Apr 13, 2018 · Angels Flight trolley in downtown Los Angeles is a murder scene in Bosch season four (photo via Diane Gordon) Bosch’s relationship with Reddick’s Police Chief Irvin Irving is further complicated by Bosch’s relentless search for his mother’s murderer. The pressure of Bosch’s personal travails combined with the high-profile Elias case makes for, as Welliver …
Jun 17, 2018 · The Bosch season 4 finale brings some closure for Harry on multiple levels. Harry finds the truth about the murders of both his mother and Howard Elias. Maddie makes a big decision about her future. Also, the father daughter duo finds a way to let Eleanor go. Jun Park helps Chief Irving gets the last …
Apr 22, 2018 · Bosch, Bosch season 4 review April 22, 2018. After a major character death many shows move on quickly like it never happened, but the aftereffects of losing Eleanor Wish continued to lingered for Bosch and Maddie. It was a brilliant showcase of both Titus Welliver and Madison Lintz and through this tragedy it bonded this father and daughter in ...
Bosch questions a bruised Martin Elias on the doorstep of his house. His alibi for the night of his father's murder is at a restaurant with girlfriend Bianca Foley. He refuses to say more without a lawyer. 13. J Edgar picks up his sons Jack and Joe for a cops' barbecue. Latonya coolly declines to join them. 14. B is en route to check young ...
He says the phone logs will prove that Griffin was the catalyst behind Eleanor’s death. Harry tells Chuck that Griffin forwarded Eleanor’s video to a contact in China, which then resulted in Chen’s retaliation against Eleanor.
Snyder notices that the mysterious wedding ring has an odd bevel on the interior. Bosch notices that the quarter fits nicely inside the ring’s perimeter. There is something unusual about the coin, though.
Then Robertson brings up the incriminating camera footage from Black Guardian, footage that showed both Drake and Sheehan committing the horrendous torture. Robertson tells Drake he regrets not reporting him at Rampart. He suggests that Black Guardian and the Elias murder may have never transpired if Drake was held accountable all those years ago.
Harry tells Kaplan that he will need the attorney to confirm the existence of the tape when the Elias murder goes to trial. Kaplan agrees. Harry also suggests that Chandler find a way to assist Kaplan in Harris’ case.
Harry finds the truth about the murders of both his mother and Howard Elias. Maddie makes a big decision about her future. Also, the father daughter duo finds a way to let Eleanor go.
J. Edgar steps forward and retrieves the murder weapon confirming that he heard everything. Walker claims his confessions will not hold up in court because Harry had a gun to his head.
In a very moving scene, Harry and Maddie spread Eleanor’s ashes at Borrego Springs at sunset. A beautiful but haunting song, “Farewell” by Rosie Thomas, plays in the background.
The highlight of the episode for us was the conversation in the closing minutes between Bosch and Maddie (really their whole relationship has been the highlight this season). We always knew that Eleanor was the one that got away for Bosch but After Maddie picked up the contents of her mom’s security box and found it full of memories of Bosch and Maddie we saw that Eleanor felt the same. One choice that Bosch and Eleanor made changed their whole lives and broke them apart. It was nice to see just how much Bosch was still in her heart right up until the end and even after death.
As the police close in on the house, Frank calls Bosch and tells him that he will kill himself if they don’t back off. Confident that he won’t do himself any harm, Bosch agrees with Frank that his wife should be allowed to leave the house and once there are eyes on her getting into her car, Frank decides to try to leave himself, but there are too many eyes on him. When they catch up with Frank, Bosch is able to convince him to put his gun down and let him help prove that Frank didn’t kill Elias. The one thing that Bosch is really depending on right now to clear Frank are the ballistics, but when the report comes back it is a match to Frank’s service weapon. Bosch was so convinced that Frank was innocent that he even convinced us and even now we aren’t completely sold on it (Jimmy is though!).
The first half of this season had Bosch and Jerry in an awkward place in their relationship, but the death of Eleanor has brought them back together (as tragedies often do). Even though Eleanor’s death is not Bosch’s case he and Jerry are still working it the best they can on their own, digging into the trail of pictures, voicemails and texts sent to her cell phone. Their biggest lead is the picture of Chen that Eleanor took at the poker game gone awry thinking that Chen made her for FBI and had her killed. Turns out Chen is a Chinese national and Bosch sniffing around could easily jeopardize the case that Eleanor gave her life for, so he decides to leave Chen in the hands of the FBI and Jerry and Bosch look to find out who the shooters were starting with the dealer (Tiffany) that set up the game for Eleanor. They still haven’t really talked much about what happened between them and when Jerry brings it up saying that he needs to be fully informed on everything, Bosch still isn’t willing to let Jerry in all the way. At least they are working together – it’s a start.
