White Tulip
- Episode aired Apr 15, 2010
- TV-14
- 44m
The Fringe team investigate a train full of people who died in a mysterious way. Olivia and the others then meet the astrophysicist who was responsible for the "experiment" and who can reset... Read allThe Fringe team investigate a train full of people who died in a mysterious way. Olivia and the others then meet the astrophysicist who was responsible for the "experiment" and who can reset the time.The Fringe team investigate a train full of people who died in a mysterious way. Olivia and the others then meet the astrophysicist who was responsible for the "experiment" and who can reset the time.
- Nina Sharp
- (credit only)
Featured reviews
"White Tulip" is another great episode of "Fringe". The intriguing story is again well resolved and Walter finds the best solution about Peter. It is great to see Peter "RoboCop" Weller again with an excellent participation. My vote is eight.
Title (Brail): "White Tulip"
There are actually two conclusions to this episode, the first regarding the time travel and the irony that goes with it and the second is about the humanity in all of us. It is very sad but ultimately satisfactory.
This is my second viewing of the series and I see things this time which I did not the first time around.
Definitely a must watch!
Usually when so doing I will arrive at the designated IMDb page (for the episode) only to find it empty, a tabula rasa.
While re-watching this amazing series sequentially, I was gob-smacked at how perfect the script for this episode was.
Sheer genius from start to finish. Manages to solve "conundrum" of the two arcs (the long and the short) by doing something I have never seen before -- making the short arc "about" the long arc (or perhaps vice versa).
That alone would be a feat. But this episode, one of the greatest in the history of TV, goes further. Handles time travel and time paradoxes better than any show prior, including VOYAGEUR which is generally thought to have aced that theme.
On a humanistic level, the complex angst of John Noble's character and the mechanism by which he solves it are extraordinary. In effect, if you watch closely, this story has not only one climactic moment which makes the viewer shudder but a second anti-climax at the end which makes you want to cry.
Hint to newbies; pay special attention to the title of the episode. These writers do nothing by accident.
We like to talk about some of the "perfect" scripts from the original Twilight Zone series, scripts that have held up over decades.
This is one for the record books.
May just watching this episode, make most watchers to see all the valuable and impressive episodes from beginning even more than one time.
Did you know
- TriviaIn many cultures, a white tulip represents forgiveness. It can also represent heaven on earth/perfection, making it an apt symbol for Walter.
- GoofsDuring the recurrent scenes where Peter Weller leaves the train ramp after his jumps, you can see at the right of the screen a subtle but visible Canadian flag on the window of another nearby stationary train.
- Quotes
Dr. Walter Bishop: [to Alistair Peck] I, too, attempted the unimaginable, and I succeeded. I crossed into another universe, and took a son that wasn't mine. And since then, not a day has passed without me feeling the burden of that act. I'm going to tell you something that I have never told another soul. Until I took my son from the other side, I had never believed in God. But it occurred to me... that my actions had betrayed him and that everything that had happened to me since was God punishing me. So now I'm looking for a sign of forgiveness. I've asked God for a sign of forgiveness. A specific one, a white tulip.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Fringe: 6B (2011)
Details
- Runtime
- 44m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1