Fringe
Season Five
Episode Five
'An Origin
Story' - 6.5
Anna Torv is my world right now. |
I think I've decided what this season needs: an enemy. No, not The Observers in general, I mean a singular, ultimate antagonist who we can picture and who can represent exactly who our heroes need to defeat. I am aware that there is that one Observer who seems to be the leader, but I don't remember his name and he has to say something vaguely authoritarian before I realise who he is. We desperately need someone different, someone who stands out as the ultimate bad guy, who will be defeated in the series finale and take his entire race down with him.
I'm not
saying 'An Origin Story' was bad. In fact, in terms of acting, originality,
direction and story this season of Fringe has been universally (except 'The
Recordist) well done, except there is a notable lack of heart and an almost
isolating shift from the tone of the first four seasons. The death of Etta had
the potential to put that sense of character back into the show, and bring us
back to the ultimate success: it's characters. And yeah, in that sense we get a
good going, with Olivia, Peter and Walter all handling the loss in their own
ways.
Walter is
quick to remind his son and daughter-in-law (I think?) that he has actually
suffered through the death of a child before, and though he handles the death fairly
well, he is the one who throws himself into preserving her memory. This is
demonstrated early on as our heroes clean out Etta's apartment, as he takes a
bottle of her perfume because his sense of smell is what best feeds his memory,
while Olivia and Peter take photos and guns, respectively. Later on his
presents Olivia with a videotape showing one of Etta's birthdays (they totally
used videotape on home cameras into the mid-2010s), and suggests she give it a
proper look in order to embrace the pain, since it is 'proof that she was
here'.
Olivia and
Peter are the real focuses though, with both taking a big hit from the death.
Olivia mostly holds her dignity, apart from a brief moment in the opening
scene, until Walter presents her with the tape, which prompts her to warn him
that she's 'holding on by a thread'. Of the parents, I have to say I
appreciated Anna Torv's portrayal more, as the few moments of anguished grief
she did have managed to remain understated yet powerful. 'An Origin Story'
doesn't choose to present displaced or over-the-top emotion, rather we get the
views of two people who were somewhat prepared for this eventuality, and who
had essentially been through it before. I don't think either really expected to
be fighting the battle with their daughter anyhow, and it was largely icing on
an unsavoury cake, or maybe even a brick or something.
Olivia's
best scene was when she did finally decide to give the tape a go, breaking into
Olivia-tears and pretty much drunk-dialling Peter to tell him how much she
loves him. It was depressing, but like the rest of the episode it was also
believable. On a deeper level, they aren't surprised, which does explain why
the two at times are functioning better than most TV parents would.
Peter is
having just a few issues though, with the biggest one being rage. All he wants
is to stick it to the Observers and watch them suffer, and he does get to
engage in some eerie Observer-torture tonight. After a delivery from the
future arrives, bringing new components for the CO2 generators, the resistance
comes up with a plan to try and destroy the wormhole allowing these time
travelling freights to come through. It involves deciphering both a strange
wormhole-opening box and a book, which had come from a captured Observer.
Peter gets
down to business trying to pull information from the unnamed enemy, who spends
the entire episode strapped to a bed. He takes obvious pleasure in his
treatment of his subject, clearly hell bent on avenging the loss of his
daughter, using 'tells' to try and get him to inadvertently reveal how to
utilise the device.
In the end
though, the Observer reveals that Peter had put meaning in things that do not
have meaning, and had misread the tells, meaning that when the group tries to
use the device to destroy the wormhole it doesn't work. In revenge, Peter
decides to steal the technology that makes a human into one of these Observers
and implant it into itself. We don't get the implications of this tonight,
but it was worth it just to see the Observer in its death throes as Peter cut
into his back. Gross and violent, but so rewarding.
There are a
couple of ways this could go: Peter is granted the powers of an Observer,
including super speed and such, but also is given the dependence on CO2, the
loss of hair, all that shit meaning that once they defeat them he will die. The
tech could react badly to him as he is kind of an anomaly, resulting in him
either dying or forcing Walter to remove it from him, which might also kill
him. Maybe. Conversely, it could react strangely but give him even more intense
powers, allowing him to easily overcome the other Observers, with no adverse
side effects. This last one could also lead to a different, more interesting
tangent: if he became an all-powerful Observer, perhaps the tech will also
cause him to sway to their side, becoming the recognisable and distinctive face
of the enemy for the final showdown. Of course, only one or two of these
doesn't result in the death of Peter, but it is the final season so who cares
about death?
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