I have to say, I really had high hopes for this one. Danny used to be an interesting and dynamic character, and this seemed to be an episode with potential to have a lot of great continuity.
My beef with the episode isn't Lindsay. Oh, Anna Belknap still can't act--I've never seen anyone flatter than she was in her scene with Hill when she realized the cases were connected. Seriously where was the frustration about being sideline again? The escalation of her concern throughout the episode? It was on the page, but not in the performance. I think Lindsay would be a far less polarizing character if she was played by an actress with any rage whatsoever. Regardless, Lindsay's actions were admirable. Good for her for going to bat for Danny--I've long said that if she's going to be married to the show's resident damsel-in-distress, she's got to step up. And she really has since they've been married--she shot the serial killer who threatened life and then went after the cop threatening his career. I do think she's made up for her early shoddy treatment of Danny, and paid back the emotional support he gave her with active support.
My problem isn't with Danny not saving himself--that's consistent, too. Danny doesn't save himself. He whines and wrings his hands and does something that makes it worse until Flack or Lindsay or Mac comes in and saves him. What bugged me is that we got nothing of Danny's emotional journey. Yes, he's matured, but does that mean he has virtually no reaction? Aside from the scene with Cooper, we only really see him with the IA guy. No scene with Mac until the end, no scene with Lindsay, no scene with Flack--which would have been nice continuity with "On the Job," by the way. No scene with Lucy, worrying about his job.
And in the end, it's wrapped up in with a neat little bow. Cooper confessed! We never get any scenes with the cops, who are so obviously complicit from the get-go that's no shock to the audience. No explanation as to why they felt the need to cover it up and tried to pin the lie on Danny when they got found out. No depth to it at all.
And then, this much touted promotion? Done in four episodes. Maybe if this was halfway through the season, it wouldn't have felt so premature, but it really, really did feel so predictable, and so quick, it made me question why they did it at all. Did we really see Danny grow as a leader in four episodes? I wish this show was more patient, more willing to stretch out what could be really good storylines. This was supposedly a Danny-centric episode, but because we never got to see his emotional journey, it sure didn't feel like it.
C-
My beef with the episode isn't Lindsay. Oh, Anna Belknap still can't act--I've never seen anyone flatter than she was in her scene with Hill when she realized the cases were connected. Seriously where was the frustration about being sideline again? The escalation of her concern throughout the episode? It was on the page, but not in the performance. I think Lindsay would be a far less polarizing character if she was played by an actress with any rage whatsoever. Regardless, Lindsay's actions were admirable. Good for her for going to bat for Danny--I've long said that if she's going to be married to the show's resident damsel-in-distress, she's got to step up. And she really has since they've been married--she shot the serial killer who threatened life and then went after the cop threatening his career. I do think she's made up for her early shoddy treatment of Danny, and paid back the emotional support he gave her with active support.
My problem isn't with Danny not saving himself--that's consistent, too. Danny doesn't save himself. He whines and wrings his hands and does something that makes it worse until Flack or Lindsay or Mac comes in and saves him. What bugged me is that we got nothing of Danny's emotional journey. Yes, he's matured, but does that mean he has virtually no reaction? Aside from the scene with Cooper, we only really see him with the IA guy. No scene with Mac until the end, no scene with Lindsay, no scene with Flack--which would have been nice continuity with "On the Job," by the way. No scene with Lucy, worrying about his job.
And in the end, it's wrapped up in with a neat little bow. Cooper confessed! We never get any scenes with the cops, who are so obviously complicit from the get-go that's no shock to the audience. No explanation as to why they felt the need to cover it up and tried to pin the lie on Danny when they got found out. No depth to it at all.
And then, this much touted promotion? Done in four episodes. Maybe if this was halfway through the season, it wouldn't have felt so premature, but it really, really did feel so predictable, and so quick, it made me question why they did it at all. Did we really see Danny grow as a leader in four episodes? I wish this show was more patient, more willing to stretch out what could be really good storylines. This was supposedly a Danny-centric episode, but because we never got to see his emotional journey, it sure didn't feel like it.
C-