"Monk" Mr. Monk Goes Back to School (TV Episode 2003) Poster

(TV Series)

(2003)

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8/10
The Cost of Education
Hitchcoc3 March 2020
Being a long time teacher myself, it would seem that for the average person, keeping thirty kids' attention for an hour, five or six times a day would be daunting. I really sympathized with Mr. Monk. One thing that surprised me was the number of ding dong teachers in this supposedly upscale high school. I did enjoy the writing, however, and the solution to the murder.
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8/10
Mr Monk and the Brat Pack alumnus
safenoe28 January 2020
Andrew McCarthy, who is not only a Brat Pack alumnus but also an acclaimed travel writer, appears as a philandering chemistry teacher in this episode. David Rasche plays a David Raschesque gym teacher who is an all-brawn type. Rosalind Chao, who played Klinger's wife in M*A*S*H appears as the principal of the school where Trudy was an alumnus. A nice episode which keeps the memory of Trudy alive in this season 2 opener. It's hard to imagine this episode screened three years before the invention of Twitter!
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8/10
Crime at Trudy's High School
claudio_carvalho17 April 2024
The English teacher Beth Landow is the secret lover of the Science teacher Derek Philby and is pressing him to end his marriage with his wife. He schedules a meeting with Beth on the next morning to tell her about his discussion with his wife. On the next morning, Derek is giving a test to his students, and Beth apparently commits suicide falling from the clock tower of the school on Derek's car that activates the alarm. The principal Arleen Cassady was Trudy's best friend and asks Monk and Sharona to investigate the case. Monk accepts the case without any charge since it is Trudy's high school, and the place gives recollections to him. He questions the school janitor, but the man tells him that he did not see anything strange on that morning. Monk investigates the crime scene and finds that Derek's car was opened and alarmed. Then he interviews the teachers and concludes Derek is the murderer of Beth. But the police found a badly written suicide note and believes Beth committed suicide and the case is closed. Monk accepts to be substitute teacher to investigate Derek further and looks for a failure in his alibi.

"Mr. Monk Goes Back to School" is a good episode of "Monk", since the viewer (and Monk) knows who the killer is, but his alibi is too strong. But the weird character brilliantly resolves the case again. There are funny scenes, but the best one is certainly when Monk blends the coffee jars to make them be in the same level of liquid. The theme song of the Second Season is capable to be worse than the one played in the First Season. My vote is eight.

Title (Brazil): "Monk na Escola" ("Monk in School")
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10/10
Back to school with Mr Monk
TheLittleSongbird16 July 2017
'Monk' has always been one of my most watched shows when needing comfort, to relax after a hard day, a good laugh or a way to spend a lazy weekend.

After a very good Season 1, where the weakest episode "Mr Monk and the Earthquake" was still above decent, Season 2 gets off to a great start with "Mr Monk Goes Back to School", one of the season's best episodes. 'Monk' was always a show that was remarkably well-established and settled early on, and with "Mr Monk Goes Back to School" one sees noticeable changes that work immediately rather than taking time to get used to.

One of the best things about 'Monk' has always been the acting of Tony Shalhoub in the title role. It was essential for him to work and be the glue of the show, and Shalhoub not only is that but also at his very best he IS the show. Have always loved the balance of the humour, which is often hilarious, and pathos, which is sincere and touching. It is remarkable here that right from the first episode to when the show ended that one likes him straight away, even with his quirks and deficiencies that could easily have been overplayed, and also that he is better developed than most titular characters of other shows at this particular stage. Who can't help love Monk's brilliant mind too?

He is very well supported by a sharp and no-nonsense but also sympathetic Bitty Schram, whose Sharona makes for a worthy and entertaining partner for Monk's sleuthing and somebody with a maternal side. There is always a debate at who's better between Sharona and Natalie, personally like both in their own way and consider them both attractive though as of now leaning towards Natalie as the better acted and more attentive of the two. The two are so enjoyable together and the best detective duo of any show in recent years from personal opinion.

Also by a very amusing, and sometimes even funnier than that, Ted Levine, what a difference from his Buffalo Bill in 'The Silence of the Lambs', the loyalty, friendship and annoyance towards Monk coming across wonderfully. Jason Gray-Stanford is growing in confidence and comic timing with each episode, as is the chemistry with the other three leads. Andrew McCarthy plays his role with wry wit and unpredictability.

It's not just the cast though. Another star is the writing, which is also essential to whether the show would be successful or not and succeed it does here. The mix of hilarious wry humour, lovable quirkiness and tender easy-to-relate-to drama is delicately done but extremely deft, of which some of the funniest writing of the whole show is in this episode. The character moments are such a joy with the principal cast are always.

Actually found the Trudy stuff very nice touches, while the Sharona telling off the kid for his treatment of Monk, all of Monk's classroom antics (never less than very funny), Derek's battle of wits law of physics boast and Monk's moment with the coffee are great moments. Oh and the murder is one of the cleverest of the whole show and the solution is one, despite being sure of who the perpetrator is, that is a genuine surprise.

Visually, the episode is shot in a slick and stylish way, and the music is both understated and quirky. While there is a preference for the theme music for Season 1, Randy Newman's "It's a Jungle Out There" has grown on me overtime, found it annoying at first but appreciate its meaning and what it's trying to say much more now.

In summary, wonderful and one of the season's and show's best. 10/10 Bethany Cox
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6/10
Monk at his soppiest
moysant22 November 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Monk gets extra soppy as he goes back to his dead wife's alma mater to investigate the death of a teacher there. The police say suicide. Monk says murder. To solve the crime he decides to stay at school and teach the classes of the dead teacher. Yes, it IS a little far fetched, even for this show, to have Monk volunteer for such things given how phobic he is suppose to be. The schtick of what happens in class is predictable and drags on a little too long (and why do classes that have just started end in 5 mins?). But anyway, he solves it all, and gets the bad guy, as we know he will, and then he can be a little more soppy over Trudi's demise since she was so perfect (part of the plot that is getting a little on my nerves and I wished they'd downplay).
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6/10
Absolutely despise that new theme song
dubiousitems8 September 2021
I dislike the new theme song so much, I actually give thanks I live in a world with technology that I can fast forward without hearing it before watching the show. Yet even knowing it's still there and part of the show is nauseating to me somehow.

This probably has much more to do with the fact that the singers voice makes my ears bleed and as a, well let's say 'person', to be polite, totally creeps me out.

I say give him an award or two for having crawled out from whatever rock/s that was and showing such bravery in the midst of stupidity.

And they did. Well done, to all involved. Once again proving almost anyone can make it, even make it big in the entertainment industry with the right connections, and flavourful controversy of the day.
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1/10
Wrong, just wrong
lenorediane-3004431 March 2023
Warning: Spoilers
First of all, in this episode, Monk corrects an english teacher's grammar. The teacher had supposedly addressed her suicide note by addressing it to whomever I may have hurt. Monk claims it should have read to whoever I may have hurt. He is incorrect whomever should be used here, as "I may have hurt" is objective case.

Next, Monk knowing who did just 5 minutes after meeting the man comes across more as vindictive ( the two had clashed over Monk put caffeinated coffee in the de-caffeinated 'to make them even ') even the wisest most seasoned detective would need a little time to review.

In the first season, viewers are given the option to skip the title song. Starting with the second season, however, we are no longer given that option and we are stuck with the most mind numbing, annoying title song ever (written and performed by the majorly un-talented Randy Newman. In a later episode, a crazy, obsessed fan makes a point of living a shows original theme song.

The point is clear . Only crazies like the original song.

That's all! I'm done!
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