After last week started off the season
with one of the most terrible and unpleasant episodes in the show's
history, let's see if they can top it post-twin reveal!
The show opens with the twin being let
out of jail, and the twin's lawyer announcing that he's going to sue
the department. For what, exactly? And why is he being let out? He
led the police on a high-speed car chase, endangering lives, and then
lied to them by not telling the police his name while he was being
booked.
There's a ridiculous bit of the
lawyer's speech where he says that 'profiling doesn't work, and this
proves it', as if his guy was arrested because of a behaviour
profile, and not, you know, because he's the identical twin of a
serial killer who just shot a guy after taking a room full of women
hostage and forcing them to eat rotting human flesh.
Jeanne, in the SUV with Joe, ponders
what the odds are that there would be identical twins. I feel it's
like... one in a couple hundred live births? Something like that?
Twins aren't actually that uncommon. Now if these guys are completely
unrelated yet live in the same city, then those would be some longer
odds. And since we find out that the have different last names, maybe
that's what they're going with! Although separated at birth is more
likely.
According to Reid, the odds of twins
are 3.5/1000, and Wikipedia says 4/1000, so my 5/1000 guess wasn't
really that far off!
The team gets to the station, and the
cop explains that because the twin is a paralegal, they had a whole
firm itching to bust him loose. Which seems plausible, although the
high-speed car chase and lying to cops seems like it would be a hard
thing to get kicked.
Garcia explains the backstory - the
twins were separated at 3, and a few years ago the twin got his
adoption records unsealed, and found out about the existence of his
brother - but there's no evidence that they're in contact! Well,
given the fact that he apparently knew that his brother was a serial
killer, motivating him to lead the cops on a chase and then lie to
them, I feel like Garcia's probably missed something.
Wow, the scene with the twin's lawyer
is dumb. Greg asks him - quite logically - if it's a coincidence that
he was arrested right when they were looking for his brother, and the
lawyer responds that the twin was working the night shift when the
murders were happening.
Which is so... just yikes. Not only is
that not an answer to the question that was asked, it doesn't his
accuse his speeding, reckless driving, and lying to police!
Things get so much dumber in the next
scene, as Camryn Manheim arrives at her home, and the killer rushes
from his car across the street, so he can confront her about the twin
brother he's only now finding out he has!
That's right - the entire city of
Glendale, AZ is hunting a spree killer who's armed and dangerous, yet
that killer was able to park - in the vehicle that is registered to
him - across the street from his mother's house without being
immediately caught. Is everyone in this world an idiot?
Seriously, show people, at least have Camryn get home and find the killer waiting inside, so we can imagine that he parked a mile away and walked over while wearing a hoodie or something. God. It's like the producers of this show not only want to do stupid things, it's important to them that they do them in the stupidest way possible.
Then it turns out there's a reason for
the god-awful writing - before the killer can get to the house,
though, the twin looms out of the darkness and clubs his brother over
the head!
This should have an intriguing
explanation... after the credits!
The twin brings the killer back to his
house, changes into his clothes, and then ties him to a chair. I
guess he wants to kill a bunch of people and get away with it by
framing his brother? That seems like a terrible plan - not just
because they have different fingerprints, but also because his
incredibly suspicious behaviour around his arrest makes it impossible
for the cops to give him the benefit of the doubt.
At the police station the next day, the
team finally realizes that maybe they should watch Camryn if they
want to find her son. Not sure how it took them this long to realize
it, and what Glendale's cops are doing at the moment. Garcia finds
records that Camryn used to send the killer out of town on a train
when he got into trouble. So maybe they're doing that now!
As Jeanne and Reid are arriving at the
house, they're talking about how their careers could be in danger
because of the wrongful arrest suit that the twin is threatening! I'm
going to stop commenting on this part of the story after this next
mini-rant, because this is a show written by people who don't
understand how anything works, and at some point I just have to
accept that they're not capable of doing a good job.
But I need to be clear on this: HE
DOESN'T HAVE A SUIT. A police car tried to pull him over, and he sped
away from it, breaking the speed limit and driving recklessly. Then,
when he was told that he was being arrested for his brother's crimes,
he made no effort to correct the police, leaving them to find out the
mistake themselves via fingerprints. He was uninjured in the arrest,
and his name has not been publicly associated with any crimes. He.
