1.10 Safe

Fringe Rewatch: 1.10 O Down

by Roco on August 26, 2010 · 12 comments

Welcome our retrospective rewatch for episode 10 of season 1, “Safe”. Below the jump we strangle new perspectives from the episode while believing that people really can walk through walls!

This is an episode we have cheekily retitled O Down, due to Walter’s work coming full circle to bite him on the ass, and Olivia ending the episode down and (not quite) out.

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Fringe Rewatch – 1.10 Safe

by Roco on August 12, 2009 · 7 comments

Safe - Rewatch

Synopsis: While investigating a series of bank robberies, Olivia, Walter and Peter are shocked to find one of the suspects inexplicably trapped inside a vault wall as if it solidified around him. Walter realizes that the high-tech thieves have figured out a way to defy the law of physics and that, much to his dismay, the crooks are after something of his. As the ongoing investigation unfolds and the mystery deepens, the perilous situation climaxes when a member of the trio is ambushed.

I recall “Safe” as being one of those episodes where things began to ‘come together’. On second viewing I can still see its charm.

New observations, perspectives and whatnot below:

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The Observer Theory: Dimensional (Pt. 2)

by Roco on January 20, 2009 · 6 comments

In part 1 of The Observer Theory, I offered my thoughts on why the Observer watches certain events (usually ‘pattern-events’ and Olivia’s reactions to those events). In a nutshell, I believe that the Observer is changing reality. I would advise reading the whole theory to fully grasp what I am trying to suggest.

In part 2 of The Observer Theory, sub-titled “Dimensional”, I aim to explain the phenomenon of the Blue Lights (which have appeared at various stages in the show), whilst continuing the overall ‘Observer Theory’.

The Observer Theory - Dimensional

In my opinion, the blue lights are the effects of observation from another dimension or Universe (possibly a parallel Universe). For arguments sake, I will use the word ‘dimension’, but in truth the you may decide that the word ‘Universe’ is a better fit.

So, we know that the Observer is watching pattern events, which are basically ‘experiments’. We also know that in Quantum Mechanics, the act of observing changes reality. But in the absence of foresight, what indicators are there to suggest that a reality has been observed..and therefore changed? In my opinion the blue lights are these ‘indicators’ – they are they like the indicators of the double slit experiment, or perhaps the outcome of the Uncertainty Principle, which could give us an indication of the size of these ‘dimensions’ relative to our perception:

So, I believe that the Observer is not necessarily from another time (although do believe that to be possible), but moreover, he is from another dimension..or universe. I am not talking about aliens here, I am talking about a world (possibly multiple) that exist within our own world. Invisible dimensions which are just out of our conscious perspective – dimensions which may be tiny (as the above video illustrates), but in actual fact are just as large as our own.

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It’s been a long time, but like Aaliyah we couldn’t forget you – here’s our easteregg and clues round-up for Fringe episode 1.10 “Safe”:

Caught On Camera

1.10 Eastereggs & Clues - Safe
The Observer appears very early on in the episode – the first scene, in fact. He can be seen on the security monitor, seemingly observing the area surrounding the bank that Loeb and his men were raiding. You can chalk this one down as a ‘Pattern-event’ appearance.

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1.10 “Safe” – Fringie of The Week

by Roco on December 10, 2008 · 0 comments

It’s the last Fringie of the Week of 2008, as Fringie goes into hiatus hibernation until Jan 20. It’s been a tenacious tussle, but who will land the final blow of 08′? It’s time to decide.

Current Standings: Walter 5 wins, Peter 4 wins, Olivia, Meegar’s Mom and The Observer 1 win each.

1.10 "Safe" - Fringie of the Week

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Poll closes on Dec 17.

