Aussies Take The Leads

Fringe is Sky’s big new import, and one of the first US shows of the new season to get the full order of shows commissioned.
But it’s basically The X-Files isn’t it? Were it not for a bit of Googling, I’d have even thought that it was shot in Vancouver like early series of that show were. In fact it’s set in Boston and shot in New York. Make of that what you will. Personally I kind of like shows being shot in the cities they pretend to be set in. Sitcoms are about the only real exception to this.
So we have Anna Torv (an Aussie) as FBI Agent Olivia Durham, who’s got involved in some kind of weirdness involving events that together make up The Pattern. So we have an ultra-conspiracy at the heart of the show. This being a J J Abrams show, that’s not surprising. But it’s also a little concerning. The X-Files ultimately got caught up too much in its own mythology. Abram’s previous series, Alias, was sillier, but by the end, the story arcs made little to no sense – especially to the casual action/adventure viewer. And Lost cannot possibly answer all the questions its set itself.
I really hope that this time, the writers have a big whiteboard or book or something where they note down all the conspiracy and unexplained elements, and then tick them off as they’re answered. It’s too been too much of a problem in recent years that the nature of US TV commissioning allied to ongoing stories has led to too much dissatisfaction overall.
I quite like the inclusion of an enormous corporate entity rather than just government at the heart of the matter. So we have Massive Dynamic (of course it has a web presence!) at the heart of things. And given the way that big business has finagled its way into things like defence, that seems a good route to travel and explore.
The worst part of Fringe is surely that of Dr Walter Bishop, who is played as an archetypal mad professor. Indeed, he’d put Back to the Future’s Dr Emmet Brown in the shade on the scale of madness in mad professors. The character needs reigning in if he’s not to become incredibly dull. This job falls to his son, Peter Bishop played by Joshua Jackson – Pacey from Dawson’s Creek. He’s a grizzled character who has his own issues – i.e. backstory, that’ll be later explained – involving Mafia. We meet him in Iraq.
Incidentally, in Fringe, we always know where we are, because massive 3D lettering appears “welded” into the landscape to let us know. It’s a stylish gimic that reminds you of the letter-zooming that used to happen in Alias. The only problem is that the device is massively over-used. Once we’ve seen Harvard once, we know where we are for the rest of that episode, and we don’t need to see it again. That said, I was interested enough in discovering how it was done to find VideoCopilot.net which is a fantastic resource teaching you how to use things like Adobe After Effects and various 3D packages. Indeed the site’s tutor, Andrew Kramer, worked on Fringe’s opening credits, so this is top-level stuff.
At least Fringe gives a new role to Lance Reddick – Lt. Cedric Daniels from The Wire.
Meanwhile, Five has bought the UK rights to another intriguing show also starring an Australian in the lead – Simon Baker. The Mentalist is not some kind of outrageous slur on the handicapped (although a country which happily uses the word “retard” to describe people without approbation is to be questioned), but a series about a reformed psychic performer. This comes from the hand of Bruno Heller who most recently was responsible for the HBO/BBC production of Rome. It has X-Files connections too in that regular X-Files director, David Nutter (how could you ever forget his name) has directed the first two episodes. But it really shares a pedigree with CBS’s Numb3rs, the series that features a maths genius solving pretty much all the FBI’s crimes on the West Coast.
Baker plays Patrick Jane, a man who used to pose as a psychic and appear on show similar to ones that fill up all too many hours on Living TV. Then one day, a serial killer (who’s still at large) murders members of his family, and he changes tack. He’s now admitted that he’s not a psychic but a mentalist, and he’s using those skills to help solve crimes.
Like Monk before him, he’s really just a reincarnation of Sherlock Holmes who used amazing feats of observation to deduce truths. It’s not played for laughs as much as Monk is, but it quite happily fits into a procedural mix. Robin Tunney (from series 1 of Prison Break) plays Watson to Baker’s Holmes, but aside from worrying that there won’t be enough mentalist tricks to employ to keep the stories flowing is my only real concern. That and the fact that we’re not totally let-in on some of the tricks Jane is employing. It’ll be interesting to see this show develop, assuming its ratings hold up and it’s not cancelled.


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