Mastodon Mastodon Mastodon Mastodon Mastodon Bones - The Lost in the Found and The Verdict in the Victims - Review


    Enable Dark Mode!

  • What's HOT
  • Premiere Calendar
  • Ratings News
  • Movies
  • YouTube Channel
  • Submit Scoop
  • Contact Us
  • Search
  • Privacy Policy
Support SpoilerTV
SpoilerTV.com is now available ad-free to for all premium subscribers. Thank you for considering becoming a SpoilerTV premium member!

SpoilerTV - TV Spoilers

Bones - The Lost in the Found and The Verdict in the Victims - Review

19 May 2015

Share on Reddit


If you're anything like me, you were a little bit confused by the back-to-back showing of episode 17, "The Lost in the Found", and episode 18, "The Verdict in the Victims". The episodes had no mutual ground, thematically or structurally. They weren't two parts of an overarching storyline...in fact, one of them was the conclusion of a storyline that began a few episodes back!

As such, I won't spend an abundance of time discussing them. At the end of this post, however, I will reveal the one thing that the two episodes have in common. Let's see if you saw what I saw.

Episode 17, "The Lost in the Found", focused on the death of a bright-but-quiet teenage girl named Molly. Unlike most deaths on the show, this one turned out to be self-inflicted; a bitter attempt to convict some high school mean girls of a murder they didn't commit. Bones found herself relating to Molly's struggles, and deeply lamented that Molly didn't realize that her quality of life would improve once she escaped boarding school and youthful hormones.

Back in the lab, Daisy (the squintern of the episode) was struggling with the possibility of new romance after Sweets's death and the birth of their child. Unfortunately, the show didn't focus much on the love interest, just on Daisy's deliberations, but Hodgins managed to inject some humor into the whole ordeal with some well-timed comments about how quickly she went from thinking about the date in abstract to creating an entire potential relationship. Slow down, Daisy!

"The Verdict in the Victims", episode 18, touched back to the murders uncovered in episode 13, "The Baker in the Bits". Those of you who regularly visit this blog might recall that I mentioned something about that storyline feeling "off", and hey - Brennan and I had something in common!

In the earlier episode, an ex-convict named Alex Rockwell was accused of killing multiple ex-cons in a ritualistic manner. One of the 4 bodies discovered was still unidentified, but the other 3 held enough evidence to convict him, and we reconnected with him as he awaited his execution. While reviewing the details of the case, Brennan began to question her own findings. The bulk of the episode was committed to finding out who the mysterious 4th victim was and determining any other connections that may point to another killer. It works, too; the Jeffersonian team saved Rockwell and caught the right man at the very last minute.

This was an interesting break from the traditional format of the show; I wish they did two-parters like this more often! At its core, Bones is a procedural drama, and after 10 years on the air, that formula can start to get a little stale.

Another potential show shake-up hit us from Angela and Hodgins, who started contemplating a move to Paris. It would break my heart if this couple left the show, but Hodgins made a damn good point when he admitted, "After 10 years I think we deserve to let life surprise us." Let's just hope it's good surprises.

All right, thanks for bearing with me through these less-than-thrilling episodes! As promised, I'll close out the post by discussing the common thread between these two: Brennan wore Booth's necklace, bought with money he won by gambling behind her back.

We haven't heard much about Booth's gambling in the last few episodes; it would be easy for most viewers to forget the relapse altogether. But for me, the evidence of his addiction practically screams at me from Brennan's throat. As long as that necklace is there, it means that a big, potentially harmful secret is still lurking in the shadows. How long will it stay there? And what will happen when it all comes into the light?



About the Author - entropyki
Ki (aka entropyki) is a UX Researcher, roller derby enthusiast, Star Wars nerd, and road tripper. When she's not at a computer, she's driving, singing, watching TV, and generally being a badass, plus-sized twentysomething.

Favorite shows include Supernatural, Bones, Party Down, Futurama, Orange is the New Black, and the Big Bang Theory.


8 comments:

  1. I hope Angela and Hodgins don't leave.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Me too! I don't think the show would be the same without them. I was thinking fondly the other day of Hodgins admitting he loved Angela to Brennan wayyyy back in season 1 or 2, when they were trapped in that car together...all the feels. Thanks for reading!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I hope they do. Id love to see them really shake up the show. Brennan could leave the Jeffersonian and decide she wants to change her path in life and perhaps she joins the FBI as a Forensics type person. Angela and Hodgins move to Paris (and out of the show).

    That way you keep the show as a Procedural and you introduce Brennan to a new organisation to her that she has to learn to adapt to.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I doubt Angela and Hodgins will be gone for good. They will be gone over the shows summer hiatus. Liked Lost and Found better than Verdict mostly because it was nice to see the show use Brennan's past to inform what is gong on before her. Also I loved the ending because Brennan is confident enough in herself and relationship to Booth to admit she was scared. However their assertion that she was ignoring her pregnancy for that long and for the reason she gave was not good. Brennan would not ignore or deny something like that. Verdict was too predictable, I knew the killer from previous episode that set this show up that he was going to be the killer

    ReplyDelete
  5. I just watched "The Verdict in the Victims" and from start to finish I had the feeling I'd seen this episode before. Have they recycled this "saving a guy from death row" plot from an earlier episode or am I going crazy?

    ReplyDelete
  6. Never mind, I've just found it on Wikipedia: it was "A Man on Death Row" from the first series.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I loved that they used "With the Ink of a Ghost" by Jose Gonzalez when they halt Rockwell's execution and then Booth tells Bones he doesn't believe in the death penalty anymore and offers to make her a snack. Mostly because I just really love that song, but that scene was really great and they want together well. It had a great mix of seriousness but just enough of a light touch at the end that keeps it nice and balanced. But anyway good thing Brennan figured it out, otherwise an innocent man would've been put to death.

    ReplyDelete
  8. April Wierschke30 May 2015 at 05:15

    Am I the only one who saw that the school set they used in "The Lost In the Found" was from GLEE? I recognized it immediately! Any other GLEE fans recognize the set from Dalton Academy?

    ReplyDelete

NOTE: Name-calling, personal attacks, spamming, excessive self-promotion, condescending pomposity, general assiness, racism, sexism, any-other-ism, homophobia, acrophobia, and destructive (versus constructive) criticism will get you BANNED from the party.