
(S04E10) "It's always something." - Charlie
Great episode! I've always wondered when Don's team would encounter a situation right in their own building. While this wasn't on the grand scale that I imagined, this was still pretty damn good. Plus, you have to admit, right from the beginning it felt like a math problem. Two guys in a box. Sounds like the type of thing that was probably tossed around the conference room table when this show was originally developed. Sounds exactly like the type of thing that Charlie can take apart with theories and equations. And that's just what he did.
Lots of things really came together well here. First off (as I previously mentioned in that episode where Amita got involved with that online role playing game), this show in infinitely better in my opinion when one of the team members has a personal stake in the case. This time, David's life was on the line. Right away, the tension was ratcheted up.
Secondly, it was great to see Enrico Colantoni back on TV. I never watched Veronica Mars but was a huge Just Shoot Me fan. He'll always be Elliot to me. So to see him here as some paranoid nut, ready to take his own life? You've gotta love it. I always like to see actors take on tiny guest starring roles that go completely against what you're used to seeing them play.
The third big thing for me was seeing the Eppes family work together. You don't always see that interaction between Don, Charlie, and Alan all at the same time. Charlie had his theories, Don had his hunches, and Alan had his architectural and engineering knowledge. They all contributed and it was great. Having Alan that involved in an episode is a good thing all by itself if you ask me.
So the general plot... let me see if I got all this. Colantoni played Ben Blakely, an FBI subcontractor specializing in surveillance. He was watching a bunch of mob figures for a RICO case. The case ended but the warrants remained open. So his case officer, who was retiring and taking a position as the security expert for a mayoral candidate, had Ben bug the candidate's biggest threat under the guise that he was still doing RICO work. The candidate being watched by Ben had his own surveillance team. After some scandalous info got out because of Ben's work, the other surveillance team figured out Ben was watching them. So they watched back. Ben wasn't crazy. He was being bugged. However, he thought it was his case officer and the FBI. Cue the rest of the episode... whew, deep breath.
Pretty good plot actually. There really are two sides to everything... except Don's relationships. Liz Warner has left the building. I'm sure we'll still see her from time to time (kind of like we did anyway), but her and Don made amends and she took an assignment with another team. She's gone.
We also found out that Larry and Megan are officially getting back together. The biggest revelation for me was from Charlie though. We know Charlie is smart. That's a given. We've never really seen him struggle with it though. We've heard the stories about his awkward childhood. After Don snubbed Charlie and his suggestion of applying a Chinese box theory, we saw a side of Dr. Eppes I don't think we've ever really seen. He said that he failed to communicate his ideas properly. He failed to make himself understood because sometimes complex ides are so clear to him in his head that he can't properly translate them into words. It was sad really. I felt bad for him because someone so smart became instantly helpless.
Add in his frustrations about how his publisher is handling the book's publicity (the math is being "lost") and Charlie doesn't seem too happy right now. It'll be interesting to see how Don's reaction to Charlie affects their future collaborations. Too bad there's only one pre-strike episode left. It airs "sometime" in January.
This week's numb3rs: 25 years, 500 hours of video, 2.4 gigahertz, 2 player game
This week's math: Chinese Box















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
12-16-2007 @ 12:29AM
Duane said...
I liked the episode in general, except for the Chinese Room thing. If you've done any programming, in particular any artificial intelligence, you know what the chinese room is and for the life of me I didn't see how it applied. Chinese room starts with the premise that you don't know what the rules of the man in the box are, and here we put two men in a box and said that the solution is to leave the decision inside the box? Seems like it would have been an easier sell to compare it to Schrodingers Cat (by observing you force an outcome, so don't observe), or even the Prisoner's Dilemma.
What I did like was the way the splitting of the two infrared images was so trivial that he was doing it as a sideplot and not even paying attention to it (and also the "inverse geometry" that traced the video signals). Made a nice point that the math can do a number of things and every case is not always about one specific mathematical theory.
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12-16-2007 @ 12:29AM
Jimmy said...
The elevator plot struck me as kind of cliche, but I liked this episode a lot -- we saw the office (and the characters' personalities) from different angles, which was refreshing. It seemed to me like someone else was at the helm.
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12-16-2007 @ 10:16AM
Cj said...
I LOVE THIS SHOW GREAT EPISODE. I HOPE IT STAYS ON THE AIR. I THINK THE NETWORKS ARE INTERESTED IN THE RATING TO MUCH. GOOD SHOW...... MAYBE IF THE NETWORKS QUIT TRYING TO COMPETE WITH ONE ANOTHER. THIS IS A WELL ACTED SHOW.....
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12-24-2007 @ 9:51AM
eli said...
WHAT? only 1 more episode!!???
gahh. those writers need to get off strike. i can't live without numb3rs.
anyway. i did like the way that this episode involved one of the agents being in danger, but i was confused, did sinclair get shot or not? because in one part he says something like "a bulletproof vest would have bene nice" and holds his chest, but then he walks out of the elevator like he's totally fine.
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