Warethus 13 — Wikipedia

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Warehouse 13 or Warehouse 13 In Quebec is an American television series in 65 42 -minute episodes created by Jane Espenson and D. Brent Mote, broadcast between the [ first ] and the on Syfy in the United States, and in Canada from the On CityTV [ 2 ] .

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In France, the series is broadcast from At On Syfy in a multilingual version; and in Quebec, At on Ztélé.

After saving the life of the President of the United States, two agents of Secret Service are appointed to a new position in southern Dakota in a “special” warehouse named Warehouse 13 . It is a service that houses objects with supernatural properties that have been collected by a supranational entity over the centuries. The duo then has the mission of recovering possible new artifacts likely to put the population in danger.

Main actors [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

Recurring actors [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

  • Roger Rees ( VF : Olivier Rodier)  : James MacPherson (seasons 1 to 3, guest season 4, episode 11)
  • Simon Reynolds ( VF : Philippe CATOIRE)  : Daniel Dickinson (seasons 1 and 2)
  • Tyler Hynes  (in) ( VF : Guillaume Lebon)  : Joshua Donovan (Season 1, 2 and 4)
  • FAran Tahir ( VF  : Michel Vigné) : Adwin Kosan (Guest season 1, recurrent seasons 2 to 5)
  • Mark Sheppard ( VF : Marc Saez)  : Benedict Valda (Guest season 1, episode 11, recurrent seasons 2 and 5)
  • Jaime Murray ( VF  : Marion Valantine) : H. G. Wells , character inspired by the novelist H. G. Wells (1866 – 1946) (seasons 2 to 5)
  • Paula Garcés ( VF : Véronique Desmadryl) : D r  Kelly Hernandez (seasons 2 and 5)
  • Nolan Gerard Funk ( VF  : Donald Reignoux)  : Todd (season 2)
  • Lindsay Wagner ( VF : Dominique Macavoy) : D r  Vanessa Calder (Guest season 2, episodes 7 and 11 / recurrent seasons 3 to 5)
  • Kate Mulgrew ( VF : Anne Jolivet then Micky Sébastian)  : Jane Lattimer (seasons 3 and 4)
  • Ashley Williams ( VF : VERONICE CELLU : agent du fbi sally stukowski (season 3)
  • Anthony Michael Hall ( VF : Mathieu Buscatto)  : Walter Sykes (season 3, guest season 4, episode 1)
  • Sasha roiz ( VF : Vincent Ropion)  : Marcus Diamond (season 3)
  • Brent Spiner ( VF  : Michel Voletti) : Brother Adrian (season 4)
  • Kelly Hu ( VF : Ivana Coppola) : Abigail Cho successor from Leena to the pension, former photographer and psychologist (seasons 4 and 5)
  • James Marsters ( VF : Serge turning) : Professor Sutton (season 4)
  • Josh Blaylock  (in) ( VF : Léonard Hamet)  : Nick Powell (season 4)
  • Polly Walker ( VF : Juliette Degenne) : Charlotte Duprés (season 4)
  • Anthony Stewart Head ( VF : Nicolas Marié) : Paracelse (seasons 4 and 5)
  • Chryssie Whitehead  (in) ( VF : Emmanuelle Hamet-Pailly)  : Claire Donovan (season 5)
  • René Aumberjonis: Hugo Miller (seasons 2 to 5)

Source and legend : French version ( VF ) on RS Dubbing [ 4 ] And Database series dubbing [ 3 ]

Development [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

In , the series project was announced and produced by Ronald D. Moore [ 5 ] .

The , Sci Fi Channel ordered a two -hour pilot, based on a rockne script O’Bannon, Jane Espenson and D. Brent Mote, produced by Universal Media Studios [ 6 ] . After watching the pilot, the chain ordered the series [ 7 ] . After the main casting, production started in [ 8 ] . The series was launched on the same day when ” Sci Fi Channel “Changed his name for” Syfy [ first ] ».

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The , the series was renewed for a second season of thirteen episodes [ 9 ] .

The , the series was renewed for a third season of thirteen episodes [ ten ] .

The , the series was officially renewed for a fourth season of thirteen episodes [ 11 ] On Syfy. Then, the , Syfy ordered seven additional episodes in the fourth season, a total of twenty episodes [ twelfth ] .

The , the series was officially renewed for a fifth and last season of six episodes [ 13 ] .

Casting [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

In , the roles were attributed in this order: Eddie McClintock, Joanne Kelly [ 14 ] , Saul Rubine [ 15 ] et CCH Pounder [ 16 ] .

In , the accommodation allison loots-Smith to rejoint the main distribution [ 17 ] .

Recurring during the third season [ 18 ] , Aaron Ashmore is promoted to the main distribution for the fourth season.

Filming [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

The series is shot in Dundas, Stouffville, Pickering and Toronto in Ontario, Canada [ 19 ] . It should be noted that some scenes have probably been also shot in Quebec, the most convincing example being in episode 6 of the second season, at 4 minutes 49 seconds, we see the town hall of Montreal appear [ 20 ] . Although this filming location is nowhere, we recognize the architecture of the building in this sequence when compared with an almost identical view in Google Maps in StreetView mode.

Technical sheet [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

  • Original and French title: Warehouse 13
  • Quebec title: Warehouse 13
  • Creation: Rockne S. O’Bannon (pilot episode), Jane Espenson and D. Brent Mote
  • Réalisation : Vincent Misiano, Constantine Makris, Jace Alexander, Matt Earl Beesley, Stephen Cragg,  etc.
  • Scénario : Jane Espenson, D. Brent Mote, David Simkins, Drew Z. Greenberg, Michael P. Fox, Bob Goodman, Ian Stokes, Ben Raab,  etc.
  • Artistic direction: Peter Grundy and Michele Brady
  • Deckstir: Franco de Cotis; Zeljka ALOSINAC (Plateau)
  • Costumes : Joanne Hansen
  • Photography: Derick V. Underchultz, Michael McMurray, David Herrington
  • Montage : John Peter Bernardo, John Heath, Harry B. Miller III, Andrew Seklir, Seagan Ngai
  • Music: Edward Rogers
  • Casting : Robin D. Cook, Suzanne Goddard-Smythe, Julie Tucker, Ross Meyerson
  • Production : Stephen Surjik, Mark Winemaker
  • Production company (s): Universal Cable Productions and Syfy
  • Distribution company (television): SYFY (United States, United Kingdom and France); Universal Studios Home Entertainment (DVD – United States)
  • Country of origin: see shooting
  • Original language: English
  • Format: Color – 35 mm – 1,78:1 – son Dolby Digital
  • Genre: science fiction, fantastic
  • Duration: 42 minutes
Icône signalant une information Unless otherwise indicated or complementary, the information mentioned in this section may be confirmed by the IMDB database .

International broadcasts [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

A version original
In French

The series has five seasons, the first three composed of thirteen episodes, a fourth of twenty episodes and a fifth of six episodes to conclude the series.

