Series Review: Bones Season 2

Bones Season 2 DVD cover

Long post that contains SPOILERS

Read Season One’s review here

The Titan on the Tracks:

Dr. Temperance Brennan, or Bones (Emily Deschanel) is back from vacation and she’s decided to keep on looking for her father, ignoring his warning via telephone that she should not search for him. Their first case after her return involves two victims found at a derailed train, where it crashed into a car that was parked on the tracks. The victims are an ex-basketball player and a senator. Initially it looks like the driver of the car was ex-basketball player Warren Lynch. Warren is soon found comatose in the hospital, and that the driver of the car died several hours before being struck by the train. Further investigation shows that Rick Turco, a private investigator, made plans with Lynch to stage his death to cash in on some money, and that Turco went one step further and actually killed Lynch.

Back at the lab Dr. Camille Saroyan (Tamara Taylor) is the new Head of Forensic Division at the Jeffersonian Institute. Everyone wonders why Camille got the job and not Bones, but after she stands up for her team everyone knows she is well suited. Camille is very set on knowing everything that goes on in the lab as part of her managerial duties and this doesn’t jibe well with anyone, especially Bones, Zack (Eric Millegan) and Jack Hodgins (T. J. Thyne), who loves to have unauthorized experiments. Angela (Michaela Conlin) says that it is obvious there was something between Camille and Booth (David Boreanaz).

Mother and Child in the Bay

Booth and Brennan set to identify the remains of a woman and her unborn baby found washed up. The woman, Carly Richardson, pregnant at her death, disappeared a year ago and back then it was prominent news. Her husband, the main suspect at the time, disappears, things doesn’t look too good for him. Booth is having some issues with his son Parker (Ty Panitz) spending too much time with his mother’s boyfriend, and worries that he is missing out on his son’s life.

The Boy in the Shroud

A young man is decomposing in garbage, and Angela quickly identifies him. When it is found out that his girlfriend is in the foster system Cam identifies her as a prime suspect. This doesn’t sit well with Bones who was in the system as well. When the girl is found and admits to the crime Bones is stunned and still doesn’t believe it, and it quickly becomes obvious that everything isn’t as it seems. The tension keeps rising between Cam and Bones when they disagree on how work should be done, and she threatens to fire Bones. Everyone, including Booth, assures Cam is she does that she will not only lose the top forensic anthropologist in the country but the rest of the lab as well.

The Blonde in the Game

Howard Epps, the thorn in Booth and Brennan’s side, is finally on death row after he fooled them in season one. Another victim is found murdered reminiscent of his murder style, one whose body has been missing for years. He plays games with the team, leaving them clues to another body that is only a week old, which means he is working with a copycat. Bones realise that another victim might still be alive and they race against time to find her and outwit Epps and the copycat.

The Truth in the Lye

A man is found nearly dissolved in a bath full of corrosive chemicals found on the construction site. The man murdered lived a double life with two wives and that immediately makes them suspect. Things get really confusing when another suspect is identified as well. Brennan sticks her nose in Booth’s business and asks Rebecca why she rejected Booth’s marriage proposal.

The Girl in suite 2103

The next case involves an explosion in a Miami hotel. Booth thinks Judge Dolores Ramos, who survived the blast, was the intended victim as she is an enemy of the Columbian drug cartel, and while searching for the bombers, diplomatic immunity quickly gets in their way of making proper arrests and Booth has to appeal to the decent side of the killer in the hopes to get an arrest out of the case.

The girl with the curl

When the body of a young girl is found in a water filtration plant, the team is confused by her facial construction and dental records. The young girl is Brianna Swanson, a girl who worked in child pageants. Her father is the initial suspect because he hated that she took part in the contests, but the team find more suspects at the dancing school Brianna attended and was known for bullying the other children. Hodgins and Angela have been flirting a lot with each other but she initially rejects that they go on a date because they work together. She speaks to Cam and Brennan and realizes it won’t hurt to go on one date with him, and is distressed when it goes perfectly because she had hoped there wouldn’t be anything between them.

