Virtue Quest

A practical approach to the classical virtues

  • Coalition for Clarity
  • Home
  • About
    • Who is Robert?
    • Bring Robert to you!
  • Join the Quest
  • Reading List
  • Contact Me
  • Links

Monk finale

Posted in Revenge by Robert
Dec 05 2009
TrackBack Address.

The cast of Monk

The cast of "Monk"

I’ve been watching “Monk” with my family for some time, and we all gathered around the tele last night for the series finale.

For those who don’t watch much TV, the show follows Adrian Monk (played by Tony Shalhoub), a former detective for the San Francisco Police whose OCD went into overdrive when he lost his wife twelve years ago. He’s been consulting with the department, because he has an uncanny insight into what “doesn’t fit” at a crime scene. Mostly, it’s a comedy hung loosely on a detective show with the running gag of how to set off Monk’s phobias or obsessions. Sort of an anti-Columbo.

The one case he’s never solved is his own wife’s murder. So, of course, the series had to end with the solution to this cold case. As with most episodes, the actual clues and mystery-solving aspect of the story are mostly incidental. The resolution is quick and neatly resolved. It’s all about the character quirks. But it surprised me by showing a dark side of Monk’s character that I did not at all expect from a normally light entertainment.

* * * Spoilers to follow! * * *

Monk has always been haunted by his inability to solve his wife’s murder, but when he discovers the killer’s identity, he has two very dark reactions: he grows vengeful, and he implies that his OCD derives from an inability to “breathe the same air” as Trudy’s killer.

Vengeance and Justice

You knew this had to get back to virtue at some point, didn’t you?

Justice is the act of giving to each person their due. This is obviously the principle behind civil justice: I sue someone who refuses to give me what they owe me. But it’s also the case in criminal justice. In committing a crime, the criminal owes the victim what belongs to them; and, a little less obviously but just as truly, the criminal “is due” the consequences and punishment that belong to the crime.

Vengeance, on the other hand, is the simple desire to harm someone who has harmed me. It belongs to the “misery loves company” class of motivations. Vengeance says, “I have suffered, and I want that person to suffer at least as much – maybe even more!” It’s not interested in restoring order or right; just in causing hurt.

Monk’s vengeful turn

Now, throughout the series, Monk has consistently sided with justice over vengeance. But then, he’s also consistently made an exception to all reason and logic wherever his wife was concerned. Even so, in a previous episode he was not willing to kill the person who planted the bomb that killed Trudy.

So I was surprised to see him, not only asking Stottlemeyer (Ted Levine) to kill the suspect without a trial, but actually stealing a gun and apparently threatening to kill the suspect himself. I was also surprised that he had no reaction other than “emptiness” that the suspect committed suicide.

If the show was willing to go into that area of wrath and revenge, I would have hoped that they would, well, do the topic justice. Show Monk struggle with his desire for revenge, his regret that he didn’t pull the trigger himself, and so on.

I also had hoped that, having set up that Monk didn’t want to “breathe the same air” that Trudy’s killer breathed, they might have resolved that with some idea of the world being “cleaner” now. But maybe there I’m reading more into the statement than it warrants.

Character welcome

Now, I know all too well that Monk is just a fun diversion, and is not intended to be high art or profound literature. Even so, I do wish it would reach a little higher – especially in episodes where it delves into some deeper aspect of a character. Frankly, I think any show is more entertaining – more funny, more exciting, more romantic, what have you – when it reflects the fullness of human life and motivation.

Monk’s series finale left me, unfortunately, with a rather flat character whom I just didn’t believe in anymore, much less care about or identify with.

Ah well. That leaves more time for my own writing.

Share
Tagged as: Justice, Revenge, Reviews, Vengeance
Comments
  • fr. Dismas, OP:

    I didn’t see it, but it might serve as a warning: vengeance, even when it “made” Monk the great investigator he was, in the end resulted with nothing more than an empty person inside (when he referred to his “emptiness”). It was what made Michael Jordan great, but as the whole world saw at his Hall of Fame speech, it also made him a very small person.

