Showing posts with label Season 5. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Season 5. Show all posts

Fringe - "Liberty" (5.12) / "An Enemy of Fate" (5.13) - Series Finale

"Liberty" and "An Enemy of Fate" certainly make for an amazing series finale. I have very minor issues with it, but honestly, I still give it 10 tumor-inducing cell phones because it moved me emotionally to such a great degree. There is so much to talk about, and this will very likely be my longest review of an episode, which makes sense not only because it is double-length but also because it is the series finale; I had expected that my review of the series finale (which, sadly, feels a lot like it came too soon) would be very long. I will start, obviously, with the first part of the finale. "Liberty' is really good and also very surprising, as I was not expecting to ever see the Redverse again. The end of "Worlds Apart" (4.20) seems to be a final goodbye to the Redverse, and it brings about a great deal of closure, with Lincoln suggesting that his home might be with Redverse Olivia and with Blueverse Olivia telling Redverse Olivia to keep looking up after Redverse Olivia says that they don't get rainbows anymore over there. I said then that we probably were not going to see them again, and once we were a couple of episodes into season 5, I was sure of it. After all, the Redverse is not mentioned in "Letters of Transit" (4.19), and that episode was foolishly aired prior to "Brave New World" airing. We do get the chance to see the Redverse once again, though, one last time, and we see Redverse Olivia and Lincoln and see that they have a son. I don't believe that the episode itself names him, but according to IMDB, his name is Trevor. Fringe tends to choose names very tactfully and with a strong purpose, so I looked up what the name Trevor means. Unfortunately, I think that I would really be stretching if I were to say this name was chosen because of its meaning. "Large settlement" is what it means, so unless it refers to him being direct evidence of Blueverse Lincoln and Redverse Olivia settling down together, I think that we can count this one out.

The name Donald, after all, means dark stranger, so other than the fact that September himself chose the name Donald O'Connor because that is an actor from the film Singin' in the Rain, the first film that he and Walter watched together, there is not a doubt in my mind that the writers chose the name for that reason, that Donald was the "dark stranger" of season 5, always making us wonder who he was. I, for one, was not banking on him being anyone that we had already seen because I couldn't imagine why anyone would have changed his name to Donald. Such disappointments have happened before on TV shows. For example, the Fringe producers hinted during their one and only episode of an official Fringe podcast that William Bell was someone whom we had already seen but that the actor didn't know that he was playing William Bell, so my thought was that Broyles was William Bell and was using Phillip Broyles as an alias. That did not end up being true, though; they had lied, and Bell ended up being a totally new character whom we had never seen before. The same happened on LOST; such a huge deal had been made of Jacob for so long, and my theory, since he was born on the Island, was that Aaron was Jacob, and that also did not turn out to be true. Jacob, like Donald, was a character frequently spoken of but who did not have a face to go with the name, a dark stranger. It happens, unfortunately, and that is totally what I had expected to have happen here with Donald, but I was pleasantly surprised that he is September, a revelation that I was very happy with. I am so happy that September came back, and his character really went out with a bang, didn't it? That's in my opinion, anyway; I've seen some say that it was cheap, with which I disagree.

Michael is another one whose name was definitely chosen intentionally. Michael, as most of us know, was God's archangel, and the name's meaning actually implies a question - "Who is like God?" Isn't it ironic that via his unfeeling arrogance, Walter told Carla Warren in 1985 that "there's only room for one god in this lab, and it's not yours," fancying himself a god, only to ultimately fulfill that role after becoming a much better man who sacrifices himself in the face of worldwide annihilation? I bring that up because Michael serves as Walter's right-hand man (or boy) in manipulating events, playing God, in a sense, only this time selflessly, not selfishly. It's ironic, and it's such a fitting end to the series because everything started with what we see in "Peter" (2.15), Walter destroying a universe by taking a boy through a wormhole, and it ends with him saving a universe by doing the same; the irony is immensely beautiful. I am willing to bet that as Peter looked at Walter as Walter took Michael through the wormhole and mouthed "I love you, dad" that he thought of what his mother had said to him, how she had told him to "be a better man than your father" and thought to himself that that would not be possible. The way that Peter looks at Walter one final time in juxtaposition to the way that he first looks at him in the pilot episode is simply beautiful; I would say that Walter was definitely redeemed and that his redemption was definitely a poignant facet of the Fringe story, and that's why I have been so sure for as long as I have that the series would end with Walter dying. He doesn't die, not physically, but he surrenders time (an ironic word to use) with Olivia and Peter and Astrid, those that he loves, so that (a) he could save the world and that (b) Peter and Olivia could be together with Etta. "How could a father not do that for his son?" he asks Peter rhetorically.

I am getting way ahead of myself, though, as I am discussing "Liberty" first. Near the beginning of the episode, we see a very snippy Broyles, talking smart with a Loyalist. The Loyalist tells Broyles that he can't tell him where the prisoner (Michael, of course) is being held because of new security protocols put into place, and Broyles says something quite funny here. "Are you suggesting that I might be the Dove? I'm more of a raven, don't you think?" This is such a good line. Broyles finds out that Michael is being held on Liberty Island (an ironic name in this world), and when we see the Statue of Liberty, she has been torn down with nothing but a small part of her at the bottom remaining, and this sort of reminds me of the foot of the destroyed statue on Lost. This is blatantly obvious symbolism, since the Statue of Liberty is symbolic of liberty, like the Statue, having been destroyed. We not only get a return to the Redverse as a reward from this episode, we get more Cortexiphan, something else that I was sure that we were done with, since Walter, at the end of the season 4 finale, says that Olivia having used Cortexiphan to bring herself back to life cleaned all of it out of her system. She uses Cortexiphan via a method that appears to be quite painful in order to cross over, and I love how the writers keep something in mind here in order to avoid a plothole. During season 3, Walternate learns via a series of experiments that adults cannot be given Cortexiphan because it kills them, yet here is Olivia, just like she was in season 4, being given Cortexiphan as an adult. Walter, however, says that it can be done because her neural pathways have already been altered since she was dosed as a child, which is also in keeping with Walternate and Redverse Brandon seeing the anomalies in her brain structure during "Amber 31422" (3.05).

The Cortexiphan dosages, as I said, seem to be very painful, and they're having quite a troubling effect on Olivia, which seems to worsen with every dosage, and Peter demands that Walter stop. Walter, however, says that she needs enough to be able to cross over four times - one to cross to the Redverse, one to cross to the Blueverse once she reaches Michael's location, one to cross back to the Redverse to avoid being tailed by Observers, and then one to cross back to the Blueverse once they're at a safe location. "I created Cortexiphan; there is no better authority." This definitely looks like Walternate and the old Walter, and I'm not sure why that is because Walter, in "The Boy Must Live" (5.11), says that when Michael touched him, he effectively purged that Walter. Perhaps, there were still some lingering effects that would fade in time? It reminds me of how Walter kept referring to Michael as a subject during "Anomaly XB-6783746" (5.10), earning cold stares from Peter, but that was before Michael gave Walter the gift that he gave him. Walter says that Belly made the shelf life of Cortexiphan 127 years and stresses that he made sure of it, and that makes me wonder what the purpose of that would be. I initially thought 2167, but the math doesn't add up; close, but no cigar. Why not 100? Why not 150? I am drawn to believe that there must be something significant about 127, but I have no idea what.  The scene when Olivia crosses over after her nice moment with Peter is kind of trippy, as we spin around Olivia, and the air turns different colors. That is apparently what it looks like to Olivia when she crosses over, which is cool.