Characters [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

Principal [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

Agent Pete Lattimer

He comes from Ohio. He learns that his mother, Jane Lattimer, is one of the regent of the warehouse because she had never told him [ 24 ] . His father, of which only his initial: M. is known, was a firefighter. He died during a fire when Pete was only twelve years old. He has a sister, Jannie who is deaf. He is a former navy. He was briefly married in Amanda, they divorced because Pete had big problems with alcohol. He has a special gift that allows him to feel good or bad waves.

Agent Myka Ophelie Bering

She lived in Colorado, her parents hold a bookstore called Bering and Sons (Bering et fils) even if she has no brothers. She has a sister, Tracy. Unlike her, Myka has a “tomboy” side. She was one of the Girls Scouts . She learned languages ​​and fencing while her sister could play. She describes Tracy as the Queen of Pompom Girls and the girl with whom all the boys were in love. She is also a big lover of books, one of her favorite authors is Shakespeare.
She is very close to Pete, whom she describes as the big brother she has never had.
She is a former secret service agent, she has a very good photographic memory. In addition to being a very effective agent on the ground, she can speak several languages ​​like Russian, Latin, Spanish, Italian, Arabic and French.

Agent Arthur « Artie » Nielsen

He grew up in Pennsylvania. He comes from a Russian Jewish family. In addition to English, he speaks Russian, German and French fluently and he can also read Latin.

Leena

Leena directs the pension in which the agents of the warehouse live. She is able to perceive the aura of the people she meets. She died during season 4, killed by the madness of Artie.

Claudia Donovan

Her parents died when she was young and was raised by her brother Joshua. When he disappears, she stayed in a psychiatric hospital and then is placed in a home home. She also has a sister, held in an artificial coma by Artefact because of the excesses of anger caused by the music box.
She is intelligent, very good at computer science, sings and plays the guitar. In the future, it becomes the governor of warehouse 13 to replace Irene Frederic (last episode of the series). Irene Frederic had chosen him to succeed him.

Agent Steve Jinks

Former member of the police, he was originally recruited to replace Myka who resigned but when the latter resumes service, he stops teaming up with Pete to become the teammate of Claudia Donovan. They are very linked. Steve is killed by Walter Sykes’ hell men after infiltrating them.
During the fourth season, he resuscitated by Claudia with an artifact, Johann Nepomuk Mælzel’s metronome.

Recurring [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

Irene Frederic

Irène Frederic is the current governor of warehouse 13. She replaced her sister when she died. As governor, she has a physiological and psychological link with the warehouse, as well as the gift of longevity. It accesses, among other things, in the inventory of all the artifacts present in the warehouse. It is the highest ranking of regents.

James MacPherson

He was the teammate of Artie at the warehouse and then betrayed his members because he thought that the artifacts had to be used to improve the world. He becomes the worst enemy of the warehouse and begins to make the smuggling of artifacts. He is killed by H. G. Wells.

Daniel Dickinson

Daniel Dickinson is the superior of Pete and Myka. When M me Frederic debauchery to work at the warehouse he does everything to recover them. Indeed, he considers them as two of his best agents. Dickinson has participated in several surveys which does not appeal to the regents. But Artie defends her in front of the latter because her help was useful to them. He is killed using an artifact (the Torquemada chain).

Benedict Valda

He died during a mission. He was one of the regents of the warehouse.

H. G. Wells

From her full name “Helena George Wells”, she is the sister of the famous British writer H. G. Wells (Herbert George Wells), it was she who would have written her books inspired by the inventions she developed within the ‘warehouse 12. Her daughter was killed by burglars when she was absent. She was tanned by her own free will hoping to be cleared in a better time. She dies in the explosion of the warehouse but is saved by Artie when he goes back in time with the Magellan astrolabe to save the warehouse.

List of artifacts in Warehouse 13 [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