The Woman in the sand

The body of a federal prosecutor is found in Las Vegas and is linked to the death of a female boxer. Booth and Brennan head over undercover and discover an underground boxing ring while Booth has to deal with his gambling addiction so close to all those machines.

Aliens in a Spaceship

Aliens

Two teenage boys are found in a space like capsule and Brennan says they were buried live underground. They realize the murders are of the serial killer the “Grave Digger”, who is elusive and undertakes no bargaining once the victims are taken and is happy to let them die if the ransom does not get paid. Brennan and Hodgins gets taken hostage by the killer and is trapped underground. While they seek desperate measures to stay alive with the limited amount of oxygen available, Booth and the team desperately seek ways to find them alive.

The Headless Witch in the Woods

Bones and Hodgins are still recovering from their ordeal with the Grave Digger, and Hodgins especially has problems dealing with how close he came to death and that the Grave Digger is still on the loose. When a headless corpse is found in the woods with a frightening video tape of that night, they are all sufficiently freaked out. The woods are rumoured to be haunted by Maggie Cinders, a Witch who had her head chopped off after trial and is killing her victims in the same way. Bones meets the victims brother, who took care of his brother when his parents died, and she can’t help compare his behaviour to her own brother’s Ross, who left her in foster care. When they finally arrest the murderer, everyone is happy there isn’t a Witch running around chopping people’s heads off. Watching the video again, Hodgins and Angela notices that there is a silhouette of a woman with an axe heading to the victim before he was killed, and they are freaked out all over again. Angela asks that she stays at Hodgin’s places and he is more than happy to say yes.

Judas on a Pole

While Zack is busy defending his dissertation from a disapproving board, Booth and Brennan investigate a man that was found burnt like a scarecrow on the roof of a hotel housing Federal witnesses. The victim, they learn, was in witness protection for giving evidence against the organised crime syndicate he used to work for. Russ (Lorean Dean) calls Bones and tells her their father called him warning that they are both in danger, and that she and Booth should drop the case. They learn that the victim had been stalking Russ with the intention to kill him, and that Max Keenan (Ryan O’Neal), their father, is behind the murder to warn off people who wants to kill his children.

The Man in the Cell

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Howard Epps (Heath Freeman) escapes from prison and goes on a revenge path. This includes terrorising Booth by contacting his son, Parker, and Booth completely freaks out. They know that Brennan irks Epps because she is everything he despises in a woman, and she gets FBI protection. They find the head of Epps’s wife, and when Cam opens the skull she inhales a deadly poison that nearly kills her.

The Girl in the Gator

Booth is busy on the phone and gets agitated by an animated clown on a truck. He shoots the clown and is ordered to seek psychiatric help, and he meets Doctor Gordon Wyatt (Stephen Fry) an entertaining and unusual psychiatrist. While Booth tries to get Dr. Gordon to sign his release papers, Brennan works with Agent Tim Sullivan (Eddie McClintock) – a man who perplexes Brennan because he is so calm. She realises that Tim is incredibly intelligent and a really decent guy, and when they solve their case together she agrees to go on a date with him.

The Man in the Mansion

A man is found murdered in a mansion, tied to his chair, and Hodgin’s realises it is an old friend that he distanced himself from when his fiancé left him for the victim. Theoretically, Hodging’s shouldn’t be involved in the case but stays on, seriously endangering the case when it goes to trial. Booth is still seeing Dr. Gordon Wyatt, and the relationship between Tim and Brennan continues to develop.

Bodies in the Book

Brennan, who is a successful author of crime novels as well as a forensic anthropologist, releases her new book and it is an instant hit. However, things do not look good when victims show up around her, murdered in exactly the same way she described in the books. Tim agrees with Booth that Brennan may be a target for the killer, and this leads to Brennan disagreeing with them both because she is able to take care of herself. Brennan, after investigating the bones, starts to believe that she may be looking for three opportunistic killers instead of one psycho.

