Before I press start on the episode,
let's just take a moment to notice that Criminal Minds reached the
point where it can have an episode whose number is '911'. Will this
be a emergency services-themed episode? Are the producers kicking
themselves for not shifting 'The Caller' into this slot?
Let's get this thing rolling!
A man walks into a basement which is
supposed to be dilapidated - we're shown dripping water and a rat,
but there's an almost shocking level of organization
displayed on the toolbox visible in one shot. Heck, the the screwdrivers have even been arranged symmetrically! It's a weird situation where the set dresser can't stop themselves from doing a good job of setting up a work bench, even if it shouldn't be that good looking.
Also there's dust cloths over things to
protect them from the elements. This is not an ill-cared-for
location.
The man opens up a huge chest in the
middle of the floor, removing two chains with padlocks. He helps a
woman stand up out of it, but just as he's about to start molesting
her, he hears a creak on the floorboards above. So he chains her to a
pipe so he can focus on the unexpected intruder.
Which, naturally, turns out to be the
team, who are busting in and arresting him! Jeanne tries to talk him
into dropping his gun because the woman he's hiding behind 'isn't his
mother'. Apparently he'd been sending the team taunting letters about
his crime?
Then, proving my long-standing point
that they should have their fingers on the triggers during tense
standoffs like this, the man has plenty of time to move the gun away
from the woman's side, aim it at Jeanne, and pull the trigger before
any of the FBI Agents get around to shooting him.
They say not to put your finger on the
trigger until you're ready to shoot, and their not being ready to
shoot just almost got Jeanne killed.
Yes, Jeanne is fine. Just grazed in the
arm. Think of how awful it would have been if we didn't have her
around to... um... she was supposed to profile linguistics, right?
That never really comes up, does it?
Outside, as the killer's body is carted
away, Jeanne gets a phone call from her father! Something has
happened! Is she going to be getting another character episode? We
haven't had one of those since she decided not to quit the team even
after her husband stopped being an MSF just to be closer to her!
On the plane, Garcia checks in on the
tip Jeanne's father sent - a guy was stripped of his clothes, forced
to put on women's underwear, and then beaten to death! Also, a year
earlier two teens were beaten to death in an alley, without all the
fetish nonsense. Could they be connected? The team is going to go to
Kansas City to find out, even though Jeanne's dad isn't actually on
the force any more!
While the plane is on the way, we cut
over to the presumptive killer, a roided-out nutbag who works on his
boxing skills while listening to speed metal! Because sure, why not.
There's some character stuff on the way
into town - Jeanne thinks she's better than Missouri, and so doesn't
like being back, and also her dad was a cop who got shot in the line
of duty and had to retire.
At the police station we meet Jeanne's
brother, who doesn't think there's any connection between the crimes,
and her father, who's dropped by to say hello!
JJ and Joe go out to the crime scene,
and have zero insights that they couldn't have come up with on the
plane. According to them, the killer was either targeting the victim
because of a prior grudge, or just needed someone to kill and crossed
his path. Also he either followed the victim into the woods or laid
in wait and ambushed him. Also, he had to be physically fit, because
the victim was a triathlete. For some reason no one has mentioned
scoping out local MMA and boxing gyms for leads. Just walk in, ask
for who's the most psycho, then check the victim for connections to the list of 20
people that each gym gives you.
Time for some family drama! The brother
doesn't like Jeanne coming in and stepping on his toes. So it's the
normal FBI/local cops beef, but with a familial twist! Neat? Anyhow,
the dad says there's definitely a serial killer running around, and
tells the siblings to use this opportunity to get more comfortable
with each other. Then he leaves, without offering any insight
whatsoever to why he thought there was a serial killer on the loose.
I know that on a meta level, this is a
story about Jeanne working through some family stuff, but could the
characters at least pretend to be interested in solving the crime?
Derek checks in with the ME and finds
out that the victim was beaten to death with someone's bare hands. Of
course, we already surmised that because we saw the guy hitting a
heavy bag, so this is kind of a wasted scene.
Jeanne and her brother interview the
guy who found the bodies last year - coincidentally also the male
victim's father!
The guy explains that he found the
bodies because it was late and he was worried, but then he remembered
that he had a friend-finder GPS app on his phone, and so 'a couple of
hours later' he found their corpses in an alley.
A couple of hours? So you were worried
enough to use a GPS locator on your son, the GPS locator revealed
that he was in an alley - not moving, and then... what? Did you sit
down and watch a movie before going to check on him? Presumably you
called his phone and he didn't answer before checking the GPS. How on
earth is it that your son's phone ringing through and finding out
that it was laying in an alley somewhere didn't spur you to immediate
action?
