Home » TV Series Reviews » Criminal Minds Suspect Behavior Season 1 Episode 8 Review and Watch: Night Hawks
Apr
07

Episode 8 of Criminal Minds Suspect Behavior titled “Night Hawks” poses one question: Is it true that the acorn doesn’t fall far from the tree?

You can relate the question on the events on the said episode especially when Cooper and his team went to Tulsa to stop the killing spree. So what else happened?

TV Fanatic: Last week there were a few fans that scoffed at my declaration that Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior had hit its stride. To those fans I can only reply with, See! as this week’s episode helped to certify the comment.

Lets take a look at a few points of what made this episode so good and my statement so correct:

Leonard Keane: Even after we know that Keane has brutally killed three people, you couldn’t help but feel his pain and struggle of his wife on the verge of being evicted from the hospital and the repeated harassment. Keane was incredibly portrayed by William Sanderson who I always enjoy seeing perform. His reaction to his cat being killed and left on his porch nearly made me want to pick up a bat!

Teamwork: From the moment Cooper introduced the team to the Tulsa PD all the way through them working out who Keane was, they worked like a precision instrument. I especially enjoyed them showing off Beth’s “special power” of being able to profile Leonard from his speech and dialect on the phone call. Additional, Cooper’s retort that she had been fired before being proven right on another case did a nice job of humbling her while showing some banter between them.

Imagery: While I know this will be a bit more subjective, we can all agree having the opening scene be an interview featuring Keane that actually turned out to be about his son, but also a foreshadowing of his behavior. Then using his comment from the same interview as the closing scene of the episode provided some fantastic symmetry.

Story: When you blend the idea of “we are our parent’s children” with the question of “are killer’s born that way or become that way?” you get a plot that is nearly tangible it has so much substance to it. Increasing the potency of this mix is having someone like Sanderson present this story to us.

There were so many subtle layers to this episode I am planning on rewatching it this weekend.  I am pretty sure there is some additional imagery and messaging in the conversation(s) that Cooper and Keane had about darkness and looking into those dark places that I didn’t fully absorb on the first pass. If you happen to have caught it, please comment below and enlighten me in.

Surprisingly, I have no complains on this episode. I think the case is good, the team worked well, and the episode as a whole is commendable.

You can check other Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior Reviews and Spoilers HERE.