goldnhart said:
The murder bugged me. It seemed a little too out there. It would have been more realistic if he had simply killed her in the apartment. As stated above,tonight was more about the characters than the science. That's OK in small doses, but we're bordering on soap opera.
When Grissom cheats on Sara with Catherine, then proceeds to leave them both for Sofia, and THEN runs back to Sara proclaiming his love for her and THEN convinces her that they should start a threesome with Greg and THEN during all of that Warrick and Nick start their own affair under a lab table in the trace lab, maybe THEN...and I stress the 'maybe', maybe then, this will be a soap opera. But only then.
(It was sarcasm, so please, don't take offense. I just get a kick in the pants whenever someone calls CSI a soap opera.) Well, not that you necessarily called it a soap opera, but seriously, last night did not even border it. It was simple character development, to me. That was all I got out of it.
As for the episode, if you didn't get Grissom's comment (while talking to Sara over the deceased) that maybe this case would require both faith and science, than I'm not too sure why anyone was surprised a lot of character interplay would show up here. I mean, he did say it, you know.
I enjoyed it. Sometimes, the science of it all can get crammed into an episode and crowd it. I know that may sound silly since it is a showed based on evidence and science is used to process that evidence, but take tonight and you'll see that common sense can help solve a case. (ie, Grissom letting the nun know that she was simply too small to lift the victim up)
Or just simply understanding the behaviors of people can rule out suspects. (ie, Grissom understanding a priest would never kill in such a manner. he felt guilt, not malicious intent)
That was a breath of fresh air for me. Cody, I thought, was a great "villian". His motive was revenge against Frank, not necessarily against Charlotte. It was interesting to watch the emotions play out on his face. The only way to hurt Frank was to also hurt himself by murdering their best friend. I don't know, but to me that just represents the complexities of the human mind and the relationships humans make with one another. I found it compelling and heartbreaking.
The cast overall was awesome. I love Brass.
Sure, the episode wasn't as fast paced as last week, but did the subject matter really call for an "in your face, run over the perps with a car" kind of set-up? Not really.
I was mostly happy for the lack of Special Guest Stars and random nite club scenes with John Meyer. This was CSI as I like it and it still managed to change up the formula just a little bit by throwing in a little faith.