I do have a bone to pick, though, and I think that it's one that I have already picked during season 3, but I am going to pick it again because this episode further validates a need to do so. Near the end of "The Abducted" (3.07), Olivia, having learned who she really is and having received help from Henry Higgins, goes to Liberty Island and attempts to get into Walternate's tank and cross over so that she can go home, but while she is in the Blueverse, some of Walternate's agents yank her out of the water. This told us that when Olivia crosses over, she is in two places at once, with her consciousness going to a double that is created in the opposite universe, since Walternate's agents were able to physically pull her out of the water while she was in the Blueverse. In this episode, however, we see that that is not the case, that Olivia is not physically in both universes. This is definitely a plothole; there are no ifs and ands about that, but I won't spend any more time on that. When she crosses over, she sees Redverse Olivia and Blueverse Lincoln, and Redverse Olivia is very happy to see her. It's so funny to see them so close now when they were once mortal enemies and Redverse Olivia was being portrayed as a villain of the series. They even hug, and I love that scene. I think that we definitely get an answer to a question that is asked by the two Lincolns themselves during "Everything in Its Right Place" (4.17) - the two Lincolns lived such similar lives, so why were they so different? Well, Blueverse Lincoln has now spent a great many years with Redverse Olivia and is now a lot more like Redverse Lincoln, so as many had theorized, I think that it was definitely Redverse Olivia that had rubbed off on Redverse Lincoln. That's just an observation that I thought to be worth pointing out.

Did anyone else, by the way, think that Redverse Olivia was dressed a lot like we used to see Nina dresses? She is all in black and is in a long robe-like outfit, which is very similar to how Nina dresses. That's not important at all, but it's just an observation that I thought that I would throw out there. Another reason why I was so sure that we would not see the Redverse again was because Olivia and Lincoln would have to be pushing sixty, and I couldn't see the writers wanting to go down a route of having to use makeup to make us believe that. If I remember correctly, Olivia was about forty-seven in the 2026 "The Day We Died" (3.22) future, which means that she would be close to sixty in 2036. Here's the thing, though; they definitely do not look like they're in the fifties. They barely did anything to Seth Gabel at all, in fact except grey a few hairs. I am letting it go, though; it does not bother me, and here's why; at the end of season 2 and carrying into the first few episodes of season 3, Redverse Lincoln was burned to a crisp, yet the Redverse possessed medical technology to completely heal him, not even leaving any scars, so if they have that capability, they certainly have the capability to medically hide aging, possibly even slow it down. Redverse Olivia definitely does have some wrinkles, and I think that Anna did an excellent job of making her older simply via the way that she carried herself. Anna is fantastic. I love how Redverse Olivia says to Lincoln, "You can stop checking out my young ass." That is such an awesome line. I wonder, though, how Redverse Olivia knew about Etta and even seemed to know about the Observer Invasion. With the Bridge closed, they shouldn't have had any way of communicating, yet when Blueverse Olivia mentions Etta, Redverse Olivia says, "So, you found her?" I find that to be really odd.

We don't see Walternate, but Lincoln says that he retired as Secretary of Defense and is, at ninety years old, teaching at Harvard. This is accurate because we had known that Walter was born in 1946, so in 2036, he would be ninety. When Blueverse Olivia asked about him (surprising after all that he had put her through), I fully expected Lincoln to say that he had passed away. It's also funny how Lincoln, having originated in the Blueverse and probably having known what Walternate did to Blueverse Olivia, whom he had cared about, seems to greatly admire and respect the man. I really wonder why the Observers didn't invade the Redverse. I do have a possible explanation, though. We have obviously seen from episodes such as "Peter" (2.15) that the Observers have the ability to not only move through time but also hop universes. The calendared Observers, though, traveled to the Redverse because of September's emotive attachment to and dealings with Walter and Peter. These Observers see no reason to invade another universe because even if they had the knowledge that Peter was from the Redverse, which they might not, they would probably consider it irrelevant. The Commander, after all, tries to convince Windmark that despite Windmark's desire to annihilate the fugitives, the fugitives are inconsequential. Why invade the Blueverse specifically, though? I have given that some thought, too. We learned from "The Boy Must Live" that the Observers' future exists in the Blueverse, due to the spelling of Manhattan. The Blueverse is, therefore, their universe, so that is the naturally the one whose past they invaded. They may not even be aware that they can cross universes because they didn't see a need to try, up until now when one followed Olivia.

It's so nice to see BAMF Olivia back. She shoots the Loyalist in the room with the surveillance video playing, then shoots an Observer, and finally shoots the male doctor who is about to kill and study Michael, and I would imagine that this probably reminds her a lot of what almost happened to her when she was being held captive in the Redverse. After Olivia retrieves Michael and crosses to the Redverse, an Observer, as aforementioned, follows her, and he attacks her. He almost takes Michael back, too, but Redverse Olivia is there to save the day, and that Observer literally didn't know what hit him. Then, when an Observer almost gets Redverse Olivia and Lincoln and Blueverse Olivia screams at them to warn them, I thought for sure that Redverse Olivia and Lincoln were going to die, which really would have sucked, but that fortunately did not happen because they stopped him in time, and it must be that their Redverse guns are high-level enough to kill Observers because they both shoot at him, but I'm not sure which actually made the shot that killed, not that it matters. When Blueverse Olivia then takes Michael back to the Blueverse, right before she does so, she tells Redverse Olivia that she has a beautiful family, and the first time that I watched the episode, I thought that she was going to say that Redverse Olivia has a beautiful face. That would have been quite silly, though, seeing as how that is her own face. I also find it really sweet that Blueverse Olivia and Lincoln have the discussion that they do. Blueverse Olivia tells Lincoln that each of them made their own decisions and that she doesn't regret any of her own, that Lincoln deserves all of the happiness that he found. It's a really sweet scene that involves closure for the potential relationship between the two of them during season 4, especially before Peter returned.

"Liberty" is a great first-half of the finale. I like how we see the universe window again. We see it earlier in the season during "The Bullet That Saved the World" (5.04) I believe, and that was obviously intended to be a clue that we would be returning to the Redverse again or at least see it again. When the Redverse finally shows through the window, Walter says, "Isn't she beautiful?" I wonder if he's talking about the Redverse in general or the Statue of Liberty. I'm not sure and could honestly go either way, although I would say that it's probably slightly more likely that he is referring to the Statue of Liberty, really asking, "Isn't freedom beautiful? She is our chance to conquer the Observers." I love how when Olivia first mentions the Redverse, she refers to it as the Other Side, and Astrid asks, "The other side of what?" I always laugh at that. I love how Walter refers to Astrid as Asgard, instantly making me think of the alien species from Stargate. It's funny, in fact, because Stargate Atlantis also aired for five seasons and 100 episodes, and the series finale title - "Enemy at the Gate" - is very similar to the Fringe series finale title. In addition, Joe Flannigan guest-starred in "Neither Here nor There" (4.01), and Paul McGillion guest-starred in "The Recordist" (5.03), both having been series regulars on Stargate Atlantis. In addition, Peter Kelamis guest-stars in this episode as Tobin, and he was on Stargate Universe. I do believe that someone on the Fringe team is a gater. I love the scene when Walter hugs Olivia and kisses her on the forehead not too long before she crosses over, saying, "Be careful, my dear." There are so many sweet scenes during the finale. We see that Michael is, indeed, very special, as he is causing Windmark to bleed as Windmark is trying to read Michael, a fitting punishment for Windmark for the time being, a taste of his own medicine. The first half of the finale ends with Donald showing up at someone's doorstep, and we see that it is December. Donald asks for December's help and says that December owes him. The door shows us that December's room number is 513, the episode number into which we then move.

Jasika Nicole said that the cliffhanger at the end of "Liberty" would be huge and that that was why she was happy that both episodes were being aired the same night. I have to admit, however, that I find myself pretty disappointed. December was never a major character on the series, so seeing him again was not that big of a deal to me. It did kind of surprise me, however, because it slightly threw my theory out the window. I had been sure that the calendared Observers had had the same agenda as the "evil" ones whom we see during this season but that September diverged from the plan and went his own way and that that was why he always seemed to be at odds with the other Observers. I was right about one thing, that September was going his own way, but not because the others were evil and bent on world domination. We learn from "An Enemy of Fate" that the scientific team realized that they were developing emotions as a result of having spent too much time here in this era but agreed not to speak of it; September and August, however, did not fight it and instead embraced it. The calendared Observers were told to observe the past but were not told why; intentions of world domination were kept secret, which I find interesting because it implies that the ones who gave the orders imagined that emotive attachment would be possible. Otherwise, why would the calendared Observers care? They would see matters the same way. I am thinking that when Donald/September tells December that December owes him, he is referring to the fact that he had been locked out of the universe back during season 4 due to his attachment to people. We then do not see December again until later in the episode when we see that Windmark and his men got to him and killed him, which is unfortunate. That is, however, why I say that I feel pretty disappointed by Jasika Nicole having said that the cliffhanger would be big; December hardly plays a role at all in what follows. I, too, am happy that both episodes aired the same night or else that really would have been a disappointing cliffhanger, in my opinion.

