3.7 The Abducted The basic story of abducted children used to inject youth back into an ageing man is pure X-Files – so much so that I half expected Scully to actually turn up at one point. But separating it from that show was the twist that virtually the entire episode took place in the parallel dimension, where time is rapidly running out for Olivia. She knows how to get back to our dimension, it’s just that she’s rather occupied with this case, which also has interesting overtones for the alternate Boyles. Phillip Broyles hasn’t much of a backstory in our universe other than that he’s divorced with children, but here he’s given a wife, son and daughter who he’s with. Another nice touch in here is the return of Andre Royo playing the cabby Henry Arliss Higgins whom Olivia met earlier in the season. She co-opts him into helping her get onto Liberty island so she can use the lab’s immersion tank to get back to our dimension. Which is where I got slightly confused about events. At this point Olivia’s fully materialised, and can interact with objects, but then she hasn’t actually disappeared from the other dimension, because Walternate has dragged her out of the tank, and in doing so they yank her back to that one. How? She can’t really be in two places at once, can she? And if she can, then at what point would she have ceased to exist in the other universe? I’m sure Walter will give us an explanation at some point, but I’ll admit to not entirely following how this all worked. Olivia fails to get back, but injects some real adrenalin into the narrative by getting a message to the janitor, which she then relays to Peter, who is actually in bed with Altivia at the time! This was a fantastic set-up for the next episode, and the rest of the season, because I can’t see that Peter is about to let Altivia know that she’s busted. On an entirely different note, I was massively thrilled to see that Peter hasn’t succumbed to the marketing machine of Apple, and had an Android phone! So how did Fox TV reward the better viewing figures and quality that episode 7 brought us? It moved Fringe to the Friday ‘death slot’. For those unaware of the history here, Fox TV is its very own evil twin, that falls out of love with shows, and then decides they’ve failed (before they actually have), and then sets about fixing them so they do fail.The list of shows they’ve done this to is long and quite impressive, but most recently they did this to Sarah Connor Chronicles and Firefly. When Fox does this to a show, its days are numbered, which is exactly their plan. Why anyone takes a show to Fox to have them do this to it I’ve no idea. Like the fable of the scorpion and the frog, this is what Fox does – it’s in their nature. I’ll be sad when Fringe ends, because in a world where so much TV is entirely brainless, it is often firing on multiple synapses. Read our review of Fringe episode 6, 6955 kHz, here. Follow Den Of Geek on Twitter right here.