Pete and Myka investigate a mysterious case where mobs of angry people are hallucinating.Free Download Video Warehouse 13 Episode On ABC Family Tv Online Tv Live Streaming Video. Online Watch Warehouse 13 Full Episode Watch Stream HD Video on Internet TV.The series follows U.S. Secret Service agents Myka Bering (Joanne Kelly) and Peter Lattimer (Eddie McClintock) when they are assigned to the government's secret Warehouse 13 for supernatural "artifacts". It is located in a barren landscape in South Dakota, and they initially regard the assignment as punishment. As they go about their assignments to retrieve missing Warehouse 13 artifacts and investigate reports of new ones, they come to understand the importance of what they are doing. They are enthusiastically joined by young, hip, brilliant techno-wiz Claudia Donovan (Allison Scagliotti). Joanne Kelly’s Myka said it best, “If we ever needed some sort of warehouse magic, now would be the time.”Regular viewers know that the show revolves around a warehouse with TARDIS-like powers (it’s way bigger on the inside) filled with deus ex machina solutions to every episode’s problem.The great thing about that is how the creators have managed to make each of those “easy” solutions both suspenseful and challenging. In fact, I would say one of the most exciting part of the show is trying to figure out what the artifact is this time and how will it affect everyone.
So when the warehouse was blown into a crater (and Mrs. Frederic along with it) at the end of last season, it was less a question of rebuilding it, and more a question of “what did Artie have up his sleeve?” Or indeed, in his pocket.
We open the episode with Artie, Myka and Pete standing, devastated, in the pit that used to be their home, each remembering a piece of the warehouse that was a point of happiness, now dust in front of them. Pete interrupts Artie’s reverie with the question we’ve all been thinking since the season finale, “What did you mean when you said ‘not yet’?”
Sadly, even Artie is unaware of the power of the pocket watch he carries and after discovering that the one unbreakable vault in the warehouse wasn’t, he hastens over to Leena’s to check the television. Even in the midst of the warehouse’s ashes, Pete still manages to lighten to mood, and we’re grateful.
Upon arrival the group is filled in on who has passed away and who is left and Leena suddenly remembers the Ytterbium Chamber that housed Pandora’s Box, where human hope was stored. Artie turns on the television to reveal that hope was destroyed along with everything else and the whole world is falling into chaos. As a set-up, I think it’s a great way to bring us out of our sorrow over the characters’ deaths and into the big picture.
Then it was time for the big guest appearance! It’s Brent Spiner, everyone’s favorite android, come to play as a Templar Brotherhood Knight… guy. Very fierce too, he threatens Artie and Claudia after they find the astrolabe (who else loved to hear him say “no my friend, it is you who does not understand”), and shows off his wicked knife moves by springing a booby trap from across the room.
Myka and Pete save Artie, but Claudia is stuck in the evil knight’s trap. The process for finding the next location here reminds me more of Adam West as Batman connecting clues that don’t even go together, where did the bible even come from? But they discover where they need to go and haltingly leave Claudia behind, promising to turn back time or come back for her. One more down, three to go. Are we sensing a pattern?
The episode drags a bit here as we follow the team through a riotous Rome, where Artie knows of a restaurant that has a secret passageway straight into the Basilica of the Vatican (naturally). Myka gets herself arrested as a distraction to get Pete and Artie through, and then there were two. After a final encounter with the Knights Brotherhood, the retrieval of the alidade (to complete the astrolabe) and a great death scene by Eddie McClintock, we get a warning from good ol’ Brent Spiner.
His final words (in this episode at least) to Artie are “You do this, you can tell no one, anyone. You tell of your actions, we’ll be in grave danger. If you use the astrolabe you will create an evil of your own making. An evil that will live with you the rest of your days”.
A dire warning, but what other choice does Artie have? He has to make the sacrifice for Pete, Mrs. Frederic, the warehouse, and the rest of humanity.
What a great piece of work. Its just fun and entertaining - no in-depth stories, no deep meanings, nothing to do but watch and enjoy.
My wife and I like it (50s), my children enjoy it (20s and 30s) and their kids enjoy it (6 - 12). Anyone else that has sen it raves about it as well. What more could you want!
Nice escapism after a day at work. I can't wait for the next series to come out.
I recommend this to anyone, sci-fi fans or not. It has adventure, humour, no bad language, nothing too risqué for the kids but a strong enough storyline to keep the adults on board as well as the kids.
So when the warehouse was blown into a crater (and Mrs. Frederic along with it) at the end of last season, it was less a question of rebuilding it, and more a question of “what did Artie have up his sleeve?” Or indeed, in his pocket.
We open the episode with Artie, Myka and Pete standing, devastated, in the pit that used to be their home, each remembering a piece of the warehouse that was a point of happiness, now dust in front of them. Pete interrupts Artie’s reverie with the question we’ve all been thinking since the season finale, “What did you mean when you said ‘not yet’?”
Sadly, even Artie is unaware of the power of the pocket watch he carries and after discovering that the one unbreakable vault in the warehouse wasn’t, he hastens over to Leena’s to check the television. Even in the midst of the warehouse’s ashes, Pete still manages to lighten to mood, and we’re grateful.
Upon arrival the group is filled in on who has passed away and who is left and Leena suddenly remembers the Ytterbium Chamber that housed Pandora’s Box, where human hope was stored. Artie turns on the television to reveal that hope was destroyed along with everything else and the whole world is falling into chaos. As a set-up, I think it’s a great way to bring us out of our sorrow over the characters’ deaths and into the big picture.
Then it was time for the big guest appearance! It’s Brent Spiner, everyone’s favorite android, come to play as a Templar Brotherhood Knight… guy. Very fierce too, he threatens Artie and Claudia after they find the astrolabe (who else loved to hear him say “no my friend, it is you who does not understand”), and shows off his wicked knife moves by springing a booby trap from across the room.
Myka and Pete save Artie, but Claudia is stuck in the evil knight’s trap. The process for finding the next location here reminds me more of Adam West as Batman connecting clues that don’t even go together, where did the bible even come from? But they discover where they need to go and haltingly leave Claudia behind, promising to turn back time or come back for her. One more down, three to go. Are we sensing a pattern?
The episode drags a bit here as we follow the team through a riotous Rome, where Artie knows of a restaurant that has a secret passageway straight into the Basilica of the Vatican (naturally). Myka gets herself arrested as a distraction to get Pete and Artie through, and then there were two. After a final encounter with the Knights Brotherhood, the retrieval of the alidade (to complete the astrolabe) and a great death scene by Eddie McClintock, we get a warning from good ol’ Brent Spiner.
His final words (in this episode at least) to Artie are “You do this, you can tell no one, anyone. You tell of your actions, we’ll be in grave danger. If you use the astrolabe you will create an evil of your own making. An evil that will live with you the rest of your days”.
A dire warning, but what other choice does Artie have? He has to make the sacrifice for Pete, Mrs. Frederic, the warehouse, and the rest of humanity.
What a great piece of work. Its just fun and entertaining - no in-depth stories, no deep meanings, nothing to do but watch and enjoy.
My wife and I like it (50s), my children enjoy it (20s and 30s) and their kids enjoy it (6 - 12). Anyone else that has sen it raves about it as well. What more could you want!
Nice escapism after a day at work. I can't wait for the next series to come out.
I recommend this to anyone, sci-fi fans or not. It has adventure, humour, no bad language, nothing too risqué for the kids but a strong enough storyline to keep the adults on board as well as the kids.