It's good to see that the Observers are finally listening to cell phone conversations. It has also puzzled me that in 2036, the Observers, who have very sophisticated technology, were not listening to cell phone conversations as the Fringe team freely has conversations via cell phones, which really shouldn't work at all because you would think that Observers would have put a stop to cell phone lines, not having seen a need for it. After all, even though we never got a concrete answer to why coffee isn't available to drink, it could either be because the Observers deemed it as unnecessary or because, like the Redverse, it can't be grown because of the damage that the Observers have done to the environment. Speaking of cell phones, though, I love the scene when Walter is frustrated because Anil can't seem to hear him via talking on cell phones, and Walter says, "What I wouldn't give for a good old-fashioned tumor-inducing cell phone." That is such a funny line, and it also makes me wonder if that's our answer as to how they have avoided detection for so long. Perhaps, the Resistance has developed a new kind of cell phone that the Observers can't track or listen in on. John Noble gives a phenomenal final performance, and there are so many awesome scenes. One of my favorite scenes from this episode and from the entire series in general is when Walter shows Peter the video that he recorded in 2015 and tells him that he must take Michael to the future, resulting in he and Peter never seeing each other again. He says that he must do that so that Peter can see Etta again and, as mentioned, rhetorically asks how a father could not do that for his son. They hug and cry, and Walter says, "You are my favorite thing, Peter, my very favorite thing." This line is so beautiful, and John Noble said that Joel Wyman said that he says that to his own son. This is such a beautiful and heartbreaking scene, and I sobbed.

Another great Walter scene is when Astrid shows him Gene in the amber. This is another incredibly beautiful scene. Astrid, unaware of what Walter is planning to do, tears up and says, "Walter, this is not the end. We're gonna win this, and when we do, we'll be drinking strawberry milkshakes in the lab and not even gonna remember that this happened."Then, as Astrid is leaving, Walter tells her that Astrid is a beautiful name. There are just so many beautiful scenes throughout the series finale. I also love the scene when Walter suggests using Osmium to make Observers float, obviously a callback to the "Os" (3.16) episode. Peter says, "If we shoot them, they're dead. Why would we want them to float away?" Walter, smiling, replies, "Because it's cool." This scene is so funny, and then, near the end of the episode, Walter actually does it and says, "Peter, Peter, look! What did I say? That is cool!" I love Walter so much, and I am really going to miss him a great deal. That whole scene near the end when Headquarters is attacked is just awesome. It is dark and disturbing and horrific, especially because of the alarm blaring and the disgusting images, and it's so rewarding for fans who watched all episodes, as it paid homage to old cases. I caught callbacks to "Pilot" (1.01), "The Cure" (1.06), "The Dreamscape" (1.09), "Bound" (1.11), "Ability" (1.14), and "Snakehead" (2.09). There may have been others, as well, but those are the ones that I saw. The team basically uses old Fringe science to kill off Observers and Loyalists, and it is such an awesome montage to old episodes. Then, Olivia does something really awesome; she, after having been thrown by Windmark, uses her Cortexiphan abilities to turn all of the lights in the city off and then rams Windmark with a car, crushing him, and it seems like it gets him a millisecond before Windmark blips away. I really thought that Peter would be the one to kill him, especially since he and Windmark started to fight, and it's kind of ironic that he wasn't, but it's fitting; Olivia lost a daughter, too. This was, for me, a very satisfying death, and I have gathered that it was for many. I also want to point out that I love the hat Olivia is wearing, but she was wearing something similar near the beginning of the pilot episode when she and Broyles first meet; that's not important, but it caught my attention.

It is interesting how Windmark, after having captured Broyles but before Peter and Olivia freed Broyles, tells Broyles that he is experiencing an emotion and says, "I believe you call it… hate." Broyles says, "The feeling is mutual." I love this because it shows just how different Windmark and September are. Near the end of "A Short Story About Love" (4.15), September says the exact opposite to Peter, offering a theory as to why Peter could not be fully erased from the timeline, and he says, "I believe you call it… love." Donald decides that he wants to be the one to go with Michael because he is his father, and he is sure that when he takes Michael's hand, Michael will know that he is loved. Walter nods, understanding, and says, "That's being a father." I love this scene, too; Donald says that he could never fully understand his feelings for his son but that he had and does love him. I find it funny when Olivia, near the beginning of the episode, asks why Michael would have gotten off the car, knowing that the Observers would have wished to harm them, and Donald admiringly says, "Apparently, there was a reason." I find it funny because obviously, there was a reason; it seems like a rather obvious thing to say. It is beautiful, though, because he definitely says so admiringly, and he goes on to add that "there always is." Michael says "I love you" by playing "Greensleeves" on the music box as Donald dies after being shot, and this is another scene that makes me choke up. I don't feel that it's fully explained how Michael doesn't have the tech in his head, and it's confusing to me. He is bald and hairless, and Peter having begun to lose hair at the end of "Five-Twenty-Ten" (5.07) suggests that it's the tech that causes that, so that is confusing. In the end, time is reset, and I have very mixed feelings about this. I am so happy that Peter and Olivia have their happy ending and get to raise Etta and be with her; Etta probably won't be murdered as a young woman. However, with that being said, I think that it is safe to assume that Peter and Olivia have no memories of anything that happened in season 5, and that's disappointing to me because there was so much development. I think that because of all of the chaos and the pain that they endured, they were closer than ever, and now, for them, none of that even happened.

I have seen theories, however, that involve people saying that Walter having mailed the white tulip to Peter will eventually mean that, similar to how Olivia's memories of Peter returned to her during season 4, Peter and Olivia will eventually remember events from season 5, will remember Walter's sacrifice, because they love Walter, and I love that idea. David Wu pointed out how Peter breaks the fourth wall in the final scene and looks at the audience, suggesting that fate is in the hands of us, and I love that, too, especially since our having been so committed to Fringe is what kept it on for as long as it was on, which was very long considering the odds that were stacked against us. I really wanted seven seasons (and I know that Blair Brown once said the same), but five is honestly more than we should have gotten, and I am happy. I am confused as to how Peter wasn't erased, though. How was the timeline up until 2015 the same? If the Observers were never created due to Walter dissuading the scientist in Oslo, Norway from creating them due to Michael being proof that emotion does not need to be sacrificed, September shouldn't have existed to distract Walternate from finding Peter's cure in 1985, which means that Walter wouldn't have taken Peter from the Redverse, and Peter would have grown up there. I am, however, guessing that it has something to do with the paradox which Walter talks about; apparently, only 2015 onward was changed, which seems convenient to me, but I got a happy ending and was right about Walter making a grave sacrifice, so I'll go with it. I wonder if that means that Nina, like Etta, is now alive, too, since her death was technically caused by Observers, albeit not as directly? I also wonder if the look on Nina's face when Michael touches her during "Anomaly XB-6783746" is because he did for her what he did for Walter - gave her memories from the previous timeline. Did she know that time would be reset, and that's part of the reason why she shot herself so fearlessly, knowing that she would be back? I still don't understand why collapsing the wormhole in "An Origin Story" didn't work, and I am disappointed that we didn't see Bell, especially since an earlier episode mentioned how he had been found in the amber, but maybe, Nimoy was unavailable. I love the finale, and obviously, I love Fringe, and I am going to miss it so much. Fringe is my favorite thing, my very favorite thing.

