To me, this scene demonstrates a fact that the show always demonstrates...but gets easily overlooked. And it's that Monk is honestly terrifying. His fearsome intelligence combined with his memory and attention to detail...you could probably meet him, talk with him for five minutes about random shit, and he'd be able to tell just about everything about you. I think this fact can sometimes get overlooked because (unlike other notable examples in fiction, such as Batman or Lex Luthor) his intellect isn't used alongside enhanced physical abilities or specilized combat training. But that's what makes this scene so powerful. While the "This is Trudy turning it back on" part does make me think that Monk didn't do it because Trudy didn't want him to, but I also think that he turned it back on because he couldn't intentionally let a man suffer. As much as he wanted this man to suffer (and was justified in that feeling), his consciousness wouldn't let him do this. That's why he looked so uncomfortable immediately afterwards. He's got a heart as big as his brain. An amazing show, with one of the greatest fictional characters of all time.
While I agree with this, Monk is only terrifying to those whom he has a hatred for. For those Monk holds dear to his heart, he's actually a real softie. Episodes like when going undercover in the office, getting duped by Hal Tucker and even going to his college reunion shows Monk's deep longing for just wanting to be loved and accepted by others that he'll mention that stuff as a way to hopefully impress and connect with them. Also, I'll have to disagree with the last part. He only turned it back on because Monk knew Trudy wouldn't want him to do something cruel to her killer, even if it was justifiable. If he has a big heart, it's due to Trudy more than anything. She really made him a better man.
I love that this show leaned into the fact that Adrian is not a "badass". He's just a brilliant nerd who wants justice and he's not going to corrupt himself to get it. Still, he made his point: The best part of him died in a parking garage and that is the person who turned on the morphine.
Love this scene. It's so powerful. Monk certainly has every right to only want the worst experience for this man who will die soon anyway but he knows Trudy wouldn't want that for her killer or for her husband to be the man who made him suffer so he turns the drip back on.
He wanted the Bomb Maker to know what he assisted in taking the life of a wonderful person who would not let someone suffer like he would without the morphine. That doesn’t hurt physically but emotionally.
It wasnt even really for her, he knows that she has always wanted him to take care of himself. He started being a kind man because of her and he continues because he is proud of the man who she made him into, not bevause that is who he wants
@@Jadzebra “he started being a kind man because of her” Can you elaborate on this a bit? It’s been a very long time since I’ve watched Monk but I vaguely remember them referencing how he was prior to meeting Trudy. I just don’t remember the details.
This scene alone is Emmy worthy. Tony won three Emmys for monk I think he could've maybe won five or six. He was just a great and real detective, he's not a big tough macho guy but he's a guy that has anxieties and phobias like everybody else, that made the character very relatable to me and I would assume a lot of other people too.
This episode showed the hidden rage and coldness monk had I don’t think we see again until the finale. This episode was great, but the ending was better. It’s weird you go from monk being a dazed street preacher, to urinater shamer, to pain inflicter.
The show hints several times that Monk harbors a lot of darkness in him(the lust for vengeance, arrogance, pride etc). It’s one of the elements of this show and his character I love so much. You get the sense that he’s just barely holding onto his sense of morality and at any moment he could snap.
notice how he shakes/shrugs his shoulders immediately after he turns the morphine off. He always does that when he's in an uncomfortable situation. He's not a killer, and when his sense finally came back to him, he immediately regretted what he did. Love this show btw UwU
Well he wasn't going to die because he turned the it off. The guy was going to die any minute, all the morphine did was take away the physical pain he would otherwise be suffering.
