Millennium 3ABC04: “Closure”
The Millennial Abyss | Episodes | Season Three
“Closure” (3ABC04)
Written by Laurence Andries
Directed by Daniel Sackheim
Edited by Chris Willingham, A.C.E.
Aired October 23, 1998
Summary
The pursuit of a remorseless spree killer troubles Emma Hollis, whose fierce resolve to capture the madman is tied to a violent incident that scarred her emotionally as a child.
Synopsis
Emma drives along a highway, speaking a few tense words to her passenger, a long-haired man named Rick Van Horn. Suddenly, Emma jerks the wheel. The car swerves out of control, heading towards a large object. All goes black.
In flashback, three days earlier Rick and another man, Peter, rent a room in a hotel. The walls are so thin, however, that someone's snoring filters into the pair's room. Rick straps on body armor, then picks up a gun and a hunting knife. As Peter listens, Rick kicks in the door of the offending sleeper's room and fires off a shot. Rick returns and climbs back into bed.
Emma joins Detective Jay Cooper as police search the hotel room for possible evidence. The victim turns out to be a man named Daryl Norcott, a baker who was passing through town. Emma interviews a transient staying in Rick and Peter's old room. The transient explains that two men handed him the key, explaining that the room was paid for.
Aided by descriptions from the transient, police sketch artists are able to create composites of Rick and Peter. Frank, however, is somewhat perplexed by Emma's interest in the case, as it seemingly does not warrant FBI involvement. Nonetheless, he and Emma travel to the crime scene. While standing in the hotel room, the pair cannot help but notice squeaking coming from bed springs in a nearby room. Frank is struck by several internal visions, including a smiling face. He finds a Smiley Face carved into the wooden bed where Rick slept. Frank comes to believe that the killer did not act with any particular motive.
Meanwhile, Rick and Peter rendezvous with an amorous barmaid named Joni. The threesome, dressed in bullet proof vests, lay siege on a grocery store, killing three people in the process. Emma and Frank review security videotape of the incident. The pair notices Rick picking up Smiley Face jawbreakers from a hard candy display. Emma retrieves a candy wrapper, hoping it will yield fingerprints. Before the pair leaves the store, Frank asks Emma why she has taken an interest in the case. She answers the question with a question: why?
Using a fingerprint found on the candy wrapper, Emma identifies Rick Van Horn as the shooter. To her surprise, Van Horn has no history of previous violence. Frank, meanwhile, studies Emma's FBI file, probing her background for possible clues as to her interest in the case. He discovers that, twenty years earlier, Emma witnessed a man named Michael Wynter kill her sister. Wynter later committed suicide in prison. Every year on the anniversary of her sister's death, Emma requests a murder case hoping to discover why Wynter committed such an unfathomable act.
Meanwhile, Rick, Peter and Joni trick a mountain biker, Kyle, into getting high with them. Rick then offers Kyle three thousand dollars to shoot an apple from his head. Kyle accepts the challenge and fires the gun. Rick comes through unscathed. Rick then takes the apple from this head and removes the gun from Kyle's hand. He points the weapon at Kyle and insists that he place the apple upon his own head. When Kyle resists, Rick threatens to kill him on the spot. With little choice, Kyle places the apple on his head. Rick takes aim then lowers the gun slightly, shooting Kyle between the eyes.
Rick, Peter and Joni enter a pawn shop. They see their photographs being broadcast on a local news program. Panicking, Joni runs outside to retrieve the group's vehicle. But she discovers it is being impounded by a tow truck driver. Joni draws her gun, but is taken into custody when police gain the upper hand. Peter and Rick, however, escape on foot. At the police station, Emma attempts to get Joni to cooperate with the investigation. Joni seemingly softens, but just when she seems on the verge of revealing information, she suddenly demands a lawyer. Emma leaves Frank at the police station and drives off in her car. Shortly thereafter, Rick and Peter commandeer a city bus. They threaten to begin killing hostages unless police release Joni.
As police stall for more time, the city bus stops in front of the precinct's steps. Meanwhile, Emma hears of the hijacking on her radio, turns around, and drives back to the police station. The two gunmen eventually realize that their effort is futile. Clad in body armor, they exit the bus and advance on the police station. Police return fire, and during the gun battle, Peter is struck in the neck by a bullet.
Emma pulls into the police parking lot, only to see Rick advancing towards her. Rick commandeers the car, taking Emma hostage. As Emma drives, Rick orders her to pull off the road. Emma refuses to do so. Rick loads a bullet into his gun, preparing to shoot. But before he does so, Emma asks him, "Why?" Rick replies, "You tell me." Emma floors the accelerator and swerves the vehicle towards an abutment on a bridge. The impact sends Rick crashing through the windshield. Emma, who was wearing her seatbelt, survives.
Starring
Lance Henriksen as Frank Black
Klea Scott as Emma Hollis
Guest Starring
Garret Dillahunt as Rick Van Horn
Michael Sunczyk as Peter
Shelley-Lynn Owens as Joni
Carol Alexander as Woman in Bar
Bob Dawson as Captain Kevin Mann
Jason Gray-Stanford as Kyle
Tim Henry as Sheriff Taylor
Dee Jay Jackson as Det. Jay Cooper
Robert Luft as FPD Officer
Don McWilliams as Connor
Howard Siegel as the Transient
Christopher R. Sumptom as the Tow Driver
Production Credits
Production #6C04
Music by Mark Snow
Production Designer Mark Freeborn
Director of Photography Robert McLachlan
Associate Producer Jon-Michael Preece
Co-Producer Robert Moresco
Co-Producer Paul Rabwin
Producer Thomas J. Wright
Co-Executive Producer Ken Horton
Co-Executive Producer John Peter Kousakis
Executive Producer Chip Johannessen
Executive Producer Michael Duggan
Executive Producer Chris Carter
Location
Book Excerpt
“I liked ‘Closure.’ That was the first time I got a backstory, and I thought Garret Dillahunt was really scary. That was the first time I felt like I got to sink some acting chops into some work, and it was very subtle too.”
—Klea Scott
Back to Frank Black
REVIEWS
“There is an elegance to the script’s simplicity... ‘Closure’ is a very simple story that is told in very simple terms. It never claims to be anything more than what it is. It is necessary character development for a new regular character, and is absolutely committed to that.”
—Darren Mooney
The Movie Blog
“If there’s a reason to watch ‘Closure,’ it’s Garrett Dillahunt, a great actor who manages to give Van Horn just the right kind of energy to make him bearable. For this premise to work at all, you need to enjoy watching the bad guys do their thing just as much as you dread the consequences, and Dillahunt accomplishes this easily... It has a feverish, mesmerizing intensity that makes it hard to look away.”
—Zack Handlen
The AV Club