Written by Gay Walsh ; story by Tom Fontana &
Julie Martin
Directed by Clark Johnson
One of the things that made Homicide one
of the greatest shows of all time is the exact same thing that stopped it from
being a huge hit. Network dramas to this
point (and to an extent, today) is based very much on the idea of a formula.
Some shows were picking at changes to it during this period but never as much
as you'd think: there might be different doctors working at Cook County from season
to season or different police and prosecutors working in Law & Order but
the formula was pretty much the same episode to episode with variations rare
and only happening once or twice a season at most.
Homicide was many things but the one thing it wasn't was complacent. This was
true even with the basic idea of the partnership. Some of that was necessitated by the actors
who left each season but even within that structure we've already seen it keep shifting
it throughout. The only real constant since the pilot has been the partnership
of Bayliss and Pembleton.
When Frank had his stroke at the end of last
season the very thing that thrilled Braugher about the arc was the same thing
that isolated so many long-time viewers. While Braugher has done some of the
best acting in his career during the first half of Season 5 the viewers have
been nearly as impatient as Pembleton was for him to get back on the street.
And by the end of 1996 enough pressure had come from on high (and more
importantly the ratings had begun to stagnate) that reluctantly Fontana would
agree to leave this storyline behind. For the rest of Season 5 Pembleton will
struggle less and less with speech and the issues he's had all year: Homicide
won't forget Pembleton had a stroke but by the time we reach the end of the
year it'll be hard to notice the difference.
However it's almost as if Fontana has anticipated
Braugher's frustration with this and has decided to put Pembleton off-kilter in
a different way. We've seen it ever since Pembleton went back to the street in
Control. Bayliss and Pembleton are still bickering about everything but now it
has an edge. Bayliss has been questioning Frank's methods more and more in the
first two cases they've worked together and while he's always pushed back
against his partner, there's a meanness to this that we haven't seen in four
and a half seasons. Indeed we've been
sensing more of an edge to Bayliss as Season 5 has progressed. At first the
viewer might think its his trying to prove himself but he's been getting
angrier in multiple cases, particularly against McPhee Broadman in his last
case before Frank returned to the street.
We've known Bayliss to take cases more personally then any other detective
since the series began but with every case this season he's been going into
darker territory and in this episode he explodes. Not just at Pembleton but
everyone he encounters.
The viewer knows right from the teaser that this
case will be a trigger for him: Bayliss and Pembleton are called to the scene
of another clearly abused African-American adolescent who has been killed and
mutilated. The 'Previously On' sequence
makes it clear what we're going to get when it flashes back to Requiem for Adena
where we saw the murder of Janelle Parsons in exactly the same way. So when Tanya Thomson is found on the street the
viewer thinks they know what they're going to get. Certainly I did when the
teaser aired. I couldn't have been more wrong.
We can tell when Bayliss says: "Murdered
little girl? Call Bayliss and Pembleton! We've got lots of experience!"
Pembleton actually asks Bayliss if he'll be okay. "People do not change.
Especially not you." Frank's both right and wrong today.
By any standard this case is one of the worst for
any the show has dealt with when it comes to a dead child. Tanya Thomson died
of blunt force trauma but as Cox grimly reports she's essentially been using
for a punching bag for months, if not years by the time she ended up being
dumped on the highway like she was a piece of trash. Even by this point Homicide
has dealt with nearly every permutation of the horror of a child being
killed (and so many of those times, they have met that death at the hands of
another child) but this one is worse than usual. But when Bayliss basically
tells Al that no one's going to report her missing he does so with a snideness
to his lieutenant that is becoming frequent with him. Al actually gets up and
is gentler than usual but then actually tells Frank and Howard that maybe they
should take the case with him given his history. Frank says he knows his
partner. He thinks its about Adena Watson. Again he's right and wrong.
This becomes clear when he starts going after Lynette
Thomson the moment they see her. He's sure that she knows who beat her daughter
to death, and while he's right he's actually going further. He starts pushing
Frank and making it clear that he will not be satisfied until Lynette Thomson
goes to jail as an accessory. When Frank says its their job to get the
boyfriend and that the punishment for Lynette is "she'll have to live with
her daughter being beaten to death," Bayliss says: "That's not good enough."
Giardello is right that Tim is too angry about
this case and he starts venting on everybody who might help him, including the
child services coordinator who he basically wants to lock up as an accessory and
scares her off before she could help them. And in his first interrogation he
basically accuses Lynette of being the one who beat her to death, eventually shouting:
"You were the one who was supposed to help her!" by the time she's in
the corner of the box.
At one point Bayliss has yelled at everybody and
is planning to get a confession from Lynette Thomson if he has to reach down
her throat. Frank responds sensibly and Bayliss's reaction is to talk to her
boyfriend alone saying: "You and I aren't working well together."