Loss is hard, if you can do anything to still feel like a person who isn't with you is still there, still waiting for you to open a gift, still on the other end of a voicemail, still living in your house, you will do that thing to feel like that person is still there. With someone who was as in love as monk was, I can't imagine how hard it would be
"Leave us alone for a minute!" said Monk. Randy, Sharona, and Stottlemeyer began to walk out the door as per his request. Stottle Meyer opened the door, and stared at Monk for a long while before he left. Even as meek as Monk was in general, this was the man who killed Trudy...and in essence, killed the best part of Monk. The Captain almost thought it a bad idea. He knew what he would do in that situation. Begrudgingly, he did leave. If anyone deserved revenge, it was Adrian. He was never the same after seeing the charred remains of his wife in that underground parking lot. Monk walked beside Tennyson, a deep hatred behind his eyes. This was not an emotion Tennyson felt often, but he was immensely afraid. Even on Monk's face, he could see that he wanted to kill him. Tennyson was helpless. He knew what he deserved, and there was nothing he could do about it. "You were the husband?" Tennyson asked, a deathly hollow voice barely spilling out the words. "I'am the huband!" Monk corrected him. Before now, Tennyson had never seen someone that one of his bombs had affected. He knew this man would make him suffer. In one of the few moments of humanness in this monster's life, Tennyson spilled out the only words he could...even if they fell upon deaf ears. He had no right to ask what he was about to ask. "Forgive me." asked Tennyson, a bit of sadness in his voice pleading for a little bit of grace on his death bed. "Forgive you?" asked Adrian incredulously. How dare he, he wondered? How dare he ask for the mercy his beautiful wife never received. "This is me...turning off your morphine!" Adrian reached to the side, and with the simple push of a little green button on the machine keeping Tennyson alive, put him through the worst pain that monster could ever feel. Adrian would never admit this in his lifetime, but he felt good doing it. He thought of Trudy's last moments, and hoped that Warwick was feeling just a taste of what Hell would be like. Tennyson's eyes grew wide. After all he had done, the cancer wrecking his body was his just punishment for all the evil he had done in his life. He never imagined this small little man would do more damage to him in this moment than a lifetime of wrongdoing would do. Warwick never imagined his end would come like this. He struggled to breathe as the pain began to rush through his body as the morphine wore off. Every breath took all his strength. Keeping his eyes open was a struggle. He looked deep into Adrian's eyes, pleading with his gaze what his lips didn't have the strength to say. He couldn't ask for mercy. He did nothing in his life to earn any, especially now. All he could do was look into the face of the man who was going to give him a painful death while he laid helplessly in bed strapped to a bunch of wires. Monk turned away and held his face as he thought of Trudy. No matter how much satisfaction he himself was getting in that moment, he knew one thing: Trudy could NEVER love a man who could do this...not even to a man like Warrick Tennyson. Monk did not have the strength himself to stop his suffering. Monk waited many long years for this moment, deep in thought about how sweet it would be to get revenge for once in his life. He slowly pulled his hand away, tears in his eyes, and the man he once was rose to the surface through all the pain, all the phobias, and all the anxiety. It was the man he'd turned into when Trudy was in his life, a man he'd thought long died the day his wife did. "And this...is Trudy, the woman you killed, turning it back on." With nothing but the love for Trudy in his heart, Monk reached back up and touched the little green button again. As much as he hated giving undeserved grace to this monster, it really was what Trudy would've done. Monk knew, disgusted as he was, that this was the man that Trudy loved. For no other reason than to honor her memory and the person she was, Adrian let the morphine flow through Tennyson once again. A tear rolled down Tennyson's face, his only prayer in his life answered. He could feel the rush of the morphine killing his pain again. He said nothing as Monk turned and left his door. Tennyson had nothing but a lifetime of bad memories and his death to look forward too. But alas, he experienced one thing he'd never really had before... undeserved love.
Though Monk found the man who put the bomb in Trudy's car that killed her,it took Monk a long while to find the man who hired him to do that terrible thing to Trudy.
@@MegaJustintee The man who was hired to put the bomb in Trudy's car said a man paid him $2,000 cash for the job and that the guy who hired him was a man with 6 fingers on his hand.
@@nicholasemiranda3057 He wanted to make him suffer & then die but Monk knew he wasn't the one who killed his wife still the guy was already at death's door so i think he got what he wanted to make him suffer but he knew that trudy wouldn't want him to become a murderer, that's why he said "this is trudy the woman you killed turning it back on."
@@nicholasemiranda3057 Switching off a morphine drip wouldn't kill him, if anything it would prolong his life. Morphine is a powerful and lethal pain killer usually given to patients that are dying but in a lot of pain. The morphine not only kills the pain but speeds up the dying process. So if he kept it off they guy would likely have lived an extra few weeks but in a lot more pain.
I feel that he was just getting extremely worried. Hospitals are not known to really check back and make sure everything is going well, or even always respond to calls. This would mean that he would have had to endure the pain, which would have to be seriously bad to have a constant morphine drip.
@@SUL-2000 Well, perhaps the amount of time would be a few hours, but since there was only just a few seconds left of the episode, the writers had to invoke their poetic license on that one...
