Upozornenie: Prezeranie týchto stránok je určené len pre návštevníkov nad 18 rokov!
Zásady ochrany osobných údajov.
Používaním tohto webu súhlasíte s uchovávaním cookies, ktoré slúžia na poskytovanie služieb, nastavenie reklám a analýzu návštevnosti. OK, súhlasím









A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | CH | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9

The Abducted
 

"The Abducted"
Fringe episode
Episode no.Season 3
Episode 7
Directed byChuck Russell
Written by
Production code3X6107
Original air dateNovember 18, 2010 (2010-11-18)
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
← Previous
"6955 kHz"
Next →
"Entrada"
Fringe season 3
List of episodes

"The Abducted" is the seventh episode of the third season of the American science fiction drama television series Fringe. The third season spent much of its time alternating between the prime and parallel universes, and "The Abducted" was set in the latter. The episode followed the Fringe team's investigation of "the Candyman", a man who kidnaps children to harvest their youth-giving hormones.

The episode first aired on November 18, 2010 in the United States to an estimated 4.85 million viewers. Reviews of the episode were mixed; multiple critics lauded the final five minutes of the episode, while another praised lead actress Anna Torv and actor Lance Reddick's performances. Due to the holiday of Thanksgiving, "The Abducted" began a two-week break until the broadcast of a December 2 episode.

Plot

"The Abducted" takes place in the parallel universe; Olivia (Anna Torv), having broken her conditioning that made her believe she was her doppelgänger Fauxlivia (Torv) from that universe, maintains the pretense that she is still conditioned. She meets with Henry (Andre Royo), the taxi driver who helped her out before, and asks him to help her return to Liberty Island to use the sensory deprivation tank to return herself to her universe.

A child, Max (Michael Strusievici), is kidnapped from his home. The Fringe team investigates and Broyles (Lance Reddick) immediately recognizes this as the work of "The Candyman"; though only appearing once every two years, the Candyman abducts a child and returns him some days later, but whatever the Candyman has done leaves the child physically deprived. Broyles' own son, Christopher (Curtis Harris), was one of the most recent victims, having become blind as a result of the ordeal. Christopher tells Olivia that he believes there were two people involved with his abduction, one old and one young. Combined with other information, Olivia suspects that the Candyman is draining the children of hormones from the pituitary gland, helping the Candyman stay young.

The interview leads Olivia and Broyles to Reverend Marcus (David Nykl), who gave up a career as a physician in order to establish a local church. Working through the congregation list, Olivia talks to one member, Wyatt Toomy (Will Rothhaar), a garbageman. When Olivia spots a child's toy within his apartment, Wyatt realizes he is caught and attempts to escape, but Olivia captures him. She soon finds Max in a hidden room with a not-yet-activated device on the back of his head near the pituitary gland. She frees the boy, accidentally telling him she is an FBI agent.

Believing the case completed, Olivia goes to meet with Henry, where he has gotten use of his cousin's boat. As he talks about having been trained to use it, Olivia contemplates how Wyatt knew about the chemistry to make the serum, and realizes he had a teacher as well – their true culprit, and immediately suspects Reverend Marcus. Broyles and Olivia hurry to his house to protect Christopher from Marcus; Broyles kills Marcus. Olivia accompanies Broyles and his family to the same hospital that Max is being treated. There, Max thanks Olivia personally and asks her about what the "FBI" is. Broyles, having listened to Olivia's conversation, knows that she has broken her conditioning, as the FBI had ceased to exist over a decade ago in the parallel universe. Because of her efforts to save Christopher, he lets her go.

Olivia rejoins Henry and then leaves him to swim the rest of the way in and make her way to the isolation tank. After injecting herself with the same drugs Walternate (John Noble) had used on her, she enters the tank and soon finds herself back in her own universe. She encounters a cleaning lady, and as Olivia feels herself being dragged back to the parallel universe, she gives the cleaning lady a message to pass along to Peter (Joshua Jackson). Back in the isolation tank, Walternate has had Olivia extracted from the tank and directs his agents to lock her up and sedate her.

