Jasika is candid at TV Guide
Monday, November 10th, 2008http://www.tvguide.com/News/Fringe-Jasika-Nicole-27410.aspx
Actress Jasika Nicole talks about her role as Astrid Farnsworth, her artistic side, and acting along side Gene.
http://www.tvguide.com/News/Fringe-Jasika-Nicole-27410.aspx
Actress Jasika Nicole talks about her role as Astrid Farnsworth, her artistic side, and acting along side Gene.
Score: 85/100
Fringe came back stronger this week with “The Cure.” A strange woman gets dropped off in the middle of the street. Disoriented and alone, she wanders into a coffee shop. The unsuspecting staff and patrons don’t know they are about to get their brains gooified when this strange woman goes “Carrie” when the local policeman tries to take her in as a 5150. The woman now known as Emily Kramer (Maria Dizzia) had a seemingly incurable disease by the name of Bellini’s lymphocemia as the white suited Dr. Bishop observed. This leads our team in the direction of Intrepus, a rival company of Massive Dynamic. Another woman by the name of Claire Williams (Marjan Neshat) has gone missing and Olivia is hard pressed to find her before she goes kaboom. She confronts David Esterburg, a high profile executive at Intrepus and that leads to little more than a chewing out from Broyles. So Peter asks for a friendly favor from Nina Sharp from Massive Dynamic and this gives our team a location to move on and save Claire Williams before her brain becomes strudel. 
“The Cure” was different from the other episodes because there was no chase scene and it moved at a slower pace. I liked Olivia’s character finally in this episode although I’m still not sold on Anna Torv’s acting. Agent Dunham showed emotion. We got to delve into her past as well which gives her character much needed depth. I also noticed that every episode with Nina Sharp in it has hints and storylines leading to future episodes, hence, Nina Sharp equals good show. Peter and Walter are inconsistent in their characters but their chemistry is good enough and they keep the show lighthearted. I do want to know when Astrid forgave Walter for stabbing her in the neck with a sedative.
Star of the Show: Mr Papaya
Also known as the “friendliest fruit,” Mr Papaya took one for the team in the worst way. He has shown more emotion than 90% of the Fringe characters. He also made Gene jump.
Score: 79/100
Fringe comes back out the stable after a week lay off with a bit of a whimper. The episode starts off with a down in the dumps, working class delivery boy that has confidence issues and an unhealthy crush on a woman he barely knows. Unusual things start happening to the electronics around him. This eventually leads to an unfortunate elevator accident that leaves four people dead. Since nothing in Boston happens accidentally anymore, our team is on the case. Dr. Bishop discovers that the accident is no accident. A human is causing random electromagnetic accidents by the name of Joseph Meegar (Ebon Moss-Bachrach). This leads us to this weeks Fringe science; human electro-magnetic altering, which amplifies the normal bio electricity found in humans. An evil doctor by the name of Jacob Fischer (Max Baker) was the brains behind the experiment and also hot on the trail of Mr. Meeger. The bad doctor is able to find Meeger first but our awesome team is able to track them down and save the day once again.
What makes Fringe a good show is the exciting climax of each episode and intrigue that each episode leaves for the next episode. This particular episode had neither. The ongoing relationship with Olivia and John is going in so many different directions that it’s becoming silly. I believe the writers are pushing their relationship for a dramatic climax, but I don’t need Olivia being lovestruck over a dead guy every episode. The other main characters were blah especially since both Peter’s and Walter’s storyline were becoming very interesting. I think it was a bad idea to not develop the characters of Peter and Walter after a week lay off. The climax in the episode was very anticlimactic and there was little foreshadowing for the next episode. Fringe needs to pull off some fireworks for the next few episodes to get some notice in a crowded fall season.
Star of the Show: Pigeons
Pigeons have gotten a bad wrap since we don’t need them anymore. Before telephones and a reliable postal service, pigeons were our way to communicate swiftly over far distances. Now we think of pigeons as dirty flying rats that we wish off the face of the Earth, but this episode gave the low bird on the totem pole a well deserved hug.
Score – 94/100
It keeps getting better and better. This is the most intriguing episode yet. It starts off with a bang when a guy with no hair devours the most delicious roast beef, pepper, jalapeno, Tabasco sandwich ever. All of a sudden, something comes from underground and creates tons of chaos for a construction site and a neighboring building. The bald guy confirms the mysterious object from the ground with an unknown colleague that turns out to be a vibrating cylinder. Our hero trio is of course put on the case. This cylinder is indeed very important because an unnamed killer is trying to recover the cylinder while Walter is keeping his fellow cohorts in the dark about what this cylinder is and what it can do, something he hasn’t done before. Walter even assaults Agent Farnsworth and hides the cylinder where no one can find it. Peter is especially upset with this and right as he is leaving for good, he is captured by the unnamed cylinder hunter and asked a few questions. This brings us to this weeks Fringe science, Mental Osmosis. The antagonist uses electric currents to hear his captive’s thoughts. The machine is able to read deeper than the conscious thoughts of the captives as long as the line of questioning is on track with the information he needs. Our antagonist gets the info he needs from Peter and tracks down the cylinder. Olivia comes to the rescue and subdues the beanie wearing baddie and the cylinder disappeared into the ground where it came from.
I enjoyed this episode more than the others, however I think that the characters of Walter and Peter changed their personalities pretty drastically. Walter in the first three episodes is the crazy, kooky scientist that never raised his voice to his son. Then all of a sudden he is defiant and aggressive, maybe for good reason, but outside of Walter’s character in my opinion. Peter’s case is worse because it happens twice in the same episode. He seems to enjoy Agent Dunham’s company and running down bad guys with her in most of the first three episodes then all of a sudden he wants out. Then a bump on the head makes him want to stay and uncover all of the unexplained events in the world with his father that he has thrown under the bus the whole episode before this point. The intrigue level is sky high however, with the Observer and what seems to be his mysterious cylinder. Agent Scott’s cameo was also something that I didn’t expect so soon. Thanks for leaving me 2 weeks to think about that Abrams.
Star of the Show – The Observer
“Apples, bananas, rhinoceroses…I want to hold your hand.” He is some sort of weird. No hair, no eyebrows, always there, but no one ever sees him. He can read thoughts with only a blank stare and he doesn’t age. What is he, what other powers does he have, and can he eat my world famous fire chili?
Back in action – Gene the Cow