Fringe: The Complete First Season, Ep. 12 "The No-Brainer"

4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1,309 customer reviews)
A computer scientist-turned-serial killer has discovered an unconventional method of killing people by liquefying their brains.
  • Runtime: 51 minutes
  • Original air date: January 27, 2009
  • Network: FOX
 
 
 
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  Episode   Original Air Date
Synopsis
      Price  
 
1. Pilot
  September 9, 2008
In the series premiere, FBI Special Agent Olivia Dunham (ANNA TORV) investigates a fatal international flight, recruiting Dr. Walter Bishop (JOHN NOBLE) and his son (JOSHUA JACKSON) to help.
 
$1.99  
 
2. The Same Old Story
  September 16, 2008
The unlikely trio forms a partnership and investigates the link between a wildly accelerated pregnancy and an "old" newborn.
 
$1.99  
 
3. The Ghost Network
  September 23, 2008
After a horrific bus incident, Olivia, Peter and Bishop uncover a man who has visions of Pattern-related disturbances before they happen.
 
$1.99  
 
4. The Arrival
  September 30, 2008
After a deadly explosion in New York, our unlikely threesome investigate a strange cylinder found at the scene thats completely unharmed by the surrounding devastation.
 
$1.99  
 
5. Power Hungry
  October 14, 2008
When a simple man is discovered who has the ability to harness electricity, dangerous and deadly occurrences follow, and our unlikely trio investigates this super-charged oddity.
 
$1.99  
 
6. The Cure
  October 21, 2008
When a woman with a rare disease inexplicably causes excruciating pain and subsequent death to those she encounters, the circumstances point to illegal drug trials -- or worse.
 
$1.99  
 
7. In Which We Meet Mr. Jones
  November 11, 2008
When a strange parasite attaches itself to the internal organs of a dying agent, Agent Dunham rushes to Germany to meet with a prisoner who reveals details of a much larger threat.
 
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8. The Equation
  November 18, 2008
When a music prodigy is kidnapped, it's discovered that a sequence of flashing lights appeared at the abduction - which Walter links back to his bunkmate at St. Claire's Hospital.
 
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9. The Dreamscape
  November 25, 2008
While investigating a mystifying incident at Massive Dynamic, Olivia seeks to rid her consciousness of Agent Scott and Peter's past catches up with him.
 
$1.99  
 
10. Safe
  December 2, 2008
While investigating a series of extraordinary bank robberies that defy the laws of physics, Walter realizes that the high-tech thieves are after something of his.
 
$1.99  
 
11. Bound
  January 20, 2009
After shifty FBI Agent Loeb orchestrated Mr. Jones's otherworldly escape from a German prison and Olivia's alarming abduction, indications of a larger threat begin to emerge.
 
$1.99  
12. The No-Brainer
  January 27, 2009
A computer scientist-turned-serial killer has discovered an unconventional method of killing people by liquefying their brains.
 
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13. The Transformation
  February 3, 2009
When another mysterious virus emerges aboard an international flight, leaving freakish remains, Peter & Olivia are forced to go undercover to investigate the latest bizarre threat.
 
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14. Ability
  February 10, 2009
German agents question Olivia when Mr. Jones returns and a lethal toxin is released that causes victims to die without faces - as their orifices suddenly and mysteriously close up.
 
$1.99  
 
15. Inner Child
  April 7, 2009
The FBI's Fringe Division investigates a mysterious, mute boy with an unspoken connection to Agent Olivia Dunham. Meanwhile, a gruesome serial killer resurfaces.
 
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16. Unleashed
  April 14, 2009
Unleashed by animal activists, a scientifically engineered beast with a ferocious appetite attacks Charlie. Walter must now come face-to-face with both his past and the creature.
 
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17. Bad Dreams
  April 21, 2009
The Pattern is given a thrilling twist when Agent Dunham can't stop dreaming of violent occurrences - that actually happen simultaneously in the real world.
 
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18. Midnight
  April 28, 2009
When severely mutilated bodies drained of spinal fluid begin to pile up, the Fringe Division investigates a scientist with possibleties to the ZFT terrorist cell.
 
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19. The Road Not Taken
  May 5, 2009
While investigating a disturbing case of a woman who apparently spontaneously combusted, Olivia is plagued with waking dreams,seeing elaborate visions of things not really there.
 
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20. There's More Than One of Everything
  May 12, 2009
In the season finale, the Fringe Division is attacked, Mr. Jones returns, Walter disappears and Massive Dynamics' elusive WilliamBell (LEONARD NIMOY) is finally introduced.
 
