Watch What We Say

Fringe

By Jason Lee

September 24, 2008

All of these people think Fringe is gonna make them famous. They're wrong.

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What we don't understand is why everyone around her – both her colleagues and her superiors – indulge her in this wild-goose chase. There is no threat that this biological agent will strike again. There is no looming danger to the public at large. The only person at real risk is her boyfriend - and time and time again, Dunham is afforded every available option for finding a cure.

You wanna fly to Iraq and blackmail this kid into taking you to see his Dr. Frankenstein-esque father? Sure! You wanna release Dr. Frankenstein from his solitary confinement and let him examine your boyfriend? Sure! You wanna re-open his ominous MIT lab and bring your comatose boyfriend there for treatment? Sure! You wanna let Dr. Frankenstein inject you with homemade LSD, insert a probe into the back of your skull and immerse your naked body in a tank full of salt-water so that you can talk to your comatose boyfriend through electro-induced telekinesis? Sure!

I think you get the point. Though "Fringe" is well-produced, well-acted (save for Joshua Jackson) and well-directed, the show is a little hard to swallow. It is one thing to expect audiences to accept that fringe science could be real. It is another thing entirely to accept that our government would allow one of their own agents free reign across the FBI, CIA, Homeland Security Departments, etc. in the interest of saving ONE FREAKING PERSON.

Then again, maybe I'm just a little biased. I grew up in a time where the preeminent sci-fi show of all time (the aforementioned X-Files) wove together complex paranormal stories with our deepest human fears, all the while maintaining a shadowy government group in the background whose seemingly-omnipotent power was perpetually tinged with malice.




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Ladies and gentlemen, let me let you in on a little secret: Fringe is no X-Files. But why should it be? Bringing compelling sci-fi to the small screen is no mean feat. Just ask Chris Carter about Millennium or The Lone Gunmen. Here we have an entertaining show, featuring a strong female-lead, a strong creative force behind the camera and some genuine chills along the way. It's rare nowadays for a network to support a drama that isn't a CSI spin-off or a courtroom procedural. Based on the pilot alone, I think we have something that might be worth keeping an eye on for the rest of the season.

But you can bet that they won't be playing this on cross-country American Airline flights anytime soon.

Watch What We Say rating: Three TiVos

Watch What We Say: Rating System

Four TiVos: This is television content raised to the level of a transcendent art form. Not only should you TiVo this program for yourself, you should keep it on your TiVo for future generations to watch and savor.

Three TiVos: This is a very good show with a regular spot in my TiVo rotation. I watch every week and will often invite my friends over to share the enjoyable experience.

Two TiVos: I'll TiVo this show if I need something to watch while I'm folding laundry or dusting furniture.

One TiVo: I actively dislike this show and never allow it to take up space in my TiVo. Often times, I'll gripe about the show's producers, ridicule the actors and lambaste the network for keeping it on the air.

Zero TiVos: If this show is on, I unplug my TiVo for fear that the show is accidentally recorded and my entire home entertainment system gets contaminated with this malignant, diseased trash.


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