Seth Gabel and Anna Torv in FRINGE - Season 4 - "Alone in the World" | ©2011 Fox/Liane Hentscher

Seth Gabel and Anna Torv in FRINGE - Season 4 - "Alone in the World" | ©2011 Fox/Liane Hentscher

Stars: Joshua Jackson, John Noble, Anna Torv, Seth Gabel, Lance Reddick, Jasika Nicole
Writer: David Fury
Director: Miguel Sapochnik
Network: Fox, airs Friday nights
Original Telecast: October 7, 2011

Even though Peter Bishop (Joshua Jackson) has been wiped from the FRINGE timeline due to events at the end of Season 3, “Alone in the World” continues the Season 4 thread that not all of his presence has been properly eliminated.

Walter (John Noble), his father, is starting to see the adult version of Peter pop up in mirrors and reflections in TV screens. He thinks he’s going crazy – and has no idea that it is indeed the son he thinks died (twice) when he was a child. Once in this world, the second time when he tried to bring him back from “over there.”

Meanwhile, the corpses of two twelve-year old boys bring the Fringe team in to figure out what’s going on. What they learn is these kids rapidly decomposed when the were trying to attack another kid. Turns out the attack was caused by some kind of spore with growing intelligence that has a link with the surviving kid.

The episode deals with loss in many ways – and Walter’s dealing with the young boy who could die if he can’t find a way to extract the symbiotic relationship he has with the spore. It parallels Walter’s own struggle with failing to save Peter. It’s major emotional stuff.

Meanwhile, Olivia confides in Walter that she’s been dreaming of a strange man – and she’s drawn a picture of him (it’s Peter). The two of them – still unaware it’s adult Peter – have decided to find out who it is and track him down.

Super cool.

“Alone in the World” showcases what FRINGE does best – it take s a kernel of its mythology (in this case “missing Peter”) and hinges a creepy story on top of it to hit home the various themes. It works well – with the mystery providing a really creepy and unsettling story about being “alone.”

Noble is fantastic giving a great performance as always – but the nuances that are there with his own guilt for not being able to save his own son adds to the dramatic angst.

It’s also commendable that the FRINGE writers haven’t taken the easy way out and resisted bringing back Peter full time right away. It looks like next week, episode 4 of the season, we’ll start to get some resolution in terms of his potential return – but they’ve let this play out longer than most TV series would. It feels more natural this way and it adds even more to the storylines they’re telling.

Click on Link: Exclusive Interview Executive Producer J.H. Wyman chats about Season 4

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Click on Link: TV Review – FRINGE – Season 4 premiere – “Subject 9”

Click on Link: TV Review – FRINGE – Season 4 premiere – “Neither Here Nor There”

Click on link: Exclusive Interview with JOHN NOBLE on FRINGE – Season 4

Click on Link: Blu-ray Review of FRINGE – THE COMPLETE THIRD SEASON

Click On Link: Fox talks about Season 4 and Friday expectations

CLICK HERE to read about FRINGE – Season 4 plans

Click on Link: AX’s review of the Fringe – Season 3 Finale – “The Day We Died”

CLICK HERE for AX’s exclusive interview with JASIKA NICOLE

CLICK ON THE LINK: For AX’s exclusive LANCE REDDICK interview

CLICK HERE to read about FRINGE – Season 3 finale plans

CLICK HERE to read about FRINGE having a potential series end game

CLICK HERE to read about the producers discussing if FRINGE will remain on Friday nights for Season 4

CLICK HERE for more FRINGE reviews and exclusive interviews

Article Source: Assignment X
Article: TV Review – FRINGE – Season 4 premiere – “Alone in the World”

 

 


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