It's night, in Iowa, and a kid is
sleeping peacefully in bed. But how long can that last? Like three
seconds. Then he hears mysterious whispering and goes to investigate!
He heads straight out the front door and heads down the street! We
find him next in a playground, where he starts swinging. Then he's
joined by more kids doing the same. Is this an episode about some
kind of super-swami?
The next day, JJ gets a call from her
mother announcing that she's coming to stay while her house is being
repaired. For a moment I think this means we're going to have Josh
Stewart show up, but no, their house is being painted, so JJ is
staying in a hotel for a week while he takes the boys to Florida.
Wait... Florida? Why would he not take
them to Louisiana? That's where he's from - shouldn't they get a
chance to see their ancestral homeland? And I mean ancestral, they've
got a French last name, they've probably been in New Orleans for
ever!
Time for a case rundown- three kids
went missing! Crazily, the team actually takes a moment to wonder if
this is just ten-year-olds spending all night out with friends. Hey,
remember when that actually happened last year, the kids were going
to spend all night out with friends, and the team went anyway even
though there were no signs of foul play?
This time they at least have reason to
be weirded out - no clothes or shoes were taken, so the kids must
have gone out in the bedclothes. Suspicious!
Then, Emily once again uses 'Wheels Up'
as a catchphrase with no unit of time attached to it. When are they
supposed to be in the plane, Emily? You're the boss, you should be
planning this better, Emily.
Before they can leave, Garcia gets an
e-mail from the police - they've got footage of the kids swinging in
the park, and then getting into a white panel van, beckoned and
dragged by a white guy, based on the hand!
Emily's first line in the episode wins
her a Prentiss Award, but again, I find myself wishing that there was
a stronger award to give her.
No, it's still a kidnapping, Emily.
Even if the guy doesn't want a ransom, it's still a kidnapping. Any
time you grab someone, through them in a car, and drive away, it's a
kidnapping. It doesn't matter that the kids got in willingly, they
were taken without their parents' permission, so they were kidnapped.
Emily, if someone says to a kid 'come back to my van, there's candy
in the back', then shuts the door on them and drives off, do you not
think that's a kidnapping? What is wrong with this woman?
Apparently the kids had no behavioural
problems, and no history of running away, so something more sinister
must be going on. Then Emily proves that she's the boss by telling
the team to split into pairs and visit the parents while she checks
with the field agents already working the case.
She doesn't tell them how to pair off,
or which families to visit. Just announces that it should happen and
makes no further comment. You're terrible at this, Emily.
At the police station Emily runs into
the mayor - Doc Potterywood - and he asks what's being done to make
sure this doesn't happen again. Emily offers no guarantees, since she
has no idea what's going on!
At the first house, Joe and Matt talk
with the wound-up mother. She blames the kid's love of his devices
for his abduction, assuming that the kid has been grabbed by someone
he met online. Also, he likes building things out of paper mache.
Things get super-crazy back at the
station, where we're told that none of the kids knew one another,
because they all went to different schools! Is that really possible,
though? All of the children are the same age - how big is this town
that it has three different elementary schools? We saw a map of the
routes the kids took to the park, and they all lived within a
three-block radius of it. Two of the kids lived just two blocks
apart. How could they not have been in the same school?
Oh, and Reid thinks that they've all
been hypnotized into walking out to the park in the middle of the
night. So it is a Super-Swami situation, after all! Or, I guess, a
Pied Piper situation, if you want a better analogy. So how did the
swami select these victims?
Then Garcia gives a bizarre speech
where she talks about how traumatic it was searching through sex
offenders within fifty miles of the town, which suggests that there
were a ton of them. But then she says there's just one possible
offender - so it couldn't have been that long of a list, right? The
point is, he just got out of jail, and owns a white van! Could he be
their guy?
Probably not, we're just nine minutes
into the episode.
Then it's over to the swami's lair,
where we see him near what looks like a sound board and some
surveillance equipment. He hears the kids banging on the door of the
room he has them locked in, so he kicks it to shut them up! It turns
out the kids are probably in a currently-warm meat locker, because
there's hooks hanging from the ceiling.
At roughly the same time, the perv is
arrested in the park, watching some girls eating lunch at a table.
He's immediately arrested.
Then it's over to Quantico, where JJ
takes her mother on a tour of the offices! She thinks that she and JJ
should go out on a drive to Ocean City, Maryland - they haven't been
there since JJ and her sister were little! That's a weird destination
for them - I mean, it's not impossible, but doesn't it seem like
Ocean City is the kind of place that people from Maryland or
Virgiania go on vacation? It's quite a drive from Pittsburgh, is all
I'm saying.
