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Fringe - 3.15 Subject 13 Review by A.D.Harris

Mar 2, 2011

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As I didn't write a Fringe review for last seasons flashback bonanza episode 'Peter' I want to start by saying just how awesome the title credits are for the episodes where we head back into the past. It's a genius touch that really gets you into the mindset for the episode and definitely makes it feel more of an event than usual episodes are. Also, these episodes are very cleverly shot to appear quite hazy, almost as if the test of time has made some things a little unclear and distant.
As for the retro music, that adds classic 80's suspense to the scenes and is another touch of genius; It's music you just don't hear any more on screen and so the fact that Fringe is brave enough and smart enough to throw it at you is refreshing and a lot of fun.
'Subject 13' was always going to be compared with 'Peter,' its events so closely following on from that episode and its need to rely on John Noble to reign you into an episode that features no other main cast. 'Subject 13' in fact went one step further as there was no bookends to present time like 'Peter' offered and so we were given our first ever Anna Torv free Fringe hour. I can't explain enough how brave a TV show has to be to have an episode with only one of its regulars featuring; even LOST never ventured so dangerously close to scaring away its fans in that respect. ( believe it went as low as two, LOST fanatics correct me if you can :P)

There is one man who just made that danger disappear completely and his name is John Noble; whilst he didn't have to carry the whole episode himself (thanks largely to a fantastic supporting performance by Orla Brady) he totally nailed both Walter and Walternate to heights even he hadn't reached before. He gave Walter the real emotion that his ultimate decision to keep Peter on our side needed by showing his troubles coming to terms with the fact he couldn't return him like he had promised Alt-Elizabeth.
More impressive however was his portrayal as Walternate, at last I got the part of the story I felt Walternate needed to humanise him; I had been waiting for it as I felt that it was crucial to see the transition of this man from father to almost machine. Noble's performance was one that deserves to be rewarded with every supporting award that 2011 has to offer and if he doesn't even get a nomination I feel Fringe fans should demand an explanation as to what more an actor could do on the small screen. (Join @ANobleEmmy on Twitter to show your Support)
The opening scene was something. Creepy, dramatic, tense and scary it provided the quiet distress that pulled the whole episode forwards. I never really fully recovered my heart rate from that moment and it made everything that followed pack more of a punch because you really knew what was driving Peter and Elizabeth for the entirety of the episode. I thought Orla Brady and Chandler Canterbury did a fantastic job; we almost need to see nothing more of Elizabeth Bishop on our side to fully understand her character. Her slope to suicide from here on was defined by the lie she told when she finally managed to convince Peter he was her son. That truly was the moment that Peter was never going to go back home.
On a side note, was that plane the exact same one Kate in LOST used to love and cherish. I'm all for shoutouts to the island but it felt far too much like copy and paste from one Abrams show to another there and I didn't like it. Surely the Fringe writers would know that Kate flashbacks were often the most boring anyhow, so reminding us of them is not a wise move.

Also in the episode we got a good dose of Cortexiphan Trials; it was also really great to see some of the time Olivia spent with her nasty step father that was first mentioned back in season one. It gave much more of an understanding as to the character Olivia is today; broken and damaged through abuse and broken memories. We know that she forgot her time on the cortexiphan trials, she even said last season that she had "no recollection" of the nursery in Jacksonville, and it was clear to see just why. The dark irony that runs throughout the series is that Walter, for all his attempts to do and find the good in the world has caused many of the main characters actions and personalities through his earlier life.
One thing that disappoints me, and has done for some time is William Bell. I'm sure that casting Leonard Nimoy was a very exciting offer the producers couldn't pass on but from a storyline perspective it has robbed us of important understanding to his character. I remember that Walter even stated that the Cortexiphan Trials where Bell's ideas that they worked on together, yet he was barely mentioned and not seen in the episode that showed us the trials. A less-close-to-retirement-actor would have shown his face in 'Subject 13' without a doubt in my mind and so to lose one of the key characters to the past because Nimoy doesn't want to work as much is a loss for the fans. I can't count on both hands the numbers of times I have thought to myself, Bell should have been in this episode. But he isn't. As a result it made Walter look bad; one of the main reasoning I saw behind Walter's sorrow in conducting the trials in the present day was because he and Bellie were trying to save the world. Now it appears he alone was just trying to find a way to send Peter home and it lacks less emotional punch; regardless it's something I can live with.
Looking at the trials themselves, it was fascinating to see them practice, the transitional move Walter had to take to try to find a way to activate Olivia was cleverly done, the script written to show Walter's difficulty in pushing the boundaries of science to achieve his results. That being said, the experiment where Olivia went all pyro was some dark stuff. Fake-dead-Nick-Lane is one hell of a sickening plan to put into practice. Interesting parallels could be drawn up also from the fact that Nick survived a fire explosion much like the one that has supposedly killed him in last seasons finale. Could he still be alive somewhere?
Turning to over there, we learnt that Walternate, much like our Elizabeth has taken to the drinks as a way of dealing with Peter-Issues.