Season 1 [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

Thomas Edison’s car (season 1, episode 1)
Origin: It was built by Thomas Edison for Henry Ford.
Power: it advances using the electrical energy produced naturally by the human body. To make it work, you have to put your hands on the safety bar.
Test flight helicopter n O 22 (season 1, episode 1)
Origin: Test flight of a helicopter that sunk in the Bermuda triangle.
Power: its power is unknown but the triangle seeks to take it back.
Pandora’s box (season 1, episode 1)
Origin: The origin is not known.
Power: it contains hope. When Pandora opened the box, all the evils swept over the earth, causing despair and enclosing hope.
Anecdote: Pandora’s box is kept in a lutecium stronghold, defined in the series as the hardest metal that exists.
Harry Houdini’s portfolio (season 1, episode 1)
Origin: It belonged to Harry Houdini.
Power: He invokes the ghosts that haunt the person who has the wallet. He is used to wanting to escape from the warehouse.
Visiophone (season 1, pilot and following episode)
Origin: He was invented by Philo Farnsworth.
Power: It serves as a means of communication between warehouse agents as a mobile phone with screen.
Anecdote: the videophone can also be used to transfer energy. Its communication channels are secure and you cannot hack them.
The kettle (season 1, episode 1)
Origin: It is not known, but its powers recall those of the Aladdin lamp (grant the wishes).
Power: Whoever touches it by making a wish sees it realizing itself. If the wish is impossible, the lamp produces a ferret. She is empty and she is able to move alone.
La Pierre de Sang (season 1, episode 1)
Origin: Aztec, XV It is century, used for human sacrifices.
Power: If it is activated with blood, it can control someone’s mind. This person is then pushed to kill a virgin.
The American football ball (season 1, pilot and following episode)
Origin: Built by the warehouse.
Power: It is an Artefact radar. When launched, he returns to his starting point after going around the world. Pete likes to play it very much.
The Tesla pistol (season 1, pilot and following episode)
Origin: invented by Nikola Tesla
Power: He launches electricity salvas to stun a person and make him lose his memory in the short term.
The comb of Lucrèce Borgia (season 1, episode 2)
Origin: It was made by an alchemist during the Renaissance.
Power: He has the ability to transfer the consciousness of Lucrèce Borgia to the one who carries him and allows him to manipulate an indefinite number of people.
The camera (season 1, episode 2)
Origin: Its origin is not known.
Power: He freezes the person photographed by changing it as a cardboard poster. For the person to be no longer frozen, it must be photographed again.
Eric Marsden’s recording (season 1, episode 3)
Origin: recorded by Marsden in the 60s and 70s but never published.
Power: Disposed in good resonance conditions, he creates a feeling of love and happiness among listeners who become manipulable.
La Lame de la Guillotine (season 1, episode 3)
Origin: blade used for the execution of Marie-Antoinette d’Austria
Power: it produces an explosion by falling.
James Braid’s chair (season 1, episode 4)
Origin: James Braid, precursor of hypnotism, made his patients sit there.
Power: He wakes up the unconscious impulses and desires of the people who sat there.
The time spectrometer (season 1, episode 5)
Origin: Unknown.
Power: It allows you to visualize what happened in a place given in the last five hours.
Rheticus compass (season 1, episode 5)
Origin: It belonged to the famous astronomer and mathematician Rheticus.
Power: it allows, combined with other elements and according to a specific scheme, to teleport.
The deer coat of the Lenapes (season 1, episode 6)
Origin: It was created by Lenapes shamans.
Power: it allows us to act on the consistency, and therefore to cross solid matter.
Buckwheat thorn (season 1, episode 7)
Origin: poorly defined, seems to go back to the era of the Crusades.
Power: increases strength and gives the ability to launch lightning energy. It also has its own will. The short -term carrier undergoes a fatal overload.
The Honjo Masamune (season 1, episode 8)
Origin: It is a katana forged by the grand master Masamune.
Power: Makes invincible in combat. His blade is so sharp that when he split the light, he makes the carrier invisible.
Implosion pomegranate (season 1, episode 8)
Origins: Various, some still know how to make them.
Power: Destroy the material at the point of impact, creating a black hole microphone that sucks in the vicinity.
Lewis Carroll’s mirror (season 1, episode 9)
Origin: It was created by Lewis Carroll.
POWER: The reflection of the person in the mirror becomes alive, the reflection then has the same characteristics as the latter.
Anecdote: Even if we do not know how, Alice was locked inside by former warehouse agents.
THE DISK BOULE DU STUDIO 54 (season 1, episode 9)
Origin: It comes from the nightclub, New York Studio 54, famous in the 70s and 80s.
Power: She plays disco music, while projecting a blinding light. According to Artie, it is the receptacle of the impulses of all the people who have attended this nightclub.
The Royal Casino luck token (season 1, episode 9)
Origin: It comes from the Royal Hotel & Casino Casino in Las Vegas.
Power: it allows you to see the near future, but its use has drawbacks: addiction and sores of the hands.
Volta laboratory blouse (season 1, episode 10)
Origin: It is a creation of Alessandro Volta.
Power: “temporarily” increases the bio-magnetic attraction.
La Croix de Quartz (season 1, episode 10)
Origin: Unknown.
Power: neutralizes the piezoelectric effect induced by other quartz.
Automatic vacuum cleaner (season 1, episode 11)
Origin: Unknown.
Power: As its name suggests, it does the cleaning automatically.
The snow globe (season 1, episode 11)
Origin: Unknown.
Power: It allows an object automatically to refrigerate. Claudia uses it to cool its sodas.
Baylor’s training balloon (season 1, episode 11)
Origin: He probably takes his name from Elgin Baylor, famous basketball player.
Power: This Dodgeball ball is split up with each impact on a person. He was used for military training to test agility and speed of recruits, causing the death of five of them.
The bomb of sticky wire (season 1, episode 11)
Origin: Unknown.