After a brilliant scene in which Al circles Frank in his most predatory fashion
and gets him to acknowledge how badly the case is going Frank basically chooses
to take his own approach. For the first time in the box he takes the approach
of the loving parent. He shows a picture of Olivia which gets Lynette smiling
and tells a story about him being upset with his daughter and shaking her to
quiet her down and talks about the difference between men and woman with
children.
The monologue Lynette delivers is one of the most
unsettling of Season 5 as she begins to relate exactly how things involving
Nelson unfolded. Its so matter of fact how things play out, the way she starts
talking about how he wants things a certain way and how she starts defending her
boyfriend instead of her daughter. Her justification for what she did is horrifying:
"I had to keep my family together. Tanya was dead and wasn't nothing I
could do about that." It's never clear if Lynette has been abused herself
(though watching her its impossible not to think of so many battered women over
the years) but the way she's so willing to defend what she did is frightening –
and all the more so with the denouement when she announces she's pregnant at
the end. "They'll be no problems with this one. This one's his." She
assures him with.
It's telling how Homicide works that the
other major storyline that has been going on practically since the season began
– Kellerman being called before a grand jury – unfolds almost as an anticlimax.
Kellerman's far from thrilled that no
matter what he's asked his attorney has advised him to take the Fifth. Kellerman
is upset because he wants it on the record he's innocent. The fact that his
attorney has told him that he didn't cop a plea means he's innocent isn't good
enough for him.
Kellerman watches the process unfold with
increasing rage. Mitch Roland, a man who has been responsible for burning down
countless buildings, has been given a deal that is so sweetheart even the judge
who has to do it all but degrades the attorneys who gave it. The fact that Roland
practically gloats at having got away with so many horrible thinks with barely
a year and a half in a jail couldn't be a bigger sign as to how little interest
Gail Ingram has in justice. She got her
headlines when the grand jury indicted and now she's fine sending all of those
involved to prison with what are, let's be honest, slaps on the wrist. Goodman,
Connally and Perez sold out their badges and she's taking them away and putting
them in jail for two or three years at the most. If the viewer wasn't so
invested in Kellerman's fate, we'd be inflamed – or perhaps amused - by how the federal justice system pretty
much works as the criminal justice system does.
Ingram is no more interested in taking her case to court than Danvers or
any other prosecutors are when it comes to murderers; all she wants to do is
get indictments that will get her picture in the paper and then plea out the
criminals to time that barely counts as punishment compared to the betrayals to
the public that both Roland and Goodman, Connelly and Perez are guilty of. There's an argument she cares about the public
good or justice even less than any of the detectives we've met: all she wants
is her name in the papers.
This is true even in her final interaction with
Kellerman to an extent. After months of pushing him of squeezing him demanding
he bend the knee and make her life easier, she stops short of asking him a
question. Supposedly it's because she's
impressed by his integrity but the truth is she doesn't need him anymore. It has
been framed as a convenient out but there's just as much a chance she would
have done the same thing no matter what Kellerman did. Three arson detectives, four arson detectives,
what's the difference really? (And as we'll see in the next episode, that
generosity only goes so far.) Perhaps Ingram's afraid that if he tells the
truth – and reveals that one of her key witnesses perjured himself – it will
undo every bit of work she's done building up this case. There's an implication
she's moved by his monologue of being willing to give everything he believes in
so that he can be a good cop but we also know the last thing an attorney wants
is a surprise in court that might lead to her long-term plans being derailed
and delayed. Even if that's not the case
maybe she has a full docket and she doesn't want to spend any more time on
this. Her statement could be considered moving but it could just be smoke and
mirrors. Given what we see of her in later episodes, I'm inclined to think it’s
the latter.
The problem comes when the writers try to measure
what Ingram is doing with Kellerman's scenario. He's convinced the other detectives
will invoke the blue wall. As he puts it:
So I tell the grand jury that I knew detectives
in my unit were dirty. What happens to me then? I'm gonna be brought up on charges
for failing to report the graft. If I manage to keep my badge after that, what
then? I gotta walk back in that building. Everybody's gonna look at me and know
I gave up other cops."
It's that part – particularly after so many years
of police involved shootings – that has aged the poorest. The show really wants
to equate knowing that cops violated the badge and keeping silent about it is a
virtue. This strikes against the entire
argument of Kellerman proclaiming his innocence this whole time. Failure to
report graft is a crime the same way taking a bribe is. Kellerman wants thinks that because he isn't
guilty of the crime he's accused of is the same of being completely
innocent. He's a cop. He knows the
difference between the two but in his case he sees no difference.