The brother tries to shut down the
interview when the dad says his son didn't have any enemies, so
Jeanne takes him out of the room and asks him if he's missed how
incredibly shifty the dad has been acting. The brother didn't, of
course, he just really doesn't respect what Jeanne does for a living.
And he's not alone.
Jeanne goes back in, and asks the dad
if he put his son's clothes back on and changed him out of the pair
of panties he was likely wearing. He admits that he tampered with the
crime scene to give the kids some dignity. Weird that the CSI people
missed his fingerprints being all over the buttons and zippers of
their clothes? Or, more likely, his fingerprints aren't in the
system, and they've spent a year thinking that they had the killer's
prints when they didn't.
More importantly, though, it's weird
that the ME didn't notice that they were naked in the alley at some
point. Let's assume the killer beat them to death first, then
stripped their clothes and put the panties on the boy. That would
mean wrestling around with some limp bodies, doubtlessly putting
pavement scrapes on their skin. It's not like he would have been
careful - hell, I'm surprised he didn't just rip the clothes off.
Still, the ME really should have noticed the scrapes all over the
parts of their skin that had been covered by clothes.
A smart way to catch the lie would have
been to use the time discrepancy that they accidentally put into the
script. "You called your son at 1AM, and there was no answer, so
you checked the GPS app at 1:02. Then we have you calling 911 from
the alley at 1:45. But you only live fifteen minutes away from the
alley. What happened in that extra 20 minutes? What are you hiding?"
At least then we'd know they were paying attention.
Then it's back to the killer, who's
looming outside the house of a couple who are just sitting down to
watch a movie! They hear some breaking glass, and debate what it
could possibly be. The dog, maybe? Do dogs break a lot of windows?
Apparently it was actually a cat, and
there's a broken saucer on the floor. Which I guess is completely
unrelated to the killer standing behind the woman in the kitchen? Or
maybe he broke the saucer to attract their attention?
So, why has the guy gone from weird
serial killer to spree killer? Maybe we'll find out soon, but
probably not.
The team arrives at the crime scene and
spends some time wondering why these specific people were targeted,
which leads to the Prentiss Award-winning line of the night:
Yes, that would be why they were
targeted. But it doesn't really address the far more relevant 'how'
they were targeted, does it?
Inside, JJ and Derek observe that the
killer is 'accelerating', and I have to wonder whether they've ever
considered that the acceleration might be their fault? So often these
guys don't kill anyone for years at a time, and then the minute the
FBI arrives, it's a body every night. Coincidence?
Garcia - doing their job for them, as
always - phones up with a connection between the victims! The
triathlete was a substitute teacher at the same school the teens went
to, and the newest victims had a daughter who went to the same school
at the same time, which makes her the probable target, and the killer
just didn't know that she was off at college.
The team give out the profile - the
women's underwear is about humiliating the victims, which suggests
revenge might be involved. Given that all the victims were connected
to the same school at the same time, there's a good chance that the
killer was either a student or worker there. Also they're pretty sure
he's on drugs, but it's not clear why they're assuming - this is just
rage-based overkill, which we've seen dozens of times with no
chemical enhancement.
This is one case where telling the cops
to go out and canvas would get the job done fast. They could have all
of the gyms in the city canvassed in a matter of hours. And since the
profiling montage features a scene of the killer getting in the face
of his gym's manager during a roid rage, I'm pretty sure they could
have the killer's name before close of business.
Although, really they could have had
the killer's name yesterday if they'd just gone to all of the gyms
then. Beating someone to death with your bare hands is such an
obvious clue that it's weird that they didn't run down that lead
immediately.
Of course, the show doesn't really seem
to understand the significance of the boxing thing, or even the
mechanics of it. Take a look at the killer's hands -
That's them less than a day after
beating a man to death. Not a scratch or bruise anywhere, and these
are hands that supposedly broke ribs and crushed a man's face. Ah,
Criminal Minds production, is there any part of your job that you
can't manage to do badly?
Garcia reports that only one
interesting thing happened at the school in the past few years (other
than the murdered students, of course) - a senior killed himself by
crashing his car! But why? I'm sure we'll find out soon. Did he share
any classes with the dead students, college girl, or substitute
teacher? Seems like that would be worth checking into.
Jeanne drops a list of former students
on her brother's desk, then attempts to apologize for being so absent
from her family. Then her brother rushes off to start running down
persons of interest in the investigation. Will they never settle
things?
That night, the killer has sneaked into
a guy's house, and just as he's about to start beating the guy to
death, Jeanne's brother shows up at the door! This is one of the
leads he's tracking down! And now he's in the house with the killer
without even knowing it!
