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Fringe: The Complete First Season
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DVD detailsActor: Anna Torv, Blair Brown, Joshua Jackson, Kirk Acevedo, Lance Reddick Brand: Warner Brothers DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Unknown), Dolby Digital 5.1; English (Subtitled); French (Subtitled); Spanish (Subtitled); Portuguese (Subtitled); Thai (Subtitled); English (Original Language), Dolby Digital 5.1; Portuguese (Dubbed), Dolby Digital 5.1 Format: AC-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen Picture Format: 1.78:1 Running Time: 1028 minutes DVD Release Date: 2009-09-08 Audience Rating: Unrated Studio: Warner Home Video
DVD Reviews of Fringe: The Complete First SeasonDVD Review: fringe was great! Summary: 5 StarsThe first season of "Fringe" on DVD was GREAT! It arrived in a timely manner and in good condition. Amazon kept me informed and the seller held up his end of the deal. All the way around...a great experience.
DVD Review: A strong opener Summary: 5 StarsI recognize this feeling. I've been here before - with 'X-Files,' with 'Battlestar Galactica,' with 'Firefly.' A television series that sets up high expectations with a bold concept, lots of potential, and an original storytelling voice. A show that teases and tantalizes and excites the imagination. Something that makes me think "This, now - this is something worth watching!"
Make no mistake, the first season of 'Fringe' IS well worth watching. There is a lot of bang for your buck here. 20 full-length episodes on 7 discs, with lots of extras, including deleted scenes for most episodes and a fun gag reel.
More importantly, 'Fringe' is excellent television, particularly if your tastes run to the edgier side of the spectrum. Starting off at a gallop, with an international flight that ends horrifically, the series poses idea after idea in the realm of 'fringe' science, where science meets the fantastic. Some of the ideas explored in the series include teleportation, time travel, telekinesis, mind control, pyrokinesis, and alternate dimensions. All are explored through investigations of strange events, seen through the eyes of FBI agent Olivia Dunham as she solves crimes associated with the events. Agent Dunham is joined by Peter Bishop and his father, whose most recent residence was an insane asylum. Dr. Walter Bishop has a unique understanding of and connection to these strange events, but his memory is spotty at best. Together they uncover the source of the events, and slowly, discern a pattern connecting them.
For the most part, 'Fringe' is filled with solid talent. A product of J.J. Abrams' unique vision, who brought us 'Alias,' 'Lost,' and the recent reboot of 'Star Trek,' it shows all the originality and knack for drama he's shown us before. The writing is top-notch, and so far rides the fine line of keeping much in the dark, but answering enough questions to keep you interested. The acting is excellent overall. Though Anna Torv is an unfortunate weak spot - she overplays her role sometimes as the 'tough girl' - she does the job, and the others more than make up for it. A high point is John Noble's portrayal of Dr. Walter Bishop; he plays a pitch-perfect mad scientist with depth and sensitivity, lucid and clear in some moments, then suddenly offbeat and odd with no awkward transitions - you never feel like he's "acting." It's also simply delightful to see Blair Brown in a substantive role again, though her appearances as the enigmatic Nina Sharp are too few and far between for my taste. A nice surprise awaits near the end of the series as well, for those who watch for it.
All told, it makes for a exciting, strange and engaging story, full of suspense and unexpected twists and turns, with tons of potential. I felt this way about 'X-Files' in the beginning, but unfortunately that collapsed under its own weight by the end. The first season of the new 'Battlestar Galactica' made me feel this way too, almost lost its way halfway in, but managed to follow through on most of its promises in the end. I get the same sense from 'Firefly' every time I watch it, but that was sadly cancelled almost before it started.
'Fringe' is off to a solid start. Here's hoping it can keep it up!
DVD Review: Very Enjoyable Summary: 5 StarsI admit I wasn't sure what to think of when I first saw "Fringe", but this season sucked me in.
After a strange incident aboard an airplane, FBI agent Olivia Dunham is summoned in to help solve the case when her partner and secret lover John Scott is exposed to a toxin that is killing him. This forces Olivia to rely on the help of Walter Bishop, a brilliant scientist who has been in a mental institution for 17 years, and Peter Bishop, Walter's sarcastic and skeptical son, to solve the case. But this only opens up Olivia to a whole new world of pseudoscience and a threat against our world.
This show is addicting. The characters are memorable, especially Walter Bishop, and their interaction is entertaining. The plot, while occasionally a bit gross, is well-done and keeps you guessing. It's not as confusing to follow as J.J. Abrams' "Lost", and, to me, it's better done.
DVD Review: Great Service! Summary: 5 StarsProduct came exactly as described. It shipped within 2 days of being ordered and received shortly after (seller was partly chosen on location). Not complaints. Very happy.
DVD Review: JJ Abrams creates another T.V masterpiece Summary: 5 StarsWhen "Fringe" first aired on Fox, I was informed by a friend that "if I like the X-Files, I will love Fringe." With this being said, my friend was absolutly correct.
