The episode opens with thrilling
action, as a man runs into the police station, demanding protection!
He's received a note saying that he'll be dead within 24 hours, and
there's no way to prevent it! He's obviously a little worried, and
when the cop smells booze on his breath, he immediately dismisses the
guy's concerns.
Personally, if I got a note like that, I'd rush to a hospital, assuming that I'd been poisoned, but that's only because I saw DOA at a very young age.
After being told to leave, the man
vandalizes a trash can, forcing the cops to arrest him, so he'll be
safe in a cell overnight! When he's pinned to the ground, I notice
that he's got a wedding ring on. Could his wife be the killer?
Probably too early to be making
predictions, really.
The next morning the cops go to check
on the paranoid guy, only to find him lying in a pool of blood! I
guess it was poison, after all!
Over in Quantico - which the show
introduces with an establishing shot of Washington D.C.:
Even though that's 50 kilometers away.
Because it's Season 9, and no one who works on this show cares even a
little.
-Greg is nervous about talking to his
son's class about being in the FBI. Due to that one occurrence where
a guy murdered the kid's mother because Greg was chasing him. Really, isn't it kind of insensitive to get Greg to give a presentation? I mean, the kid
goes to school in Chevy Chase, one of the other parents must have a
similarly important DoJ job, right?
Garcia runs down the case: Wayne
Campbell (!?!) is the name of the dead guy, and that scene was set in
Long Beach, CA. A week earlier a woman had also received a similar
note and then died the next day - both of them with lethal levels of
arsenic in their bodies! Between poison and notes, they jump to the
conclusion that a woman probably did it - although it's a myth that
women poison more often than men.
Also, not for nothing, putting in wacky joke character names is another sign that writers have checked out emotionally and are trying to make their own fun.
Also, not for nothing, putting in wacky joke character names is another sign that writers have checked out emotionally and are trying to make their own fun.
JJ thinks that it's super-weird to warn
victims before killing them, but Reid points out that there was an
episode about a killer that made fake 'missing' posters of his
victims before killing them. It seems Reid remembers the show even
better than I do! Was that the episode where they get one of the
victims on the phone, and send the cops to get her, but can't be
bothered to stay on the phone with her until the cops arrive, so she
gets kidnapped anyways? If so, that was a terrible episode.
Then we head over to an auto-parts
store, where the freaked-out proprietor confronts his friend about
the murder threat he received! The friend claims to know nothing
about the letter, and the proprietor is immediately struck with
severe stomach pains. Now that's timing!
The friend leaves before the guy
collapses, though, giving his customer a chance to walk in, see that
the guy is dying, and then leave a peace of string on the body,
because I guess he was the killer!
Also, was that Kevin from The Office?
Perhaps we'll find out after the credits!
On the plane ride they confirm that
neither of the victims had anything to do with one another, then are
shocked to learn about the latest victim, and the twine left on the
body! They take a moment to note the weird acceleration from 'wait a
week' to 'two victims in one day', and are somehow surprised, even
though ever serial killer is a spree killer in this world.
At the garage, Jeanne and Joe find a
hole drilled in the top of the water cooler! So the guy drank water
laced with arsenic? Does it not have a taste or smell? Because if I
had water from a cooler that tasted anything but neutral, I wouldn't
take a second sip. I'm kind of amazed by Kevin's ability to time the
death so he could be in the shop when the guy keeled over. It was an
incredibly risky move - what if the guy had fallen over, puking up
blood with ten people there, all of whom could remember him? Did he
know exactly how long it would take the guy to die? Wouldn't that be
based on how much water he drank? Also, since he presumably broke in
overnight to poison the water, why bother using a drill in a way that
could tip the victim off? Why not just take the bottle out, put in
the poison, then put it back, and towel up and spilled water before
leaving?
At the police station, Derek and Greg
discover that the first victim - a rich lady - received a delivery of
chocolates, and her eating three was all it took to kill her! Oh, and
Wayne had a piece of twine in his pocket, so it turns out that was
always a part of the MO. And it seems Kevin is a particularly talented pickpocket, since he was able to place the string without the guy noticing.
At the bar where Wayne had dinner, the
owner remembers Kevin sitting next to him, and buying him drinks!
They ask the owner if he'd recognize Kevin if he saw him again, but
doesn't ask if they have video camera footage of the night before.
Which you'd think they would - bars are places where thefts happen,
fights start, and people claim they were overserved so that they're
not responsible for their drunk driving. Having a camera around helps
to avoid all kinds of liability issues, so it's a little insane to
think there wouldn't be one.
