PacificLilly : *End of the road* "little J G said yeuhh" 🤣🤣🤣🎶🤣🤣🤣
Fezza : If you are suffering from insomnia this is the cure.
etim : Decent story, 'based on true events', well made but waay too long.
Sally : Alex's last episode he did
grasshopper rex : A younger, angrier Bosch.
boger-t : believe "charly" was better, cliff robertson was amazing and won an academy award for best...
greyfur : Was actually O.K., had to watch on YouTube, as dood tends to crap the bed on me part way t...
DJensen : Contains spoilers. Click to show. It's a short story, actually. "P.S. Please put flowers on Algernon's grave for me." I'll n...
skoooper : Masterpiece tbh and also very sad
The last 3 episodes this season have consisted largely of narrative, subjective overall stories and recollections with little to no police evidence, interrogations, trial transcripts or pictures. This episode, for example, is tedious due to the emotion-driven, though detached, memories from the mother of William Patrick Anderson who murdered his 17 year old girlfriend in 1992 when he feared she would reveal that he had stolen her grandfather’s credit card and accumulated $8,000 in charges, YET, this is not revealed until last minutes of the episode. In the meantime, Joyce Alexander, tenatively wades through a tedious combination of feelings and memories of her son. This episode, like most of this season, is not a good example of why this series has made it 7 seasons. Prior to this season, episodes were well constructed, peppering actual evidence with relevant recollections and memories, but never solely relying on a subjective view of the case. I hope that future episodes revert to the former formula for delivering a coherent and informative watch for the viewer.