tuned in, don't worry: It's an easy conspiracy to follow. ZFT is a group of outlaw scientists who show off to each other by experimenting on the human population with their weird flesh-growing bacteria and (this week) a virus that turns people into toothy creatures who must suck people's spinal fluid or they die. Attached to ZFT is mystery man Jones, who teleported out of prison using a toothbrush and string (OK maybe a few more things too), and a variety of other mad scientists who usually have labs in abandoned industrial warehouses or underneath Chinese restaurants in Boston.

But here's the creepy-spooky part: ZFT (short for "Zerstorung durch Fortschritte der Technologie" or "Destruction by Advancement of Technology") was inspired by a manifesto which states: 1. technological progress will lead to the apocalypse; 2. there is a parallel world to Earth that is more scientifically advanced than our own; and 3. a door has opened between that world and ours, but only ONE WORLD CAN SURVIVE. Got that? Now, back to hot chicks in nightclubs sucking spine.

A cute lady is eating people in Boston, severing their spines with her mega-teeth and drinking their spinal fluid. Why oh why is this? Turns out she's the nice wife of a scientist named Boone, who was working secretly for ZFT, engineering weird bacteria (like the flesh-growing stuff from an earlier episode) and viruses like the one that turns his wife into spine-drinker. The best/weirdest part is that this virus is delivered using syphillis "as a platform." So it's vampirism wrapped in an STD. Nice.

When Olivia and her Scoobies track Boone down, he admits he tried to leave ZFT and they infected his wife as revenge. He agrees to cooperate and give up some ZFT names if the Scoobies will track his wife down so he can give her an antidote. There's a great scene where Olivia asks Boone why the hell ZFT does stuff like this virus, and he says, "To create a human nightmare . . . to show off to other scientists." I love that idea, that there are crazy bio-hackers out there in the dark underground inventing weirdass viruses just to show off.

Eventually the Scoobies take down the spine sucker after finding a lot more bloody corpses and some sidebar drama about Olivia's sister getting a divorce (hubby suing for full custody of the kid! awkward to discuss via cell phone from a crime scene!). Walter works with Boone in his lab, whipping up an antidote from the guy's spinal fluid, because apparently it is the only fluid they have on hand that's "compatible." This of course leads to Boone having a stroke, since he's already drained a bunch of his fluid out to feed his wife before she took off for juicier spines. Luckily, though, the antidote works and his wife goes back to normal.

And Boone leaves behind a VHS tape naming all the ZFT names that he can. (Moment of "huh?" regarding the VHS tape: Is this a hint that Fringe is actually taking place in the less-advanced Earth dimension and we with our Blurays live in the more advanced dimension?) Olivia meets up with Broyles after-hours at a bar to discuss the names with him. Some she doesn't recognize, and Jones isn't among them. But Boone claims that the guy funding the whole ZFT science-terror operation is none other than the elusive William Bell, Walter's old friend and the founder of shady mega biotech corp Massive Dynamic. Since many of us already speculate that Walter had a hand in writing the ZFT manifesto, it makes perfect sense that Bell might be involved.

You can expect more William Bell next week, and he'll be played by (yes!) Leonard Nimoy. Strap yourself in, nerds - this is getting wild.

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<![CDATA[Olivia's Transdimensional Powers Get Stranger on "Fringe"]]> We've been dying to know more about Olivia's strange powers, possibly connected to childhood experiments, and definitely connected to a vast science conspiracy involving supersoldiers. And in last night's Fringe, we got our wish. Spoilers!

Allow me to recap briefly, so that last night's episode "Bad Dreams" makes sense. We learned a few weeks ago that Jones, a rogue German mad scientist who teleported out of prison, wants Olivia to become his "soldier." He tells her that he can help her solve a case if she'll do a series of puzzles for him, one of which involves using the power of her mind to switch light bulbs on on and off. At first, she cheats on the puzzles but when she discovers a bomb on a rooftop the only way she can turn it off is by using her mind to switch off the lights that control its fuse. And she does. While Peter watches, so we know it's real and not some kind of hallucination.

