If you’re looking for a documentary that tells you about David Bowie, the man, researched and presented with clear-eyed, journalistic rigour, then Moonage Daydream is not it. You won’t learn Bowie’s date of birth, the names of his first school or first girlfriend or children, his personal politics, favourite colour or even the nature of the disease that killed him. You won’t learn why he chose this or that film role or the meaning of this or that lyric. The words “David Robert Jones”, Bowie’s legal name for his entire life, are not mentioned once. The smattering of biographic detail we do get – a light-touch look at his relationship with his troubled half-brother and distant mother, his meeting second wife, Iman tell us little that a Bowie fan can’t find out from watching literally any of the dozens and dozens of Bowie documentaries produced over the years.
- 9/16/2022
- by Marc Burrows
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
(Welcome to ...And More, our no-frills, zero B.S. guide to when and where you can watch upcoming movies and shows, and everything else you could possibly stand to know.)
"Keep your 'lectric eye on me, babe. Put your ray gun to my head. Press your space face close to mine, love. Freak out in a moonage daydream, oh yeah!"
Six years ago, we lost one of the most enigmatic musicians to ever grace the planet, but now a new documentary focused on the rock icon will finally give fans the answers to some of the most pressing questions surrounding what allowed David Robert Jones to become David...
The post Moonage Daydream: Release Date, Cast, and More appeared first on /Film.
"Keep your 'lectric eye on me, babe. Put your ray gun to my head. Press your space face close to mine, love. Freak out in a moonage daydream, oh yeah!"
Six years ago, we lost one of the most enigmatic musicians to ever grace the planet, but now a new documentary focused on the rock icon will finally give fans the answers to some of the most pressing questions surrounding what allowed David Robert Jones to become David...
The post Moonage Daydream: Release Date, Cast, and More appeared first on /Film.
- 7/11/2022
- by BJ Colangelo
- Slash Film
When Amazon’s “Night Sky” cinematographer Ashley Connor was a teenager, her father showed her some classics. Not that he might like her telling people this particular anecdote.
“I think my dad would tell me not to say, but we definitely watched ‘A Clockwork Orange’ when I was pretty young. And then ‘2001: A Space Odyessy.’ He sort of showed me a few kinds of bigger-brain movies that kind of blew my mind in my early teens,” Connor says during our Meet the Experts: Cinematographers roundtable group panel. “Those were the films that really kind of engaged my brain in a more photographic sense. And really, like, brought me into an artier space of filmmaking.” Watch the exclusive video interview above.
Connor is one of six talented cinematographers who spoke to Gold Derby about their path to becoming filmmakers. Our Meet the Experts: Cinematographer panel also included participation from Karl-Walter...
“I think my dad would tell me not to say, but we definitely watched ‘A Clockwork Orange’ when I was pretty young. And then ‘2001: A Space Odyessy.’ He sort of showed me a few kinds of bigger-brain movies that kind of blew my mind in my early teens,” Connor says during our Meet the Experts: Cinematographers roundtable group panel. “Those were the films that really kind of engaged my brain in a more photographic sense. And really, like, brought me into an artier space of filmmaking.” Watch the exclusive video interview above.
Connor is one of six talented cinematographers who spoke to Gold Derby about their path to becoming filmmakers. Our Meet the Experts: Cinematographer panel also included participation from Karl-Walter...
- 5/21/2022
- by Christopher Rosen
- Gold Derby
When cinematographer David Robert Jones first heard about ABC’s reimagining of “The Wonder Years,” he wasn’t necessarily sold on the concept. Then he read the script from creator and showrunner Saladin K. Patterson, who based the comedy on his own experiences growing up in Montgomery, Alabama in the late 1960s.
“I was like, ‘Oh, this is amazing. This is so good,’” Jones tells Gold Derby on our Meet the Experts: Cinematographers panel. “This was a totally different thing and its own story.” Watch the exclusive video interview above.
See over 200 interviews with 2022 Emmy contenders
Set in 1968, the new version of “The Wonder Years” focuses on the Williams family, particularly through the experiences of 12-year-old Dean (Ej Williams), who narrates the show from the future as an adult (voiced by Don Cheadle). To recreate the era and the specific sense Patterson evoked in his script, Jones and the show...
“I was like, ‘Oh, this is amazing. This is so good,’” Jones tells Gold Derby on our Meet the Experts: Cinematographers panel. “This was a totally different thing and its own story.” Watch the exclusive video interview above.
See over 200 interviews with 2022 Emmy contenders
Set in 1968, the new version of “The Wonder Years” focuses on the Williams family, particularly through the experiences of 12-year-old Dean (Ej Williams), who narrates the show from the future as an adult (voiced by Don Cheadle). To recreate the era and the specific sense Patterson evoked in his script, Jones and the show...
- 5/21/2022
- by Christopher Rosen
- Gold Derby
Six top TV cinematographers will reveal secrets behind their projects when they join Gold Derby’s special “Meet the Experts” Q&a event with 2022 Emmy Awards contenders. They will participate in two video discussions to premiere on Wednesday, May 18, at 4:00 p.m. Pt; 7:00 p.m. Et. We’ll have a one-on-one with our senior editor Christopher Rosen and a roundtable chat with all of the group together.
RSVP today to our entire ongoing Emmy contenders panel series by clicking here to book your free reservation. We’ll send you a reminder a few minutes before the start of the show.
This “Meet the Experts” panel welcomes the following 2022 contenders:
Halo (Paramount+)
Synopsis: Aliens threaten human existence in an epic 26th-century showdown. TV series based on the video game ‘Halo.’
Bio: Karl-Walter Lindenlaub was an Emmy nominee for “Houdini.” Other projects have included “Independence Day,” “The Princess Diaries,” “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian,...
RSVP today to our entire ongoing Emmy contenders panel series by clicking here to book your free reservation. We’ll send you a reminder a few minutes before the start of the show.
This “Meet the Experts” panel welcomes the following 2022 contenders:
Halo (Paramount+)
Synopsis: Aliens threaten human existence in an epic 26th-century showdown. TV series based on the video game ‘Halo.’
Bio: Karl-Walter Lindenlaub was an Emmy nominee for “Houdini.” Other projects have included “Independence Day,” “The Princess Diaries,” “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian,...
- 5/12/2022
- by Chris Beachum and Christopher Rosen
- Gold Derby
Sometimes, knowing every word and beat of the most iconic albums just isn’t enough. For audiophiles, there’s no shortage of required reading when it comes to the legends who created the anthems, three-chord progressions, and scratches that define today’s music landscape.
Indeed, some of the best coffee table books about music showcase the industry’s most seminal figures through the lens of the photographers, musicologists, and other insiders. The result: intimate behind-the-scenes portraits and rare stories that shed light on the larger-than-life personalities who shaped our culture...
