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View Full Version : Spoiler An Advance Review of the Season Two Premiere



musing_11
09-02-2009, 04:01 PM
Nothing explicitly spoiler-ish, but definitely some hints.


FOX's science-driven procedural thriller Fringe started off with a bang in its first season but then found itself bogged down in self-contained episodes while keeping the overarching plot treading water more than a little bit. That changed with the last few episodes of Season One, which ratcheted up the tension, suspense, and action into overdrive while also shifting its trio of leading characters into the forefront of the story.

And then there was Bell. The first season finale offered a stunning cliffhanger in which Olivia Dunham (Anna Torv) finally came face to face with the elusive and enigmatic William Bell (guest star Leonard Nimoy), the former partner of mad scientist Walter Bishop (John Noble) and the founder of the multi-national corporation Massive Dynamic. That this meeting should occur in Bell's office in the still-standing World Trade Center in a parallel universe was just the icing on the cake, really.

It not only offered the producers a stunning visual but also significantly altered the fabric of the series itself, giving the writers a vast new panoply of canvases to work with and enabling them to build out the series in new and unexpected ways.

I had the opportunity the other day to watch the fantastic and gripping Season Two premiere of Fringe ("A New Day in the Old Town") which presents an intriguing new direction for the series and forces its leads to take a much more proactive role in the action.

While I won't say much about the episode's many plot twists and turns (and there are some particularly stunning ones along with a major one that I called ahead of time), I will say that the opening sequence of the season premiere might just be one of the very best--if not the best--openings in Fringe's short history. There's a shocking moment where the viewer is not only reminded of how utterly creepy and terrifying Fringe can be but also that with these first few minutes, we're being drawn back into this shadowy world where anything and everything is possible.

That action involves Olivia Dunham and what follows was shocking, exciting, and a little bit terrifying. It also draws in our other major characters, namely the Bishops: as Walter and Peter (Joshua Jackson) are called in to investigate a strange anomaly (as if there's any other kind) and wind up crossing paths with the preternaturally curious junior FBI Agent Jessup (90210's Megan Markle), clearly intended to be the replacement liaison between Fringe Division and the FBI for Kirk Acevedo's Charlie Francis. (Rest assured, however: Acevedo appears in the season opener and plays a vital role in the plot.)

While I'm not quite sold on Markle's character just yet (she seems, in this initial outing anyway, rather flat and lacking in charisma), she serves to not only shake things up with the members of the Fringe Division but also pose some questions that newer viewers might have about what's going on or refresh those faithful followers whose memories of Season One events are a bit wonky. (For those viewers who do however remember quite clearly what Fringe Division does and who these characters are, these scenes feel a little too on the nose in terms of blatant exposition.)

Viewers wondering what exactly happened in that other world between Olivia and William Bell are going to have to wait a little while to learn the truth as we're not privy to what played out between the characters and the producers have wisely (and rather coyly) managed to keep the scene between them a mystery to be solved another day. Suffice it to say, however, that something of major import went down between Olivia and Bell and that conversation will be a huge throughline for Season Two.

Peter, meanwhile, had been criticized by many (including this critic) of being way too reactive and tangential to the overarching plot in the first season. Viewers will be pleasantly surprised to see the younger Bishop take an authoritative and proactive role in this first episode, cleverly shifting the role that the Fringe Division plays in investigating the Pattern and coming to the assistance of none other than Broyles (Lance Reddick) himself. I won't say just what sort of trouble Broyles is in other than that it affects the existence of the team itself and that it will take Peter's ingenuity and craftiness to extricate Broyles from one hell of a mess. (And keep an eye out for a very interesting plot twist involving Broyles.)

Additionally, the writers are tightening the focus as it were on the interpersonal dynamics between the members of the Fringe Division and pointing a spotlight onto their pasts. The storyline introduced in Season One about Peter Bishop not being the Peter of his universe remains front and center and is most definitely on Walter's mind as he makes a cake and custard for Peter's birthday. Just how this will play out remains to be seen but there's a tantalizing poignancy to these mini-revelations, which play out in Walter's mind without Peter's knowledge.

Sadly, Astrid (Jasika Nicole) still seems to have little to do and I'm praying that this changes as the season goes on. Once again, she's reduced to little more than brainy lab help and unofficial nursemaid for Walter Bishop and I'm hoping that the writers develop her character and give her some much needed fleshing-out, something I've called for since the pilot episode.

All in all, the Season Two premiere of Fringe offers a hypnotic journey back to the trippy, mind-bending world of the Fringe Division while also deftly altering the pattern of this intriguing and suspenseful series in unexpected and gratifying ways. I can't wait to see just what happens next.