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Product Details
Episode 12, "The No-Brainer"
Synopsis: A computer scientist-turned-serial killer has discovered an unconventional method of killing people by liquefying their brains.
Original air date: January 27, 2009
Runtime: 51 minutes
ASIN: B001QW8XBY
Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #117,926 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
Fringe: The Complete First Season
Synopsis: From the creative team behind Mission: Impossible 3, Alias and the upcoming Star Trek feature comes this incredible thriller about an unlikely trio who uncover a deadly mystery involving a series of unbelievable events that may be part of a larger and more disturbing pattern that blurs the line between the possible and the impossible.
Starring: Anna Torv, Joshua Jackson
Supporting actors: Lance Reddick, Kirk Acevedo, Blair Brown, Jasika Nicole, Mark Valley, John Noble, Michael Gaston, Ari Graynor, Chance Kelly, Trini Alvarado, Sarah Wilson, Peter J. Fernandez, Lily Pilblad, Stephen Schnetzer, Chinasa Ogbuagu, Chad Gittens, Brian Slaten, Michael Cerveris
Season year: 2009
Genre: Drama, Mystery, Sci-Fi, Thriller
Executive producer: J.J. Abrams
Network: FOX
ASIN: B001FVV2X2
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Customer Reviews

Well written characters and storylines, and GREAT acting. Blah  |  307 reviewers made a similar statement
Quirky characters and bizarre plots makes Fringe a lot of fun. K. Averill  |  93 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
263 of 288 people found the following review helpful
Format:Blu-ray
I have dual suggestions for anyone thinking of trying FRINGE. First, definitely watch it. Second, be very, very patient. The show eventually gets very, very good, but it takes a very long time to get there. I have a theory as to why that is. FOX has a tendency to micro manage many of its shows. DOLLHOUSE is an example. After Joss Whedon brought them his initial pilot, they nixed it and asked for a new one, and then dictated that the first several episodes be standalone episodes. And guess what. In the sixth episode DOLLHOUSE became one of the best shows on TV, with multiple delicious plot twists. The weakest part of the series? The first five stand alone episodes. I have not heard similar things about FRINGE, but given that the first half of the season tends to be almost all stand alone episodes and that they are far and away the weakest part of the show, I suspect more FOX interference. FRINGE has been compared to THE X-FILES in many ways, but one way that they are dissimilar is that THE X-FILES standalone episodes were far superior to FRINGE's standalone episodes. So the viewer has to be patient for the payoff for watching the show to come to fruition. But the payoff does finally come. About halfway through the series a "mythology" arc emerges in a most satisfying way, resulting in a string of deeply satisfying and exciting episodes in the second half of the season. At the end of the first year, it hasn't yet quite become a great show, but it shows all the potential of becoming one. But perhaps only if FOX will get out of the way and let them get on with the story.

The show also suffered from internal problems, the main one being casting. I came to like Anna Torv in the lead role of Agent Olivia Dunham, but she remained in many ways the show's weak link. Many fans noted that her American accent (Torv is Australian) often faded and especially early in the show her Aussie accent would briefly creep in. She isn't a bad actress, but neither is she - comparing the show once again to THE X-FILES - Gillian Anderson, who was by any accounting a brilliant actress. When I watch FRINGE, I often wonder just what the show would be like with a stronger actress in the lead role. I also have not yet become sold on Joshua Jackson as Peter Bishop, but this may be far more of a problem with the writers fully integrating him into the show. (Though the season ends with a great, great twist involving Peter that explains a lot of the background on Walter's story.) Other than being Walter's son, his role in the greater scheme of things hasn't really become clear, though perhaps the writers envision a more crucial role in Season Two. Lance Reddick is a powerful physical presence, but is another actor who has perhaps been under utilized at this point.

