I rarely watch this CSI anymore, but I turned in last night out of curiousity over the OTT plot, and because I love the guest star, Jeffrey Tambor.
A few things and scenes really struck me: Hodges, walking reluctantly to the grief counselor's office, almost looking as if he were trying to talk himself into going to see her, as if he perhaps thought it was a show of "weakness". When he raised his hand to knock at her door and stopped in surprise and he saw an emotional Greg inside, reaching for the box of tissues... I got the distinct impression that Hodges suddenly felt a newfound kinship, of sorts, with the guy who he had a largely adversarial relationship with. Suddenly he realized, through seeing Greg, that feeling grief was
okay. Quietly powerful scene, IMO. It would have lost much of it's impact for me, if we had "overheard" Greg, we didn't need to. We saw his tears and grief, through the window.
Also with Hodges, he's the one person more than anyone else in the lab who is consistently a kiss-ass and suck-up to Grissom. So I found it no surprise that it was Hodges who began noticing that something was definitely amiss with the boss whom he basically hero-worships.
Re: Grissom, I think it's a pretty well documented/known theory that our pets can feel and strongly react to our emotions, i.e. if we're feeling sad, they feel it and respond in kind. Surely Grissom would know this, so it was intriguing, to me, that he chose to open up to the grief counselor by sharing his dog Hank's "sad, listless behavior". He must have known full well what she would tell him, that our pets respond to our
own emotions, therefore Hank was reacting to Grissom's own grief. (Even though I only watch 1 or 2 eps of this show per season, I can pretty much guess what Heather's role will be in Grissom's life, in a few eps).
Loved Riley. She's strong and sensible enough not to go into this new job feeling out of sorts because she's coming into a long and well established team, or that she's "replacing" a beloved fallen team member. For her, it is what it is, and if they accept her, great; if they don't, tough, she's still going to be there, doing her job. Loved her humor and savvy, and anyone who can catch Cath off guard with a joke is pretty darn good! Grissom seemed to accept her, too.
Loved, loved, loved Jeffrey Tambor's stint as the eccentric artist. Perfectly written and acted, IMO! :thumbsup: The plotline was OTT enough to almost be cartoonish, for me, but still fairly entertaining, overall.