Has. No. Case.
Alright. Where was I? Yes, they see the
car that he supposedly stole from the attack on the restaurant, which
I'd thought was his own car. Let's just check that.
Here's the car across the street from
his mother's house:
Here's his personal car that we see him
driving to work in.
That's obviously the same vehicle.
That's right, the producers of Criminal Minds can't be bothered to
keep track of even the most basic of continuity from one episode to
the next.
Seriously, how are you this terrible at
your job?
Also, whether it's his car (which,
again, it is) or a car he stole, how did it take people this long to
find it?
Jeanne and Reid rush into the house,
and find that it's been torn apart, and documents have been burned in
the fireplace. They're left wondering what Camryn could possibly be
hiding if they already knew about the twin. Is there a third brother?
More importantly, though, you wouldn't have to guess about this stuff
if you'd had cops watching the most likely location for the killer to
show up.
The twin wakes the killer up by
slapping his face a bunch, and then demands to be told what the
killer did, so that he can know if he'll be able to walk down the
street in public, or if his life is destroyed because he looks like a
spree killer. During this whole speech, the killer doesn't find it
odd that the twin has stolen and is wearing his clothes, so he
doesn't suspect that the twin really wants to know the details of the
crimes so that he can copycat them and frame the killer.
Going through the burned documents,
Jeanne and Reid realize that the only things that were destroyed were
pieces of paper with the twins' father's name on them! Which, you
know, should be easily searchable in computerized birth records,
right? The killer was born in like 1980, so all of this burning was
probably a waste.
The twin offers to take his brother
across the border into Canada after the cops 'chill out', so that he
can get some mental help. He also wants the killer to take a heavy
sedative so he'll be out for 16 hours. The killer is reticent,
although seemingly not because the plan is absolutely nuts - a crazy
man raped and murdered four women and then shot up a restaurant.
They'll never stop looking for him. The town should be shut down
right now.
Anyhow, the killer takes the drugs so
that the twin is free to go out and do whatever he wants,
unsupervised, dressed as a serial killer. Only the killer didn't
actually swallow the pill, so he'll know what his twin is up to! I'm
really going all-in on this theory, aren't I?
Then it's over to the train station,
which longtime fans of the show will remember as the location of the
final showdown with Frank!
It makes a lot more sense, visually, as
an Arizona train station than it ever did as a DC one. The team sees
Camryn arrive, but she starts to leave when she doesn't see the
killer anywhere around - did they plan to meet here? When did that
happen? - so the team just grabs her for an interview.
Then it's back to the twin that night,
as he cuts off his brother's bonds and leaves the house, sure that
he'll be out for another twelve hours. But, of course, the killer
wasn't sleeping at all, which is going to blow a big hole in the
'framing' plan.
So the twin goes to a woman's house and
shoots her in bed, confident that he's going to get away with it! We
know better, of course. I'm not sure how the twin is able to get
around town so easily when the cops should be prowling around,
searching for signs of the killer. A guy driving around, looking
exactly like him would be a tempting target for the police, after
all.
Also, he breaks into the woman's house
by just kind of shoving the door? I'm not saying that the woman
deserves to get killed or something like that, but there's a serial
killer on the loose murdering women, and yet you still don't lock
your deadbolt?
In the next scene Greg is interviewing
Camryn and it's daytime again, but I think this is a case of the show
being sloppily rearranged at the edit, rather than suggesting that
they kept her locked in a cage for 18 hours before talking to her.
Camryn gets a speech about how she
couldn't handle being a single mother of twins, so she gave one of
them up. It's a nice speech, but we already kind of figured that.
Like, if she'd said that she thought that one of the kids was
possessed, and she sent the other one away to protect him, I'd get
the point of the scene, but 'selfish, whiny, overwhelmed parent gives
up child' is a dog bites man situation.
The twin arrives back at his hideout
and is shocked to find that the killer isn't in the chair any more!
But he hasn't run off or anything, he's just standing by the window.