You know how powerful this scene is just by Monk not needing to wipe his hands after touching the button. Thats how powerful this scene is meant to be.
Monk may come across as a clumsy awkward vulnerable dude You couldn't be more wrong, the man is TERRIFYING He will bring down those who are guilty shaking with fear. He is the hunter, and his prey cannot escape..
Possibly a reference to The Six-Fingered Man from The Princess Bride. Possibly just a somewhat unusual thing that would make identifying a suspect slightly easier.
Very powerful scene and makes for great TV, but I don't think the hospital would leave that guy alone in a room with Monk. Maybe they need the bed? Hospitals are always short on beds.
They were there on police business, plus they had machines in place to inform them if anything critical happened to the patient so there were likely some of the hospital staff on standby just in case. Remember that the hospital staff left the patient alone with the police but it was the police, not the hospital staff, that agreed to leave the patient alone with Monk. Monk and his police buddies would've gotten into trouble if Monk actually went through with keeping the morphine off since they should've known not to leave the husband of the victim in the same room, unattended, with one of the guys responsible for his wife's murder.
Can you really blame him? Monk's life was nearly ruined by this guy's act of cruelty. I'm not saying Monk was right to not forgive him, but I completely understand why he didn't. Even if Tennyson did regret his actions later, he can't take back what he did to Monk.
He doesn't forgive him but he doesn't want to sully his wife's memory by becoming a monster either. he keeps her alive in his heart if you want to be poetic
till today i dnt know who did it and well is it weird that i dont want to know also. this show is just too good. cause everything monk is the woman behind him. but damn you whoever gave the order for this murder and why you did it. plz i dnt even wanna know.
It's absolutely, without a doubt worth the watch. I binged the series when it was on Netflix and the finale was spectacular and so incredibly powerful that it frustrated, elated, and filled me with so many mixed emotions because of the way they decided to tie every single loose end in a bow so neat that Monk would have been proud. Tony Shaloub was a genius at bringing Monk alive and the world needs more art like that.
I won't make a single spoiler because i watched the series(80%) so i'll say that if that guy didn't had made that bomb then the hirer would never had the chance to either kill Trudy or get away.
U got it mixed up. Ethan Rickover hired Frank Nunn (six fingered man) to kill Trudy. Nunn paid Tennyson to build him a bomb; but not just a regular bomb. A very crude explosive sure to kill Trudy Monk. & Nunn planted and detonated the bomb.
There' no way Monk would have respected Walter. Frankly, I don't like Walter, either. A guy who didn't bother with life insurance going off and making meth to make money for his ungrateful and unfaithful wife and family? I was rooting for his enemies to put one each through his head and Jesse's.
His scene when he does the play, this scene, and when he plays the newspaper stand owner in Frazier shows he can act. And then he’s hopelessly camp the rest of the time. Go figure.
Begs the question though: who's the actual killer ... if it hadn't been this man, it would have been another. The real killer was the one who hired him.
@@NicoleMP885 no i just know all the details of all the episodes & all the dialogue from each character and just so happened to know the plot to every episode.
I know this is fictional, but $2,000. $2,000 is all it takes to build something that is going to kill. how low and immoral do you need to be to think that's an acceptable amount of money. that a human life is worth maybe a month paycheck?
Ayo dumbass the murder happened in 1997 back when 1.) $2000 was a lot of money & 2.) Warrick Tennyson is a life long criminal and more specifically a bomb maker.
He actually wasn’t. He only knew all the details because of his high social status & vast wealth. Monk & Trudy had their own issues with Dale. Dale of course hating Monk never would have said a word if not for a benefit to his own agenda. Him wanting a window outside in his prison cell.
Im pretty sure there was more to go but for some reason be that viewer decline on the network or contractual disagreement or whatever but its still the best ending ever.
@@Dharmon1 But at the beginning of that episode with Frank, it was Frank who was stealing the parts to make the bomb. I don't understand why he was stealing legal parts from a corner store, I guess they needed that opener.
Ummm how are they allowed to talk to this man and have any of what he says legal in court. He is high on morphine and doesn’t have a lawyer present. Guess it’s just tv but this seems shady
'And this is Trudy, the woman you killed... truning it back on..' best moment of the scene
*turning...
Best moment of the series
my all time favorite scene in the whole series
That is an awesome line. For me the best moment is “You were the husband?” “I AM the husband”
You spelled “series” wrong.
