Fringe Complete Series Box Set

Fringe Complete Series Box Set
$119.99

Fringe: the complete cult sci-fi TV series in a DVD Box Set, season 1–5, 29 discs! Entire five seasons of the science fiction television drama, co-created by J.J. Abrams, following a team investigating cases of strange phenomena that exist on the fringes of science. FBI agent Olivia Dunham (Anna Torv) suspects a sinister presence behind bizarre and unexplained events and enlists the help of a scientist who has been in a mental institution for the last 17 years, Walter Bishop (John Noble), along with his son, Peter (Joshua Jackson). Together, they explore various cases which go beyond the realms of normal police work and soon begin to uncover a trail leading to a global corporation called Massive Dynamic. 29 disc boxed set – over 75 hours of content! Awards for Series Won Saturn Award, Best Network Television Series (2012 & 2011), Nominated (2013, 2010 & 2009) Won People's Choice Award USA, Favorite Sci-Fi/Fantasy Show (2011), Nominated (2012) Won TV Guide Award, Favorite Drama Series (2012) Nominated Satellite Award, Best Television Series, Genre (2012) Nominated SFX Award, Best TV Show (2012) Nominated Television Critics Association Award, Outstanding New Program of the Year (2009) Nominated Hugo Award, Best Dramatic Presentation – Short Form (2013) Nominated Teen Choice Award Fantasy/Sci-Fi (2012, 2011 & 2010) Won another 10 awards, Nominated for another 47 awards Fringe TV Show Reviews “Lately everything that Lost supremo J.J. Abrams touches turns into gold: Cloverfield, Star Trek, Mission Impossible III…Well, maybe not Mission Impossible III but Fringe, his latest TV series (the second season premieres in the States on September 17, 2009), is no exception. The show, co-created by Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci, the team behind the popular Star Trek reboot – is pure 24 carat gold…Fringe may take a few episodes to get going, but once you do get into the swing of things you'll find that Fringe is one of the more addictive science fiction television shows out there..Highly recommended.” scifimoviepage.com (season 1) “One of the great character dramas of contemporary television.” New York Daily News “What started out back in 2008 as what looked to be another sci-fi drama in the vein of The X-Files has turned into so much more. Fringe, now getting ready to head into its fourth season, has evolved beyond a simple paranormal sci-fi drama with male and female FBI agents into a complex, intriguing world all its own, very distant from the X-Files clone it looked to be…An absolutely superb season that moves beyond its influences and carves out a space of its own in the annals of sci-fi television, Fringe: The Complete Third Season is brilliant sci-fi” Blu-raydefinition.com (season 3) “..The series has been compared to another Fox Science Fiction standard; ‘The X-Files’ and I suppose that some comparison is natural and valid but just a cursory consideration of both series will reveal that such a comparison is cursory at best. They both deal with paranormal events that are investigated by FBI agents but other than that they are completely different in construction, tone and underlying story. "Fringe’ represents a novel approach to a tried, successful genre. This is the type of series that demands lengthy discussions with your friends the morning after a new episode has aired. Each episode is so carefully constructed that it requires multiple viewings to catch all of the subtly placed clues to unraveling the mystery and uncover the perfectly planted nuances of the story lines…This is an incredible series that thankfully has been renewed..Move over ‘X-Files’ this is the new series for the serious Sci-Fi fan.” hometheaterinfo.com (season 1) “The best show you'll find on network television is here with it's third season, a mind-bending excursion into hugely rewarding mythology. Watch it please…” DVD Verdict (season 3) “It's classy, inventive sci-fi with shades of Doctor Who, Looper, The Matrix and The X Files.” Guardian UK (season 5) '“..this series set a new standard for intelligently written and imaginatively produced story telling even witnessed on television. ‘Fringe ‘was frequently bizarre, often enigmatic and always entertaining it took up the mantle of multi complicated, multiple season story arcs to an entirely different level. The creative mind behind the series, J.J. Abrams has been a force to be reckoned with on TV for years with his cult classics; ‘Alias’ and ‘Felicity’ making him a household name. With the series, ‘Lost’ he took imagery, convoluted plot devices and interaction with the fans to a place never imagined before. The mistakes in pacing that were made in ‘Lost’ as it began to unravel and loss momentum were for the most part avoided in ‘Fringe’ resulting in a series that constantly defined itself…Many shows just phone in the last season but not ‘Fringe’. This last season exhibited a dedication to the integrity of the story and a respect for the diehard fan. the final character arcs fleshed out what had been previously established and gave the audience a resolution that worked, it is understandably sad to see it end but this is a series that you can revisit many times and each time pick up new nuances.” hometheaterinfo.com (season 5) Episodes: ‘Pilot’, ‘The Same Old Story’, ‘The Ghost Network’, ‘The Arrival’, ‘Power Hungry’, ‘The Cure’, ‘In Which We Meet Mr. Jones’, ‘The Equation’, ‘The Dreamscape’, ‘Safe’, ‘Bound’, ‘The No-Brainer’, ‘The Transformation’, ‘Ability’, ‘Inner Child’, ‘Unleashed’, ‘Bad Dreams’, ‘Midnight’, ‘The Road Not Taken’, ‘There's More Than One of Everything’, ‘A New Day in the Old Town’, ‘Night of Desirable Objects’, ‘Fracture’, ‘Momentum Deferred’, ‘Dream Logic’, ‘Earthling’, ‘Of Human Action’, ‘August’, ‘Snakehead’, ‘Grey Matters’, ‘Unearthed’, ‘Johari Window’, ‘What Lies Below’, ‘The Bishop Revival’, ‘Jacksonville’, ‘Peter’, ‘Olivia. In the Lab. With the Revolver’, ‘White Tulip’, ‘The Man from the Other Side’, ‘Brown Betty’, ‘Northwest Passage’, ‘Over There: Part One’, ‘Over There: Part Two’, ‘Olivia’, ‘The Box’, ‘The Plateau’, ‘Do Shapeshifters Dream of Electric Sheep?’, ‘Amber 31422’, ‘6955 kHz’, ‘The Abducted’, ‘Entrada’, ‘Marionette’, ‘The Firefly’, ‘Reciprocity’, ‘Concentrate and Ask Again’, ‘Immortality’, ‘6B’, ‘Subject 13’, ‘Os’, ‘Stowaway’, ‘Bloodline’, ‘Lysergic Acid Diethylamide’, ‘6:02 AM EST’, ‘The Last Sam Weiss’, ‘The Day We Died’, ‘Neither Here Nor There’, ‘One Night in October’, ‘Alone in the World’, ‘Subject 9’, ‘Novation’, ‘And Those We've Left Behind’, ‘Wallflower’, ‘Back to Where You've Never Been’, ‘Enemy of My Enemy’, ‘Forced Perspective’, ‘Making Angels’, ‘Welcome to Westfield’, ‘A Better Human Being’, ‘The End of All Things’, ‘A Short Story About Love’, ‘Nothing As It Seems’, ‘Everything in Its Right Place’, ‘The Consultant’, ‘Letters of Transit’, ‘Worlds Apart’, ‘Brave New World: Part One’, ‘Brave New World: Part Two’, ‘Transilience Thought Unifier Model-11’, ‘In Absentia’, ‘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’ and ‘An Enemy Fate’.