In 'Downtown Detroit' two kids are
looking to break into a suspiciously nice car that wound up parked
one a narrow street. There's probably a body in the trunk or
something, but before we get to that, what's with the 'Downtown' part
of the title?
Is that the kind of tag they've ever
put on a location before? There's a huge amount of towns that make up
the greater Los Angeles Area, but I've never seen specificity when
the head to LA. So what's with this 'Downtown' nonsense? Did the
tourism department of Detroit threaten to stop advertising on CBS
stations if they didn't remove a reference to Detroit being a lawless
hellhole where street crime is ever present? But the episode couldn't
be re-shot, so they negotiated a additional word to suggest that only
a small section of Detroit is a crime-ridden hell hole?
Anyway, the car is unlocked when the
kids go to break in, but are stymied when the car turns out to be
keyless. They say that the 'clicker thing' must be somewhere in the
car, but I don't think that's the case. After all, if the clicker was
in the car, wouldn't the start button work? Isn't that the whole
point of keyless systems, that you just sit down with the thing in
your pocket and you can star the car right away?
Turns out I was right, the kids finally
just try pushing the start button, and the engine turns over! They
start to drive the car away from the curb, but hear a thump from the
trunk. Could the corpse have finally arrived?
Yes, and it turns out there's two of
them? The kids prove to be quite stupid, deciding the convenience of
finding the key on one of the bodies is worth the risk of being
implicated in a murder, so they decide to dump the bodies and steal
the car. The woman with the keys turns out to be alive, however, and
begs them for help! The kids are too scared to do anything but run
away.
Which, you know, bad luck for her.
Over at Jeanne's house, she gets a
phone call from her husband, who is a MSF doctor! He pretends to be
in a foreign country so that he can surprise her by showing up at the
door! Do you think she's told him that they're being targeted by a
serial killer?
Jeanne's happy to see her husband, but
worried that he's suddenly back from abroad! Penelope texts with a
job, but she wants to prioritize the relationship. In the end, she
goes to work, in order to fail even harder than the other characters
at justifying her paycheck.
Time for the case rundown! Married
couples are being abducted, tortured with dozens of small knife
wounds, then killed and dumped in their cars! That's depressing, but
in the 'good news' column, it turns out the kids immediately ran for
help and called the police! But the ambulance was there too late to
save the woman.
They're psyched to find and stop the
guy before he kidnaps another couple! Of course, they're too late for
that, as we immediately cut to the next victims. Who he grabbed
overnight? So he dumped the car yesterday, and he's already got two
more locked up somewhere! The first thing we see is the woman with
blood all over her white shirt - does the killer give them those
clothes, so the blood will 'pop' more, or does he only grab people
wearing white shirts?
Then the husband leans into the frame
in a light blue shirt with no blood on it, and my theory is blown all
to hell. I will make an obvious prediction, however - the killer
makes the couple stab each other! The wife has a knife buried in her
stomach, and she tells the husband to take it out, killing her,
because 'it's time'. He does, she dies, and I guess we'll find out
what all this is about after the credits!
Some details from the plane ride! The
victims were all white, and from Grosse Point, so they're assuming
the killer lives there as well so that he can blend in. They try to
guess exactly why the killer might murder couples, is it to mock
their marital bond? That seems like a stretch, although if you'd
phrased it a little differently, I'd probably be supportive of the
idea that he gains more perverse pleasure from tormenting people with
strong emotions towards each other.
Jeanne and Joe drop by the morgue, and
find out something interesting - the spouses have matching injuries
placement-wise, but not in type of slash! Each is cut in a different
direction! They use this info to confirm my prediction that the
couples stab each other!
There's a check-in with Reid's map of
the couples' final movements. Both were on 'Date Nights' in Grosse
Pointe when they disappeared, so the working theory is that he
grabbed them at their cars. So that means lots of surveillance
cameras, right? Both couples were in well-traveled areas, so
shouldn't there be all sorts of records of their (and possibly the
killer's) movements? At least one of the couples must have been in a
parking garage, doesn't that almost guarantee footage of the killer?
Over at the impound yard, JJ and Derek
examine the cars to try and figure out how the killer could possibly
control two people into doing what he wants! They seem to be under
the impression that pointing a gun at them wouldn't work.
Hilariously, they assume that the husband and wife are going to sit
in the front of the car, with the killer in the back. Um... why would
the killer let the wife walk around the car away from him? I don't
want to go down a dark rabbit hole of gaming-out crime situations,
but couldn't the killer just grab the wife, point a gun at her, tell
the husband to get into the car, climb into the back with the wife,
keeping the gun on her, and then instruct the husband where to go?
Their complete lack of imagination
causes them to find a lead! When you press the 'lock car' button on
the car's fob, it makes a sound, but the door doesn't lock - the car
has been hacked!
