Since its debut in 2010, Blue Bloods, a crime procedural drama led by Tom Selleck of Magnum PI fame, has taken audiences by surprise. Fans followed the multi-generational family of cops, the Reagans, for nearly 14 years. They’ve watched the Reagans’ children, parents and spouses each deal with injustices and their familial spats in their own ways – within and sometimes out of the system. With the current season possibly being the last, and with just six episodes remaining, now would be a good time for the mid-season to set up a possible endgame. Instead, Season 14, Episode 13, “Bad to Worse,” looks to be playing it safe by pitting the Reagans against some of the most powerful figures in their sphere – and against each other.
Blue Bloods Season 14, Episode 13 Is More of the Same
The Episode’s Subplots Are Resolved Too Cleanly and Conveniently
On its own merits, “Bad to Worse” is a decent episode. All of its concurrent subplots — the vicious and puerile feud between Veronica Radley and Mayor Chase, Erin and Henry’s entanglement in the case of the violent former cop, the skeleton in the storage space, and the arrest of the organ-donor – feature storylines that aptly go from bad to worse, in the dramatic sense. Things that at first appear small, trivial and frustrating take a turn for the darker, deeper and more psychologically complicated.
Thankfully, this is all in the wheelhouse of the Reagans, whose individual approaches to law enforcement and problem-solving lead to reasonable conclusions. Edie’s bizarre case of the runaway kidney donor ends on a surprisingly poignant note. Danny’s case with the skeleton leads to a serial killer with a terrifying and tragic motive for killing that leaves a trail of devastation once solved. These stories, by themselves, are fine. Like much of Blue Bloods, these subplots serve as vignettes and character studies for the main cast. For the most part, these side stories give the characters’ individual arcs decent development, as they find ways to circumvent loopholes in the system they are dedicated to serving, and ensure justice is done. It delivers that sometimes cozy, sometimes heart-shattering balance of crime and family drama with slight comedic touches.
That said, Blue Bloods has had 13-and-a-half seasons to do this. The end is nigh, and judging from the mid-season premiere alone, one would hardly know it. There does seem to be a slight trail of breadcrumbs leading to a final confrontation — and possible reconciliation — between Frank Reagan and Mayor Chase, whose relationship has been contentious at best. It would be fitting for the borderline cowboy cop to end this series with a showdown against the surly, self-centered Mayor, who has spent much of this season – and this episode – alienating entire communities. It would also be exciting if the coming finale has the two rivals team-up, thus giving them the chance to redeem themselves in the eyes of the other. After all, ruffling the feathers of the Fire Department is rarely a popular move. However, most of the plot points — except Danny’s arc — in “Bad to Worse” are tied up too neatly, leaving next to nothing in the way of a finale’s set-up.
Blue Blooods Season 14, Episode 13 Is More an Anthology of Supblots Than the Final Arc’s Beginning
The Episode Is Carried by the Characters’ Personal Journeys
The strongest story is Danny’s – his case is the juiciest, darkest and most rife with bittersweet drama. Of all the episode’s interwoven storylines, his hints at a possible plot for Blue Blood’s overall finale. Danny starts the episode bemoaning his age and his current career path. The trajectory of the case — which involves multiple cases of harassment, a string of dead women and a sympathetic but monstrous serial killer — clearly takes a toll on him, physically and mentally. Danny’s and Maria’s plot tackles a tricky and thorny topic, and does so in a relatively brief share of time. It’s one of those stories that could have easily been expanded into a full episode in the vein of Law and Order SVU, but as it is, it makes for the best and strongest aspect of this rather disjointed episode.
Blue Bloods Season 14, Episode 13 Is a Decent if Uninspiring Penultimate Chapter
The Episode Leaves a Lot to Be Desired
At most, this episode ends on a bittersweet cliffhanger. Important relationships are mended, and Frank paves the way for a possible peaceful resolution to Mayor Chase and Fire Commissioner Radley’s feud by calling out their immaturity. The one big stickler is Danny’s future in the family business, if his final lines are anything to go on. “Bad to Worse” leaves a possible trail of breadcrumbs, rather than establish the endgame’s final arc with guns blazing. Had this been any other episode, it would have been solid fare. But as the possible beginning of this long-running and well-loved series’ final chapter, it just leaves viewers impatient for more.