"Millennium" Sacrament (TV Episode 1997) Poster

(TV Series)

(1997)

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8/10
My Devil Daddy made me do it!
injury-6544717 June 2020
This was an enjoyable enough episode.

We get the cliche of "you're too close to this case" thing.

We get to meet Frank's brother. I guess stoicism runs in the family. If I was him, given the nature of what happens in this episode, I would stay far far away from Frank from now on. Eek.

His sister in law is basically just here to be a victim. We don't learn anything about her or her experiences. I think they could have handled that side of the episode better. Then we might have been more invested in her rescue. As it was I didn't particularly care if she was saved or not. Kinda hoping she died actually but oh well.

Daughters gift is popping up again. I hope they do something interesting with that. She's always just been this annoying bubbly thing running around in the background of the show. It'd be nice to see some darkness take hold there.

It's always fun to have a Satanic theme. I had a feeling the parents knew something about the crimes. The actor who plays the mad torturer does a fine job of acting sufficiently creepy.

Solid episode that continues with the tone of the show nicely.
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6/10
middle of the road
quinoble8 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This episode is what people have in mind when they characterize "Millennium" as "serial killer of the week." "Sacrament" lacks the intensity and creativity of the previous few episodes, instead going for a conventional, by-the-numbers (by "Millennium" standards) narrative.

Here, Frank Black's sister-in-law is kidnapped and Frank will stop at nothing to find her. The sister-in-law is a cipher who exists only so Frank can rescue her.

Frank's younger brother exists only to provide a foil to Frank: he's less intense and unfamiliar with the seamier side of life. It's reiterated that Frank's primary concern is shielding his loved ones from the darkness in the world: he protected his brother when they were children, and continues to protect him in the episode by concealing some of his darker suspicions about the kidnapper. In a moment of despair, the brother tells him that his quest to protect everyone is doomed to fail.

But all these are points the show has made before in more interesting ways, especially in the pilot. So no new ground is broken.

The plot is rather scattered: at first Bletcher furiously tells Frank to leave the case alone, but is back to asking him for help later in the episode. We're led to believe the sister-in-law's dead, but in a twist, she's found alive. We're led to believe the killer is one character, but it turns out to be someone who was onscreen for all of five seconds.

Frank has demonic visions, but they're not tied meaningfully into the plot and seem to be there only because it's what's expected on "Millennium."

The only new idea the episode plays with is suggesting Jordan Black has inherited her father's intuitive abilities, as she seems to mysteriously know what is happening to her aunt, and falls inexplicably ill during the case--only to abruptly recover when her aunt is rescued.

Put this episode in the "not very memorable" column.
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5/10
Here's an autograph for your brother, I wrote it on the Starter cap.
bombersflyup6 September 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Sacrament is engaging, not too thrilling though and somewhat vague. Jordan's exhibiting some of Frank's gift, but it's not discussed. We aren't given the villain's point of view and we don't know what it's all about. Lieutenant Bletch's going off about nothing. He's angry that Frank's getting involved, but isn't angry when Frank finds her.
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