Episode One – Pilot – Review

My Score 78/100

Fringe, the latest new ip (intellectual property) from mister money in the bank, J.J. Abhams, aired on 9/9/09. The show has gotten many comparisons to that other Fox show… the name slips my mind… oh yeah, X-Files, and from what I saw in the first episode, deservedly so. It doesn’t help that the main characters are FBI agents that are investigating “unnatural” events that are happening. I wasn’t a fan of the stale love angle that was in the episode but without spoiling the plot, I must say it ended in an interesting way.

Agent Olivia Dunham looking very angry

Agent Olivia Dunham looking very angry

The pacing of the show was slow and badly acted, but the actors have potential which would make the dialogue bad. It starts off with an expensive bang with people turning translucent and melting all over this “smart plane” that lands itself in Boston. This eventually leads to Agent Olivia Dunham (Anna Torv) investigating a crime scene that leads to her partner Agent Scott (Mark Valley) getting disfigured and dying.

The last 25-30 minutes of the show really picked up as we learned more about what fringe sciences are and how the kooky Dr. Walter Bishop (John Noble) implemented the particular science in this installment. In this episode, the science implemented was “Mental Transference, ” in which Agent Dunham volunteers to be Dr. Bishop’s first test subject in some 17 years to save the agent she has a secret romantic relationship with, Agent Scott. She had to lay in a rusty tub of water with “Matrix” tubes in the back of her head while doped up with LSD so she could connect with Agent Scott to find his attempted killer so they could interrogate the criminal to find a cure for Scott . The concept was interesting but the corny love plot put a wrench in a well designed scheme. The uncovering of all of the events known as “the pattern,” is where the show… shows it’s legs. The show takes a predictable turn that ends in our new team of Agent Dunham, Dr. Bishop, and Peter Bishop (Joshua Jackson) coming together for the long haul and the demise of Agent Scott. There is a lot of upside to the show with all of the sciences to be uncovered and all of the secrets that are yet to be revealed.  Fringe has as much potential as X-Files to become a hit show and this is evident in the first episode. However, the pilot in itself had bad dialogue, a stale feel, and no identity of its own.

Star of the Show

– Gene the Cow -

There are 3 reasons why Gene stole the show. 1) It taught me that cow’s and human’s DNA are only separated by a few strands. 2) She eats Chinese food. 3) Watching her getting pulled through Harvard during classes is hilarious. How many times have you seen a cow starring on network TV?

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