Power: contains a thread composed of an extremely strong glue. The thread is surprisingly solidity while retaining its adhesive power.
Double the Neena pension (season 1, episode 11)
Origin: Unknown.
Power: It is possible to enter it, but any attempt to get out of it by a door or a window brings you back to it. It seems that these phenomena are caused by a table fixed to the wall of the living room, which represents this same room.
Sylvia Plath’s typewriter (season 1, episode 11)
Origin: It belonged to Sylvia Plath, American poet whose life marked with dramas MENA in suicide.
Power: She has the capacity to subjugate anyone who looks at her, also plunging her into a depressive state and taking her desire to live.
The pen and the notebook (season 1, episode 12)
Origin: Plume and notebook that belonged to Edgar Allan Poe.
Power: The pen makes it possible to achieve what is written in the notebook. The victim must read the registration.
Lantern (season 1, episode 12)
Origin: It belonged to Jack the Ripper.
Power: it seems to hypnotize people fixing it.
The Sétonian Glass Cup (season 1, episode 13)
Origin: The glass cutting that belonged to the Roman emperor Helogabale.
Power: it produces, when it is rubbed, a powerful sound wave that makes people who hear it suffer. Héliogabale used it, according to Artie, in order to control people, contravene his own weakness in this way.
The Phoenix (season 1, episode 13)
Origin: Unknown
Power: it allows those who use it to survive death by flames, but in return several people will have to die in its place.
Harriet Tubman’s sewing die (season 1, episode 12)
Origin: It belonged to Harriet Tubman.
Power: It allows you to take the appearance of anyone.

Season 2 [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

The imperception vest (season 2, episode 1)
Origine : H.G. Wells
Power: It allows you to move without being seen and at high speed. Needs a significant source of energy.
The pearl of discernment (season 2, episodes 1 and 3)
Origin: Unknown.
Power: it allows you to take control of the person who wears it.
Dante’s mortuary mask (season 2, episode 1)
Origin: Unknown.
Power: Create a wall of flames.
General Patton’s helmet (season 2, episode 2)
Origin: The helmet of the American general of the 2nd GM George S. Patton.
Power: allows you to communicate telepathically with a crowd. (Appears on the computer that Artie consults)
Rasputin’s Lestovka (season 2, episode 2)
Origin: The Lestovka is the equivalent of the rosary for old Orthodox believers.
Power: resuscitates the dead.
Charles Atlas’ underpants (season 2, episode 2)
Origin: It belonged to Angelo Siciliano, alias Charles Atlas (1892-1972), the designer of bodybuilding.
Power: He has the ability to modify the density of things.
The camera and the projector of Philo Farnsworth (season 2, episode 3)
Origin: Invented by Philo Farnsworth in 1944 as part of the Gemini project.
Power: the projector materializes what the camera films.
Man Ray’s camera (season 2, episode 4)
Origin: It belonged to the artist Man Ray.
Power: it allows a double exhibition to exchange “youth and old age” of the two subjects.
Telegraph Island telegraph (season 2, episode 6)
Origine : Telegraph Island  (in) (before isolated post of the British Empire to the middle of XIX It is century)
Power: Interfere with the cerebral waves of the user causing hallucinations.
The Brigadier General Lavelong Elephant Cane (season 2, episode 6)
Origin: it belonged to the Brigadier-General Laverlong in Filey
Power: causes seismic tremors.
The ladle of Godfrid (season 2, episode 7)
Origin: She was forged by Godfrid Haraldson, Prince Viking, from the armor of her warriors killed in combat. He made his warriors drink there before the fight, which transformed them into berserkers.
Power: people drinking a liquid in which this ladle has soaked become invincible. But in the event of abuse, spontaneous combustion follows.
The low smile zelele (season 2, episode 8)
Origin: They belonged to the famous spy and seductive Mata Hari.
Power: A person who taze them finds himself instantly charmed until the obsession by the carrier of the artifact.
Stevenson’s binds (season 2, episode 8)
Origin: They were the property of Robert Louis Stevenson, the author of Doctor Jekyll and M.  Hyde.
Power: These are two statuettes representing one eagle, the other one lion. These allow, by involving their heads, to interchange spirits and bodies.
The Torquemada chain (season 2, episode 9)
Origin: Tomás de Torquemada’s torture easel.
Power: Disloque all the bones of the targeted person, as could do a torture easel.
The fragment of the titanic (season 2, episode 9)
Origin: It comes from the sinking of the famous liner.
Power: it causes fatal hypothermia in the targeted person.
Charles II Croquet ball (season 2, episode 9)
Origin: It belonged to Charles II of England.
Power: she is “responsible for all the fury of a bad loser king”, according to Artie. Once struck she ricoche for hours at high speed.
The time machine (season 2, episode 10)
Origin: It is an invention by Helena G. Wells.
Power: It allows to transfer his consciousness to the body of a person belonging to the past for a period of 22 hours and 19 minutes.
The warehouse protection system 2 (season 2, episode 11)
Origin: The first regents.
Power: causes dehydration going to the desiccation of anyone who enters it, apart from an agent of the warehouse trained to thwart his traps.
The Poseidon trident (season 2, episode 12)
Origin: He was put into safety in warehouse 1 by Alexander the Great.
Power: When it is violently planted in the ground three times in a row, it opens a crack on the surface of the earth, causing earthquakes, volcanic eruptions …
The Lizzie Borden Poudrier (season 2, episode 12)
Origin: It belonged to the famous murderer (presumed)
Power: He pushes the person who wants him to kill those he likes most with ax.
The snow cup (season 2, episode 13)
Origin: Switzerland.
Power: it projects in the air of snowflakes flavored with marshmallow.
Original guy’s ball (season 2, episode 13)
Origin: immemorial.
Power: it pushes the people who are below kissing sensually.
The trench ball (season 2, episode)
Origin: It dates from the 1914 Christmas truce.
Power: During the Christmas period, it allows you to make a wish in accordance with the spirit of this party.

