It was DRMRS who was shot at the end of
the last episode! Just wanted to get that out of the way immediately.
She was shot in the best possible place, though - the parking lot of
a hospital! That's even better than being shot inside of a hospital,
since if a gun goes off inside the hospital there's going to be panic
that delays treatment. Not so if you're shot in the parking lot and a
guy immediately carries you inside!
She's rushed into surgery, and Derek
wishes he could do more! Derek, the time to do more was yesterday,
when you were acting like your life and that of your wife's wasn't
immediately under threat. When they had the slightest inkling that
Garcia might be a target she was locked away inside the FBI for
weeks.
When you're proven to the target of -
you're all assuming - the exact same group of people, you just went
to work and home like nothing was going on, taking zero extra
precautions. It's your fault that this is happening.
The hospital calls Garcia because
that's the only person Derek can think of. Obviously he should have
called Greg, who's less panicky, but the end result is the same,
Garcia goes to tell everyone that they need to help out Derek
immediately! Luckily, everyone but was still at the office, even
though this is happening after Joe's poker game, meaning the work day
has been over for - conservatively - four hours at this point.
Then it's over to the crime scene,
where Greg tells the local cops to block off all pedestrian and
vehicle traffic stopped in a ten-block radius. Which is kind of late
- wasn't that an order to give from Quantico? I mean, the shooting
must have been at least a half and hour ago at this point - even if
the sniper was walking at a leisurely pace, they'd still be well
outside of that radius.
Derek is understandably panicky and
blaming himself, and he wonders why they didn't shoot him, since he
was 'the easy shot'. Well, considering the fact that she was standing
directly in front of you, no, she was absolutely the easier shot. The
only question is whether they were trying to hit you and missed, or
if this was an attempt to torture you even further! Also, why weren't
you shot as well? From the angle the guy was shooting from, he would
have had to specifically try to just hit you.
Fun fact - Joe is at the crime scene,
and unless he got one of his famous friends to take him there, he
definitely drove drunk!
Garcia attempts to comfort Derek, but
he's resistant to it. Then Greg arrives to take him off the case.
Derek points out that Greg stayed on the Reaper case, and Greg
responds that doing so didn't turn out well for anyone.
Okay, nothing but problems with their
memories. Greg was, in fact, taken off the Reaper case, and he just
kept working it secretly, but that's not what caused problems. All of
the problems in the Reaper case was caused by people's failure to
find what drugs he could be using to treat his various medical
issues, and because Hailey was such an idiot that when she heard her
husband was dead, she didn't immediately drive to Quantico, while
calling Derek or Joe or Penelope.
So it's not a good situation to compare
this to, at all.
Greg's right, though - they should be
treating Derek as a target, and trying to use victimology to figure
out why these killers are focused on him. That's something Derek is
way too close to the situation to understand, though, so I get why
he's upset.
Do you think they're ever going to
figure out why those Mercenaries were sent after Derek? We still have
no idea what's going on in the investigation - and it can't be
because he was taking point on the League investigation, because he
absolutely wasn't. Garcia, Greg, and even Reid, based on his meeting
with Aubrey Plaza were way, way, way more central to the 'dark web
investigation' than Derek ever was.
It's a bonus length episode! They
didn't do opening credits!
In their mobile office at the hospital
we learn that there were no security cameras on the roof the shots
were fired from, which is an odd thing to say. I mean, it's a roof.
Why would there be? What you need is security footage from that
building, because the sniper obviously got in and out of it at some
point (unless he's still there, of course).
JJ then wins a Prentiss Award for this
line-
Yeah, JJ? The one place you know that
the sniper probably wasn't is inside or around the hospital. The
shooting was performed from a building abutting the parking lot
across the street from the hospital. Focus on that building.
Also, what loose ends from the kidnapping? Derek killed all but one member of the team, and then Reid murdered the last one so that he couldn't be questioned about who hired him. (My conspiracy theory remains until disproven)
As far as I can tell, zero
investigation has been done in the past six months on this case,
other than Derek's terrible Venn diagram, so what faces, exactly, are
you planning to run through the computer?