There's a flashback to Kevin spiking
the guy's drink with a tiny squeeze bottle of arsenic, and it's
definitely Kevin from The Office, so luckily I won't have to go back
and remove me calling him 'Kevin' from earlier in the review!
Oooh, remind me to put some
Kevin/Criminal Minds trivia at the end of this review! Seriously, if
I forget to put it in the final notes, leave a comment reminding me!
Anyhoo, we then find Kevin at his 'bon
boyage' party from work! He's belittled by a co-worker, who tells a
story about how Kevin almost quit everything to start a new life in
the Mediterranean, but missed his flight and just went back to work
in a factory for another twenty years! Then Kevin tries to give a
speech, but is terrible at it, because he's an awkward weirdo.
The team looks over the sites where the
people were poisoned, and discovers that they were all within a 2.5
mile radius in the north part of the city! The sports bar and the
garage, sure, but did the rich lady really live within a couple of
miles of that part of town?
As usual, no one can identify a way in
which this profile might help them find the killer.
Wallowing in self-pity, Kevin brings
home his gift basket from work, then throws a mini Grecian bust that
was with the foodstuffs against the wall. He will not be mocked! Then
we get some voices in his head, which can only be quieted by cutting
out new strings for his next murders!
Oh, I get it, he's identifying himself with the 'fates' of Greek myth, and he's ending people's lifelines. That kind of makes sense.
That night, a woman gets home and finds
the note - she calls the cops to complain about it, but when the
officer answering the phone hears the content, she calls Joe over to
talk to the lady! Kind of amazingly lucky that the call was being
answered in the very room Joe was in, rather than one of the other 20
stations in LA. Or at some kind of 911 dispatch office.
Hey, since they know that there's a mad
poisoner on the loose, shouldn't they have warned the public about
this whole 'note' thing? I mean, they can call every cell phone in
the state if there's a missing kid or storm coming, could they not
offer a similar warning about the notes and arsenic?
Joe counsels her not to eat or drink
anything, and to lock herself in her house. Which seems like a bad
idea to me - shouldn't you tell her to be with a lot of people until
the police arrive? It doesn't matter, anyway - Kevin was in the
house, and stabs her to death because she's obviously not going to
eat anything.
Wait, was he just going to hang out for
six hours until she died, or has he given up on poisoning and is now
just a stabbing-themed killer? Also, if he'd planned on poisoning her, how could he know what she was going to eat or drink that night? The first three victims track - chocolates delivered as a gift are likely to be eaten. He literally dropped the poison into the second guy's drink, and you can assume that the auto-parts guy was eventually going to have some water from the cooler. That last one's a bit iffy, though - there's a good chance you'll kill a bunch of other people, and there's no way to time when to show up and watch the guy die.
But in this case, did he poison everything in the fridge? Or has he really moved on to stabbing?
But in this case, did he poison everything in the fridge? Or has he really moved on to stabbing?
Also, doesn't LA have thousands of
cops? She was on the phone with Joe for like two minutes, shouldn't
there be cops on the scene in time to catch Kevin?
Joe takes the death pretty hard, what
with her having been on the phone with him when it happened. He's on
the ball enough to observe that vicious stabbings often lead to the
killer cutting their own hands, so that's something to check out with
the local hospitals!
At the start of the next scene Derek
points out that the geographic profile - as always - is useless,
since the newest victim lived ten miles away from the zone they drew
around the other three. How is he finding his victims? No leads on
that, but Reid notices that the strings are each as long in
centimeters as the age of the dead people! This leads them to the
Greek mythology connection, and it's time for a profile!
They announce that the guy is obsessed
with Greek Mythology, and suggest that the city should be warned
about the poison pen notes! Little late on that one, Greg, but it's
nice that you're trying!
Oh, and Kevin spends the profile
flipping through a mythology book until he comes across a picture of
a labyrinth! What could he be planning? To breed a monster man to
hunt people throughout the LA subways?
Probably not.
Garcia finds a connection with the
latest victim - she bought a coffee in a shop next to the university,
which is inside the predicted zone! This immediately makes them think
that the killer must be an academic, and Garcia starts searching
every single student and faculty for red flags for serial killing!
Which should go relatively quickly, given that there can only be so
many tubby middle-aged guys at the university.
