Someone mentioned a similarity between peter and Kyle Reese. One of the officers at Olivia's funeral had a name tag that said "Reese".
I noticed that too, and wondered if it was an intentional nod.
Someone mentioned a similarity between peter and Kyle Reese. One of the officers at Olivia's funeral had a name tag that said "Reese".
Their track record already proves that they can't handle time travel stories. I was hoping they had actually learned from their previous mistakes, but nope. Not the case.
Walter's explanation of the origin of the machine makes sense...on Earth 1. Where did Walternate get his machine? Earth 2 was already destroyed and never had any form of temporal rift. So unless these Earths originated from a common universe that diverge a some point after the Cretaceous...there is no way to explain how both worlds had machines and documents. Of course having a common lineage might explain why these two universes are apparently linked. Assuming that was true...one wonders what happens to cause the split?
But see the paradox eliminates a reason to explain who built it and why--if you follow the paradox loop there is no origin for the machine it just existed--Walter sends it back in 2026, they bury it in the distant past where it remains for millenia, it stays there until the last year when it is unearthed by Walter and the rest of the Fringe team where it is assembled and housed in a government warehouse, it is then activated then disassembled after Peter destroys the alt-universe. As you can see there is no moment in the timeline where the machine was built--hence the closed loop. It is like that scene in VOY's Futures End where Braxton tries to explain things to Janeway.I mean there's no reason to build the machine in the first place though unless there are already two universes. Right? Does the machine have some other purpose that doesn't include two universes?
This is my feeling--it is just going to end up being a mess and we'll hear "well it was always about the characters the plot wasn't the point". If you look at the track record for these type of shows which ones have pulled it off--The X-Files? Nope. Lost? Nope, BSG? Nope. The 4400? Nope. Heroes post S1? Nope. Twin Peaks? Nope. Life on Mars? Not really. Babylon 5 pulled it off. DS9 ended well enough but they weren't these convoluted non linear complicated mythology series--they were easy to follow and relatively straightforward in telling a linear arc.The problem with all that is it gives me the sinking feeling post-LOST that I am depending on them to have it all make sense in the end and that's probably a foolish thing to do. But I do think it's possible to still end with a satisfactory explanation.
Well I didn't respond to it because I figure it will either be addressed or it is a plot hole and we are just expected to go along with it.
I'm going to ask this question again sine no one replied.
Walter's explanation of the origin of the machine makes sense...on Earth 1. Where did Walternate get his machine? Earth 2 was already destroyed and never had any form of temporal rift. So unless these Earths originated from a common universe that diverge a some point after the Cretaceous...there is no way to explain how both worlds had machines and documents. Of course having a common lineage might explain why these two universes are apparently linked. Assuming that was true...one wonders what happens to cause the split?
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