    That kind of reminds me of the Inigo Montoya character in “The Princess Bride.” He, too, became something great (a swordsman) out of the drive that vengeance fueled. At the end, he too felt empty after his vengeance was complete. If it were “truer” to life, he may have sunk into alcohol or some other escape.

    If you look at Spe Salvi, we need something to drive us. We have to have something to “look forward” to, even if it’s just our progeny or species. But if hope dies, and all we have are the empty drives of vengeance, consumerism or what have you; if we have no hope, then all the vices that drive us will destroy us in the end.

    Just my 2 cents (adjust to inflation accordingly).

    Reply 5 December 2009 at 3.10 pm
  • Jake Lewis:

    Cold Case looks like CSI just like anyother detective tv series,:`

    Reply 12 July 2010 at 9.25 am
  • Brian Hughes:

    Cold Case is a nice TV series but the story sometimes does not appeal to me much.*’

    Reply 10 October 2010 at 10.21 am
  • Lora Ohlhauser:

    The website author has a specified ability to describe truly really excellent subjects. Reading this web web site is genuinely enjoyable and you’ll locate surely many great comments. In any circumstance, it was a pleasure to spend time in your web internet site and go by way of the exciting report.

    Reply 20 November 2010 at 6.33 pm
Leave a Comment
Click here to cancel reply.

The Author

Robert King

My name is Robert King. I'm trying to become a better person, and I hope you'll join me on my quest for virtue.

Get the whole story on my About page, or drop me a line through my Contact page.

Recent Comments

  • Robert on Good news … sort of
  • Peter Black on Good news … sort of
  • AC on Life seen through the lens of the virtues
  • Mark B on Alasdair MacIntyre on human rights
  • Leo on The crisis-driven life

Categories

  • Aristotle  (10)
  • Art  (3)
  • Catholic stuff  (3)
  • Charity  (40)
    • Diligence  (2)
    • Friendship  (5)
    • Sloth  (5)
  • Daily Inventory  (22)
  • Discernment  (25)
  • Experience  (20)
  • Faith  (17)
  • Fortitude  (27)
    • Patience  (2)
    • Perseverance  (11)
  • Freedom  (13)
  • Good  (54)
  • Good Clean Fun  (12)
  • Habit  (35)
  • Hope  (20)
  • Justice  (55)
    • Duty  (3)
    • Gratitude  (7)
    • Law  (10)
    • Religion  (8)
    • Revenge  (3)
    • Rights  (6)
  • Letters to Legislators  (1)
  • Linky  (18)
  • Passions  (4)
    • Anger  (1)
    • Lonliness  (1)
  • Prudence  (32)
    • Learning  (7)
    • negligence  (2)
  • Reality  (65)
  • Reviews  (9)
  • Temperance  (16)
    • Chastity  (2)
  • Thomas Aquinas  (24)
  • Uncategorized  (48)
  • Vice  (26)
    • Avarice  (1)
    • Pride  (1)
  • Virtue in Action  (9)

Search for Virtue

Archives

  • November 2011 (1)
  • August 2011 (2)
  • July 2011 (3)
  • June 2011 (3)
  • May 2011 (4)
  • April 2011 (3)
  • March 2011 (1)
  • February 2011 (3)
  • January 2011 (4)
  • December 2010 (11)
  • November 2010 (24)
  • October 2010 (25)
  • September 2010 (11)
  • August 2010 (1)
  • July 2010 (10)
  • June 2010 (8)
  • May 2010 (11)
  • April 2010 (10)
  • March 2010 (20)
  • February 2010 (27)
  • January 2010 (25)
  • December 2009 (19)
  • November 2009 (19)
  • October 2009 (4)

Support the Quest for Virtue

Donate

Networked Blogs

Follow this blog
All contents of this site Copyright 2009 Robert King (unless otherwise attributed); All Rights Reserved. If you copy anything from this site, please attribute the source!
Join the Quest Powered by WordPress | “Blend” from Spectacu.la WP Themes Club