List of The Knick episodes
The Knick is an American television drama series on Cinemax created by Jack Amiel and Michael Begler, directed by Steven Soderbergh and starring Clive Owen. It looks at the professional and personal lives of Dr. John W. Thackery (played by Owen) and the staff at a fictionalized version of the Knickerbocker Hospital ("the Knick") in New York during the early part of the twentieth century. The series premiered on Cinemax on August 8, 2014.[1] In March 2017, Cinemax announced the series was officially cancelled.[2]
Series overview
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | ||||
1 | 10 | August 8, 2014 | October 17, 2014 | ||
2 | 10 | October 16, 2015 | December 18, 2015 |
Episodes
Season 1 (2014)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | U.S. viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Method and Madness" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | August 8, 2014 | 0.354[3] | |
In 1900, after Drs. J. M. Christiansen and John Thackery fail to save a woman and child during placenta praevia surgery, Christiansen commits suicide. Thackery takes his place as leader of the surgery staff. His choice for deputy is his colleague Dr. Everett Gallinger, but he is asked to hire Dr. Algernon Edwards, who has outstanding qualifications gained in Europe, and has connections with the hospital's benefactor, Captain Robertson. When Thackery discovers Edwards is African-American, he refuses to hire him. The Robertsons then pull the funding for a vital modernization project for the hospital – the installation of electricity. Hospital manager Herman Barrow then hires Edwards and tells the staff that it was Thackery's decision. When a patient develops a bowel infection after surgery, Thackery is needed urgently. Nurse Lucy Elkins finds him at his house suffering from cocaine withdrawal. She reluctantly agrees to inject him, and when she finds that most of his veins have collapsed, she has to inject the drug directly into Thackery's penis. Thackery returns to undertake the high-risk operation. The patient has bronchitis and can't be etherized, so Thackery gives him a spinal block using cocaine, then repairs the bowel using a revolutionary clamp of his own design. Edwards has observed the operation, and despite the humiliations that Thackery and others have heaped on him during his first day, he vows not to resign until he has learned everything he can from Thackery. This sets up a bitter enmity with Gallinger, who believes the deputy position should be his. | |||||||
2 | 2 | "Mr. Paris Shoes" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | August 15, 2014 | 0.419[4] | |
The episode opens with contrasting views of how the day begins for two key characters. Cornelia Robertson, the daughter of the hospital's benefactor and chair of the hospital board, breakfasts with her father in an opulent dining room surrounded by servants. Meanwhile Algernon Edwards queues for the bathroom in a seedy boardinghouse that caters to African-Americans. He manages to avoid a confrontation with an aggressive tenant who notices Edwards' expensive shoes. At the hospital, an operation is underway using a cauterizer powered by the newly-installed electricity. A short-circuit sets the patient on fire and a nurse is electrocuted. Barrow is ordered to get the contractor to repair the fault, and we learn that the job was done on the cheap because Barrow had skimmed the funds to pay his own debts to a loan shark. Edwards is given an "office" in the dank basement of the hospital. Frozen out by Thackery upstairs, Edwards opens an underground clinic for poor African-Americans in the basement. More problems for Barrow as Thackery pressures him for cadavers to practice on: competition among hospitals for bodies is pricing The Knick out of the market. Barrow goes to the loan shark Bunky Collier to renegotiate his debt and Collier rips out one of Barrow's teeth as collateral. Thackery loses a patient in a tricky operation on an aortic aneurysm. Edwards tells him of a new galvanic procedure he learned in Europe. Thackery rejects his help then sends Drs. Gallinger and Chickering to find a journal article on the procedure. They succeed (after burgling another hospital) but the article is in French. Back at his boardinghouse, Edwards has another run-in with his menacing neighbor and turns out to be tougher than he looks. He knocks the man out, tosses some iodine and bandages on his chest for when he comes to, and goes to bed. | |||||||
3 | 3 | "The Busy Flea" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | August 22, 2014 | 0.407[5] | |
