Critics’ rating: 3/5.0
3
Well, that’s part of the Chicago PD.
We’ve been waiting for the series to return to Atwater in rotation for most of the season, while Chicago PD Episode 12 Episode 13 is delivered in the middle, but that’s not the strongest.
The hour, titled “Jesus on the Street,” sets up a familiar conflict for Atwater, where his struggle with his community’s dedication clashes with his work as a policeman.
Chicago PD Season 12 Episode 13 with Kevin Renovation Water
We’ve walked this path with Kevin before and although they didn’t play the black and blue notes, the result usually feels the same for him.
Chicago Season 12 has spent most of its time using the cast and rotation to do a great job of generating role-focused installments to further develop and serve the characters.
By far, this is the most powerful season for Chicago PD, exploring new aspects of the characters we know and focusing on their installments while still leveraging the rest of the team.
We get some strong arcs from this approach. Torres struggles at times, but he still has a satisfying arc. Burgess’ evolution in her career advancement has provided good growth for her growth.
Ruzek’s evolution is also worth noting, and the series makes us fall in love with newcomer Kiana.
If someone struggles the most this season, it’s mainly because of the series’ place substitute him, that’s atwater. As a result, there is another hour of real excitement to explore him correctly because we haven’t done that since Chicago PD Season 12 Episode 3.
But “Jesus on the Street” is a rough part that feels disconnected in many ways.
Reexamine Val’s fall
First, after Val’s introduction at the beginning of the season, and all of this commitment and teasing about Atwater having a real, truly romantic nature to serve him, it’s all disappointing.
This hour treats our two-minute couple as a couple minutes, let’s take a brief peek into their lives together enough to know that Val elevates and supports the attwater in the way he needs to.
However, it is easy for them to go home with him and get the comfort he deserves after a difficult case. However, hours don’t produce it.
Val’s words to Kevin are crucial. He needs to hear them regularly because he has a long history trying to be everything for too many people.
However, he entered the day and the case became a victim again, which led to this messy, frustrating case that clouded Kevin’s best traits with a negative eye.
Chicago PD Season 12 excels at keeping the entire team connected
It made me smile as he was opening a community center. He is the kind of person who tends to help those around him and really wants to make a difference.
It has always been at the heart of him as a human and a policeman.
Of course, my smile became wider as my brothers cheered and supported him as his best friend saw his brothers Ruzek and Torres’ community members.
These are the best moments in this series. Frankly, these small clips have been missing in these seasons.
Now that we see real friendships and partnerships, rather than splitting and breaking up teams, interconnectedness can promote the unit.
Kevin
But we never have positive things on the Chicago PD, so it’s no surprise that Kevin can barely leave the ceremony, and then someone fires a shot and a young man dies in front of him.
It’s shocking to see so many people claiming not to see or hear anything. We hope the community is afraid of retribution for police or pointing at any fingers, which is not surprising.
The most shocking thing this time was the lack of reaction to Alonzo’s body on the ground. People walked past his body without hesitation, as if climbing up garbage on the street.
Indifference to a dead young man – desensitization is uneasy, as if the person’s body and life are irrelevant.
Maybe that’s what makes Kevin so prickly about it, plus that fact happens shortly after celebrating the community and having this safe space for the community.
Chicago PD Season 12 Episode 13 offers Ruzwater content (and some old questions)
Then, in some cases, we moved to some confusion between Ruzek and Atwater. Kevin’s assumptions about Ruzek’s assumptions say that Alonzo had a gang relationship despite griefing his opposite remarks with his mother.
Feel like this hour in Chicago PD Season 8, briefly revisiting some awkward clumsiness when Ruzek is frustratingly deaf and culturally insensitive, while Atwater is on the edge, constantly dealing with everything Racial color.
At one time, these two best friends were hit.
Ruzek’s push toward gang affiliation narrative is frustrating. However, he initially proposed it as a possible theory based on certain evidence.