To me, this scene demonstrates a fact that the show always demonstrates...but gets easily overlooked. And it's that Monk is honestly terrifying. His fearsome intelligence combined with his memory and attention to detail...you could probably meet him, talk with him for five minutes about random shit, and he'd be able to tell just about everything about you. I think this fact can sometimes get overlooked because (unlike other notable examples in fiction, such as Batman or Lex Luthor) his intellect isn't used alongside enhanced physical abilities or specilized combat training.
But that's what makes this scene so powerful. While the "This is Trudy turning it back on" part does make me think that Monk didn't do it because Trudy didn't want him to, but I also think that he turned it back on because he couldn't intentionally let a man suffer. As much as he wanted this man to suffer (and was justified in that feeling), his consciousness wouldn't let him do this. That's why he looked so uncomfortable immediately afterwards. He's got a heart as big as his brain.
An amazing show, with one of the greatest fictional characters of all time.
While I agree with this, Monk is only terrifying to those whom he has a hatred for. For those Monk holds dear to his heart, he's actually a real softie. Episodes like when going undercover in the office, getting duped by Hal Tucker and even going to his college reunion shows Monk's deep longing for just wanting to be loved and accepted by others that he'll mention that stuff as a way to hopefully impress and connect with them.
Also, I'll have to disagree with the last part. He only turned it back on because Monk knew Trudy wouldn't want him to do something cruel to her killer, even if it was justifiable. If he has a big heart, it's due to Trudy more than anything. She really made him a better man.
Love this
Mr Pee would never have received that sort of forgiveness
I do think it was Trudy not wanting him to. Otherwise your argument shoots itself in the foot, there is nothing to fear from a merciful man.
@@Jonathan83X I know Monk's a sweetheart (I watch the show:/), I'm saying that this demonstrates how scary he COULD be if you really pushed him
"...You were the husband..."
"...I *am* the husband."
I am the one who knocks!
@@7632ios it's treason then...
Saw your comment was at 99 likes so I thought it fitting I make it an even hundred
Husband/Widower of the century award goes to…
I love that this show leaned into the fact that Adrian is not a "badass". He's just a brilliant nerd who wants justice and he's not going to corrupt himself to get it. Still, he made his point: The best part of him died in a parking garage and that is the person who turned on the morphine.
He is actually very much a badass i mean not like a wild man lol but he faces almost all of his phobias daily sometimes all on his own.
He almost killed the judge who killed trudy
Not going to lie, one of the most touching moments in Monk. What we as human beings need to strive to be like.
Yes my 3rd favourite monk scene
@@richardjd8182 what are the other 2
^It’s a good question
Love this scene. It's so powerful. Monk certainly has every right to only want the worst experience for this man who will die soon anyway but he knows Trudy wouldn't want that for her killer or for her husband to be the man who made him suffer so he turns the drip back on.
Christina Doxstader Agree
He wanted the Bomb Maker to know what he assisted in taking the life of a wonderful person who would not let someone suffer like he would without the morphine. That doesn’t hurt physically but emotionally.
It wasnt even really for her, he knows that she has always wanted him to take care of himself. He started being a kind man because of her and he continues because he is proud of the man who she made him into, not bevause that is who he wants
@@Jadzebra “he started being a kind man because of her”
Can you elaborate on this a bit? It’s been a very long time since I’ve watched Monk but I vaguely remember them referencing how he was prior to meeting Trudy. I just don’t remember the details.
This scene alone is Emmy worthy. Tony won three Emmys for monk I think he could've maybe won five or six. He was just a great and real detective, he's not a big tough macho guy but he's a guy that has anxieties and phobias like everybody else, that made the character very relatable to me and I would assume a lot of other people too.
Most impressive is:
Monk used his bare finger to touch the morphine switch.
Elan well, Monk might have his phobias and quirks, but if you hurt Trudy, you’re going down.
Ll
and he didn't repeat it.
It's not amazing
Hospitals are super clean, they have to be.
This episode showed the hidden rage and coldness monk had I don’t think we see again until the finale. This episode was great, but the ending was better. It’s weird you go from monk being a dazed street preacher, to urinater shamer, to pain inflicter.
