![]() One reason I don’t believe Keene killed both girls is that Vickery is so very sure he did. ![]() There's just one problem: Sharp Objects has telegraphed, in a number of ways, that Keene didn’t do it. Sharp Objects is almost certainly serving a red herring in Vickery’s suspicion of John KeeneĪ major development in “Falling” is that Wind Gap’s police chief, Vickery ( Matt Craven), has settled on who he believes is the murderer: John Keene ( Taylor John Smith). (It also interrogated a creepy, horny version of a Civil War heroine myth.)īut because it has spent so much time showing us the local color of Wind Gap, when Sharp Objects finally sinks its teeth into the murder mystery at its core, as it does in “Falling,” the result is something a little more satisfying - due to all the personal stakes involved - than the typical quest to figure out whodunnit. It’s been a slow burn, while the show has focused on stories and themes centered on female sexuality, the idea of who gets to tell women’s stories, and society’s expectations of women. For the past six episodes, we’ve been examining the underpinnings of the Wind Gap murders, mostly through the lens of Camille’s ( Amy Adams) deranged family life and her inescapable past. If you’ve been watching Sharp Objects, you know that solving the murder mystery isn’t really part of the story the show seems most concerned with telling.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |