It Happened Last Night

'Fringe' goes across the multiverse

By Ryan McGee

   |  

February 10, 2009 8:21 PM

Annatorv_fringe_240 OK, let's get this out of the way up top: that was easily the best episode of Fringe so far, living up to the hype of last summer, laying down the central conflict of the show, and exploding our minds with mythological overload. I need a cigarette. Oh wait, I don't smoke.

You knew this episode would be a good one the second you saw Mr. Jones make his triumphant return to the show. The character just oozes awesome. He's a combination of Hannibal Lecter, Alias' Rimbaldi, John Doe from the movie Se7en, and MacGyver/Pepsuber. (That jamming device? Freakin' sweet.) And his mission this week? Recruit Olivia Dunham into the ZFT fold. You might remember ZFT as one of the many sects throughout the world unleashing scientific anomalies into an unsuspecting world for an unknown purpose. Well, that purpose got a little clearer this week.

At this point, I'd like to turn things over to the manifesto for the ZFT group, titled "Zerstorung durch Fortschritte der Technologie" (or "Destruction by Advancement of Technology" in English). In said manuscript, we learned the following belief of this group:

"We think we understand reality, but our universe is only one of many. The unknown truth is that the way to travel between them has already been discovered by beings like us, but whose history is slightly ahead of our own. The negative aspects of such visitations will be irreversible both to our world and to theirs. It will begin with a series of unnatural occurrences, difficult to notice at first, but growing not unlike a cancer until a simple fact becomes undeniable: only one world will survive. And it will be either us...or them."

So, Jones fashions himself a soldier in the army against a similar yet slightly advanced version of humanity somewhere else in the multiverse, in the midst of a conflict in which only one universe will ultimately survive. Glad we cleared that up. Fringe is apparently Crisis on Infinite Earths with less super heroes and more cows.

Jones' obsession with Olivia stems from her childhood exposure to a Massive Dynamic drug named (and I hope I'm getting the spelling right here) Cortexiphan, pioneered by one William Bell in the early 1980's. Bell created this drug, according to Nina Sharp, to stem what he felt were the inhibiting factors that social, moral, and intellectual pursuits placed upon man's inherently limitless brain capacity. Cortexiphan, in Sharp's words, was meant to "limit that limitation."

Apparently, if you're treated with said drug, your mind's abilities widen, allowing you to do things like turn off lights with your freakin' mind. Jones threatened to unleash a massive dose of the Pattern of the Week (think hyperactive scar tissue covering every orifice upon exposure) unless Olivia could disable its release by the power of her Cortexiphan'ed noggin. Upon successful completion, Olivia went from merely examining the Pattern to being a potential key to either stopping it entirely or unleashing it fully. I loved the look of horror on her face as she turned to Peter after diffusing the bomb. She's no longer sure if she's a force for good or a walking, ticking time bomb herself.

Johnnoble_fringe_240_002 Just as Olivia's part in the Pattern achieved greater importance, Walter Bishop's part likewise ratcheted up as well. It turns out that he himself wrote the ZFT bible, explaining not only Jones' joy at meeting The ZFT Prophet, but also Walter's continual fascination with the tome throughout the episode. Walter's manifesto, coupled with Bell's creation of Cortexiphan, both deepens and confuses the relationship between these two men during their time together. What drove these two men to these acts?

Well, it is most likely the Observer, a member of the race of "slightly ahead" people mentioned in the ZFT manual. We know Walter and he have a history, and this "slightly ahead" aspect explains how he seems to know things before they actually happen. Now, because the show's introduced a "multiverse," we can't quite call The Observer an alien per se. But if The Observer's appearance to Bishop and Bell prompted the acts listed above, it's interesting to note that Bishop's response was to in fact take up arms against further fringe research, whereas Bell sought even more controversial scientific methods to stop the impending Armageddon.

Further driving home the dual nature of their approaches is Olivia herself. Once a test subject of William Bell, she's now a partner of Walter Bishop. In Nina Sharp, one can see William Bell's invisible hand in Nina's shaky one. I think her somewhat less-than-perfect right hand was meant to echo Jones' at the episode's outset, meaning Jones wasn't the only one exploiting Walter's "Dis-Re" in the recent past. While the war for the multiverse edges closer to full-scale assault, it's the battle for Olivia Dunham that will decide that war's fate.

And you know what? I'm in. I'm completely and totally in. That was one absolutely insane hour of television, explaining various loose threads while pulling the curtain back on a battle that spans frakkin' universes. Olivia's new role as Savior of the World could push Olivia hatahs over the edge and onto sanother show. But if it means she doesn't spend a good chunk of each episode making cutesy faces at Peter so he'll do what she wants, I'm fine with this change in her character. I've longed for her to be more than just the stoic, solid center in the middle of the more interesting Bishop Boys. Now, she has a chance to truly shine. Will she? Only time will tell, but at least she's got a chance now.