Could this be a subtle foreshadowing of Walternates future; perhaps, but it is too early to tell. A clever twist in some sense could be that Walter and Alternate Elizabeth dealt with Peter in a more positive way and Walternate and Elizabeth both found themselves almost cut off from reality. Regardless, I finally felt like I understood Walternate as I knew how he began to deal with Peters disappearance and so the path he took to becoming the 'monster' he is today felt more believable and clear. Maybe now I can begin to actually like the present day Walternate more; this still remains to be seen.
Then the most important moments in the episode, revolving all around Olivia and her first few trips to the other side. The first one in her home was a little disappointing. Whilst initially being very cool to see her jumping from her home to a field was cool, but the whole blimp = alternate universe concept is boring me now. Surely a Fringe fan who has got this far has enough brain cells to work out where she is without being spoon fed. Or is it that there has to be blimps around to cross over :P? It's a bit too same old, same old and they need to freshen that concept up.

More interesting concept wise was the white tulips in the field, harkening back to the time bending love story that was the episode 'White Tulip.' The thoughts were clearly that Peter disappeared and that was because he went to find Olivia in a field of white tulips. This was the point where Peter began to accept he belongs over here. Regardless of the fact Walter doesn't know this, we as an audience can symbolise that with Walter when he got the white tulip in the mail and how because of that Walter believed that Peter could forgive him and once again accept that he belongs here. Olivia in the season two finale even says "you belong with me." It's perhaps some subliminal messaging from the writers telling us that everything will be okay and that Peter will always belong with us. We can only hope.
Turning my attention back to the second Olivia trip to the other side, it was a moment of classic Fringe, perhaps my favourite singular moment of the entire series. It fooled me, leaving me stunned and in awe of the film-making and script writing. Olivia runs to talk to Walter about her step father, dashing into his office with her sketch book explaining that she crossed over when he hit her. What first appears as Walters amazement that she crossed over is then flipped around when our Walter walks into the room and we discover that Olivia has told Walternate about other universes. It was so, so awesomely done that it just made me applaud (and rewatch it a few times). Walternate opens the sketch book and sees an image of her and Peter in the field of white tulips; the father now knows where his son is. And he now knows who has him. Genius. Utter genius.
A funny shoutout was the 'Bishop Dynamic' which was...
OBSERVER ALERT:

...set up in an attempt to find Peter, and its clear symbolism to 'Massive Dynamic' may hint at what sort of practises goes on inside such a building.
Also was that a rocket through his office window?
Knowing Fringe as well as I do, I'm calling first dibs on the Observers landing on earth for the first time on it.

There I said it. The great thing about Fringe is, You never know...

9/10

Adam

Don't forget you can follow me on Twitter and Facebook.
Twitter: @AdDHarris
Facebook: Adam D.Harris

Read my other Fringe Season Three Reviews Here:
3.01 Olivia
3.02 The Box
3.03 The Plateau
3.04 Do Shapeshifters Dream of Electric Sheep?
3.05 Amber 31422
3.06 6995 kHz
3.07 The Abducted
3.08 Entrada
3.09 Marionette
3.10 The Firefly
3.11 Reciprocity
3.12 Concentrate & Ask Again
3.13 Immortality
3.14 6B

21 comments:

  1. joel said the reason nick survived is because olivias pyro doesnt affect organic material only inanimate objects.

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  2. Cool. Well, the other girl was a Cortexiphan Subject. Who's to say hers isn't the same :P

    hahaha.

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  3. Woah. I really like the idea of seeing the Observers landing on Earth! That would just be insane, dare I say even more epic than 'Ab Aeterno' was for LOST considering how far back the time jump would be.

    On a similar note, if we do see a third universe, I want it to be the Observer/First People universe. I want to see a world that branched off MILLIONS of years ago instead of as recently as the red universe, one where the world is full of Observers and their technology. Now that would be a third universe worth exploring!

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  4. It wasn't the same toy plane as Kate's in LOST, hers was much much smaller however there was another blatant copy-and-paste job (if you wanna call it that, I just call it a cool shout-out) in the wooden puzzle Walter was making Olivia try to solve to test for anger, it was seemingly an exact replica of the Project Christmas puzzle Sydney was made to solve when she was a child in Alias (and then her daughter solved it in the final moments of the season finale).

    "Developed by the Central Intelligence Agency and headed by Jack Bristow in the 1970s, the project was designed to identify and train children as sleeper agents to become future spies."

    Sounds like the season 1 ZFT storyline in Fringe don't you think? ;)

    ReplyDelete
  5. facebook-632665612March 2, 2011 at 3:56 PM

    Yes. I never said the SAME plane. I said 'like', as in an easter egg and shout out! I just wrote this all out the other day on the forum and reposted my thoughts here because there are so many little things tying back.

