Written by Henry Bromell
Directed by Whit Stillman
Ever since Season 2's 'Bop Gun' Homicide's writers have typically given at
least one episode in every subsequent season where they take a look at the
murders from the perspective of those who are left behind to deal with their
grief. These are without question some of the greatest episodes of the show's
history.
The Heart of a Saturday Night represents by far
the most fascinating variation on it we've yet seen. To this point all of the
episodes have involved murders where more attention was paid to the families of
the victims then the detectives. This episode takes a different approach. We
look at the story in two time periods. The first is the Saturday night when
three separate killings take place. We actually see the events proceeding
either the murder or the discovery of the victim in the opening of the episode.
We then follow each investigation as it takes place in more detail then
usual. None of them are easy to solve
and indeed one will be left open. And we see as each investigator goes through
the process of notifying the loved ones of the victims.
And on a parallel we see a group therapy session
that takes place some time after the original murders. In a throwback to the
early days of the show, the group therapy sessions take place in decolorized
scenes while the action in the squad room is in full color.
This episode is in many ways closer to a feature
film then we've seen on Homicide in a long time and that is in large
part because this is another occasion when Homicide has chosen a notable
film director to work behind the camera. In 1996 Whit Stillman was becoming
known as a major voice in independent films. He had been nominated for an Oscar
for his film debut Metropolitan, which would eventually win Best First
Feature and the Independent Spirit awards. He'd followed that up with Barcelona
in 1994and two years after that would do so with The Last Days of Disco in
1998. (He would make no other major films until the 2010s.) But unlike the
movies he made throughout his career, which mostly focused on upper-class
socialites 'Saturday Night' is arguably the grittiest and darkest work he has
done in his entire career. Compared to such other film directors who worked for
the show such as John McNaughton and Keith Gordon Stillman would seem to be an
odd choice for the material. But as always he handles it well.
Because the show was a sweeps episode the series
is also loaded with guest stars among those who grief. Rosanna Arquette is by
far the biggest name but we also see two actors who have a sufficient TV
imprint (See Hey, Isn't That…) Chris Eigeman and Polly Holiday. All three actors are astonishing as they each
give performances that show that they are all in different stages of grief.
Even more impressive is that this episode takes
an in-depth look at every member of the squad while these investigations are
going on as each of them has roots in them to an extent. For Lewis and Munch
this is bad news because one of the deaths took place at the Waterfront in the
midst of a bar brawl. ("That's the kind of publicity we don't need,"
Munch says accurately.) They are not assigned this case as Giardello makes it
clear to Howard that he will handle it and she will hold down the fort. This
surprises Howard (especially since the case will end up going under her name)
but Al makes it clear he needs this one.
Jude Silvio is angrier than the others because
his wife was killed in a carjacking. Carolyn Widmer seems depressed and seems
to intuit something horrible has happened to her husband even before the
notification takes place. And Mr. and Mrs. Rath the parents of the third victim
are the most divided. The mother is in denial about the kind of child their
daughter was and the father knew very clearly who she was. She's been missing
for two days and the mother seems unwilling to acknowledge anything is wrong.
Her father is the one who calls the cops.
Jude spends the entire episode, both in the
present and the future, angry. He is angry at the cops because they couldn't
find his daughter. When they do find his daughter he's infuriated that they
can't catch the man who killed him. He calls them incompetent. The episode
shows that Lewis spends the episode desperate to find a way to close a case
which he knows in his heart is a stone cold whodunit. He focuses all his energy
on finding the daughter and after that goes first to Cox for help, which she
rightly says is a sign of desperation, and while cleaning up the Waterfront
goes out of his way to engage in an elaborate plot to figure out exactly who
the killer is. It's rare to see Meldrick this desperate to solve a case that is
clearly never going to be solved – and then we remember he has no one to go to
home to right now.
Giardello spends the night interviewing the
drunken witnesses to the bar brawl, most of whom are too plastered, hung over
or angry to be coherent. Finally he runs into a very hung over man who vaguely
remembers seeing Jack Widmer hitting on a woman at a bar and he chose to cut
in. He doesn't even remember hitting him with the beer bottle that killed him.
Carolyn is very expansive about how she feels complete empathy for the man who
did it and is the most open about how much of drunkard and womanizer her husband
was. Her main reason for anger is that she was planning to leave him that night
and instead her husband left her. Once again her husband left her with the last
word and she hates him for it. (You gotta love the ways she says she slams The
Waterfront in her last statement.)
