Saffron: You're a good man. Mal: You clearly haven't been talking to anyone else on this boat.

'Our Mrs. Reynolds'


The Minearverse 4: Support Group for Clumsy People  

[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls and The Inside), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath.


Lee - Jun 24, 2005 9:03:39 am PDT #72 of 10001
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

I don't know about Roger turning into a killer or not, but wasn't it pretty well established that the other men were well on their way to killing? The Janitor had a death closet and drawings of women with their throats cut; one man was placed in graves he had dug, and the pre-filer's conversation with the guy in the car included statements on killing.


Kiba Rika - Jun 24, 2005 9:05:08 am PDT #73 of 10001
I may have to seize the cat.

ETA: Allyson, I actually really like your Popgurls piece. Sure it's defensive, but that's okay: you have that right. What's more, I like the melodrama. It fits.

Allyson, I liked it, too. It addressed some wonderings I'd been having, and explained to me why the show grabs you. It's good. And by far not at all a "Hey why are you saying mean things about my show?"-type piece, which I find impressive as I am among the most readily defensive of fans, and totally incapable of not just coming up with, "Well yeah, but YOU'RE STUPID!" when people critique something I truly love.

...also, I LOVED the bit with Danny and the kid, and I totally adore Katie Finneran. Every time she said or mouthed, "That's mine," I giggled. She's like if Scully were funnier, and I love her.


Allyson - Jun 24, 2005 9:07:14 am PDT #74 of 10001
Wait, is this real-world child support, where the money goes to buy food for the kids, or MRA fantasyland child support where the women just buy Ferraris and cocaine? -Jessica

"Well yeah, but YOU'RE STUPID!"

If you play it backwards, that's EXACTLY what it says, along with, "Eat at Denny's."


§ ita § - Jun 24, 2005 9:08:16 am PDT #75 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

The Janitor had a death closet and drawings of women with their throats cut; one man was placed in graves he had dug, and the pre-filer's conversation with the guy in the car included statements on killing.

I'd say that not only could any of these guys not followed through on it, but the first guy was comfortably in fantasy with props stage, and the guy in the car even further away.

I think Roger was the most arrestable of the bunch, honestly, although grave guy was well on the way.

The pre-filer, interestingly, was just being a proactive Web (who's willing to be executioner himself). But his "flaw" (which I agree with) was deciding where the irrevocable line was. And if he knew that the guy in the car would get up the gumption to kill someone, then I assume his knowledge is just as sound for the pedophile -- doesn't matter how many other pedophiles kill. This one, apparently, was going to.


bon bon - Jun 24, 2005 9:10:50 am PDT #76 of 10001
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

It does open up a question about how that changes the prefiler if he were executing people who wouldn't kill. ETA: I wrote that before ita's comment.

Anyway, I re-watched the last two eps with BF last night. He liked them. And they both stood up to re-watch: little moments I missed before, like the repeated use of the word "control" in last week's ep.

Having rewatched, I actually disagree that the way the potential killers were all mentioned as "serial killers" was so out of bounds as to be unrealistic. I don't know about you guys, but certainly some things at work I have expertise in I speak generally and incorrectly about in order to be more efficient. I might call a set of documents "motions" even though CLEARLY there's a pleading in there. (Kidding, kidding. I barely know the difference.)


Gris - Jun 24, 2005 9:23:35 am PDT #77 of 10001
Hey. New board.

Actually, ita, I'm not sure I don't agree. In fact, I probably agree, I just thought it through more with Roger because he was the one we got the most evidence of.

I do think the janitor guy was much closer to the murder stage than Roger: they are both, as you say, in the "fantasy" stage but I doubt Roger's fantasies involve their throats being slit. Or, rather, their heads in plastic bags. He's a sexual fantasizer, and I'd say he's probably about as close to molesting as the janitor was to killing, maybe. Still, a different line. Unless janitor had a manifesto we're not aware of.

Son of Sam in the car, not so sure about. There is no doubt that, just like Roger, he easily has the potential of pulling himself out of his cycle in a moment of reverie. But, again, his porn was snuff porn. That directly involves killing, specifically.

I certainly don't think that any of them are arrestable really, though janitor may be commitable, and car guy has the snuff porn. I just think that the evidence of Roger points more towards possible future child molestor much more than possible future killer. Which seems to go against pre-filer's M.O.

In succintness: certainly none of the pre-filer's victims deserved death (yet). But what evidence there is points that, ASSUMING they all go through with their patterns, car guy, ak-47 guy, janitor guy, and dug-graves guy are all going to kill. Roger, it seems to me, is going to rape kids. Depraved and disturbing, yes, but outside the pre-filer's pattern, and never fully explained in the ep. Explained by Tim, though: he picked him to screw with Rebecca. I just wish that we didn't come off, in that final scene with him looking at the girls, with the feeling that Rebecca was convinced he was still going to kill.


Allyson - Jun 24, 2005 9:23:47 am PDT #78 of 10001
Wait, is this real-world child support, where the money goes to buy food for the kids, or MRA fantasyland child support where the women just buy Ferraris and cocaine? -Jessica

I'd say that not only could any of these guys not followed through on it, but the first guy was comfortably in fantasy with props stage, and the guy in the car even further away.

Which is where I agree with infuriating!paul.

A lot of us here own weapons and porn and may have, on occassion, expressed violent fantasies about our bosses, or the POTUS.

Which, you know, is normal.

Owning the kiddie porn is illegal, and he should be prosecuted for that, but aside from taking pics, he's never acted on his fantasy. I assume there are a great many more people who fantasize about children, or rape, or the family dog, who never act upon that impulse.

He may have kept that impulse a pure fantasy, using the porn, but never actually acting out the fantasy.


Polter-Cow - Jun 24, 2005 9:24:02 am PDT #79 of 10001
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

little moments I missed before, like the repeated use of the word "control" in last week's ep.

Wow. You missed that? I was ready to start a drinking game. (Note: I liked the repeated use anyway.)


§ ita § - Jun 24, 2005 9:27:05 am PDT #80 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I doubt Roger's fantasies involve their throats being slit.

Why?

I firmly believe people get off on stuff they'd never do. Snuff porn does not a sexual killer make.

Basically, what Allyson said. I have no idea if they were going to follow through or not, any of them, but I don't see the rationale for singling one out and say he probably wasn't going to.


Jessica - Jun 24, 2005 9:31:33 am PDT #81 of 10001
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

My impression of Rebecca's analysis (correct or not) was that Roger was going to kill the girls to punish them for turning him on, as well as to remove the object of his desire in order to cure himself of wanting them.

I'm not sure I buy into any of the pre-filing as valid -- if they hadn't commited crimes, then they were merely people with depraved fantasy lives, not criminals -- but for what it was, her reading of Roger seemed as valid to me as any of the others.