When a sugar refinery explodes, CSI discovers a shocking secret about the lone victim's identity.When a sugar refinery explodes, CSI discovers a shocking secret about the lone victim's identity.When a sugar refinery explodes, CSI discovers a shocking secret about the lone victim's identity.
Omar Benson Miller
- Walter Simmons
- (as Omar Miller)
Ramón Franco
- Luis Avilla
- (as Ramon Franco)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaGregg Henry's second appearance, as a different character, Roger Cavanaugh.
- SoundtracksSlow Motion
Performed by Panda Bear ('Panda Bear')
Featured review
Do not watch if you have seizures or get motion sick
I will admit that I haven't watched CSI: Miami in years, is this what the show has become? I feel stupider having watched the little amount I did.
I don't usually write reviews, but I saw the first 5 minutes of this episode and felt like not writing a review was doing everyone else a disservice. Please, learn from my mistake: do not watch this episode.
First of all, I'm not joking about the seizure warning. I'm not epileptic but I got so motion sick from watching it that I couldn't continue.
The camera starts off with a pretty and colorful ocean and sky shot like usual, and then it cuts crazily back and forth between people picking plants and the inside of a factory. By "cuts crazily" I mean the shots don't last more than a second, giving you only enough time to realize the location changed before it flashed back to the original shot. I felt like I was being subliminally brainwashed.
This lasted for the first 2 minutes, I think. I admit I couldn't really focus on the clock at this point so I'm only guessing.
Then, suddenly there's a fire! The factory? is on fire. I'm assuming it's the factory, maybe there's a building where the people were picking plants? Who knows. The building is on fire, cars are speeding down the street with a radio announcing for everyone available to come help.
Now the CSI: Miami team is exploring the still-flaming building. I mean this literally, things are still on fire and Horatio and Erik are wandering around this building using flashlights, climbing over wreckage, shouting for people to answer, wearing their standard, everyday business casual wear, no protection from the fire they're climbing over. They're faster to respond than even the first responders.
Horatio Caine single-handedly rescues the remaining survivors, of course.
I'm still nauseous, so I turned the TV off.
I feel like 5 minutes of this episode stole 50 IQ points from me. I'd like them back, please.
I don't usually write reviews, but I saw the first 5 minutes of this episode and felt like not writing a review was doing everyone else a disservice. Please, learn from my mistake: do not watch this episode.
First of all, I'm not joking about the seizure warning. I'm not epileptic but I got so motion sick from watching it that I couldn't continue.
The camera starts off with a pretty and colorful ocean and sky shot like usual, and then it cuts crazily back and forth between people picking plants and the inside of a factory. By "cuts crazily" I mean the shots don't last more than a second, giving you only enough time to realize the location changed before it flashed back to the original shot. I felt like I was being subliminally brainwashed.
This lasted for the first 2 minutes, I think. I admit I couldn't really focus on the clock at this point so I'm only guessing.
Then, suddenly there's a fire! The factory? is on fire. I'm assuming it's the factory, maybe there's a building where the people were picking plants? Who knows. The building is on fire, cars are speeding down the street with a radio announcing for everyone available to come help.
Now the CSI: Miami team is exploring the still-flaming building. I mean this literally, things are still on fire and Horatio and Erik are wandering around this building using flashlights, climbing over wreckage, shouting for people to answer, wearing their standard, everyday business casual wear, no protection from the fire they're climbing over. They're faster to respond than even the first responders.
Horatio Caine single-handedly rescues the remaining survivors, of course.
I'm still nauseous, so I turned the TV off.
I feel like 5 minutes of this episode stole 50 IQ points from me. I'd like them back, please.
helpful•28
- helpfulhat
- Jan 12, 2019
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