This episode picks up SIX MONTHS after
the last one, so I guess it's August? The previous episode was
explicitly set a couple of months into the new year, since Derek
mentions that he decided to propose to DRGF (now Doctor Fiancee, or
DRFI) at the end of last year, and that was a couple of months ago.
Weird that they wouldn't do a couple of
episodes without Derek, only checking in on his recovery. I mean,
Reid took a bunch of episodes off this year, couldn't Derek have as
well? Or does CBS know full well that no one's tuning in to the show
if Shemar Moore isn't on it?
Actually, that's not a silly thing to believe.
On his way into the office, Derek
checks out the photo of Erin on the wall, and thinks about how he was
almost right up there next to her!
Then he starts setting up his office
again - turns out that he married DRFI during the time off, making
her DRMRS!
Derek goes over his list of League
leads. It mentions all of the killers from scarface's group.
Hilariously, we learn that the obviously Asian chemist killer was
named 'Barry Plyman'. Awesomely unexpected, how.
The second page of his notes is kind of
hilarious-
Yeah, that's not how Venn diagrams
work, Derek. Like, at all. I could spend half an hour just talking about
what nonsense this is, but instead let's be impressed at what amazing
freehand circles Derek was able to draw (I choose to believe this was
freehand), and move on.
To wondering why there hasn't been any
movement in this case in six months! Were they taking time off of it
because they knew Derek felt super-strongly about handling it on his
own? Also, why are they so sure that the League and the Darknet are
involved in all of this? Like, do they have a single lead connecting
his kidnapping to their work on those cases?
I mean, why would they target Derek at
all? He wasn't the lead on any aspect of the investigation, other
than interviewing Scarface, and he's not after them in any way,
shape, or form. They shut down a drug ring that used the darknet, and
took down the League that also used it. Is there s secret boss of the
darknet who doesn't like people messing with the criminals that use
his service? Spoiler Alert - the whole point of a Darknet is
anonymity. Going after the FBI serves to rob you of that.
I mean, whoever the players are, they
didn't know that Reid would murder their mercenary - setting him on
Derek could have ruined everything, and for what? Is this going to be
another Love situation, where a killer targeted an agent for no
reason, other than to ensure that they would be caught?
Seriously, though, how has no one been
working on this case? The FBI was attacked by an unkown entity, and
our look at the investigation is Derek's nonsense notes scribbled on
a piece of paper. What are you doing, show?
In a rural farmhouse, a couple is
sleeping in bed. The killer enters, drops some liquid on the woman's
face, sprinkles some sand over her, then heads into the kid's room.
Is he a sandman-themed killer?
When the mother hears her child
screaming for help she gets up to look for him, but the eyedrops have
rendered her vision so blurry that she can't make her way through the
house! Oh, and her husband has been murdered. The scene ends with the
killer looming towards her out of the darkness!
The next morning, Joe tries to invite
Derek to his weekly poker game as a way of re-socializing him to the
job! How nice! Then, he gets really shifty when Derek says that he
needs to get into the conference room. It's a surprise party!
It's all happy for everyone! Oh, and
Aisha is back! Greg isn't at the party, because he's getting a call
about the double murder and child abduction! JJ's not happy to hear
that they're canceling the party, but Greg proves to be the best boss
in the world, as he decides to let them party for a few minutes while
he calls the plane and helps organize the Amber Alert people.
Then we get a glimpse at the killer in
his workshop. He's spooning white grains into his murder bag - I
guess it wasn't sand! Then he walks past a kiln, where he's in the
middle of incinerating a skull!
In a hilarious non-sequitor, Reid
mentions In Cold Blood, as if a robbery gone wrong has anything to do
with a killer who glues sand into peoples eyes, stabs them to death,
and then kidnaps their child. Joe points out that it's nonsense, but
he shouldn't have said it in the first place.
Reid points out that it's just as
likely for the Sandman to be a malevolent figure as a kindly one in
mythology. Again, great use of our time!
At the local police station, the Sheriff gets out a map and lets us see where checkpoints have been set up as part of the Amber Alert! Spoiler: It's madness. Let's take a look.
So, I went to check, and according to
her map, they've set up a checkpoint at the cloverleaf where the 235
and the 400 meet, at the 235 meets the 96 to head out of town, and,
for some unknown reason, the 400/135 junction in the dead center of
town.
Not only are all of these bizarre
places to put checkpoints (hint - you want to put them well past
junctions, so killers don't have a chance to see them and turn away
without making a fuss), but you've left 7 major ways out of the city
completely uncovered.
Also, where exactly was this crime
committed? We were told that it's on the 'outskirts' of Wichita - was
it west of town? If so, shouldn't you be blocking off all the ways
into town, not focusing on the town itself? And set up some
roadblocks heading even further away from the city, in case the guy's
not coming to Wichita, which you have no reason to believe that he
is!