Fringe - "The Boy Must Live" (5.11)

"The Boy Must Live" (5.11) is a fantastic episode, primarily because we get so many answers, and I feel like I have been paid off as a viewer since season 1. For starters, we see a return to the tank, even though it is not Olivia who returns to the tank this time but Walter, who goes into the tank believing that he can revive his memories of Donald. I love how Olivia sees that Walter took his underwear off, too, when he got into the tank, and she asks, "Walter, why did you remove your trunks?" He says that if his mind is to be free, then his body needs to feel free, as well, and the trunks felt constrictive; you then see his underwear floating in the water, and this is such a funny scene. During the scene when Walter remembers the apartment in which he saw Donald, he looks from a window and sees that he is a City but is, at first, unable to determine what city that it is. He sees a bridge, and I thought that notable because bridges have tended to be a motif on Fringe. A bridge plays a very pivotal role in "The Man from the Other Side" (2.18), for example, and during "Over There" (2.21) (2.22), Redverse Olivia has a picture on a wall of her apartment that seems to be of the same bridge. Then, Peter builds a bridge between the two universes during "The Day We Died" (3.22) that allows the two teams to work together during season 4. I was initially confused about this because I could have sworn that Walter said during "Letters of Transit" (4.19) that September had been killed for aiding the Resistance, so I went back and rewatched the episode, and he actually does not; he says that what happened to September was unexpected, and I think that because of that, we all, or, at least, a lot of us, assumed that he had meant that September died. However, that was at a time when he had had his memories but before Windmark wiped them during "Transilience Thought Unifier Model-11" (5.01), so Walter knew that September was now Donald.

I am so happy that we finally get to see what the Observers' future looks like, what their world looks like. I said a long time ago that I really hoped that we would see that by the end of the season, and sure enough, we have, and I am thrilled. It certainly looks very macabre, almost like something out of a Tim Burton film, and it's so cool. It is Manhattan 2609, and since Manhattan is spelled the way that it is, a question has been answered for us; we now know that the Observers' future is set in the Blueverse, not the Redverse, so I'm really happy that we got that answer. This episode introduces us to the Commander, who is above Windmark. Every boss has a boss, right? He reports to the Commander and tells him that Anomaly XB-6783746 has been found and is being hidden in 2036. He says of Michael, "It did not exist, but someone wanted it to exist. Someone wanted to ensure its survival because they thought it was important." I love this line because it has a double-meaning for fans, referring not only to Michael but to Peter, who was erased from the timeline at the end of season 3, but because September did not want to stop him from bleeding through and because people such as Olivia, Walter, and Astrid loved Peter, he could not be fully erased from the timeline. September, at the beginning of season 4, was instructed to prevent Peter from continuing to bleed through the timeline via a device, and he failed to do so, deciding not to, and I think that now that we know that Michael is September's son, we understand why that is. He saw the love between Walter and Peter and was reminded of his own son.

I also find it interesting how Windmark, throughout this episode, refers to Michael as it because in the last episode, when he is speaking of him to Nina, he refers to him as he. I don't think that this is inconsistent writing; there must be a reason for it. Perhaps, it is because he was using language that he figured would appeal to Nina the best, since Nina was a human, and since he is now in the presence of a fellow Observer, one above him at that, he is using emotionless, unattached language, and speaking of which, I found something to be really interesting recently because I recently rewatched the "Letters of Transit" episode. During that episode, we see multiple examples of Observers showing emotion. For example, Broyles asks Windmark what he did during his own time to get such a crap detail, and Windmark smirks and says, "I like animals." Windmark smiles quite a bit during that scene, in fact. Additionally, just before the Observer that's killed in the Massive Dynamic anti-matter explosion dies, you see downright fear consume him, and this is in direct contradiction to what the Observer whom Peter kills near the end of "An Origin Story" (5.05) says; he says that the Observers do not experience fear. I would say that this is a possible inconsistency in the writing or that they had originally planned to go down one route that they then abandoned, but I don't think so. Windmark, in this episode, admits that he is beginning to experience emotion, that he has become consumed by the idea of eradicating the fugitives. There is, therefore, something to that, for sure. He also asks for permission for a protocol suspension in order to travel back to a point in time at which he can get rid of them, and the Commander refuses, saying that they are inconsequential. I wonder what a protocol suspension is. A Beacon, perhaps?

We also see during the scene when Windmark and another Observer go to Donald's apartment that, despite what Windmark says back during "Transilience Thought Unifier Model-11" (5.01) about music serving no purpose even though it is tolerated, that the other Observer is tapping his foot to music, as he plays a record found in Donald's apartment. It seems to be music from the 1940s or so, and that is most interesting because the Observers are dressed in suits and fedoras much like that time period, male Loyalists are dressed like Nazis, and female Loyalists are dressed like women from that era. Additionally, we learn that the first movie that Walter and September watched together was Singin' in the Rain starring Donald O'Connor, from which September took his name. This film was released in 1952, fairly close to the 1940s. Donald tells Walter that his fate of being turned human wasn't really much of a punishment, as he has enjoyed humanity and has always had a fondness for this era, and I love that line, begging the typical question asked by good science-fiction of what it means to be human. I wonder, though, if by this era, he is clumping together the entire twentieth century. After all, sixty years seems like a long time to us, but to an Observer who can travel to any point in time that he chooses, that would be relatively insignificant. To an Observer, an entire century may be considered an era, and it might truly be the 1940s that Donald loves. Additionally, Walter, during "Brown Betty" (2.19), tells Ella a story about evil Observers (suggesting that he may have possibly had some insight into what was to come), and he chooses to set it during the 1940s. It's very interesting to me and really makes me think.

Back to the foot-tapping scene, however, we, once again, see the colors green and red on the device above the door that would have killed Windmark and the other Observer had they not narrowly missed the explosion. I also wonder what it is with Fringe and snowglobes. Windmark picks a snowglobe up of Donald's and examines it, and I half-expected him to smash it, but he does not. Fans will remember that this is not the first time that snowglobes have been seen on the series, as Nina used two during "Momentum Deferred" (2.04) to demonstrate what would happen to the two universes if they were to collide - one would survive, and the other would not, and conveniently, she somehow manages not only to just have two snowglobes on hand but also to smash them together will only one breaking. I have always found that scene to be funny for those reasons. Windmark looks kind of disgusted with the other Observer for tapping his foot to the music, and that, again, calls back to what he says to Walter during the season 5 premiere about music. We learn, as was expected, a lot about Donald during this episode, how September became Donald, and a big question on a lot of our minds prior to this episode was - did September become Donald, or did Donald become September? His punishment for interfering with the Resistance and for developing such strong emotive empathy for the people of this era landed him in a situation that involved him having his tech removed, which I find odd because "The Human Kind" (5.08) teaches us that what the technology does to you is not irreversible, but maybe, it's because September was grown as an Observer, whereas Peter was not, or maybe, it's because the Observers have technology so much more sophisticated than what Walter and Astrid had in the lab.

We see that Donald has definitely aged since we saw him in Walter's vision at the end of "Anomaly XB-6783746" (5.10), and I think that this was such a great aging makeup job, as Donald totally looks like he could be in his fifties, pushing sixty or so, possibly even older. Props to the makeup department. We learn from Donald that the Observers are created in labs and come from a donor, and September was Michael's donor, effectively making Michael his son, making the scene at the end of "Inner Child" so poignant, as the look on September's face during that scene now says to us, "How did you get out?" We finally learn why Michael was underground like that; he was scheduled for termination due to his being an anomaly (something that we learned during the last episode), and September took him and hid him in the past where he would not be found. This makes me wonder if September ever went down there to visit Michael, to check on him, as he must have struggled to survive, and he must have gotten terribly lonely since he is capable of emotion. The Observers, when conceived, are raised, like the Borg of the Star Trek universe, in maturation chambers where they rapidly age to a certain age and then stop. We also learn from this episode that there were, indeed, twelve Observers in the original calendared science team, but to my disappointment, we do not learn why they took months as names. It could have just been because there happened to be twelve of them, so that was an easy way to remember. Was September a code name, or did he have a different given name? I am thinking that September was his actual name, as I think that he was created precisely to do what he did - observe.

