On 6/11/2025 6:37 AM, Dimensional Traveler wrote:
Fringe S4E19 'Letters of Transit'
IMDb sez: "In the future, the Observers rule and humans that survived
the purge serve them. There are still a small number of people fighting
for the resistance, and one of them has discovered one of the original
Fringe team in the form of Walter protected in amber. As the resistance attempts to get rid of the Observers, we get a glimpse into a rather
dark dystopian future."
The glyphs for this episode spell out: QUAKE
This episode follows the pattern established in season two: The fourth- to-last episode of a season is "the weird one". Season two (23 eps) had #2.20, Brown Betty, a musical, whereas season three (22 eps) had #3.19, Lysergic Acid Diethylamide, a partly animated episode. And this one is a flash-forward episode.
When Simon and Henrietta are taking Walter to the city, they get stopped
by a Loyalist officer. During this Walter says "These aren't the droids
you are looking for" which is a line from Star Wars: A New Hope (1977). Fringe creator JJ Abrams would go on to direct two Star Wars films -
Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015) and Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker. "Crazy Credits": Opening text which scrolled upward on screen: 'They
came from the future. At first, they only watched. Arriving at key
moments in human history. We called them OBSERVERS. But in 2015 they
stopped watching... and seized control. Citizen uprisings proved bloody
and futile. Those who survived became known as "Natives." In an attempt
to show their allegiance, some Native factions became "Loyalists" and
were marked by the OBSERVERS. The original FRINGE TEAM fought the
invasion, but was quickly defeated. FRINGE DIVISION was allowed to
continue at a reduced capacity, but only to police the Natives. The resistance was quickly overcome ...or so they thought.' [the word
"OBSERVERS" was written in red text, while all other text was white
against the black background.]
Dr. Walter Bishop: I am not a number. I am a free man. (I wonder where
he got that from.)
:-)
Dr. Walter Bishop: Have you seen it?
Simon Foster: Monkey feces? No. I can't say I've had the pleasure.
Dr. Walter Bishop: I wouldn't say that it was a pleasure.
Fringe S4E20 'Worlds Apart'
IMDb sez: "Multiple earthquakes are happening simultaneously around both
our world and the alt-world. Walter believes he knows what the end game
of David Robert Jones is. And, even though Olivia has a connection to
one of the players Jones is using that she thinks she can utilize, in
the end it leads to some hard decisions for the Fringe team."
The glyphs for this episode spell out: ALIVE
Olivia Dunham: I knew Nick when we were kids. We shared an emotional
bond. I'm hoping that through you we may be able to reconnect and find him. Nick Lane: And this makes perfect sense to all of you?
Lincoln Lee: I find it's best if you just go with it.
What Did You Watch?
I watched:
A Fabled Holiday (Hallmark) Another old movie I've had sitting on the
DVR since 2023. And it's another Christmas movie. This one stars
Brooke D'Orsay and Fyan Paevey as two childhood friends who as adults
drifted apart. They run into each other and briefly rekindle their
friendship, then they run into each other again when they both wind up
at the same Christmas resort town. Brooke insists there's something
familiar about the town and their traditions, then realizes it's all
exactly like the Christmas book she and Fyan used to read as children.
But the people who run the town say the similarities are because they
stole the ideas from the same book. Paint by numbers Hallmark wackiness ensues. It was an OK Christmas movie. I'm not spoiling anything to say
the town really was magic. They never hid that fact. Part of the
amusement was Brooke noticing the magic while the people who ran the
town made excuses for it. They said something like, of course it's
similar, you can't copyright ideas from a book. At one point when
Brooke said all the guests read the same book, even I was thinking
that's not proof of anything! How many people at a "The Cat in the Hat"
or "How The Grinch Stole Christmas" themed town would have read that
book as a child?
There's something fishy about this Star Wars themed ride at Disneyland. Everyone in line for this ride has also watched a Star Wars movie. How
is that possible?
Zack Snyder's Justice League (4K disc) Picking up after the events of
"Batman v. Superman" and "Suicide Squad," Batman (Ben Affleck) assembles
a team of heroes to protect Earth from Darkseid's pending invasion of
Earth. Batman ultimately assembles Wonder Woman (Gal Gadot), Cyborg
(Ray Fisher), Aquaman (Jason Moma), and The Flash (Ezra Miller). In
spite of being dead, Henry Cavill's name shows up during the opening
credits, so I guess Superman is in this too. And this being the Synder
cut we also get Martian Manhunter and Ryan Choi (who would become The
Atom) because why not. Overall, it holds up great and is probably the
best movie in the DCEU franchise. But Snyder could have *easily* shaved
an hour from this movie and it wouldn't have been missed. Well, shave
30 minutes to be on the safe side. I don't mind giving the movie room
to breathe, but did we really need so many slow motion shots (that
weren't the Flash)?
The other annoying thing is Snyder released the movie in open matte
1.33:1 ratio to mimic the IMAX ratio. But he didn't film the movie
using IMAX cameras. It's purely an aesthetic choice, and it's an
aesthetic choice that I hate! It's one thing watching IMAX ratio in an
IMAX theater, or watching the frame open up for scenes shot using IMAX
cameras, but the 1.33:1 ratio (which isn't even true IMAX!) just makes
it look like you're watching something shot for TV in the 90s. :-/
Anyway, it's still a great movie and by far the superior version of
Justice League. I wouldn't spit on the Joss Whedon version if it was on
fire. That version is *dead* to me!
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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