We see it a few times but the finale is showing alot more
You’re going down Mr. Pee 🤣
The show hints several times that Monk harbors a lot of darkness in him(the lust for vengeance, arrogance, pride etc). It’s one of the elements of this show and his character I love so much. You get the sense that he’s just barely holding onto his sense of morality and at any moment he could snap.
@@SageofSorrow which is why I love when he went on that radio show and beat the snot out of that dickhead who was making jokes about Trudy dying.
this, then the episode where it seems Monk is almost at peace until a Trudy impersonator dies and he's crushed all over again
notice how he shakes/shrugs his shoulders immediately after he turns the morphine off. He always does that when he's in an uncomfortable situation. He's not a killer, and when his sense finally came back to him, he immediately regretted what he did. Love this show btw UwU
Well he wasn't going to die because he turned the it off. The guy was going to die any minute, all the morphine did was take away the physical pain he would otherwise be suffering.
@@christinadoxstader3004 same way Trudy suffered. Trudy lived for 20 minutes after the bomb went off.
For all the great comedic acting, this show could really bring you to tears.
The only reason why the series even happened is because Monk was too sentimental about a Christmas present
@@Backup_Plan I mean if he just opened it she would have told him who the killer, so it seems like the only reason.
@@Backup_Plan I felt so angry when I saw the finale lol
@@Backup_Plan I feel like while there were some retcons that this might have been the plan.
Loss is hard, if you can do anything to still feel like a person who isn't with you is still there, still waiting for you to open a gift, still on the other end of a voicemail, still living in your house, you will do that thing to feel like that person is still there. With someone who was as in love as monk was, I can't imagine how hard it would be
I'm sure this was the plan from the start. I think most of us figured that out by like the 2nd or 3rd time that present was brought up.
Monk is such a boss.
SuitMyself Yeah, but he rarely pays his employee, and when he does 95% of it bounces. That’s how you can tell it’s a movie
"Leave us alone for a minute!" said Monk.
Randy, Sharona, and Stottlemeyer began to walk out the door as per his request. Stottle Meyer opened the door, and stared at Monk for a long while before he left. Even as meek as Monk was in general, this was the man who killed Trudy...and in essence, killed the best part of Monk. The Captain almost thought it a bad idea. He knew what he would do in that situation. Begrudgingly, he did leave. If anyone deserved revenge, it was Adrian. He was never the same after seeing the charred remains of his wife in that underground parking lot.
Monk walked beside Tennyson, a deep hatred behind his eyes. This was not an emotion Tennyson felt often, but he was immensely afraid. Even on Monk's face, he could see that he wanted to kill him. Tennyson was helpless. He knew what he deserved, and there was nothing he could do about it.
"You were the husband?" Tennyson asked, a deathly hollow voice barely spilling out the words.
"I'am the huband!" Monk corrected him.
Before now, Tennyson had never seen someone that one of his bombs had affected. He knew this man would make him suffer. In one of the few moments of humanness in this monster's life, Tennyson spilled out the only words he could...even if they fell upon deaf ears. He had no right to ask what he was about to ask.
"Forgive me." asked Tennyson, a bit of sadness in his voice pleading for a little bit of grace on his death bed.
"Forgive you?" asked Adrian incredulously. How dare he, he wondered? How dare he ask for the mercy his beautiful wife never received. "This is me...turning off your morphine!"
Adrian reached to the side, and with the simple push of a little green button on the machine keeping Tennyson alive, put him through the worst pain that monster could ever feel. Adrian would never admit this in his lifetime, but he felt good doing it. He thought of Trudy's last moments, and hoped that Warwick was feeling just a taste of what Hell would be like.
Tennyson's eyes grew wide. After all he had done, the cancer wrecking his body was his just punishment for all the evil he had done in his life. He never imagined this small little man would do more damage to him in this moment than a lifetime of wrongdoing would do. Warwick never imagined his end would come like this. He struggled to breathe as the pain began to rush through his body as the morphine wore off. Every breath took all his strength. Keeping his eyes open was a struggle. He looked deep into Adrian's eyes, pleading with his gaze what his lips didn't have the strength to say. He couldn't ask for mercy. He did nothing in his life to earn any, especially now. All he could do was look into the face of the man who was going to give him a painful death while he laid helplessly in bed strapped to a bunch of wires.