Joe and Emily interview the perv, but
he has an alibi. They don't like him, though, so they trump up fake
charges to get him sent back to prison. I'm not against them doing
this, but let's just take a moment to luxuriate in this abuse of
power by the same people who said it was immoral to not help a
cannibal serial killer get out of an insane asylum.
I'm just looking for a little
consistency, people.
Doc comes by the office to ask if this
is the guy so they can announce the threat is over, but Matt and
Aisha tell him that it definitely isn't. Will there be more
abductions that night? It would be weird if there were, since you'd
think parents with kids that age would be locking them in their
rooms, and the cops would be all over the streets, but let's find
out!
Yeah, in the next scene another kids
escape their home - by jumping out a window! That's just kooky! Then
the van driver picks the kid up and they speed away!
At the police station, the team if
baffled - if these kids are just hypnotized, how did the little girl
know to jump out a window instead of checking on the front door? What
kind of cosmic hypnosis is this? Also, it's a little weird that the
family went to the trouble of both locking the front door and pushing
a couch in front of it, but didn't bother wiring the daughter's
window shut. Then they hear that the swami has left a package at the
local newspaper!
Inside the envelope they find the names
of the first three victims and a set of nail clippings. This leads
Matt to make a fool of himself by referring to them as 'proof of
life'. Except, and I hate to be morbid like this, dead bodies also
have nails you can clip. Proof of life is talking to someone, or a
video of them made after the abduction. It's not a lock of hair. With
the clippings is a video where a camera looks at the huddled,
frightened children while a voice says 'how does it feel'?
This is all the information they need
for the profile - the swami must be trying to get even with the town,
possibly over the loss of his own child. He's making the townspeople
feel what he did! So now it's just a question of looking for tragic
stories in the town's recent history. And, you know, tying your
children to their bedposts at night.
We see the swami doing some strange
audio work while the profile is given. He records the sounds of acid
burning things, plastic crinkling, metal tapping. It's a weird thing
to watch. Is this guy hypnotizing children via ASMR? Do children
listen to ASMR? I thought it was just a weird fetish thing. Oh, and
the guy wears latex gloves while doing all of this. Strange!
More with JJ and her mother! It seems
she only be pretended to need a place to stay because she's lonely
and wanted to spend time with her daughter! Maybe move closer to DC
then, instead of just wallowing in resentment?
At the police station, we discover that
the key linking two of the kids is paper mache! Please tell me that
the kids were hypnotized by paper mache videos on YouTube. That would
be amazing.
Then we check in on another family, as
the mother prepares to lock up the house, there's a knock on the door
downstairs. Her son goes to answer it, despite there being a maniac
on the loose, and when he does, the maniac is there! He recognizes
the guy immediately. So now the swami is just grabbing kids from
their front doors? How has he not been caught yet?
How big is this town supposed to be
that he's able to get around unnoticed? There's definitely been a
curfew since the first abduction, with no unapproved cars allowed out
on the streets - so how is his guy able to drive his van around
without being spotted?
Also, what would he have done if the
mother had come to the door and looked through the peephole? How
would this guy have explained being out knocking on doors after
curfew?
Oh, and it turns out that this was the
mayor's house, and while the guy was abducting the son, he smashed in
the mother's head! Reid thinks it's too late to save her, even though
she's sitting up in a chair looking at him when he takes her pulse.
You're not a medical doctor, Reid, you don't make those kinds of
assessments.
When the team interviews the mayor,
they discover that the son's computer has been locked away for a week
because he didn't do his chores. They assume that this means the
killer has been contacting the kids over the internet, and when he
couldn't get to this one, he just attacked the house! What that
doesn't explain is why Garcia hasn't found any trace of this contact
- she's had 48 hours to track down these kids' media use, and come up
with zero information in all that time?
What's going on with you, Garcia? Ever since you got kidnapped you've been terrible at your job.
Seriously, though, what kid opens the
front door after dark during a curfew when there's a killer on the
loose? I'm not saying that woman deserved to be murdered for having
raised an idiot, but I'm also not saying that, either.
Garcia does come up with a lead - all
of the kids went to the same summer activities program the previous
year! Weird that it took you that long to find the link, Garcia.
Reid and Emily look over the missing
kid's computer, and finds that it contains an ASMR video with
whispering atop it! The theory - the kids were hypnotized by the
video, and then compelled to do what the voice said!
Dear god, what has this show become? A
couple of seasons ago the point of view of the show was that
Hypnotism couldn't work unless you drugged someone, and now kids are
being hypnotized by internet videos? This is just madness. Seriously,
if they fought an actual werewolf it would be less implausible than
this.