We also know that Olivia's strange powers are probably connected to an experiment done on her and a bunch of other kids in a small Florida town. Remember the episode when the bad guys kidnapped her and did a spinal tap? That was because she was one of those kids who'd been given a drug called cortexiphan during those tests.

OK so last night's episode starts with Olivia killing a woman in her dreams. It's a great, creepy scene, and leads to yet another weird investigation where Broyles gets mad more than once that Olivia is using FBI resources to literally research her own dreams. Still, there's a good reason because it turns out that when Olivia dreams about killing this lady, she was seeing an actual death. Same thing happens the next night, when she dreams she forces a woman to stab her own husband in a restaurant.

After a lot of bizarre crosstalk between Peter, Walter, and Olivia, plus a lot of surveillance tape footage from the scenes of the crimes, the Scoobies discover a common thread. A guy with blond hair and a scar named Nick seems to be at all the scenes. Is Olivia in Nick's head? How could this be?

Big reveal time from Walter (yay!). Turns out that Walter was involved in the cortexiphan experiments, and he speculates that Nick was too. In fact, he says, probably Olivia and Nick were "partners" during the drug trials because little kids were paired off during them "kind of the way you pair up kids to keep them safe at summer camp." Have I mentioned lately that I love Walter? This whole subplot with randomly experimenting on kids with mega-drugs is so great.

And when I say mega-drug, that's what I mean. Walter says cortexiphan has the power to allow people to travel between dimensions (???). Translate that into "it can mean whatever weirdass thing we want." So Olivia is transdimensionally connected to Nick, who also has the power to project his intense emotions onto everyone around him. Since his last home was a mental hospital, the Scoobies are able to figure out that Nick is suicidally depressed, and people around him have a tendency to kill themselves because they "catch" his emotions. And Olivia is trapped inside his brain, watching all of it.

To catch Nick, of course Walter has to hypnotize Olivia into Nick's head by sticking her in the machine with blinky lights. And absolutely of course, she enters Nick's head while he's picking up a stripper for sex. It sounds skeevy, but actually the scene is quite well-played - funny and strange - while also involving a long, sexy kiss between Olivia/Nick and the stripper. Unfortunately, after the stripper sex, Nick feels guilty and self-hating. Then the stripper does too, and she slits her own throat with a shard of glass. But at least now the Scoobies have his Brooklyn address, and can track him down.

Olivia and Nick finally meet in a weird and utterly Fringey faceoff on top of a tall building, where suicidal Nick has gone to jump off, along with half a dozen other people who have caught his desire to die as well. He immediately recognizes Olivia, calling her "Olive," and says that when they were going through the experiments that she always calmed him down. She can't remember anything about it, though, and just keeps trying to talk him down when he begs her to kill him. Finally he confesses that his powers of emotion-blasting were recently switched on, presumably by the arrival of Jones, who told Nick the same thing he told Olivia - that he had to be a soldier. Apparently, however, when Nick was told to be a soldier he was also warned to "stay in shape" and "wear black and grey." No mention of blinky lights.

Eventually, Olivia shoots Nick in the knees and he's put into a "chemical coma" while the Feds figure out what to do with him. And Olivia is left with the strange knowledge that a lot of twisted shit happened to her when she was a kid and she doesn't remember any of it. Also, presumably Broyles and her partner Charlie know about it now too. Charlie delivers Nick's secret file to her as the episode closes, and at the same time we see Walter watching an old videotape of the cortexiphan experiments.

In the video, we see a little girl sitting in the corner of a completely destroyed room, while voices in the background freak out over the destruction that's been caused. We hear Walter saying, "Don't worry Olive, it will be alright." So presumably Olivia's powers extend way beyond blinky light stuff. Looks like she can get pretty dangerous, and if she's been switched back on by Jones' machinations, we're in for a seriously groovy ride.

