The Art of the Retroactive Reveal
In the world of mystery television, the final reveal is everything. It’s the moment the detective gathers the suspects and unmasks the killer. But on 'Only Murders in the Building,' this trope is elevated into something far more ambitious. The show doesn't
just reveal who did it; it uses the killer's confession to fundamentally change the meaning of past events. Scenes that once seemed quirky, romantic, or inconsequential are suddenly cast in a sinister new light. This isn't just a flashback; it's a retroactive rewrite. The confession acts as a key that unlocks a different version of the season we just watched, forcing the audience to become armchair detectives all over again, scrolling back through their memories (or the episode list) to see how the clues were hidden in plain sight all along.
Season One: The Charming Killer
The quintessential example of this technique is the Season 1 finale. For ten episodes, Jan (Amy Ryan) was Charles's quirky, bassoon-playing love interest. Their relationship was a sweet subplot about a lonely man finding connection. When she is revealed as Tim Kono’s killer, her confession is chilling. We flash back to her perspective, seeing her own motives and actions. Suddenly, every prior scene with her is transformed. The awkward but charming moments are reframed as calculated manipulations. Her claims of being first-chair bassoonist, a lie Charles uncovers, becomes the key that unravels her entire persona. Her confession isn’t just an admission of guilt; it's a complete re-narration of her character, turning a love story into a horror story that Charles—and the audience—had been unknowingly watching unfold.
Season Two: The Architect of Deception
The show doubled down on this structure in Season 2. The killer was revealed to be Cinda Canning’s meek, overlooked assistant, Poppy White (Adina Verson). But the larger reveal was that Poppy was actually Becky Butler, the supposedly dead subject of Cinda's hit podcast, who faked her own disappearance to escape her old life. This confession recontextualized not just the events of Season 2, but the entire mythology of the show's podcast-within-a-podcast. Poppy's motive was a desperate desire to create a compelling story she could solve, leading her to murder Bunny Folger. Moments that made her seem like a put-upon assistant were recast as the actions of a master manipulator pulling the strings on everyone, including her boss and the trio of protagonists.
Season Three: A Shared Delusion
Season 3 offered a variation on the theme with a dual confession. First, producer Donna DeMeo (Linda Emond) admitted to poisoning star actor Ben Glenroy to save her son Cliff's first Broadway show from a bad review. Her tearful confession seemed to close the case. But the final twist came with the second confession: her son Cliff (Wesley Taylor) admitted he was the one who actually killed Ben, pushing him down an elevator shaft after Ben survived the poisoning and threatened to expose Donna. The confession scenes showed two people lying to protect each other, warping their motives from pure malice to a twisted, codependent love. This re-framed their entire season-long presence from merely odd to tragically dysfunctional, making their crime a shared delusion rather than a singular act of villainy.
Why It’s More Than Just a Gimmick
This storytelling device is what elevates 'Only Murders' beyond a simple whodunnit. It’s a profound exploration of the show's central themes: storytelling, perspective, and the unreliability of a single narrative. The series constantly reminds us that every person is the protagonist of their own story, and their version of events is shaped by their own secret motives and desires. The final confession isn't just about solving the crime in the building; it's about exposing the faulty narratives the characters—and the viewers—have bought into. It’s a meta-commentary on the very nature of true-crime entertainment, where complex human beings are often flattened into simple archetypes of 'victim' and 'killer.' The show brilliantly gives the killer the final word, and in doing so, makes us question every word we heard before.













