joshua jackson

February 12, 2012

REVIEW: Fringe “And Those We’ve Left Behind”

Time travel can be so problematic can’t it? Most of us would like to say that if prensented with the ability to turn back time we’d go kill Hitler, or save Kennedy, or call the ambulance for poor misunderstood Marilyn Monroe so she could grow old and make Lifetime Movies of the Week about drug addiction but in reality we’d rather rewind to a better place in our own lives and get stuck there. If I could turn back time (cue my Cher impression) I’d probably find myself in 1994 dancing to Depeche Mode on a speaker at The Masquerade. In this week’s episode of Fringe we meet Raymond (Stephen Root) who can do just that, and he’s taken the opportunity to revisit his scientist wife Kate (Romy Rosemont) before she developed Alzheimers so she can help perfect it. Isn’t that sweet?

Raymond is so focused on the matter at hand that he has no idea that his little jaunts back four years are making life miserable for everyone else. Small spheres of time displacement start appearing all over Boston and the Fringe team is convinced that it is all because of Peter, who as the consummate gentleman is ready to help and anxious to get to the bottom of things. Too bad Walter is not as enthused. He has refused to have anything to do with this version of his son and no one can blame him?

Peter (Joshua Jackson) is a resourceful lad though and he manages just fine without Walter’s help. And with some last minute sacrifices from the culprits wife they are able to ensure this won’t happen again. But this hasn’t helped Peter’s situation much at all. Walter (John Noble) still won’t even look at him and Olivia (Anna Torv) is treating him like any other random agent. She has deduced that the “other” Olivia must have meant a lot to Peter though and seems at least a little sympathetic. Peter has finally decided that his problem isn’t that no one can remember him, it’s that he is in the wrong timeline completely and now he has to figure out how to get home.

Plotting out the shifting timelines in Fringe is a daunting task. We have allocated one of the whiteboards in my office for this task and each Monday we discuss it. Now it looks like we have to add another branch to the growing tree of questions. I’m not complaining mind you, but damn this is getting to be like school with homework and book reports and what not.

I’m still wondering where Fauxlivia and Walternate have been lately. Did Peter’s return mark the spot where the timeline branched again or did he just punch through to the current timeline? Peter has no recollection of ever trying to contact Walter or Olivia from the “other side” so was that him doing it or was it some other incarnation of Peter? What if this isn’t the right Peter at all? Ugh. I have a headache now.

Fringe is back next Friday on Fox.

REVIEW: Fringe “Novation”

I think sports should operate like network television and go on hiatus every summer and for the holidays because sometimes we need a break from all this madness and who would really want to watch baseball instead of Fringe? That is not a world I want to live in. One more thing to add to my to-do list for when I achieve world domination. Until then, here is what happened on Fringe this week.

Peter (Joshua Jackson) is back and everyone at Fringe division is giving him the side-eye because they just know he’s up to no good and his uber-confident demeanor is a bit off-putting to the men in the room. So far only Astrid seems immune to his well-groomed charms. There is no question about who he is because his DNA is a 99% match to Walter’s. But when his own father fails to recognize him Peter knows he has to change tactics. This is not the world he left. Thankfully there is a new case to focus on involving a new breed of shapeshifter and Peter happens to know a little about them. With some prodding from Lincoln (Seth Gabel) they agree to let Peter help them out. Just like old times, sort of.

The case involves a kidnapped scientists who used to work for Massive Dynamic developing human cell replication. The project was nixed by William Bell due to some ethical argument but on the other side the project lived on. But there is a problem, and the shapeshifters are here to get the man who started it all to help fix it. Not surprisingly the man agrees, but only because he doesn’t really know what is going on. Things go bad very quickly.

After some fancy keyboard work Peter figures out that these new shapeshifters replicate down to the cellular level which means that they don’t bleed Mercury and unless you open them up you’d never know, opening the door for some shapeshifting moles in the FBI or even Fringe division. I expect this will come up again soon. In the meantime Peter has to figure out how to get everyone to recognize him again.

I mentioned earlier that this timeline is different and without Peter in the picture there are big changes in our main characters. Olivia (Anna Torv) and her sister were raised by Nina Sharp after her mother died and is interested in Lincoln. Walter has long since accepted the death of his son as well so when faced with an adult Peter he sees it as a temptation and a gift he is not worthy of receiving since it was his own selfishness that put them in their current situation to begin with. This Peter is merely another iteration of his dead son and he treats him as such. Peter could start telling them things about their lives that he knows but they may not even be valid any more in this timeline. I can’t wait to see how they resolve this.

