This week’s episode was the one I have enjoyed the most so far, my current highwater mark for a series that’s consistently funny, regularly inventive, and extremely rich in fully imagined details. In this beautiful episode, everything clicked, all of the scenes had engaging stakes, and the story felt very well-told all round. Superb television. And this year, the show-makers seem to be doing much better with their mystery plotting. At least so far – mysteries can’t really be judged properly until they’re over. Two more weeks! Right now, I want to look at all of the suspects and consider what evidence, if any, suggests their potential guilt. We’ll touch on new clues from episode eight and also pull in potential spoilers from all over the place as we go. Dickie At the end of this episode, the police are arresting Dickie. Are we quite sure precisely why? Does Detective Williams know something the rest of us do not? If so, will it be recorded in the GoPro footage, ready for the podcasters to uncover at some point in the next two episodes? Dickie’s proximity to Ben (much more on this later) certainly means the revelation of his guilt could satisfy and wrap up all sorts of emotional arcs. We’ll just have to see which one we’re really tracing. Might there be some unexpected knots in the remainder of unravelling threads? I think so, and I’ll get to those when addressing some of the other suspects… hold on… we’ll be coming back to Dickie. Tobert That GoPro might yet yield other clues. As well as the interrogations it could include footage shot previously by Tobert. This might be another way the smoking gun comes into play with the podcasters. Also, Tobert is one of several characters to have “inserted himself into the investigation”, something we’ve been told over and over to be suspicious of. Might the reason Tobert knew about Ben’s doctor actually be because he had visited him to procure something he could poison Ben with? Or he had interfered with Ben’s supply of medications at the source somehow? Or, if it’s just a case that Tobert knew all of Ben’s dirty secrets already, doesn’t this alone open up endless motives? And if we really are building to a big, Shakespearean showdown, his name is perfectly suited for some “Tobert or not Tobert” silliness in which he’s at least considered as the killer. That moment is surely overdue. He’s been off the show’s radar for so long. In a stereotypical mystery structure, this alone would place a burning spotlight of suspicion on the character. Bobo Talking of which… Bobo is so outside of suspicion it’s absurd. But revealing him as the killer would either be insane and deflating or – if there are somehow countless hidden clues we don’t have any idea about – utterly mind-blowing. Either way, I don’t see any clues to talk about. There aren’t any. Are there? Kimber Nothing much points to Kimber either. We’ve been told that things weren’t going great between her and Ben, and it will be satisfying to find out precisely what this means. My expectation is that the reveal of how badly Ben treated her is going to come into play when we’re learning more about him, however, and not Kimber. I only hope her side of the story is given due emotional weight and the character is respected. Jonathan Ben’s understudy now has the play’s leading role. There’s the remote possibility he’s being characterised as a bit of a dark horse by Howard’s Papa Smurf and Skeletor slashfic. If this is a fantasy mirror to Howard’s own love life, that is, and there’s obviously no reason it would have to be. There wasn’t much more than this to pin the first season’s murder on the actual culprit that time around, let’s be honest, but this year’s intricate set of reveals and switchbacks suggests we’re dealing with a much more sophisticated mystery plot. But I would possibly have said the same at this stage in year one, back when I thought we were building to the big reveal that Cinda Canning had killed Tim Kono (spoilers: we weren’t). Cinda Canning That ship has sailed. Howard It’s hard to believe Howard could be a killer, but might he have knocked Ben down the elevator shaft by mistake? It’s easy to conceive of a plot where Howard would accidentally kill somebody and not be able to admit it afterwards, either to himself or to others, but there are no clues, and no traces in his behaviour. There’s no way whatsoever that Howard killed anybody. OR IS THERE? Maxine The return of this scathing and powerful theatre critic brings the possibility of Maxine being a murderer into play. If we’d not seen her again this season, rolling her out as the culprit would have felt extremely cheap. After this second appearance… just a bit cheeky. There’s nothing to say she was at the Arconia when Ben fell down the elevator shaft, so I think we can remove her from the suspect board. And I can’t see this show making the critic into a literal killer – it seems both on-the-nose and bit haughty. Might that have been a review that was shredded and which Howard is now attempting to reconstruct? I don’t think so. More on this later…
Credit: Disney+
credit: Disney+
- There’s no Ben II in the photos, but does this mean he doesn’t exist? Could his parents give him up, arguing their ability to keep two children, not three? I’m not convincing myself.
- Let’s go back and look at Loretta’s flashback in the early scenes of this episode once more. We’re shown No Strings again, the first play she saw and the one that made her fall in love with theatre. A play that, from episode one, has illuminated the way I look at Loretta’s relationship with Oliver. They’re headed for a sad separation. But how so? And why? Is she going to prison? Or will Oliver reject her for some reason?
- We then see Loretta’s school production of The Winter’s Tale, a play with poisoning, a baby conceived outside of marriage that is taken from its mother, and a character who has secretly lived in seclusion though everybody believed them dead. What parts of this will prove relevant? I’ve got a feeling it might just all tie in somehow.
- We see Three Plays by Thornton Wilder, which includes Our Town and Skin of Our Teeth, both of which break the fourth wall regularly and address the audience directly. Very on-topic, especially this week in which a song tried to tell us to look beyond the typical suspects.
- She also has Three Plays by George Bernard Shaw, including Mrs Warren’s Profession, featuring a mother and adult daughter getting to know each other for the first time.
- All this stuff about triplets and then the play books are Three Plays… editions. Hmmm.
- Cliff gets his text about Gregg from Kacey. Could Kacey be KT’s first name? Is she doomed to forever be known by two-syllable monikers that sound like a pair of letters? Given her surname is Knoblauer maybe it’s just quicker this way. But it’s weird to imagine her texting Cliff like that.
- I bet my shirt on Creature of the Night taking on much more resonance as we go forwards. It’s just hanging there, like ripe fruit.
- Maxine probably couldn’t say anything more mean than ‘Pure Oliver Putnam’, could she?
- Howard demonstrated his anagram-adjacent skills. Some wags on Instagram decoded Loretta Durkin as ‘Our Kind Rattles’ way back in the first few days of the series. What would it mean to call her a snake?
- Bobo as some sort of harmless Boob is probably the simplest anagram possible.
- Kimber Min gives us… um… ‘Rim me, Bink’. Or ‘I’m Me, Brink.’ I don’t think her name is an anagram, is it? Not unless we find out her birth name was Brink. So, no.
- Dickie Glenroy has the letters for rekindle in there, as in his relationship with Loretta, and then the leftover letters can be ‘go icy’. And Ben Glenroy can be ‘Rebel no go NY’ or ‘Long NY beer.’
- Nope, this isn’t going to be solved with Scrabble tiles. Let’s pretend most of that never happened.
- Does Donna use the same lipstick here as the one Joy had? The one apparently used on Ben’s mirror? Might she have been in Ben’s dressing room for some important reason we’re about to discover?
- It’s surprising that Death Rattle was to be a revival, as mentioned in the newspaper story Loretta reads in the flashback. But I don’t know what to do with that information.
- I’m starting to wonder if we’re going to end the series with another murder, like the last two. If so, how will it fit into the tapestry of our final episode?
Read Brendon’s thoughts on Only Murders In The Building's previous instalment, season 3, episode, 7. — Thank you for visiting! If you’d like to support our attempts to make a non-clickbaity movie website: Follow Film Stories on Twitter here, and on Facebook here. Buy our Film Stories and Film Junior print magazines here. Become a Patron here.