Of course, we immediately learn that
everyone has secretly been working on the case! Why secretly? How was
there a case that was more important than this one - a group of
mercenaries was hired to torture Derek to death. Shouldn't the entire
FBI (not to mention the NSA, who owe Greg a pretty huge favour right
now) be working on this case?
It turns out that the mercenaries had
grabbed people for the Mafia in the past, so they might have been
involved this time as well!
Turns out the crime family is headed up
by one Lance Henriksen, the father of Scarface! Right after his son
died he faked his death in Europe, so no one would be looking for
him! Was anyone looking for him, though? Like, when you arrested his
son, you weren't thinking 'hey, this is the son of a famous mobster'.
You just figured he was a hitman and put him in jail.
Is Lance angry at Derek because he
feels Derek is somehow responsible for his son's death? Because he
was one of the many people who arrested the guy? I mean, sure Derek
went to see Scarface, and asked about the next targets, and Scarface
taunted him, but that wasn't much of a relationship, and I'm not sure
anyone knows about it other than Derek and Scarface, who they
definitely weren't letting get messages to anyone until they sorted
out the 'Dirty Dozen' situation.
Hilariously, they do find footage of
Lance walking out of the hospital. I guess he went in there after the
shooting for some reason? He walks right past two cops running
inside, who apparently not interested in checking the IDs of all the
people around when an FBI agent's wife was shot.
Did Matt Gubler direct this episode? I
can't imagine the normal producers and directors saying 'let's get
Lance Henriksen for this one'. Which is a crime, because the man is a
national treasure. And if Millennium didn't exist, there would be no
Criminal Minds, so there you go.
Reid goes to check on Derek, and then
lets slip that the man responsible is someone's father! Or he was
trying to get Derek to react and run off to chase down a lead. It's
difficult to tell with Reid.
Garcia gets on the video footage, and
finds that before Lance walked out of the hospital, he was on a
payphone - she realizes that he's the one who called her, not an
orderly! But how would he have Garcia's direct line? Derek obviously
does, it's on his phone, and he could have given that number to an
orderly, but instead, Lance just has it already?
And why would Lance have made the call
from inside the building? His presence there means he can't have been
the shooter, so I guess he only positioned himself inside the
hospital so people would know it was him? That sounds like the
actions of a man who's not planning on getting out of this alive.
JJ finds a note in the pay phone for
them, and then Derek flashes back to bringing DRMRS into the ER. Seeing it, I realize that I have no idea where this woman was
shot. There's no blood anywhere on her, and we can see her entire
head, front torso, and arms. I guess she was shot in the back and the
bullet didn't go through? He flashes back to seeing Lance on the
phone, and notices that the old man was wearing a pinkie ring! Which
means he was involved, because only mobsters wear those?
Aisha checks on Derek and offers him a
bottle of iced tea that she's been careful to completely remove the
label from, for legal reasons. Derek wonders why you'd try to kill
someone in front of a hospital, where they'd have the best chance of
being saved! It takes Aisha to point out that the sniper obviously
wasn't trying to kill them, because they'd be dead if he was. They
were in an empty parking lot a hundred meters away with no cover of
any kind. He could have shot them a dozen times and left without any
trouble. This was obviously about anguish, no immediate murder.
Greg arrives with the news about the
phone call, and Derek realizes that it must have been Lance because
why would a homeless guy have a nice ring? Wait, you thought that was
a homeless guy? How? He's got a clean jacket and pants, clean hair,
he's obviously in good health. That's some bad profiling.
Derek says that Lance wanted him to
feel what it was like to lose a child, and now he does! Wouldn't it
be great if Derek's reaction was to forgive Lance, because only now
does he realize the anguish he causes people all the time?
I'm kidding, of course. His first
reaction is to want revenge.
Again, it makes literally no sense that
Lance wants to target Derek specifically. He wasn't any more involved
in Scaface's capture than the rest of the team, and he had no role in
the man's death. Is Lance mad because Derek is the one that had a
foot chase with his son? Because that's just crazy.
JJ, who loves murder, remember, only
shows Derek the note. It says 'how does it feel do you see red I see
red'. Is it a clue for how to find him? Or just some classy beat
poetry?