Get it? The kids at the start were
old-school car thieves, and the killer is a high-tech version of
them!
Oh, and there's been another car dumped
with a body in it! That's right, it's just one, which is why we
didn't see any blood on blue shirt guy! Jeanne and Reid interview the
sobbing husband, who's been brought to the scene for reasons I'm not
clear on. Actor scheduling, maybe? He's not the blue shirt guy,
though, which is significant! Could the killer have mistook a woman
and her paramour for a married couple, then only killed one of them
the normal way when he discovered his mistake? The husband's
interview is incredibly confusing. Apparently he didn't report her
missing because he was working in Cleveland, and was supposed to be
back for Date Night on Thursday, but his boss told him he had to work
the weekend, and she was annoyed and went to the dinner alone, which
is when she was grabbed by the killer. How does he not try to get his
wife on the phone for two days after a fight? This was not a good
marriage, even before one of them was dead.
This scene is also super-confusing when
it comes to just how long the woman has been missing. We know she was
grabbed on the Thursday, which is when the last car was dropped off.
And we saw her die Friday morning, between the team discussing the
case and getting on the plane. Now they're saying the husband didn't
notice she was missing for two days, which makes this... Saturday?
Has the team already been in town 24 hours? Damn this show and its
complete inability to convey how much time is passing from scene to
scene.
The team wonders where the missing male
victim could be! Meanwhile, the killer abducts a woman from a
pharmacy parking lot!
I feel like we've seen that exact
Pharmacy sign before. Maybe more than once. I swear this location has
operated as a pharmacy in multiple cities, both in day and nighttime
shots.
Back in Virginia, Jeanne calls her
husband to check in - he maintains that he's fine, and he was only
being cagey because he has a job offer. Two, actually, for both of
them to teach at Harvard! Jeanne's still psyched about being an FBI
Agent for some reason, which is going to cause some tension. Perhaps
this case about butchered husbands and wives will give her a chance
to reflect on her own situation?
Greg and Jeanne are the next pair to
visit the morgue, where they find the woman has the same nervous cuts
that they've seen with other victims. Could it be that the killer has
kept the man alive, and may have him kill more than one woman?
It's time for the profile! The team
says that the killer is killing couples because his marriage went
bad. Fair enough assumption. They also think that finding the man
who's currently kidnapped as well will be the quickest path to the
killer! Unless, of course, he is the killer, and he's evolved his
fetish to just wanting to kill women, rather than focusing on
couples. And, you know, he's pretending that he's also a victim with
the kidnap victims, and they have to follow the orders of a
Jigsaw-style audio tape or something?
I'm getting ahead of myself with these
predictions. Let's just get back to the latest kidnap victim, who's
waking cell, wearing a just ridiculous wedding ring.
The cell is entirely made of glass
walls, and seems to be situated in the middle of some kind of old
office building or possibly hospital. There's a connecting door to
the other victim's room, but it's currently locked. So the woman
bangs on the glass, trying to wake the guy up. Eventually she starts
yelling at the cameras, the victim addresses her, warning her not to
make noise, because that would attract the attention of 'him'. Just
then some banging starts somewhere above them. So the victim could
have a partner! Or really be a victim. Or just rigged up a
remote-control noise-making thing. The killer hacked the car, after
all.
Speaking of car hacking, JJ, Derek and
Greg are back at the impound lot, looking for more clues about the
cars' computers. Which they didn't need to do, since they know
nothing of how computers work, and Garcia's already got it handled.
Seriously, she calls them from Quantico to tell them all the
important information about the car they're standing next to.
They're reusing a weirdly large number
of locations this week. Were they trying to cover a budget shortfall
or something?
Garcia's information is key: all of the
cars were hacked three days before the abduction, and had their
ability to record or upload GPS data disabled, so there's no record
of where the killer drove them. Interestingly, the cars weren't all
serviced or washed on the day of the hacking, which leaves the team
wondering how the killer could have had unfettered access to all
three vehicles on random days.
Greg's got an idea though, and he calls
the Attorney General to ask for a favour! What could it be? Using
some kind of patriot act sci-fi stuff that tracks every sat-linked
car on Earth all the time?
Then it's over to the woman and the
victim. He lets her know that he's been in the cell since April!
Which seems at odds with what happened with the couples, I guess
we'll find out more when he's revealed to be the killer.
Wow, I'm really going all-in on this theory, aren't I?
While he explains his situation, a
videoscreen snaps on in both rooms, where a tape of the killer tells
them to begin. Victim apologizes to the woman and takes out a paring
knife!
Greg and Reid go to meet with the heads
of the 'big three' car companies, and we immediately discover why
they set this episode in Detroit. Greg wants access to that thing I
just mentioned about - the secret driving history of every car that
the car companies all keep!