Indeed, some of the best coffee table books about music showcase the industry’s most seminal figures through the lens of the photographers, musicologists, and other insiders. The result: intimate behind-the-scenes portraits and rare stories that shed light on the larger-than-life personalities who shaped our culture...
- 7/20/2020
- by Danielle Directo-Meston
- Rollingstone.com
Joseph Baxter Aug 20, 2019
Stardust, a film that will depict David Bowie’s 1971 first American visit, sets actor/singer Johnny Flynn to play the legend.
The life of the late rock legend, David Bowie, is to become the dramatic centerpiece of a biopic titled Stardust. Tackling the task of portraying Bowie is Johnny Flynn, a musician who’s already banked quite the resume as an actor.
Stardust will chronicle a critical waypoint in the career of Bowie (born David Robert Jones), set in 1971 during the then-24-year-old's first trip to America. After Bowie made evolutionary leaps from early-1960s teen idol to "Space Oddity" in 1969 to Dylan-esque/Britpop hybrid on album Hunky Dory and a dark transition on The Man Who Sold the World, his first stateside sojourn yielded inspiration for his next creative step. There, he conceived the plan to parlay his onstage androgyny into the persona that we know as Ziggy Stardust,...
Stardust, a film that will depict David Bowie’s 1971 first American visit, sets actor/singer Johnny Flynn to play the legend.
The life of the late rock legend, David Bowie, is to become the dramatic centerpiece of a biopic titled Stardust. Tackling the task of portraying Bowie is Johnny Flynn, a musician who’s already banked quite the resume as an actor.
Stardust will chronicle a critical waypoint in the career of Bowie (born David Robert Jones), set in 1971 during the then-24-year-old's first trip to America. After Bowie made evolutionary leaps from early-1960s teen idol to "Space Oddity" in 1969 to Dylan-esque/Britpop hybrid on album Hunky Dory and a dark transition on The Man Who Sold the World, his first stateside sojourn yielded inspiration for his next creative step. There, he conceived the plan to parlay his onstage androgyny into the persona that we know as Ziggy Stardust,...
- 1/31/2019
- Den of Geek
New York City commuters are always "Under Pressure," it seems, but at least now they'll travel around the Big Apple with the help of late music icon David Bowie! Starting this week, NYC's Metropolitan Transportation Authority will distribute 250,000 "Tickets to Mars," i.e. a quarter million MetroCards printed with images of the singer, who sadly passed away in January 2016. These Bowie-themed MetroCards celebrate the exhibit "David Bowie Is," currently on view at the city's Brooklyn Museum. Each of the cards — which are being randomly distributed from Manhattan's Broadway-Lafayette and Bleecker St. subway stations — bears one of five images from the exhibition that honor different phases of David's career. (Thin White Duke? Check. Ziggy Stardust? Check. Aladdin Sane? Check.) A post shared by Brooklyn Vegan (@brooklynvegan) on Apr 17, 2018 at 11:11am Pdt The cards are a collaboration between the museum and the music streaming service Spotify, which has also decked out...
- 4/19/2018
- by Dan Clarendon
- Closer Weekly
Iman is remembering her late husband David Bowie, one day before the two-year anniversary of his death.
The supermodel, 62, shared four black and white portraits of the couple on Instagram and Twitter to commemorate her romance with the legendary singer, who would have turned 71 on Jan. 8. “My favorite love story is ours! #BowieForever #ForeverAndEver,” she captioned the photo series.
Bowie, born David Robert Jones, died on January 10, 2016, after an 18-month battle with liver cancer. He is survived by the couple’s 17-year-old daughter, Alexandria “Lexi” Zahra and his 46-year-old son Duncan Jones, from his first marriage to Angela Bowie.
Related:...
The supermodel, 62, shared four black and white portraits of the couple on Instagram and Twitter to commemorate her romance with the legendary singer, who would have turned 71 on Jan. 8. “My favorite love story is ours! #BowieForever #ForeverAndEver,” she captioned the photo series.
Bowie, born David Robert Jones, died on January 10, 2016, after an 18-month battle with liver cancer. He is survived by the couple’s 17-year-old daughter, Alexandria “Lexi” Zahra and his 46-year-old son Duncan Jones, from his first marriage to Angela Bowie.
Related:...
- 1/10/2018
- by Karen Mizoguchi
- PEOPLE.com
David Bowie had to change his name twice, does anyone recall why? It sounds like more of a joke and there’s actually a third time in there to hear Conan tell it since he changed his name to Davey Jones first. That didn’t work when the Monkees came out so he switched to Tom Jones. That of course had to go away when Tom Jones came out with It’s Not Unusual, and then he switched on over to David Cassidy. In reality David Bowie was already Davy Jones since his born name was David Robert Jones. He switched to Tom
David Bowie Had to Change his Name Not Once, But Twice...
David Bowie Had to Change his Name Not Once, But Twice...
- 12/25/2017
- by Wake
- TVovermind.com
Putting forward the idea that David Bowie (born David Robert Jones) wouldn't have been David Bowie without the help of his most celebrated sideman, Jon Brewer's Beside Bowie: The Mick Ronson Story views the lauded guitarist mostly through the lens of the Spiders from Mars. Incomplete but benefiting from warm interviews with Ronson's loved ones, the doc gives some idea of his greatness but is better at depicting him as a likeable, modest bloke — one who just happened to be the best thing that happened to Bowie. Though it will be welcomed by hardcore rock nerds on video, theatrical prospects...
- 8/31/2017
- by John DeFore
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
A gripping and powerful new trailer has been released for Detroit. The trailer centers around John Boyega's character being interrogated by the police for the killing of three people. It looks like Boyega gives an incredible performance in this movie. I also included a new featurette that focuses on the true events that the film is based on, which is intriguing and eye-opening. It features interviews with the actual individuals who were involved with these events.
The movie is a crime drama based on real life events that are set against the backdrop of Detroit's 1967 riots. It's described as "a gripping story of one of the darkest moments during the civil unrest that rocked Detroit during that summer."
The movie comes from Kathryn Bigelow, the Academy Award-winning director of The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty. It also stars Will Poulter, Algee Smith, Jacob Latimore, Jason Mitchell, Hannah Murray,...
The movie is a crime drama based on real life events that are set against the backdrop of Detroit's 1967 riots. It's described as "a gripping story of one of the darkest moments during the civil unrest that rocked Detroit during that summer."
The movie comes from Kathryn Bigelow, the Academy Award-winning director of The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty. It also stars Will Poulter, Algee Smith, Jacob Latimore, Jason Mitchell, Hannah Murray,...
- 6/15/2017
- by Joey Paur
- GeekTyrant
Author: Zehra Phelan
The new trailer from The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty director Kathryn Bigelow’s Detroit has just exploded onto the public, drenched in racial tension with a Us Marshall played by John Boyega enduring a hate filled interrogation.