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1.10 “Safe” Review

by Roco on December 8, 2008 · 5 comments

The Good

  1. The opening sequence with Loeb and his men walking through the vault walls. Yet again Fringe scores a win for an intense and well made opening.
  2. Recurring. Old faces Loeb and Jones return to give Fringe the more “serial” feel that it cries out for. Both characters gave the episode more depth and purpose. Jones could well turn out to be the “Henry Gale” of Fringe.
  3. Peter back with the ‘A Team’ where he belongs. Tell Tess that he belongs with his daddy.
  4. Olivia and Peter chemistry. There were some seriously great vibes between these two during the bar scene. Lord knows Olivia needs some healing and I think peter could be the one to provide it. But we don’t want it to happen anytime soon. Let it simmer and slow burn. 
  5. Charlie said a funny. How awesome was Charlie’s “Is he stoned?” response to Walter’s even better ramble about time-travel and “imagining yourself then, imagining yourself now”.  
  6. Teleportation. Some fans have been b*tchin’ about the teleportation plot saying that it wasn’t explained well or realistic enough. Seriously, did these people ever moan this much when Scotty beamed them up, or when Ben turned the wheel? People need to remember that Fringe is entertainment, and that we clearly haven’t seen the last of Walter’s little time-travel gizmo. Personally, I enjoyed the teleportation of Mr. Jones and loved the fact that time-travel was alluded to. This show will hopefully go on for years, imagine if Lost had revealed every little detail in it’s first season!? Mystery frickin box, people!
  7. Nina Sharp in a state of worry and concern. We love Nina, she’s like our version of Walter’s “supplements”. She perks us up just thinking about her cheery smile and red hair. Seriously, I want her hair. But it was great to see her a bit agitated in this episode – “we’re up against highly motivated individuals” – yeah, and then she’s in merry London for something important. YES! Fringe truly went international in this episode and we have more clues as to the high stakes for the various factions.
  8. Olivia in peril. Yes! Finally there are consequences for running head-first into potential danger alone. Whilst we sincerely hope that Olivia is OK, it’s about time that she was on the receiving end of a foot chase (albeit one that only covered 4 yards. Pretty weak actually, but she probably had heels on).
  9. A well written and directed episode that brought several strands together, whilst giving us even more questions. This is not a bad thing, have you seen the state of TV-land recently? Thank heavens for Fringe, thank heavens for Bad Robot! Hail, hail!

The Bad

  1. What has happened to Phillip Broyles? Perhaps they’re down-playing his role for the time being, but I was led to believe that Lance Reddick’s character would be more meaty than the one he has portrayed on Lost? This man is surely being under utilized?
  2. Arghhhhhh-strid. Dear, sweet Astrid, how we have waited patiently for you to do something other than watch Sponge bob, order take-aways, come up with random cryptology skills and stroke Gene (good God, did that really happen?). We’ve watched in horror as you’ve allowed Walter to get away with attacking you. We’ve looked on with admiration as you’ve diligently stuck to the task of doing NOTHING for 10 episodes (seriously, I want a job like that). We’ve observed with amusement, as you’ve failed to slap the man who constantly massacres your name. And yet there’s something about you, some undeniable quality that keeps you under our protective wing. Like a little Chicklet we want to feed you with larger scripts and juicier worms. Astrid. Frustratingly, we like you. And therein lies the contradiction, and your umpteenth appearance in our “Bad” list.
  3. Peter’s good but that good? We’ve been led to believe that he read people, that’s marvelous! But is he really so good as to know that wall-phase-lackeyhad radiation poisoning, just from seeing the trembling of his hand? Maybe (if he was paying attention during “The Cure”), but it seems a bit convenient that he can get people to confess when actual FBI agents stand around floundering. Remember Steig? Peter broke him in a heartbeat.
  4. Charlie. Worst. Field. Assist. Ever. OK, so he’s not Olivia’s nanny, but he is her partner. When has he ever pulled his weight in that relationship? He’s good on the therapists couch, but out on the field? Charlie sucks. He can wail into that radio all day long, but at the end of the day this is yet another occasion where he’s failed to help Olivia with the ’bad guy’ situation. He’s either too late, off screen somewhere, or rolling around town with his army FBI agents. Which brings me to..
  5. Olivia baby, we’re glad that you’ve learnt the hard way not to go it alone, but seriously, why go it alone? Where were all of those FBI agents? Why were you isolated? 
  6. Repetition and clarity. The John Scott/Olivia thing is becoming a bit confusing. Not because we’re slow, but because it seems like the characters forget the discussions that they’ve had in previous episodes. Why is Walter slightly surprised that Olivia is remembering some of John Scott’s memories? Is it because Walter himself is forgetful? Because if it is, that’s OK. But if we’re doing this for the benefit of casual viewers: Meh. (This is really our way of saying we want the show to become more serialized. Please? With butterscotch pudding on top?).
  7. The fact that we have to wait 7 weeks for the next fantastic installment. What? No Mobisodes? You’re just gonna leave us at Christmas? Only kidding, merry Christmas to all at Fringe and to all at Fringe a happy new year. :)

Overall episode rating 9.5/10 [based on previous episodes. Best episode so far, with huge potential for the remainder of the season]

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1.10 “Safe” – Sci-Fi Vs Reality

by Roco on December 6, 2008 · 0 comments

Popular Mechanics break into Fringe’s “Safe” and cast their judgement on the accuracy of the science depicted in the episode.

