#603456
Mr. Monk Gets Married
Season 2, Episode 15
Written by: David Breckman
Directed by: Craig Zisk
Original Air Date; February 27, 2004
We’ll Need Some Help: Raymond Toliver is cleaning out an antique desk when he finds a note. We flash back to the winter of 1849, when miner Joshua Skinner found the mother lode and killed his partner. After using some of the funds to build a house, he hid the gold in that house and left clues in journals. Toliver shares this letter with a friend Dalton Padron and is promptly killed.
Monk’s attempts to record an answering machine message are interrupted by a call from Disher. They go to a station and find an intoxicated Disher distraught over his mother, Maria. She is engaged to Padron but there is an age difference of almost two decades and he proposed on their second date. Maria does not have money and Disher checked Padron out only to find a clean record. Monk and Sharona visit Padron’s shop and find out that Padron is moving to Ecuador, a country notorious for being hard to get an extradition from, and his Visa application lists him as single. Monk is suspicious but does not know what is going on. Sharona has an idea and asks Monk to keep an open mind.
Sharona and Monk pretend to be a married couple so that they can attend the group counseling session with Marie and Padron led by Dr. Julie Waterford. Maria recognizes Monk’s name but he brushes it off. By an amazing coincidence, Dr. Waterford is leasing the house from the estate of Skinner. Even more amazing, they find Padron in the library. Padron claims the writing is fascinating, but a sample of the journals shows that is not the case.
In their room, Monk tells Sharona that he recognized the desk in a picture of Skinner, meaning that Padron did not choose this particular venue by chance. Sharona has problems getting the ring off and argues with Monk about the bathroom. Just as she takes the ring off and asks for a divorce, Dr. Waterford walks in with their schedules. She sees a picture of Trudy and gets rid of it, focusing on Monk moving on and Sharona to stop drinking (which Monk improvised earlier) over the weekend.
During a group therapy session, Monk talks about Trudy and Sharona notices a sheet of paper hanging out of Padron’s lapel. In order to get it, she does the only rational thing and starts a fight so that she can push him while sneaking away the note. Dr. Waterford is furious. When they read the letter, they realize that there is gold hidden on the premises. Unfortunately, Padron finds them and burns the letter, thus preventing Maria from getting ‘confused’ and presumably breaking not only fire laws but their agreement in the process.
Monk sees Padron walking around the premises with a shovel. He and Sharona follow him to a cave whereupon he sneaks out and causes a cave-in. Sharona uses the flash on her camera to find a way out before Monk uses his flashlight. As Sharona uses a pocketknife to dig them out, Monk asks for the ring back as it was Trudy’s. Monk then gets a phone call, but he ends it quickly as he is trapped in a cave.
At a group session, Dr. Waterford notes that Sharona is sleeping in a tent while Trudy’s picture is on the mantle, the place of honor. She has them declare their love for each other verbally and has them kiss to prove their love. Not just any kiss, a lovingly deep one with mention tongue and everything. They get away with a quick peck after which Monk washes his mouth out which Sharona calls insulting.
Meanwhile, Disher looks into Padron. Toliver is missing so he goes to the store owned by Tolliver and Padron. Inside, he finds Tolvier’s corpse. He calls his mom with the news, but Padron is on the line. Disher calls the local sheriff to detain Padron before heading out himself.
Monk and Sharona go over the journals of which there are over nine hundred of and one of which is the first three books of the bible. When Monk puts a book on the wobbly mantle, it weighs more than it should. When the sheriff arrives, they find Padron going to town on a grandfather clock he mistakenly believes has the gold. Skinner melted down the gold and mixed in some ink and wrote until he used it all up. The handcuffed Padron takes the sheriff’s gun, locks everyone in a closet and leaves. In the closet, Monk gets a bit of space, a couple reconnects, and the sheriff meets an interested Maria. While Padron tries to make a getaway, he is stopped by Disher.
The sheriff finds the relatives of the true owner of the gold and leaves with Maria, the other couple has made progress and Sharona returns Trudy’s ring. Dr. Waterford believes in the two of them as a couple only to be told the truth wherein she breathes a sigh of relief and asks them to keep it that way.
This Week’s Compulsion: Monk spots a forgery that Padron is selling for fourteen thousand dollars.
White Courtesy Phone: When recording a message with his new machine, Sharona says Monk will wear out the computer chip.
Dishing it out: Disher’s preferred hooch is Scotch. He is fairly into a bottle before Monk and Sharona arrive.
Let’s Up the Rating: Padron is unable to ‘perform’ due to an accident involving a land mine.
Here’s What Happened: We get a sepia flashback narrated by Toliver showing the winter of 1849 complete with a superimposed title.
One More Time: “Aren’t you supposed to have a warrant?” “Aren’t you supposed to have a sprinkler system that works?”