Because, of course, he knows what the twin is up to! The killer says
he's down with it - he wants the twin to start doing the killing for
him! I guess because he's lazy?
Greg finally gets around to asking
Camryn about the father of the kids. Camryn refuses to tell.
Moving right along, the team has
Heather's parents go on TV to ask the killer to turn himself in.
This, naturally, summons Heather's ghost to taunt the killer some
more. She does this by having mantises crawl out of her mouth! Which,
you know, ick, and also I'd kind of blocked that part of the M.O., so
thanks for reminding me, show.
The killer freaks out so hard that he
runs out of the house, where he encounters someone who knows the
twin! Awkward! He acts incredibly suspiciously and flees back into
the house. Will she spot the twin at the dog park and realize what
happened?
The team goes to the new crime scene,
and talk about how it's an obvious copy, but they fake in the 'it
could be him' direction for a second, saying that the rape and shot
through the heart match the M.O. Except that the woman was raped
post-mortem, and shot in he bed, which couldn't be further from the
M.O. Still, the scene is different enough that they're sure the twin
is the new killer. But what's his connection to this victim?
Talking to her brother, we find out
that they were twins! Everyone looks at each other like this is
significant, although I'm not sure how.
Then, as predicted, the dog-walking
lady sees the twin, and apologizes for freaking him out earlier. He
invites her inside so he can kill her, and she agrees, which is
crazy, because she was in a minivan and obviously on her way
somewhere when she saw him and apologized.
The team arrives at the hideout and
sees where the latest victim was raped and murdered. They talk a
little about how twin killing a woman who had a twin brother was
probably a way of getting out his anger at his own brother. But how
did he know she was a twin? Did he know her? As far as we've been
told, he just busted into some random woman's house, and now it was
supposed to fill a psychological need?
Also, they sped off in the dog-lady's
minivan, which gives the police, who should be in the process of
shutting down the whole city at this point, a good target to search
for.
In other news, Camryn slipped her tail,
fleeing out the back of a restaurant where someone was waiting for
her in a car! Probably the father. Who's the lawyer? I guess? I mean,
it's a secret, and only one other person in this episode has had any
lines, so it's got to be the lawyer that the twin works for, right?
No, the lawyer was just acting as an
intermediary, because he's kind of sleazy. But by going through the
private files on Camryn, Garcia's able to find the name of the kids'
father, one Bill Robbins. It's an unintentionally hilarious scene,
because they go straight from Greg forcing the lawyer to spill the
beans, to Greg at the police station, listening to Garcia explain
what the beans mean, and then Greg saying that he's going to go talk
to the lawyer, who obviously knows a lot if he's the family attorney,
and has been for some time.
Because these two scenes are together,
we're left with the impression that Greg left the lawyer's office and
drove across town just to take a phone call, then drove right back.
It's ludicrous.
There's a quick scene of the twins,
wondering where they can go, since they're driving around in the car
of the woman they just killed. The killer suggests the church, since
that's where Camryn always took him when he was feeling bad.
Then we cut to Greg in an interrogation
room with the lawyer (that's another car ride!), who explains that
Camryn wanted to put the family back together by setting up a trust
for the twins, so twin would forgive her for giving him away. He then
explains that he found out how messed-up the family was when he met
Bill, the father, and other trustee. Greg asks him what he means by
that.
What, is the father a priest or
something, and that's why they went to church all the time? No,
probably not. So what could this dark secret be?
Reid and Derek head deep into a
flophouse to find Bill, who's a schizophrenic deep in the grips of a
manic episode. Reid and Derek agree that their kids' psychosis
definitely has a genetic component.
The team meets up for a convo about the
situation. Greg's theory? Camryn wants twin to murder the killer, so
it can be just the two of them, and she'll finally have a worthwhile
son! They assume she's been planning it for some time, and that the
train station meeting was supposed to be a talk with twin, not an
attempt to help killer escape. Then things all went to hell because
the twin also loves murder!
When did she make this plan, exactly?
Like, we know she's been in touch with twin for a while because of
all the legal stuff, but when did they start conspiring to kill her
other son? Is that why he fled from the cops? How would that have
helped their plan?