REVIEW: Fringe “Subject 9″

 

So far this season Fringe has really delivered some top notch television and while I do enjoy the addition of Lincoln Lee (Seth Gabel) to the mix on our side he’s no Peter whose absence has really revealed his role as the anchor of the show. That isn’t to say that Olivia, Walter and Astrid aren’t very capable on their own but for me their story only works when I know Peter is lurking underneath. It could be argued that I have a soft spot for Joshua Jackson, and that would be correct, but I doubt I’m the only one ready for him to come back to Fringe. Well this week we got our wish.

Armed with the knowledge that Olivia (Anna Torv) has also been having visions of the same strange yet captivatingly handsome man who has been terrorizing the lab Walter (John Noble) sets up an elaborate camera trap based on an idea he got watching The Matrix. He aims to catch a photo of this man but isn’t having much luck, and Astrid (Jasika Nicole) is visibly annoyed with the whole project. The situation is further complicated by the strange cloud of electromagnetic energy that seems to be chasing Olivia and bending space/time a little bit. Walter wonders if one of the Cortexiphan kids might be behind it and he sets off for New York with Olivia to track down Subject 9, his first trip out of the lab in three years.

But what made Walter decide to leave the lab after all this time? I’m happy you asked. Walter noticed a letter to Olivia from St. Claire’s asking her about Walter’s mental state. His future is in her hands and if she thinks he isn’t coping well he will be sent back to the loony bin. He decided his best bet was to show Olivia he was improving, but it does not go so well. After an amusing and amazingly well acted journey down a New York sidewalk where his senses are being overloaded he has a complete meltdown in his hotel room over unseen germs on the bedspread. Olivia takes him out for a root beer float and he confesses his motives, and Olivia seems to be on his side but not completely sold on the whole sanity thing. Their date is cut short though when that ball of energy materializes in the diner and causes some mayhem.

Olivia and Walter finally track down Subject 9 who isn’t too happy about seeing Walter again. It doesn’t take long to determine he isn’t behind the Angry Blue Ball of Light but Walter thinks he can help destroy it. Olivia puts a stop to that business when the ball of light takes the shape of the handsome young man from her dreams and the Angry Blue Ball vanishes…and Peter emerges from the depths of Reiden Lake. For those following along, Reiden Lake is where Peter died as a child…both Peters.

John and Anna acted the shit out of this episode. These two continue to amaze me every week with their range and how the smallest thing can make or break a scene. In this Peter-free timeline we’ve been treated to yet another version of our main characters and how they evolved without Peter in their lives. The differences are mostly subtle but there all the same. Walter is a bit more off center and less grounded and Olivia seems a bit softer, but still cold. Both the scene in the hotel room and the scene where Cameron James confronts Walter about what he did to the Cortexiphan kids were powerful stuff. It was interesting to learn that she has a past with Nina Sharp (Blair Brown) and that Nina and Walter are not at all friendly. With Peter back I wonder if we will get to fully explore the new shared history here or if things will be reset again. The Observer was watching when Peter was reborn from the lake after all.

Fringe returns next Friday on Fox.

REVIEW: Fringe “One Night in October”

Just when I thought Fringe couldn’t get any better they pull out an episode like “One Night in October”. This was a perfect hour of television.

The crime this week takes place “over there” and involves a man extracting happy memories from his victims using a machine right out of The Matrix. Now that the two universes are working together a unique opportunity has presented itself. Fauxlivia (Anna Torv) suggests that they interview the killer’s alternate on our side for some insight into his mind. Brilliant! Our Olivia is skeptical of course and her fears are realized when the man finds something that links him to the suspect in a very personal way and bolts.

The revelation that one seemingly small change in someone’s path can result in such drastic differences in their lives. On our side the fact that John ran instead of enduring the beatings his father rained down on his alternate meant that he met a kind soul who taught him how to battle the darkness in his mind. Therefore he became a teacher instead of a killer. The lesson here being we are the product of our choices. Wise words indeed.