The Boneless Bride in the River

Bones is taking some well deserved vacation with Tim when Booth finds her, obviously frustrated that he has to work without her. Brennan is frustrated that she needs to give up some of her precious off time, and is even more infuriated when she the body pulled from water without any bones, which is kind of her area of expertise. Booth quickly finds the bones to keep her involved, and a strange, ancient ritual is discovered. At the end of the episode, Tim asks Bones to go on a year-long hiatus with him, and she declines, and he leaves in the boat he named after her.

The Priest in the Churchyard

After a main bursts and floods a cemetery, Zack and Dr. Brennan head to investigate. It seems like an easy task – there is not supposed to be any recently buried victims as the cemetery hasn’t been used for burials for over fifty years, and all the bones have been identified. One skeleton causes problems when they conclude that he was placed there within the last few weeks, and when they discover that the deceased was a difficult young priest sent to Father Dolan, the strict elderly church leader renowned for fixing troublesome young priests. He is immediately a suspect. Booth and Brennan constantly snipe at each other with their different religious views, and things become very tense between them.

The Killer in the Concrete

Next, a body is found in concrete. Booth thinks it has something to do with organized crime, and they stumble onto the chase for a former hit man by a dedicated bounty hunter. Booth is taken captive and tortured, but left alive. Frantic, Bones searches for her partner but it is only when her father arrives that she gets anywhere. Max, still wanted by the FBI, speeds up her search quickly and when Booth is safe again, Max escapes when Booth attempts to arrest him.

The Spaceman in the Crater

A dead astronaut appears to have fallen out from a high altitude. The team investigates members at the Space Agency, while the resident conspiracy-theorist Hodgins thinks there were aliens involved. Sadly, no aliens are involved, and Hodgin’s life gets sadder when Angela says no to his marriage proposal, but at least she tells him to keep on trying.

The Glowing Bones in the old house

Homeland security is perplexed by glowing bones found in a house and asks Bones and Booth to assist. They find the glowing bones but no sign of radioactivity. The team immediately identifies the victim but still has no explanation for the state of the remains. Eventually, they find both an explanation for the bones and the killer, and when Angela proposes to Hodgins and he accepts, the two of them are quite happy.

Stargazer in a Puddle

The season concludes with the case of Chelsea Cole, a girl with Werner’s syndrome and who had a talent of painting constellations. They eventually arrest Chelsea’s mother, who murdered her daughter when she thought that no one would be there to take care of Chelsea when she died of AIDS. Hodgins and Angela are very busy planning their wedding, where Bones will be Angela’s maid of honour. Angela’s father rocks up and he is a bit scary. Zack shares with Booth that he has been asked to serve in Iraq identifying bodies, and plans to leave after the wedding. Max Brennan rocks up and gives Bones a videotaping of her mother. He fights with Booth and after he loses, he allows himself to be arrested. Watching the video, Bones realises her parents left her and her brother so that they could be safe, and this helps her tremendously in dealing with her traumatic child years.

The wedding is halted when Caroline Julian (Patricia Belcher), a no-nonsense prosecutor, shows up and informs them that Angela is married to another man. Angela is shocked by it all because she thought that ceremony wasn’t real, but that still means she can’t marry Hodgins. Horrified, they don’t know what to do until Caroline suggests running away and not telling the guests what is happening. This works perfectly well, except that it leaves Bones and Booth standing uncomfortably at the altar.

Rating: 5.5/10

Best episode: Episode 9, Aliens in a spaceship.

Episode 12, The Man in the Cell

Worst episode: The Man in the Manshion

I didn’t enjoy Season 2 very much. Season 1 of Bones was a fairly good pilot season and I was excited to see how it would develop. Season two just didn’t live up to my expectations. The storylines were weak with critically few episodes that were really attention grabbing.

Honestly, I hated Cam in the first bunch of episodes. She seemed in love with her authority and it looked like she took pleasure from bossing the squints around. I also think that they should have explored Dr. Daniel Goodman’s departure more because he just disappeared with little said about it.