The victim goes into the woman's room
and gives her the knife! It's his turn to be stabbed!
Garcia figures out what all of the
cars' trips had in common - they all stopped at a jogging track! Joe
and Jeanne take a look around, and see plenty of couples jogging
together, as well as women with personal trainers who they could
possibly be sleeping with! Instantly they assume that his wife left
him for another man she went running with, and he uses the track as a
hunting ground because it reminds him of why he's so angry.
Here's my question - isn't it an
amazing coincidence that all of the couples/women he attacked stopped
by the same running track three days before the date nights on which
they were kidnapped? Isn't that kind of preposterous? Why did it
always have to be three days? Couldn't all of the computers have just
been erased up to a week before the abductions, and Garcia just had
the computer sync the GPS information with the day each car was
hacked?
More with the stabbing people! Victim
reveals he's already got a bunch of stab marks, so it's fine that she
cuts him, but she's still reluctant. Finally the killer starts a
countdown, and victim makes woman stab him a couple of times. Yeah,
it looks like I'm wrong, but we're still not seeing any direct
interaction between the masked figure on the screen and the people in
the cages.
Okay, we now get a weird scene at the
police station. The team has put up pictures of all the missing men
in Grosse Pointe - they like the looks of victim, because his mother
reported him missing right after the single lady disappeared on
Thursday. They then go into how he met his wife while she was married
to someone else, and suggest that could have convinced the killer to
target him. Except, you know, he said that he's been locked in the
cell for a month, and has wounds all over him.
I guess he is the killer?
In the cells, victim confesses to woman
about dating his wife while she was married, and woman says she met
her husband on a Christian dating site, but that she's Jewish! Zany!
Then they're separated back to their own cells. Victim fakes a hug so
that he can whisper that he has a plan for them to escape! Is the
plan for him to claim that he can fake-stab her so that the killer
will think she's dead, which is why the woman in the first death
scene seemed to be psyched about being stabbed?
I'm really going to extremes to justify
my theory at this point.
Hey, quick question - remember how the
car companies were keeping secret information on all the cars, even
though the cars' own computers didn't have GPS capabilities any more?
Shouldn't they also know where all of the cars have gone in the past
few days, i.e. where the killer offloaded the victims and then loaded
up their bodies? Seems like that would be an interesting location to
know about, wouldn't it?
I mean, I guess it's possible that the
hacker turned off the car's ability to upload location data at all,
but that doesn't seem likely, since Garcia had to work to figure out
what location all of the cars had in common, rather than just check
the last location they were at when they lost the ability to transmit
info.
While driving, Jeanne gets a call from
her husband, and she doesn't want to talk to him! She reveals all of
her secrets to Reid! She maybe doesn't want to be separated from her
husband any more, but she doesn't want to give up her career either!
What a dilemma. With, you know, a pretty simple solution. Remember
how there are FBI offices in Boston? You don't have to teach
exclusively, you know. Reid, because of the Maeve situation, thinks
she should be with her husband! Is she leaving the show, or are they
making it look like she's leaving the show for one reason, just so
we'll be surprised when they kill her off because, as we've already
mentioned, the copycat seems to be focused on her.
Back in the cells, it turns out there
really was an escape plan! The woman is able to pull up a tile in the
floor and crawl through a cable access line! Is this all part of the
killer's game? After sending her down the hole, did he immediately
get into costume and run to where the hole lets out just for the fun
of catch-and-release murdering?
Reid and Jeanne visit the mother of the
victim, who confirms that he's the killer. He used to go to the track
to stalk his wife, who he's sure was going to cheat on him.
Eventually his dickishness drove her away! The mother even calls her
son 'sick', just so we'll get the point that he's the killer. Jeanne
realizes that the man the mother is describing fits the profile, and
asks if his 'sickness' takes the form of ritual self-cutting, which
he does!
That's all they need to know, of
course, and they'll be on to him post-haste!
As predicted, it was just an elaborate
catch and release scenario, and the killer waits for the woman to
trip on a wire and daze herself before he walks out in his
hastily-donned costume. Then he tears the mask off, just in case the
audience hasn't figured it out yet. They must not thing much of their
audience, really - after all, at this point there's no reason for him
to take the mask off. After all, he's got to move her back to the
room, and doesn't know how long she'll be out cold. Doesn't this risk
him blowing his whole 'stabbed by a friendly guy' scheme?
In the cells, woman wakes to find that
the killer has cut himself up a little to make her feel sorry for
him, and then uses a remote control to get her to cut him further.
This is certainly a strange fetish.
Garcia reveals that the killer is a
contractor, and goes over a list of buildings he has access to. Only
one of them is believably large and isolated enough for him to be
playing elaborate games of sympathy and murder in! Also Jeanne has a
theory for how to talk him down, which only she can arrange, and says
that it's a pretty big bluff. Is she going to pretend his wife is
there to talk to him? Are they going to bust in pretending that they
think he's a victim? I can't wait to see what happens at the cells!
