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But while Linden and Holder waited for the ATM warrant to come through, which may take a day, a distraction was provided in the sudden disappearance of her own son Jack (Liam James). From there, the whole episode dropped the Rosie Larsen mystery and instead focused on Linden and Holder using their free time to search for Jack. And, along the way, they got to know each other a little better, too. In particular, we learned that Linden was abandoned by her mother at the age of five and grew up as a foster kid (passed around to various families growing up), how "mother figure" Regi is actually her probation worker, and that the case that obsessed Linden involved a boy who was taken into child protection when his father killed his mother and never got out of the system. We also learned that Holder has a sister called Liz, but isn't so dependable as an uncle, and heard more about his past addiction to crystal meth.
The frustrating thing about this episode is that, to be perfectly honest, this was the kind of character-building hour we needed much earlier in the season. I can see how difficult it is to find time away from the murder case (especially given The Killing's episode-to-day format and serialized focus), but perhaps that goes to show that the format itself is flawed. I'm glad we got some firm insights into Linden and Holder, and the episode was entertaining in its own right, but it was unfortunately reliant on the audience caring about Jack and Linden's relationship with her son. Unfortunately, we don't really. The previous 10 episodes haven't done a very good job developing Linden from the character she was introduced as in the pilot, with only a few moments scattered around that existed to shed light on certain family areas.
Overall, "Missing" was both irritating (so close to the end and we're given a character-building, mostly extraneous diversion?) and very enjoyable (the show actually found room to breathe and develop the two central character who have previously just been plot-devices to keep the mystery rolling along). I enjoyed it, but I wish this had been episode 4.
Aside
- The ATM machine footage amused me, as we'd previously discussed how US cop shows don't rely as much on CCTV as their British equivalents—so more often investigations use nosey neighbours and ATM cameras. And now this episode proves it!
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