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<![CDATA[A Monster That's Half-Snake, Half-Bat, and Half-Tank on Fringe]]> Fringe never lets me down. In last night's episode there was a giant monster that defied all laws of science and made me think of the Trogdor song from Homestar Runner. Spoilers ahead!

There wasn't much arc in this episode, called "Unleashed," so we didn't have to strain ourselves trying to figure out the conspiracy uniting the government intelligence community, a rogue underground of mad scientists led by Jones, and genome-tweaking megacorp Massive Dynamic. We didn't find out more about Olivia's newly-developed psychic powers. And we didn't even really delve into mad scientist extraordinaire Walter's shady past.

Instead, it was just balls-to-the-wall monster insanity. The science concept of the week was "transgenic animal," which as you can see from this clip means a snake crossed with a lion crossed with a spider and a wasp and a bat and a venus flytrap and a spaceship. Also I just love those drawings Walter shows Peter and Olivia of the original transgenic animals he was working on back in the day. What the hell is that? A cross between a tarantula and a snake? How awesome is that?

It also turns out that our monster shoots out venom spikes that inject eggs into its victim. Baby versions of the snake/lion/venus flytrap apparently look like regular old mealworms, which is good unless they are breeding inside your stomach. Which is what happens to Olivia's partner Charlie, and they only have (you guessed it) less than 24 hours to prevent him from exploding with bugs. I remember a few episodes back when everybody was saying that Charlie is probably in on the conspiracy and is secretly spying on Olivia. But now that I've seen him with little bugs swimming in his stomach I'm thinking no. The more I get to know him, the more warmly lunkheaded he seems - just a regular member of Olivia's Scoobies, not a spy.

So Walter figures out that the only way they can save Charlie is to inject him with blood from the monster (excuse me: "transgenic animal") for reasons too silly to go into here. And the only way to find the monster is to bring a bunch of its mealworm babies into the sewers where it's hiding - apparently because it's part-bat, it will hear the babies from far away and come running. Walter still feels so guilty about thinking up the spider-snake thing in the first place that he goes off alone to slay it, as you can see at the end of the clip above. If there's one thing you can say consistently about the Abrams-Kurtzman-Orci trifecta, it's that they don't scrimp on the monstery goodness.

Oh, the only remotely arc-y thing that happened in this episode is that we found out Peter is sort of possibly dating Olivia's sister. Which could get weird, because many of us have theorized that Peter and Olivia might be siblings or clones or something because Walter has made obscure references that seem to suggest that possibility. Though of course Olivia and Peter might be vat-grown cousins but Olivia's sister might not be. So that would be OK. Right?

Tune in next week when we head deep into what I think is arc territory. Seems as if Olivia is killing people with her mind, which we can only hope is a new and dangerous extension of her ability to switch lights on and off with her mind.

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<![CDATA[Alien Kids and Serial Killers - Fringe Is Back!]]> Fringe came back last night, and it was great to worm back inside its spooky world of human science experiments and penis jokes. Spoilers ahead!

"Inner Child" was a fun departure from the usual "science menace of the week" formula for Fringe. Instead of just discovering something weird, Olivia and the Scoobies used the weird discovery to stop a completely non-fringey series of murders.

The episode opens with some building demolition workers finding a preternatural kid who has been living underground in a facility that's been sealed for almost a century. Sure, he could have crawled in there since it was sealed, but nobody can figure out how he would have done it. Pasty, bald, and speechless, the kid is like a miniature Observer (and as you can see in the clip above, the Observer has noticed the similarities too).

Turns out mini-Observer also has extreme powers of psychic empathy, and his favorite person to empathize with is Olivia. Makes sense, because Olivia feeds him M&Ms and is herself superpowered as a result of strange childhood experiments. Speaking of which, there were no mentions of Olivia's newly-discovered lightswitch mental powers from last episode, but it was obvious that the kid was tuned into her much more than to anybody else. Clearly there's something going on there.