Someone, I forget who, wrote a post on a website about their issues with this episode, and one was that they had a problem with the fact that Observers are created using the DNA of a donor, yet Peter was able to gain Observer abilities just by putting the technology in his head, and Peter is a human. We have to keep in mind, however, that near the end of "Through the Looking Glass and What Walter Found There" (5.06), Peter encounters an Observer whose neck he snaps, and that Observer tells Peter that Peter doesn't know what he has done. Then, during "Five-Twenty-Ten" (5.07), we see Peter bleeding from his ear and experiencing extreme headaches, so I am going to say that the technology is only compatible with Observer DNA, not human DNA, and that if Peter would have kept it inside of his head, it would have eventually killed him. This would explain why Windmark did not seem concerned that Peter had put the technology in his own head and was developing Observer abilities; in fact, he seemed thrilled by it and said that everything was occurring as he had foreseen, which suggests to me that Windmark knew that it was going to kill him, effectively eliminating him. That is my explanation to that. Unfortunately, Donald does not explain why Sam Weiss was protecting the signal, and it's mildly frustrating because you would think that Olivia would be interested in that and would ask, but she doesn't. She probably figured that there were much more important matters at hand, which is true, and didn't want to waste time by asking. I just know that I probably would have asked, since Sam Weiss was such a poignant figure from her past. It's possible that September, having known that, recruited Sam himself because he knew that he could trust him, and he may have even somehow convinced him of what needed to be done by somehow giving Sam his memories of Olivia.

I am so ecstatic that Walter's memories from the previous timeline have been restored to him. Michael returned them to him when he put his hand to Walter's face at the end of the last episode, and I can only imagine that that is because he can see time so expansively. I love the scene when Walter tells Peter of this and mentions events from previous seasons. It is such a touching scene, especially when they hug. Did anyone else notice that at the beginning of this scene, as he is getting out of the vehicle, he is sporting a black umbrella? Sadly, we also learn from this episode that Walter will have to sacrifice himself in order for the plan to work, and I have been saying that he would die for a long time because it just seemed like, after Walter had caused so much destruction and had stolen Peter from the Redverse, that it would be a fitting end to the show, and I was right. I wonder, too, if Michael did the same for Nina before she died, giving her memories from the previous timeline. We also learn when Observers were first mentally conceived, which was in 2167 by a scientist trying to expand human intelligence by sacrificing emotion for logic, and we learn what the plan is, which is to send Michael to that time period so that he can prove to that scientist that emotion does not need to be sacrificed, and the Observers will never exist. We learn that when September says during "Peter" (2.15) that the boy must live, that he is important, he is not referring to Peter but to his son, Michael. It was an incredibly daring and bold move by the writers to take that piece of the mythology and answer it by undoing it. I absolutely love it; you don't find many shows with clever writers like these. I do have a couple of minor problems with the episode; to start, Astrid is left alone in the lab yet again, and also, since Olivia is on RewardWire and is a fugitive, why does no one recognize her when she walks around with Michael? Quite a few times this season, it has seemed like the team has roamed about freely without being recognized. I still, however, due to the load of answers that we get and the some of the awesome scenes that we get, give "The Boy Must Live" 10 penultimate memories returned to Walter. The big question now is - why the heck did Michael get off the train and turn himself in?

Fringe - "Anomaly XB-6783746" (5.10)

"Anomaly XB-6783746" is a good episode, especially because of the amazing cliffhanger. I had, however, been hoping that we would finally find out why Michael had been underground prior to "Inner Child" (1.15), but we still do not. It is really interesting how Michael does not have technology in his head because that begs the question of why he is bald. After all, after Peter put the technology in his head, he started to lose his hair, which suggests that the tech is what causes hairlessness. I had been wondering why they didn't find any tech when they examined him back in "Inner Child" and now know why. It's also kind of cool how the Observers pick up sound from the glass around where Nina had been to find out what she had said because this is a callback to science that we see in the season 1 episode "The Road Not Taken" (1.19). We definitely, by the way, see traces of Walternate and the old Walter bleeding through Walter throughout this episode as he, more than once, refers to Michael as the subject, which does not make Peter very happy.

For a few years now, I have been hoping that Nina would finally be held accountable for all that she did - cloning Christopher Penrose and Tyler Carson, more than likely killing Mark Young and George Morales, and so forth. She is not exactly held accountable, but I love how the writers didn't just forget about all of that and addressed it within this episode. Nina admits that Massive Dynamic had black labs, and when Olivia says that he hadn't known that, Nina says that she is glad that she can still manage to surprise her. Olivia does not look happy about this at all. It is kind of annoying that Astrid is left all alone in the lab yet again. One would think that they would have learned their lesson after she was attacked near the end of "Through the Looking Glass and What Walter Found There" (5.06), but I am starting to sound like a broken record because I always complain when Astrid is left alone in the lab; it just doesn't make sense to me.


I figured early on in the episode that Nina might be in trouble, and sure enough, she definitely is, and Windmark is onto her. When she and the team go to the Massive Dynamic black lab, we see that an Observer's corpse is there and has been experimented on so that they would better understand Observers. I'm not 100% sure, but I think that that is the same Observer that Peter killed to remove the tech from back near the end of "An Origin Story" (5.05). Michael communicates with Nina after the team leaves and holds one of his hands to her face. I'm not completely sure what he told her, but considering what she eventually does, he probably told her that she would have to sacrifice herself, which she does. To avoid being read, Nina grabs a gun from a Loyalist and shoots herself in the head right in front of Windmark, after Michael had hidden himself in the container in which the Observer corpse is, in a compartment underneath the Observer.


This definitely came as a shock to me, and the team, especially Walter, doesn't take it very well, either. Walter really loses it. The team sees that Nina understood that she would have to kill herself in order for their victory against the Observers, and it is quite apparent that they appreciate her sacrifice. I think that this further supported my theory that Walter would die by the end of the series because not only does she, herself, sacrifice herself, but she says to Peter earlier in the episode that Walter understands that sometimes, one must make a sacrifice for something important. I have been saying all season long that Walter would probably die; in fact, I think that I have been saying that even longer than that, and this episode definitely helps give support to that idea. Blair Brown said shortly after this episode aired that she was very happy with how Nina's story ended. She certainly went out with a bang; that's for sure, and having her in this episode was very beneficial.


There is great dialogue between Nina and Windmark. After Windmark sees the Observer corpse, he says, "You... animals," and this really reminds me of how he called the sealant from "The Bullet That Saved the World" (5.04) "barbaric" as if he, himself, is not barbaric at all. It's not a major answer, but we do learn from this episode why it is that the Observers cock their head the way that they do. The angle allows in more stimuli, like a lizard. She says, though, that even after all of the evolution that lizards have gone through, they still are unable to form bonds, unable to love someone else, unable to understand something greater than themselves, much like the Observers. I love this, and we also learn a little bit about Michael. We learn that he was, more or less, a mistake that was designated as Anomaly XB-6783746, and that he was scheduled for termination but, for some reason, went missing. That's as much as we learn about Michael from this episode, but it's something, at least.


Throughout the episode, I kept hoping that Hastings would be okay and that he wouldn't die. We don't know him all that well, but he was definitely really scared, and I felt really sorry for him. Luckily, he ends up being fine, though, because just as a Loyalist comes into the interrogation room in which he is being held and says, "We're going to make an example of you," the team comes in, and Olivia says, "My thoughts, exactly." I love Olivia. It reminds me of when, earlier in the season, she says to an Observer, "Yeah, it's that type of gun." The cliffhanger of this episode is amazing and is why I think that the episode is so good; this is definitely one of the best cliffhangers of the entire series so far. Michael shows Walter that Donald is September, and this is quite the shocker. People had been speculating about this, but I wasn't on board with it because I couldn't understand why September would have hair, but sure enough, it is true, and I was totally taken aback. I give this episode 9 chromosomal mistakes, the ending being enough to support the high rating.