Season Two of Fringe kicks off on Thursday, September 17th at 9 pm ET/PT on FOX.

Source (http://www.televisionaryblog.com/2009/09/shape-of-things-to-come-advance-review.html)

Elliot
09-02-2009, 04:28 PM
Nothing explicitly spoiler-ish, but definitely some hints.

Quote:
FOX's science-driven procedural thriller Fringe started off with a bang in its first season but then found itself bogged down in self-contained episodes while keeping the overarching plot treading water more than a little bit. That changed with the last few episodes of Season One, which ratcheted up the tension, suspense, and action into overdrive while also shifting its trio of leading characters into the forefront of the story.

And then there was Bell. The first season finale offered a stunning cliffhanger in which Olivia Dunham (Anna Torv) finally came face to face with the elusive and enigmatic William Bell (guest star Leonard Nimoy), the former partner of mad scientist Walter Bishop (John Noble) and the founder of the multi-national corporation Massive Dynamic. That this meeting should occur in Bell's office in the still-standing World Trade Center in a parallel universe was just the icing on the cake, really.

It not only offered the producers a stunning visual but also significantly altered the fabric of the series itself, giving the writers a vast new panoply of canvases to work with and enabling them to build out the series in new and unexpected ways.

I had the opportunity the other day to watch the fantastic and gripping Season Two premiere of Fringe ("A New Day in the Old Town") which presents an intriguing new direction for the series and forces its leads to take a much more proactive role in the action.

While I won't say much about the episode's many plot twists and turns (and there are some particularly stunning ones along with a major one that I called ahead of time), I will say that the opening sequence of the season premiere might just be one of the very best--if not the best--openings in Fringe's short history. There's a shocking moment where the viewer is not only reminded of how utterly creepy and terrifying Fringe can be but also that with these first few minutes, we're being drawn back into this shadowy world where anything and everything is possible.

That action involves Olivia Dunham and what follows was shocking, exciting, and a little bit terrifying. It also draws in our other major characters, namely the Bishops: as Walter and Peter (Joshua Jackson) are called in to investigate a strange anomaly (as if there's any other kind) and wind up crossing paths with the preternaturally curious junior FBI Agent Jessup (90210's Megan Markle), clearly intended to be the replacement liaison between Fringe Division and the FBI for Kirk Acevedo's Charlie Francis. (Rest assured, however: Acevedo appears in the season opener and plays a vital role in the plot.)

While I'm not quite sold on Markle's character just yet (she seems, in this initial outing anyway, rather flat and lacking in charisma), she serves to not only shake things up with the members of the Fringe Division but also pose some questions that newer viewers might have about what's going on or refresh those faithful followers whose memories of Season One events are a bit wonky. (For those viewers who do however remember quite clearly what Fringe Division does and who these characters are, these scenes feel a little too on the nose in terms of blatant exposition.)

Viewers wondering what exactly happened in that other world between Olivia and William Bell are going to have to wait a little while to learn the truth as we're not privy to what played out between the characters and the producers have wisely (and rather coyly) managed to keep the scene between them a mystery to be solved another day. Suffice it to say, however, that something of major import went down between Olivia and Bell and that conversation will be a huge throughline for Season Two.

Peter, meanwhile, had been criticized by many (including this critic) of being way too reactive and tangential to the overarching plot in the first season. Viewers will be pleasantly surprised to see the younger Bishop take an authoritative and proactive role in this first episode, cleverly shifting the role that the Fringe Division plays in investigating the Pattern and coming to the assistance of none other than Broyles (Lance Reddick) himself. I won't say just what sort of trouble Broyles is in other than that it affects the existence of the team itself and that it will take Peter's ingenuity and craftiness to extricate Broyles from one hell of a mess. (And keep an eye out for a very interesting plot twist involving Broyles.)

Additionally, the writers are tightening the focus as it were on the interpersonal dynamics between the members of the Fringe Division and pointing a spotlight onto their pasts. The storyline introduced in Season One about Peter Bishop not being the Peter of his universe remains front and center and is most definitely on Walter's mind as he makes a cake and custard for Peter's birthday. Just how this will play out remains to be seen but there's a tantalizing poignancy to these mini-revelations, which play out in Walter's mind without Peter's knowledge.

Sadly, Astrid (Jasika Nicole) still seems to have little to do and I'm praying that this changes as the season goes on. Once again, she's reduced to little more than brainy lab help and unofficial nursemaid for Walter Bishop and I'm hoping that the writers develop her character and give her some much needed fleshing-out, something I've called for since the pilot episode.

