Mr. Monk and Little Monk
- Episode aired Aug 26, 2005
- TV-14
- 43m
Monk encounters an old flame from junior high school when she hires him to discover why her housekeeper was killed and her favorite painting vandalized during a burglary.Monk encounters an old flame from junior high school when she hires him to discover why her housekeeper was killed and her favorite painting vandalized during a burglary.Monk encounters an old flame from junior high school when she hires him to discover why her housekeeper was killed and her favorite painting vandalized during a burglary.
- Jimmy Wagner
- (as Shane Haboucha)
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A former middle school classmate of Adrian, a woman he had a crush on when she was that age (13?), comes to Monk then asks him to solve this case to give that old lady - whom she employed in that hose - justice. Monk takes the case.
Through flashbacks, we then get a glimpse of what Monk was like in that awkward age. Actually, thanks to those flashbacks we see Monk solve two cases on this episode: the one when he's in school and the one "live" with the burglars and the painting. Both involve helping the same female.
All in all, more of an insight on the strange and amazing Mr. Monk.
In flashbacks, we see young Monk's agony as he longs for the teen girl, who is friendly but seems impossibly out of reach. When young Sherry is accused of the theft of the bake sale money, young Monk (actor Grant Rosenmeyer), convinced of Sherry's innocence, tackles what may be his first case, and of course his brilliant insights save her from the clever scheming of the bully who framed her.
Natalie can see that Monk still has feelings for Sherry, and encourages him to make his move, but unfortunately Monk as an adult has as little self-confidence with women as he did as a teen.
Any episode where you get to see Monk as a child is a winner, and this one does not disappoint. His mother (actress Rose Abdoo) does a tidy job of suggesting to the audience where some of Monk's personality quirks come from. Any real fan of Monk will make seeing this episode a top priority.
Monk solves all mysteries, past and present, but loses out on the lady under circumstances eerily similar to what happened in the past.
The woman who owns the house wasn't home that night, but comes to Monk to solve the case. It turns out to be Sherry Judd, somebody Monk had a crush on in junior high. He somewhat returns to age 13 in her presence, which is amusing. Stottlemeyer thinks that maybe Sherry herself may have done it for the insurance money for the painting. Monk says no, because Sherry got a very large settlement when she divorced her husband which includes 20 thousand dollars a month in alimony. Monk is acting like he is still interested in this girl from his past but, alas, the painting restoration guy she takes the vandalized portrait to is also somebody she knew in junior high and they are hitting it off all over again. Meanwhile, in an amusing flashback, there is a mini mystery as Monk is shown as he was in junior high when he saved Sherry from being falsely accused of stealing some school funds.
Did you know
- TriviaThe flashback scenes take place in April 1972.
- GoofsWhen Natalie is looking at Sherry's picture in Monk's yearbook, there is no writing near it, but when Monk is looking at the same picture at the end of the episode, it was signed right underneath the picture by young Sherry calling him the coolest kid in school.
- Quotes
[Sherry Judd and Adrian Monk are looking at a painting in an art gallery]
Sherry Judd: I love this one, look at their faces, I wonder what they're thinking.
Adrian Monk: She is planning to murder him.
Sherry Judd: What?
Adrian Monk: She's about to feed him Amanita mushrooms, you can tell by the little white spots, it's a deadly poison.
Sherry Judd: Well maybe she doesn't know?
Adrian Monk: She knows. He's been hitting her. She's swollen; see the bruises on her arms and her left eye. She knows what she's doing.
[pause]
Sherry Judd: It must be hard, to be you, to see everything.
Adrian Monk: It's awful.
- ConnectionsReferences Gunsmoke (1955)
Details
- Runtime
- 43m
- Color