Fringe - "Black Blotter" (5.09)

"Black Blotter" is this season's, which means, of course, the final, special "out of the box" episode of Fringe, and I am very pleased with it. I find it to be much better than last year's "Letters of Transit" because that ultimately serves as the season 5 premiere, not as a special "out of the box" genre-bending episode. The episode begins with Astrid in her pajamas as she hears the radio transmitting; it was kind of funny to see Astrid in her pajamas. I wonder from this scene, too, why Peter and Olivia don't share a bed. Is it because, perhaps, Peter isn't feeling all that well? Is it because the cots are so small? It is a bit perplexing but not a big deal, and I let it go. I really like how Olivia asks Peter if he needs anything, and he says, "No, I've got everything I need right here." That is such a sweet line and shows how powerful love can be. Even after losing their daughter, even in the world in which they live, they can find peace in just being together. I find it kind of ironic that Peter is now telling Walter what he thinks isn't a good idea. Walter tells Peter that Nina agreed to help Walter remove the pieces of his brain that Etta and Simon put back in, and Peter says that that is not a good idea. This is ironic because in the last episode, Walter was the one trying to tell Peter that Peter's actions were not a good idea. It is also kind of ironic that Walter now wants those pieces removed, even though it is for a very good reason, because if we go all the way back to the season 2 finale "Over There" (2.21) (2.22), Walter is extremely frustrated with Bell and angrily says that he is a broken man because of Bell having removed pieces of his brain in the past. I always find the parallels and the ironies interesting on Fringe.

I really love the scene during which Peter tells Olivia that he is lucky to have her. He says that he did the very thing that he promised that he wouldn't - left her again, and he says that he doesn't deserve her. It's really cool to think back on who Peter was in the pilot episode of the series, the lying opportunist and manipulative conman that he was, and who he is now. He has certainly developed and changed a great deal. The following is pretty cool because Sam Weiss is mentioned again; the man in the van was initially thought to be Donald, but then, Olivia finds out that he was, in fact, Sam Weiss. Sam Weiss is now dead, and I wonder why he was protecting the signal. Who tasked him to do that? Was he working with Donald? It doesn't make a whole lot of sense because Sam shouldn't have had any involvement in this timeline. When Peter was erased, that would have prevented him from ever bringing Sam back into the past with him and giving him the First People manuscript, but maybe, for whatever reason, he still helped Nina after she lost her arm. Wyman technically lied because he said that we would not be dealing with Weiss anymore, but I use the word technically because in a sense, we haven't dealt with him again since all we saw was a corpse, not Sam when he was alive, and obviously, Kevin Corrigan was not involved. It definitely came as a surprise, though, for him to have even been mentioned, as I figured that we were totally done with him.

What makes this episode the special episode? Walter, of course, goes on another drug trip. I do admit that I am tired of drugs being the source of the special episode. "Brown Betty" is an adventure that Walter tells Ella because he's tripping on a drug that he calls Brown Betty. "Lysergic Acid Diethylamide" is a drug trip through Olivia's mind, and this episode is a drug trip that shows us Walter's skeletons in the closet. Walter is desperate to remember September's plan and, therefore, figures that a drug trip might help him, so he takes something that he calls Black Blotter, and he sees a number of things from his past that haunt him. He sees Carla Warren, the lab assistant who died in the lab fire that he caused. She is very antagonistic and reminds him of how terrible of a man that he once was. At one point, we see her burned corpse, which is very macabre. He also sees Nina when she was a younger woman, who seems to be a bit more supportive; it's interesting how she, in a sense, represents the angel while Carla represents the devil, and that could be because Nina seemingly forgave Walter for having lost her arm, but Walter never received forgiveness from Carla because she died. I do find it odd that he didn't see Elizabeth, since he seemed to be seeing people that he had victimized, but maybe, the actress Orla Brady was not available. Besides, in a sense, he does see her because memories from "Peter" (2.15) play on the walls of the lab as a montage, which is a really great scene. "Peter" is still probably my favorite episode of the series, although it's tough to say for sure because I really love "A New Day in the Old Town" (2.01), as well. It is an emotional episode, for sure, as this is probably the most intimate experience that we have had getting inside of Walter's head.

The Observer Child, or, as we now know him as - Michael, is seen in this episode as the events of "Through the Looking Glass and What Walter Found There" (5.06) finally come to fruition. Michael's adoptive father says that Donald left a password with him so that when the right people came for Michael, he would know that they were the right people. Walter then has a really trippy Monty Python-inspired animated vision during which he rides a cow whom I am assuming was supposed to be Gene. We also see a frog, a dog, a seahorse, and babies, amongst other things, and many of these harbor connections to the series, as the frog, the seahorse, and the babies are all either glyphs or parts of a glyph (the apple glyph as babies at the core). I am not sure about the dog, although it could be the dog that Peter had as a child. I am not sure, not that it's all that important, whether Walter actually experienced this (meaning that he felt himself riding on a cow, etc.) or if it was nothing more than a vision in his head. Either way, it leads him to the realization that Black Umbrella, a term that he found in a book underneath a floor in the lab, is the password. Michael's adoptive father says, "I never doubted that Michael was important, that he was meant for something great." I love this line because it obviously hints at Michael being a pivotal part of the plan to defeat the Observers. This scene leaves me wondering something. In "Inner Child" (1.15), the Child is given to a family for adoption, and is this the family to whom he was given? Obviously, he is genetically different from humans, so what happened when the family took him to the doctor's office for physicals and whatnot? As a child, he would have been required to go to school, so what would that have meant for him? These are all questions that I have in my head but that probably aren't too important, though.

The scene during which the team tries to evade the Loyalists at the bay (or lake; I'm not sure what it is, exactly), Walter is pretty funny. A Loyalist tries to shoot at them, and Walter, confused, asks, "Why is he shooting at us?" I love this, as if he's not in a world ruled by emotionless drones that are bent on world domination. I love how he sees Emerald City across the water, yet another Wizard of Oz reference on Fringe, and there seems, for whatever reason, to be a lot of green in this episode. I also love how Astrid holds on to Walter; that is so sweet. She and Walter have such a special bond, an unconventional bond that can't really be explained because it's not really father and daughter, but it's definitely more than just friends, too. It can't be defined, and that's something that I've always loved about Fringe; it has always been about love, an unconventional, dysfunctional family that goes through turmoil but holds onto love at the end of the day. There are plenty of funny scenes during this episode, even though, by the end, you realize just how serious of an episode that it really is. For example, I love it when Walter flicks the green fairy away; that is hilarious. I wonder why he envisions fairies; there is a green and a red one, and all that comes to mind as far as that is concerned is the green and red repetition that we have seen since season 1. Also, Green Fairy is a nickname of absinthe, and Walter definitely saw the green fairy a lot more than he did the red one, so maybe, he drank absinthe along with dropping the acid? I doubt it because it seems like he would have said so, but it's just a thought. In closing, though, this is a pretty good episode, although I do wish that it had done something a little crazier like a claymation episode or a sitcom, something like that, but I guess that they couldn't do something too crazy with it being so close to the end of the series. I give "Black Blotter" 8.5 Walter Python trips.