The real story this week is the interaction between Olivia and Fauxlivia. Each is learning a bit about the other during this period of cooperation and the subtlety of Anna Torv’s performance is just amazing. When Olivia admits to her counterpart that she killed her abusive stepfather you can see the wheels in Fauxlivia’s brain turning. How closely does that mirror her own childhood? Will we ever know? I must applaud the production team here because the scenes with the two Olivias are seamless. I completely believe that there are two Anna Torvs occupying the same space. This is a far cry from the ridiculous looking compositing being done on that new Sarah Michelle Gellar evil-twin series Ringer. I can’t wait till we get to see the two Lincoln’s meet. Imagine a Seth Gabel sandwich if you will.

Also worth noting is that the alternate Broyles (Lance Reddick) is alive. Remember when he died helping our Olivia escape the other side last season? This means we are on yet another timeline from the two we’ve been following since the second season. What else is different in this one? I’m going to have to bring out the whiteboard to plot all this out I think.

This episode also saw the return of Commando Astrid (Jasika Nicole) who is so smart she shudders ever so slightly when rattling off complex calculations like her head is about to explode with random knowledge. Our Astrid is much less high strung which I’m sure helps her tolerate Walter (John Noble) and his increasingly eratic behavior. But who can blame him? He hasn’t slept in weeks because Peter (Joshua Jackson), wherever he is, is keeping him awake shouting HELP ME WALTER, I’M RIGHT HERE! Peter is obviously getting stronger and I imagine it is just a matter of time before he makes his presence known to someone other than Walter.

Fringe returns next Friday at 9pm on Fox.

Fringe Season 4 promo is here!

The next Fringe Friday is September 23rd and it simply cannot get here fast enough. Season four of the best show on TV premieres that day and all the heavens shall rejoice! Until then we have to amuse ourselves with lots of pudding and fantasies about what our alternate selves are like. I’ve decided mine is totally a movie star. The first episode is titled “Neither Here Nor There” so check out this kick ass promo and stuff.

Producers are keeping a tight lip about exactly what Peter Bishops role will be in the new season. Joshua Jackson has been spotted on set so we know he at least appears in some capacity, whether that be flash backs or flash forwards or flash sideways remains to be seen. Whatever they do we can be pretty sure that Olivia will do some ass-kicking.

Are you ready?

Joshua Jackson waxes poetic about Fringe

Joshua Jackson (or Pacey as I like to call him cuz I’m a dork) has portrayed the dashing and witty Peter Bishop on Fringe for three long seasons now. He’s battled shape shifters, women who could make your head literally explode and been turned into a cartoon but in season four he might just face his biggest challenge yet as he told Entertainment Weekly:

If you didn’t see the season finale of Fringe this past spring then let me stop you right here. DO NOT READ ANY FURTHER cuz thar be spoilers in them there woods. Now, with that out of the way…let’s move on. 

There’s been a running joke since season three ended that Jackson is out of a job. When the Walternates converged and Peter’s story arc became so complicated he manipulated himself out of existence. POOF. Back to The Creek for Pacey. But with Fringe nothing is that simple.

“My hope is that the journey of Peter and the journey of the show pays off that cliffhanger we saw at the end of last year,” he says of season four. “It’s a pretty cool conceptual thing to allow the show to go off in this direction. So the show is going to be grappling with that from an emotional point all year,”

But what about Walter, his father? How will he manage without Peter around to keep him grounded? Joshua had this to say:

“I’m looking forward to hashing out a new permutation of it. Because the dynamic is going to be entirely changed.”

Changed is an understatement. At least Walter has Astrid around to bring him pudding now and then until this mess gets resolved. For an actor working on Fringe has got to be the best job in the world. Most of them get to play two roles, sometimes not so different but therein lies the challenge. Anna Torv has crafted two Olivias that are different is subtle ways which can be hard to portray effectively. Torv has owned it and made them both her bitch and even thrown in a Leonard Nimoy impression that made me want to slap William Shatner.

John Noble‘s two Walters on the other hand are vastly different and he switches back and forth with ease. Peter exists only in one world though since his “alternate” died when he was a kid, setting the events we are witnessing now in motion. Rebooting Peter in season four will be a special treat for Jackson.

“To me, I was glad they were able to go that big with the cliffhanger last year. The nobility of that sacrifice is a great ending for the Peter we used to know. His journey was to grow up and become a man, become part of a family and dedicate himself to something. The ultimate test of that was, ‘The choice is them or you.’ So I think the guy who would come back to us now would be a changed man.”

I’ve tried to work out how season four will play out in my head all summer and I’ve got nothing. To say I’m excited is mildly downplaying the reality of it. I’m damn near rabid. That being said, the idea that Peter got transported back to Dawson’s Creek and wakes up on that damn dock wondering what the hell happened is a visual too amazingly awesome to let go of. I think a Funny or Die skit is in order. God knows Van Der Beek will be up for it.

