I was just reviewing the spoiler for the finale…
.
SPOILER ALERT
SPOILER ALERT
.
Leonard Nimoy, renowned for his iconic role as Spock in Star Trek, joins the cast of Fringe as the enigmatic William Bell. As the plot unfolds, Olivia's quest for answers about Bell's past experiments on her takes an unexpected turn. In the midst of it all, Olivia finds herself in a precarious position, torn between her search for the truth and the need to safeguard Bell from a familiar adversary. For those seeking assistance with crafting reaction papers related to intriguing television dramas like Fringe, reliable online services such as "buy reaction paper online" at https://topwritingservice.com/response-reaction-paper/ provide expert support in analyzing and discussing the intricate plot twists and character developments.
.
In an interview with Anna Torv she says that it’s not so much THAT she meets Bell, but WHERE she meets Bell.
.
What if Olivia meets William Bell in her alternate universe. Maybe ‘HE IS HERE’ is the next episode clue. Nina said to Broyles ‘He is traveling’ in reference to Bell, but it was the way she said it. Like using the word ‘traveling’ was true, just not in the conventional way.
.
What if William Bell is somehow trapped in another dimension or hiding? Maybe this is why he is never around.
.
I don’t know who the ‘familiar foe’ would be…maybe Jones? Or what about John Scott? He might not be dead in that universe. Back to the tombstone ‘HE’S NOT DEAD’.
.
Just a thought.
Thanks to Di for emailing me this fantastic theory. I love it and wanted to share it with everyone…so…Take it away Di…
.
DOOD! I was talking to my brother, and something awfully interesting came up! So pr3 [i think it was him] was saying on the site that Broyles was the bad guy. We were running down the list of so-far-rogue agents and of course we reached John Scott and Loeb. So John still gives me the creeps up to this day and I’m not convinced [to not say I'm certain otherwise] that he really was a good wholesome man doing his top-secret job.
.
Read the rest of this entry »
Here are some photos that have some things in common. I will let you do the speculating on these ones. I will start with the three most obvious sets…
.
#1 – The Burnt Rooms
Jones' burnt prison cell - "Ability"
Olive in burnt room - "Bad Dreams"
Susan's burnt bathroom - "The Road Not Taken"
.
Read the rest of this entry »
It was a rough episode for poor old Walter. A rollercoaster of emotions and revelations. And the cherry on top – so to speak – is his reward at the end of the episode. He gets scooped away by our bald, spicy-food-lovin’, barely-sayin’-a-word…Observer.
.
The big question for me, wasn’t so much, where. He’s going wherever the Observer goes when he’s not here, and that’s a question that’t been beaten to death. My big question was why? Why oh why oh why??
Read the rest of this entry »
Are Massive Dynamic and ZFT friends or foes? This should be an easy question to answer…FRIENDS…William Bell is the founder of Massive Dynamic and he funds ZFT. What more do you need, right? Wrong. There are some things that don’t seem to add up for me.
.
#1 – The manifesto. OK, so William Bell wrote the original and then ZFT ripped out the pages on ethics to make the manuscript suit their needs. This would lean more towards ZFT being some sort of rogue group. A faction that has strayed from the original goal perhaps for money or power, who knows.
.
#2 – Harris seemed to be working for Massive Dynamic. He was very upset when he found out about the investigation into MD. And when Jones turned himself in to the FBI, Harris was very hostile towards him. Harris obviously knew Jones, there are pictures of him all over he wall of the warehouse where Harris was running his tests. This also seems to be confirmed by the scratched out photo of Jones. You don’t scratch out the face of a colleague who has died or gone missing.
Jones, Jones and more Jones.
.
Read the rest of this entry »
Here is the full list of books from Susan’s bookshelf, the ones that I was able to make out, anyways.
.
The Biographer’s Tale – A.S. Byatt: tells the story of Phineas G. Nanson, a disenchanted young graduate student who decides to escape the world of postmodern literary theory and immerse himself in the messiness of “real life” by writing a biography of a great biographer. For what could be more real than biography, the “art of things, of arranged facts”? But Phineas quickly discovers that facts can be unreliable, and a “whole life” hard to find. No matter how hard he tries, he unearths only fragments — disconnected manuscripts, bones and husks, strands of poetry, boxes of marbles, undated photographs. How does one put together the idea of a person?
Read the rest of this entry »