Even now, 15 years later, you cannot mention Criminal Minds without someone bringing up this episode. It is the standard against which all procedural "Big Bads" are measured.
10/10 (And one broken coffee mug for Hotch). Did you recover from this episode? Or do you still skip it during re-watches? Let me know in the comments below. criminal minds 100 script
Most action scripts rely on rapid-fire dialogue. "100" relies on . The most powerful moment in the episode isn't a gunshot; it's a phone call. Even now, 15 years later, you cannot mention
If he had died, it would have been a tragedy. But forcing him to live, to carry Jack out of that house while the boy whispers, "I worked the case, Daddy. Just like you said," is Shakespearean-level trauma. "100" changed the DNA of the show. Before this episode, the BAU was a family that always won in the end. After "100," the stakes became permanent. Hotch never really smiled again in the same way. The script taught the writers that the audience could handle the worst possible outcome, as long as the emotional logic held up. Did you recover from this episode
The script then does the cruelest thing possible:
If you are a fan of Criminal Minds , you don’t refer to Episode 100 by its production number. You call it "The one where Hotch loses Haley." You call it "The phone call episode." You call it the 45 minutes of television that left the entire fandom emotionally scarred and reaching for tissues.
Airing on April 14, 2010, Season 5, Episode 9—simply titled —wasn't just a milestone. It was a thesis statement for the entire series. Here is why this script remains the gold standard for procedural tragedy. The Setup: The Devil You Know To understand the gravity of the script, you have to look at the villain. The writers didn't bring in a random UnSub for the 100th episode. They brought back George Foyet (C. Thomas Howell), aka "The Reaper."