Josh, you listening?

follow me on Twitter @omgneal

 

What No Fringe at the 2011 Emmys?

 

I’m not much of an awards show guy. They are overly long and mostly boring to watch but I do want to see the shows and actors I enjoy get recognition when deserved. Apparently I have angered the Emmy Gods this year because while one show I enjoy got some nods the one I thought most deserved to win it all was completely snubbed. *shakes fist*

Oh Emmy Gods, where is the love for Fringe? Anna Torv mopped the floor with just about everyone this year and I can’t say enough about John Noble & Josh Jackson, who happened to be announcing the nominees this morning. And Jasika Nicole! Lance Reddick! These people are all playing TWO CHARACTERS. They should get double nominations right? I mean come on…not one? Emmy you are a fickle wench indeed. Maybe that weird globe you are always holding is getting too heavy for you.

AMC’s The Killing got two acting nods, Michelle Forbes for Supporting Actress in a Drama and Mireille Enos for Best Actress in a Drama….both very deserved. Chris Colfer got another Best Supporting Actor nomination this year as well which I fully support. I am also in favor of the 21 nominations for HBO’s Mildred Pierce. Scroll down for a list of the major awards.

OUTSTANDING DRAMA
Boardwalk Empire
Dexter
Friday Night Lights
Game of Thrones
The Good Wife
Mad Men

OUTSTANDING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA
Julianna Margulies (The Good Wife)
Kathy Bates (Harry’s Law)
Mariska Hargitay (Law and Order: SVU)
Connie Britton (Friday Night Lights)
Elisabeth Moss (Mad Men)
Mireille Enos (The Killing)

OUTSTANDING ACTOR IN A DRAMA
Jon Hamm (Mad Men)
Kyle Chandler (Friday Night Lights)
Steve Buscemi (Boardwalk Empire)
Michael C. Hall (Dexter)
Hugh Laurie (House)
Timothy Olyphant (Justified)

OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA
John Slattery (Mad Men)
Josh Charles (The Good Wife)
Andre Braugher (Men of a Certain Age)
Walton Goggins (Justified)
Alan Cumming (The Good Wife)
Peter Dinklage (Game of Thrones)

OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA
Christina Hendricks (Mad Men)
Archie Panjabi (The Good Wife)
Christine Baranski (The Good Wife)
Margo Martindale (Justified)
Kelly Macdonald (Boardwalk Empire)
Michelle Forbes (The Killing)

OUTSTANDING COMEDY
The Big Bang Theory
The Office
Parks and Recreation
Modern Family
Glee
30 Rock

OUTSTANDING ACTRESS IN A COMEDY
Melissa McCarthy (Mike & Molly)
Tina Fey (30 Rock)
Martha Plimpton (Raising Hope)
Amy Poehler (Parks and Recreation)
Edie Falco (Nurse Jackie)
Laura Linney (The C Word)

OUTSTANDING ACTOR IN A COMEDY
Alec Baldwin (30 Rock)
Louis C.K. (Louie)
Steve Carell (The Office)
Johnny Galecki (The Big Bang Theory)
Jim Parsons (The Big Bang Theory)
Matt LeBlanc (Episodes)

OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A COMEDY
Chris Colfer (Glee)
Jon Cryer (Two and a Half Men)
Eric Stronestreet (Modern Family)
Ty Burrell (Modern Family)
Ed O’Neil (Modern Family)

OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A COMEDY
Jane Lynch (Glee)
Betty White (Hot in Cleveland)
Jane Krakowski (30 Rock)
Julie Bowen (Modern Family)
Sofia Vergara (Modern Family)
Kristen Wiig (Saturday Night Live)

OUTSTANDING REALITY SHOW COMPETITION
Project Runway
American Idol
The Amazing Race
So You Think You Can Dance
Dancing with the Stars

OUTSTANDING VARIETY, MUSIC, OR COMEDY SERIES
The Colbert Report
The Daily Show With Jon Stewart
Conan
Real Time with Bill Maher
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon

OUTSTANDING REALITY SHOW HOST

Phil Keoghan (Amazing Race)
Ryan Seacrest (American Idol)
Tom Bergeron (Dancing with the Stars)
Cat Deeley (So You Think You Can Dance)
Jeff Probst (Survivor)