Meanwhile, JJ and Jeanne interview the
college girl about her parents' murder, and whether she might have
been the target! She breaks down crying, though, which doesn't offer
much help.
Then things get weird, because when we cut back to Jeanne's brother, he's interviewing the guy not about the dead teens, and not about the dead teacher or dead parents, but about the car crash suicide. Why? Have the writers forgotten that the brother likely doesn't even know about this? Garcia only discovered it after the profile, and since the profile, the brother's only contact with Jeanne has been to get a list of names to check out.
So he wouldn't know about the suicide,
or even if he did, there's no reason to believe that he would have
any reason to think that it was related to the case. The team doesn't
even think that it's related to the case yet. There's literally no
reason for him to be asking these questions of this character.
Except, you know, for the killer to be so angered by the guy lying about being friends with the dead kid that he bursts into the room, knocks out the brother, and then beats the victim to death.
After arriving at the scene, Jeanne
checks on her brother, and her father gets there just in time to ride
with him to the hospital, so Jeanne can keep working the case.
Because that's gone so well so far. They at least mention that the
brother and his partner split up to cover the list faster, so I can
take a pass on criticizing the show for having him go to meet a
potential suspect alone. Turns out he was just an idiot, and it's not
necessarily bad writing to portray him as such.
Then the interview proves to be
significant, because Jeanne notices that brother underlined the claim
that the victim was 'good friends' with the suicide guy. That's
something he only did when annoyed with something. But why?
More importantly, this whole part of
the story is a wash, because again, there's no way he would have been
interviewing the victim about the suicide kid.
Finally JJ gets around to asking the
college girl about the victims, and it turns out that what they all
had in common was they bullied the suicide kid by stealing his
clothes after gym class and making him wear panties! The ringleader
was the college girl's boyfriend, which is why she was targeted, and
the humiliating situation was broken up by the triathlete and another
teacher.
So who's the next target? The other
teacher or the ex-boyfriend?
Well, turns out the ex-boyfriend is in
the military and out of the country, so obviously the teacher.
Oh, and Garcia has figured out who the
killer is, a kid who was tubby at the time, but quit school after the
suicide and got way into MMA.
While driving to the school, they call
the teacher just as he's getting into his car, so they manage to hear
him getting assaulted by the killer! Wow, if only they'd had a closer
cop go to check on him, this could have been avoided!
Anyway, the killer brings the teacher
to the locker room and strips him down, then berates him for not
doing more to stop bullying in the school. Meanwhile the cops are
rushing in, and this is the second time in this episode when they're
pointing guns at someone while he uses a victim as a human shield. Is
that a record?
The killer is asked if he's killed
enough. He agrees that he has, and drops his gun.
The end!
Other than a check-in with Jeanne and
her brother. She's emotionally closed-off, he's resentful. She can't
deal with the town reminding her of her dead brother and mother, and
she promises to be a better sibling/daughter! Then the whole team
gets together at her father's place for barbecue!
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
Profoundly no. The killer only murdered
people who had concrete links to one another, and they didn't even do
a good job of figuring out the significance of the killer's naked/underwear signature. The moment they realized that the underwear
thing was in both cases, and the three victims were linked by the
school, they could have swung by and asked anyone working there about
the women's underwear thing, and they would have immediately been
told that a kid was bullied into wearing panties and then killed
himself a couple of months later.
Also that the substitute teacher was at
the bullying incident, and the male teen was one of the bullies. What
I'm saying is they could have had this thing wrapped up a couple
hours after wheels down had they bothered to follow fairly obvious
leads.
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
God, yes. I know I said this already,
but just go to every gym in town, ask who the biggest psycho is, and
then check those names against the victims. You'll find that one of
them went to school with two of the victims and was taught by the
third. Job done.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
1
I know that a good amount of the
episode needed to be set aside for Jeanne's family stuff, but wow,
was this a shocklingly easy case to solve. I'm a little surprised it
didn't get wrapped up a year ago. When the cops went to the school to
ask if anyone wanted the teens dead, did no one say 'well, they
bullied this nerd into suicide a couple of years ago, and then the
nerd's best friend quit school and turned himself into a roided-out
monster'?
If not, why not? I know that the
covering up of the panties made the case harder to solve, but not
that much harder. I guess we'll just assume that Jeanne's brother and
the rest of the Kansas City cops are so lazy that they just didn't
bother trying to solve the crime? Or maybe KC is such a crime-ridden
hellhole that no one even noticed two high school students getting
beaten to death?
2 comments:
How many of these have you done out of the 299 and counting?
Turns out the current count is 203 - although a few are pre-posted!
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