Which leaves John Noble as Walter Bishop. Is there a more delightful supporting character on TV? He steals just about every scene he is in as the delightfully idiosyncratic and marvelously insane genius Walter Bishop. Walter is both a wonderfully written character and brilliantly portrayed by Noble. Sci-fi series do not as a rule get much recognition by the Emmys, but I would love to see Noble get a nomination for Best Supporting Actor in a Drama. Many of the great moments of the show's first season revolve around Walter. And there are so many fine Walter moments that some go unnoticed. Among my favorites was in the show's penultimate episode where the crew is assembled in Walter's Harvard lab and someone says they need to turn the lights out. Walter gleefully tells them all to hold on and he claps his hands, demonstrating that he has "the Clapper" installed in the lab. But what makes the scene so funny is a very subtle bit of business. Walter has been passing out cookies and has one of his own. To be able to clap, he has set his own cookie down on the derrière of the corpse he has been examining and that is laying immediately in front of him. So while Walter is clapping his cookie is on this dead guy's rear end. Typical Walter. Not least because of Walter's penchant for blending the investigation of the most grotesque phenomena with food. Icky disfigured corpse? Nothing like that to get Walter to think about food!

The best thing about FRINGE is that it got better as it went along. This is a great sign for Season Two. I blame FOX for the slow first half of the season. Maybe I'm wrong in doing that, but we know for a fact that FOX messed up the first half of DOLLHOUSE, and they've been known to interfere with the development of other shows. The fact is this: executive producers and their writers know more about how to do a great show than network executives do. Maybe they feel that they need to earn their salaries by "crafting" the new series, but generally what they do is mess things up. You hire someone like J. J. Abrams or Joss Whedon to do a series, just get out of the way and let them do what they inevitably do better than you do.

So definitely watch this show. Be patient. It starts off OK, but about halfway through the season it will really start to kick tail. I think there is some core weakness in the cast, but not to the degree that it cripples the show. Best of all, this show really feels like it is going somewhere special. Make sure you are along for the ride.
Was this review helpful to you?
89 of 98 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
Brainchild of JJ Abrams, this show is loaded with all the vitamins a good series needs: an exciting and innovative plot, along with well-scripted characters. Some episodes are a bit of a fill-out but the overall plot, much like the show Lost, is very interesting and has one at the edge of their seat. Anna Torv is a bit of a newcomer without much experience, but portrays her character very well. John Noble does a cracking job as the somewhat looney Einstein-inspired Dr Walter Bishop. The biggest surprise is Joshua Jackson who's getting a bit of a fresh start in his career with this show. He does an excellent job as the intelligent Peter Bishop, son of Walter Bishop. Another brilliant choice actor-wise is Lance Reddick, known from The Wire (which by the way probably is the best show in TV history).
The main plot? Well, strange incidents are occuring, perpetrated by a mysterious terrorist group using the world as their experiment lab. The events are investigated by the characters named above. As the story unfolds, the motives of this terrorist group start to emerge and the question rises: Who is the real enemy?
Scripted and created by the same guys who wrote the new Star Trek film, this show is the new Lost. It has been picked up for a season 2, and will probably go beyond that. Brilliant stuff.
Comment | 
Was this review helpful to you?
142 of 162 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
I have dual suggestions for anyone thinking of trying FRINGE. First, definitely watch it. Second, be very, very patient. The show eventually gets very, very good, but it takes a very long time to get there. I have a theory as to why that is. FOX has a tendency to micro manage many of its shows. DOLLHOUSE is an example. After Joss Whedon brought them his initial pilot, they nixed it and asked for a new one, and then dictated that the first several episodes be standalone episodes. And guess what. In the sixth episode DOLLHOUSE became one of the best shows on TV, with multiple delicious plot twists. The weakest part of the series? The first five stand alone episodes. I have not heard similar things about FRINGE, but given that the first half of the season tends to be almost all stand alone episodes and that they are far and away the weakest part of the show, I suspect more FOX interference. FRINGE has been compared to THE X-FILES in many ways, but one way that they are dissimilar is that THE X-FILES standalone episodes were far superior to FRINGE's standalone episodes. So the viewer has to be patient for the payoff for watching the show to come to fruition. But the payoff does finally come. About halfway through the series a "mythology" arc emerges in a most satisfying way, resulting in a string of deeply satisfying and exciting episodes in the second half of the season. At the end of the first year, it hasn't yet quite become a great show, but it shows all the potential of becoming one. But perhaps only if FOX will get out of the way and let them get on with the story.

The show also suffered from internal problems, the main one being casting. I came to like Anna Torv in the lead role of Agent Olivia Dunham, but she remained in many ways the show's weak link. Many fans noted that her American accent (Torv is Australian) often faded and especially early in the show her Aussie accent would briefly creep in. She isn't a bad actress, but neither is she - comparing the show once again to THE X-FILES - Gillian Anderson, who was by any accounting a brilliant actress. When I watch FRINGE, I often wonder just what the show would be like with a stronger actress in the lead role. I also have not yet become sold on Joshua Jackson as Peter Bishop, but this may be far more of a problem with the writers fully integrating him into the show. (Though the season ends with a great, great twist involving Peter that explains a lot of the background on Walter's story.) Other than being Walter's son, his role in the greater scheme of things hasn't really become clear, though perhaps the writers envision a more crucial role in Season Two. Lance Reddick is a powerful physical presence, but is another actor who has perhaps been under utilized at this point.

