Written by Lee Blessing & Joanne Blacke ;
story by Tom Fontana & James Shimurara
Directed by Uli Edel
It's important to know the difference between what
Homicide did that was truly revolutionary and what it just did extraordinarily
well. So much of what happens in 'Double Blind' falls in the latter category.
What might seem the most revolutionary part - revisiting the story of Chris Thormann, a character we met briefly in Season 1 – isn't
that different from what other TV shows had done in the past. Fontana himself
had done it more than a few times on St. Elsewhere and even then it was
territory that the two other shows that it was frequently company with in the
Emmys year in and year out, Hill Street Blues and L.A. Law would
do throughout their run, revisiting minor characters and certain storylines
sometimes multiple times over the course of their run. By the time 'Double
Blind' aired almost every network TV drama was doing so in a course of their
long runs: NYPD Blue, ER and Chicago Hope had already done so:
the former with cop and criminals, the latter with doctors, patients and even
friends of the staff. The show used the passage of time effectively to show how
so much of the minor characters had been radically effected by their time on
the show while the series regulars frequently barely remembered with the
passage of time.
In the case of Chris Thormann it is more personal
for Meldrick Lewis. Thormann is one of the last living connections to Steve
Crosetti and he played a vital role in the arrest and conviction of Charlie
Flavin. So the news that Flavin is being given early parole stuns him more than
if this were to come up with another case. It's worth noting that this is the
first time in Homicide's run that it has dealt with a parole hearing in
regard to a former felon: the series has dealt with old cases and revisited the
men they've sent to prison but its never dealt with what happens when they get
a chance at freedom. (Fontana had actually visited this scenario with St. Elsewhere but in a far more
melodramatic context for its character and ending.) Lewis is infuriated when he
learns Flavin is up for parole after just four years, which would be upsetting
enough were it not for the detached matter of the board. They don't even know
Crosetti's dead, which infuriates him further. The fact that Flavin has gotten
special circumstances – there was a riot and he carried one of the guards to save a guard and then went back to negotiate
the lives of the other hostages –
astonishes Meldrick when he learns the truth.
For all that Homicide chooses to spend the
episode looking at it not through the affect it has on Meldrick but rather Chris
and Eva. The show is more daring, showing us for the first time the circumstances
that led to Chris' shooting and how he ended up blind. We saw Chris through the
period of his physical recovery, watched him after his son was born and a
lesser show would have him be able to move on. Homicide has never been
one of those show and in a season which has been looking both at the pasts of
the regulars and the traumas of so many recurring characters, its only fitting
'Double Blind' chooses to do so with one of its first.
Tergesen and Falco were very early in their careers
as actors when they were cast in Homicide back in 1993 and both of them
have gained a lot in the four years since. Tergesen shows it in that scene
where he tells Meldrick just what his life has become like since his world went
black and how he's felt impotent in a way that he never has now that he's
working in medical answering phones. Falco has a remarkable scene as well when
she tells Meldrick just how exhausted it is that her husband has never been able
to let going of being a cop and how 'he has to let go of the jazz'.
He gets some encouraging works from Mike, who
seems to be trying to rebuild after everything that happened. When he sees
Lewis in a brown study and tells him about what's going on with Flavin Meldrick
confesses that's he taking on the responsibility of Crosetti and he doesn't know
if he can do it. Kellerman assures him that he knows the right words at times and
Lewis takes it better then last time. Mike assures him to go help his friend.
Meldrick does so by talking through as well as cheering him up by saying that
in addition to Gee and Howard, everybody from the Commissioner to Ray Charles
wrote a statement is support of Thormann. The officer who Thormann saved is at
the parole hearing and what should be an awkward scene shows a kind of unity
between those who wear the badge.
But the most powerful moment comes when Chris
sets aside his victim impact statement and speaks from his heart and says this isn't
about that:
"If this is about whether Charlie Flavin is
ready for a new future then I don't know. I'm still working on a future. It
might take a year, it might take 20, it might take a lifetime. But I'm gonna
get there. And when I do, I promise to let you all know. And then maybe we can
talk about Charlie Flavin."
It's a powerful moment, all the more so because
Lewis never learns what it is he said. Only Chris and Eva know and neither
tell. It works because Flavin's parole is denied
As if that were not enough we see Bayliss and Pembleton
officially get back on the horse: "Together again," Bayliss says.
"For the first time," Frank gets the last word. Their first official
murder will not be a pretty one. In a way we saw the set up for it in the
teaser when a young woman came to the squad screaming about how her father beat
her mother and that he was going to kill her. We see just how badly the process
failed her – and Gee does too – and we see what is the inevitable consequence.
It takes a while for the show to get that point when we learn about the murder
of Franz Rader, a man shot three times. Cox tells them that its clear the
bullets were on a downward trajectory. Brodie has been around long enough to
know what this means: "The victim was on his knees." Even Bayliss is
impressed.
We learn Franz Rader has beat his wife Lucille
multiple times but the battered woman has never chosen to call the police once.
After the most recent horrible beating it becomes clear Billie, the daughter,
who we saw in the teaser took her mother to the hospital after he nearly beat
her to death. Even more shocking is just how willing Lucille is to apologize
for Franz's actions and how almost immediately afterward she's willing to
testify against her daughter.