Most of the beef I had with season one was with regards to how badly the episodes were wrapped up. The progress at the ending of Season 1 concerning plot developments and episode disintegrated and the first few episodes of Season 2 were horrible.There also a few moments where the camera work was very dodgy and I really didn’t like how they showed flashes of the corpse or the murder. It seems they wanted to make the show more procedural crime but they really didn’t have a solid plan as to how to get there.

I did enjoy a few things: namely how Bones and Booth are developed more and how both of them had a bit of their story told. I liked that Angela and Jack were romantically linked. They match even though their personalities and outlook on life are different. I also thought that the relationship between Jack and Zack is so sweet and how they become best friends.

The inclusion of the Grave Digger and Howard Epps finally brought some excitement to the table. It gave the show a foundation to work with, and those make up for the episodes i most enjoyed. Howard Epps was brilliantly done by Heath Freeman. He was so frickin scary and The Man in the Cell was brilliantly done. Epps fell into the freakiest-men-to-ever-meet category. I found the inclusion of his crazy wife very entertaining yet sad because I have always been confused by these women who love serial killers.

I really liked Tim Sullivan. He seemed an intellectual match to Bones (if there is such a thing). It was sad they couldn’t have dated longer but he didn’t fit with my plans with Bones and Booth getting together in the not too distant future.

I loved Stephen Fry as Dr. Gordon Wyatt. He brings some excellent acting to the show and I liked how the doctor dealt with Booth shooting the clown on top of the truck and how it showed deeper problems in his life.

Have you seen Bones season 2? Tell me what you thought!

 

 

Five things Friday: 5 Male Characters in a series who kicks ass while looking DAMN fine

It’s Friday, folks!

I really liked compiling last week’s five female characters who kick ass on the small screen, so today I am bringing you this: 5 Male Characters in a series who kicks ass while looking DAMN fine

Jax Teller, Sons of Anarchy, played by Charlie Hunnam

 JaxTeller

I was so happy when CH dropped out of the 50 Shades of Grey movie. Whether it was voluntary or they forced him, starring in that shit would have damaged how much I love Jax Teller.

SOA messes with your mind a lot because you are on the criminal’s side and JT even more because you are vouching for a man that is basically a murdering gangster with questionable morals.

However, I love how badass JT is. He is gorgeous to look at and he has such an attitude that I find extremely appealing. I like that he is at the most basic level actually a man with deep love for the people closest to him and how protective he can be when someone messes with his nearest and dearest.

Dean Winchester, Supernatural, played by Jensen Ackles

 dean

Ah, Dean. He is without a doubt the most appealing of the Winchester brothers. I hated the whiney Snotbag Sam Winchester and how Dean always had to clean up after him. I love Dean’s dedication to his job and his family, his music, clothes and food, his Impala and his courage to never stop moving.

I think Jensen Ackles was excellently cast as Dean Winchester. He was one of the only characters in the show I constantly had sympathy for and rooted for.

Special Agent Seeley Booth, Bones, played by David Boreanaz

booth

Some characters you support because of their looks and some because of who they are. There is absolutely nothing wrong with how Booth looks, but it is mostly his character that got him on this list. I enjoy his relationship with Bones and how he protects her but understands that she is independent and needs to do some things on her own. I find his hero complex endearing and how he always needs to be there for the people in his life.

Harvey Specter, Suits, played by Gabriel Macht

 Harvey-Specter

It is the suits and the education and work ethic and that hairstyle that would have looked absolutely stupid on anyone else. He is hardworking and very dedicated to the people around him and is okay with lifting himself up. Harvey Specter makes Suits amazing – I think all the other characters just pale in comparison.

Patrick Jane, The Mentalist, played by Simon Baker

 Patrick Jane

He is without one of the most layered, complex characters on television. I thoroughly enjoy that attitude that gets him slapped ever so often, the dedication to finding his wife’s killer, and his own killer instinct when it comes to people bullshitting police investigations. Simon Baker was as well cast as Jane as Robert Downey Jnr. is cast as Iron Man – they both bring something essential to their characters that just make everything more believable.