Related: Detroit First Trailer and Poster
The trailer depicts a dark and racially charged Us, Detroit to be precise, at the height of the 1967 troubles. Starting with a detained John Boyega as he starts to relay the events of that fateful night where three youngsters were killed, leading to a police raid of excessive gunfire which sees the community take to violent protest. As the trailer unfolds, the two arrogant cops turn the tables on Boyega to lay blame at his feet as war rages on the street whilst “Change is Coming” rings out.
Reuniting with her screenwriting muse Mark Boal, Bigelow digs deep to unearth the events...
The new trailer from The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty director Kathryn Bigelow’s Detroit has just exploded onto the public, drenched in racial tension with a Us Marshall played by John Boyega enduring a hate filled interrogation.
Related: Detroit First Trailer and Poster
The trailer depicts a dark and racially charged Us, Detroit to be precise, at the height of the 1967 troubles. Starting with a detained John Boyega as he starts to relay the events of that fateful night where three youngsters were killed, leading to a police raid of excessive gunfire which sees the community take to violent protest. As the trailer unfolds, the two arrogant cops turn the tables on Boyega to lay blame at his feet as war rages on the street whilst “Change is Coming” rings out.
Reuniting with her screenwriting muse Mark Boal, Bigelow digs deep to unearth the events...
- 6/15/2017
- by Zehra Phelan
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
On the 10th of January 2016 the world was saddened to hear David Robert Jones better known to the world as David Bowie lost his battle with cancer and passed on.
His mark on the world is indisputable and we now must in a reality in which he is not part of. For this check this we present David Bowies first movie performance in the 1969 short film 'The Image'.
Directed by Michael Armstrong 'The Image' is about a troubled artist haunted by a ghostly young man who appears to step right out of one of his paintings.
Bowies final bow was for the music video for Lazarus from the album Black Star:...
His mark on the world is indisputable and we now must in a reality in which he is not part of. For this check this we present David Bowies first movie performance in the 1969 short film 'The Image'.
Directed by Michael Armstrong 'The Image' is about a troubled artist haunted by a ghostly young man who appears to step right out of one of his paintings.
Bowies final bow was for the music video for Lazarus from the album Black Star:...
- 2/11/2016
- by noreply@blogger.com (Flicks News)
- FlicksNews.net
In the deluge of tributes penned in the days following David Bowie's death, some of the most moving were those suggesting that, despite his famous self-reinventions and stretches of living so hard they should leave a man forever altered, he retained an unchanged kernel of David Robert Jones within him until the day he died. This notion that identity can be both constant and endlessly mutable is at the heart of Complete Unknown, the third feature by Maria Full of Grace director Joshua Marston, in which Rachel Weisz plays a woman who (depending on your point of view) has
read more...
read more...
- 1/26/2016
- by John DeFore
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
David Bowie displayed the makings of Starman from an early age. Before changing the face of pop culture, music and fashion with a slew of ostentatious alter egos (from Ziggy Stardust to the Thin White Man), Bowie - who died of cancer Sunday, just two days after his 69th birthday and the release of his album Blackstar - was just a precocious kid in a middle-class family. Born David Robert Jones to John, a charity worker, and Peggy, a waitress, Bowie grew up in the south London neighborhood of Brixton, where a boring home life motivated him to want more.
- 1/13/2016
- by Jeff Nelson, @nelson_jeff
- PEOPLE.com
David Bowie — rock star, movie star, all-around legend — has passed away at the age of 69, following an 18-month battle with cancer. The news arrives two days after he released his final album, Blackstar. He is survived by his wife, Iman, and his children, 15-year-old Alexandria Jones and Moon and Warcraft director Duncan Jones. Born David Robert Jones […]
The post David Bowie Has Died appeared first on /Film.
The post David Bowie Has Died appeared first on /Film.
- 1/11/2016
- by Angie Han
- Slash Film
I just woke up to this news. I’m still processing this. I didn’t know David Bowie (born David Robert Jones) but I know how profoundly his music and his work in cinema and general presence on the planet affected me. Affected generations. Millions and millions of people all over the globe. There was no one…
The post David Bowie (1947-2016) appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.
The post David Bowie (1947-2016) appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.
- 1/11/2016
- by Chris Alexander
- shocktillyoudrop.com
Sins of the Father, which was preceded by The Zodiac Paradox and The Burning Man, is the third and final book of author Christa Faust’s Fringe prequel trilogy.
Each book of the Fringe trilogy has focused on a different character and explored the events in their lives leading up to the series. The Zodiac Paradox followed Walter Bishop and The Burning Man told Olivia Dunham’s story. This third book focuses on Peter Bishop and to be honest, I was anticipating that it would be hard to get through. The series never really implied that Peter had any involvement or knowledge of Fringe related events (beyond the obvious one that I won’t spoil) prior to the start of the series. So I was left wondering what kind of story could be told with those creative constraints. Turns out…a pretty good one.
A fatal incident in Walter Bishop...
Each book of the Fringe trilogy has focused on a different character and explored the events in their lives leading up to the series. The Zodiac Paradox followed Walter Bishop and The Burning Man told Olivia Dunham’s story. This third book focuses on Peter Bishop and to be honest, I was anticipating that it would be hard to get through. The series never really implied that Peter had any involvement or knowledge of Fringe related events (beyond the obvious one that I won’t spoil) prior to the start of the series. So I was left wondering what kind of story could be told with those creative constraints. Turns out…a pretty good one.
A fatal incident in Walter Bishop...
- 9/12/2014
- by Kevin Fraser
- City of Films
With Resident Evil: Retribution behind him, and the upcoming Resident Evil: Reconfabulation - or whatever it ends up being called . looming next September, Paul W.S. Anderson needs a way to make some part of 2013 miserable for people who like cinema. And while it didn.t seem possible that the rocky path to production for his Pompeii epic would ever end, apparently it has. Hooray? Luckily, the latest casting addition adds a bit of credibility to the disaster flick. Next to join Anderson.s 3-D action-adventure, according to The Hollywood Reporter, is Jared Harris. In just the last five years, Harris has wowed audiences as Lane Pryce on Mad Men, as Professor Moriarty in Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows, as the dubious David Robert Jones on Fringe and as Ulysses S. Grant in Steven Spielberg.s Lincoln. So obviously the next step in his burgeoning career is to reteam...
- 3/14/2013
- cinemablend.com
What a long and wonderfully strange trip Fringe has taken us on over the past four season. The Pattern, David Robert Jones, Cross Dimensional Typewriters, Cross Dimensional Love, and, maybe strangest of all, The Observers. A fifth season of Fringe is certainly a gift for fans as well as everyone who creates on the show, but with William Bell's diabolical plan thwarted in one of the most intense displays of faith and love ever to be seen on TV in the season 4 finale, where do we go from here? The answer, of course, is ... back to the future.