This time he wasn’t the case where he was a micro attack this time (it’s not to say he didn’t have his own moments in the past), but it was a fair theory when they tried to resolve the case.
Kevin is too close to the case, and his greatest strength becomes a flaw
However, Kevin is more sensitive this time, so his machete will rise.
But then, the hours dissipated anything there because we had to move to the more obvious problem of Kevin’s personal involvement in the case.
Kevin recognizes the hype (played in “Keston John”) and does not want to reveal that anything is not his most outstanding move. However, this is not something we haven’t seen on this unit before.
This may be part of this storyline problem. After all, Kevin deserves a storyline that doesn’t reread the same conflicts his usual arcs and other characters encounter at the same time.
Ruzek noted even within an hour that Kim and Dante just handle the whole thing by not telling Voight and the other teams about it.
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The secret replaying method is unnecessary
We’ve done these storylines before and are dying. It was disappointing to see this happen again.
It’s difficult when we have to watch the most solid character in the series and then chew it as if it’s standard for him.
With Ruzek’s reaction to Torres (I know you all put out me), he has a deep attitude with Kevin and encourages him, honestly, feels more organic, because we’re just stuck with Kim and Dante.
After a similar incident, it is best not to swing the boat so soon. It doesn’t serve anyone well. Hell, it’s also fun and emphasizes how well they know each other. Ruzek immediately realized that Kevin was lying on his teeth, trying to pull him aside and call him.
Kevin’s navigation of the case is messy
But it’s still hard to take some of these things seriously when Kevin isn’t doing anything we don’t see other characters (including Voight) do themselves.
In some ways, the hour proved Kevin’s decision to ultimately keep the hype away from it based on the fate of the hype.
Kevin still revolves around the hype and shares important information about Luther. They can solve most cases well.
But that also didn’t change the fact that Kevin was ridiculous throughout the hour, and it was painful to watch.
It is also difficult to tangle around a fact that he is in front of a group of people in the same community, admitting himself to be an officer, and then shortly afterwards he secretly declares himself to be everything else.
These little things in the hours are not easy to click, so it is difficult to enjoy.
Chicago PD Season 12 Episode 13 performed some poor arcs
Kevin showed powerlessness in most cases, or his sympathy outweighed his judgment, so much so that his judgment prevented him from properly investigating his judgment.
But the rest of the team also had those moments. It’s not more predictable than Luther killing hype in front of the team, even if they have enough time to prevent it.
I don’t understand why he didn’t have a vest or why the team was so slow since Luther killed about six people.
The hype death is tragic and frustrating. The damage to the community was significant, and this had a great impact on Kevin far beyond his ability to bear it.
Worse, we probably won’t see the consequences of it, so for this, it feels like extra trauma. I won’t even turn on the Black Death Method of the Hour.
Voight’s moral highlands with the most moral character are the same part of the fun and annoying
The cold reaction to Alonzo’s death is hard to swallow, and the hype of meaningless death tied it down and put things into unsettling places.
By the end of the hour, we had Voight recite his signature slogan: Tell me the truth so that I can lie for you.
Voight chews Kevin like a disappointed father who has to give this speech to a child he usually doesn’t have to worry about, but at some point, let everyone give a lecture to everyone, It’s ridiculous that they introduce anyone to his things’ D done dozens of times.
It’s hard to take Kevin seriously if not the previous few times when we look at each of Kiana’s characters (because she’s a newbie).
Additional Notes:
- I will never get tired of the mixing situation and ability to match the team this season. This is my favorite thing this season.
- Kiana’s character on the show has chemistry. I’m going to sing from the rooftops and she’s a great addition to this series and they didn’t miss one of her interactions.
- I missed the Ruzwater scene and I’m glad we got the fraternity on screen again. Too long.
- I like the Voight on his skull cap. I love him with glasses, too.
- Torres tackle is epic.
In you, Chicago PD fanatic.
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