Isnt Beau Felton dead?


Didnt he die on the TV-series? Suicide, in season 4th or 5th season?

reply

If memory serves, Corsetti killed himself and Felton was murdered. I think Felton's murder looked like a suicide but in the end they figured out it was a murder. Could be wrong, but I'm pretty sure that's the way it went down.

reply

I havent seen the movie yet, because it never came out in Denmark, but how can he be in the movie?

reply

If I told you how him and Crosetti are in the movie, that'd be a spoiler of sorts unless you really want to know.

reply

Well, i cant see it in Denmark, so you might as well tell me.

reply

Okay, I will tell you but just to give you one more chance, you could buy the movie online at amazon or something. If you still want to know though....















In the movie, Giardello gets shot amidst his political campaign, thus reuniting everyone ever involved with his Homicide unit. Everybody comes back, Pembleton, Kay, Bolander, the whole group. Except for Felton and Crosetti b/c they're dead. Giardello is in the hospital and everyone is under the impression that he is gonna be fine. The shooter is identified and things are good. Then Giardello is announced to be dead. The final scene of the movie is in the coffee/break room in the Homicide department. Felton and Crosetti are playing cards and Adina Watson (the 11 year old girl who was Bayliss' first case if you can't recall) is jumping rope. G walks in and joins them, taking his place in Homicide heaven. It's a good movie, but it could have played out better as the final season of the show b/c all the characters don't get used as much as they could. Anyway, that's how the dead are back, I hope this helps. Have a good one.

reply

[deleted]

It was for dramatic effect: Crosetti was there, Felton and one other person I can't remember who. But Gee "walks in" to the coffee room where Felton and Crosetti were playing cards; that's when Gee realizes he's dead.

reply

[deleted]

[deleted]

[deleted]

Having just watched this episode a few days ago - I can confirm that Felton's death was originally ruled a suicide until C.M.E. Julianna Cox discovered a small-calibre bullet hole in his skull, after putting together fragments for a couple of days.

reply

[deleted]

Yes he and Croseti are dead, but they are in the end of the movie, #Spoiler# below






Felton and Croseti are ghosts that still hang around. Dead cops stay in the precint and one of the cops joins them in the end







reply

I just watched it again, umm....Frank did and said everything he could to make Bayliss shut up! If Tim wasn't so insistant on Frank turning him in, it would have all gone away. Tim threatened to kill himself if Frank didn't turn him in.

Homicide:Life on the Street was/is the best show EVER on television. Stop global whining!

reply

I watched the movie again today on Sluth-it will be aired a couple more times this week.I don't know if Frank turned him in or not I had the feeling that he didn't and it would be burden Frank would have to carry.I'm unclear about the blue marker,I always though it meant cold case but maybe not? Powerful ending typicl that the idea men (or women) like Gee are cut down while the uninspering men/ like Gaffney and Gherty get the promotions and the credit.

reply

As said above, a cold case goes blue when it is resolved. i.e. Bayliss was turned in.

reply

When talking to Gee's son Frank says he caught two bad guys that day. That plus the name being changed to blue to indicate the case was closed suggests Frank did indeed turn in Tim.

With regard to the fourth chair i thought it might be for Tim, as he did talk about killing himself due to the guilt, or maybe even killed in jail for being an ex-cop.... It was Tim who played cards with Gee in an early season episode....

reply

I agree that the fourth chair was for Bayliss. I don't think he ever went to trial; I can't see Danvers hauling him in front of a grand jury, and if he did, who would've testified against him? Gaffney? I figured that he would've been dismissed without a pension and the guilt would've eaten him up until he committed suicide.

"We're fighting for this woman's honor, which is more than she ever did."

reply

I can't remember exactly who killed Felton, but I know it wasn't until he was off the show. As for Luke Ryland, I think a lot of people think that Bayliss is the one who rewrites the name in blue. Blue cases are cold cases from the previous year, so it still isn't solved. It is a white hand from what I recall, and also Pembleton didn't want to turn him in so I know its not Frank. Bayliss insisted and said that Frank owed him for the bullet Bayliss took, but the movie is kind of unclear as to whether Frank ends up turning him in or not. Bayliss also asks Frank to absolve him, but Frank says he can't. So it could be that they both keep their mouths shut and the case is written in blue by the secretary becuase it still hasn't been solved. And it could be Bayliss.
As for the 4th chair, I believe the popular consensus is that the chair is for the show. The show's history was a rocky one, with NBC always thinking about cancelling it and always changing its airtime, that H:LOTS never got a chance to settle. But the show kept going anyway, remained the best thing on television and survived constantly. So the 4th chair might be there to represent that the show is dead for good or that the show will live on through memories and what not. This is a popular theory. I myself, do not think the chair is for a person. I think it is either for the show or it is symbolic of something else. Either way, best *beep* drama on tv ever.

reply

[deleted]

[deleted]

you are wrong. old cases are written in blue only after they are solved.

reply