Fringe's fourth season ended on a beat that could have been a satisfying ending for the series, but also a difficult point to re-connect for a fifth season. Momentum would need to be generated again, and all within a shortened season of only 13 episodes. But luckily, the Fringe creative bank had...
Fringe's fourth season ended on a beat that could have been a satisfying ending for the series, but also a difficult point to re-connect for a fifth season. Momentum would need to be generated again, and all within a shortened season of only 13 episodes. But luckily, the Fringe creative bank had...
- 9/28/2012
- by Jon Lachonis
- TVovermind.com
While I like Sherlock Holmes, I am far from a scholar nor have I seen every film adaptation or read every pastiche written. Still, I love the concept and the characters and setting are certainly appealing. Holmes, as created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, is etched in the public mind as one of the most brilliant consulting detectives ever imagined with no clue going unnoticed. His encyclopedic knowledge is legendary and his eccentricities make him nothing but fascinating, including the desire to have Dr. John Watson accompany him as companion and official biographer, a level of narcissism unique in the late 19th century.
As a result, when it was learned Guy Ritchie was to helm a new adaptation with Robert Downey Jr. as Holmes, eyebrows rose around the world. Then we saw the 2009 release, and were generally pleased with the bromance between Downey and Jude Law, the latest Watson. This...
As a result, when it was learned Guy Ritchie was to helm a new adaptation with Robert Downey Jr. as Holmes, eyebrows rose around the world. Then we saw the 2009 release, and were generally pleased with the bromance between Downey and Jude Law, the latest Watson. This...
- 6/11/2012
- by Robert Greenberger
- Comicmix.com
Spoiler Alert for "Mad Men" and "Fringe" fans: If you aren't current on both shows, stop reading right now and catch up with the episodes. As the rest of you already know, British actor Jared Harris has had a rough year on TV. After returning to "Fringe" as criminal mastermind David Robert Jones, last seen bandaged and decomposing due to the effects of teleportation, he was killed off in the season finale. And then last Sunday, his "Mad Men" character, Lane Pryce, shocked viewers by committing suicide. Back Stage spoke to Harris from his hotel in London, where he's currently shooting the supernatural thriller "The Quiet Ones." No word on his character's fate in that project.Between "Fringe" and "Mad Men," your characters have had a rough year.Jared Harris: Don't forget "Sherlock Holmes"! I've died three times this year!When you returned to "Fringe," did you know your character's fate?...
- 6/8/2012
- by help@backstage.com (Jenelle Riley)
- backstage.com
Lane Pryce's suicide on Sunday's (June 3) episode of "Mad Men" was, says actor Jared Harris, his character's final F.U. to Don Draper and Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce -- a company where he believed he'd never got his due in terms of stature and financial gain.
"It was vindictive and it was a passive aggressive act," says Harris in a conference call the day after his character's exit from the show. "His choice of doing it there was a f*** you to the office and to Don. And the topper to that was the boiler plate suicide note. He's trying to dig a hole and make Don feel like he was wrong and make them feel as bad as they made him feel."
"It was a cowardly act," he adds.
Even though Harris is sorry to leave a show that he describes as "still building," he gets show creator Matt Weiner...
"It was vindictive and it was a passive aggressive act," says Harris in a conference call the day after his character's exit from the show. "His choice of doing it there was a f*** you to the office and to Don. And the topper to that was the boiler plate suicide note. He's trying to dig a hole and make Don feel like he was wrong and make them feel as bad as they made him feel."
"It was a cowardly act," he adds.
Even though Harris is sorry to leave a show that he describes as "still building," he gets show creator Matt Weiner...
- 6/4/2012
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
It's that time of year, when the world falls in love...or maybe it's just that time of year when the world pretends to be in love because her better half is a really good recruiter for her religion.
Seriously, between Harry's trip down Krishna lane, and Lane's money problems, there was a lot going on in "Christmas Waltz" that couldn't have cared less about.
As Harry's plot continued to get stranger and stranger as it went, I started wondering what the point was of adding this arc to the series. Was it just to show that audience how caring Harry was? Was it to add some religious elements to the mix? Whatever the reasoning, I found myself not caring in the least what happened to the new Paul, and his lovely friend.
Similarly, I was bored out of my mind whenever Lane was by himself worrying about his money situation.
Seriously, between Harry's trip down Krishna lane, and Lane's money problems, there was a lot going on in "Christmas Waltz" that couldn't have cared less about.
As Harry's plot continued to get stranger and stranger as it went, I started wondering what the point was of adding this arc to the series. Was it just to show that audience how caring Harry was? Was it to add some religious elements to the mix? Whatever the reasoning, I found myself not caring in the least what happened to the new Paul, and his lovely friend.
Similarly, I was bored out of my mind whenever Lane was by himself worrying about his money situation.
- 5/21/2012
- by d4cella@gmail.com (Dan Forcella)
- TVfanatic
Note: Do not read on if you have not seen the Season 4 finale of "Fringe," entitled "Brave New World Part 2."
Genetically mutated dinosaurs? A Cortexiphan baby? Leonard Nimoy? Brain-laced lemon cake?
You can't say there wasn't a lot going on in the May 11 "Fringe" finale. But weirdly enough, that's always been part of the problem with this unlikely survivor, which has been renewed for a fifth and final season.
The Fox show is always trying to balance "stuff" -- the complex mythology that has grown up around the Observers, Olivia Dunham, Walter Bishop, his old friend William Bell, his son Peter and a number of alternate worlds and scenarios -- with the ultimate emotional impact of the stories it tells.
It's not an easy balance to strike, and Season 4 was something of an object lesson in the perils of ideas that seem cool on paper, but can lessen the cumulative...
Genetically mutated dinosaurs? A Cortexiphan baby? Leonard Nimoy? Brain-laced lemon cake?
You can't say there wasn't a lot going on in the May 11 "Fringe" finale. But weirdly enough, that's always been part of the problem with this unlikely survivor, which has been renewed for a fifth and final season.
The Fox show is always trying to balance "stuff" -- the complex mythology that has grown up around the Observers, Olivia Dunham, Walter Bishop, his old friend William Bell, his son Peter and a number of alternate worlds and scenarios -- with the ultimate emotional impact of the stories it tells.
It's not an easy balance to strike, and Season 4 was something of an object lesson in the perils of ideas that seem cool on paper, but can lessen the cumulative...
- 5/12/2012
- by Maureen Ryan
- Aol TV.
Note: Do not read on if you have not seen the Season 4 finale of "Fringe," entitled "Brave New World Part 2."
Genetically mutated dinosaurs? A Cortexiphan baby? Leonard Nimoy? Brain-laced lemon cake?
You can't say there wasn't a lot going on in the May 11 "Fringe" finale. But weirdly enough, that's always been part of the problem with this unlikely survivor, which has been renewed for a fifth and final season.