Luckily the coffee shop has a
surveillance camera - which the team gives the manager a weirdly hard
time about. He awkwardly explains that they've had a problem with
short cash registers, and they're trying to find out who's
responsible - as if he needs to explain the presence of a security
camera.
Is this episode set in a bizarre
alternate dimension where it's weird for businesses to have security
cameras?
They discover that when the latest
victim bought her coffee, all of the other victims were in the same
lineup! And now there's a fifth person they have to track down!
They don't mention that they definitely
have footage of the killer, though. Here's the angle of the camera:
Note that the doors to the
establishment are clearly visible. Since they record all day long,
that means they have him walking in and walking out. I know they
don't know which one he is exactly, but how many dumpy 6 foot
middle-aged guys could have been in the coffee shop within the time
window?
Also, how did he find out how all the
people were?
Kevin is busy writing his next note
when the bully from work drops by to pick up the factory keys. The
bully, BTW, is not played by Anthony Michael Hall, despite looking
almost exactly like him:
That's weird, right?
Oh, hey, Kevin then finds out that the
bully got him drunk on purpose, so that he wouldn't go to Greece
broke - now he can travel with money and insurance! Also he looked
after his dying mother, which he couldn't have done while in Greece.
Kevin doesn't take this news well, and
seemingly immediately kills the bully. Because, you know, duh.
They do eventually get around to
looking for the killer on the video, but when no one can find him,
the team assumes he might have been outside, in the parking lot,
writing down people's license plate numbers as they left the coffee
shop!
So, wait - all of the people in that
particular line drove to the coffee shop and drove away immediately?
Nobody walked from a close by location where they were doing something
else?
Then they consider that plenty of
people in scrubs walk in, because the coffee shop is next to the
University hospital as well. This leads to the conclusion that the
killer must be murdering people because he found out he has a
terminal illness, hence his obsession with the threads of fate!
I'm sure they're right, but wow, is
that a huge leap. Anyhoo, Garcia violates some medical records to
find out everyone who got a terminal diagnosis on the day of the
coffee shop incident, and immediately identifies Kevin!
Reid watches the footage until he sees
the final victim - it turns out she's a nurse at the hospital next
door, and her nametag says Taylor! But wait, if she works at the
hospital next door, then she definitely didn't drive to the coffee
shop, so how could Kevin have found out her ID if he was basing it on license
plates?
When the cops get to the nurse's house,
there's no arsenic anywhere! But what would make Kevin shift his
focus? Obviously the bully, who we now learn isn't dead yet, but
rather has become Kevin's target! So Kevin shows up at the office and
gives him so poisoned liquor!
Kevin explains his motivation - there
was tragedy when he was a kid, he found out about the fates afterwards,
you know, the usual self-justifying nonsense. He also confesses to
all of the stuff we already know about.
Then there's one more twist about fate,
proving that this show is just hilarious: the bully saved Kevin's
life! The airport shuttle he missed because of his hangover crashed, and
everyone died! It turns out the bully gave him another twenty years!
Of working in a warehouse and getting asbestos-related cancer. But
still!
Kevin is arrested without incident.
THE END!
Then some more chatting on the plane -
Greg has arranged a field trip to the FBI, which we then see!
Cute!
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
Kind of? They made all of these crazy
leaps to get to cancer, but since there'd be no way to find out
patient information, I'm not sure that it would have helped save the
Bully's life.
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
Everywhere Kevin went would have had
video cameras. No, they would have had no trouble catching him.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
2 - Seriously, this was an entire
episode about pretending that security cameras didn't exist just so
they could make profiling seem useful! That's a weird stretch to go
to. Also, thanks for not telling us whether fake Anthony Michael Hall
survived his poisoning! This show really stops caring about all the
other characters the moment the killer is caught, doesn't it?
Right, the trivia!
Okay, so before The Office started,
Kevin was in an episode of Arrested Development, playing a gun dealer
who sells Tobias a Tranq rifle so that he can hunt a wolf to impress
his wife! It was a good episode.
Anyhoo, the point is, Tobias
accidentally tranqs his wife out in a park while she's on a date with
a TV star, who worries that he'll be blamed for harming her when a
couple of hikers see him standing over her. The male hiker?
Matt Gubler, working as an extra
shortly before getting the Criminal Minds gig!
Coincidence?
Yes, absolutely.
Thanks for keeping up with these, Count! I check every week to see if you've posted a new one, they're a high point in my day :)
ReplyDeleteI love the trivia! Thanks for including!
ReplyDelete