Series Review: Bones Season 1 (2005-2006)

tv_bones01

A friend and a work colleague and my sister told me that I would like watching Bones. With three solid recommendations I eventually just had to try it out. I am SO happy I did. I am travelling through the fourth season right now and I haven’t stopped watching at all.

Here is what happened 🙂

After returning from a “holiday” where workaholic Dr. Temperance Brennan (Emily Deschanel) identified victims of genocide, she is stopped at the airport by Homeland Security. Not knowing who the man tailing her is, Brennan kicks his butt and is arrested. It turns out FBI agent Seely Booth (David Boreanaz) orchestrated her arrest because he needed to know when she would be back in the country and her lab co-workers at the Jeffersonian Institute wasn’t being very helpful with telling him when she might land. Temperance, who is known as Bones, finally agrees to help and she and Booth works to identify bones found in a lake. A working agreement is struck between the Jeffersonian and the FBI that makes Bones and Booth investigative partners.

Booth and Brennan are investigating a man that looks like a suicide bomber. The deceased was part of the Arab-American Friendship League and the President of the USA is upset that he is looking like a fool for trusting an extremist. The deceased’s wife insists she and her husband are lovers of peace and cooperation and the team try to find out why he is dead. The bomb reveals to be planted under his car and this eliminates the suicide bombing and makes it a murder case. Bones discover he and his brother shared some strange skin condition and tries to figure out if it was genetics or something else. They learn that the deceased’s brother is hiding that he is an extremist Muslim by pretending to be Christian and that he plans to suicide bomb a peace summit meeting, they rush to save the lives of the people at the meeting and Booth’s sniper abilities helps them save the day.

The next case takes them to an exclusive private school where children of important dignitaries attend under the strictest security measures. The son of Columbian diplomats is found hanging from a tree and Bones quickly establishes it wasn’t suicide. His mother insists that her son wouldn’t commit suicide that the miracle of him gaining hearing from a cochlear implant was a powerful moment and he wouldn’t commit suicide after something like that. Bones believes her because the evidence points to murder, and Booth has vindictive fun by not giving the snooty principal and his security manager the answer they want. Further investigation shows that the boy was involved in filming sex scenes and bribing sugar mommies at the school, and they find the killer through the videos.

Bones is upset that she needs to travel to Aurora to investigate a hand that was found in bear’s stomach. Looking at the remains, Bones deduces that the man was a victim of cannibalism and didn’t die from the bear attack. When the likeliest victim, a Native American Indian, is proved innocent, everyone in the town becomes a suspect. Brennan is very popular with the men in the small town and Booth dances with her to give her a break from all the unwanted popularity. Back at the lab Zack and Hodgins compete for a delivery employee’s attention but strangely enough Angela is the victor in that war.

A six year old boy’s bones are found murdered near a shopping mall and they find out that he is a boy that was reported missing a few days earlier. It turns out that his mother isn’t his biological parent and that she took him when she found his birthmother dead. She has two other foster kids as well and Bones gets emotionally attached to the case because she herself was a foster child. The murderer is found in the neighbourhood and Bones is very happy with Booth when he manages to get the charges against the mother dropped and the two foster children can remain with her because she is a good parent to them.

Brennan and Angela go out for a night on town and Brennan gets into a fight at a nightclub because she observes the culture in her usually direct and slightly offensive way. When a wall collapses and a skeleton is found underneath, Booth arrives and it becomes a crime scene. The victim is identified as a former DJ at the club, and his known rival and the club’s owner become suspects.

Howard Epps (Heath Freeman), a serial killer on death row, is days fromexecution. He and his lawyer, a woman who believes in justice, ask that his case gets investigated again by the man who put him in jail, Booth. Booth believes he is guilty and is reluctant, but agrees to take a look. There is just enough doubt to get him a delay on his death sentence. In the end they see that Epps is guilty and is just playing with them, but now he won’t get executed immediately. Booth is furious but unable to do anything. Bones breaks Epps’s wrist when he tries to touch her and it makes her and Booth feel a bit better.

