The episode opens with three kids
wrecking stuff in a junkyard! Will they find a dead body? Of course
they will. This is Criminal Minds! That's the brand, people! They
find a way-too-heavy barrel and it turns out to be filled with
cement, with a woman's hand partially sticking out of the top!
Is the dismember rapist from Suspect
Behaviour back? Wasn't this his MO?
In Virginia, we find Eric out for a jog
with his dog! I don't much care about Eric's personal life yet, but
it's a really, really cute dog.
At Quantico, Emily drops by to see
everyone! So I guess we're finally at the point where Aaron isn't on
the show any more? Just two episodes in? What the hell, show?
I mean, sure, I'm happy to have Emily
back, I guess, but to have them just announce that Aaron left on a
special assignment, and that's it? Oof. I understand that no one
actor is bigger than a show like this, but I'm bracing for things to
get real bad, real fast.
We get a rundown of the case - the
victim is a single mother who disappeared a week ago! And an
ultrasound shows that she was straining against restraints while the
concrete was being poured around her! So it's not the dismember
rapist back again. That's a relief!
New credits, and I guess Emily is now
the central character? Yikes. That was fast, show.
On the plane, the team looks at obvious
suspects. It couldn't have been the husband, who lives half a country
away, and was apparently on good terms with the victim! Then JJ wins
a Prentiss Award for this line:
Why would you even say that out loud?
No, JJ, American banks are not drowning people in concrete and
leaving the bodies out to be found as a way of publicly silencing
whistleblowers. I hate that I had to type that, but here we are.
Garcia finds another victim in another
dump site, which leads to Emily intuiting that the killer looks on
his victims as literal garbage! Which I'm sure is true, but the much
more relevant observations to make are A: the killer has access to a
heavy enough vehicle to transport 600 pounds of barrel. B: the killer
has either a lift attached to a truck, or at least one helper, since
the barrel was left standing up, which almost no single person could
accomplish alone, and 3: the killer doesn't have access to a boat, or
perhaps wants the victims to be found, because they're in a town that
literally has 'beach' in its name, so dumping these barrels at sea
would be a perfect way of disposing of the bodies while leaving zero
trace evidence.
On the way to the second dump site, Joe
and Emily catch up, and I learn that Joe's ex-wife's name is
'Hayden', not 'Ada' as I'd misheard it! Whoops!
They talk about how the killer might
have gotten the barrel out there. Heavy truck? Steel dolly? I can't
believe the dolly theory, because using one would have left deep
furrows in the ground next to the barrel, deep enough that there
would be signs of it even after rain washed away footprints or tire
tracks.
Has it rained? If not, there should
definitely be tire tracks in the dirt. That said, the people on this
show don't seem to understand that tire tracks are a form of
evidence, so... maybe we'll just never hear back about that?
Joe and Emily debate what the
significance of the public dumping could mean. Emily suggests that
the drum could represent a coffin, the concrete a headstone! Joe
thinks that would make the dumping ground his own 'private cemetery'.
There's just so much wrong with this.
The victims were drowned with concrete - so it's part of the murder
ritual, rather than the disposal. If the killer wanted to have a
'private burial ground', he could have buried the drums or rolled
them into the ocean. All you can tell about this disposal site is
that it's important for the bodies to be displayed in public where
they'll be quickly found. The word 'private' should not be used at
all.
Reid and Derek go to the ME's office,
and when Reid flashes his badge, it's back to being a fake! I
neglected to mention this, but in the season opener, when Reid showed
the bondage store lady his badge, it was an accurate FBI badge, with
a metal shield on one side, and the ID on the other. Now they're back
to the 'dual ID card' model they normally use on the show. Did
someone at the FBI complain about them using an accurate badge a
couple of weeks ago?
There's nothing of note learned at the
morgue, other than that the first barrel they found was the earlier
of the two victims! Also, the concrete is manually mixed, rather than
the bagged kind from a store where you just add water. This means
that the killer has the equipment to mix concrete, or access to it
through his job!
We then cut to a group of construction
workers sitting next to a pool. One of them gets a call about whether
he's heard from someone, which is probably significant, because we
get closeups and everything! Then a mother and her son walk up and
ask when they're going to be done, because they want to be able to
swim again! Weirdly the swimming pool is full, so I don't know why
people can't swim in it, but the construction workers say it'll be a
couple of days.
Is this a situation where the place
they filmed didn't want to drain the pool, because doing that and
refilling it takes forever, and the cinematographer didn't know that
they were supposed to frame out the water? Because that's what this
feels like.