Which leaves John Noble as Walter Bishop. Is there a more delightful supporting character on TV? He steals just about every scene he is in as the delightfully idiosyncratic and marvelously insane genius Walter Bishop. Walter is both a wonderfully written character and brilliantly portrayed by Noble. Sci-fi series do not as a rule get much recognition by the Emmys, but I would love to see Noble get a nomination for Best Supporting Actor in a Drama. Many of the great moments of the show's first season revolve around Walter. And there are so many fine Walter moments that some go unnoticed. Among my favorites was in the show's penultimate episode where the crew is assembled in Walter's Harvard lab and someone says they need to turn the lights out. Walter gleefully tells them all to hold on and he claps his hands, demonstrating that he has "the Clapper" installed in the lab. But what makes the scene so funny is a very subtle bit of business. Walter has been passing out cookies and has one of his own. To be able to clap, he has set his own cookie down on the derrière of the corpse he has been examining and that is laying immediately in front of him. So while Walter is clapping his cookie is on this dead guy's rear end. Typical Walter. Not least because of Walter's penchant for blending the investigation of the most grotesque phenomena with food. Icky disfigured corpse? Nothing like that to get Walter to think about food!

The best thing about FRINGE is that it got better as it went along. This is a great sign for Season Two. I blame FOX for the slow first half of the season. Maybe I'm wrong in doing that, but we know for a fact that FOX messed up the first half of DOLLHOUSE, and they've been known to interfere with the development of other shows. The fact is this: executive producers and their writers know more about how to do a great show than network executives do. Maybe they feel that they need to earn their salaries by "crafting" the new series, but generally what they do is mess things up. You hire someone like J. J. Abrams or Joss Whedon to do a series, just get out of the way and let them do what they inevitably do better than you do.

So definitely watch this show. Be patient. It starts off OK, but about halfway through the season it will really start to kick tail. I think there is some core weakness in the cast, but not to the degree that it cripples the show. Best of all, this show really feels like it is going somewhere special. Make sure you are along for the ride.
Was this review helpful to you?
Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Series
This is a great series. Definitely worth watching if you're into Sci-fi at all. It's too bad that it has been discontinued.
Published 8 hours ago by DaOneEnOnly
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Series
I loved Alias and was excited to see something else by this same producer. I have only started watching Fringe, but already I'm intrigued!
Published 1 day ago by Lynn Montgomery
5.0 out of 5 stars Best SciFi of its kind
This is the best SciFi of its kind. Combines stellar science fiction themes with time travel of a different nature.
Virtual hide and seek between alternate dimensions.
Published 4 days ago by Thomas Woolston
5.0 out of 5 stars Favorite Series
I love this series. The characters are great and suit each other perfectly. I was hooked after the first show and could not wait for each new episode.
Published 4 days ago by Patty McCool
5.0 out of 5 stars I love sci-fi
I love sci- fi, especially the kind that embellishes the truth just enough to make you think, "What if".
Fringe does that for me.
Published 4 days ago by tyrone hicks
4.0 out of 5 stars Engaging episodes
Riveting watch and cool casting too. Looking forward to seeing season 2 and massive dynamic connections unfold even further. Good stuff.
Published 4 days ago by SN
5.0 out of 5 stars My current favorite show, this one has me hooked!
Fringe finally came to Netflix not long ago, so I popped on the first episode one evening. I had always been interested in the concept of the show, but had never actually seen it. Read more
Published 4 days ago by G. Denick
2.0 out of 5 stars Fringe Season
The Fringe Series just ended last fall. And there were never any repeats or chances to watch it again. Read more
Published 4 days ago by Jill Kegler
5.0 out of 5 stars awesome
simply awesome; I look forward to many more episodes; the acting is terrific and the special effects are great for a TV show;
Published 5 days ago by cfn
4.0 out of 5 stars Good fun low calorie entertainment
If we don't take our characters or what they do too seriously, this is great viewing. All the investment that a series such as "The Closer" offers to help us appreciate the... Read more
Published 6 days ago by michael q
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