So, I know I haven't seen enough episodes of CSI Miami to speak in-depth about Horatio and Stetler's relationship. Aside from a few Stetler appearances where he mostly clashed with Ryan (and don't think I wasn't replaying those Ryan/Stetler scenes from last night, they were intense :lol
, the one episode I'm remembering is the one where Stetler was trying to pin something on Horatio, and Calleigh was trying to clear his name. But it's interesting how disappointed I was with the way last night's episode played out. Not with Stetler himself, who was great, even as a disillusioned cop, but with the resolution of it all. I guess they're going to go with the same non-follow-up formula they did with Dan Cooper (never fully explaining why, after wanting so badly to be a CSI he suddenly went bad) and Tara Price.
But reading through this thread, I think what bothers me is a) Stetler's been on the show a lot longer than those two, and b) like someone said earlier, it's kind of important for these characters to have an "archenemy", I guess, who isn't evil and fights on the same side they do. Every one of the CSI shows has/had those characters -- Gil Grissom had Ecklie, Mac Taylor had Inspector Gerrard and Chief Sinclair. Interestingly enough, those last two characters have also vanished from CSI:NY, but while I miss them, their departure didn't leave me with the same bad taste that Stetler's did. Maybe because they were portrayed in (fairly) sympathetic ways, and it really bothered me that Stetler was written off as an irredeemable "bad guy". None of the other arch-nemeses on the CSI shows have been handled that way, and it soured an otherwise-cool episode. Even Ecklie's had his redeeming moments where he goes to bat for the CSI team, and he's probably the most effective arch-nemesis of all three shows; the others (from what I've seen)
try to discredit or punish team-characters, but Ecklie's the only one whose ever kind-of succeeded.
Miami has been getting better this year, imo, but they copped out with Stetler. Even if the actor asked to leave the show, I think they could've been a little more creative with his exit, like giving him a more solid motive. IIRC, they didn't even explain why he decided Nevins or Eric Delko had to die. Eric said that if it hadn't been him investigating the lab, it would've been someone else; being the
Assistant State Attorney, can we assume the same could be said for Rebecca Nevins? Was he planning to kill off the entire State Attorney office?
It was just really sloppily done.