After talking to them Bayliss says that according
to her parents "Dad wouldn't be surprised if she was Satan's little
disciple and Mom thinks she got lost on her way to the prom." Part of it
is no doubt because the mother had her at 40 and like all mothers wants to see
the best in her daughter. In the therapy session the two of them are sniping at
each other but its clear that the father has a clearer perspective of Lila then
her mother does. Lila hasn't been home in two days and her mother doesn't think
anything's wrong even though she hasn't come home for her sixteenth
birthday. She refuses to accept what
happened to her daughter even though her husband knows right away.
Pembleton has chafed at being chained to his desk
but he's been trying to prove that he deserves to go back out. In the last few
episodes he has been offering Bayliss advise on how to handle investigations
but he stills trying to overreach. In the opening he tries to force Giardello
to send him on the street and Al once again has to push him down. Kellerman is
not much happier but he's willing to do the busy work when it counts. He agrees
to go through the search to see if there are any carjackers and is more than
willing to update Al about the progress of the cases. And he has yet to lose
the sympathy for the job; when no one can clearly identify the victim he says
its sometimes worse when they're anonymous. The Raths would beg to differ.
Its interesting to see the interactions between
Kellerman and Pembleton in particular because ever since he was introduced the
two men have rarely interacted, even on red balls. There's logic to this: both
men have partners and as we've seen their personalities were diametrically
opposite when we met Kellerman.
Interestingly while both have been chained to
their desks for the past month we haven't seen them interact that much. Mike
tries to make an effort to reach out to Frank and talk to him and Frank, in his
inimitable fashion, thinks Mike is condescending to him. Mike tries hard to say
things are alike: "We're both stuck at our desk. We're both pissed off
about it. I'd say we have something in common."
And Frank demonstrating the delicacy he always
does says: "You are accused of a crime. Not me." Now its worth noting
this is the first time anyone in the squad has been direct to Mike about what's
going on and Mike calls him on it: "I'm accused of being dirty, so I'm a
class below you. And you're clean because all that happened is your brain
frizzled and popped."
This is by far the cruelest thing any one has
said about Frank's condition since he returned to the unit, Even when Munch
mocked him in the early episodes he was never this insulting. But in the case of Mike its almost
justifiable when he calls Frank on the bs he's been showing to everybody since
he came back.
"You're not just arrogant. You're vain.
You're like a pretty girl who never wants to show the bad sign of her
face."
When Frank tries to modify it by saying he never
said Mike was dirty and Mike fires back he never said otherwise, its one of the
few times that Mike's superiority in the face of these charges is justifiable.
And Frank clearly takes it as a challenge. Immediately afterward he goes into
the aquarium and starts to interview the crackheads who haven't been telling
the truth about what they saw in the alley.
That will eventually lead to him figuring out
that the crackheads saw Gary Swern, the local scum in the ally, A convicted
rapist just out of Jessup his aunt, the woman who raised him, is all but hoping
that Bayliss can find the evidence in her house that would put her nephew away
for good. Bayliss does find the evidence and though we don't see it play out,
it's pretty clear that he manages to get Swern to confess to the murder.
Maybe the final scene between Kellerman and
Pembleton isn't surprising. Considering that so many people in the squad have
been ridiculously polite to him ever since he came back Frank no doubt
appreciates someone saying to his face what he no doubt thinks the majority of
the people in the department actively think of him coming back. Kellerman is
the first person in a long time who tells Frank his pushing back against
everybody since he got here that maybe the person he's been holding on to all
this time wasn't particularly pleasant to begin with.
And so by the end of the episode when both men
are looking at the sky he says: "Kellerman, you're okay by me." He
doesn't say he believes Mike; he doesn't tell Mike he'll get through this
intact. He just says that as far as he's concerned he has no problem with
Kellerman. And for Mike that's actually enough at least tonight. He gives the
first smile we've seen him give since this ordeal began and then lays on his
back and looks at the moon.
Giardello tells Kay after he manages to close the
Widmer's murder case that the reason he did it was that he still feels guilt
for the murder of Raymond Dessassy. But the writers are too smart to argue that
by solving this changes anything. Al knows that he still is good police but it
doesn't change the fact he killed a man. When he asks Howard if because Webster
made a lapse in judgment he's guilty Howard says he's responsible. Al knows
he's responsible too and though it's never mentioned again (at least on the
series) we know he will carry it forever.
It is not until the final scene that we find out
what links to get her. In her last encounter at the morgue Juliana Cox tells
Meldrick she has somewhere to be on a Saturday. Now in the final scene she
tells us she's late and that she's been attending groups like this for weeks.
It is here we get the horrible truth behind her
father's death. We assumed that when he passed in M.E., Myself and I it was because he succumbed to an illness.