Derek flashes back to blood - he
remembers seeing a hole in DRMRS' shoulder (finally!), and himself
being loaded into an ambulance! You know, if they wanted this to get
personal, they should have just had Derek shoot Scarface in the first
episode, and give the dirty dozen message before dying from his
wounds. Then at least this revenge plot would have made sense.
Adding in the 'League kills him' thing
lets all the air out of the premise. Shouldn't Lance be trying to
kill the two jailed women?
There's a scene of Aisha and Garcia
being sad, then we're over to the work room, where JJ has made a wall
version of their research wall! Which is just the family trees of the
various members of the League of assassins. The see no clues in it,
or in the note Lance left. They assume that the note is to get Derek
to want to chase him down, making him vulnerable, but I don't know
how it can serve that purpose, unless it's a code only the two of
them understand. When Derek was flashing back to the injuries, there
was a third image - a key going into a lock. Did Derek recently paint
a room red in his house? The nursery? And that's where Lance wants to
meet him?
Greg asks Derek what the note means,
and Derek refuses to share, claiming that Greg divided the team by
shutting him out. I know it's a little hypocritical for Greg to come
out against personal revenge as a solution to problems, but in this
one case, he's right that Derek shouldn't be chasing after a dude on
his own. Then Derek goes to check on his wife, and it's sad again!
In the workroom, the doctor comes to
find Derek, and the team discovers that he's fled the building! He's
off looking for Lance! Greg calls him and tells him to come back, but
Derek says he can't let anyone else get hurt. Of course you can't,
Derek - that's why it's better to send in SWAT teams to do this kind
of work, rather than one super-on-edge and sleep-deprived guy.
Seriously, he arrested the hourglass
killer in Kansas today, then flew half-way across the country and had
a couple of drinks at Joe's place. He's not 100% is what I'm saying.
Derek gets rid of his phone and goes to
a house that has a red front door! I guess this is one of his
properties? It's also a visual reference to Nightmare on Elm Street,
if this is a Gubler episode, and a complete coincidence, if it's not.
Derek tries to clear the house, but
Lance sneaks up on him and we discover that he's tapped into the
security cameras at the hospital! Lance says that he has a team of
people waiting to kill all of Derek's loved ones if they don't get a
stand down call every five minutes.
Okay, that has to be a lie. An FBI Agent's wife was shot in front of that hospital an hour and a half ago, and the man they're looking for was inside the building at the same time. That whole place would be on lockdown. Anyone looking to kill the team or DRMRS would know that there's no way they'd get out of the building alive, so unless Lance has an army of suicidal assassins, he's got to be lying.
Lance tries to explain that he holds
Derek responsible for his son dying, but it's so tenuous a connection
I can't take it seriously. This would all be so much tighter if he's
just shot Scarface to death at the start of the season. There's
absolutely no way that anyone would specifically blame Derek for
arresting Scarface.
The team keeps trying to figure out
what 'Red' means, but they're foolishly basing it on their own frames
of reference, and obvious things like bus lines. Derek knew what it
meant immediately, but you were baffled, so you have to focus on
things that only Derek knows about!
Lance has a little villain speech with
Derek and loads his revolver with a single bullet so they can play
Russian Roulette. He asks Derek if Derek killed his son, Derek says
no, and then Lance pulls the trigger on an empty chamber! I know that
Derek thinks Lance is a sadist, so he doesn't want to show fear, but
would it kill him to mention that the two people who actually did
kill Lance's son are currently in jail, and should be relatively easy
to have killed?
At the workroom, they break down what
Derek said to Greg on the phone. He called him by his first name,
which is weird, and then specifically reminded him about the Reaper
case. I guess he was trying to give the team a clue that the showdown
was going to be happening at his own house, the way the showdown with
the Reaper did? What else could it mean?
Finally they get to where we were ages
ago - and figure one of Derek's houses has a red door!
I don't get Derek at all, here. Why use
a code? Your phone isn't being tapped. You can just tell them where
you're going, and ask for a 15-minute head start. Or, you know, turn
off your phone and then turn it back on when you get there.
If you want them to follow, tell them
to follow. If you don't, don't give clues. This plan makes no sense.
It's not like Lance was listening in on you.