Padron’s landlord and Disher one upping each other.
Dear Genre: Nester Carobonell appears pre-Lost and Bates Motel as Padron. The Great Jane Lynch appears pre-Glee and Party Down.
Trivial Matters: The gold rush in California took place from 1848 through 1855 but those who partook are commonly referred to as forty-niners.
Disher paraphrases Weekend at Bernie’s’ “Where the hell are you, you son of a bitch?” with “Where the hell’s my mother, you son of a bitch?”
Per the rules of television, you have to get credit if you have a speaking part, even if it is Navigation ensign. For those roles with very little screen time, the credit is at the end of the episode during the credits. This episode has enough for the actors to do that it is unnecessary, a rarity in the industry.
Stottlemeyer gets a name check but is not in this episode.
It’s a Jungle Out There: “Raining all morning. I had beef jerky for breakfast. There is a cloud in the sky that resembles President Pierce. This chair is squeaking. Something smells good. I love smoking tobaccy. I just sneezed.” Certain times you write for a specific actor in mind. Other times, a great actor comes along and makes the writing all that much better with their performance. Jane Lynch enhances the heck out of Dr. Waterford. She has some monologues that are performed perfectly and is every bit the counselor she has to be. Even at the end when she tells Monk and Sharona not to wed it is a great moment as she breaks out in a sigh of relief. It is such a joy to watch her, and you can see how she was destined to become a great actor. Since this was before her breakout role in Glee, the casting department got a bargain.
Even the best actors can salvage horrible writing, but David Berkman has a fantastic script. There are a lot of zingers not just with main characters. The third couple at the retreat are the Sweeneys and they are pretty much there to be the third wheel, but they do well with their material. The sheriff and Maria getting together feels natural.
The only issue with the writing is the title. Mr. Monk does not get married, but the setup is one that the series had to do. Usually, someone will clamor for the male and female leads to get together and with eight seasons you figure that would happen here. Berkman had fun with the concept as did Shaloub and Schram. Their kiss is done perfectly though Dr. Waterford lets them get away with a quick peck. There are no weak links in the acting; it is great all around.
Director Craig Zak had fun with things as well. The cave scene is done well as is the sepia segment at the top of the episode. There is also an overhead camera in the closet and Zak did a good job of showing how close everyone was. A great job all around.
Season 2, Episode 15
Written by: David Breckman
Directed by: Craig Zisk
Original Air Date; February 27, 2004
We’ll Need Some Help: Raymond Toliver is cleaning out an antique desk when he finds a note. We flash back to the winter of 1849, when miner Joshua Skinner found the mother lode and killed his partner. After using some of the funds to build a house, he hid the gold in that house and left clues in journals. Toliver shares this letter with a friend Dalton Padron and is promptly killed.
Monk’s attempts to record an answering machine message are interrupted by a call from Disher. They go to a station and find an intoxicated Disher distraught over his mother, Maria. She is engaged to Padron but there is an age difference of almost two decades and he proposed on their second date. Maria does not have money and Disher checked Padron out only to find a clean record. Monk and Sharona visit Padron’s shop and find out that Padron is moving to Ecuador, a country notorious for being hard to get an extradition from, and his Visa application lists him as single. Monk is suspicious but does not know what is going on. Sharona has an idea and asks Monk to keep an open mind.
Sharona and Monk pretend to be a married couple so that they can attend the group counseling session with Marie and Padron led by Dr. Julie Waterford. Maria recognizes Monk’s name but he brushes it off. By an amazing coincidence, Dr. Waterford is leasing the house from the estate of Skinner. Even more amazing, they find Padron in the library. Padron claims the writing is fascinating, but a sample of the journals shows that is not the case.
In their room, Monk tells Sharona that he recognized the desk in a picture of Skinner, meaning that Padron did not choose this particular venue by chance. Sharona has problems getting the ring off and argues with Monk about the bathroom. Just as she takes the ring off and asks for a divorce, Dr. Waterford walks in with their schedules. She sees a picture of Trudy and gets rid of it, focusing on Monk moving on and Sharona to stop drinking (which Monk improvised earlier) over the weekend.
During a group therapy session, Monk talks about Trudy and Sharona notices a sheet of paper hanging out of Padron’s lapel. In order to get it, she does the only rational thing and starts a fight so that she can push him while sneaking away the note. Dr. Waterford is furious. When they read the letter, they realize that there is gold hidden on the premises. Unfortunately, Padron finds them and burns the letter, thus preventing Maria from getting ‘confused’ and presumably breaking not only fire laws but their agreement in the process.