The Fox show is always trying to balance "stuff" -- the complex mythology that has grown up around the Observers, Olivia Dunham, Walter Bishop, his old friend William Bell, his son Peter and a number of alternate worlds and scenarios -- with the ultimate emotional impact of the stories it tells.
It's not an easy balance to strike, and Season 4 was something of an object lesson in the perils of ideas that seem cool on paper, but can lessen the cumulative...
Genetically mutated dinosaurs? A Cortexiphan baby? Leonard Nimoy? Brain-laced lemon cake?
You can't say there wasn't a lot going on in the May 11 "Fringe" finale. But weirdly enough, that's always been part of the problem with this unlikely survivor, which has been renewed for a fifth and final season.
The Fox show is always trying to balance "stuff" -- the complex mythology that has grown up around the Observers, Olivia Dunham, Walter Bishop, his old friend William Bell, his son Peter and a number of alternate worlds and scenarios -- with the ultimate emotional impact of the stories it tells.
It's not an easy balance to strike, and Season 4 was something of an object lesson in the perils of ideas that seem cool on paper, but can lessen the cumulative...
- 5/12/2012
- by Maureen Ryan
- Aol TV.
Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
After we got the news that Fringe would return for a fifth and finale season of 13 episodes, I was comforted by the knowledge that any loose threads left by Season 4 would be able to be tied up eventually. No matter how badly they screwed up the finale, there would always be September (the month not the Observer). What I never considered was how badly they wouldn’t screw it up, and in a way, this is even worse.
Things kick off where we last left them: William Bell (Leonard Nimoy) has taken Walter (John Noble); Astrid (Jasika Nicole) isn’t dead (silly me thought they might do something bold for a change); Olivia (Anna Torv) and Peter (Joshua Jackson) have no idea what’s going on; and David Robert Jones really was just a henchman.
Bell is showing Walter a vision of the new world he is trying to create.
After we got the news that Fringe would return for a fifth and finale season of 13 episodes, I was comforted by the knowledge that any loose threads left by Season 4 would be able to be tied up eventually. No matter how badly they screwed up the finale, there would always be September (the month not the Observer). What I never considered was how badly they wouldn’t screw it up, and in a way, this is even worse.
Things kick off where we last left them: William Bell (Leonard Nimoy) has taken Walter (John Noble); Astrid (Jasika Nicole) isn’t dead (silly me thought they might do something bold for a change); Olivia (Anna Torv) and Peter (Joshua Jackson) have no idea what’s going on; and David Robert Jones really was just a henchman.
Bell is showing Walter a vision of the new world he is trying to create.
- 5/12/2012
- by Emile K. Lewis
- Obsessed with Film
Fringe Review, Season 4, Episode 22: “Brave New World (Part 2)”
Written by Jeff Pinkner, J. H. Wyman, and Akiva Goldsman
Directed by Joe Chappelle
Airs Fridays at 9pm (Et) on Fox
This week, on Fringe: Bell monologues, Walter shoots, and Olivia smiles
It’s been a mixed season for Fringe. After last year’s shocking cliffhanger, much of the beginning of season four dealt with the fallout of Peter’s deletion. 22 episodes later, we’re in much the same place as we were then. Peter and Olivia are together and happy, Walter is comparatively well-adjusted, thanks to Peter’s influence, and mad scientists keep insisting on cropping up to make trouble. David Robert Jones filled this role well, but he’s already been dealt with, so we’re back to Belly as the mysterious villain. Perhaps the most significant change this season was the addition of Lincoln Lee as a permanent fixture in both Universes.
Written by Jeff Pinkner, J. H. Wyman, and Akiva Goldsman
Directed by Joe Chappelle
Airs Fridays at 9pm (Et) on Fox
This week, on Fringe: Bell monologues, Walter shoots, and Olivia smiles
It’s been a mixed season for Fringe. After last year’s shocking cliffhanger, much of the beginning of season four dealt with the fallout of Peter’s deletion. 22 episodes later, we’re in much the same place as we were then. Peter and Olivia are together and happy, Walter is comparatively well-adjusted, thanks to Peter’s influence, and mad scientists keep insisting on cropping up to make trouble. David Robert Jones filled this role well, but he’s already been dealt with, so we’re back to Belly as the mysterious villain. Perhaps the most significant change this season was the addition of Lincoln Lee as a permanent fixture in both Universes.
- 5/12/2012
- by Kate Kulzick
- SoundOnSight
What a privilege it was to be on the media call with sci-fi legend Leonard Nimoy yesterday. That voice. He was gracious, kind, funny, and laughed a lot. He was an absolute treat. The questions and answers ran the gamut from his start as an actor – with a Boston accent! – to his thoughts on Fringe, the new Star Trek movie franchise, and any future appearances.
First, we’ll keep you in suspense no longer: he is willing to appear on the final season of Fringe. This isn’t spoilery, considering we’ve already seen him die once on the show, so we’re still in the dark as to what might happen tonight. He hasn’t yet spoken with anyone on Fringe about a Season 5 appearance, but expects to be hearing from them some time soon.
Second, it doesn’t appear that he’ll be showing up in the second Star Trek movie,...
First, we’ll keep you in suspense no longer: he is willing to appear on the final season of Fringe. This isn’t spoilery, considering we’ve already seen him die once on the show, so we’re still in the dark as to what might happen tonight. He hasn’t yet spoken with anyone on Fringe about a Season 5 appearance, but expects to be hearing from them some time soon.
Second, it doesn’t appear that he’ll be showing up in the second Star Trek movie,...
- 5/11/2012
- by Erin Willard
- ScifiMafia
The time has come. We have been warned by the Observers, invited into the future to see the outcome and reintroduced to characters of the past. All of this has lead up to tonight, the season four finale of Fringe.
Last week, William Bell was revealed as the mastermind behind the evil plot to destroy both universes and create an all new one under his control. David Robert Jones was sacrificed for the "greater" good and Astrid may be the next casualty. Tonight, the battle will come to an end as the Fringe Division works to prevent a catastrophic event from taking the lives of many.
Last week, William Bell was revealed as the mastermind behind the evil plot to destroy both universes and create an all new one under his control. David Robert Jones was sacrificed for the "greater" good and Astrid may be the next casualty. Tonight, the battle will come to an end as the Fringe Division works to prevent a catastrophic event from taking the lives of many.
- 5/11/2012
- by editor@buddytv.com
- buddytv.com
"Fringe" has had some great villains over the years, but the return of Leonard Nimoy as William Bell in the first part of the season finale "Worlds Apart" might mean the end of both universes. Bell wants to create his own new world and it doesn't matter who dies in the attempt.
After four seasons, we want to know who your favorite villain is. The nefarious David Robert Jones (Jared Harris)? Alt Nina (Blair Brown)? Belly? Or is it someone else? Vote for your choice in our poll.
Before the finale, check in to Get Glue to relive some of your favorite moments with "Fringe" stickers like the ones below. What was your favorite moment? We want to hear your thoughts. "Fringe" airs Friday nights on Fox.
