The series I think had its own story for the dinosaur, in the revamped New Batman Adventures Calendar Lady or whatever attacks him with robotic dinosaurs.
The series I think had its own story for the dinosaur, in the revamped New Batman Adventures Calendar Lady or whatever attacks him with robotic dinosaurs.
Almost all of the problems were at least explained in context. Deb and Dexter seeing him at the scene doesn't work because he was wearing a mask and it was a crazy maze with strobe lights and shit, so they never got a good look at his face. The crime scene was not Speltzer's residence, it was a foreclosure he broke…
Almost all of the problems were at least explained in context. Deb and Dexter seeing him at the scene doesn't work because he was wearing a mask and it was a crazy maze with strobe lights and shit, so they never got a good look at his face. The crime scene was not Speltzer's residence, it was a foreclosure he broke…
Go watch this episode and please tell us all again how much more sophmoric the show has gotten:
Go watch this episode and please tell us all again how much more sophmoric the show has gotten:
Well, we were told that Broyles was working on evacuations, so maybe they just didn't show the reaction?
Walter's hallucinations don't involve bipeds.
Also that girl that sleeps with all her sources…
@sissnitz Of course DRJ never particularly cared about the damage he may be causing to the universe, and in fact is seeking to destroy the universe as it currently exists. It seems hard to believe that closing that bridge could really stop him.
Yeah, she played a terminator on that.
@alurin Do yourself a favor and just stop after the John Lithgow season. If you even feel like continuing after the Jimmy Smits season.
I think the environmental catastrophe is plausible because as we've seen the Observers' possession of god-like technology hasn't prevented them from making mistakes with dire consequences, and it fits with Fringe's broader themes of science run amok. But I agree that the machine may have been a better way to fit this…
Not just fans, September himself referred to it as a "beacon" in the latter episode, IIRC.
Of course she knew that, she just didn't want to tell anyone.
You're right. And they were in Boston in the future, too. When the agent in New York (which was just full of Observers) called Broyles, he said something along the lines of, "We follow rules here, not like in Boston." And it didn't take him long to show up at Harvard, either. Broyles was in Boston.
@avclub-298673367c6de609ae5970ce1e699c50:disqus How did you get through four years of this show if references to old sci-fi bothers you this much? What are you even doing here? Welcome to Fringe — it's an awesome show that is chock full of sci-fi fan service.
It's pretty lame that the only thing you really have to do to beat Bane is cut those hoses he's got dangling around everywhere. That's a major design flaw he should probably address.
@avclub-fff4ac4c2f46e5cd75ec8b515c235031:disqus IIRC, that one stormed into Massive Dynamic to make sure they couldn't get any information out of the damaged shapeshifter that had been posing as a Senator. He was a cop and Newton instructed him to use a different identity to get access to Massive Dynamic but he…
Except for the shape-shifter we met last week, who just wanted to be more than he was, and did the right thing when pushed.
@avclub-1343022fc4003e2cf16f0368302d86e8:disqus They've said explicitly on the show that these are Earth 1 and Earth 2 but the timeline has been rewritten. Several times. Let it go.