When we're back with Lance, who claims
that he did, in fact, shoot MRSDR, which is absolutely not possible
based on the timeline. It's like they've completely forgotten how the
scene was staged, and think that she was shot from the roof of the
hospital.
Derek only has 8 houses in the area,
and one of them has a red door! The team rushes out of the hospital
to perform a rescue! Then we find out that DRMRS is awake, and needs
to have a C-section - she wants to know where Derek is! Garcia has to
explain the situation.
Hey, remember how Greg was the closest
one to where the Reaper was, and basically had no choice but to go
there as fast as possible? In this situation, Derek could have just
told the FBI where Lance was, and had a hundred agents go and arrest
him with no danger to anyone.
Derek chats more with Lance, and tells
him that it's his fault his son is dead, because of the life of crime
he brought the kid into! Lance, trying to be a gentleman, offers to
give Derek a chance 'that he wasn't given', and lets him call Garcia
and put his wife on the phone before playing another round of Russian
Roulette.
Just think of how much better this
would play if Derek actually had killed Scarface. Then Lance would
have a good reason to make these points and do these specific things.
Derek says goodbye to everyone on a conference call, and then Lance
pulls the trigger and we hear a gunshot! But is Derek dead?
Of course not! Lance is standing like a
foot away from Derek, and he's got plenty of time to swat the gun
away and knock Lance to the floor. Really, the better time to do this
was when Lance completely unloaded the gun to prepare for his little
game.
Obviously this is all Lance's mistake
for not restraining Derek in any way, but the guy's well past his
prime when it comes to crime bosses. Seriously, why not just knock
Lance down the moment the gun was empty? I know he's worried about
the 'every five minutes' phone call, but he'd just gotten off of one
of those. That's plenty of time to murder Lance, call the team, and
have them lock down the hospital, so that if Lance isn't lying, no
one will have a chance to attack the team or DRMRS.
Derek then says that, as the landlord,
he knows that the house doesn't have a landline, and Lance was
pretending to make the calls on an old-timey telephone!
Wait, if you knew that, why didn't you just tackle him when he emptied out his gun, rendering it useless?
This episode has such a small scope,
you'd think they wouldn't be able to get this much wrong, but if
there's one thing the Criminal Minds team is amazing at, it's being
terrible at their jobs.
Lance tries to get Derek to pull the
trigger and execute him, but Derek can't shoot an unarmed man, unlike
JJ and Reid, who've both recently executed people.
Just think, if Reid hadn't murdered
that unarmed man, they would have known about Lance six months ago,
and all of this could have been avoided!
The team busts in, and Lance is
arrested without incident.
THE END
Except for a scene with the happy
parents and their newborn... son! (I wrote that sentence while
waiting for the reveal in real time.)
The kid has to be in an incubator for a
while, of course, but he's otherwise healthy! And Derek's psyched to
be a father! This is character development they should have done five
season ago, but at least it's finally happening!
Time for more fatherhood stuff with Joe
and Derek, and then the long night finally ends!
Over at Quantico some days later, we
see Derek sitting at a random person's desk in the bullpen, looking
the room over. I feel a little sorry for JJ and Reid, being the only
team members without their own offices. Derek's looking wistful as he
glances around the room, is he planning to retire, the way he should
have after getting tortured?
JJ gives him a picture of the team, and
then they say goodbye! Then it's time for him to bid a farewell to
Reid! He promises to be just a phone call away, but Reid never called
Mandy in eight years, so I don't count on him taking Derek up on
that. But hey, the son's middle name is Spencer, which should make up
for a decade of bullying!
Hey, who gets Derek's empty office?
Reid, JJ, or are they hiring someone new?
Then we get a last scene with Garcia
and Derek, and it's as sweet as you want it to be!
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
Nope. Lance Henriksen appeared on
video, left a note to tell them where he was, and then Derek gave
them a clue about where he was going.
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
Pretty quickly, yes. The killer winked
at a video camera.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
1/10 - It's a sweet farewell to Derek
Morgan, but wow, was everything before the goodbye scenes incredibly
weak.
I checked, and this was, in fact, a
Gubler episode! None of the visual or stylistic stuff you want, of
course, but that's just because this episode was in no way suited for
it.
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