Back in the prime universe, Peter and Fauxlivia are in bed together when Peter receives a call from the cleaning lady, who relays the message: that Olivia is trapped in the parallel universe. Peter realizes that he has been sleeping with Olivia's doppelgänger.

Production

"The attitude among the characters in the alternate universe is that the people ‘over here’ are bad... They did this to us. They started this thing. They’re trying to destroy our world. As far as I’m concerned, Olivia is one of those people. She’s one of the bad people that wants to kill us and if there’s any chance she can regain her senses, she’s a threat, especially if she’s as formdiable [sic] as our Olivia. But something happens in this episode where things begin to change."

–Actor Lance Reddick[1]

"The Abducted" was written by co-executive producer David Wilcox and executive story editor Graham Roland, and directed by filmmaker Chuck Russell.[2] The episode featured guest appearances by Curtis Harris, David Nykl, John Hainsworth, Karen Holness, Andre Royo, Will Rothhaar, Tristin Leffler, and Michael Strusievici. Holness and Royo had previously guest starred on Fringe before as the characters Diane Broyles and Henry Higgins, respectively.[2][3][4]

Alluding to the normally "no-nonsense" personality of his character Phillip Broyles, actor Lance Reddick noted that for once "you get to see smile and have fun. Not for very long, but you see it. You get to meet his ex-wife (Karen Holness) and find out why his marriage ended. You understand more about his relationship to his work and his job and the Fringe Division–how he feels about it and why he does what he does."[5]

Reddick drew inspiration for the episode from undercover FBI agent Joe Pistone, whom he met while filming the TV series Falcone. Pistone recommended his autobiography Donnie Brasco: My Undercover Life in the Mafia, and Reddick found many parallels to it and the episode. "In the book, talked about how while being undercover in the Mafia, he had to separate his personal feelings from his professional and moral sense of responsibility. There were certain guys he really couldn’t stand, but there were some people he genuinely liked, even though ultimately he had to bring them down. I think Col. Broyles feels the same way about Olivia. On various occasions, she has performed heroically to earn his respect, and in tonight’s episode, that appreciation — and the angst that goes with it — reaches a new level".[1]

As with other Fringe episodes,[6][7] Fox released a science lesson plan in collaboration with Science Olympiad for grade school children, focusing on the science seen in "The Abducted", with the intention of having "students learn about vaccination and the spread of communicable diseases."[8]

Cultural references

Peter and Fauxlivia watch the 1942 romantic drama film Casablanca, and the latter incorrectly says it starred actor and later president of the United States Ronald Reagan, rather than actor Humphrey Bogart.[2][9][10] Olivia finds a children's book her niece owns called Burlap Bear Goes To The Woods in Christopher's room.[9][10] SFScope's Sarah Stegall believed that the episode antagonist's name of Toomy was a reference to popular villain Eugene Victor Tooms in the science fiction television series The X-Files. Olivia also refers to several fringe cases that were in first season episodes of Fringe, including "The Same Old Story" and "Midnight".[2]

Reception

Ratings

On its initial broadcast on November 17, 2010, "The Abducted" was watched by an estimated 4.85 million viewers in the United States, with a 3.0/5 rating among all households.[11] It earned a 1.9/5 ratings share for viewers 18-49, helping Fox place third for the night in that demographic.[12] Due to the Thanksgiving holiday in the US, "The Abducted" was the last episode to air until December 2, when the season's eighth episode "Entrada" aired.[13][14] Time shifted viewing increased the episode's ratings by 37 percent among adults, resulting in a rise from 1.9 to 2.6.[15]

Reviews

"This was one of the best, creepiest, most tightly written episodes of this outstanding third season... It takes a heck of a writing team to give us a story that is both touching and spine-tingling."