Monk turned away and held his face as he thought of Trudy. No matter how much satisfaction he himself was getting in that moment, he knew one thing: Trudy could NEVER love a man who could do this...not even to a man like Warrick Tennyson. Monk did not have the strength himself to stop his suffering. Monk waited many long years for this moment, deep in thought about how sweet it would be to get revenge for once in his life. He slowly pulled his hand away, tears in his eyes, and the man he once was rose to the surface through all the pain, all the phobias, and all the anxiety. It was the man he'd turned into when Trudy was in his life, a man he'd thought long died the day his wife did.
"And this...is Trudy, the woman you killed, turning it back on."
With nothing but the love for Trudy in his heart, Monk reached back up and touched the little green button again. As much as he hated giving undeserved grace to this monster, it really was what Trudy would've done. Monk knew, disgusted as he was, that this was the man that Trudy loved. For no other reason than to honor her memory and the person she was, Adrian let the morphine flow through Tennyson once again. A tear rolled down Tennyson's face, his only prayer in his life answered. He could feel the rush of the morphine killing his pain again. He said nothing as Monk turned and left his door. Tennyson had nothing but a lifetime of bad memories and his death to look forward too. But alas, he experienced one thing he'd never really had before... undeserved love.
Very well put.
The half-life of morphine is like 2-4 hrs
God you need a gf man
@@rs9130
You could be his
one of the most badass scene ive ever witnessed in television history. Monk ! Such a tragic story... such a good man.
One of the sweetest and saddest episodes of monk. What I loved is how everyone went. From stottlemeyer to randy
Though Monk found the man who put the bomb in Trudy's car that killed her,it took Monk a long while to find the man who hired him to do that terrible thing to Trudy.
Who was responsible for it?
@@MegaJustintee The man who was hired to put the bomb in Trudy's car said a man paid him $2,000 cash for the job and that the guy who hired him was a man with 6 fingers on his hand.
The Person who hired the bomb maker is Rickover the judge
The judge hired Nunn to kill Trudy, Nunn hired Tennyson to make a bomb, Tennyson built the bomb, Nunn planted and detonated it.
My heart skipped a beat When I first saw this on tv when I was younger, but I’m glad he turned it back on
satmtcak was monk going to kill him for revenge?
@@nicholasemiranda3057 He wanted to make him suffer & then die but Monk knew he wasn't the one who killed his wife still the guy was already at death's door so i think he got what he wanted to make him suffer but he knew that trudy wouldn't want him to become a murderer, that's why he said "this is trudy the woman you killed turning it back on."
@@nicholasemiranda3057 Switching off a morphine drip wouldn't kill him, if anything it would prolong his life.
Morphine is a powerful and lethal pain killer usually given to patients that are dying but in a lot of pain. The morphine not only kills the pain but speeds up the dying process.
So if he kept it off they guy would likely have lived an extra few weeks but in a lot more pain.
I wouldn't have
I miss monk...
4 years later I hope you still alive to see the movie.
I cried when I watched this on the tv for the first time😭
I like how in such a serious moment, he still opens the door with his sleeve.
This… this scene… The moment that separated Monk from most detective shows.
"You'd better pray, that you never see me again."
Monk
God I miss this show! Such brilliant acting !
you're in luck then, they're filming a movie this year :)
it's gonna be something like Monks last case
Only a few more weeks before the movie comes out!
Does Morphine really wear off that fast? Or was he freaking out about the pain he was going to start feeling?
For sake of keeping things going a steady pace in shows its assumed they feel the pain.
You're right. Morphine would have taken about three to four hours to clear from his system.
I feel that he was just getting extremely worried. Hospitals are not known to really check back and make sure everything is going well, or even always respond to calls. This would mean that he would have had to endure the pain, which would have to be seriously bad to have a constant morphine drip.
snoopdogie187 finally someone who understands the scene instead of going CinemaSins and being real life accuracy checker.
@@SUL-2000 Well, perhaps the amount of time would be a few hours, but since there was only just a few seconds left of the episode, the writers had to invoke their poetic license on that one...
If he left it off, I would not have been the least bit mad at him.
Capcoor yeah, but he rarely pays his employee, and if he does 93% of his pay check bounces.
It would have changed the way we saw him
@@lunachan1477 Huh?
@@varoonnone7159 True.
@@Capcoor
Still kicking five years since your original comment :)
*Monk....* 😔💔
good upload man
Such a sad, beautiful moment...
What a brilliant actor Tony Shalhoub is.
You know how powerful this scene is just by Monk not needing to wipe his hands after touching the button.