Who is your favorite villain on 'Fringe?'...
After four seasons, we want to know who your favorite villain is. The nefarious David Robert Jones (Jared Harris)? Alt Nina (Blair Brown)? Belly? Or is it someone else? Vote for your choice in our poll.
Before the finale, check in to Get Glue to relive some of your favorite moments with "Fringe" stickers like the ones below. What was your favorite moment? We want to hear your thoughts. "Fringe" airs Friday nights on Fox.
Who is your favorite villain on 'Fringe?'...
- 5/10/2012
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
"Brave New World, Part 1" seems to imply that the Fringe world is in for yet another gigantic change as it heads to the end of the season.
Enjoy the opinions of Sean McKenna, Nick Shere and Carissa Pavlica below, as this Round Table trio shares its thoughts on the first of a season finale that really does promise to change everything...
-------------------------------------------
What was your favorite moment or quote from the episode?
Sean: Had to be the reveal of William Bell. I love when the show brings back stuff from past seasons and Bell certainly takes the cake. So cool to see that he's pulling the strings.
Nick S: Astrid finally got to kick a little ass. Not enough, though. Grr.
Carissa: I loved Olivia learning she had more powers. Just taking over Peter's body like that was seriously awesome.
Were you surprised to see William Bell?
Sean: A little,...
Enjoy the opinions of Sean McKenna, Nick Shere and Carissa Pavlica below, as this Round Table trio shares its thoughts on the first of a season finale that really does promise to change everything...
-------------------------------------------
What was your favorite moment or quote from the episode?
Sean: Had to be the reveal of William Bell. I love when the show brings back stuff from past seasons and Bell certainly takes the cake. So cool to see that he's pulling the strings.
Nick S: Astrid finally got to kick a little ass. Not enough, though. Grr.
Carissa: I loved Olivia learning she had more powers. Just taking over Peter's body like that was seriously awesome.
Were you surprised to see William Bell?
Sean: A little,...
- 5/10/2012
- by matt@tvfanatic.com (TV Fanatic Staff)
- TVfanatic
The first part of Fringe’s Season 4 finale, “Brave New World,” set the stage for the end to one of the craziest seasons of science fiction television I have ever seen. Not only did Leonard Nimoy come out of retirement to reprise his role as William Bell, but it became quite clear he has been the bad guy all along, pulling the strings from behind the scenes and directing the more obviously villainous David Robert Jones. Going into the second part of “Brave New World,” we have a lot of questions that need to be answered and, thankfully, Fox gave us a couple of videos that should calm our nerves that most answers will be revealed.
related: Fringe Season 5 And Versatile Season 4 Finale
In the first video, Nimoy and John Noble discuss what it has been like playing Bell and Walter Bishop, who were still working out some personal grudges...
related: Fringe Season 5 And Versatile Season 4 Finale
In the first video, Nimoy and John Noble discuss what it has been like playing Bell and Walter Bishop, who were still working out some personal grudges...
- 5/10/2012
- by Brody Gibson
- Boomtron
"Fringe" has been incredibly exciting this season, but no episode hit a home run the way the first part of the season finale "Brave New World" did. David Robert Jones (Jared Harris) is trying to merge the universes to create a new one that he controls. Who's behind it? William Bell (Leonard Nimoy), who isn't in amber after all.
A shorter version of the movie-style trailer was released before Part One, but now we have the full version. After the moment Astrid (Jaiska Nicole) is shot, we see exactly what Bell is trying to do. It's terrifying. And what about Olivia (Anna Torv)? Will she make it, despite what the Other saw?
Check out the full trailer below and let us know what you think. Thank goodness we have another season! There is no way this could have been wrapped up in one more night! "Fringe" fans, you just won TV!
A shorter version of the movie-style trailer was released before Part One, but now we have the full version. After the moment Astrid (Jaiska Nicole) is shot, we see exactly what Bell is trying to do. It's terrifying. And what about Olivia (Anna Torv)? Will she make it, despite what the Other saw?
Check out the full trailer below and let us know what you think. Thank goodness we have another season! There is no way this could have been wrapped up in one more night! "Fringe" fans, you just won TV!
- 5/10/2012
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
As Leonard Nimoy recalls of his previous Fringe run (which closed Season 2), “The [William] Bell character was unresolved. We didn’t quite know whether to trust him or what his intentions really were.”
Well, given the events of Season 4′s penultimate episode, I think we can file this genius scientist under “Not trustworthy.”
Recap | Fringe Shockers! David Robert Jones’ Boss Is Revealed! And Did Astrid Die?!
As Fringe regular John Noble notes in this video sitdown with Nimoy, Bell, for whom David Robert Jones had been toiling, “has taken control completely… and I think he’s completely insane at this point.
Well, given the events of Season 4′s penultimate episode, I think we can file this genius scientist under “Not trustworthy.”
Recap | Fringe Shockers! David Robert Jones’ Boss Is Revealed! And Did Astrid Die?!
As Fringe regular John Noble notes in this video sitdown with Nimoy, Bell, for whom David Robert Jones had been toiling, “has taken control completely… and I think he’s completely insane at this point.
- 5/8/2012
- by Matt Webb Mitovich
- TVLine.com
Fringe
“Brave New World, Part 1” Air Date: 5/4/2012
A black gentleman buys a coffee at a stand with his Sprint phone, in a blatant example of product placement. After riding the escalator down, and out of the building, he starts to smoke, turn red, and then crumples to the ground in a heap. Others around him also begin to spontaneously combust when, in a very Twilight Zone-y way, a woman yells for everybody to stop moving. “It only happens if you move!” Cue the quirky Fringe music and the first part of a massive (and dynamic) two parter to end Fringe’s penultimate fourth season has begun.
Peter and Olivia are in bed, shopping for homes around Boston in the classified’s (old school), looking at places with a dog run or, dare to dream, a nursery. This tickles Peter beyond belief, but then the phone rings and they’re on the case.
“Brave New World, Part 1” Air Date: 5/4/2012
A black gentleman buys a coffee at a stand with his Sprint phone, in a blatant example of product placement. After riding the escalator down, and out of the building, he starts to smoke, turn red, and then crumples to the ground in a heap. Others around him also begin to spontaneously combust when, in a very Twilight Zone-y way, a woman yells for everybody to stop moving. “It only happens if you move!” Cue the quirky Fringe music and the first part of a massive (and dynamic) two parter to end Fringe’s penultimate fourth season has begun.
Peter and Olivia are in bed, shopping for homes around Boston in the classified’s (old school), looking at places with a dog run or, dare to dream, a nursery. This tickles Peter beyond belief, but then the phone rings and they’re on the case.