Oh, and the way the phone guy glares at
the mother walking away suggests that he's the killer.
Hey, remember JJ's terrible Prentiss
Award-winning line from earlier? Yeah, that actually comes back, when
JJ confirms that no, there hasn't been any fraud at her bank that she
might have reported! Um... if she was killed to keep her quiet, how
would you know?
Seriously, though, once a second body
turned up, why did you continue pursuing this lead? It's obviously a
twisted sexual sadist.
The identify the first victim - another
single mother! Which suggests that the lady from the pool is going to
wind up in a barrel very soon, sadly. They interview the son of the
woman, and from him they learn that because they live in a gated
community, there's never any strange men around. Other than guys who
are brought into repair things. He goes out of his way to point out
that they can only get in if they have a sticker on their windshield!
That is one super-observant kid.
More importantly, because the mother spent all of her time with her son or at work, there's an incredibly limited number of places the killer could have found her! We haven't heard when she was abducted, though, so hopefully that will be revealed soon, so they can start narrowing down their list of suspects!
Joe and JJ discuss how simliar the
mothers were, both doting on their sons. Obviously the killer must be
the child of a single mother who is angry at her! Then Eric arrives
with the news that pool lady is missing! Will his son remember to
mention the construction workers?
Then it's over to the torture garage,
where the killer is going to murder pool lady with a drill!
Naturally, the show revels in her terror for a while, as the killer
wants her to 'admit' something while she begs for her life!
Eric and Emily go out to the dump site
where the newest body was found. Preposterously quickly, I might add.
I assume this is the next day, but, as always, the show is god-awful
at establishing timelines. Emily then takes out a map and does a
terrible job at geographic profiling-
She announces that there's likely
something important at the center of the triangle, because it's the
point equidistant from all three dump sites, and obviously the killer
was keeping that in mind when he dropped the bodies off! Damn it,
Emily, that's just terrible.
Reid goes to check on the newest body -
apparently the woman was kept for 16 hours before she died, which was
about two hours ago! Making this scene set at roughly 8AM! Look, it's
a timeline! Too bad they didn't interview the son yesterday, they
could have found out about the creepy construction crew at the pool
and intervened to save the mother's life!
So yeah, the drill was about him trying
to dissolve the frontal lobes of the women's brains with chlorine, in
the hopes of lobotomizing them. At least they get to the connection
that the concrete plus chlorine means that he probably works in the
field of pools! So that's something! Joe ends the profile by
announcing that the team needs the local cops' help to figure out the
importance of the dump sites!
How would they do that? Also, the local
cops never figure things like that out.
Back to the killer, who's looking at a
childhood photo of himself with his mother and... older sister,
maybe? That's the sense we get from his conversation with his
adoptive mother (Sherilynn Fenn!) about the photo, anyhow. He's
openly contemptuous towards his mother, so yeah, he's got some pretty
clear motivations.
Eric and Joe have a truly bizarre
conversation at the station, talking about how the latest victim was
killed by the lobotomy. Joe makes two references to the killer
getting better at his ersatz brain surgery, and while I'd like to
assume Joe is being sarcastic, it certainly doesn't play that way.
Which makes it sound like Joe is saying that failing to keep someone
alive makes you better at lobotomizing them. It's bizarre.
Garcia can't find a link between all
three victims and the killer because all of their condo developments
used the same management and maintenance companies! I guess they
still haven't talked to the son who watched his mother have an
interaction with the pool guys literally one hour before she was
kidnapped, huh? How are they so bad at this?
Without any concrete (get it?) leads,
the team decides to focus on the disposal sites, assuming that the
killer is somehow obsessed with them, and will return to them at some
point! Except that the fact that the bodies were found there has been
widely reported in the media. So why would he?
Eric and Emily chat while on stakeout,
and we get more character stuff with Eric! Obviously the writers are
worried that a new face ten season in won't resonate with the
audience, so they're trying to establish him as quickly as possible
to make him feel like a part of the team.
Their chat is interrupted by a car
driving up to the dump site! The license plate says that it belongs
to a local contractor, and then they hear a woman squealing from
inside the truck and rush over to investigate! It's just a teen
couple looking for a place to have sex! Meanwhile, the killer was
watching from the woods, and slinks back into the darkness!
Somehow Eric and Emily decide that the
killer knows they're out there, and has left. Except, you know, he
could have not arrived yet, or be at one of the other two sites.
Seems a little early to be cashing in.