All in all, the Season Two premiere of Fringe offers a hypnotic journey back to the trippy, mind-bending world of the Fringe Division while also deftly altering the pattern of this intriguing and suspenseful series in unexpected and gratifying ways. I can't wait to see just what happens next.

Season Two of Fringe kicks off on Thursday, September 17th at 9 pm ET/PT on FOX.

Source (http://www.televisionaryblog.com/2009/09/shape-of-things-to-come-advance-review.html)
Sounds good!

xofringe314
09-02-2009, 04:29 PM
Season Two sounds so good! I can't wait!!

Elliot
09-02-2009, 04:30 PM
*Waves at Musing!*
This is making me more & more excited for the new season.

musing_11
09-02-2009, 05:32 PM
*Waves at Musing!*
This is making me more & more excited for the new season.

*waves back*
yeah i'm getting pretty pumped for it :party0011::flailsmilie:

Blue Sunflower
09-02-2009, 09:07 PM
Viewers will be pleasantly surprised to see the younger Bishop take an authoritative and proactive role in this first episode, cleverly shifting the role that the Fringe Division plays in investigating the Pattern and coming to the assistance of none other than Broyles (Lance Reddick) himself. I won't say just what sort of trouble Broyles is in other than that it affects the existence of the team itself and that it will take Peter's ingenuity and craftiness to extricate Broyles from one hell of a mess. (And keep an eye out for a very interesting plot twist involving Broyles.)

I wonder if this backs up the ideas that Peter's been...uh, quietly (and on his part most likely unknowingly) trained to be a leader in the upcoming war. Like this is the start of him "taking charge" like it's speculated he and Olivia may be destined to do. I am personally beginning to warm to the idea that Peter (with his weird contacts) may be a part somehow of the ZFT but not know it.

Elliot
09-02-2009, 10:52 PM
Oh I think he's going to take charge, but ZFT and not know it? That's like saying you're Baptist and don't know it.

Blue Sunflower
09-03-2009, 12:05 AM
...but ZFT and not know it? That's like saying you're Baptist and don't know it.
Huh? Not if Peter's been kept in the dark it's not. Not to mention, most people - particularly people as shady as the ones Peter seems to hang out with - probably don't advertise all their affiliations. And since the ZFT operates quite heavily on the QT and DL (including who the heck is in it to begin with), it's more than possible Peter may have dealt with some operatives and not known it. I wouldn't even be surprised if there was already an embedded closet ZFT member already in their midst.

Elliot
09-03-2009, 12:31 AM
Peter is not someone who could be fooled into believing a bunch of quasi-religous dogma without his knowing it. ZFT is not the Illuminati, and Fringe isn't a Dan Brown novel.

Blue Sunflower
09-03-2009, 01:05 AM
Peter is not someone who could be fooled into believing a bunch of quasi-religous dogma without his knowing it.
Again: huh? I don't believe I ever said that, nor is it in anyway related (or mentioned for that matter) to the idea of Peter somehow being unwittingly involved with the ZFT that has been brought up by others I've seen that I mentioned in my previous posts.


ZFT is not the Illuminati, and Fringe isn't a Dan Brown novel.
I'd actually argue that. The ZFT follows pretty much the same "super sekrit world powerful organization rulz" as the Illuminati written by Dan Brown, as well as the Quantum of Solace as written in the lastest James Bond movie. And that's just to name only two examples of the exact same idea.

PAPAYA
09-03-2009, 01:45 AM
Viewers will be pleasantly surprised to see the younger Bishop take an authoritative and proactive role in this first episode, cleverly shifting the role that the Fringe Division plays in investigating the Pattern and coming to the assistance of none other than Broyles (Lance Reddick) himself.

That's my fave part! Can't wait to see how that turns out.


And keep an eye out for a very interesting plot twist involving Broyles.)

Uh uh...

Elliot
09-03-2009, 02:01 AM
Again: huh? I don't believe I ever said that, nor is it in anyway related (or mentioned for that matter) to the idea of Peter somehow being unwittingly involved with the ZFT that has been brought up by others I've seen that I mentioned in my previous posts.