This infuriates Frank in a way we haven't seen in a long time. Some of
it may have to do with the breakup of his marriage – he may be projecting
Mary's decision to leave onto Lucille's decision to stay – but it more likely
has to do with the fact that two hours after her husband died she's willing to
sell her daughter out, Bayliss, for once,
is the logical one: he knows two hours later Lucille is still in shock.
At work Rader's partner is fully aware of the
kind of man he was with his wife and that he could never discuss it with him. One
of his chefs thinks the world of him, thinks he walked on water. This subtle dissonance
shows how effectively an abuser can separate his work life from his home life.
It's only when his colleagues mentions how horrible his childhood was that Bayliss
listens, particularly when he says: "You can't just go back into his
childhood and fix it, can you?"
While trying to find the girl Frank and Tim do
something we haven't seen them do: try to debate the punishment. In a reversal
Frank argues for manslaughter, justifiable homicide while Bayliss is arguing
for second degree murder. Both agree that the victim was a bastard but on who
the victim is: Bayliss thinks the mother was; Frank thinks Billie was. It
doesn't help when they learn that two of the bullets came when he was on his
knees and the third when he was flat on his back, a threat to no one.
Billie Rader seems to be doing everything she can
to put herself in for the most severe punishment: she's willing to confess when
she's finally arrested and when Frank tries to tiptoe around, to find a way for
Billie to admit to a lesser charge, she refuses to do it. She seems incredibly
angry even when she's confessing to the beatings her mother took, almost as if
she blames her mother for taking the abuse instead of her. No one in the squad feels happy about what
they have to do: Bayliss is by far the bluntest and angriest about it, but he's
just saying what everyone knows is necessary. "A bottom-feeding, wife-beating
member of the tribe," Bayliss admits. Pembleton can only laugh at the
irony. "You're the sensitive one, right?"
Monica Kenna's work in this episode is astonishing:
we see her powered by desperation in the teaser, anger and indignation in when
she's arrested, pride when she shouts about it and finally she starts to cry
when she relates her father was begging her not to shoot with his last words. There's
never a moment where our sympathy is with Billie even if she would deny that
sympathy for herself.
Afterwards Lucille tells the detectives that
Franz attacked Billie first and that she only fired in self-defense. This is
what Howard predicted would happen and Bayliss is still angry. Pembleton finally
calls him on it: "Lucille Rader suffered. She took every beating as if it
were her due. Billie, on the other hand…she took all the power and for one
moment at least, she won. They were the same. The sin was not their own."
Pause. "The sin is not your own."
That night
he goes back to his old district and is greeting by his old commander. He tells
Meldrick he'll always miss this and that someday Flavin will make parole. Both
of them know this. Chris seems to be willing to let go.
The same is not true in the final scene. Bayliss
is at a decrepit home, where his Uncle George, drunken, slovenly and unable to
take care of himself is there. He barely recognizes his nephew. "What am I
supposed to with my hate?" he asks him. We're a little terrified – but the
answer will be somewhat shocking to everybody.
Notes From The Board
From Simon's Book: The scene where Thormann
returns to the Eastern District is taken out of where his counterpart Cassidy
returns to the Eastern. In real life Cassidy recovered much quicker than he did
on TV.
Its Baltimore: Meldrick and Munch share their
mutual outrage over the Orioles decision to move Ripken from shortstop to third
base at the start of the 1997 season. (And we'll be talking more about the
Orioles and how their year went in just a few months' time.)
"Blasphemy!" Munch says. When Lewis dares argue "Ol Cal's lost a
step", Munch refers to him as the 'blasphemer to my immediate right."
"Detective Munch" Munch's reaction to
Cal Ripken being moved off shortstop. "What's next? Blue crabs with drawn
butter and the Union Jack being flown over Fort McHenry?"
One of the best ways that Homicide proves its not
your father's cop show is that after talking to a witness Frank says,
"Don't leave town." He then assures the pilot he's kidding. When
Bayliss remarks on this Frank says with a smile: "I've always wanted to
say that."
Not long before this episode was shot Tom Fontana
would cast Tergesen and Falco for roles in OZ the prison drama he was working
on with HBO. Tergesen would play Tobias Beecher, an attorney who was sent to
Oswald as an example by a judge and Falco would play Diane Wittelsey, a female
prison guard in Em City.
Hey, Isn't That…Monica Keena, who plays Billie Rader
seemed to start her career like gangbusters when she played Oksana Baiul at
fifteen in a TV movies. She then appeared in a series of well received
independent films including Ripe, Snow White; A Tale of Terror before appearing
on Homicide (she used the
name Monica Kenna) She then reached a level of coolness by playing the doomed
Abby Morgan on the second season of Dawson Creek, before starring in First Daughter
and Orange County. Her biggest role was in Judd Apatow's Undeclared, which while
not as cult as Freaks and Geeks was nearly as good. She later played Kristen in
the 2004 and 2005 seasons of Entourage. After that her career began to slow though
she would appear in Private Practice and do voice work in Beavis and Butthead.
She's acted only sporadically since then but is currently making something of a
return with four projects in development in the years to come.