Speaking of, the killer asks the woman
to stab him, claiming he's been in there so long that he doesn't want
to live any more. They're really getting close after only knowing
each other for like six hours.
Yeah, this just went crazy. They show
us his plan to turn this suicide into a murder, and it's a doozy. He
figures that, by asking for death, he'll cause the women to say 'what
happens to me when I'm alone with the killer?' And he responds that
they should double-suicide, which just turns into him murdering her.
Wow, would this never work. You're saying that previous woman was
psyched to commit suicide with a dude after spending half a day with
him? Wow, do this show's timelines make no sense whatsoever. I mean,
if they were there for a week, with her being slowly worn down and
starved, maybe, but it's half a day, seriously.
While they're chatting the FBI breaks
in, and the killer immediately grabs the woman, since he knows the
jig is up. He demands that the cops drop their guns, threatening to
slash the woman's throat if they don't. They're standing
approximately five feet away from the killer, and he's holding the
knife blade a good three inches away from the woman's cheek. This
feels like a good time to just blow his head off and take your
chances.
But no, it's time for Jeanne's plan
- she's the only one in there, other than a SWAT guy.
Okay, the plan is to just have the wife
come in and ask him to let the woman go. Why were they so cagey about
the plan, why was Jeanne the only one who could do it, and why did
they say it was a 'bluff'? This is just like hostage negotiation day
1 stuff.
Maybe they thought it was a 'bluff'
because they had to ask the wife to lie and say that she could get
back together with the killer if he let the woman go? But that's not
really a bluff. It's just a lie designed to manipulate a guy, which,
again, Day 1 hostage negotiation stuff.
Really they should have just shot him
in the head.
The End.
Also, Jeanne sees woman reunited with
her husband, and it convinces her to make a decision. That decision?
She needs to keep trying to catch serial killers while he works in
Boston, so they can see each other more often! Why did seeing the
reunited spouses make her decide that? Seeing people hug in relief
convinced her that she needs her space?
I'm kidding, I know that she saw them reunited and wants to keep helping people, but if they wanted that to be her reaction, she should have contributed a lot more to figuring out this case. They tried to make it look that way at the ending putting her front and center, but then her big idea was 'hostage negotiate', which literally all of them have done many times before.
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
A little! I'll give them that Jeanne
was smart enough to guess that the guy loved to cut himself, but it
wasn't much of an educated guess. Seriously, they were looking for a
guy who hated happy couples, and then a woman called them up and said
'my son is missing, he's a creepy stalker with serious mental
problems'. Mom did most of the solving this week.
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
They had a magic GPS record that would
have led them to the place that everyone was being held. So yes, the
cops probably could have found them. Beyond that, it doesn't take
psychology to figure out that, when a psychotic stalker is one of
your missing people, there's a better-than-average chance that he's
the killer.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
3
The show's compressed timelines really
hurt the drama this week. Especially because we're asked to believe
that the killer, after grabbing a woman instead of a couple, was able
to throw together a whole interactive video presentation operable by
remote control, as well as gain the acting skills necessary to
convince a woman to kill herself like ten hours after meeting him?
And he did all of that in under a day, because he grabbed that woman
Thursday night and killed her Friday morning?
I want to say it's possible that he had
the first one for like 36 hours, because maybe the team was called in
on a Saturday? The show is maddeningly unclear on timelines. But
that's probably not the case, since he only had the last victim for a
few hours before starting the double suicide pitch, and there's no
reason to believed he would have changed up his MO between victim one
and victim two.
The thing that confuses me the most
about the episode, though, is that it's set up like we're supposed to
be surprised that the victim is the killer - he even does a mask
unveiling! - but then the first line he says, about being a captive
for weeks, is utterly blown apart by the first thing the team finds
out about him, that he's only been missing for three days.
It's like the episode couldn't decided
to be about us watching the killed and being way ahead of the team,
or be a mystery where we shocked by a twist, so they ended up doing
both? Weird.
You know, maybe they got
such poor reviews for the nonsense writing in that Ken Olin episode
that they decided to really blatantly set up the twist that time so
that absolutely no one could be confused by it.
It's possible they over-corrected.
4 comments:
hey I have read all your reviews for criminal minds and am currently on season 8 episode 22 and reading the one you just posted for it. I was wondering if you are planning to continue reviewing the rest of the episodes and seasons?
Yup! Every week for the forseeable future!
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A lot of writing mistakes and you think you're qualified to critique the show's writing. You don't even bother to spell check. Such minor things & you want to call the writers out for writing stories & major plots & what not. You are definitely a bitch.
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