I know this is a lot of thought to put into a map prop that's on screen for less than a second, just wanted to remind everyone how little work goes into every episode of Criminal Minds.
On the upside, a local worker noticed a
grey car driving away from the scene of the crime! On the downside,
the people making the show were so inept that when deciding on what
angle to shoot the farmhouse from, they decided on one that showcased
the Angeles Crest Mountains in the background.
How are you so bad at everything,
Criminal Minds? Kansas, while only the 7th-flattest state in America,
is thought of both by people who live there and visitors as being
flat as a pancake. There are no mountains. There are barely hills.
How hard could it have been to frame those things out?
You can't say the director and
cinematographer didn't know where this was set - the prop car has
Wichita written right on the side!
Arriving at the crime scene, JJ and Joe
talk about how the victims probably never even locked their doors!
Joe, naturally, uses this fact to blame them for their own deaths!
Classy guy, that Joe. Looking at the bloody bed, JJ hopes aloud that
some of the blood is the killer's, and they can get DNA! Why do you
think it would be, though? It's just a pool of blood under where the
father's throat was slashed. There's no sign of a struggle or
indication that the parents fought back, so why even mention the
remote possibility that the killer's blood is there?
They notice that the killer moved a
table in front of the staircase so that the wife didn't accidentally
fall down the stairs while blind. Why could he have done this, they
wonder? Because he enjoyed watching her flailing around, desperately
trying to save her son, and only when he got bored of her did he
finally kill her? I don't think you have to go too far to find the
motivation for the action - you guess should be wildly guessing at
the psychological causes for this strange fetish!
The ME has some interesting news for
Reid - the husband's eyes were glued and sanded when he was already
dead! They also note that it's strange for a killer to stab one
victim and bludgeon another! Most interesting of all: They bring back
the ME from the tornado Frankenstein episode! It's so nice when we
see returning characters, especially since it almost never happens!
Seriously, they go back to the same cities over and over again, but
almost never work with the same cops.
At the office, Derek and Greg discuss
the case - Derek offers a confusing line reading, where he says
'Garcia's not coming up with much, the Brewer family had no enemies'
- these are supposed to be separate thoughts, by he phrases it as if
Garcia was checking on whether the family was well-liked, which is
pretty darn far from her job. You find that out by talking to
neighbours and asking around town - Garcia can only tell you if
someone is actively suing them.
Then the sheriff comes in - they've
found a body of a young boy! Could it be the missing child?
In the killer's lair, he looks from the
news report of the body being discovered over to a locked trunk, so
no, it's probably a different body. No, wait, he is dead! That was a
strange shot. Anyhoo, they assume that the killer is going to
immediately go after his next family, because every killer on this
show is a spree killer.
We cut over to a little girl sitting on
a fence, texting. When he mother comes out to get her neither of them
notices the suspicious grey car watching them from fifty meters away.
Which is odd, since they live in a rural area, and seeing a car
stopped at the side of the road on the edge of your property is an
inherently unnerving thing. Especially, you know, when a guy in that
kind of car brutally murdered a family last night.
Back at HQ, we find out some
interesting stuff! The husband's eyes were glued shut an hour before
the killer left the house! Why was he hanging around for an hour
with the rest of the family?
We then get a glimpse of the new victim
family getting ready for bed, and they seem oddly blase about the
whole thing. No checking locks, no mention of the brutal unsolved
murder the night before in the area. Doesn't this seem strange to
anyone else?
At the office, Reid explains that they
can't trace the skin glue, because you can buy it at any drug store,
but that the sand is from a river in upstate New York! Well, that
seems like an interesting lead, doesn't it? Derek's too distracted
thinking about the dead child to focus on the case! That's right, now
that he's got a kid on the way, and took six months off, he's
desensitized to horror!
I think it's telling that before he admits why he was freaked out, Reid assumes that it had to do with PTSD over his torture, as if Reid can only really imagine stuff that happened to you personally having this kind of effect on you. Reid's a screwed-up person, is my point.
I think it's telling that before he admits why he was freaked out, Reid assumes that it had to do with PTSD over his torture, as if Reid can only really imagine stuff that happened to you personally having this kind of effect on you. Reid's a screwed-up person, is my point.
While they're talking about family
stuff, the second family is getting murdered! Well, just the dad is.
The mother survives, and is hospitalized, too unconscious to offer
any help! The daughter is kidnapped, though. Greg and Aisha go to the
scene, and talk about how the killer probably isn't a sex offender,
since they usually have a type! You'd think that they already would
have leaped to this when the first child wasn't sexually assaulted,
but I guess they don't care about facts all that much until they
become so overwhelming as to be impossible to ignore.
