Season 4, Episodes 19-20
“I find it’s best just to go with it.”
It looks like my prediction in my last Fringe review was right – we have
entered the next leg of storytelling for the season/show, one which has mostly
dropped the frustrating “Peter was erased from the universe” storyline in favor
of something more straightforward and easier to connect to. I only have to
wonder if this was the sort of move that was planned out all along – you know
show runners, always saying that they “have a plan”, a statement which is only
true about a third of the time – or if this is a reaction to all of the
criticism that was lobbed against the season late last year. Me, I have to
think it’s the latter, but I’m not really sure how I feel about the show
turning so fully away from the angle they were working it. In contrast,
suddenly dropping what had originally been the main theme is quite jarring to
watch, and I’m not sure that the show’s new bit of serialization is going to do
it any favors either.
The problem then comes in the bits of new mythology/table
setting, which will take the show through the finale (and probably well into
the 13 episode fifth and final season next fall). That the Observers would
eventually take rule over humanity makes a bit of sense given what we learned
in the info-dump scene in “The End of All Things”, but it, much like the random
shot of William Bell trapped in the amber, seems like a potentially dangerous bit
of goal-setting for the show. It’s sort of like when Lost switched from incorporation flashbacks to using flash-forwards
(and then flash-sideways) in the second half of its life. Setting in-show goals
posts for the story is great, but it also can turn everything between the first
forward reveal and the finale bits of connective tissue into sort of
perfunctory filling in of the blanks, depending on the quality of the writing. Fringe has proven itself to be both a
great and a middling show at various points in its life (as well as everything
in between), so what happens from here is still very much up in the air.
However, with such a risky gamble, it’s going to take a lot of legwork to have
it all be worth it.
Such a job would seem to fall on “Worlds Apart” as the
episode that follows all of that game-changing stuff. Instead, it returned us
to all of the plot points that were apparent before “Letters of Transit” went
and mucked everything up further. These points, as you may remember, have to do
all Robert David Jones and his ascension to big bad status within the season. I’m
fine with this development mostly, as it now gives the Fringe Team something
more concrete to strive for (that is, stopping Jones) than dealing with the
Great Mysteries of the Universe as they had been doing when the show was so
focused on Peter’s disappearance. And seeing Jones; plan slowly unravel – first
the “eye of the storm” test of “Welcome To Westfield”, then the creature
experiments of “Nothing As It Seems”, and finally the universe harmonization of
“The Consultant” – has had a nice methodical build to it. That it all
culminated in “Worlds Apart” speaks to the writers’ ability to build an arc
properly, something that was missing in the first have of the season.
What I’m not sure of is how the show planes of connecting
Jones’ master plot to collapse the two universes with the future actions of the
Observers. Now, given what we know about the future – that in roughly three
years time, Peter, Walter, and Olivia will be able to focus on a rebellion
against the Observers – it seems likely that they will be able to find a way to
stop Jones. (I doubt the closing of the Bridge is enough to stop him outright.)
But how Jones’ defeat will lead into this other story that we know about
remains unclear. Obviously there don’t have to connection in order for it to
make sense – one problem is destroyed, and another could pop up – but not doing
so might be to the show’s peril. Fringe
is a heavily serialized show, and that usually means that plots and arc flow
from one to the other, in a hopefully linear and a logical fashion. It’s the
sort of narrative connective tissue that keeps viewers entertained and allows
them to follow the story without feeling like they’re rubbernecking.
When such a thing doesn’t happen, that’s when we get
something like Peter’s disappearance – a plot development that comes with
little or no explanation, and seems only to exist to keep the story moving
forward, regardless of it’s relation to the already established story. The
pointlessness of Peter’s disappearance was only further cemented by the past
few episodes, which have dropped the storyline with very little effort, and managed
to refocus on something that’s a bit more traditional in scope. I suppose I
could be mad at the show for dropping something that they had seem to indicate
was SO IMPORTANT in favor of something else, but the truth is that I’m just
happy to be moving on from something that I could never connect to.
I especially endorse the move when it’s something that
allows the show to finally cash in on the potential that was hinted at in the
season three finale, by allowing the two Fringe teams on each universe to
interact with one another more. It’s something that was sorely missing from the
earlier parts of the season (even if I can only identify that was a problem in
hindsight), and it made the past string of episodes pop. As such, I’m a little
upset that that potential setup wasn’t exploited more, and only seemed to exist
in order to be a solution (however temporary) to Jones’ plans to destroy both
universes. I know that there are budget considerations in play in regards to
how many times we were able to see the doppelgangers interact with one another.
But every time we did, it was done with much grace and pathos, and managed to
give a lot of humanity to those that we had originally thought of as villains. Much
like Walter, I think I’m going to miss seeing the Earth-2 residences quite
dearly. Let’s just hope the show finds ways to bring them back once again.
So Fringe, if
you want to shift gears one more time with your storytelling one more time
before you go off the air? Fine, go ahead. I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt
because A) I can see where you’re headed with this, B) you’ve tried to give it
something resembling proper build-up and C) this is the sort of story that’s
right up your alley. But please, let’s not return to 2036 any more than we have
to. Seeing Lance Reddick in old man makeup one time was enough for me, thanks.
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