Meanwhile, the kid keeps manifesting an uncanny ability to know things about a local serial killer called "the Artist" who murders women and then puts their dressed-up bodies in the middle of staged tableaux. First the kid writes down the name of a future victim, and then he writes down some addresses where the Scoobies are likely to run into the Artist. Eventually Walter figures out that the kid has such tremendous empathy for Olivia that he's trying to help her - and he can use his empathy to figure out the location of the killer too. Something to do with shark vibrations or something, according to Walter. I think he mentions the shark thing right around the time that Peter points out that Walter's penis is hanging out of his robe, which is a perfect way to distract us from the cheesy fake shark science talk.

Of course some dude from the CIA is also looking for the kid, and pretending to be a social worker in order to snake him from under Olivia's nose. There's obviously some conspiracy side to this, since we hear CIA dude talking on his cell to somebody about the kid and he says, "We've found another one." So is this kid part of an alien race or mutant group that's somehow connected to the Observer? I certainly hope so. I want a subplot about the Observers, and this kid would be a perfect way into that.

By the end of the episode, the kid has helped Olivia and the Scoobies catch the Artist, saving a final victim in the process. And Olivia has really taken a shine to him. Maybe that's because she misses kid company now that her sister and niece Ella are about to move into their own apartment. Or maybe it's some kind of human science experiment bonding thing. Either way, she arranges for the kid to get placed in a secret foster home and the CIA dude has to go back to the Company empty-handed. And pissed off.

I predict more tangles with CIA dude, as well as (hopefully) more Observer action. Plus, Olivia is going to start growing more cool powers and I can't wait.

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<![CDATA[It's Back to the Pattern on Fringe]]> Last night's episode of Fringe brought us back to the central mythos of the show, the Pattern, and gave us all kinds of juicy clues about what's at stake - and about Olivia's "ability."

In fact the episode is called "Ability," partly because it opens up a new intriguing subplot about a bunch of mega-powered people who were treated with something called "cortexiphan" as kids. Though we don't know much about what these mega-powers are, we know one of them is turning off lightbulbs with your mind. And we know Olivia was one of the kids treated with it. Plus she has the weird lightbulb ability - kind of like a psychic clapper?

Anyway, the cortexiphan subplot helps explain why turncoat agent Mitchell kidnapped and spinal tapped Olivia a few episodes ago. He was testing her for cortexiphan. And it also explains mad German scientist Jones' interest in her too. He's trying to round up "reluctant warriors" to fight in a battle across the multiverse, and he's hoping the cortexiphan kids will be those warriors. Oh, and did I mention that cortexiphan was made by shady biotech corp Massive Dynamic. Yeah.

It was a very Jonesy episode last night. Our intrepid outlaw teleporter has at last made it to Boston where he geeks out with Walter in between bouts of physical agony caused by having his body dissolved in Germany and recreated in Boston. We discover that Jones and his mystery pals have gotten their ideas about fringe science from a rare, unpublished manuscript called ZFT, or "destruction by advancement of technology." The anonymous author of the book claims (as you can see in this clip) that there is a conflict going on between our universe and a parallel one. Call it a universe collision. It will start with creepy events (yay!) and wind up with one of the universes being destroyed (I'm rooting for our universe).

When you bring the multiverse into a story that is already full of melting people, science outlaws, and superpowers - well, it's like one of those lovely cupcakes with like an inch of gooey chocolate ganache on top. Tasty as hell. I'm really looking forward to Olivia possibly becoming a warrior in the fight against creatures from a parallel Earth. I thinks she's ready to graduate from "special liaison" to "multiverse warrior." Hope she doesn't become a victim of the psychic wars! OK, like three Blue Oyster Cult fans got that joke.