    I also pointed out Project Christmas on that the same discussion thread and on Alex's review. If you notice there are red and green lights through out Fringe also making us think of 'Christmas'. --And "Christmas" was the code word Olivia used to tell the FBI to move in when dealing with "Commrad" in "The Transformation" In addition Peter lived across the street from a little girl named Sydney when he was kid ("Grey Matters")

    In addition Tales of the Fringe comic number 1, second story, "LOST TIME" (another shout out to LOST) also features a girl named Nikki, whom has a weird experience, where she takes a drug at a party titled, "F", in which she travels (in her mind-astral projects) to the future! She is ten or so years older and is a sleeper agent fighting against the man who programmed her, whom she didn't "meet" until after returning back to her current time.

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  6. JJ you crafty little guy haha

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  7. Also in my defence regarding the plane you (Judging by your wording I'm assuming you're the author) did use the word "exact" ;P

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  8. She's not, she's a SpoilerTV Fringe Show Experts from the forum. I think she was commenting on her own theory/comment that was just above yours :)

    I wrote it. And it looked so similar and it's importance to the storyline felt too much like a copy and paste from LOST. I love shoutouts though, but that one for me was a little too obvious :P

    Thanks for the comments though, and the Alias stuff does sound similar. It's something I've meant to watch for a while but have never gotten round to it.

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  9. Thanks. It would be cool. Pretty unlikely I guess, but I was half making a joke on the fact that with Fringe pretty much anything is possible.

    And so I get the credit if the incredible does come true :P

    ReplyDelete
  10. Whoops, seems you thought my original comment was directed at you, which it wasn't, it was directed at the review :)

    ReplyDelete
  11. Wow. When you write it like that it's almost like I'm watching LOST 2.0

    The father issues is something that Abrams shows seem to like. As season one, episode ten of LOST said, "All The Best Cowboys Have Daddy Issues."

    I'm sure Peter would agree :P

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  12. Ah I see haha my bad. But yeah Alias was a great show. Had its weaker seasons but shared a lot of ground with Fringe thematically and had some great characters and twists along the way.

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  13. Haven't finished the entire review yet, but alt Peter...well our Peter...you know what I mean... has always had a thing for planes. It was established in "Peter" last season. I don't know if it was a direct link to Kate's plane or not, but just wanted to point that out... The kid likes airplanes...

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  14. Great review! As for Olivia's first crossing over the blimp is the biggest sign that we're on the other side and I think it was more for the characters than the audience to realize that she crossed over (Walter wouldn't have found out if she hadn't drawn it). But I agree, it would be nice if they used something else for a change. What a twist that Olivia was the one who told Walternate! I wonder if Walternate knows that the woman he maliciously experiments on over 20 years later is the same little girl that crossed over into his office and told him about the other universe. I wonder if he still has the drawing and I wonder if Olivia's ever going to remember or find out about it.

    As far as William Bell didn't it say that he abandoned the research in 1983? So I'm wondering if the trials were done but when Peter was taken from the other side, Walter started them back up again to find a way to get him back home. Just a thought. It's also possible that by this time William Bell was already on the other side too. One question I have: If Walter's crossing over that one time did so much damage, then how did William Bell's crossing over multiple times not? All this blame is on Walter, but you'd think that Bell did even more damage with how many times he crossed over. Or was it because Walter took Peter? And if that's the case, then how would crossing over again to return him do even more damage? Wouldn't it restore the balance? Maybe I missed it but I feel like this has never been explained well...

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  15. One interesting thing about young Peter's toy plane, is the commentary that he makes while playing with it:

    "Approaching the building, requesting clearance to dock. [imitates plane engines whirring]"

    Sounds like he's playing with a zeppelin!

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  16. The white tulips looked kind of cooked to me and those are organic...

    If you watch the 'Subject 13' scene in slow motion you can clearly see that the flames go around Nick. I guess it's because of his abilities. We know that they were not working properly in 'Over There Part 1'. And I am sure getting shot didn't help either...

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  17. I didn't catch that! Nice one writers.

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  18. facebook-632665612March 3, 2011 at 1:17 AM

    Darthlocke:

    Perhaps Rambaldi, is an 'Other', and the Island is the technology of the First People (;.

    j/k.....or am I?

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  19. facebook-632665612March 3, 2011 at 1:18 AM

    Darthlocke:

    My bad too! Sorry!

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  20. Damn, I didn't notice all those allusion to LOST, except the plane ;)

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  21. Very good review ! :)
    I loved the episode, and the scene when little Olivia is locked in the room at night reminds me the episode when old Olivia is locked in the other universe, when she says " please let me get out of here " or something like that, I don't remember the episode, it gotta be the finale of season 2 ;)

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