SFScope writer Sarah Stegall[2]

Entertainment Weekly writer Ken Tucker wrote, "I loved this episode for... its careful layering and expansion of the series’ key themes, and for the way it’s setting us up for a truly superb, universe-shaking episode when Fringe returns Dec. 2."[10] The A.V. Club's Noel Murray graded the episode with a B+, explaining he enjoyed the episode more than the previous visit to the parallel universe because "the last five minutes or so of 'The Abducted' were more compelling than the case-of-the-week. But not far more. The Candy Man is just so creepy—and his crime so powerfully symbolic—that I felt better about this episode overall than I did about 'Amber."[9]

Los Angeles Times columnist Andrew Hanson thought the whole episode was "disturbing, even for Fringe", and was pleased that the killers were shot rather than arrested due to the heinousness of their crimes.[16] SFScope contributor Sarah Stegall believed the episode contained some of the cast's best performances, especially praising Lance Reddick's portrayal of a "very human, caring hero who has been damaged but not crippled by the tragedy that struck his family" and Anna Torv's ability to subtly play both Olivias.[2] IGN's Phil Pirrello believed "the Broyles Factor padded a cool premise with a solid (if unremarkable) execution that lead to a great final five minutes."[17] In January 2013, IGN ranked it the eighth best episode of the entire series, explaining that "this one holds a special place for having so many elements of what makes Fringe great... There's only one word for the way this episode handled two awesome storylines and intertwined them seamlessly: brilliant."[18]

References

  1. ^ a b Jensen, Jeff (2010-11-18). "'Fringe': Lance Reddick dishes on tonight's Broyles-centric episode, and how the real-life 'Donnie Brasco' inspires him". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2011-02-24.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Stegall, Sarah (2010-12-03). "Candy Man—Fringe's "The Abducted"". SFScope. Archived from the original on 2012-05-14. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
  3. ^ Fitzpatrick, Kevin (2010-10-18). "Fringe's Next Episodes Wet, Wild and Cancer-Free". UGO Networks. Archived from the original on 2010-10-22. Retrieved 2011-05-17.
  4. ^ "Fringe Episode: "The Abducted"". TV Guide. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
  5. ^ "Lance Reddick's big Broyles episode of 'Fringe'". Red Eye Chicago. Chicago Tribune. 2009-11-05. Retrieved 2011-12-06.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ "TV Show "Fringe" on Fox Partners with Science Olympiad". Science Olympiad. Retrieved 2011-07-19.
  7. ^ Holbrook, Damian (2010-11-11). "Fringe Unveils Science Sites". TV Guide. Retrieved 2011-07-07.
  8. ^ "The Science of Fringe: Exploring Communicable Diseases" (PDF). Fox Broadcasting Company. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-11. Retrieved 2011-07-19.
  9. ^ a b c Murray, Noel (2010-11-18). "The Abducted". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
  10. ^ a b c Tucker, Ken (2010-11-18). "'Fringe' recap: In 'The Abducted,' who can take a child? The Candyman can". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
  11. ^ Seidman, Robert (2010-11-19). "Thursday Final Ratings: $#*! My Dad Says, 30 Rock, Outsourced Adjusted Down; The Office Adjusted Up". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on 2010-11-21. Retrieved 2011-02-24.
  12. ^ Rice, Lynette (2010-11-19). "Viewers love their 'Big Bang Theory' fix! Plus, 'The Apprentice' goes down ... way down". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2011-02-24.
  13. ^ Anders, Charlie Jane (2010-11-17). "We've seen the next 2 blow-out episodes of Fringe!". io9. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
  14. ^ Wigler, Josh (2010-11-18). "Recap: Fringe: The Abducted". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
  15. ^ Gorman, Bill (2010-12-06). "Live+7 DVR Ratings: 'Modern Family,' 'Grey's Anatomy,' 'Parenthood,' 'Hawaii Five-0' Top Week's Rankings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on 2010-12-08. Retrieved 2012-06-13.
  16. ^ Hanson, Andrew (2010-11-18). ""Fringe" recap: What's the FBI?". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
  17. ^ Pirrello, Phil (2010-11-19). "Fringe: How The Hell Are They Gonna Bring Back Olivia?". IGN. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
  18. ^ Isler, Ramsey (2013-01-22). "Top 10 Fringe episodes". IGN. Retrieved 2013-05-25.

External links

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=The_Abducted
>Text je dostupný pod licencí Creative Commons Uveďte autora – Zachovejte licenci, případně za dalších podmínek. Podrobnosti naleznete na stránce Podmínky užití.