The way Jones recruits warriors is to give them a series of tests with light bulbs, and he decides to make Olivia's test very serious. He rigs up a bomb that will shoot out a biodust that makes people's orifices seal up - we got to see a couple gooey-faced results, which were gross and cool. If she can't make all the little light bulbs turn off on the bomb, everybody goes goo-faced. Luckily she's able to call upon her psychic clapper ability, and freak herself out along with Walter (who probably knows a lot more about this than he's letting on).

Meanwhile, Jones' teleportation experience has turned him into something Walter calls "unthinkable." He escapes from his hospital bed via a giant hole smashed in the wall, leaving behind only these words scrawled on the wall for Olivia: "You passed."

Of course we get no more Fringe until April, you bastards! Where will I get my body-melting, head-exploding, parasite-mutating fix until then? And what is going on with this multiverse war, and the people with abilities? I really hope that it turns out that Olivia is the only surviving person to have taken cortexiphan, because that will make the plot less of a Heroes or X-Men thing where everybody has their own special blinky light powers or something even more silly.

Overall, this was a terrific episode, and a great way to go into a show hiatus. We got a lot of payoff when we discovered why Olivia was being stalked by the ZFT weirdos, and we learned more about the Pattern than we had in a really long time. Plus, melty face bomb!

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<![CDATA[Bioterrorists Are Just in It for the Thrill]]> Not only did last night's episode of Fringe have some great nipple commentary, occasioned by a virus that Hulks people out, but it also brought us some closure on a big mystery.

Called "The Transformation," this episode had the usual creepy scares and thrills - including what has now become a little bit of a cliched scenario on Fringe, where a suspect goes virusy while being interrogated by Agent Olivia and the scoobies. Our virus of the week was something that causes people to Hulk out. First they get nosebleeds, then they turn into spiney monsters, then they kill everybody. Then they die due to mega-mutation.

There were some fun scenes of Peter and Olivia going undercover to catch a bad guy named Conrad who is selling the Hulk Virus - apparently "just because he can." I love a bioterrorist who does it for fun, though of course that sort of makes him more like a serial killer than a terrorist. Usually terrorists have some kind of political motivation, and it seems Conrad and his gang were just making and selling this stuff for the highest bidder. That also means they probably aren't part of the Pattern, but somehow overlap with it a little bit. Somebody please make me a Venn diagram of the Pattern, in which one circle is for "bioterrorists who do it for fun," and another one is "secret undercover quadruple agents who work for the NSA and private industry." Not sure what the third circle should be.

Anyway, Olivia is a super badass as usual, and gets the terrorists. But the more interesting part of this episode was the re-emergence (yay!) of shady biotech company Massive Dynamic and my imaginary girlfriend, Massive Dynamic VP Nina Sharp.

A few episodes ago, we learned that Nina had kept Olivia's ex-boyfriend John Scott's body in a state of undeath so she could attempt to read the memories in his brain. Unfortunately, all those memories had been transferred to Olivia's brain during one of mad scientist Walter's undead psychic experiments with the isolation tank. The isolation tank (which means "Olivia in cute undies") was in heavy rotation last night because Olivia keeps seeing John's memories of the terrorists they're tracking. Olivia also discovers that the Hulk Virus terrorists all have little glass floppy disks implanted in their hands "from the NSA." Knowing that John worked with these terrorists - based on her memories - Olivia demands that bossman Broyles exhume ex-bf's body.

And finally Broyles has to reveal that Nina still has John Scott's body. Nina says they kept him around to try to read the glass floppy in his hand, because the disks self-destruct when their host dies. BUT! You and I and the other Fringe fiends know that they actually kept John to read his BRAIN, not the disk. So Olivia still only knows part of the deep truth.

While she's tanking out and talking to the John in her head, Olivia also learns that maybe John was a good guy after all. He says he was a double-super-secret NSA agent, who was working undercover with the bioterrorists to ferret out Conrad. Could the John in Olivia's head be lying? Honestly, it's hard to say. No matter what you and I think, Olivia feels much better about getting it on with John now that she thinks he's a good guy again. They share a tender moment where they say "I love you," and then Walter confirms that the John parts of Olivia's brain have been purged. So the John in her head is dead, but he's left a warm schmoopy feeling behind.

