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Revision as of 21:18, 2 February 2014
The ingredients are all straightforward enough: a girl is kidnapped; her wealthy father wants to move heaven and earth to find her; a homeless man seems to have guilty knowledge, but is actually psychic.
But Garrett--the clairvoyant vagrant--is not lyrically crazy, like, say, River Tam of Firefly, but absolutely devastated by his years of enduring visions and other manifestations of people's psychic pain. He isn't unstable, he is shattered.
That super-rational Fraser even believes him may seem odd, but Fraser has always been warmly humanistic as well as logical and observant; a trait that here sets him against Vecchio and, even more so, against Agents Ford and Deeter, two arrogant FBI agents sent to find the missing girl.
Includes a car chase scene that is made completely awesome by being set to the Tragically Hip's "At the Hundredth Meridian".
At the very end, we see Fraser's first serious ethical lapse (eavesdropping on Ray and Fran), followed shortly by the first crack in his ironclad self-control (kicking the water fountain).
Tropes
- Clingy Jealous Girl: Fran.
- Fingertip Drug Analysis: Fraser picks out cumin in a chili recipe.
- Lemming Cops: Averted hard. The cops in the high speed chase are all shown to be very competent, with the first car to chase the fugitive driving backwards before doing a hairpin turn at the start of the chase (the guy took off running the other way from behind them).
- Literary Allusion Title - Hamlet I.v
- Mad Oracle: Garrett.
- No Good Deed Goes Unpunished
- Title Drop
- Hot Pursuit: Accompanied with Hundredth Meridian by the Tragically Hip.
- Seers