The team gives the profile, which is
typically useless, but does lead to two funny moments. The first is
where they announce that the mother's survival could either cause the
killer to lie low out of caution, or enrage him, causing him to go
after another target immediately! So, basically you used two
sentences to say nothing. Then Greg lets the cops know that they
should tell people living in rural areas to be guarded since this
killer is on the loose.
Yeah, if you'd done that yesterday, this second family wouldn't have been attacked.
Back to the killer's workshop! Where
he's grinding teeth for some reason.
Derek and Aisha wonder why the
daughter's dead body hasn't turned up yet. Could at be that in order
to sate his evil desires, the killer has to murder the family in a
specific order? And he can't kill the daughter until the mother is
dead? They decide to add more security at the hospital.
Not that they should have to - they
have no reason to believe that the killer knows the mother is alive.
He clubbed her head just like in the first case, then left her
bleeding on the floor. He killed the first child hours before his
body was found, likely before he'd seen any news reports of the first
family's murder. Why would he wait around for a bunch of extra hours
this time?
Reid notices something strange -
there's an hourglass in the newest victim's house that wasn't there
in a Christmas photo of the same location! Could the killer have
brought it with him, hence the sand and the hour spent in the house
in both cases?
Of course, 'hourglass' is just a name,
and the tiny kind that the killer brought lasts just a few minutes.
Maybe he times an hour by flipping it over twenty times?
Greg and JJ go to talk the mother. She
describes the killer wearing heavy goggles, but couldn't make out any
features! He led her around the house using her daughter's screams,
then said '11' before clubbing her. What could it mean? Greg shows
her photo of the hourglass taken from the house as evidence, and just
in case you were wondering if anyone working on the production side
of the show takes their job at all seriously, check this out
The 'evidence number' under it is how
you write BOOBS on a calculator.
Given the extent to which people are
phoning in their jobs, it's crazy to think that there are four more
seasons of Criminal Minds after this one.
Joe and Derek call Garcia, who hasn't
been able to trace the hourglasses - they seem to be custom-made by a
master craftsman! Derek makes the assumption that the killer must be
using sand from upstate New York because that's where he was abducted
and tortured as a child. It seems like Garcia already should have
been checking on all people who moved from upstate New York to
Wichita, rather than just in the past year, but if it takes Derek's
extra criteria to get her to broaden her search, then that's fine.
Reid comes in to talk about the
hourglasses - he says that they were perfectly engineered to last
exactly an hour, but we saw how small they were, and that's just not
possible. It's nice that they're trying to cover, though. Then the
sheriff comes in to announce that the hourglasses were made with sand
from a local river, tooth enamel, and human bone!
Then it's over to the killer's
workshop, where he has literally dozens of hourglasses and
hourglass-themed art. Strange that he's not selling these, he could
be making a tidy profit. The girl is still alive, and asks not to be
murdered! I think she's got a good chance, given that there's only
fifteen minutes left in the episode, which means there isn't enough
time to set up another victim to be rescued.
Garcia then wins a Prentiss Award when
talking about sending Reid all of the child abuse records from
upstate New York for him to speed read.
All printer paper is recyclable,
Garcia. How do you not know that? Also, did she even bother doing a
keyword search for terms like 'glue, sand, hourglass, glass blowing,
furnace' and the like? Hopefully the case isn't that easy to track
down.
Oh, we then see the killer lock the
girl in a dungeon and go back to his hourglasses. He takes a unique,
wire-framed one that he presumably uses to time when he should kill a
child, and flips it over!
Greg finally notices what I thought had
been an obvious element of the crime - that the stairs were blocked
at the first house to keep the woman from falling down the stairs.
They change their assumption from the killer clonking the woman on
the head to instead assume that she fell and accidentally died- maybe
the killer doesn't want the mothers dead at all, and that's why he
killed the boy the first time, because the mother wasn't alive for
the next part of his plan!
Again, they made it sound like he was
killed well before the media would have reported the mother's death,
but let's just let them have this one.
Yeah, it turns out that Reid didn't
have to print out the files and speed-read them at all. A simple
keyword search would have revealed a case from the 90s where a boy
was abducted while his mother was sleeping off a drunk in the car
outside. The rapist would force the kid to stare at an hourglass
while he was being raped, and obviously this has led to the
construction of his criminal MO.
So had Garcia just typed the word
'hourglass' in to the search bar, she'd have found this in .0003 of a
second, and they wouldn't have had to waste all of that time on
printing and reading files. And the girl would have been rescued that
much sooner.
Again, you're all terrible at your jobs.
It seems the rapist held the killer for
exactly 11 hours, and they assume that the mother was told '11'
because that's how long she had to save the child before she would be
murdered. It's really all an attack on negligent single mothers!