Fringe - "The Human Kind" (5.08)

"The Human Kind" is a fairly decent episode, and I give it 8 invulnerabilities to space and time. After the events of "Five-Twenty-Ten" (5.07), one of my first questions is to whom Olivia would turn to for emotional help and for help saving the world. Anil had never occurred to me, for some reason, and it's not like we see him persistently as a major character throughout a majority of the episode, but it's clear that as soon as she left Etta's apartment at the end of the last episode, she sought out Anil. While Olivia waits for Anil, she sees people taking down the Etta RESIST posters, and this sort of answers a question that a lot of fans have seemed to have for a while now - why are the Observers allowing these posters to stay up? Well, apparently, they're not. Was anyone else grossed out by how big the technological device that Peter put in his head is? Anil shows one to Olivia at the beginning of the episode, and then, we see the one that Peter put in his head after he takes it out. I do realize that we obviously already saw what it looked like at the end of "An Origin Story" (5.05) when Peter put his in his head, but I don't remember it being that large, and it's disgusting. "The Human Kind" finally shows us the Jill Scott character; I am admittedly not familiar with Jill Scott (or, at least, I wasn't), but I have known about the character Simone for quite some time, as something - I think that it was Entertainment Weekly - revealed it, saying that Jill Scott would play a mysterious Oracle-like woman named Simone. I was expecting it much earlier than this because they said that it would be early in the season, and this definitely wasn't early; this was more than halfway through. I wonder if we'll ever find out how she got her gift; unfortunately, I doubt it, and I think that we have seen the last of her. I wonder, though, if that she is the child of a Cortexiphan subject.

We see from the futures that Peter has mapped out on the glass that Windmark, at a certain time (I believe that it was 4:32 a.m.), was to respond to a disturbance, so I am guessing that the Observers act as police, too. What happened to former policemen, if this is the case? Were they given the choice of either becoming Loyalists or being executed, perhaps? That is so interesting to me because I hadn't really realized that the Observers were policing, certainly not in regards to domestic disturbances and whatnot. I wonder who else, like me, half-expected Windmark to kill the guy who spilled tea on him? I expected him to snap his neck or something, but instead, the man cleans the mess up a bit until Windmark says, "That's enough" and carries on. I suppose that Windmark, like most Observers, have no need for anger. He, however, seems so carnal at times. For example, when he encounters Peter, telling him that he had led him there, he says, "Everything has taken place as I intended," and he reminds me so much of Palpatine from Star Wars. He seems to have taken pleasure in the fact that he has caused Peter pain; he seems sadistic. His line, "Your emotions make you weak" really reminds me of Jones, because Jones, during "The Consultant" (4.18), says to Colonel Broyles, "Love makes us vulnerable, but it also makes us human, I suppose." Peter, too, affirms that "she [Etta] will be avenged," again having had me wondering about his emotions being inhibited; however, Olivia, at the end of the episode says, "Soon, you're not going to be able to feel anything, not for me, not for Etta," suggesting that a total emotional compression has not occurred yet, explaining why he might have taken on Observer mannerisms but still feel a drive for revenge.

Something that I really like about this episode is that we get the opportunity to get more concrete answers about the Observers' psychology, if you will. Walter and Astrid and everyone now know about the technology that Peter put inside his head, and we learn that the technology makes the cerebral cortex become so thick that it overrides the area of the brain that controls emotions; this is a very cool scene. I love how Walter tests the device on Porcuman's brain; the writers must have really liked Porcuman because they keep revisiting him. Am I hearing things, though, or does Walter refer to Astrid as "miss" when he asks her to retrieve Porcuman's brain? That is kind of odd, if so, even for him, because he usually, at least refers to her by a name, usually one that starts with A, but he does call her Asner later in the episode, which I find funny because who is even named Asner? I have never heard that name before. Peter shows up at the lab after his violent altercation with Windmark, after almost being killed, and he is wounded. Walter asks him if it hurts, and Peter says, "There is no pain." Does this mean that the technology inhibits physical pain, as well? It would make sense because when September was shot, he didn't seem to be in any physical pain. Speaking of being shot, though, when did Olivia catch bullets? She mentions having caught bullets in mid-air to Simone, and I don't remember that ever having happened. In fact, in the 2026 "The Day We Died" (3.22) future, her Cortexiphan abilities were at their peak, and she certainly didn't catch a bullet, then. Perhaps, she is referring to something that happened offscreen, something that we haven't seen; it is perplexing.

I love the conversation between Olivia and Simone because it is the same theme that is so prevalent on The X-Files, Star Trek: Voyager, LOST, etc. Are you a person of science or a person of faith? I don't necessarily thank that Simone refers to God when she refers to faith; I think that she is simply referring to having faith that sometimes, odd things happen just because they do and that there doesn't need to be an explanation that makes sense. I think that the purpose of the conversation within the episode is not only simply to provide viewers with some philosophy to ponder but also to finally set the record straight that Fringe is not The X-Files because whereas Simone is The X-Files, Olivia is Fringe; Fringe has always been a show that has based its phenomena on science, but The X-Files so often offered up witches, vampires, ghosts, and so forth, and they existed just because they did, not because there was any scientific explanation for them. We, once again, see that Olivia is good with kids, and even though, in a sense, she just uses Darby because she knows that she is young and will, therefore, willingly offer up answers, I do think that her generosity is genuine, as it's consistent with how we have always seen her treat children. We also see, as usual, that after Olivia leaves Simone's residence and gets captured by thieves, that she is an incredibly smart and resourceful woman when we see how she escapes; she rigs a weapon and uses the bullet that saved the world (which, although now misshaped, she is later able to retrieve) to shoot a captor and escape that way. She always uses what's available to her, just like she did near the beginning of "Bound" (1.11). We also see, as has been shown before, that Olivia's empathy for others is a potential weakness because her need to see if the "people" (who were really dolls set for a trap) are okay is what lands her into trouble; this same mechanism is also used against Sydney Bristow on Alias.

I love the ending of the episode because once again, love prevails. Once again, love wins the battle, and Olivia is able to save Peter, is able to pull him back. I love how, before Peter finally gives in and removes the technology from his head, Olivia says, "Peter, look at me; I love you." Then, there are flashes of their love, what they have shared together throughout all of these years, and it's such a moving, beautiful scene, and I am not going to lie and say that I didn't cry because I did. Then, after he does remove the technology from his head, he leans into her, she holds him, and she repeats, "I love you." Some would and probably do call the scene really sappy, but I think that it's extremely beautiful. The technology also seemed rather to remove because even though it did seem rather painful, it didn't take very long. I can't deny, though, that I am a bit disappointed by the ending of this episode because even though it's so beautiful and I'm really happy that love has prevailed and that Olivia managed to pull Peter back, I was really excited to see Peter go full-on Observer. Since the last episode ended with Peter acting completely Observer and his hair beginning to fall out, I was excited because the story was just so intense and I was so excited to see Peter as a full-on Observer, as I said. I had expected him to look like Josh Jackson was dressed at the ComicCon event prior to season 4 airing, but now, we're not going to see that, and it makes me wonder if this is going to be another "Bellivia" storyline - fun, entertaining, but ultimately irrelevant by the end of the season, but who knows, maybe this was necessary; we'll find out soon enough. "The Human Kind" is a decent episode; I think that the mixed feelings about the ending is my only problem with it.

Fringe - "Five-Twenty-Ten" (5.07)

"Five-Twenty-Ten" is a very good episode of Fringe. At the conclusion of the episode the first time that I watched it, I was so impressed that that was pretty much the point at which I had decided that this was, so far, my second favorite season of the series (my top favorite being season 2, which isn't going to change, I don't think; phenomenal season). I was very excited when I discovered this episode title because the series brought that combination of numbers - 5-20-10 - into the fold almost three years ago when Walter, during "Jacksonville" (2.14), reveals that that is the combination that he and Belly used for just about everything, and 5-20-10 also ended up being the date of the season 2 finale. I do admit that I had expected there to be a significance to the numbers revealed in this episode, and that does not happen; instead, they are simply a very small part of the story, as Walter struggles to remember the code as he tries to open Belly's safe. Is it just me, by the way, who expected Olivia to remember? Olivia was with Walter when he revealed the number, and we all know how amazing her memory is, especially in regards to numbers. She did not remember, however, and I have to admit that I am a bit disappointed by that. It was, indeed, a long time ago, but it still would have been a perfect opportunity for her ability to come into play, and it can't be suggested that her ability was due to Cortexiphan because she displayed it earlier in the season, which, of course, makes you wonder why Redverse Olivia does not share the ability. I, however, digress. I also find it odd that Walter seemed to easily remember the code in "Letters of Transit" (4.19) to open the vault at Massive Dynamic that contain the pieces of his brain that had been removed, the same code, but had trouble remembering it now, since, then, he was practically gone.