Can people walk through walls?
Fringe loves to toe the line between science fact and fiction, but this time its tilted far over onto the fiction side. In the episode, mad scientist Walter Bishop concludes that the thieves would’ve needed cutting-edge knowledge of quantum physics, plus more money than many banks’ assets combined, to make it through the wall. However, the closest thing to a scientific explanation Bishop offers is a lab demonstration with rice—when he puts an action figure on top of a bowl of uncooked rice, it can stand on top, but when he shakes the back it sinks to the bottom. Bishop correctly states that matter is mostly empty space, says MIT physics professor Ray Ashoori—beyond the nucleus made of protons and neutrons, an atom is tremendously spacious, filled only by electrons that essentially have no mass. However, what’s important, and the reason a solid doesn’t just go through another solid, is electrons’ electrical charge—the closer you try to push two electrons together, the more electromagnetic repulsion is created. That’s why the space in a bowl of rice isn’t the same as the space in an atom, Ashoori says. In Fringe, Bishop implies that vibrations like those he uses on the rice bowl would be similar to what the thieves used to change the structure of the wall, but vibrations aren’t going to stop those repulsive charges for a couple minutes and change the wall’s matter into some kind of new state. “It’s absolutely absurd,” says Reed College physics professor David Griffiths. “Nobody’s ever going to walk through a wall.”

But while people can’t walk through solid barriers—we either carry enough energy to break through them or we bounce back and hurt ourselves—that doesn’t mean it’s impossible to travel through a barrier without having the energy you’d normally need to break through. Electrons break this rule of classical physics all the time, and sometimes even atoms can. It’s called quantum tunneling, and Griffiths explains it with the example of a roller coaster. Say the roller coaster car is traveling down a slope, about to start up the next hill on the course. Unfortunately, it doesn’t have enough speed and therefore doesn’t have the energy to reach the top and start down the other side. If that car were an electron, Griffiths says, there’s a possibility that rather than going over or around the barrier, it could tunnel right through. In the 1920s, he says, scientists used quantum tunneling to explain the problems of radioactive alpha decay, in which alpha particles—equivalent to a helium nucleus—fly out of a larger atom’s nucleus. Alpha particles don’t normally have the energy to overcome the forces holding the nucleus together, but quantum tunneling allows them to escape. Some electrical devices—like cellphones, MP3 players and some microscopes—take advantage of tunneling.

Tunneling is a particularly mysterious concept because, like most things in quantum mechanics, it’s a statistical phenomenon based on probability rather than causality. You can know the likelihood that a particle will tunnel, but you can’t know if or when a particular particle will do it. The reason tunneling is possible, he says, is the peculiar ability particles have to also act like waves in certain circumstances. “[Waves] can do things particles cannot,” he says. However, you, as an entire human being, do not exhibit wavelike behavior, and that’s one of the reasons that we can’t walk through walls like the Fringe thieves or like Kitty Pryde in X-Men.

The main reason that running into a wall results in a bruises rather than reaching the other side is the sheer complexity of the human body. A human body contains a huge number of atoms, about 1025. “Each one of those atoms has to tunnel,” he says, “and they need to tunnel in just the right way to reassemble into a human on the other side.” Every single thing would have to go right, he says, and when you multiply all those probabilities together, the result becomes so vanishingly small that it would take not just the age of the universe, but the age of the universe multiplied upon itself for you to even approach the probability of a human walking through a wall and emerging unharmed on the other side. Even then, he says, it would still be “silly” to consider.

However, though you could try for a 100 billion years and never walk through a barrier the way that electrons can, quantum tunneling is quite common in the universe. In fact, it’s the reason that human life exists in the first place, according to MIT physicist John Negele. Radioactive decay relies on the quantum tunneling phenomenon in order to work, and the energy of the Earth’s interior is powered by radioactive decay. Without radioactive decay, there wouldn’t be enough energy for plate tectonics and continents would never have formed and come out of the water. In addition, he says, the sun couldn’t sustain its ongoing fusion reaction with just its heat alone. “There has to be some tunneling,” he told PM.