The show's crazy understanding of how
the brain works just gets worse as we learn that the kids were given
instructions on where to go by the sound of a creaking swing chain,
and the word 'Hamelin' being played over and over backwards. So what,
the kids subconsciously understood that they were representative of
the kids from the fairy tale and played their part?
Oof. We get to the reveal of the
killer, and it's so obvious that I can't believe it didn't come up
earlier. The summer program's computer teacher was fired for being
inappropriately close to the kids and meeting up with them in random
places to 'teach' them things. If any of the missing kids were one of
the ones who reported him, this guy should already have been caught.
What parent, after their kid disappeared, wouldn't immediately think
'hey, remember last year when that guy was fired for getting creepy
with my kid? Maybe that has something to do with it?
And hey, when they searched for
everyone with a white van in the state, how did they not notices that
one of them was fired from a job in this town for being inappropriate
with kids?
Oh, and back at base, we learn that the
guy might have killed his son - no one's seen either of them for
three weeks, and the kid was having trouble at school because his dad
was a suspected child molester. They search his house, and find a
noose - evidence that the son killed himself, triggering this violent
rampage!
Meanwhile, all of their profiling
proves pointless, because the killer just grabs a woman in the park
and puts a gun to his head, while yelling about how everyone accused
him of being a monster. That was an easy solve!
Matt and Aisha confront him in the
park, so he shoots himself, after announcing that the kids will be
dead soon! So I guess if the Hamelin thing is true, he's going to
drown them? Or maybe he just turned the freezer on finally. Can the
team figure out where his torture dungeon is in time?
Yes, and it's not at all difficult! The
guy had meat tenderized all over his shoes, so Garcia does a search
and finds out there's an abandoned meat packing plant on the edge of
town. The team rushes over there and saves the kids without any
difficulty.
THE END
We get another scene with JJ and her
mother, where she admits that she wasn't a good parent! Yeah, we knew
that years ago when you guilted JJ about not telling her 10-year-old
child about suicide. They also mention that now they know the 'truth'
about her sister's suicide she realizes how valuable JJ's life
choices have been. But didn't they always know that the sister killed
herself because of depression influenced by an inappropriate love
affair? That's what the flashbacks in the Slenderman episode
suggested.
In Iowa the kids are reunited with
their parents! The mayor is happy to see his son, despite the child's
idiocy getting his wife killed.
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
They did not solve the crime.
Everything went according to the killer's plan.
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
A curfew would have caught this guy
almost immediately.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
0/10 - I just had the most unpleasant
thought, and it's one of those things that comes into your head
unbidden, and I hope I'm just going crazy. Here's the thing - this
episode ends with Reid and JJ chatting about what he thinks the
future holds, and he suggests they chat about it sometime. The season
opened with a reminder of the time that they almost went on a date 13
years ago before that storyline was abandoned. Are they going to do
something incredibly stupid like kill of Jr. and try to get these two
together before the show ends?
Because that would be a betrayal of the
most severe kind imaginable. I'm sure that writing 1500 pages about
Criminal Minds in just a couple of months has sent me around the
bend, and now I'm seeing patterns where they aren't there, but wow,
would that be the worst choice that the show could possibly make. Not
only is their relationship the sole healthy one in the history of the
show, but Jr. is literally the best person in the cast of recurring
characters. So no, this can't be happening.
Then again, this season opened by Reid
sacrificing Theo - the most heroic character in this history of the
show - for Garcia, so at this point, who knows to what depths this
thing can sink, right?
Normally I use this space to talk about
stuff from the episode, but I was so deeply unsettled by the ending
that I had to take a moment and just wallow in my own terrible
predictions. Sorry about that.
So, this episode was trash, huh?
In an interview given after the Season 14 finale with TVLine I believe, Erica Messer said the idea of going down a possible romantic path with JJ and Reid came about after reading the script for this episode specifically the ending conversation of the imagined futures. Prior to that, she was adamantly against it even though other writers wanted it. So, that shows this JJ and Reid romantic path wasn't something planned long term but short term gratification. You and Sheila are right....Messer is a terrible writer.
ReplyDeleteThank you for mentioning the bizarre mother thing. I was like "She's already dead" is very dramatic and all, but that isn't how brain injuries or death work. You didn't mention the woman and the end of the last episode (I don't think) that went from stabbed at least twice in the back, lying in a large pool of blood, to sitting up on a pretty white pillow looking over at JJ. I think that was a continuity error, and they cut JJ talking to the woman after a rescue, because they decided to go for the stabbing drama. If you ever read this, I am wondering what you think.
ReplyDeleteQuick little critique of your comment...do you really think anyone would have saved a virtual stranger over their close friend of 15 years? Maybe I need to rewatch that scene and see what you mean, but if this was a 50/50 choice, there is no choice. I would save my friend of 10 years over Mother Theresa.