In the prime universe, Walter, Peter, and Fauxlivia discover that Walternate's doomsday device, known as the Wave Synch Device, has an alternate form "over here," though its pieces and components are scattered. They learn that the machine was created by a long-dead race of humans known as the First People, and that it has the power to create and destroy universes.
They left behind multiple manuals with instructions on how to reconstruct the device and use it. Throughout this time, Peter and Fauxlivia grow closer and begin a romantic relationship. Peter, however, believes her to be the real Olivia.
In the parallel universe, Walternate brainwashes Olivia into believing that she is Fauxlivia, and uses her abilities to conduct more Cortexiphan experiments as they prepare to use the Wave Synch Device to destroy the prime universe.
Olivia soon realizes who she is and travels back to the prime world, blowing Fauxlivia's cover. Fauxlivia travels back to her own world, pregnant with Peter's baby. Walternate accelerates the baby's growth and uses his blood to start the machine. In the prime universe, Peter, Walter, and Olivia have put together their version of the device. With both devices on their versions of Liberty Island, Peter enters the device, hoping to stop the parallel universe from destroying the prime.
Instead, he has a vision of 15 years into the future. The parallel universe has been destroyed and the prime is suffering from the same anomalies that the alternate world once endured, leading to eventual destruction. Walter, Astrid, and Ella, Olivia's niece, send the device and manuals back in time through a wormhole, thus becoming, in a sense, the "First People," fulfilling a bootstrap paradox.
Instead of destroying one universe, Peter merges the two together, forming a bridge so they can work together to heal both worlds. The two Walters and the two Olivias come face to face. But as they meet each other, Peter disappears from existence, with the Observers looking on all the while. In season four, with Peter wiped from existence, the prime universe and the parallel universe begin working together to heal both worlds.
But Walter and Olivia have lingering memories of Peter, his presence appearing to them periodically even though they can't recall who he is. As Walter and Olivia continue to remember him, Peter suddenly manifests within this third reality. Peter begins working with the Fringe team again while their memories of him slowly return. During one case, September appears to them, warning Olivia that she "dies in every timeline" that he can see.
In another appearance, he tells Peter that this timeline is his correct timeline and that the other Observers tried to "keep it from him.
Season four is ominous and somewhat confusing. As a result of the worlds merging, David Robert Jones, the ZFT mastermind from the first season, is still alive and working for William Bell, who is also alive. Bell wants to destroy both worlds and create a new one. He tries to use Olivia's Cortexiphan abilities to accomplish his task, but Walter shoots Olivia in the head, preventing Bell from using her.
Walter pulls the bullet from her head, leaving Olivia in complete control of her Cortexiphan abilities. She heals quickly, and reveals that she and Peter are having a baby. The 19th episode of Fringe's fourth season offers up a vision of what a final season could be.
He explains that the Observers come from the year This goes on for a few episodes, then there is the episode 6B. The episode starts with Walter trying to heal the riff between the two, but what ends up with them arguing, as Peter wants to be together, and Olivia feels as though that's been taken away from them. When they visit a bar, Olivia tells Peter that she wants to know what their relationship was like, and so they kiss, however, Olivia runs out when she sees him glimmer.
Eventually, by the end of the episode, Olivia goes to Peters house, where they kiss, and eventually, Olivia leads him upstairs to the bedroom. We finally get the relationship we wanted from Fringe. There was a little break, where William Bell was inside Olivia for two episodes, but when they go into Olivia's mind Peter manages to find her and bring her out of her own mind.
They seem to have an amazing open relationship where they are deeply in love. The first time we see Olivia is when she is rushing to the hospital to see Peter, and eventually you find out they've been married for years.
Also, when looking at a picture a young neighbour drew of Olivia, Peter and 'the little baby [they] are going to have', that Olivia decided she wasn't going to have a child, but it seems Peter does want one. When Olivia "dies", Peter says how she meant everything to him, and you see him break down crying over that drawn picture of her and the family they should've had.
In the beginning of Season 4, no one knows who Peter is, not even Olivia. When Peter shows back up, he's having dreams about him and Olivia, and so is she, which is confusing her as she doesn't know who he is. There isn't much of Peter and Olivia, as she doesn't remember him, However, then there is the episode Welcome to Westfield. The episode starts off with Olivia and Peter in bed, with them telling each other they love each other, but then Olivia wakes up and you realise it was her dream.
In the episode, she mentions a case in Edina, the case that happened in Johari Window , which confuses Walter and Peter, as they investigated that case together in the original timeline, not the new one they were in. They also have a conversation about their relationship in the original timeline. At the end of the episode, Peter goes to Olivia's, where she kisses him with familiarity, which causes Peter to be taken aback.
Olivia in Pilot - "Call me sweetheart one more time I'd really like that". FringeWiki Explore. This loss of feeling relates to both emotion as well as senses like taste. Observers were evolved humans from one possible future of mankind. The Vacuum or the Machine exists in both universes and has the ability to create or destroy worlds. Shapeshifters are sent to the Prime Universe in embryos that glow. Each embryo is provided with a shapeshifting device that allows the shapeshifters to take on the identity of anyone.
Once the shapeshifters hatch, they find victims to kill. The definition of fringe is someone or something at the edge. An example of fringe is the edge of the television reception area. Fox decided to air it during the second season. When Georgina Haig was first cast, her role was described as "potentially recurring" next season. In any case, here's what we know about the timeline we glimpsed last night. Sometime in , Peter and Olivia make a baby, Henrietta. And then in , a ton of Observers show up from the future — way more than can be covered by "months of the year" names — and they take over the planet.
At some point during that year, soldiers Native ones, I guess go door to door, pulling suspected Resistance members out of their homes and shooting them. By , the Observers' grip is tight — although the Fringe team keeps fighting them. Eventually, the Fringe team gets cornered, and Walter puts himself, Astrid, Peter and William Bell into amber so they'll be hidden from the Observers. By , the world is a full-on dystopia, and the Observers have become your standard evil overlords, oppressing the "Natives" of the 21st century.
Whether the Observers traveled back in time to avert the ecological disaster that makes the world uninhabitable in or just to gain a new dominion to rule over, they've gotten totally corrupted. They even go into speakeasy-style nightclubs and demand the hottest women for themselves, because apparently Observers have needs too. Manhattan, referred to as "The City," is pretty much exclusively their domain.
And the Observer overlords have a slew of human lackeys, who have symbols tattooed on their faces, and the once-defiant Fringe Division now polices human-on-human crime for them.
Broyles, in particular, seems to have become a willing collaborator with the occupation, and has a very Casablanca -style relationship with the Observer known as Widmark, who swigs water as though it was Although he doesn't seem in a hurry to tell anybody when he finds one of Walter's trademark Red Vines at the end of the episode.
Widmark makes a notably creepy villain, especially the way he threatens to take over policing Native crime with methods that Broyles wouldn't like. And the way he explains his current "crap detail" by smiling and saying "I like animals. But luckily, a couple of Fringe agents are still secretly working with the Resistance. One of Etta's contacts has found the Fringe team in amber, and managed to pull Walter's piece of it out, before being killed. So all Etta and Simon have to do is figure out how to get Walter out of amber that re-solidifies the moment it's dissolved, and then enlist the aid of a ridiculously wigged Nina Sharp to restore Walter's amber-addled brain.
Oh, and back in Walter designed some new crazy device, which will supposedly rid the world of the Observers once and for all. So what happened to Olivia? How did she die?
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