As for other stretches of scientific truth, “Safe” revisits the borrowed memory theme. In our look at last week’s episode, we brought you the science (and mostly nonsense) behind Agent Dunham’s memory mix-up: In the season premiere, she got into a sensory depravation water tank and somehow managed to get inside the head of a fellow agent, John Scott. Last night we learned that when Scott died, his memories lived on inside her head. This twist on the Star Trek Vulcan mind-meld comes in handy for the team this week when Dunham recognizes the unfortunate bank robber stuck in the wall, but can’t figure out where the memory’s from. It turns out that Scott knew him, and she recognized him because she had access to the dead FBI agent’s memories.

Finally, were the laws-of-physics-defying thieves’ targets pieces of a time machine that Bishop himself developed years ago, then separated and hid? Bishop remembers that he built the machine in the first place because his son, Peter, had a rare form of bird flu called “hepea,” and he wanted to go back in time to retrieve the only doctor to ever cure the disease and bring him into the future to cure his son. First things first: there’s no such bird flu as “hepea.” The most deadly form of bird flu is called H5N1.

As for time and space travel … we’ll leave that for another week. While scientists say that time travel is theoretically possible, Bishop’s device, with its mysterious glowing tubes, can bring anybody from anywhere, anytime. We bet it will show up in future episodes.

Popular Mechanics

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Here’s the good doctor’s lab notes for episode 1.10 “Safe”. Walter reflects on some of the science behind the ‘phasing’ seen in the episode. He posits that, in principle, subatomic vibrations can allow particles to phase through ‘solid’ objects. He also rambles on a bit about his hiding places and “stolen details”. He appears to be talking to the “Alter-Walter” who paid him a visit in “The Equation”.

The lab notes are accompanied by a picture of poor ‘stuck in the wall’ Raul, and his decapatated hand.

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1.10 “Safe” Ratings

by Roco on December 3, 2008 · 0 comments

Fringe episode 1.10 “Safe” received around 8.7 million viewers, slightly down on last week but still performing well in the key demos. The Mentalist, which benefited from Dancing With The Stars ending last week, finally beat Fringe in the key demos, but Fringe still looks strong with American Idol being it’s lead in when the show returns from the 7 week hiatus on January 20. TVByTheNumbers have more:

Fringe had less than 9 million viewers (8.69 million) and it lost ~600,000 viewers from the first half hour to the second (8.994 million to 8.380 million) but those who departed House for The Mentalist must have mostly been older because Fringe only dropped .1 in among 18-49 year olds from a 3.7 to a 3.6.

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1.10 “Safe”

by Roco on December 2, 2008 · 3 comments

Official Description

EXTRAORDINARY BANK ROBBERIES LINK UNEXPECTEDLY TO WALTER AND ENDANGER THE LIFE OF ONE OF THE TRIO ON “FRINGE” TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, ON FOX

While investigating a series of bank robberies, Olivia, Walter and Peter are shocked to find one of the suspects inexplicably trapped inside a vault wall as if it solidified around him. Walter realizes that the high-tech thieves have figured out a way to defy the law of physics and that, much to his dismay, the crooks are after something of his. As the ongoing investigation unfolds and the mystery deepens, the perilous situation climaxes when a member of the trio is ambushed in the all-new “Safe” episode of FRINGE airing Tuesday, Dec. 2 (9:01-10:00 PM ET/PT) on FOX. (FR-110) (TV-14 L, V)

Cast: Anna Torv as Olivia Dunham; Joshua Jackson as Peter Bishop; John Noble as Walter Bishop; Lance Reddick as Phillip Broyles; Kirk Acevedo as Charlie Francis; Mark Valley as John Scott; Blair Brown as Nina Sharp; Jasika Nicole as Astrid Farnsworth

Guest Cast: Chance Kelly as Mitchell Loeb; Paul Fitzgerald as Ryan Eastwick; Darby Totten as ND Agent; Matthew Martin as ND Agent; Angel David as Raul Lugo; Vince Capone as Evan McNeil

Official Trailer

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1.10 "Safe" Episode Rating

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