Still, his undead body remains at Massive Dynamic. I predict more John in future episodes. Also, what about these other super-duper-secret NSA guys he supposedly worked with undercover on the Conrad case? Will they be back, too?

All I can say is that right now, a bunch of NSA agents are slapping each other on the backs and saying, "Dude, this show makes us look totally awesome. What we really do is work in basements writing reports about signals intelligence, but on Fringe we like kick ass and fight Hulk Viruses and crap."

Also, as a super-duper-secret person asked me today: When are we going to find out that Olivia's partner Charlie is a double agent? To which I add: Or a quadruple agent? Sextuple agent? Is there a way to figure out how many layers of super-agent you are by counting your nipples?

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<![CDATA[Grody Pregnancy, Eyeballs, and a Little Light Corporate Fascism]]> Although Fringe got off to a rocky start last week with the two-hour pilot about weird viruses, this week's episode was quicker and more fun. In many ways it felt like the real pilot, with all our characters being reintroduced along with the show's central conceit: There is a "pattern" of pseudo-science weirdness going on, and it can all be traced back in some way to the creepy corporation Massive Dynamic. What I liked about this episode was that Massive Dynamic itself became a much more complicated player. Plus, there were rogue brain surgeries and grody eyeballs! Spoilers ahead.

This episode, called "Same Old," dealt with (not surprisingly) father-son dynamics between a scientist and his weird creation/son, a man who has to eat brains in order to prevent himself from growing old in like five minutes. The episode begins with our brain-eater accidentally getting a woman pregnant, and her freaktastic birth scene after the baby grows from zygote to dead old man in about 5 hours. Awesomely disgusting. I know it's a cliche — everybody does the super-fast baby thing from Species and XTRO to Abraxas and Anne Rice (those walking babies in Taltos? WTF?). What I'm saying is yes it's a B-movie staple, and I love it every time I see it.

Even better was the way more and more B-movie tropes got larded on to the point where it felt like I was entering schlock shock. The brain-eater is also a serial killer, and he also has to eat pineal glands, and it turns out his "dad" (the scientist) was involved in the same scary experiments as mad scientist dad Walter Bishop — who then later admits to Vague Agent Olivia that his kid Peter also has fringe science health issues. It was like a father-son LiveJournal melodrama with concept design by Brian Yuzna.

"Same Old" also hinted at a pattern in the way every episode is going to be laid out in terms of plot structure. There will be a fringe science mystery, perhaps part of The Pattern or perhaps not (last week: freaky virus; this week: freaky pregnancy). Then Walter Bishop will step in and engage in some kind of fringe experiment to solve the mystery. Last week it was the telepathy/LSD/sensory deprivation tank thing. This week, Walter used a special light gun camera to take pictures of the dead eyeballs belonging to one of the brain eater's murder victims. On her eyeball, the gun revealed images of the last thing she saw while alive! And this helped the Scooby Gang use Google maps to find their murderer's death warehouse. No, really. The eyeball thing was only slightly creepier than Google maps, actually.

The other major throughline we encountered in this episode that I think is likely to get carried through for the whole season is Olivia's professional entanglement with one of the VPs of Massive Dynamic. You can see the oddly chilling scene, above, where the VP offers Olivia a job basically by saying that Massive Dynamic is more powerful than any government. I like the idea that the Big Bad here is a corporation, rather than the government ala X-Files. That, more than anything, marks Fringe as a post-Cold War, fully contemporary spookfest.

Also, I like how Olivia has workplace drama while Walter and Peter have domestic family drama. The lady works while the men squabble over parenting issues. Tune in next week when everyone on a bus becomes frozen in ice . . . cliches from Speed mixed with Johnny Snow! Plus, I hope we get more corporate fascism from Massive Dynamic. I want to see them use those "private armies" to fuck shit up in some made-up country where everybody is psychic.

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