Thats how powerful this scene is meant to be.
Monk may come across as a clumsy awkward vulnerable dude
You couldn't be more wrong, the man is TERRIFYING
He will bring down those who are guilty shaking with fear.
He is the hunter, and his prey cannot escape..
Haven’t finished the show yet but I love this scene!
Humanity as it’s best
I just saw this for the first time this scene I was like whoaaaa wtf monk !!! 🤯😮
i really like the part where he says the guy has six fingers (it's cut from here) but its one little piece of clue enough to keep monk going
Possibly a reference to The Six-Fingered Man from The Princess Bride. Possibly just a somewhat unusual thing that would make identifying a suspect slightly easier.
and that they call him the judge
My 5 year old cousin told me back then that the reason Monk couldn't solve the case was because he was the one who murdered Trudy! Lol
KoniginElle no it was Rickover the judge lol
@@w.dgaster1635 I know that.
Insightful kid. Never thought of it that way.
I always thought Trudy and Monk's love story was Monk's wishful dreams and that in reality, Trudy and he were falling apart
How very angry was Monk under the surface here? He didn't clean his hand after Stottlemeyer grabbed it.
Very powerful scene and makes for great TV, but I don't think the hospital would leave that guy alone in a room with Monk. Maybe they need the bed? Hospitals are always short on beds.
They were there on police business, plus they had machines in place to inform them if anything critical happened to the patient so there were likely some of the hospital staff on standby just in case. Remember that the hospital staff left the patient alone with the police but it was the police, not the hospital staff, that agreed to leave the patient alone with Monk. Monk and his police buddies would've gotten into trouble if Monk actually went through with keeping the morphine off since they should've known not to leave the husband of the victim in the same room, unattended, with one of the guys responsible for his wife's murder.
"You were the husband?"
"I *AM* the husband."
❤️
No matter how many times I watch I am moved
It was "Trudy" who turned the morphine back on, meaning he *doesn't* forgive him
Can you really blame him? Monk's life was nearly ruined by this guy's act of cruelty. I'm not saying Monk was right to not forgive him, but I completely understand why he didn't. Even if Tennyson did regret his actions later, he can't take back what he did to Monk.
@@Jonathan83X I absolutely agree! Personally, I loved this scene
He doesn't forgive him but he doesn't want to sully his wife's memory by becoming a monster either. he keeps her alive in his heart if you want to be poetic
@@bdeamon1 I don't wanna be poetic. But I think I see how you can interpret Monk's actions here as poetic
@@michaelschweigart3517 oh, I meant my phrasing. Monk is just being himself of course
till today i dnt know who did it and well is it weird that i dont want to know also. this show is just too good. cause everything monk is the woman behind him. but damn you whoever gave the order for this murder and why you did it. plz i dnt even wanna know.
watch the finale - its amazing - i realy recommend it
It's absolutely, without a doubt worth the watch. I binged the series when it was on Netflix and the finale was spectacular and so incredibly powerful that it frustrated, elated, and filled me with so many mixed emotions because of the way they decided to tie every single loose end in a bow so neat that Monk would have been proud.
Tony Shaloub was a genius at bringing Monk alive and the world needs more art like that.
the dad from 1st Poltergeist movie
Where to watch it?
Trully a strong man.
Power under control
This was the scene that pulled me in for good
I won't make a single spoiler because i watched the series(80%) so i'll say that if that guy didn't had made that bomb then the hirer would never had the chance to either kill Trudy or get away.
Thise whole scene is filled with memorable quotes
Good thing Monk doesn't have a thing about even numbers.
This guy Tennyson built the bomb. Judge Rickover set up the hit to kill Trudy. So what did the six fingered man do exactly?
I think he was rickover's right hand man who got a hold of the bomb maker
U got it mixed up. Ethan Rickover hired Frank Nunn (six fingered man) to kill Trudy. Nunn paid Tennyson to build him a bomb; but not just a regular bomb. A very crude explosive sure to kill Trudy Monk. & Nunn planted and detonated the bomb.
He detonated it with his cell phone.
This scene gives me HELLA Mentalist vibes
I want a Monk vs Breaking bad crossover. The they ended up respect each other were the walk away.
There' no way Monk would have respected Walter. Frankly, I don't like Walter, either. A guy who didn't bother with life insurance going off and making meth to make money for his ungrateful and unfaithful wife and family? I was rooting for his enemies to put one each through his head and Jesse's.
