Critics’ rating: 3.9 / 5.0
3.9
This is a dark person.
Tracker is far from bright as a series, but some situations are more sinister than others, and the sinister and sinisterness of this case.
Colt is searching for a missing mother, and the person who took her there is beheading the victim, meaning time is indeed essential.
The case of the missing Alice Bear is strange considering that the mother lets her son fall asleep and then disappears late at night.
Has she escaped? Has she been taken away? Or is it something else entirely?
All tracker cases usually start in one way and end up appearing elsewhere, and this is no exception, as preliminary findings lead Colter to think that perhaps Alice’s disappearance could be something related to a date error or even drug use.
But it was too neat and tidy for the tracker, and once Cotter arrived at the psychiatrist’s house where Alice had been communicating, things got darker and never looked back.
We’ve seen skeletal remains, some annoying injuries and a lot of gunfire, but in this show, do we see something stronger than the beheaded body?
Thrall was not only murdered. His head was sliced thinly, just as the headless knight himself came to his house to circle the other head in his collection.
This proves that Colter sees the horrible nature of crime every day without even phased crazy things. He just kept searching for Alice, like he didn’t deal with something more disturbing than the Tinder date.
Discovering that Alice was once trained to be a psychiatrist before giving up on it is the information her mother should have shared with Colter from the beginning, even if it doesn’t seem important on the surface.
Knowing that her past drug use matched her time training might save Colter time, although the only thing that really helped him was finding journals at Sal’s home, which put Colter on the road to finding PJ.
Mental health is a serious subject and was not always treated like this on TV in the past.
Tracker did a good job of allowing viewers to see and hear PJ and his interactions with Alice, rather than just hearing his story and history through Colter and his team, and discovering information through some suspicious means.
PJ is a troubled young man with a lot of trauma lately, recently released from prison, and while he seems to be trying to get help by meeting Sal, he may need more in-depth help.
His story is one of the stories of abandonment, shame, anger and abuse, which leads to the ultimate murder. He was obsessed with Alice because it was obvious that she seemed to be the one who showed him a kind and understanding in all his years on Earth.
But PJ is not good, it is hard to imagine that after he spent his time, considering his past events, his best place is to return to his mother.
Thrall was killed because he saw himself as a danger to society, and unfortunately PJ was in danger to him before he could remind anyone.
Colt quickly put many of the works together, and with Renee’s assistance, they left her office and entered Ohio to help him.
There is no secret to my love for my relationship with Colter and Reenie, the fact that Reenie is the only secondary character tracker interested in developing.
Whenever we meet Reenie recently, she’s talking about her latest clients and their difficulties and can’t build something in the future.
But build anyone’s guess.
We must thank this new client who does not face to face for putting Reenie near Colter so she can do Reenie’s things to get into PJ’s storage facility.
Reenie is almost the same, but when she enters that storage unit and closes the door, I’m scared for her! I know she was trying to escape the person hovering over her, but I just unlocked new fears.
Because no one hears your screams locked in the storage unit would be worse?
When you don’t have a service, you can call 9-1-1, but it doesn’t need to go that far, as Reenie is able to get out of there and get Colter’s information to get the information he needs to find out where PJ might have occupied Alice.
The more time you spend with PJ, you can see that PJ is very ill, but also extremely calculated. He planned things, and he had been following revenge and decades of anger, which were exacerbated by his mental problems.
Build a Bobby Trap and will be shocked by anyone who walks into his home.
Colt not only deals with someone driven by complex and terrible emotions, but also considers someone with a plan.
At first, it wasn’t even clear what he wanted to do with Alice, because he saw her in a different light, seeing her as the mother he wanted to have. It might also be part of the reason he took her there: He wanted her to be her Meyer’s mother.
He didn’t seem to want to hurt her, but wanted her to almost give her to his parents, or at least tell him everything he wanted to hear.
Alice delves into her past life in depth to remember her training and attempts to reason with PJ to a certain extent, showing empathy and strength in trying to get out of it. Still, she only has too many reasons to do so with someone who recently killed her mother and beheaded the man.
As if I wasn’t afraid of being locked in a new fear in the storage unit, the climax of this episode must come in the form of a creepy glory in the form of an abandoned amusement park.
For something that brings so much joy, it is abandoned and it suddenly becomes one of the most frightening places you can imagine.
Colter’s break-in could be much worse than it was, and he was lucky that he brought him into his sight from the moment he arrived at Alice.
Once PJ was shot in the legs, I thought Colter would fix him and then that was it, but the episode was so ominous that they decided to really take Colter and Colter and Alice, Alice, Alice, Hunt PJ through the mirror hall.
Colt’s job is not necessarily a murder, but it has become part of the job when dealing with the kind of dangerous people he encounters, but it still attracts me every time because he is not a policeman.
He did not provide professional training for this, nor did he get any help in the more challenging aspects of his work.
That’s why I especially like the conversation between Colter and Reenie between Diner when she mentions that Colter isn’t the worst thing in the world to talk to someone.
He can go back to his childhood or stick to his greatest hit as an adult. Either way, he should talk about all the emotions that must be trapped in him.
This could have been so helpful to him considering the life he lived and all the unsolved problems of his past.
Tracker Comments
- Did Cotter even have to make a statement to the police? Can he kill PJ without explaining anything?
- If they want to end each episode with Colter and Reenie Comping, that will be with me.
- It was a joke before, but where is Bobby? I love Randy; he’s been a comedic relief, he and Cote chemistry on the phone, but why can’t we get Bobby to work with Randy?
- Colt didn’t mention his mother for a minute, so should I hope we finally get back to Shaw’s family drama soon?
If this doesn’t make you squeeze or outright fear, then you’ll be better than me!
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You can watch the tracker on CBS on Sunday on 8/7C.
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