At the office, they talk about how the
fact that one of the dump sites is a lover's lane might make it a
significant place in the killer's sexual development and dysfunction!
Are the other two also lover's lanes? They're worried that with his
access to the sites cut off, he'll devolve! Is it possible to devolve
further than trying to kill a woman every day?
Dude, if you wanted to be able to
revisit the sites, why did you make it so that the barrels impossible
to miss? Put them on their side, throw a mattress on top of them.
This episode can't decide whether the killer wants to hide or display
his kills, and it's ridiculous.
Back home, the killer is mad! So he
wrecks the family photo from earlier, then demands to know why his
mother adopted him! Wait, is this one of those situations where his
'aunt' is actually his mother, who had him at age 13, and they've
just been lying to him for his whole life? She refuses to tell him
'the whole story', and then he clubs her with a candlestick!
If there's one thing we've learned from Clue, it's that you shouldn't leave big, heavy candlesticks lying around. Also nooses.
In the bullpen, Reid points out that
people with frontal lobe damage can sometimes become more aggressive
and sexual. Then they get the news that there was no sexual assault
of the victims! I don't know why you're so shocked by this, when it's
obvious the guy is dealing with mother issues. They go further and
further down the rabbit hole of what the lobotomies could mean - even
talking about women getting lobotomized for being 'too sexual'. Which
yeah, that was a thing. Ick. Perhaps the killer was trying to get the
women to behave more responsibly?
Speaking of all of this, the killer has
tied his mother to a chair in the back yard while he digs up a square
of dirt, presumably so he can bury her and pour a concrete patio on
top! He keeps demanding the truth about his adoption, and the mother
keeps talking about how his birth mother couldn't handle raising him.
Then immediately talks about her 'acting out' daughter, so yeah, I
guess it's a Ted Bundy type of situation.
The team assumes that the killer's
mother would necessarily have brain damage, so they look for brain
damaged people in the area, and come up with the killer's 'sister',
who got brain damage in a car accident and became oddly sexual as a
result!
So, after going through all of the
killer's background and finding him via 'psychology', they look at
his work history, and discover that he was the only pool guy who was
working at all three condo sites on the day the women were kidnapped!
They could have caught this man
yesterday with no trouble at all.
So yeah, we get the background of the
murders, where we find out that a month ago the guy came on to his
own mother, who revealed the secret, and then he murdered her for it!
Yeah, so just a mess all around this week. The guy starts blaming his
grandmother for raising him in a screwed-up home. Which, you know,
obviously. And starts to pout in concrete to bury her alive! But he's
doing it from one of those small stand-mixers, and the patio he wants
to build is like ten feet across, so this is going to take all day.
It's going to be like 45 minutes before there's even enough concrete
to drown the grandmother.
Not that it's going to happen, of
course - the team arrives and arrests the killer without incident.
THE END
The grandmother is still freaked out,
obviously. Her story ends abruptly, though. We see her crying in
Joe's arms and then BOOM! Back to an establishing shot of Washington
DC, where, again, they don't work.
Oh, and Eric doesn't want Emily to tell
anyone which Ranger battalion he was in. I guess they went through
some famously awful stuff in Iraq?
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
I guess? Honestly, they were so bad at
basic detective work this week I want to give them zero credit for
solving the case. Then again, the assumption that the killer was
trying to recreate brain damage isn't a bad one, and when there was
just one brain-damaged woman in the area, they got there quickly
enough!
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
If they'd talked to the son of the
kidnapped woman, and he'd mentioned that they only had to go to the
mall because the pool was closed, and that she talked to the pool
guys, they'd have immediately checked out time sheets and realized
just one person was at all three abduction sites, and that woman
would have been rescued before anything happened to her.
What I'm saying is, the team's refusal
to do any basic investigative work got that woman killed.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
2/10 - So yeah, this week's killer
makes zero sense! I'll explain. They make quite a big deal about the
fact that none of the women were sexually assaulted. Because they
want the team to assume that the killer is trying to 'fix' bad
mothers.
Then it turns out that the guy was
obsessed with having sex with his mother, and was trying to brain
damage women to make them more like her. I hate to have to say this,
but if that was his motivation, he definitely would have raped those
women.
I'm not psyched to think about or picture that, but it's a fact, and the show lies to its audience to try and amp up a surprise later, which is fundamentally dishonest.
I'm not psyched to think about or picture that, but it's a fact, and the show lies to its audience to try and amp up a surprise later, which is fundamentally dishonest.
No comments:
Post a Comment