Season 3 [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

The Trojan Horse (Season 3, Generic)
Origin: According to Greek mythology, siege weapon built by assisted Epeios assisted by Athena, allowing to hide there in its flank Ulysses and a group of soldiers, to be able to introduce themselves inside the city of Troy and make it to fall.
Power: Unknown.
Tesla’s grenade (season 3, episode 1)
Origin: Invented by Claudia Donovan, on the basis of the Tesla pistol.
Power: When she is disgusted, she launches an electric salvo to stun a group of people.
Hendrix guitar (season 3, episode 1)
Origin: Jimi Hendrix’s electric guitar.
Power: Artifact in 2 parts; The first part, the activated guitar can play alone and project electricity bursts around the final note which has to disrupt the electricity network to the general failure for the entire east coast of the United States ( example given in the episode). To stop the effects of the guitar, the use of the second part of the artifact: Hendrix Trémolo is necessary to modify the height of the strings.
Note: It is Hendrix’s second guitar to enter the warehouse, the first which is mentioned is that burned at Finsbury Park in 1967.
The statues of Zeus and Hera Compendium (season 3, episode 1)
Origin: Greece, are part of a set.
Power: These two statues hate themselves cordially and constantly replay the mythological role of the gods they represent; Zeus frightened by the presence of the Héra statue constantly sends him his lightning.
The lost folio (the first folio) (season 3, episode 1)
Origin: The collection of pieces by William Shakespeare, printed 7 years after his death by John Heminges and Henry Condell, cursed by one of the actors of Shakespeare because he could not remember his text.
Power: Whoever sees one of the engravings dies in the same circumstances as those described by the image. This curse can be countered by having the victim recite the verse corresponding to the image before the latter died.
Mary Tiphoid’s butcher knife (season 3, episode 2)
Origin: knife that belonged to Mary Mallon.
Power: It allows you to transfer diseases or injuries to anyone.
Walter Winchell’s tie pin (season 3, episode 2)
Origin: tie pin that belonged to Walter Winchell, famous American speaker and journalist specializing in rumors. He was renowned for his ease of extracting information.
Power: it allows to remove the memory.
Warning: The carrier can develop extreme self-confidence.
Walter Winchell cufflinks (season 3, episode 2)
Origin: Cuff buttons that belonged to Walter Winchell.
Power: they make memory.
Rosalind Franklin’s DNA sequencer (season 3, episode 3)
Origin: This is the original prototype of the DNA sequencer of this molecular biologist discovered by the structure of DNA.
Power: allows you to sequence a person’s DNA in a few moments.
The time spectrometer (season 3, episode 3)
Origin: Unknown
Power: It allows you to review what happened in a room in the last five hours.
Nikola Tesla’s target coil (season 3, episode 3)
Origin: Invented by Nikola Tesla
Power: it allows you to develop an electric field around it. Pete, Mika and Steve shoot with their Tesla to train while having fun.
W. C. Fields juggling balls (season 3, episode 3)
Origin: They belonged to William Claude Dukenfield
Power: they cause intoxication, fainting and amnesia concerning the events of the last hours to anyone who touches them. There are seven in the warehouse.
Walt Disney’s brush (season 3, episode 3)
Origin: Brush that belonged to Walt Disney.
Power: The brush animates, in the form of a cartoon, directly everything that comes out of the designer’s imagination.
Marilyn Monroe’s hair brush (season 3, episode 3)
Origin: Hair brush that belonged to Marilyn Monroe.
Power: It changes the hair on a platinum blond as soon as it is used.
Richard Nixon’s shoes (season 3, episode 3)
Origin: Shoes that belonged to Richard Nixon.
Power: they lead to deep paranoia and induce their wearer to carry out illegal actions.
The Emet necklace (season 3, episode 3)
Origin: Artifact of the Jewish legend of the golem. At XVI It is A century in Prague, the Rabbi Judah Loew, to prevent pogroms against the Jews of the ghettos, made a golem made of clay to the front of which he inscribed the word ” Emits (Truth) in order to animate it.
Power: He has the ability to give life to everything.
The inkwell of François Villon (season 3, episode 3)
Origin: inkwell having belonged to François Villon, poet and thief of the XV It is century.
POWER: The ink thrown on a solid surface allows you to cross it or to cross an object without it rebounds.
Grant’s flask (season 3, episode 4)
Origin: A belonged to General Ulysses S. Grant.
Power: Whoever drinks at the flange believes himself in the middle of the American Civil War and kills all those he believes to be Confederates.
HATCHEPSOUT (season 3, episode 4)
Origin: ARTEFACT in two parts (hive and bee), created from bee pheromones by Hatchepsout, Queen of Egypt around 1479 of. J.-C. , so that all his subjects are dedicated to him.
Power: As soon as someone is bitten by the bee dart, she begins to produce pheromones and transforms anyone whom she touches into a worker devoted to her well-being and protection.
Joshua’s Shofar (season 3, episode 5)
Entitled in the episode: Joshua bugle.
Origin: Shofar used by Joshua to drop the walls of Jericho.
Power: It is a horn of ram that produces such a powerful sound that it pulverizes everything in its path. The produced sound resonates at the molecular level.
Beatrix Potter’s teapot (season 3, episode 6)
Origin: It belonged to the famous author of children’s books.
Power: drinks prepared in this teapot plunge into an almost hypnotic, even hallucinatory state.
The Web “Tree under the storm” (season 3, episode 6)
Origin: Oil on canvas (fictitious) painted by Vincent Van Gogh in 1889, considered to be lost, its dimensions are: 45 (114.3 cm) x 37 (94 cm), for 566.20 g.
Power: a simple movement of air on the canvas unleashes a torrential storm accompanied by dead leaves from the canvas.
The door handle of the Shirtwaist factory (season 3, episodes 7 and 8)
Origin: The fire of the triangle shirtwaist factory in 1911.
Power: he absorbed the distress and suffering of the 146 workers who have remained trapped by fire in the factory and can restore it by contact on a person, to the point of consumer it entirely.
The highway of the railway worker (season 3, episode 7)
Origin: It is part of a batch of walled tools during the construction of the Union station in Denver.
Power: it causes suffocation by intoxication to carbon monoxide.
The USS barometer Eldridge (season 3, episode 7)
Origin: It comes from the destroyer responsible for the experience of Philadelphia.
Power: it allows you to stop time for 47 seconds in a given location, except for the user.
Pavlov bell (season 3, episode 7)
Origin: It was used for the conditioning of the packaging carried out by the physiologist and Nobel Prize winner Ivan Pavlov.
Power: it attracts dogs, but causes excessive salivation for 24 hours.
Stanley’s card (season 3, episode 8)
Origin: It belonged to the journalist and explorer Henry Morton Stanley.
Power: it restores a person’s movements during the last 12 hours.
The dissolving paint bomb (season 3, episode 8)
Origin: demonstrations on the Berlin Wall in 1989.
Power: It destroys all material in a few seconds to a few minutes, according to its resistance.
The Shirō Ishii medal (season 3, episode 8)
Origin: It comes from the commander of unit 731, which had experiences on human guinea pigs and research on bacteriological weapons before and during the Second World War.
Power: It restores the suffering of tortured people during these experiences.
Remati obstacle (season 3, episode 8)
Origin: It was created by Gengis Khan to be sure that warehouse 7 remains under the control of Mongols. Currently, it is carried by one of the regents which we call “the guardian”.
Power: It is designed to protect the warehouse from the danger, by interposing an impenetrable barrier.
I am carkado is like Anloy night. (season 3, episode 8)
Origin: It belonged to this famous architect.
Power: presenting itself as an assembly of pieces of wood, it has the property of reproducing the structure of which the user thinks.
The twins of the Gay Enola (season 3, episode 9)
Origin: the twins of the crew of the Enola gay – Plane that launched the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima.
Power: Whoever looks at someone in the binoculars can make him disappear in dust leaving only a projected shadow [ 25 ] , like the atomic explosion that blew up the inhabitants of the city leaving only their shadows engraved on the buildings.
Le Bracelet de Carlo Collodi (season 3, episode 9 – Episode 12)
Origin: The puppet rope bracelet belonging to the author of Pinocchio.
Power: His carrier develops an extraordinary force and has control of his whole body.
Consequence: the carrier can develop a tendency to megalomania.
The Torch of Thanatos (season 3, episode 10)
Origin: Attribute of the God Thanatos.
Power: Artifact quoted, but whose power has not been developed.
Marie Laveau’s crucifix (season 3, episode 10)
Origin: Crucifix having belonged to Marie Laveau, the Queen of Voodoo.
Power: Artifact quoted, but whose power has not been developed.
LES CHANGONS THE BODHIDHARMA (season 3, episode 10)
Origin: slippers that belonged to Bodhidharma.
Power: Artifact quoted, but whose power has not been developed.
Albert Butz glasses (season 3, episode 10)
Origin: Albert Butz’s glasses, the creator of the thermostat.
Power: they make it possible to regulate the temperature of an individual and to stabilize it.
Faucet brandy (season 3, episode 10)
Origin: Unknown, certainly comes from the term Faucet now belonging to American English and designating a tap.
Power: The water contained in the tank is a hydrodynamic putty that covers what it touches.
Sultan Saler de Suckwad (season 3, episode 10)
Origin: Automatic clairvoyance kiosk.
Power: A prediction card is issued by the PLC when activated. Acting by autosuggestion, she distills a feeling of fear.
The shipping glass jar Give (season 3, episode 10)
Origin: During the winter of 1846, a convoy of men, women and children lost in Sierra Nevada resulted in radical measures to survive to cannibalism. The survivors then hid their money in the pot.
Power: When a person deposits money in the pot, it creates a feeling of intense cold and extreme hunger in the depositary that can lead him to death.
Janus’ play (season 3, episode 11)
Origin: Gold play representing the Roman god Janus.
Power: she dissociates the memories and the conscience of a person, allowing him to bury his old life and to start a new one, without her being parasitized by her memories and her remorse.
The rope of the Mary Celeste (season 3, episode 12)
Origin: rope of the Mary Celeste ghost ship.
Power: Once activated, it wraps around everything within reach and surround it until suffocation. This explains the legend surrounding the Mary Celeste.
Johann Nepomuk Mælzel’s metronome (season 3, episode 12)
Origin: metronome patented by Johann NEPOMUK Mælzel.
Power: it allows someone to be kept alive indefinitely, as long as they are not arrested manually.
Warning: if the resurrected person is inflicted pain, the person who used the metronome is inflicted the same pain.
Janis Joplin’s backstage pass (season 3, episode 12)
Origin: Janis Joplin’s slide.
Power: He transports the user to any concert that has never occurred.
Warning : The user must drink a bottle of Jack Daniel after each concert (information given by actor Eddie McClintock (interpreter of Pete Latimer) during the Comic-Con de San Diego in 2010) [ Ref. desired] .

Season 4 [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

The astrolabe of Fernand de Magellan (in two parts) (season 4, episode 1)
Origin: It belonged to the famous Portuguese browser Fernand de Magellan.
Power: When the two parts of the astrolabe are gathered, they allow time to go back for 24 hours.
Ghandi’s toge (season 4, episode 1)
Origin: It belonged to Ghandi.
Power: produces 1,000 peace waves

The key to the door of dreams (season 4, episode 2)