"Fringe" is about Agent Olivia Dunham and her work for the fringe division in the F.B.I. The fringe division takes on the cases of the paranormal, similar to the "X-Files" Oliva's supervisor "Agent Broyles" allows her to work with Dr. Walter Bishop and his son Peter Bishop. Walter, who was institutionalized, is a very smart man, but needs his sons help, in order to complety function.
Fringe does start out a little slow, but it ends with a bang !
Writer/Producer/Creator of "Fringe" JJ Abrams does a wonderful job of makeing the plot very interesting, and confusing. But like other projects of JJ Abrams, "Lost" he always has a plan for the show.
If you quit watching "Fringe" because of the way it started out, give it a second chance. The ending will having rushing to the stores to get season 2.
Description of Fringe: The Complete First SeasonTeleportation. Mind control. Invisibility. Astral projection. Mutation. Reanimation. Phenomena that exist on the Fringe of science unleash their strange powers in this thrilling series, co-created by J.J. Abrams (Lost, Alias), combining the grit of the police procedural with the excitement of the unknown. The story revolves around three unlikely colleagues - a beautiful young FBI agent, a brilliant scientist who's spent the last 17 years in a mental institution and the scientist's sardonic son - who investigate a series of bizarre deaths and disasters known as "the pattern." Someone is using our world as an experimental lab. And all clues lead to Massive Dynamic, a shadowy global corporation that may be more powerful than any nation. DVD features: Evolution: The Genesis of Fringe featurette - The creators of the show discuss how the series unfolded and the qualities that make it so unique Behind the Real Science of Fringe featurette - From teleportation to re-animation, Fringe incorporates recent discoveries in science. Consulting experts and scientists who are the authorities in their field address the areas of science which are the inspiration for the show. A Massive Undertaking: The Making of Fringe (on select episodes) - An in-depth exploration of how select episodes came to be made: from the frozen far reaches of shooting the pilot in Toronto, to the weekly challenges of bringing episodes to air The Casting of Fringe- The story, as told by producers and cast, of how Anna Torv, Joshua Jackson, John Noble and others came to be cast in the series. Fringe Visual Effects featurette - Goes deep into the creation of the shared dream state with some of the biggest VFX shots of the show. Dissected Files: Unaired Scenes Unusual Side Effects: Gag Reel Fringe: Deciphering the Scene Roberto Orci Production Diary Gene the Cow montage Three Full-Length Commentaries from writers/producers, including J.J. Abrams, Roberto Orci, Alex Kurtman, J.R. Orci, David Goodman, Bryan Burk, Akiva Goldsman and Jeff Pinkner
Teleportation, mind control, astral projection, invisibility, precognition, spontaneous combustion, reanimation: these are among the peripheral sciences--or "pseudo-sciences," as one skeptic puts it--examined during the first season of Fringe, a Fox network TV drama debuting on DVD with the full first season (twenty episodes) offered on seven extras-laden discs. The notion that those phenomena could have a genuine scientific basis is intriguing enough. But co-creator J.J. Abrams (whose bulging resume as a director, writer, and producer includes Lost, Alias, and the 2009 Star Trek feature film) has even more on his mind. Along with the weird science, the series features a multi-agency task force investigating related acts of terrorism that may very well add up to a threat of unimaginable global proportions; people who are exactly what they appear to be (i.e., insane) and others who are anything but; plot twists galore; family drama, interpersonal relationships, corporate evil, cop chases... There's a lot in play here, and while it doesn't always hold together (and like any new series, it takes a while to hit its stride), Fringe is rarely boring, and never less than impressively ambitious. The pilot introduces us to the main characters, principally FBI agent Olivia Dunham (Anna Torv, good but not great in the show's central role) and others on the task force brought in to investigate some gross goings-on aboard a jumbo jet (a "self-eradicating, airborne toxin" reduced everyone to blood and bones). Seems this is but one part of "The Pattern," a series of synchronous, similarly shocking events that unfold as the show progresses; in subsequent episodes, lots of people are killed in graphic fashion by all manner of horrors, including scary monsters (slugs as big as a football, teethed parasites that can crush your heart), a gas that freezes a busload of passengers "like insects trapped in amber," people so radioactive they can literally make your brain boil. it goes on. Helping Dunham and the rest of the force figure it all out are scientist Dr. Walter Bishop (an appealing John Noble), who's spent the past 17 years locked up in the loony bin and whose research may be responsible for some of the crimes we witness, and his son-babysitter Peter (Joshua Jackson). As for the "fringe" element, Dr. Bishop and other, less benign geniuses jump-start a dead man's brain, photograph another victim's cornea in order to access the last thing she saw before death, connect Dunham to her boyfriend so she can experience his memories of the incident that left him comatose, use high-frequency vibrations to enable bank robbers to pass through a solid vault wall, and much, much more. As for where and how all of this ends up, let's just that enquiring minds will have to hang in for the long, complicated run. Bonus features are many and varied; among the best are "Deciphering the Scene" (brief explications of key scenes in every episode) and "The Massive Undertaking" (detailing how certain special effects sequences were pulled off). --Sam Graham
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