I'd actually argue that. The ZFT follows pretty much the same "super sekrit world powerful organization rulz" as the Illuminati written by Dan Brown, as well as the Quantum of Solace as written in the lastest James Bond movie. And that's just to name only two examples of the exact same idea.
And, another thing ZFT have in common with Dan Brown's works is that they are fiction. I grew up on hearing the whole Illuminati thing, and neither that nor Brown are anything like reality.
Which is fine, as Fringe is fictional as well; I'm just very hesitant to try to form Fringe in the mold of heavy fiction by other current authors, as BR do very well on their own and are making their own mythology with little tastes from other things but not wholly dependent on other sources.

lezario
09-03-2009, 03:41 AM
Peter is not someone who could be fooled into believing a bunch of quasi-religous dogma without his knowing it. ZFT is not the Illuminati, and Fringe isn't a Dan Brown novel.


Huh? Not if Peter's been kept in the dark it's not. Not to mention, most people - particularly people as shady as the ones Peter seems to hang out with - probably don't advertise all their affiliations. And since the ZFT operates quite heavily on the QT and DL (including who the heck is in it to begin with), it's more than possible Peter may have dealt with some operatives and not known it. I wouldn't even be surprised if there was already an embedded closet ZFT member already in their midst.

Peter being part of ZFT, dating Rachel Dunham, this one found out but doesn't want to tell her sister, who asked if there's "something else", an-
No. :haha:


And keep an eye out for a very interesting plot twist involving Broyles.)

Which brings me back to the Pilot, when John said "ask yourself why Broyles sent you" :confused0006:

It is going to be very interesting, though i'm still against bringing a new agent in the show (Jest up), instead of making Astrid more important (i know she's said to have more screentime, but .... i'm not entirely convinced she will...), or not sending Charlie away, because it sounds like they are going to.

I'm not worry about our Benschip, but a new female agent ? No, no, doesn't do it for me. I think I'll keep hating her the whole season.....
If I watch the second season entirely...

Stephy
09-03-2009, 07:09 AM
I'm not worry about our Benschip, but a new female agent ? No, no, doesn't do it for me. I think I'll keep hating her the whole season.....
If I watch the second season entirely...

Well, I'm more moderate. I offer her a chance to be useful. Wait and see... :rolleye0014: I'm not worry about Olivia about this second season. I'm sure that her character will be more important still. If the plot becomes complicated, the new characters will be very interesting and the show could be greater. That's my hope ! :D

Xeen
09-03-2009, 08:45 AM
I'm not worry about Olivia about this second season.

I'm more worried about what Pinkner just said: "the question to ask is are we necessary the good guys?"

Elliot
09-03-2009, 10:09 AM
It's a good question to ask; if war is coming, who starts it, and is it inevitable?

lezario
09-03-2009, 12:08 PM
It's a good question to ask; if war is coming, who starts it, and is it inevitable?

and when ?

In the review spoiler, the person mentionned "and this one is ahead of time", but what did he/she mean by that ?

What if the war began over there when Olivia comes back "home" ?

Elliot
09-03-2009, 12:57 PM
The quotes Josh is giving sounds like it is SOON.

lezario
09-03-2009, 01:07 PM
The quotes Josh is giving sounds like it is SOON.

Depends on their definition of "soon" :P

Omniscient_Jay
09-03-2009, 01:36 PM
It appears that we're in for ride.

I'm more than certain that any possible expectations I could have will be
satisfied beyond reason.

14 more days...

lezario
09-03-2009, 01:39 PM
It appears that we're in for ride.

I'm more than certain that any possible expectations I could have will be
satisfied beyond reason.

14 more days...

14 days seem like nothing when you've spent FOUR MONTHS without Fringe....

Omniscient_Jay
09-03-2009, 01:43 PM
You know what's even worse?

The season has already aired in the other reality... :(

lezario
09-03-2009, 01:46 PM
You know what's even worse?

The season has already aired in the other reality... :(

:haha:

How do you know ? Oh- Right, you're omniscient :P

:haha:

Omniscient_Jay
09-03-2009, 01:49 PM
I know...

Cathy904
09-03-2009, 02:04 PM
Now that's what I call a Level One Spoiler Review. Very interesting but pretty uninformative. Thank you, whoever wrote this review (source was blocked at work).

Oh well, so Astrid is underused again. At least Peter fans don't sound like we'll be saying the same thing! :happy15: Astrid has always been fascinating, but ancillary, and that's not a bad thing. She usually has to juggle Walter AND Peter, and help Olivia put pieces together. A very important Support role.

The Main Three do a lot individually. I'd just as well the cast not swell to "Lost" proportions, myself. Those three are pretty darn fascinating, I could easily make any one of the three my 'fave character'.

Elliot
09-03-2009, 05:49 PM
The Main Three do a lot individually. I'd just as well the cast not swell to "Lost" proportions, myself. Those three are pretty darn fascinating
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