A few more thoughts about this final episode for two months (damnit):

  1. Hey, Agent Harassment, so not nice to see you again. I dare not repeat what I said when he essentially referred to Olivia as an exotic dancer, but trust me, it was really mean.
  2. There are approximately 300 hospitals in the Boston area. They really could have taken Jones to a real one?
  3. Loved the Star Trek reference. Way to plug J.J.'s other gig, Fringe.
  4. I'm beyond relieved Jones isn't dead. Not only am I sick to death of characters slowly dying over the course of an hour, but he's by far the most intriguing character in the Fringe universe. Walter's still my favorite, but I am on the edge of my seat, leaning in, every time Jones pops up onscreen. Still, the show should use him sparingly: a little Jones goes a LONG way.
  5. Not sure why the "recruit" needs to be "unwilling" for the Lite-Brite Test to work. Hopefully we'll learn why during the final seven episodes of the season.
  6. If Walter's teleportation device doesn't kill you, exactly what DOES it do?

And yes, seven more to go, starting in April. I really, really hate how Fringe has ended its two mini-runs this season on such high notes. Makes me super twitchy in the interim. But at least we have a ton to talk about in the meantime, so talk away below!

So, best ep of the season, or am I overreacting? Which was the better reveal: Olivia's centrality or Walter's screed? Does Massive Dynamic have ties to ZFT, or did ZFT merely exploit Bell's clinical trials for their own purposes?

Ryan posts using the power of his Cortexiphan-powered brain over at Boob Tube Dude.


42 Comments

ok, so i don't hate Olivia *as much.* i heart Jones too. and loved the closer with Walter figuring out he wrote the manifesto. that was biggety-bada$$. and i loved that Astrid called Walter on developing the Des-Re and wasn't going to let him walk from it. i think she's the key to unlocking the rest of what's in Walter's (dare i say limitless) noggin. Peter had to get the key in the door, but Astrid knows how to jiggle the handle. here's hoping that means more Astrid in seven months!


No,I don't think you're over-reacting. This episode opened up all sorts of possibilities. (Please, J.J., don't go the way of Rambaldi on this -- a wicked cool premise that petered out.)

Does the recruit "have" to be unwilling? I thought it was merely ***umed that the recruit would be unwilling . . .


Great episode, absolutely great episode. Don't forget, Olivia has nine more tests to go. Walter appears to be writing more of the manifesto. The Observer showed up in front of the newsstand. Astrid seems to be the best at communicating with Walter now. Jones apparently exploded out of the hospital...which is odd. Olivia, throughout this episode, was great, some great stuff from Anna Torv. Personally, I enjoyed the "I'm going to get a m***age" line to Agent D-Bag.

Here's hoping the POTW stuff takes a backseat when the final seven episodes start, or that the POTW stuff delves deeper into all of this mythology that was just uncovered tonight.

I feel the same way I do after a really good episode of Lost. Just epic stuff tonight. And now we have to wait until April...

Sonofa*****.


Another Star Trek connection: the face-going-away-thingie was also done in the original series episode called "Charlie X" when the same-named character makes a female crew members face go bye-bye after she makes too much noise or laughs at him or some such. It freaked me out the first time I saw it when I was eight. Still gives me the wiggins.

I agree that this was the best show of the season. It was tight all the way through, and even the FBI's biggest jerk was semi-tolerable this time around. I feel bad for the guy playing Jones, though...either he had some major acne problems as a kid, or the make-up department did a hella good job making him look like a victim of chicken pox gone haywire.

My biggest question, though: on the light array, why were two spaces not filled with bulbs? Did this have some meaning, none at all, or was it some kind of trigger mechanism for Olivia being able to turn off the array? I've read about studies on how the mind fills in blanks in patterns automatically (which has been shown to occur in children as well as adults) when presented with gaps. I wonder if the scientists on the show were trying to see if the reverse were possible, making the test subjects erase seen objects in the pattern, rather than filling in blanks. Otherwise, it seemed odd to me to have those two blank spaces in an otherwise-filled in array. Things like that bug me, I guess.


You also have to ***ume that Peter with his genius IQ and the mystery behind his "condition" mentioned by Walter a ways back also has been given the Cortexiphan(sp?). Maybe Olivia couldn't ahve disarmed the bomb without Peter there, maybe Olivia and Peter together are the key.


Good call, Matt. Completely forgot about Peter's past.


Why can't every episode of Fringe be like this? I mean seriously if mythology played a role in every episode Fringe could become a LOST level show


This crap is getting ridiculous--I'm tired of shows going away for 1+ months at the end of the year only to come back for just a few episodes before repeats/preempting comes along and it's another month+ before they return. GET SOME DAMN REGULARITY GOING! And you wonder where the audience goes...


ok i'm sorry but i was interrupted some during this great episode. how did we find out that walther biship wrote the bible? he was typing at the ending and it was titled Ability so was that it?


i missed what they said about why he said they did the spinal thing on Olivia when they kidnapped her? i missed there explanation. anyone know?


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