When they get involved with Roger's family, I kept waiting and waiting for the shoe to drop on what Roger's kink was. It seemed to take to long and it seemed too obvious that something was off with the family.
At first I thought the little girl looking for Angel the cat was a sign that the killer was after a different family and wanted to get rid of the girl first. I was was confused for a while until I saw the cat in the trunk.
I thought the phone call between Marty and Rebecca was a bit annoying, it seemed like a competition of who was the more insightful, intelligent one and that bugged me.
The final scene with Roger, Rebecca and Marty rocked big time. That was the first time I actually seemed to get what Rebecca felt.
I thought the phone call between Marty and Rebecca was a bit annoying, it seemed like a competition of who was the more insightful, intelligent one and that bugged me.
I think that was the point. He had already got into their office, and this was just a continuation of the battle.
First of all, would the bad guy be likely to ring the bell? And second of all, would it really be the best course of action for all four of them to head for the door, rather than to spread out and guard more than one possible entrance?
This bugged me.
It also bugged me that they just walked in, no guns, when Roger called out that the door was open. I noticed that Rebecca started to pull her gun and Paul cautioned her against it, which fit with him stopping Rebecca as she questioned the wife (compassion/don't scare the "innocent", etc.), but it still bugged. I was expecting a killer behind the door. I can't believe FBI agents are less paranoid than I am.
Otherwise, I really liked this episode.
I think that was the point. He had already got into their office, and this was just a continuation of the battle.
It seemed a little too smarmy for me. I thought the battle in the final scene worked much better.
It just seemed to me that, whether the bad guy was at the door or not, they should expect something bad at other doors too/instead.
That was my point, too. The doorbell seemed like such an obvious misdirect.
That was my point, too. The doorbell seemed like such an obvious misdirect.
Danny gets on his walkie. I assume, and maybe I'm taking a gigantic mental leap, here, that the house is otherwise covered, and the walkie was to cover the back.
But then wouldn't someone have radioed them to warn them that someone was coming to the door?
But then wouldn't someone have radioed them to warn them that someone was coming to the door?
Maybe. But then we'd miss that scene.