Monk sees Padron walking around the premises with a shovel. He and Sharona follow him to a cave whereupon he sneaks out and causes a cave-in. Sharona uses the flash on her camera to find a way out before Monk uses his flashlight. As Sharona uses a pocketknife to dig them out, Monk asks for the ring back as it was Trudy’s. Monk then gets a phone call, but he ends it quickly as he is trapped in a cave.
At a group session, Dr. Waterford notes that Sharona is sleeping in a tent while Trudy’s picture is on the mantle, the place of honor. She has them declare their love for each other verbally and has them kiss to prove their love. Not just any kiss, a lovingly deep one with mention tongue and everything. They get away with a quick peck after which Monk washes his mouth out which Sharona calls insulting.
Meanwhile, Disher looks into Padron. Toliver is missing so he goes to the store owned by Tolliver and Padron. Inside, he finds Tolvier’s corpse. He calls his mom with the news, but Padron is on the line. Disher calls the local sheriff to detain Padron before heading out himself.
Monk and Sharona go over the journals of which there are over nine hundred of and one of which is the first three books of the bible. When Monk puts a book on the wobbly mantle, it weighs more than it should. When the sheriff arrives, they find Padron going to town on a grandfather clock he mistakenly believes has the gold. Skinner melted down the gold and mixed in some ink and wrote until he used it all up. The handcuffed Padron takes the sheriff’s gun, locks everyone in a closet and leaves. In the closet, Monk gets a bit of space, a couple reconnects, and the sheriff meets an interested Maria. While Padron tries to make a getaway, he is stopped by Disher.
The sheriff finds the relatives of the true owner of the gold and leaves with Maria, the other couple has made progress and Sharona returns Trudy’s ring. Dr. Waterford believes in the two of them as a couple only to be told the truth wherein she breathes a sigh of relief and asks them to keep it that way.
This Week’s Compulsion: Monk spots a forgery that Padron is selling for fourteen thousand dollars.
White Courtesy Phone: When recording a message with his new machine, Sharona says Monk will wear out the computer chip.
Dishing it out: Disher’s preferred hooch is Scotch. He is fairly into a bottle before Monk and Sharona arrive.
Let’s Up the Rating: Padron is unable to ‘perform’ due to an accident involving a land mine.
Here’s What Happened: We get a sepia flashback narrated by Toliver showing the winter of 1849 complete with a superimposed title.
One More Time: “Aren’t you supposed to have a warrant?” “Aren’t you supposed to have a sprinkler system that works?”
Padron’s landlord and Disher one upping each other.
Dear Genre: Nester Carobonell appears pre-Lost and Bates Motel as Padron. The Great Jane Lynch appears pre-Glee and Party Down.
Trivial Matters: The gold rush in California took place from 1848 through 1855 but those who partook are commonly referred to as forty-niners.
Disher paraphrases Weekend at Bernie’s’ “Where the hell are you, you son of a bitch?” with “Where the hell’s my mother, you son of a bitch?”
Per the rules of television, you have to get credit if you have a speaking part, even if it is Navigation ensign. For those roles with very little screen time, the credit is at the end of the episode during the credits. This episode has enough for the actors to do that it is unnecessary, a rarity in the industry.
Stottlemeyer gets a name check but is not in this episode.
It’s a Jungle Out There: “Raining all morning. I had beef jerky for breakfast. There is a cloud in the sky that resembles President Pierce. This chair is squeaking. Something smells good. I love smoking tobaccy. I just sneezed.” Certain times you write for a specific actor in mind. Other times, a great actor comes along and makes the writing all that much better with their performance. Jane Lynch enhances the heck out of Dr. Waterford. She has some monologues that are performed perfectly and is every bit the counselor she has to be. Even at the end when she tells Monk and Sharona not to wed it is a great moment as she breaks out in a sigh of relief. It is such a joy to watch her, and you can see how she was destined to become a great actor. Since this was before her breakout role in Glee, the casting department got a bargain.
Even the best actors can salvage horrible writing, but David Berkman has a fantastic script. There are a lot of zingers not just with main characters. The third couple at the retreat are the Sweeneys and they are pretty much there to be the third wheel, but they do well with their material. The sheriff and Maria getting together feels natural.
The only issue with the writing is the title. Mr. Monk does not get married, but the setup is one that the series had to do. Usually, someone will clamor for the male and female leads to get together and with eight seasons you figure that would happen here. Berkman had fun with the concept as did Shaloub and Schram. Their kiss is done perfectly though Dr. Waterford lets them get away with a quick peck. There are no weak links in the acting; it is great all around.
Director Craig Zak had fun with things as well. The cave scene is done well as is the sepia segment at the top of the episode. There is also an overhead camera in the closet and Zak did a good job of showing how close everyone was. A great job all around.
A New Earth, An Old Bajor, Casino Fun For All: Alternate Universe: Twilight
Vidiians welcomed to Second Edition: Phage
Vidiians welcomed to Second Edition: Phage