What happened?
It’s a world without Peter, with no memory that he ever existed, and the two realities of parallel worlds have been bridged (though knowledge of this happening has not been released to the general public). Whilst there is a form of truce between the two Fringe divisions, it’s a pact currently running on distrust from both sides.
Agent Lincoln Lee, in this reality oblivious to the world of Fringe Division, is on a callout with his partner when they run into a bizarre, translucent human. Lincoln’s partner is killed and, searching for answers, Lincoln is integrated into Fringe division where it transpires these translucent humans are a new form of shapeshifter, and considering that Walternate was responsible for the first shapeshifters Olivia and Walter are immediately suspicious that he may have a hand in these latest incarnations.
Meanwhile The Observers watch on and deem it essential that this world is never aware that Peter the boy became a man. But September, charged with erasing him from existence, falters over flicking the switch. Peter repeatedly appears in glimpses, struggling to bleed back into existence. . .
Thoughts
Good to have Fringe back, although if anyone thought the bridging of the realities and the removal of Peter would somehow give the show a kind of blank slate feel to re-build anew then they’ve got another thing coming. Right out of the gate this episode demands that the viewers are well up on their mythology and it was really only the re-introduction of Lincoln Lee as a ‘new starter’ to Fringe Division did the episode make a little concession for anyone coming in cold.
The episode wasted no time setting up animosity between the two Olivias. Considering this is a world where Peter never existed I can only figure the antagonism is down to the fact that Olivia was still kidnapped Over There, and replaced by Fauxlivia for a while, and this is cause for a rift. It was perhaps slightly irritating that these two level-headed, intelligent characters had defaulted to such opposition so early but, I suppose, this season needs to find its conflict from somewhere and just erasing the friction between both sides might have also felt just as irritating.
It was interesting to see that without Peter, Olivia hasn’t progressed much from the person in the Pilot episode. She still lost her partner but never found a replacement, and instead was the one to release Walter and take responsibility for him. Walter, too, is a slightly different beast. Afraid to leave the lab, more untethered to reality, and the one being ‘haunted’ by visions of Peter.
The Observers discussed amongst themselves a few bits and pieces that were interesting. The general idea seems to be that September – the Observer we usually see – intervened in the way the course of events was supposed to run when he saved Peter’s life. This re-written universe has it, I presume, that Peter as a child died.
Walter made a remark about how a person can die twice, so I have to conclude that his original son, Peter, died from illness like he always did. And Walter then crossed over and kidnapped the other Peter. The difference here is that Peter wasn’t saved in the car crash that September once got involved in? That’s my best guess. So Walter has had to live with losing his own son, and then kidnapped Peter’s alternate and seeing him die also. No wonder he’s messed up.
September being sent off to permanently erase Peter is bizarre (God knows what the heck that thing he gathered bits and pieces together for was going to do!) but I get the feeling he is going more ‘rogue’, perhaps curious about the extent to which he can effect the course of events (and the consequences of doing so). Perhaps he’s just curious about Peter, and how he manages to still bleed through.
Still not really any closer to knowing what The Observers fundamentally are, mind, but then this is one of Fringe’s biggest and most enduring mysteries (it’s their Black Smoke!) so I don’t expect that to be explained anytime soon.
I enjoyed Lincoln Lee in this episode. The bespectacled version of him is a likable and yet admirable character. He shows he’s got the smarts, and the action skills, but mostly he’s got amazing acceptance of whatever’s going on. Walter hands him a dead pigeon that springs to life, flies around, and then drops to the floor – Lincoln barely bats an eyelid! It’ll be interesting to see if Alt-Lincoln is on the scene Over There, and whether he retains a ‘thing’ for Fauxlivia (I would suspect he’s still dead, though).
All in all it was a more measured return to the fold. It was good in the sense of showing rather than telling, drip-feeding information about what this world was and currently is as a result of Peter’s absence. It’s perhaps a sharp point, but I didn’t find myself missing Peter. I did want to pick up more with Fauxlivia and Walternate and see where they were really at (I hope Fauxlivia still retains a sympathetic side to her rather than the sneering person we saw here).
Of course, Peter will return. The big question has to be: When he does return, will he return to this world, or will the worlds shift once more – and if they do, what will it be like? It’s big, heady territory for Fringe but the show has been good at straddling bold ideas in a sophisticated manner so far so there’s no cause for concern at present.
What was the best part?
Whilst there was a lot of strong interplay between these established characters displaying the subtle differences between their ‘old’ versions and their ‘new’ versions, for me the best part of the episode was the transition from Lincoln and his partner talking in the kitchen to giving chase to the shapeshifter. It was a cool cut, with an energising music cue that also involved Lincoln showing some sweet, fast moves when he apprehended the guy he was chasing despite the guy having a gun to his head! In a subdued episode it was the one real pulse-raising sequence (though hats off to the scene where Olivia and Lincoln bagged a shapeshifter each, that was good too).
What do I think will happen next?
I expect we’ll get a perspective on how things are with the ‘Alt’ characters; Walternate, Fauxlivia and the rest. I wouldn’t be surprised if the next episode shifted focus onto their side in a similar way to how it alternated sides during Season 3. As for the question of whether Walternate is responsible for the new shapeshifters, that’s a tough call given we’ve really no understanding about what kind of man this ‘new’ version of him is. My gut, however, says the alternates are not directly involved in the sense that they are trying to wage war with the other side.
The big question, of course, is about Peter. I fully expect that he will get ‘remembered’ and bleed back into reality. I also expect this to happen around about episode 4 or 5 (can’t see a lead character like his being left out longer than that). I suspect that the Observer, September, will be a pivotal part of that – perhaps further disobeying his orders to erase Peter and instead choosing to do the exact opposite.