Greg wants Derek to find out if Camryn
or the twins have visited the father, or if they had a 'shared family
history' before the adoption. Who knows where they're going with
this?
Then Camryn shows up at the church with
the boys, and says that's it's great to finally see twin in person.
So they haven't been working together? Wait, no, they're just acting
like they don't know each other for the killer's benefit. That makes
sense.
The team finally get some info out of
the father - when the kids were adopted, it was via Saint Mary! Of
course, the team already has that as part of their records, so I
don't know why they'd think it was significant now, or why they
immediately jump to the conclusion that Camryn and the twins are
hiding out at the church they were adopted through. Joe tries to
offer a figleaf justification for sending a SWAT team to a church,
that as a narcissist Camryn would identify with the most idolized
mother of all. That's great and all, but I don't know how it
translates to two serial killers and their mother being able to
arrive - unnoticed - at a downtown church in the middle of the day.
At the church, Camryn tries to set up
killer to get chopped in the back (cleaver again. Great.), but twin
double-crosses her, and puts the knife to her throat! Which irritates
killer, who points a gun at him. Honestly, I don't care if any of
these people live, so let's fast forward, shall we?
One twin shoots the other, and when the
cops arrive, they announce that it was twin who shot killer. Of
course, a quick fingerprint check will sort that out. Greg doesn't
think so, calling it an 'inexact science', then suggests that they
use a trick to make killer behave like himself to reveal his true
nature! Because, you know, behavioural science is more reliable than
fingerprints.
God, this show.
Outside, they ask the crazy father
which son is alive, and the father says that he taught his son to
twitch his fingers when nervous, which the killer immediately starts
doing. That's right, folks, according to criminal minds, finger
twitching is more reliable than fingerprints.
Come on.
On the flight home, Greg announces that
he's not going to be their new boss! So I guess we'll find out who
that is next week?
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
No. Of course not. The closest they
came was saying that psychology dictated that they would all meet up
in a church that Camryn took killer to as a child. Which, you know,
is crazy.
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
They were driving around town in the
car of a woman they'd murdered. It was not going to be hard to catch
them.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
0 - Of course zero! How could it be
anything but zero? This is a terrible second part to a terrible
two-parter. There's no way killer wouldn't have been caught after
murdering Heather way back when, and none of the twin stuff should
have happened at all. But even if you set that aside, the cops
accomplished nothing! The villains' plans played out based on the
mental problems of the various participants, and the two survivors
would have been caught immediately whether or not the team made a
random guess that they would meet in a church. Which... why would
they?
As for the 'but which twin got shot'
thing, with the killer pretending to be his twin, that would have
lasted all of five minutes. Beyond them having different
fingerprints, the killer is in the midst of a psychotic break, and
knows zero information about his brother's life. It's not a charade
he would have been able to keep up for more than like three minutes.
Also, brother's fingerprints are all around the house where they murdered that woman together, so... yeah, the team accomplished nothing.
And god, so many unanswered
questions...
When and why did Camryn start plotting
to murder killer? After he killed Heather? Before then?
Why weren't the cops watching her place
to find killer?
What was going on with the woman twin
killed? How did he target another twin? Why wasn't her door locked
with a deadbolt when there was a killer on the loose?
How on earth does killer's story not
end with Heather in the back seat of the police car with him as they
drive away?
Why did the twin lead the cops on a
police chase? It can't have been part of a plan he'd worked out with
Camryn, since it accomplished nothing positive, and only risked
having him thrown in jail, which would have but a crimp in his
'become a serial killer' plan.
Seriously, when did Twin even come up
with this plan? Killer had only been killing for five days, and
there's no reason to suspect that he even knew his brother was a
killer until the cops came to talk to Camryn. So what, did she
immediately call twin and hatch some kind of a plot? If so, what was
it?
Why was Camryn so desperate to destroy
all records of the boys' father when the man had zero useful
information to offer? It couldn't be to hide him from her preferred
son, since she went out of her way to make sure that the father was
one of the trustees of the kids' trust fund!
This was terrible in every way that a
show can be.
I think that these were two of the worst episodes of the series.
ReplyDeleteThey're going to be hard to beat!
ReplyDeleteNot that the very next episode doesn't try...
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