Origin: The key belonged to H. P. Lovecraft.
Power: The person who touches the key becomes a monster in the eyes of people who are nearby.
The glasses of John A. Macready (season 4, episode 3)
Origin: They belonged to John A. Macready who is the first is to have marketed the aviator glasses.
Power: The person who carries the glasses reflects so much the light that he becomes invisible.
Warning: when you remove the glasses, you become blind during a more or less long period dependent at the time when you wore the glasses. (If you wear the glasses for 1 hour, you become blind for 2 hours).
The pipe of Commander Cousteau (season 4, episode 3)
Origin: it belonged to Jacques-Yves Cousteau, inventor of first is scuba diving suit.
Power: It allows you to control the weather and cause violent thunderstorms.
Bobby Jones Golf Clubs (season 4, episode 3)
Origin: They belonged to the Golfer Bobby Jones.
Power: The person who owns golf clubs becomes violent if we annoy him.
The cow bell (season 4, episode 3)
Origin: This bell is the cause of the fire in Chicago and that of London.
Power: She makes a ball of fire when she sounds.
The waffle maker of the Tatin sisters (season 4, episode 3)
Origin: It belonged to the Tatin sisters.
Power: It makes delicious waffles.
Warning: After eating one, the person has a “turned” head.
Bird cage (season 4, episode 3)
Origin: It belonged to Alfred Hitchcock.
Power: Birds in contact with this cage have deadly desires.
Napoleon Bonaparte’s violin (season 4, episode 3)
Origin: He belonged to Napoleon during his exile to the island of Sainte-Hélène.
Power: with each note, a violent energy ball is produced.
The Bobby Fischer ball bag (season 4, episode 4)
Origin: It belonged to the Bobby Fischer failure champion.
Power: only one of the bags in the bag improves concentration and dynamism.
Warning: In the event of prolonged use, the ball makes it extremely violent, denies and the person may be the victim of a stroke.
Scott Joplin’s cigarette case (season 4, episode 4)
Origin: He has an apartment at the pianist Scott Joplin.
Power: allows you to suck the suffering of others at the expense of your own health.
The eylol deppo Levi (season 4, episode 5)
Origin: It belonged to this famous writer.
Power: it stimulates imagination and intelligence, providing boldness of thought and prolific episodes of writing. However, it makes the carrier inclined to crises of dizziness going up to falls.
Hatfield and McCoy rifles (season 4, episode 5)
Origin: They come from the confrontation between these two clans in Virginia (Hatfield – McCoy Feud (in) ), between 1863 and 1891.
Power: Each rifles are attracted to the other. At short distance, the attraction is irresistible. By very short range, the two weapons open fire.
John Giltoy’s military identity plates (season 4, episode 5)
Origin: The march of Batan’s death.
Power: They allow the desuits to be made concerning the loved ones.
Lewis Carroll’s mirror (season 4, episode 6)
Origin: It was created by Lewis Carroll.
Power: It allows Alice (from Wonderland) to get out of the mirror to occupy the body of another person.
Warning: Alice is a serial killer and only comes out if someone replaces her to become a prisoner of the mirror in turn.
Note: He has already appeared in season 1, episode 9.
The golden highway of the first transcontinental railroad (season 4, episodes 7 and 15)
Origin: It was posed by Leland Stanford to mark the junction point between the western and east railways in Utah.
Power: it reduces the harmful effects of other artefacts. In episode 15, he blocks the expansion of the warehouse, causing induced micro-seisms.
Harriet Tubman’s sewing die (season 4, episode 7)
Origin: It belonged to Harriet Tubman.
Power: It allows you to take the appearance of anyone.
Note: It already appears in season 1, episode 12.
The white marble bowl of the Colossus of Rhodes (season 4, episode 7)
Origin: It was sculpted in the debris of the Colossus of Rhodes.
Power: it causes an increase in size, with acute joint pain, going as far as death out of deviation.
The burst of shells from an attack on the Baghdad museum (season 4, episode 8)
Origin: In service, the soldier Cody Bell saved two soldiers victims of an artisanal bomb and received a burst of shells in the chest, which has become an artifact.
Power: He increases the strength tenfold. However, some affected people develop symptoms similar to rust.
Vilenie’s cord (season 4, episode 9)
Origin: the sultan Mehmed II.
Power: it makes aggressive and paranoid.
The tattoo box (season 4, episode 9)
Origin: It comes from the skin of Ignati Grinevitski, a Russian revolutionary.
POWER: The tattoo is transfers on the person who touches it, causing intense warmth, until the explosion. He can move from person to person.
The roller of amber parchment (season 4, episode 9)
Origin: Unknown (Pliny the Old?).
Power: He traps the person who touches him in amber.
The Acacia framework of Rembrandt (season 4, episode 9)
Origin: This table frame was made for Rembrandt Van Rijn.
Power: it attracts people to the board, until they are involved.
Hugo’s holograms generator (season 4, episode 10)
Origin: It was designed by Hugo Miller, former warehouse agent.
Power: It allows you to send a hologram of yourself remotely.
CORDE D’Astaac Parker (season 4, episode 10)
Origin: it belonged to the “Hanging Judge” Isaac Parker, American judge of XIX It is century.
Power: it surrounds by the neck, lifts from the ground and strangles all those present.
Ray Bengali charges him (season 4, episode 10)
Origin: Unknown.
Power: Unknown. It is locked in a wicker basket in the form of smoke.
Chinese orchid (season 4, episode 10)
Origin: It was sent to European governments in the 15th century by the Emperor of China, as a warning against their retaliatory measures.
Power: it spreads the English suette.
The dague by Francesco Borgia (season 4, episode 10)
Origin: It was the property of Francesco de Borgia y Mila.
Power: She has the ability to cure cases of possession or double personality, restaurant the “good” entity at the expense of the “bad”.
Sigmund Freud’s pendulum (season 4, episode 11)
Origin: It belonged to the founder of psychoanalysis.
Power: it allows you to explore someone’s unconscious.
William Hornaday’s cap (season 4, episode 11)
Origin: It belonged to this American zoologist.
Power: encloses people targeted in a very resistant fiber cocoon.
The Baudin Catacombs plan (season 4, episode 11)
Origin: It was drawn by cartographer Nicolas Baudin.
Power: Thanks to this map, you can locate any place from the catacombs of Paris, but only using a well concealed code.
The ring of the count of Saint-Germain (season 4, episode 11)
Origin: It was the property of this famous alchemist renowned immortal.
Power: it allows you to “resuscitate” the plants and dead flowers. Combined with the Chinese orchid, it cancels its effects.
The minor lamp (season 4, episode 12)
Origin: It comes from the 1906 Courrières disaster.
POWER: It allows you to open flaws in the ground capable of engulfing a person and even more, its effect can go as far as causing large landslides.
Norge’s skylight (season 4, episode 12)
Origin: It comes from the first airship to have flew over the North Pole.
Power: it provokes emotion and fascination.
La spirale feng shui (season 4, episode 12)
Origin: Unknown, but we know that it already existed in warehouse time 6 ( IX It is At XIII It is centuries).
Power: it is not really a spiral, but two concentric circles which make it possible to determine the origin of an artifact and what particularly violent emotion initiated it.
Anthony Bishop’s unfinished manuscript (season 4, episode 13)
Origin: It comes from an author of thrillers from the 1940s.