- 5/7/2012
- by Andy Greene
- FamousMonsters of Filmland
Fringe Review, Season 4, Episode 21: “Brave New World (Part 1)”
Written by J. H. Wyman, Jeff Pinkner, and Akiva Goldsman
Directed by Joe Chappelle
Airs Fridays at 9pm (Et) on Fox
This week, on Fringe: Walter bakes, Olivia and Astrid are fighters, and Belly likes almonds
Much of this season has centered around the reemergence of David Robert Jones. He’s been a fantastic villain, keeping a few steps ahead of the Fringe team by shrouding his larger agenda in mystery. Jared Harris has been a blast in the role, dripping with malevolent glee, chewing the scenery when appropriate, and dialing down the camp and up the intensity when his scenes call for it. This week, we bid Jones a fond farewell as he once again goes out by Peter’s hand, with an assist from his own technology (losing half his face in the process). As ever, Harris gives his scenes his all,...
Written by J. H. Wyman, Jeff Pinkner, and Akiva Goldsman
Directed by Joe Chappelle
Airs Fridays at 9pm (Et) on Fox
This week, on Fringe: Walter bakes, Olivia and Astrid are fighters, and Belly likes almonds
Much of this season has centered around the reemergence of David Robert Jones. He’s been a fantastic villain, keeping a few steps ahead of the Fringe team by shrouding his larger agenda in mystery. Jared Harris has been a blast in the role, dripping with malevolent glee, chewing the scenery when appropriate, and dialing down the camp and up the intensity when his scenes call for it. This week, we bid Jones a fond farewell as he once again goes out by Peter’s hand, with an assist from his own technology (losing half his face in the process). As ever, Harris gives his scenes his all,...
- 5/7/2012
- by Kate Kulzick
- SoundOnSight
The introductions to Fringe are always one of the best parts of each episode and this week’s introduction was no exception. It was undoubetdly one of the most engaging of the season, as a man came walking out of a cafe and collapsed before his death just as others around him were finding the same fate. But this wasn’t your typical case of the week scenario. David Robert Jones was behind it all. With the season finale airing next week, can’t say we’re surprised. But there were still plenty of jaw dropping moments intertwined, making this one of the best episodes of the season.
We were treated to Lost alum, Rebecca Mader as a guest star this week, playing Jessica Holt, one of the victims who came in contact with what resulted in spontaneous human combustion. Kudos to the random woman who said, “Don’t move.
We were treated to Lost alum, Rebecca Mader as a guest star this week, playing Jessica Holt, one of the victims who came in contact with what resulted in spontaneous human combustion. Kudos to the random woman who said, “Don’t move.
- 5/5/2012
- by Melody Simpson
- BuzzFocus.com
Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars
For the first time that I can remember, Fringe has broken its formula of showing us one case per week. Usually, even the mythology episodes are linked to a single case, or there’s no stand-alone case at all and it’s just pure mythology. This week we get a jumbled mess of I don’t know what.
As per usual, Spoilers follow:
This is the first part of the two-part Season 4 finale and the episode opens with one case and then resolves with another. I found this to be very distracting considering the only point to this episode was to reveal Mr. You-Know-Who and set up the finale next week.
The first case, which was actually pretty interesting until I completely forgot about it during the second half of the episode, opened with a guy buying a coffee at a commercial centre in Boston with...
For the first time that I can remember, Fringe has broken its formula of showing us one case per week. Usually, even the mythology episodes are linked to a single case, or there’s no stand-alone case at all and it’s just pure mythology. This week we get a jumbled mess of I don’t know what.
As per usual, Spoilers follow:
This is the first part of the two-part Season 4 finale and the episode opens with one case and then resolves with another. I found this to be very distracting considering the only point to this episode was to reveal Mr. You-Know-Who and set up the finale next week.
The first case, which was actually pretty interesting until I completely forgot about it during the second half of the episode, opened with a guy buying a coffee at a commercial centre in Boston with...
- 5/5/2012
- by Emile K. Lewis
- Obsessed with Film
Well now. Was that the shortest hour of television in the history of television or did I somehow miss half of "Brave New World, Part 1?"
The last few episodes have all been quite similar in that respect. Before I have time to wrap my head around the enormity of what's happening, the credits roll! That's an incredible combination of my somewhat thick skull and the extraordinary craft that goes into making an episode of Fringe.
We were duped!
I have to give credit to producers who can hold a press conference and successfully retain the big secrets. As a writer, I've come to trust Joel Wyman and Jeff Pinkner when they say something, so I didn't think twice during a recent Fringe interview when they said they had so far been unsuccessful in begging Leonard Nimoy to return to acting and had resorted to planting signs in his yard. A slight exaggeration,...
The last few episodes have all been quite similar in that respect. Before I have time to wrap my head around the enormity of what's happening, the credits roll! That's an incredible combination of my somewhat thick skull and the extraordinary craft that goes into making an episode of Fringe.
We were duped!
I have to give credit to producers who can hold a press conference and successfully retain the big secrets. As a writer, I've come to trust Joel Wyman and Jeff Pinkner when they say something, so I didn't think twice during a recent Fringe interview when they said they had so far been unsuccessful in begging Leonard Nimoy to return to acting and had resorted to planting signs in his yard. A slight exaggeration,...
- 5/5/2012
- by carissa@tvfanatic.com (Carissa Pavlica)
- TVfanatic
Someone isn't dead, and if you don't want to know who it is, stop here until you've watched the episode. There is no going back now. Yes, "Fringe" fans. Part one of the season finale has brought back a character we didn't know was out of amber. William Bell (Leonard Nimoy) is alive!
In this week's episode, someone is overheating the nanites in people's bodies. A brave woman named Jessica Holt (Rebecca Mader) allows Walter (John Noble) to experiment on her to save them. What we find out is that Olivia (Anna Torv) has kinetic powers from the cortexiphan. She lowers Jessica's temperature with her mind. Nice trick!
Olivia is worried that she and Peter (Joshua Jackson) will never have a normal life after the two of them discuss getting a place with a nursery. Crazy abilities that we learn later in the episode include remote punching, might make this an issue.
In this week's episode, someone is overheating the nanites in people's bodies. A brave woman named Jessica Holt (Rebecca Mader) allows Walter (John Noble) to experiment on her to save them. What we find out is that Olivia (Anna Torv) has kinetic powers from the cortexiphan. She lowers Jessica's temperature with her mind. Nice trick!
Olivia is worried that she and Peter (Joshua Jackson) will never have a normal life after the two of them discuss getting a place with a nursery. Crazy abilities that we learn later in the episode include remote punching, might make this an issue.
- 5/5/2012
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
Warning: The following contains major spoilers from this Friday’s episode of Fox’s Fringe. Proceed accordingly.
If Fox had not renewed Fringe last week, the Internet would be on fire right now, torched to the ground, given the jaw-dropping events of Season 4′s penultimate hour.
For starters, very early into the episode it was revealed that the devious, deviant David Robert Jones in fact does answer to someone. And that someone is no less than… William Bell, played by a not-very-retired Leonard Nimoy.