Wait, then why isn't he targeting
single mothers? It's not like they're hard to find. I guess he could
just be lazy, but it's weird to ascribe that description to the
world's most talented and industrious hourglass maker.
JJ asks the mother to make a video
apologizing for letting her child down. They assume that this will
fulfill the killer's need for emotional catharsis, and he might let
the daughter go!
Meanwhile, Garcia is trying to figure
out how to trace a guy who moved from upstate New York to Wichita a
couple of months ago. Um... here's an idea - you know that he's
making the hourglasses locally, since they're filled with local river
sand. Glass blowing requires a huge amount of very specialized
equipment, which he either had transported from New York, or is
buying/renting here locally. According to Google there are just a
handful of glass shops in Wichita, so it's not like you'll be looking
for one fish in the ocean.
I've written all of this before we get
to Garcia's actual scene, but even if Garcia does everything I just
said, it's still not an excuse - they knew that the hourglasses were
being made locally hours ago, so this is a lead they already should
have been following up on.
No, instead, she just searches for
where the killer's mother is. Turns out she lives in Wichita, and
died six weeks ago, triggering this whole massacre. Why does the
scene act like this is a brilliant revelation of hers? Once you know
the killer's name, isn't tracking down all close relatives and asking
where the guy is literally the first thing you do?
Now for the scene in the hospital,
where the mother's confession is being broadcast from a tiny Sony
handicam, for some reason.
Does the news station not have better
cameras than that?
They give the mother a script where she
talks about how if her child would just come to her, she'd be able to
explain shy she failed them! The idea is that this will trick the
delusional killer into going to the morgue where his mother's body is
still laying, unclaimed! How can you possibly think that this would
actually happen?
This is a terrible plan, team, even if it works.
Of course, this whole plan was put into
place without bothering to check where the body was - when Aisha goes
to look for it, it turns out that it's been stolen! You people are
terrible at planning. That certainly explains the skull in the kiln.
Also, when they found out about the
dead mother, shouldn't they have already put 2+2 together concerning
the bone and teeth fragments in the hourglasses? I mean, I didn't but
I'm watching these episodes at double-speed, so...
The killer brings a cell phone to the
little girl and tells her to call her mother! Luckily the mother's
cell phone is in the hospital room with her! She keeps doing the
'apologize to the killer' thing, and demanding that the killer 'come
back to me'.
The team drives around the
neighbourhood where the cell phone call came from and they find the
grey sedan! Hilariously, this is only that difficult because Garcia
'didn't have time to trace the call'. But that's not how cell signals
work. Either the phone has GPS, or it doesn't. Once he called, you
have his number, and that information. If the call doesn't have GPS,
then all you'll ever know is what tower he came from. If it does,
you'll have an approximate location. Doing the 'keep him on the call'
thing is a ridiculous narrative holdover from old technologies that's
completely irrelevant today.
Anyhoo, they rescue the girl and shoot
the killer.
THE END
Seriously, the guy had nearly a hundred
hourglasses in his shop. You would absolutely have been able to trace
the materials he was using to make these things. This guy should have
been in cuffs hours ago.
Then we drop by the poker game, which
apparently is attended by Joe Walsh, and a bunch of other famous
people I don't recognize!
Weird that I recognized Joe Walsh,
though, even before they use a lyric of his to close out the show.
Then we get a scene of Derek picking up
DRMRS at her job, and as they talk about whether Garcia should be
godmother to their child, we see them through a sniper scope, and
hear a gunshot!
But who was shot?
I guess we'll have to find out next
week!
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
Yes, actually! They used psychology to
convince the killer to call them, which gave them a chance to trace
his call! Bravo! I mean, they were counting on the killer being so
delusional that he'd make that call, but as gambles go, it worked
out!
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
I can't stress how easy it would have
been to trace that huge amount of glass-blowing equipment.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
6/10 - The fathers were killed just to
add body count and confuse the profilers. This guy has put a huge
amount of work and planning into his crime, and given his fixation, I
can't believe that he wouldn't have gone out of his way to find
single mothers to be his targets - presumably ones that resembled his
mother.
In Sedgewick county, where Wichita is
located, a full 1/3rd of children live in single-parent households.
He'd have had plenty to choose from.
1 comment:
I love the part where they showed the hourglass obsessed killer playing with a Galileo thermometer. Hahaha! I guess the writers and cinematographers are a big old fail on research. Don’t get me started on how the Wichita PD look straight out of Mayberry. Even back in the 80s when BTK was active, Wichita PD detectives didn’t dress that way. I know since Wichita is my hometown and my brother-in-law was a Wichita PD detective who worked the BTK case, heh. The shot of the mountains behind the rural farmhouse crime scene just made me laugh. Reminded me of MASH, and I know they filmed that in Ojai, CA, lol.
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