Worth watching for Hodge’s performance and the surveillance horror vibe, but suffers from pacing lulls and a familiar twist.
If you’ve watched any modern serial killer show, you’ll guess the “surprise ally” reveal about 10 minutes before it happens. The episode leans on a trope (killer inside law enforcement) without adding new wrinkles. cross s01e07 pdtv
The episode introduces a “live broadcast” element: the killer streams his activities through hacked public TV screens. It’s a timely, unsettling touch (think The Joker meets Watch Dogs ). The cat-and-mouse game gets personal in a way previous episodes only hinted at. The episode introduces a “live broadcast” element: the
If you’re binge-watching, it works as a necessary bridge to Episode 8. If you’re on the fence about the series, this episode won’t convert you, but fans of Patterson’s books or detective thrillers will find enough to enjoy. If you’re binge-watching, it works as a necessary
Ryan Eggold’s Ed Ramsey and Eloise Mumford’s Shannon Witmer barely appear. Their subplots feel paused, making the episode feel slightly unbalanced — all Cross, little ensemble. Final verdict “PDTV” is a solid middle-late episode that raises stakes and delivers one genuinely creepy sequence (the killer watching Cross watch him). It’s not the series’ best — Episode 5 was stronger — but it sets up a tense finale.