The Mayor and Walker are putting pressure on Irving to remove Bosch from the Elias case thinking that they can get someone else in who will close this case in a way that satisfies everyone – quickly and without doubt. Irving has really been under a lot of pressure with this most of the season, so it was nice to see him have a win over the Mayor by exposing his close connection with Walker and how some of his campaign funds from Walker look a little shady.
With that in mind Bosch really needs to get his hands on the video tape Elias had as well as the gun that was used to kill Elias. After going through the items that Elias had on him the night he was killed, Bosch and Snyder find the video hidden inside a quarter. He tells Snyder not to reveal to anyone else that he’s found the video (which does implicate both Frank and Terry Drake), and he gives the video to Harris’ new legal representative with the agreement that when Bosch needs it for his case they will share it.
He tells Snyder not to reveal to anyone else that he’s found the video (which does implicate both Frank and Terry Drake), and he gives the video to Harris’ new legal representative with the agreement that when Bosch needs it for his case they will share it.
Walker pulls the gun out of it’s hiding place and Bosch is there to arrest him. All Bosch wants is an admission from Walker that he killed his mother and Walker gives it to him in hopes of pushing Bosch into killing him, but it doesn’t work. Instead Jerry snuck into the tunnels, heard the confession and together they arrest Walker ...
Bosch may have Gabriella’s testimony and has found the way that Walker left the fundraiser, killed Elias and returned to the gala within 20 minutes, but there’s still not enough hard evidence to implicate him. He knows that unless he can put the gun that killed Elias in Walker’s hand that anything else won’t be enough to keep him tied to this crime. Power goes a long way.
Picking up six months after the events in Season 1, Bosch returns from a suspension. He investigates the murder of a Hollywood producer who appears to have mob connections. His investigation of the producer sends him to Las Vegas, where he also finds out that all is not well with his teenage daughter and ex-wife. Bosch's investigation almost threatens the life of his family as he is also brought into another case that leads to a ring of dirty cops. New evidence appears on the death of his mother, which causes him to investigate the circumstances leading to her murder.
(TV series) Bosch is an American police procedural streaming television series produced by Amazon Studios and Fabrik Entertainment starring Titus Welliver as Los Angeles Police detective Harry Bosch. The show was developed for Amazon by Eric Overmyer, and the first season takes its inspiration from ...
Restless because he has been on restricted duty during the trial and anxious to do more active detective work, Bosch convinces two other detectives to trade shifts with him so he can work their weekend shift, much to the chagrin of his partner. On Saturday, Bosch is called out on a case which turns out to be a suicide, and a second case wherein a doctor reports his dog found a human bone in the woods.
All ten episodes of the first season of Bosch were released for viewing on Amazon Video on February 13, 2015. Portions of the first episode were changed from the pilot, including the addition of Mimi Rogers to the cast to replace Amy Price-Francis as plaintiff's attorney Honey Chandler and the addition of a scene in which Bosch testifies in court and is questioned about his background by Chandler.
The details of the boy's mistreatment – more than 40 broken bones, some healed and others relatively recent – and death are so grisly that Bosch has to step away from the coroner's recitation to go into the restroom to splash water on his face and sit down on a commode for a moment to regain his composure.
Maddie Bosch works as an intern in the LA DA's office. A young attorney mentions a case against her father. Maddie observes bad intent from the CIU investigator, Bosch's former girlfriend, and relays her suspicions to her dad.
Season 1. Based on The Concrete Blonde (Book 3), City of Bones (Book 8), and Echo Park (Book 12) As the pilot opens, Bosch is tailing a suspect. Eventually cornering him in an alley, Bosch shoots the suspect when he reaches in his pocket. The incident is shown later in the episode in two separate flashbacks.
Angels Flight is one of the main sources for Season 4 of Bosch, and it didn't take much tweaking to set its events in the present. Unfortunately, some things haven't changed. The murder that kicks off Season 4 takes place on Angels Flight, the restored funicular railway from downtown L.A. to Bunker Hill that's a city landmark.
Bosch is also trying to run interference between his teenage daughter and his ex-wife, Eleanor Wish, who seems to be getting back into her old job with the FBI and getting out of her second marriage at the same time, much to Maddie's chagrin.
In the new season of Bosch, Amazon's bingeworthy series based on Michael Connelly's crime novels, LAPD Detective Harry Bosch's daughter asks him, "Were you here for the riots?". Maddie is talking about the 1992 Los Angeles riots, six days of mayhem touched off by the acquittal of four police officers accused of severely beating Rodney King, ...
Elias' office is a corner space in the iconic Bradbury Building ; a little more than a block away is Angels Flight, where he's murdered. From the sunbaked suburbs where Bosch pursues subjects to his dreamy house in the Hollywood Hills, the series benefits enormously from being shot on location.
Bosch's partner, Jerry Edgar (Jamie Hector), was shot and grievously wounded last season; in Season 4 he's getting back to work, but it's a struggle on the job and at home.