A woman is found in a fridge with signs of undergoing through torture and drugging. Booth immediately notices one of the deceased’s friends has a new fridge and he and his girlfriend is arrested. It is obvious they are guilty but they have a good defence team and Brennan is called to testify, something she is bad at because she can’t connect to the jury. Her former professor and lover, Michael, shows up and he and Brennan casually sleep together. She is unable to continue being his friend when he is the witness for the killers and he mocks her during the trial. The prosecutors manage to make Brennan appear human when they ask her why she became an anthropologist, to find her parents that went missing, on the stand, a tip Booth gave them. She is angry with Booth but at least justice prevails and the couple is arrested for their perverted fantasies.

The Man in the Fallout Shelter: A very old set of bones is found in a fallout shelter before Christmas and is sent to the Jeffersonian for identification. The entire team is quarantined after a fungus is released into the lab from the body, and it seems that everyone will be spending Christmas there. Brennan is the Christmas Grinch and no one knows why, but she tells Angela that her parents disappeared right before Christmas as a teen and she and her brother had a huge fight on Christmas day that made him put her into foster care. She sets out to identify the man and learns that he, a white man, had loved a black woman in a time where interracial marriages were illegal. He was murdered for his coin collection but kept the last, most valuable pieces hidden. After an outburst from Angela, Bones makes it her priority to find the elderly woman and let her know the man that she loved never deserted her. They find the now elderly lady and her granddaughter and tell them the news. The elderly lady thanks her for the coins means the deceased’s granddaughter is able to go to medical school. The episode ends with Bones finally opening the present her parents gave her that last Christmas.

The Woman at the Airport.

Bones_season_1_episode_10

Bones and Booth head to Los Angeles to investigate the remains of a young woman found scattered around the airport. Angela has trouble reconstructing the skull because the woman had so much plastic surgery done on her. The deceased’s boyfriend says she was beautiful but never at peace with how she looked, and though he is saddened by her death he is a suspect because he found out that she was a prostitute and very angry about it. They find the specialist who did the surgery and he is cleared of the suspect eventually. Booth and Brennan catches another prostitute who killed her friend because she thought the deceased had tried to steal her rich customer.

The Woman in the Car:

An agent from the State Department arrives at the Jeffersonian Institute to do security checks on the staff. Hodgins is offended when he learns that he isn’t perceived as a threat because he really wants to be perceived as dangerous. Overall, the lab staff just confuses the agent and she is eventually taken off her assignment when she asks Brennan classified information and Brennan makes the right call to the right person about it. During all that Booth and Brennan find a body of a woman in a car and signs that a child was kidnapped. They trace the victim and her son to Carl Decker, a man in witness protection against a weapons manufacturer that sent damaged goods to Iraq and Afghanistan and is subsequently responsible for soldiers’ death. Decker disappears and it is obvious he is looking for his son. He takes the CEO of the weapon’s manufacturer hostage but Brennan manages to calm him down with logic they both understand with their advanced minds. The boy’s finger is sent to the Jeffersonian with a warning to back off. Hodgins traces the general area where the boy is kept and Booth saves the boy and calms him down by using the safe word his father taught him.

The Superhero in the Alley

A decomposing corpse is found in an alley. Brennan establishes it as a teenage boy and he is marked as a comic book enthusiast in his superhero outfit. Booth and Brennan find a comic book store close by that is a place where fans meet and have some cosplay. The deceased, who was already dying of cancer, had his own series of books and character. They suspect the book store owner, who did the graphics for his novels, but he is proven innocent. Further investigation shows that the boy died protecting a woman he worked with when he tried to scare her husband. At his funeral, Booth honours the superhero by laying his Sniper pin on the boys’ casket.

The Woman in the Garden

Brennan and Booth investigate a dug up corpse that was found in the back of a gang member’s car. Another body turns up and it becomes a double homicide and Brennan finds the victims to be related. They investigate the wealthy employees of the victims and eventually find the killer.