@@partyguy101ify lol. Monk all the way for sure.
what season is ?
Season 3..
😢I cried.
Great and sad scene. Is this Horace from dr. Queen?
This was the plant guy in The Happening. Just a random tidbit. Really weird role.
It looks as if I am watching this movie through my neighbor's dirty window.
Stfu
His scene when he does the play, this scene, and when he plays the newspaper stand owner in Frazier shows he can act. And then he’s hopelessly camp the rest of the time. Go figure.
What season and episode is this from??
The first episode of season 3
Mr Monk takes Manhattan
Mr monk made that feel so guilty and little
can i know what season and episode dis was?
Season 3, episode 1, Mr. Monk Takes Manhattan.
So powerful
If I was I monk's, position I would have beaten the he'll out of him.
pretty sure he only turned it back on because of his OCD
🥺No!
Took long enough to finally show Monk in a different light.
Begs the question though: who's the actual killer ... if it hadn't been this man, it would have been another. The real killer was the one who hired him.
Someone is going to comment the answer soon. I'd reccommend deleting this comment to avoid spoilers but DONT WORRY. It WILL eventually be explained.
@@mastermindepsilon9517 This is a philosophical question ... not a storyline question.
@@Dizzyfingers2 Oh. Then it probably should've been worded like one! Ah well.
@@mastermindepsilon9517 Oh. It was. Sorry you couldn't "understand" it.
Lmao grow up
Does he ever find the one who sanctioned Trudy's murder?
The last episode
@@NicoleMP885 WRONG
@@desmondkelly5178 did you even watch the show???
@@NicoleMP885 no i just know all the details of all the episodes & all the dialogue from each character and just so happened to know the plot to every episode.
@@desmondkelly5178 welp, sorry, I have a life.
Wow
I would not be a good as monk.
I know this is fictional, but $2,000. $2,000 is all it takes to build something that is going to kill. how low and immoral do you need to be to think that's an acceptable amount of money. that a human life is worth maybe a month paycheck?
10 lbs of plastic how did not it remove the entire car also $2K in what world does that even cover the materials 😂
Ayo dumbass the murder happened in 1997 back when 1.) $2000 was a lot of money & 2.) Warrick Tennyson is a life long criminal and more specifically a bomb maker.
@@desmondkelly5178 I was alive in 1997 2k was not a lot of money
@@Ghastly_Grinner as was I & you certainly could do a helllll of a lot more with $2000 then than you could now.
Dale the whale must have been apart of it.
He actually wasn’t. He only knew all the details because of his high social status & vast wealth. Monk & Trudy had their own issues with Dale. Dale of course hating Monk never would have said a word if not for a benefit to his own agenda. Him wanting a window outside in his prison cell.
I really hated the ending of the Series.
Im pretty sure there was more to go but for some reason be that viewer decline on the network or contractual disagreement or whatever but its still the best ending ever.
@@desmondkelly5178Monk ending is not only the final chapter but the whole season. I love it
@@cahucadi u know theyre working on a Monk movie right.
This is a great scene, but it doesn't fit with the later episodes where it turns out Frank Nunn made the bomb.
Actually, Frank hired the man in this video to make the bomb.
@@Dharmon1 But at the beginning of that episode with Frank, it was Frank who was stealing the parts to make the bomb. I don't understand why he was stealing legal parts from a corner store, I guess they needed that opener.
Randomfully Wonderful that was to lure monk out
@@desmondkelly5178 True, I realized that when reading my old response, but then it goes back to Frank Nunn making the bomb.
@@desmondkelly5178 Wasn't he still making a bomb anyway for the governor parade assassination?
Ummm how are they allowed to talk to this man and have any of what he says legal in court. He is high on morphine and doesn’t have a lawyer present. Guess it’s just tv but this seems shady
It is shady. That's the point. They had to bribe the NYPD with freelance detective work to be there.
Wtf are u talking about lol
There is nothing going on involving the court. This is Monk getting information about how and why his wife Trudy was murdered.
LMAO I didnt even see my own comment til just now but wow. A year later and U still piss me off with ur stupidity.
Because I'm sure any legitimate hospital would allow anyone to fuck around with medical equipment.
⭕️⭕️⭕️⭕️⭕️⭕️⭕️
I forgot how powerful this scene was.