The very beginning of the episode is somewhat similar to something that we see in "The Plateau" (3.03) because in that episode, Milo does something similar; he, on a city street, sees possible courses of events that would happen as a result of certain actions taken and maps probabilities out. A lot of us even wondered after that episode aired if Milo had some sort of connection to the Observers since he seemed to have such a similar ability. Something that I find odd about this scene, though, is that there are scattered conversations upon which Peter is picking up, and while they seem to be totally indistinct, I had captions on when I watched the episode on television, and the captions were revealing what the people were saying. It didn't seem to be anything significant, just everyday conversation, but I wonder why the captions were revealing statements that were being made when, to our ears, it's indistinct. It's probably not important at all; I just wanted to point it out. During this scene, though, something else comes to mind that I have pretty much been wondering since "Letters of Transit" (4.19). What do civilians think the Observers are? Are they aware of the truth, that they're from a future Earth? Are they aware of the technology in their heads? Do they think, since they call them Invaders (don't get me wrong; they are), that they're aliens? This season has done a lot to show us how the Invasion has affected our Fringe Division team (Etta's death, Peter's conversion to Observerdom, etc.), but it has done little to show us how it has affected civilization, and that's why, as the civilians carry on conversations and the driver gets annoyed with Peter during this scene, that comes to mind.

One reason that I really like this episode is that it offers up a great deal of answers. We finally learn why Belly was with the team when it was ambered, and it was because the team needed him in order to access the storage space because they needed the two Beacons that were there. Belly, apparently, betrayed them once again, and that's why Walter was unconcerned for him when they left him behind in the amber. I am also now convinced that when Walter, in "Letters of Transit" (4.19), reminds Astrid of what Belly did to Olivia, he is referring to season 4 events and her ultimate activation in "Brave New World" (4.21/4.22), since there doesn't seem to be any evidence of him having inflicted any more direct harm onto her beyond that point. I wonder if we will see Belly again by the end of the season; I definitely think that we will. I also wonder if any of what Walter "remembers" about Belly having betrayed him which ends up being a movie called Marathon Man that he is actually remembering is actually accurate. We also get a more concrete answer about what the function of the Beacons is, and, as Walter says on the tape that they play, they help the Observers locate points in space and time. That must be how they're not only able to travel through time but also can hop universes. There are, unfortunately, many questions on my list of unanswered questions to which I don't think we will ever get answers, but at least some big questions are being answered this season, such as the Child - a very major one.

I love how Walter refers to Astrid as Agnes. I can't recall if he has ever called her that before, but he just doesn't stop with the A names (and sometimes others such as Claire), and as I have said before, I definitely think that he does it on purpose. I am really happy that Astrid is finally out and about with the team and isn't back at the lab where she is alone. Maybe, that's because of the vehicles of Loyalists that show up just outside of the lab early in the episode and they finally decided to be smart and not put Astrid in danger, especially since she was attacked near the end of the last episode. I am also really happy to see some "girl" moments between her and Olivia; they are great together, and they really do not share enough scenes together. The most memorable one that comes to mind is when, during "Marionette" (3.09), Olivia is suffering a great deal and asks Astrid how Peter and Redverse Olivia were together. Astrid tells her that Peter seemed really happy but tries to comfort her by reminding her that Peter thought that Redverse Olivia was his Olivia - her. They really do need more screen time together, as I have always said that I would have liked to have seen the two of them as closer friends, and in this episode, once again, they discuss Peter, with Astrid counseling Olivia, Olivia saying that she is fearful that she is losing Peter. It's funny, too, because Anna Torv and Jasika Nicole are actually really great friends. I also love the look on Astrid's face when she tries to touch Dr. Hastings' devices and he scolds her; that is so hilarious.

Walter makes his usual drug reference when he points to a location nearby the storage facility and says that he used to drop acid there while he watched ships dock. His humorous lines usually are drug-related (or food-related), but they're still always funny, especially when, as he does in this case, he says them so nonchalantly. I am so happy that we get to see Nina again and really wish that Blair Brown (as well as Lance Reddick) were still series regulars. It seems as if FOX, knowing that this is definitely the last season, didn't put as much funding into this season, since neither Blair Brown nor Lance Reddick are series regulars anymore and have been featured on the show so little; it is a shame. Wyman and the gang were most likely forced to cut people that they could afford to for the sake of the story due to such limited funding. It's awesome that, under the persistent circumstances, Fringe has managed to survive on FOX for five seasons, but I have still always gotten the impression that FOX's heart hasn't always been in this series. I say that because I (used to) watch other FOX shows, such as 24, House, and New Girl, and while advertisement for shows such as Bones and House receive(d) a great deal of advertising attention during commercial breaks, Fringe was and is very seldom advertised during commercial breaks. FOX just didn't seem to have its whole heart into it, but I do profusely commend them for keeping it on for five seasons, at least, and I am grateful for that; it has certainly been a longer ride than many, including cast and crew, probably expected it to be. Blair Brown even said recently that she didn't even initially expect FOX to pick the pilot episode up.

Nina is back, and, as I said, it is so good to see her, especially since there are so many good scenes with her. She sees Olivia, and they share a really special moment together, even though it would have been even better if they both shared the same memories. The dialogue between Nina and Walter is absolutely phenomenal; it's such good writing. Walter asks her if she sees the old Walter in him, the cruel, callous one, and she says that she does not, but then, later, Walter tells Nina that Belly never loved her, that he didn't love anyone, and Nina says, "You asked me if I saw him in you; I just did," and she proceeds to tell him that the Walter that she knew would never say something so cruel. It's just such a good scene, although I interpret what Walter says during that scene a bit differently than Nina does, although I understand how it would be difficult not to take something like that personally when someone whom you love is the topic of the conversation. Walter does, indeed, say that Belly never loved Nina, but he also proceeds to say that he never loved anyone; his anger is directed toward Belly because of what he had tried to do to Olivia, how he had betrayed the team, not Nina, and that is totally reasonable to me. Later, though, Walter finds a photo of Nina in Belly's safe, and since it was locked up, Walter deduces that the photo was obviously important to Belly and he obviously did love Nina, so he meets up with Nina, shows her the photo, and apologizes, which is also a great scene. He, also, of course, asks her to remove the pieces of his brain that Etta and Simon put back in because he doesn't want to push loved ones away.

It's funny how Walter's personality is changing and it scares him, but Peter's personality is changing and he embraces it; I think that the writers want us to see that parallel, especially since, as Walter tells Nina before he asks her to remove those pieces of his brain, Walter is relying on Peter to help prevent him from becoming the man that he was. We really start to see Observer mannerisms as he talks to Anil, and Anil, who doesn't even know Peter as well as most other characters do (which is probably why Peter seems to not feel a need to inhibit his Observer mannerisms when he is around him), even begins to see changes and becomes concerned. Near the end of the episode, we see that Peter seems to have fully embraced Observer mannerisms and begins cocking his head like one and speaking like one, and now, it is around Olivia as he reveals to her that he has planted the technology in his head. Josh Jackson does a really great job here. It's just odd, though, because he tells Olivia that Etta will be avenged, but that is indicative of an emotion. He also smiles at the Etta RESIST poster near the beginning of the episode, another example of emotion, not only happiness at the thought of her but the drive for revenge. This final sequence is just awesome and had my heart pounding, and it's so great because of the David Bowie song "The Man Who Sold the World" overlaying the scene, and when his hair begins to fall out, I was so crazy with excitement. I love this episode because of this awesome final scene, the answers that we get, and the callback to the pilot episode as Anil takes some Observers out using the same skin-melting technology that we saw on Flight 627. I am also going to count having seen peppered raw meat as another possible answer because I think that the purpose of showing that to us in this episode is to say that it's the technology that inhibits taste. I give "Five-Twenty-Ten" 9 pilfered David Robert Jones records, due to Belly discovering David Bowie records that Belly had apparently stolen from him, a very funny scene.