The Man on the Fairway

Bones and Zack investigate crash site where Chinese diplomats and an unidentified guest, possibly a prostitute, died. Bones find fragments of a person who wasn’t in the plane but on the ground during the crash. A private investigator, Jesse Kane (Michael E. Rogers) shows up and thinks it is his missing father who was on the ground. Bones connects to him because he is an orphan too, but it is obvious she is in a better place than him. It turns out to not be his father and he asks Brennan how she copes with someone not searching. Bones gives the documents of her parents’ disappearance to Booth so someone can start again.

Two bodies in the Lab

Bones_1x15_465

Two bodies arrive at the Jeffersonian – one that appears to be a victim of a serial killer Booth searched for and another that might be James Cuguni, an old mob boss. Special Agent Jamie Kenton (Adam Baldwin), the Agent who worked on the mob case, arrives to assist the investigation. Bones ignores Booth’s suspicious warnings (and a bit of jealousy) and goes on a blind date with David Simmons (Coby Ryan McLaughlin), a man she met online. She is shot at before she can meet David and he is brought in for questioning but he seems innocent. It seems clear that Bones was shot at because of one of the highly volatile cases she is working on, and Booth vows not to leave her side until they catch who was responsible. He decides to spend the night on her couch to be by her side, but he ends up in hospital when her refrigerator door blows up in his face. Kenton promises to keep her safe but Booth realises what is happening – to distract Booth, Kenton made a victim appear like a serial killer case to shift his focus while the corrupt Kenton went and tried to either mislead or murder Bones. When he realised that she is way too clever to be distracted, he knew he had to kill her. He ties her up and nearly gives her the gruesome death his other victim suffers but the seriously injured Booth arrives and frees her.

Helen Bronson (Mary Mara), a documentary filmmaker, is found dead at the bottom of a shaft tunnel beneath Washington. Bones establishes Helen didn’t die from the fall. Brennan and Booth find an underground society. Their leader, Harold Overmeyer (Glenn Plummer) is an ex-soldier who can’t move on from what he saw in the war and who also holds himself responsible for the victim’s death. Booth and Brennan discover that the underground tunnels contain priceless treasure and that Helen was murdered because she discovered it and someone else wanted it. Booth and Brennan set to find who knew Helen had discovered the treasure and catch the killers trying to take the treasure, and afterwards they take Harold back to his underground friends and he is happy again.

The Skull in the Desert

Angela is on vacation with her photographer boyfriend in the desert. He goes missing and a skull arrives on the sheriff’s porch. Angela calls Brennan and she flies down to New Mexico and confirms the worst – that it is Angela’s boyfriend. Booth rocks up and Sheriff Dawes (James Parks) is upset about it but when he learns that his sister was with the photographer before he died he allows Booth to help with the investigation. A drug syndicate is uncovered and the team races against time to save the Sheriff’s sister while Angela deals with her boyfriend’s horrible death.

The man with the Bone

Booth brings to Brennan a 300 year old bone that may have belonged to Blackbeard. The team gets excited at the thought of pirates and treasures, and Hodgins is only too eager to dive down to collect samples. He befriends Dane McGinnis (Rodney Rowland), a site worker who shares his love for treasure. The team really gets excited when a skeleton is found at the site and they set to date the body. With all indications pointing towards their expected time period, everyone is excited. The body is stolen from the lab and all hell breaks loose. Bones is furious at what happened and wants the skeleton found. Dr. Goodman tracks the theft to a security guard and he is questioned. The bones were planted at the site and everyone is outraged. When their likeliest suspect is dead, they need to look at new avenues and Hodgins nearly pays the price.

Brennan wakes up in a bloody scene and can’t remember what happened to her. She is badly beaten and calls Booth to help her. He arrives in New Orleans and the voodoo priests tell her that Hurricane Katrina was caused by evil voodoo priests. The lab staff at the Jeffersonian calls her with results on a skeleton she can’t remember she sent and she knows it is a clue to her attack. Everything around her points to dark magic but even when Bones becomes a suspect for murder she refuses to believe it was supernatural. In the end her simple use of intellect helps her find the murderer.