In fact his car was run off the road several weeks ago in what appears to have
been a deliberate act. He lingers for weeks refusing to die and then finally
his body gave out. It's a stunning revelation that once again adds layers to
Cox's character – and unfortunately will rarely be mentioned again.
I've little doubt that Juliana recognizes all
four members of the group from her work at the morgue, even if she can't
immediately put names to faces. (Carolyn makes the link immediately; its not
clear if Jude and the Raths do.) Mr. Rath and Jude have been sniping at each
other the entire episode and Juliana's remarks manage to cause a truth.
Carolyn has a fitting last remark about what's
happened. "I'm all alone. But (Mr. Rath) you lost a child but you still
have your wife and (Jude) lost a wife but you still have your child. There has
to be some comfort in that."
And for the first time Jude lets his guard down
and says the truth: "No there isn't." Mr. Rath agrees with him. The
final moments show the four members of the group at their homes. Mr. Rath says
he and his wife can't go home any more and when they do they can't sleep.
"You have to be free to sleep. And we're trapped by this thing that
happened to us."
The fact that the final image of the episode is
of Gary Swern in lockup makes the metaphor clear. Everyone in this group is as
much a prisoner as the people who took their loved ones lives. Just because
there are no bars doesn't make it any less a cage
NOTES FROM THE BOARD
'Detective Munch'
In the midst of cleaning up the Waterfront Munch reveals the meaning of
life to an uninterested Meldrick. The thing is with Munch it makes perfect
sense.
"Life is basically an ironic experience. Let
me give you an example. Say that you start out life trashing the establishment.
Calling cops pigs, thumbing your nose at authority. What is the most ironic
thing that could possibly happen to you? Becoming a cop, right? Well, look at
me right. What am I?"
This may be the most self-aware John has ever
been or will ever be on Homicide. Of course then he spoils it. "Ironies
and Human Emotion by John Munch. I think J.P. Sartre's hearing footsteps, don't
you?" Lewis, who is going through the wreckage of the Waterfront, demands
Munch shut the hell up.
Hey Isn't That… This will be a long one.
Rosanna Arquette is the oldest sibling of the
famous acting family with a career stretching back to her teenage years in ABC
Afterschool specials, Eight is Enough and the role in the short-lived series
Shirley. Her breakout role came as Nicole in the Emmy winning miniseries The
Executioner's Song where she played the girlfriend of Gary Gilmore. She became
a film sensation in 1985 when she starred in Desperately Seeking Susan,
Silverado and After Hours. Her major work in television was in mini-series and
TV movies such as Son of the Morning Star and Fear City. Movie fans know her best as Jody, the heavily
pierced girlfriend who reacts to Mia Wallace's adrenaline shot with the famous
line "That was trippy."
She has acted with less frequency in the 21st
century, though she has worked somewhat in TV. She played Cherie in The L Word
and played Nicole in the ABC drama What About Brian for two seasons. Her most
prominent role was in the first season of Ray Donovan when she played Linda,
Mick's girlfriend who meets the end of a gun
and then as the voice of a dolphin.(No it doesn't make sense even if I
explain it.) She has since appeared as the mother of the title character in
Ballard.
Chris Eigeman made his film debut in Whit
Stillman's Metropolitan and would also have roles in Stillman's Barcelona and
Last Days of Disco. This role was relatively early in his career. Not long
after he would be cast as Arthur in It's Like, You Know an ABC sitcom that
aired one season. He appeared as Bill Moyers in the Emmy winning HBO film Path
To War and Lionel over four seasons of Malcolm in the Middle. He also played
Jason, one of Lorelai's potential love interests in Season 4 of Gilmore Girls.
(Right before she and Luke finally got together.) A favorite of Amy
Sherman-Palladino he had a guest appearance in Bunheads and the final two
seasons of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. Aside from that he basically stopped
acting after a 2012 appearance in Girls.
Polly Holiday was had starred in TV for several
years before she had her break out role as Flo on the classic comedy Alice.
With her famous line of 'Kiss My Grits' her character was so iconic she even
had her own spinoff for one season. She never achieved that success again but
was a constant force in television with numerous guest roles and several
regular roles. The year before she was cast as Mrs. Rath she had played Momma
Love on The Client. In her film career she starred in Gremlins, Mrs. Doubtfire
and The Parent Trap. Her last film role was as Diane Plame in Fair Game. She
passed away in September of 2025 at 88.
Get the DVD: The montage sequence that shows what is
happening during the long Saturday night from the victims deals with their
grief to Meldrick bringing the baby home triumphantly in the streaming is
absent the song that makes it a classic: The Eels 'Not Ready Yet'. Trust me it
absolutely doesn't have the same power without it. She has since appeared as
the mother of the title character in Ballard.