I find this discussion even more interesting than the episode -- and I liked the episode.
I like that Mac treated the women -- both of the women -- as the murder suspects they were. The suspect/murderer/attempted murderer were all sympathetic and the victims were unsympathetic but that doesn't mean that their murders were any less reprehensible than any other murders.
What happened to the women was tragic, but what they did was wrong.
I found it extremely creepy that the Amber believed that killing people was a "gift" that she could give to others. That she somehow "freed" the victims of what happened by murdering those who were acquitted of the crimes. She saw herself as an avenging angel rather than someone who enjoyed killing people (which she clearly did).
I bet there would have been a lot less sympathy for the killers if, rather than being caught on their first murder spree, they managed to kill several people and were caught only when they finally killed someone who was actually innocent of the crime they were acquitted of.
The real tragedy, as Mac pointed out, wasn't in the attacks on the women or, even, in the killing/attempted killing of the men, but in the fact that the women lost all sense of conscience -- right and wrong became a matter of person desire and they became like the men that attacked them in the first place.
I like that Mac treated the women -- both of the women -- as the murder suspects they were. The suspect/murderer/attempted murderer were all sympathetic and the victims were unsympathetic but that doesn't mean that their murders were any less reprehensible than any other murders.
What happened to the women was tragic, but what they did was wrong.
I found it extremely creepy that the Amber believed that killing people was a "gift" that she could give to others. That she somehow "freed" the victims of what happened by murdering those who were acquitted of the crimes. She saw herself as an avenging angel rather than someone who enjoyed killing people (which she clearly did).
I bet there would have been a lot less sympathy for the killers if, rather than being caught on their first murder spree, they managed to kill several people and were caught only when they finally killed someone who was actually innocent of the crime they were acquitted of.
The real tragedy, as Mac pointed out, wasn't in the attacks on the women or, even, in the killing/attempted killing of the men, but in the fact that the women lost all sense of conscience -- right and wrong became a matter of person desire and they became like the men that attacked them in the first place.