The Graft in the Girl

FBI Deputy Director Sam Cullen’s daughter is dying from a form of lung cancer Brennan questions because it prevalent in older people. Investigation reveals that the bone graft she received came from a sick donor and that the company that supplied it has disappeared. More patients who received grafts from the same body are tested for cancer. Although it is too late for Cullen’s daughter, Booth and Bones search for the guilty parties and help the other patients with early detection. Angela does something beautiful and gives Cullen’s daughter a visual tour of the Louvre, something the young artist will never see now because of her cancer.

The Soldier on the Grave

A soldier’s grave is vandalised in what seems a protest suicide the day before he was supposed to be honoured. Bones finds that he was deceased was murdered and that he served in the same troupe as the soldier in the grave. Booth relieves a lot of horrors of his own time in the army and struggles to deal objectively with the case. They investigate the entire troupe and realise that something happened when they were in Iraq that is causing every person that was there to die. Bones manages to console Booth when he reveals some of the things he did in the army by listening to what Angela said that compassion and a simple touch is sometimes the only things that are needed to save a situation.

The Woman in Limbo

Bones is running around as usual, late for everything, when an image Angela created stops her in her tracks. It is her mother, and the devastated Bones insist that it is wrong. Booth opens a case and tries to console Bones. He fetches her estranged brother Russ (Lorean Dean) to help with the investigation. He tells Bones the truth – her parents changed their identities to get away from their lives as high class bank robbers. Russ works with Angela to create a sketch of a man his father pointed out as dangerous when he was a child – Vince McVickers, a man that was in a violent heist gang that turned witness to protect himself. Booth arrests him for carrying weapons and for killing Bones’ mother when they find a weapon that could have killed her. McVickers casts doubt on Max Brennan’s integrity by claiming it was him that killed her mother, not McVickers. The episode ends with a phone message from Max Brennan telling them to stop searching for him.

Rating: 6.5/10

I liked Bones Season One. It came through as a strong pilot and had everything needed to keep people watching. I felt drawn to it because obviously I love the lab side. The characters are strong and colourful and girl power rocks this show. I like Brennan’s unapologetic outlook on life and her confidence in what she believes in. She is so strong minded and she is such a good role model for girls.

Best episode: The Superhero in the alley, Two Bodies in the Lab, The Soldier on the Grave.

Worst episode: The Skull in the Desert. It should have been Angela’s shining moment but Michaela Conlin’s performance fell through.

What irritated me

Bones touching her hair with gloves on. That is DISGUSTING. Why don’t you just contaminate yourself and the bones already?!

The eating in the lab. YEUCH!

Michaela Conlin really is a mediocre actress. She does improve as the show progresses, but she is honestly not the cream of the crop.

The first bunch of episodes ends lamely. Sometimes the episode didn’t even have an obvious villain and end, and when they did there weren’t even arrests or anything.

The overtime these people gladly work

What I loved

The seriously beautiful lab. I would give a kidney to work in a place like that.

The way the characters interact reminds me of how people in the lab really talk to each other.

The characters are funny and intelligent and awkward. I love Hodgins’s short temper, paranoia and conspiracy theories, Angela’s sweet and kind nature, everything about Booth, Bones’ sarcasm, brains and social inadequacy, Zack’s nerdiness and awkwardness. I love how Dr. Goodman tries to manage them but ultimately accept they are experts and should be indulged.

The relationship between Bones and Booth. It is obvious from the start that there is something special between them and that it is inevitable that they end up together. I love how they learn to tolerate each other, and then understand each other and then move towards friendship at the end of season one.

Conclusion

Bones season one is worth the watch but the following seasons need more solid plotlines for the cases. Worth the watch, especially for the significantly more glamorised view of lab life.

Have you seen it? What did you think?