Mr. Monk and the End

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"Mr. Monk and the End"
Ed Begley, Jr. as Dr. Malcolm Nash
Mary Beth Evans as Mrs. Rickover
Shelly Cole as Edie Kazarinsky
Sarah Rush as Nurse Judy Fitzgerald

Flashbacks
Bitty Schram as Sharona Fleming
Stanley Kamel as Dr. Charles Kroger
John Turturro as Ambrose Monk
Dan Hedaya as Jack Monk, Sr.
Tim Bagley as Harold Krenshaw
Jarrad Paul as Kevin Dorfman
Episode chronology
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Monk (season 8)
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"Mr. Monk and the End" is the two-part

Natalie Teeger (Traylor Howard). In the finale, Monk finally solves his wife Trudy's (Melora Hardin
) murder after twelve years, concluding an eight-season long arc.

"Mr. Monk and the End" was written by

drama series ever in basic cable with 9.4 million viewers.[1]
The finale received generally positive reviews from critics, who praised Shalhoub's performance and the overall resolution of the series.

Plot

In a flashback to December 14, 1997,

Captain Stottlemeyer
question Dr. Malcolm Nash, director of the birthing center where Stroud worked. Stottlemeyer receives a phone call and informs Monk that Trudy has been killed.

In the present day, Monk finds that his latest case is taking him back to the same birthing clinic. Although Stottlemeyer offers Monk the chance to sit the case out, he insists he is okay. The pair learn that Dr. Nash had been shot dead while digitizing patient records. Monk concludes that the murder was committed by a professional hitman, and the police soon find a partial fingerprint that identifies the suspect as Joey Kazarinski. Seeking a warrant for his arrest from Judge Ethan Rickover, the group overhear Rickover telling his wife that he will never move out of his house, learning that he has been nominated for the State Supreme Court. That night, Kazarinski's employer instructs him to kill Monk.

When attending a dinner the following day at Natalie's house, Monk is poisoned with a powerful synthetic toxin based on ricin. Stottlemeyer forms a task force to find out who hired the hitman to kill Dr. Nash and what poison was used on Monk. The group track down Kazarinski to a train station, only for him to be hit by a freight train and killed.

Monk discovers a videotape recording made by Trudy before her death, where she confesses to having had an affair with Rickover when he had been a law professor at Berkeley. The affair resulted in a child, which only lived for a few minutes. Trudy suspected that Rickover might be silencing everyone who knew about the affair, so she made the video just in case. Monk remembers the conversation between Rickover and his wife about his house and deduces that a crucial clue is connected to it.

Natalie realizes that the poison was planted in Monk's hand wipes; the hospital is given this information to make an antidote.

Monk goes to Rickover's house and forces Rickover to dig up the remains of the missing midwife. Rickover admits he committed the murders in order to ensure that he would get the position of appellate judge. Twelve years ago, Wendy Stroud, the nurse who delivered the child, told Rickover she intended to tell the press about his affair with Trudy and their child. He murdered her instead, and buried her in his front yard, which explains why he refused to move. Rickover also killed Trudy, as she was the only person who could connect Stroud's disappearance to him. Twelve years later, Dr. Nash came across references to the child when digitizing the birthing clinic's patient records, and thus suspected what had happened to Stroud. He then tried to blackmail Rickover, causing Rickover to hire Kazarinski to kill him and poison Monk so he wouldn't be able to piece everything together. Rickover steals Monk's gun and commits suicide after cryptically telling Monk to "take care of her".

Despite having finally found closure from Trudy's murder, Monk is bothered by Rickover's last words. A few days later, Monk finds an old newspaper article concerning Stroud's disappearance, and discovers that Trudy's child did not die, but was adopted. Stottlemeyer tracks her down. Monk meets Trudy's daughter, Molly Evans, who bears a striking resemblance to Trudy and, much like her mother, is a writer, working as a film critic for a local paper. Monk considers retiring from detective work to spend time with Molly, but Molly encourages him to use his gift to continue helping other people. The team find out that Randy, who has been hiding something throughout the episode, is moving to Summit, New Jersey to take over as Chief of Police, and that he and Sharona are moving in together.

Before leaving with Natalie to investigate another crime scene, Monk takes a moment to check that he did not leave his stove on, a reference to the first episode. A final montage shows flashbacks from throughout the series, before cutting to clips of the main characters in the present day: Stottlemeyer getting ready for work and embracing his wife, Randy setting up his desk in Summit, and Monk and Natalie arriving at the crime scene.

Reception

Critical reception

"Mr. Monk and the End" has received generally positive reviews. Allison Waldman of TvSquad called the cliffhanger at the end of "Part 1" great and said that she was "dying to know how [it would be] resolved". She also praised Tony Shalhoub's acting in the bed scene in which he talks to Trudy.[2] Waldman called the drama "tense" in "Part 2", and praised Shalhoub and Craig T. Nelson's acting.[3] Jonah Krakow of IGN had mixed feelings about the finale, saying that Molly's introduction was a nice way to send the show off, although he felt cheated that the show's biggest mystery was literally handed to Monk in a box. Like Waldman, he praised Shalhoub's and Nelson's acting, and the tension of their scene in which Nelson digs up the midwife's body. Overall he gave it an 8 out of 10.[4] The A.V. Club's Emily VanDerWerff called it "a surprisingly sweet ending to a show that I haven't watched regularly in a few years", and gave it a "B+".[5]

Ratings

"Part 1" gained 5.8 million viewers.

Mr. Monk Fights City Hall"), USA Network's most-watched scripted television show (previously set by Burn Notice), and basic cable's most-watched hour-long drama (previously set by The Closer
with 9.2 million viewers).

Awards and nominations

Primetime Emmy Award for Original Outstanding Music and Lyrics
for the song "When I'm Gone".

References

  1. ^ 'Monk' exits on record-breaking high, Variety, December 7, 2009
  2. ^ Review – Mr. Monk and the End (Part 1) by Allison Waldman
  3. ^ Review – Mr. Monk and the End (Part 2) by Allison Waldman
  4. ^ "TV Episode Guides, Reviews, Videos, Wikis & TV Show Previews". IGN.
  5. ^ VanDerWerff, Emily (December 5, 2009). ""Mr Monk and the End"". The A.V. Club. The Onion. Retrieved July 27, 2019.
  6. ^ "First Half Of 'Monk' Finale Draws Series' Most Viewers Since Feb. 2008".