Bobby and Nicole Wallace match wits again as he and Eames attempt to solve the murder of a health inspector.Bobby and Nicole Wallace match wits again as he and Eames attempt to solve the murder of a health inspector.Bobby and Nicole Wallace match wits again as he and Eames attempt to solve the murder of a health inspector.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaEames and Goren discover that, in the lawsuit that Gwen's parents had filed against her mother's OB/GYN, the original amount awarded to Gwen was $3 million. Since syndication, this episode has been shown on various networks (including ION Television [WPXNH]). In the rebroadcasts of this episode, it can be noted that the award amount has been changed to $5 million. Eames' voice has also been dubbed over to reflect this change, but the viewer can still read her lips saying, "Three million, in trust to Gwen."
- GoofsGoren says Nicole Wallace cut Ella Miyazaki's throat, but at the end of the episode "Great Barrier", the medical examiner says Wallace crushed Miyazaki's trachea, and that the blood in the room was all Wallace's. Further, the picture in this episode of Miyazaki's corpse shows bruises on the throat but no cut.
- Quotes
Detective Mike Logan: Beauty, brains, and a complete psycho. My dream girl.
Featured review
Modern version of Classic Hollywood "Good vs Evil"
After Bobby Goren, there's nobody I enjoy watching more in this series than when Nicole Wallace (played by Olivia d'Abo) is in one of the episodes. She is definitely the "yin to his yang" or reverse, however you'd like to call it... But they are two mirror images of the same personality with the only difference being that Bobby works on the side of "good" whereas Nicole represents the opposite side of "evil". It's almost like something out of an old Western film, with the Good guys wearing white, and the Bad characters all dressed in black. I can't help but think of so many Classic, Hollywood Westerns that are too numerous to mention here. The beauty of watching them do a scene together, is how almost "unscripted" it feels and natural, that the dialogue just happens. It's not stunted, there is no feeling of somebody just reading words off of a script, it just happens the way the best scenes always do... in the best shows, the best movies, and the best entertainment of any kind, is when it's just really, as they say, "in the moment." And boy... When these two get together, it is so in the moment, that you don't need anybody else to "move the story forward" or "to draw a conclusion to an ending", because Bobby Goren and Nicole Wallace get it all done, just by themselves! I just saw this episode less than a month ago, and after starting to watch a few minutes... Wound up finishing the whole episode, all the way through to the end...I could not turn it off. No need to say anymore than I already have... It speaks for itself!
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