other things are rearranged for a serial form – and killer by the way – which means each episode has to end
with a cliffhanger, and that is not always easy. A series also slows down the rhythm since it has to start rather
slowly and it has to move not too fast so that the cliffhanger comes as a precipitous short punchline if I can
use this word for a video, maybe a punch-scene.
This being said, Brady Hartsfield sure is a monster and he was in the novel, but the visualization of
the monstrousness of the chap makes him so obviously unpleasant and distasteful to everyone that it is
surprising his boss picks him to become a store manager, or his lesbian colleague more or less falls for him –
as a friend of course – and we are also surprised that he may be a good ice-cream man, friendly with all and
particularly children. That makes his deep-rooted psychiatric dysfunctioning all the more sort of artificial and
based on some clichés. Written in the book the circumstances are not as shocking as they become in pictures.
His causing the death of his brother with first an accident (the brother chokes on some apple slices) that ends
well with the Heimlich maneuver, that is not very well performed in the series, and then second with pushing
him down the stairs to the basement of the house, is cruel. His possessiveness towards his mother, and it is
hinted that’s why he killed his younger brother, is, in fact: only his way to make her a slave in her absolute
solitude and to satisfy his perverse desires by titillating and teasing his mother into satisfying her own perverse
desires. That’s a cliché, but it is a true case of pedophilia generally minimized and forgotten. The pedophile in
a family has to be the father, and can’t be the mother, and the child is too young to be a pedophile, isn’t he?
Note the fact we are dealing with a son, not a daughter. It is the Oedipus complex in the absence of a male
rival between the son and the mother, an absence constructed by the elimination of the younger brother.
The fact that based on such a situation the son becomes a mass serial killer is most surprising. But it
is possible, though the child has to be particularly introverted not to be able to find alternative directions in
school and with kids, boys and girls, his age. There is no empathy at all, and it is the belief, common and
popular, even populist, that all perverts are born like that, just the same way all normal people are born like
that. The basic and most unacceptable belief in American philosophy, psychiatry, and ideology (religious or
not), that all criminals are born like that and thus are different at birth, and thus all those who are different at
birth have to be born criminals. Read my lips as Ronald Reagan would have said. And the first difference is to
be an immigrant. Good morning, Apocalypse!
The series also insists heavily on the ineptitude of the police to capture the situation and to act up to it
in the name of hard evidence, circumstantiality, the first amendment, the Miranda protection of accused or
suspected criminals, the fear the case may stall in court for who knows what kind of mistake in the punctuation
of the investigation. But at the same time that makes Bill Hodges a sort of vigilante, a self-appointed justice-
maker, a social trash collector and incinerator, a cop (or ex-cop, same thing, once a cop always a cop) and a
judge and an executioner and an undertaker, all in one person. And that is another caricature that makes him
slightly disagreeable, especially since he is all but civil with his neighbors and the people he meets and deals
with.