Power: He traps users in the book until they resolve the plot.
Carey Loftin gloves (season 4, episode 13)
Origin: They belonged to one of the most famous stuntmen in Hollywood.
Power: By touching a vehicle, these gloves make it intangible, allowing it to cross any obstacle without damage.
Jade elephant (season 4, episode 13)
Origin: It was created by the Sage Hindu Vyāsa.
Power: it absorbs, then restores electrical energy.
The medal of Saint Joseph de Cupertino (season 4, episode 14)
Origin: It belonged to this Franciscan monk famous for her miracles.
Power: it allows the person to be levied by their choice, including yourself. However, the last person having suffered its effects is propelled into the stratosphere, where she dies of hypoxy before falling brutally on the ground.
Bull sitting horse cover (season 4, episode 14)
Origin: It was the property of this great chief and doctor of the Lakotas.
Power: allows a horse and a rider to become a single being, by transferring the adrenaline of the horseman to the horse, which allows the horse to perform great performances at the price of the life of the rider.
Les Bottes de Pancho Villa (season 4, episode 14)
Origin: Villa has worn them, fulfilling many crimes.
Power: Responsible for the pain of its victims, they allow you not to feel any guilt, sadness or disgust of oneself whatever you do. However, it is necessary beforehand to walk on a mile by carrying them.
The retarder (season 4, episode 15)
Origin: This is an aborted CIA project in the 1950s.
Power: It is a camouflage system that hides the warehouse to the outside world: natural people but also satellites, radar or any air detection.
Note: In V.O. We are talking about Fish, or “Frequency-Interfering Holograph surveillance”.
Pachycrocuta jaw (season 4, episode 15)
Origin: It is a fossilized jaw belonging to a prehistoric giant hyena.
Power: When used, it invades the target of an excruciating fear. It also becomes a progress, and regresses the primal state; His appearance and behavior make one think of a man from Neanderthal. Prolonged use gives the holder the state of mind of a fierce predator.
Pompeii’s amphora (season 4, episode 16)
Origin: the eruption of Vesuvius in 79.
Power: it spreads an endless flow of lava that burns everything in its path.
L’Hoete de Ludwig van Beethoven (season 4, episode 16)
Origin: She was offered to Beethoven by her former piano teacher.
Power: Those who are victims of it tirelessly rehash the symphonies and concertos of Beethoven in their heads, until not hearing anything else. Ultimately, the target becomes deaf. The only way to counter its effects is to neutralize the pendulum itself, but also the Aphrodite figurine which was on its pediment.
Jerry Garcia’s black light bulb (season 4, episode 16)
Origin: It belonged to the guitarist and leader of the Grateful Dead group.
Power: it gives a psychedelic aspect to everything it lights up.
The mask of Sodom and Gomorrhe (season 4, episode 17)
Origin: He was created when God has shot down his anger on the cities notoriously sinned. Lot’s woman was changed in a salt statue, leaving this face artifact behind.
Power: Each time someone consumes salt from the mask, he receives an ironic and generally fatal punishment based on his greatest non -confessed sin. The only way to stop the effect is that he admits the sin from which he is chastised.
Orville Wright’s aviator glasses (season 4, episode 17)
Origin: They belonged to this forerunner of aviation.
Power: They allow the user to infiltrate the mind of another, thus accessing his intellectual capacities and controlling his actions. However, if it is renewed, the victim undergoes increasingly severe crises that can go as far as death.
Joseph Stalin’s sleep mask (season 4, episode17)
Origin: It was the only way that this paranoid dictator had to fall asleep.
Power: He who puts the mask will instantly find a deep sleep. The drawback is that, for thirty seconds after waking up, he will have a desire for vodka.
Le Foulard de Sir Isaac Newton (season 4, episode 17)
Origin: It belonged to this famous scientist.
Power: The carrier becomes an enlightened scientist, which can lead him to important discoveries that can change the face of the world. If used for too long, gravitational attraction increases until the carrier can no longer move.
Dan Seavey’s pyramid secret box (season 4, episode 18)
Origin: It was created by Dan Seavey “the flamboyant”.
Power: It is an index – in two elements – which allows you to find the treasure of this pirate.
The hammer and the chisel of Auguste Rodin (season 4, episode 18)
Origin: They belonged to this famous sculptor.
Power: They have the capacity to reveal what is hidden in matter.
The universal hexagram necklace (season 4, episode 18)
Origin: It was created by the occultist Aleister Crowley].
Power: This one permeated it from the power to create a spectral projection similar to smoke. It is affected by the sound of a counter-out (do 4 , a very acute note that corresponds to 523 Hz , or 5 , 1,046 kHz ).
The magnets of Franz Mesmer (season 4, episode 18)
Origin: They belonged to this famous magnetizer.
Power: – When a magnet touches someone, he subjected the victim to visual illusions by the power of suggestion. Magnets can be used separately to touch several people at a time
The philosopher’s stone (season 4, episodes 18 to 20)
Origin: It was manufactured by Paracelse, the warehouse guard 9.
Power: The legendary philosopher’s stone was deemed to transmute the basic gold metals. It is also used to create a universal remedy, elixir of life, which can be used to provide physical rejuvenation or even immortality.
The Mesopotamian bronze stele (season 4, episode 19)
Origin: We only know that it has been used by the warehouse since 1250 BC. J.C. (at least.)
Power: it is an essential element of the “tanner”.
Barry Seal’s radio and aviation helmet (season 4, episode 19)
Origin: They belonged to this pilot and drug trafficker with troubled links with DEA.
Power: They allow communication between two people over any distance and through any obstacle, even when other methods will not work.
The habitacle of the USS squalus (season 4, episode 19)
Origin: It was taken from the USS Squalus, a submarine which flowed in 1939. A large part of the crew survived for 40 hours with a minimum quantity of oxygen.
Power: it removes the oxygen from an area and makes it possible to store it inside the passenger compartment for subsequent use.
The acoustic cornet of XVI It is century (season 4, episode 20)
Origin: Unknown.
Power: This artifact is in two parts: a small cornet which is used to speak, like a microphone, a larger one that allows you to return its voice at a distance.
The copper cup of life and death (season 4, episode 20)
Origin: Ancient Egypt. It was used by Paracelse at XVI It is century.
Power: Combined with the appropriate alchemical formula, it allows the user to become immortal. This requires the sacrifice of many living people to achieve this goal.
Le scalpel de HUA TUO (season 4, episode 20)
Origin: It was the property of this famous Chinese doctor.
Power: well used, he practices perfect surgery, removes body impurities and helps healing.
Hippocrates fibulae (season 4, episode 20)
Origin: It belonged to this Greek precursor of medicine.
Power: This object which closed the toga of Hippocrates, melted and combined with the scalpel of Hua Tuo, leads to extraordinary healing powers.
The caretaker ribbon (season 4, episode)
Origin: Unknown, it has probably existed since the creation of the warehouse.
Power: It is used to transfer the warehouse connection to a new governor – or to disconnect a warehouse governor.