“Don’t confuse a winning move with a winning game,” Belly told his cohort in the...
If Fox had not renewed Fringe last week, the Internet would be on fire right now, torched to the ground, given the jaw-dropping events of Season 4′s penultimate hour.
For starters, very early into the episode it was revealed that the devious, deviant David Robert Jones in fact does answer to someone. And that someone is no less than… William Bell, played by a not-very-retired Leonard Nimoy.
“Don’t confuse a winning move with a winning game,” Belly told his cohort in the...
- 5/5/2012
- by Matt Webb Mitovich
- TVLine.com
It's the first part of a two-part Fringe finale tonight and all is bittersweet. The end of season four is near, yet there are so many answers to open-ended questions to learn! I don't know if I'd rather look away to prolong the inevitable or face my fears head on. I guess I should ask myself, "Wwwd?" Translation being, "What Would Walter Do?" Clever, right? Walter Bishop has a childlike nature as seen through most of the season, yet as a leader amongst his Fringe family, Walter has definitely stepped up to the plate. Tonight, audiences will see even more from this lovable character.
Last week, the bridge between both universes was closed. We waved goodbye to Lincoln Lee and the alternate Fringe Division, but welcomed the end to the supposed reign of terror from ultimate bad guy David Robert Jones. Tonight's episode will require that Walter return to the dark times in his life,...
Last week, the bridge between both universes was closed. We waved goodbye to Lincoln Lee and the alternate Fringe Division, but welcomed the end to the supposed reign of terror from ultimate bad guy David Robert Jones. Tonight's episode will require that Walter return to the dark times in his life,...
- 5/4/2012
- by editor@buddytv.com
- buddytv.com
On TV this Friday: The Finder tackles a bewitching case, Fringe‘s worlds remain in crisis, Mary Shannon is In Plain Sight for the very last time and more. In addition to TVLine’s features (linked within), here are eight programs to keep on your radar.
Photos | Nikita Exclusive: ‘Mikita’ Gets Wet and Wild
8 pm The Finder (Fox) | A Miami mob boss (Nestor Serrano, 24) has a strange request: Find the voodoo doll that is working against him.
8 pm Who Do You Think You Are? (NBC) | Parks and Recreation‘s Rashida Jones uncovers information about her grandmother’s pre-marriage life, during...
Photos | Nikita Exclusive: ‘Mikita’ Gets Wet and Wild
8 pm The Finder (Fox) | A Miami mob boss (Nestor Serrano, 24) has a strange request: Find the voodoo doll that is working against him.
8 pm Who Do You Think You Are? (NBC) | Parks and Recreation‘s Rashida Jones uncovers information about her grandmother’s pre-marriage life, during...
- 5/4/2012
- by Alyse Whitney
- TVLine.com
Only two episodes remain of Fringe season 4. With David Robert Jones out to destroy the universe (or universes, as the case may be), access to the Other Side cut off and a whole bunch of suddenly nefarious Observers, the stakes have never been higher.
How will the world almost end this time? And how will the Fringe team stop it? These four Fringe videos may give a bit of a clue.
How will the world almost end this time? And how will the Fringe team stop it? These four Fringe videos may give a bit of a clue.
- 5/3/2012
- by editor@buddytv.com
- buddytv.com
Will Fringe take us back to 2036? Will we see William Bell again? What about Seth Gabel as Lincoln Lee?
During a conference call with reporters yesterday, producers Joel Wyman and Jeff Pinkner touched on these topics and more, teasing both the upcoming finale and Fringe season five... without giving away too much, of course.
Fringe Season 4 Finale Preview
Will the series return to 2036? Most likely, said Pinker: “That future is important to our storytelling, but it’s the not the be all and end all.”
Be sure you are familiar with last Friday's "Letters of Transit." It holds the key to the thematic issues Wyman and Pinkner hope to tell to close out the drama.
Leonard Nimoy has to return as William Bell... right? “We basically erected a sign outside of Leonard’s house that says, ‘Please come back to Fringe,’ and we are hoping that by Season 5 he says yes,...
During a conference call with reporters yesterday, producers Joel Wyman and Jeff Pinkner touched on these topics and more, teasing both the upcoming finale and Fringe season five... without giving away too much, of course.
Fringe Season 4 Finale Preview
Will the series return to 2036? Most likely, said Pinker: “That future is important to our storytelling, but it’s the not the be all and end all.”
Be sure you are familiar with last Friday's "Letters of Transit." It holds the key to the thematic issues Wyman and Pinkner hope to tell to close out the drama.
Leonard Nimoy has to return as William Bell... right? “We basically erected a sign outside of Leonard’s house that says, ‘Please come back to Fringe,’ and we are hoping that by Season 5 he says yes,...
- 5/3/2012
- by carissa@tvfanatic.com (Carissa Pavlica)
- TVfanatic
Fringe executive producers Jeff Pinkner and Joel Wyman held a conference call on Wednesday to, first, thank those who write about television for their support over the years and how that, in part, helped the show earn a fifth and final season pick-up. Then they got to the business at hand: fielding burning questions coming out of the past couple of episodes and leading into the final two weeks of Season 4.
A Most Logical Encore? | For starters, TVLine asked the show bosses if what/whom we got a glimpse of in the 2036-set Episode 19 — coupled with what Josh Jackson said...
A Most Logical Encore? | For starters, TVLine asked the show bosses if what/whom we got a glimpse of in the 2036-set Episode 19 — coupled with what Josh Jackson said...
- 5/2/2012
- by Matt Webb Mitovich
- TVLine.com
Walter Revisits His Painful Past On An All-new "Fringe" Friday, May 4, On Fox A mysterious Fringe event causing people to spontaneously combust forces Walter to revisit his painful past while the Fringe team faces off against David Robert Jones to save the world, or worlds, in the all-new "Brave New World, Part 1 of 2" episode of Fringe airing Friday, May 4 (9:00-10:00 Pm Et/Pt) on Fox. Don't worry, the copyright advice at the middle of the video was indeed put there on purpose by Fox to tease the fans until this Friday.
- 5/2/2012
- ComicBookMovie.com
Only one world will survive in the Fringe season finale.
In the two-hour episode, airing on May 11, David Robert Jones (Jared Harris) will try to destroy the two universes to create a new one that he'll control. And from the looks of it in the trailer below, William Bell (Leonard Nimoy) is alive and helping him.
Fox renews Fringe for 13 episodes
Read More >...
In the two-hour episode, airing on May 11, David Robert Jones (Jared Harris) will try to destroy the two universes to create a new one that he'll control. And from the looks of it in the trailer below, William Bell (Leonard Nimoy) is alive and helping him.
Fox renews Fringe for 13 episodes
Read More >...
- 5/1/2012
- by Robyn Ross
- TVGuide - Breaking News
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