Fringe may be dead and gone, but thanks
to syndication on the Science Channel, not to mention the magic of a home
releases, you’ll have ample opportunities to watch and re-watch your favorite
Fringe cases. This is a show that really benefits from the ability to watch in
a marathon format. As you move through the series and each episode becomes more
and more connected to those that came before, and those that come after, it’s
nice to view them one after another for continuity’s sake.
It’s been almost a month since Fringe
drew to a close. In remembrance of the show, gone much too soon, I wanted to
look back at a few of my personal favorite moments, cases, and episodes. So
here are a handful of particularly memorable episodes in roughly descending
order. By no means is this an exhaustive list, and if you asked me tomorrow, it
might be completely different.
“Snakehead”: Season 2, Episode 9
Gross giant worms. Does anything else need to be said? When
asked which Fringe moment creeped them out the most,
multiple cast members cited the mutant nematode worms from “Snakehead” as
giving them the willies like nothing else. Filming this actually made Joshua
Jackson go and dry heave. This is one of the best creature episodes of the
series.
Even with the high gross-out factor, there is an incredibly
emotional component as well. When a stubborn Walter (John Noble) sets out on
his own to look for clues on a case, he inadvertently puts Astrid (Jasika
Nicole), and himself, in danger. Watching the scientist, so brilliant in some
areas, fumble around, unable to remember where he lives or his son’s phone
number, is heartbreaking.
“Brown Betty”: Season 2, Episode 20
For a show with as many memorable, unique episodes as
Fringe, “Brown Betty” ranks among the most distinctive.
Named after a particularly potent strain of Walter’s marijuana—any episode
named after the mad scientist’s various drugs are a good time, see also “Black
Blotter”—the story is notable for not only being told as a noir-style detective
yarn, but also as a musical. Getting to hear Walter sing “Head Over Heels” by
Tears For Fears is a good time indeed.
A lot of people hate on the musical component of “Brown
Betty.” The device is a radical departure from their usual territory, to be
sure, as well as a huge risk. But it’s also a fun twist and an interesting
narrative technique. Through Walter’s storytelling within the episode, you get
an oblique look at how his mind works and how he views himself. He does portray
himself as the inventor of rainbows and hugs, but there is also an edge of
darkness and menace to his self-image.
“Jacksonville”/“Peter”: Season Two, Episodes 15 and 16
After a building from the other side merges with one from
the prime universe, the team takes a road trip to Jacksonville, Florida, to the
facility where Walter and William Bell (Leonard Nimoy) experimented on the
Cortexiphan kids. Given the fact that Olivia (Anna Torv) was a part of these
trials, this trip stirs up some deep seeded memories and emotions. She is forced
to confront her past, as is Walter, who also must try to come to terms with
some of the questionable things he’s done in the name of science and progress.
“Jacksonville” is the episode where we first uncover
Olivia’s ability to spot things from the other side, from the alternate
universe. She sees a shimmery glow around the items, and the hour ends when she
looks at Peter, a golden glow around him.
“Peter” plays something like the second part of a
to-be-continued episode. The moment when Liv realizes that Peter is not of this
universe opens up a whole world of questions. Walter breaks down the chain of
event that includes his Peter getting sick and dying,
creating the window into the alternate reality, and watching another version of
his son dying on the other side.
Not only is this an intensely emotional episode all
around—again, stirring up long dormant feelings—this is where we learn about the
extent of Walter’s interference. His meddling set the two universes on a
collision course, one that may doom them both.
Events in “Peter” echo even further, reaching past the point when the dual-universe drama has been largely resolved. When the Observer September (Michael Cerveris) rescues the father and son from the frigid waters of Reiden Lake, this plays a part in his path as well. As we learn in the final season, September was influenced by the love between fathers and sons—largely between Walter and Peter—which leads him away from the emotionless, entirely rational nature of his kind.
“Letters of Transit”: Season 4, Episode 19
“Letters of Transit” transports the Fringe team to the year
2036, where the Observers have taken over. This episode sets the stage for the
finale of Fringe—this is the world where the fifth and final
season takes place. It also ups the stakes yet again, both as the individual
characters are concerned, and for the entire human race. We also get introduced
to Henrietta (Georgina Haig), the heretofore-unknown daughter of Peter and
Olivia.
This is also indicative of the show’s courage and
willingness to take risk. Even though they knew they would likely be cancelled
soon, that knowledge didn’t stop them from staying true to the spirit of the
show, and pushing it in directions that no one expected, and taking enormous
risks.
“Liberty”/ “An Enemy of Fate”: Season 5, Episodes 12 and 13
Though envisioned as two distinct episodes, “Liberty” and
“An Enemy of Fate” were presented as what as essentially one two-hour long
series finale. Five years built toward this, and even though it wasn’t a
perfect send off—no conclusion will ever please everyone—this end does a worthy
job of wrapping things up, which is why putting it this close to the top of my
list feels like an appropriate choice.
These two episodes are full of fun little nods to longtime
fans of Fringe, like the when Peter and Olivia storm the
Observers HQ using a bunch of old Fringe cases as ammunition—they unleash the
butterflies from “Dreamscape” and the worms from “Snakehead,” among others. You
get to say goodbye to old friends like Fauxlivia and Lincoln Lee (Seth Gable).
And most importantly, the characters get exactly what they need. It may not always
be the easiest path, but they in the end they do what they must to find
redemption. All in all, the series ends on more of a positive note than many of
us expected.
“Pilot”: Season 1, Episode 1
While this maybe may not be the best episode from a quantifiable
standpoint, the more I think about it, the harder it is to place the pilot
episode anywhere but in the number one spot. This is, after all, the episode
that started it all, that introduced us to an upstart young FBI agent, an
institutionalized mad scientist, his globe trotting con man of a son, and a
whole bunch of weird ass shit.
I didn’t give Fringe a fair shake until
the first season came out on DVD, in part because I didn’t have access to
network TV at the time, and partly because I dismissed it as an
X-Files knock off. As important as all the craziness is to
Fringe—and there’s a good deal of that in the pilot, what
with the guy disintegrating on an airplane—the show has always been about the
relationships between the characters. Though it takes time to establish those,
this is where all of that starts.
The moment when Fringe first clicked for
me, when I really thought that this was something I could get behind, was when
we first meet Walter. He’s sitting there in Sinclair’s, disheveled and insane
looking, and there’s such an overwhelming sadness about him. This is one of the
most enduring images of the show. That feeling infuses everything he does as
the series progresses. As giddy and lighthearted as he can be as he waxes
philosophical about a particularly memorable batch of blotter acid, the weight
of every terrible thing he’s ever done is always right there with him. He feels
the consequences so acutely that he can never escape his past, all he can do is
attempt to make amends. This carries through to the final moments of the
series.
So that’s my list. The number is arbitrary because it could
go on almost indefinitely, and yours is probably something completely different.
Do you miss Fringe? What are your favorite episodes?
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