And it is worth noting his doing so is only at
the last minute. It's a noble gesture
and it would be good but the thing is this storyline has been going on for
three months and it has to have an ending. There was never going to be one that
didn't end with Kellerman back on the street – the show's called Homicide after
all – and there really wasn't a good way out.
To be clear Mike's self-righteous attitude at the
Waterfront is the definition of hypocrisy. It's not enough that he hasn't been
indicted and that they're not curious about how he got out from under it. His
attitude of saying: "I might as well have taken his money" is
self-righteous. He was guilty of a crime this whole period – he admitted as
much to Cox this very episode. And Lewis and Giardello have spent an enormous
amount of time and energy supporting him and trying to help him. What more does
Mike want? The best case scenario for Kellerman's
behavior is that he's pissed about having been pushed through the entire system.
But even that falls apart when you consider the next major storyline that's
going to befall him this season. With the benefit of thirty years of hindsight
it really seems Mike Kellerman was never a good cop at any point in his career.
It's harder to blame Bayliss for his attitude. A
man has beaten a child to death and a woman has been an accessory to it and the
murderer gets three years and the woman a suspended sentence and
probation. We've seen just how little
justice there is in the world but this really seems like the worst miscarriage
since Annabella Wilgus killed eight women and went to an asylum by pretending
to have DID.
However it’s the final scene of the episode that
brings Betrayal into classic status. Pembleton goes to find Bayliss who is
drowning his sorrows and again he thinks he knows why. Bayliss looks at him.
"Every murdered child, every abused child, I understand. Because all those
children are me."
"See my father's brother – I was five
years old – and he would follow me into the bathroom and he would lock the door
and he would take my hand in his. When he was finished he would smile and say,
'what a good boy was', and Oh yeah ---Shhh! And this went on for years. And my
parents couldn't understand why I'd cry every holiday, every time there's a
family gathering."
"So when I was eight years old, I'd tell my
father what had been going on. And it was a struggle to get those words out.
And he just stared at me. And he asked me why I was lying. And he was my father
and he was my father and he was supposed to protect me but he didn't Frank! I
mean for him, whatever was happening it was an inconvenience! I wasn't real,
Frank. I wasn't a real person! And he never saw me! He never looked at me ever!"
This episode has been a standout for Secor, but
the final monologue makes it arguably his finest hour and it stuns me as to why
he didn't even get nominated for an Emmy for this episode. This
basically ties in almost everything we know about Bayliss together so
brilliantly its even more astonishing to learn that Secor himself came
up with the storyline this season rather than Fontana or any of his writers.
Pembleton who always knows the right thing to say
is struck dumb. In another show this would be the moment that makes the
partners closer, particularly these two have always feuded. But when Frank
moves to Tim to try and hug him Bayliss pushes him away: "That's not why I
told you." Why did he? Was it to prove that for once Frank wasn't as smart
as he said he was?
The final line is the most stunning because its
so casual. "By the way Frank. I don't want to be partners anymore."
And a drunken Tim gets in a car and drives off, having gotten the last word for
once.
So what is the betrayal that the title refers to?
Connelly's betrayal of Kellerman at the grand jury? The way Lynette Thomson
betrayed her daughter? The way Tim thinks Frank has betrayed him? All we know
is that Frank may have recovered from his stroke but he's just had another set
of legs cut out from under him. And things are going to get even worse.
NOTES FROM THE BOARD
Detective Munch': When Mrs. Thomson says she's
looking for missing persons, Munch with his usually sensitivity says:
"They're usually the hardest to find." Not aware of the hornet's nest
he's stepping he walks in and asks Brodie who came up with the term 'missing
persons'. "If you're a person, you know exactly where you are. You're only
missing from someone else's point of view." I think we can all be grateful
Munch has been working in Homicide all this time; if he actually was in Missing
Persons he would be the worst person to help people.
Brodie Has Found A Home! The storyline of Brodie
being moving ends this episode with him moving in with a blond woman who calls
him "J.H." When Lewis sees her, he says the only reasonable thing:
"You're kidding?"
Hey, Isn't That… Latanya Richardson (now Latanya
Richardson Jackson) had already appeared in such films as Fried Green Tomatoes,
Malcolm X, Sleepless in Seattle and Lone Star by the time she appeared as Lynette
Thompson in Homicide. She's become one of the more prominent character
actresses in TV and film ever since. She played Atallah Sims in the A & E courtrooms
series 100 Centre Street and has since starred in such films as Introducing Dorothy
Dandridge, The Fighting Temptations and Mother and Child. Her most notable role
in TV was as Norma O'Neal on the acclaimed HBO series Show Me A Hero written by
David Simon. Her husband, Samuel L. Jackson, is somewhat prominent in films and
TV himself.