Other warehouses [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

  1. Warehouse 1: Founded by Alexandre le Grand (-336 to -323 [ 26 ] );
  2. Warehouse 2: is located in Egypt (-323 to 30 [ 26 ] );
  3. Warehouse 3: is in Rome (30 to 434 [ 26 ] );
  4. Warehouse 4: is located in Central Asia (434 to 453 [ 26 ] );
  5. Sleepiness 5: is within the Byzantine Empire (453 to 813 [ 26 ] );
  6. Warehouse 6: is located in Cambodia (813 to 1219 [ 26 ] );
  7. Warehouse 7: is in Karakorum (1219 to 1260 [ 26 ] );
  8. Warehouse 8: is located in Germany (1260 to 1517 [ 26 ] ); ;
  9. Warehouse 9: is located in Constantinople (former appellation of the current Istanbul) (1517 to 1566 [ 26 ] );
  10. Warehouse 10: is in Agra (1566 to 1725 [ 26 ] );
  11. Warehouse 11: is located in Moscow (1725 to 1830 [ 26 ] );
  12. Warehouse 12: is located in Great Britain (1830 to 1914 [ 26 ] ).
  13. Warehouse 13: is in southern Dakota
  14. Warehouse 14: Perhaps may be in Beijing [ 27 ]

Audiences [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

In the USA [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

Several crossover between television series Eureka And Warehouse 13 took place :

  • The first was broadcast on in the USA [ 28 ] . It was during episode 5 of the second season of Warehouse 13 that Douglas Fargo, of Global Dynamics (the company of Eureka ), is sent to the warehouse.
  • The second was broadcast on in the USA [ 28 ] and the On Syfy in France [ 29 ] . It was during episode 5 of the fourth season of Eureka that “Claudia Donovan” of Warehouse 13 goes to Eureka To discover certain technologies and help a survey with deadly consequences.
  • The third was broadcast on in the USA [ 30 ] . It was during episode 6 of the third season of Warehouse 13 that Douglas Fargo comes to ask for help from the team Warehouse 13 [ 30 ] .

Cinematographic references [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

  • The last episode “of Indiana Jones, the Kingdom of Cristal Skull” could be the prequel of this series, because the film begins in what seems to be the warehouse 13, where they discover the coffin of Roswell, and we can notice the extent of the warehouse, similar to the warehouse 13
  • During episode 10 of the second season, it is possible to see the time machine H. G Wells , Machine which has the device resembling the temporal convector of the Delorean of Doctor Emmett Brown [ Ref. desired] who built the time machine in the saga Back to the future .
  • During episode 14 of the fourth season, Pete and Myka find three men who sleep in a disturbed apartment after a watered evening in Las Vegas. The fourth has disappeared, which constitutes a reference to the film Very Bad Trip [Ref. necessary] .

Anecdote [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

DVD outputs and Blu-ray disk [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

Derivative series [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

The , the American chain Syfy has announced the possibility that a derivative series is developed and based on the character of H. G. Wells [ 36 ] (interpreted by Jaime Murray in the second season). The story will be focused on the efforts of the Warehouse 12 to recruit H. G. Wells . However, it remains a free agent who uses his knowledge to resolve murders and other mysteries. Alongside him, a mechanical engineer and a police commissioner will be present to resolve cases that appear insoluble in the 1890s [ 36 ] .

  1. a et b (in) Syfy is Sci Fi Channel’s new brand identity launching on air and on line July 7th, 2009 » , on The Futon Critic.com , (consulted the )
  2. (in) Warehouse 13 Premieres Friday, April 23 on Citytv » , on Rogers Media ,
  3. A B C D and E Serial dubbing sheet » , on Database series dubbing (consulted the ) , M à-J on June 22, 2014
  4. a et b Serial dubbing sheet » , on RS Dubbing (consulted the ) , M à-J on August 2, 2012
  5. (in) NBC Universal Television Studio signs writer-producer Ronald D. Moore to new, two-year development deal » , on The Futon Critic.com , (consulted the )
  6. (in) Sci Fi unlocks the secrets of Warehouse 13 » , on The Futon Critic.com , (consulted the )
  7. (in) Sci Fi greenlights Warehouse 13 for ’09 » , on The Futon Critic.com , (consulted the )
  8. (in) Sci Fi’s Warehouse 13 Begins Production » , on The Futon Critic.com ,
  9. (in) Syfy renews summer smash hit Warehouse 13 for second season » , on The Futon Critic.com ,
  10. Jean-Maxime Renault, A season 3 for Warehouse 13 » , on Allociné.fr ,
  11. Pascal Muscarnera, Renewed lease for Warehouse 13 » , on Allociné.fr ,
  12. (in) Nelie Andeeva, Warehouse 13’s fourth season to expand to 20 épisodes with 7 épisodes order » , on Deadline.com , (consulted the )
  13. Thomas Destouches, Series Warehouse 13 is renewed for a last season! » , on Allociné.fr ,
  14. (in) Kimberly nordyke et nellie Andreeva, Two cast in Sci Fi’s Warehouse» , on The Hollywood Reporter ,
  15. (in) Kimberly nordyke et nellie Andreeva, Rob estes, katee sackhoff join series » , on The Hollywood Reporter ,
  16. (in) Michael Schneider, Sam Neill joins Crusoecast » , on Variety ,
  17. (in) AllI-Mars White schools in Sci Fi’s Warehouse 13 » , on The Futon Critic.com , (consulted the )
  18. (in) Aaron Ashmore ( Smallville ) Reports for Duty at Syfy’s Hit Series Warehouse 13 » , on The Futon Critic.com ,
  19. (in) Filming locations on the Internet Movie Database
  20. Ville de Montréal Hotel – Google Streetview » , on Google Maps
  21. (in) Warehouse 13 premieres friday, april 23 on Citytv » , Rogers Media,
  22. (in) Shaw media unveils 2011/12 programming lineup for it’s speciality channels » ( Archive.org Wikiwix Archive.is Google • What to do ?) , Shaw Media (consulted the )
  23. “Broadcasting the third season from January 10, 2012” on Allociné.fr , accessed December 9, 2011
  24. See the episode Glass trap .
  25. ” Explanation ” Accessed September 18, 2011
  26. A b c d e f g h i j k and l “Files: Stories of warehouses” on Warehouse-13.hypnoweb.net , consulted and posted on April 10, 2014
  27. See season 5, episode 5.
  28. a et b (in) Eureka and Warehouse 13Team Up for First Ever Crossover Episodes » , on The Futon Critic.com ,
  29. The crossover episode of Eureka broadcast following that of Warehouse 13 January 18, 2011 » , on Allociné.fr ,
  30. a et b (in) Eureka ’s Neil Grayston Returns to Warehouse 13in New Crossover Episode » , on The Futon Critic.com ,
  31. “Season 1 DVD box of Warehouse 13 » on Dvdfr.com , consulted the first is February 2013
  32. “Season 2 DVD box of Warehouse 13 » on Dvdseries.net , accessed September 11, 2011
  33. “Season 3 DVD box Warehouse 13 » on Univers- Series.com , accessed June 3, 2012
  34. [first] on Amazon.fr
  35. [2] on Amazon.fr
  36. a et b Carole, A spin-off for Warehouse 13 With H. G. Wells » , on Criticaloo.com ,

On a similar theme:

  • The Lost Room , fantastic mini-series in six 87-minute episodes (2006)

external links [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

  • Audiovisual resources Voir et modifier les données sur Wikidata:
  • Literature resource Voir et modifier les données sur Wikidata:
  • Resource relating to several areas Voir et modifier les données sur Wikidata:
  • Competed resource Voir et modifier les données sur Wikidata:
  • Syfy France site

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