čítajte viac o The_Abducted


čítajte viac na tomto odkaze: The Abducted



Hladanie1.

Abducted (disambiguation)
Fringe (TV series)
Chuck Russell
David Wilcox (screenwriter)
Graham Roland
Seth Gabel
Lincoln Lee
Kirk Acevedo
List of Fringe characters#Charlie Francis
Will Rothhaar
List of Fringe characters#Diane Broyles
David Nykl
Andre Royo
List of Fringe characters#Henry Higgins
6955 kHz
Entrada (Fringe)
Fringe season 3
List of Fringe episodes
List of Fringe episodes
Fringe season 3
Science fiction
Drama
Television program
Fringe (TV series)
Thanksgiving
Entrada (Fringe)
Parallel universe (fiction)
Anna Torv
Doppelgänger
Andre Royo
Liberty Island
Isolation tank
Lance Reddick
Pituitary gland
David Nykl
Will Rothhaar
Federal Bureau of Investigation
John Noble
Joshua Jackson
Sic
Lance Reddick
David Wilcox (screenwriter)
Graham Roland
Chuck Russell
Andre Royo
List of Fringe characters#Minor characters
List of Fringe characters#Minor characters
Phillip Broyles
Lance Reddick
FBI
Joe Pistone
Falcone (TV series)
Donnie Brasco: My Undercover Life in the Mafia
Science Olympiad
Casablanca (film)
President of the United States
Ronald Reagan
Humphrey Bogart
SFScope
Eugene Victor Tooms
The X-Files
Fringe season 1
The Same Old Story
Thanksgiving
Entrada (Fringe)
Time shifting
SFScope
Entertainment Weekly
The A.V. Club
Amber 31422
Los Angeles Times
SFScope
IGN
Entertainment Weekly
SFScope
UGO Networks
TV Guide
Chicago Tribune
Wikipedia:Link rot
Science Olympiad
TV Guide
Fox Broadcasting Company
The A.V. Club
Entertainment Weekly
TV by the Numbers
Entertainment Weekly
Charlie Anders
Io9
Comic Book Resources
TV by the Numbers
Los Angeles Times
IGN
IGN
Fringe#The Abducted .5B3.07.5D
Fox Broadcasting Company
IMDb (identifier)
Q7712113#P345
Template:Fringe (TV series)
Template talk:Fringe (TV series)
Special:EditPage/Template:Fringe (TV series)
Fringe (TV series)
List of Fringe episodes
Fringe season 1
Pilot (Fringe)
The Same Old Story
The Ghost Network
The Arrival (Fringe)
Power Hungry (Fringe)
The Cure (Fringe)
In Which We Meet Mr. Jones
The Equation
The Dreamscape
Safe (Fringe)
Bound (Fringe)
The No-Brainer
The Transformation
Ability (Fringe)
Inner Child (Fringe)
Unleashed (Fringe)
Bad Dreams (Fringe)
Midnight (Fringe)
The Road Not Taken (Fringe)
There's More Than One of Everything
Fringe season 2
A New Day in the Old Town
Night of Desirable Objects
Fracture (Fringe)
Momentum Deferred
Dream Logic
Earthling (Fringe)
Of Human Action
August (Fringe episode)
Snakehead (Fringe)
Grey Matters (Fringe)
Unearthed (Fringe)
Johari Window (Fringe)
What Lies Below (Fringe)
The Bishop Revival
Jacksonville (Fringe)
Peter (Fringe episode)
Olivia. In the Lab. With the Revolver.
White Tulip
The Man from the Other Side
Brown Betty (Fringe)
Northwest Passage (Fringe)
Over There (Fringe)
Fringe season 3
Olivia (Fringe episode)
The Box (Fringe)
The Plateau (Fringe)
Do Shapeshifters Dream of Electric Sheep?
Amber 31422
6955 kHz
Entrada (Fringe)
Marionette (Fringe)
The Firefly (Fringe)
Reciprocity (Fringe)
Concentrate and Ask Again
Immortality (Fringe)
6B (Fringe)
Subject 13 (Fringe)
Os (Fringe)
Stowaway (Fringe)
Bloodline (Fringe)
Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (Fringe)
6:02 AM EST
The Last Sam Weiss
The Day We Died
Fringe season 4
