The dramatic television series and the dangerous situations and problems faced by medical examiner Megan Hunt, when the body begins to stick, Megan goes and learns that the body is torn by the body, not all parts there. They somehow learn who the person is and go to this apartment and there they find the rest of it, in the freezer. They learn that she has a daughter married to an apathetic and angry man that her father came to them for money. Megan entered the world of the upscale society she once belonged to when the editor of Meta magazine was found at Chestnut Hill Palace. Megan accepts her mother's invitation to attend a social event with the hidden motive to confront one of the main suspects, appalling her mother in the process. When Kate Ethan is asked to investigate the only evidence found at the crime scene, she is surprised by her unusual optimism and support.
You know those promotional logos that networks sometimes put in a corner of the television screen? They're highly annoying, but... perhaps ABC should consider putting the words "You are stupid" on the screen whenever it airs Body of Proof.
The writers will have to do a lot of heavy lifting for Body of Proof to transcend its immediate predictability. There's only so much Delany can do with a cardboard show.
Body of Proof would be interesting enough if it were just Quincy with better legs. Add the other elements and you have something worth checking out at 10 o'clock.
Nothing would make me happier than to see Delany, who's one of my favorite actresses, starring in a smart network drama that gave her the kind of range Laurie gets in House or Falco and Collette get on Showtime. If only Body of Proof were that show.
Body of Proof for the most part plays dead within the realm of plausible crime-solving, interesting characters and assumptions that Delany's once-promising career would do more than wither on this vine.