Neither Here nor There (Fringe)
One Night in October
Alone in the World (Fringe)
Subject 9
Novation (Fringe)
And Those We've Left Behind
Wallflower (Fringe)
Back to Where You've Never Been
Enemy of My Enemy
Forced Perspective (Fringe)
Making Angels
Welcome to Westfield
A Better Human Being
The End of All Things
A Short Story About Love
Nothing As It Seems (Fringe)
Everything in Its Right Place (Fringe)
The Consultant (Fringe)
Letters of Transit
Worlds Apart (Fringe)
Brave New World (Fringe)
Fringe season 5
Transilience Thought Unifier Model-11
In Absentia (Fringe)
The Recordist
The Bullet That Saved the World
An Origin Story
Through the Looking Glass and What Walter Found There
Five-Twenty-Ten
The Human Kind
Black Blotter
Anomaly XB-6783746
The Boy Must Live
Liberty (Fringe)
An Enemy of Fate
List of Fringe characters
Olivia Dunham
Peter Bishop
Walter Bishop (Fringe)
Astrid Farnsworth
Lincoln Lee
List of awards and nominations received by Fringe
Fringepedia
Mythology of Fringe
Massive Dynamic
The Abducted
The Abducted
Main Page
Wikipedia:Contents
Portal:Current events
Special:Random
Wikipedia:About
Wikipedia:Contact us
Special:FundraiserRedirector?utm source=donate&utm medium=sidebar&utm campaign=C13 en.wikipedia.org&uselang=en
Help:Contents
Help:Introduction
Wikipedia:Community portal
Special:RecentChanges
Wikipedia:File upload wizard
Main Page
Special:Search
Help:Introduction
Special:MyContributions
Special:MyTalk
Special:EntityPage/Q7712113#sitelinks-wikipedia
The Abducted
Talk:The Abducted
The Abducted
The Abducted
Special:WhatLinksHere/The Abducted
Special:RecentChangesLinked/The Abducted
Wikipedia:File Upload Wizard
Special:SpecialPages
Special:EntityPage/Q7712113
Wikipedia:Good articles*
The Abducted
The Abducted
Main Page
Wikipedia:Contents
Portal:Current events
Special:Random
Wikipedia:About
Wikipedia:Contact us
Special:FundraiserRedirector?utm source=donate&utm medium=sidebar&utm campaign=C13 en.wikipedia.org&uselang=en
Help:Contents
Help:Introduction
Wikipedia:Community portal
Special:RecentChanges
Wikipedia:File upload wizard
Main Page
Special:Search
Help:Introduction
Special:MyContributions
Special:MyTalk
Special:EntityPage/Q7712113#sitelinks-wikipedia
The Abducted
Talk:The Abducted
The Abducted
The Abducted
Special:WhatLinksHere/The Abducted
Special:RecentChangesLinked/The Abducted
Wikipedia:File Upload Wizard
Special:SpecialPages
Special:EntityPage/Q7712113
Wikipedia:Good articles*
The Abducted
The Abducted
Main Page
Wikipedia:Contents
Portal:Current events
Special:Random
Wikipedia:About
Wikipedia:Contact us
Special:FundraiserRedirector?utm source=donate&utm medium=sidebar&utm campaign=C13 en.wikipedia.org&uselang=en
Help:Contents
Help:Introduction
Wikipedia:Community portal
Special:RecentChanges
Wikipedia:File upload wizard
Main Page
Special:Search
Help:Introduction
Special:MyContributions
Special:MyTalk
Special:EntityPage/Q7712113#sitelinks-wikipedia
The Abducted
Talk:The Abducted
The Abducted
The Abducted
Special:WhatLinksHere/The Abducted
Special:RecentChangesLinked/The Abducted
Wikipedia:File Upload Wizard
Special:SpecialPages
Special:EntityPage/Q7712113
Wikipedia:Good articles*
Updating...x




Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších podmienok.
Podrobnejšie informácie nájdete na stránke Podmienky použitia.