Abigail Alford (Jennifer Ferrin), a former lover of Thackery's, arrives at the hospital to ask him to examine her nose, which has been ravaged by syphilis from her promiscuous ex-husband. Thackery suggests a grueling live graft procedure in which tissue on her arm is grafted to her face. Abigail insists that it should be Thackery who performs the operation. Barrow steals a corpse from the hospital morgue and sells it to make his payment to Bunky, then goes to see the prostitute he is in love with. Algernon Edwards assembles a team to help him in his underground clinic, training a seamstress as a theatre nurse. He performs a complex repair on a laborer's severe hernia and warns him to rest. Gallinger asks for his wife's help in deciphering the French journal article on the galvanic aorta procedure, but her schoolgirl French isn't up to it. Thackery insists that they let Algernon talk them through it, on the understanding that he won't touch the patient. Algernon's hernia patient returns to the clinic, having re-injured himself at work after ignoring the doctor's instruction to rest. Algernon operates again, but the man dies on the table. Algernon goes out and gets drunk and picks a fight with a bar patron. | |||||||
4 | 4 | "Where's the Dignity?" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | September 5, 2014 | 0.374[6] | |
Edwards talks Gallinger through a heart surgery and ultimately takes the scalpel to save the patient's life. Later, Edwards asks a vacuum cleaner salesman if the machine could be used to suction blood, only to find that his basement clinic has no electrical outlets. Thackery visits a recovering Abigail to say he understands why she left him, but not for whom she left him. He then tries to save a woman who botched a self-administered abortion. The woman's death causes Cleary to take Sister Harriet to a pauper's cemetery to show her other mothers who have died from abortions. If Harriet must perform the procedure, she would at least save the mothers' lives. | |||||||
5 | 5 | "They Capture the Heat" | Steven Soderbergh | Steven Katz | September 12, 2014 | 0.322[7] | |
Barrow can alleviate a debt if he treats one of Collier's wounded men and also urges Capt. Robertson to buy an x-ray machine, one of Thomas Edison's new inventions. Meanwhile, Edwards tries a new approach to hernia surgery; the health of Everett and Eleanor's baby worsens; and Sister Harriet and Cleary head to Chinatown. | |||||||
6 | 6 | "Start Calling Me Dad" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | September 19, 2014 | 0.358[8] | |
Despite partaking in a weekend-long bender, Thackery enlists Chickering's help to cure the recurring placenta previa problem. They save a woman and her baby's life, which leads Thackery to write a paper about it. Cornelia and Speight are able to track a typhoid outbreak to a cook employed by the wealthy elite, before it spreads further into the city. Sister Harriet offers the Gallingers adoption advice when their baby dies from meningitis. Although Thackery finds and shuts down Edwards's basement clinic, he drops his plans to have Edwards fired when he finds Edwards has created a new way of operating on hernias. Edwards offers to co-author a paper on the procedure with Thackery, in exchange for being allowed to carry out his duties as deputy chief of surgery. Cornelia's future father in-law confronts her in her bedroom and makes sexually suggestive comments, which visibly upsets her. | |||||||
7 | 7 | "Get the Rope" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | September 26, 2014 | 0.358[9] | |
Escalating racial tension within the city affects the hospital when Sears, attempting to find prostitutes for the mob, gets stabbed by a black man. Another black man is saved from a beating outside the hospital by Thackery, who then suggests hospital segregation, when Everett wants to close the basement clinic. | |||||||
8 | 8 | "Working Late a Lot" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | October 3, 2014 | 0.349[10] | |
A shortage of cocaine puts increasing strain on Thackery as he continues his affair with Nurse Elkins, and introduces her to the drug prior to intercourse. Edwards and Cornelia continue their affair as well. Barrow faces repeated rebukes as he seeks donations to help replenish the hospital's cocaine stock, after expensive repairs to the hospital following the race riots. Chickering Sr. pressures his son to leave The Knickerbocker, despite Bertie's determination to stay working near the woman he's in love with, Nurse Elkins. Gallinger brings home an orphaned, baby girl in hopes Eleanor will respond to a new child in her care. | |||||||
9 | 9 | "The Golden Lotus" | Steven Soderbergh | Steven Katz | October 10, 2014 | 0.319[11] | |
Thackery becomes increasingly desperate as he experiences cocaine withdrawal, and is arrested for breaking into a pharmacy. Barrow begins working to cover up Thackery's addiction, news of which has spread around town, while also trying to procure more of the drug. Cornelia learns that she is pregnant with Edwards' child and requests he perform an abortion. Eleanor Gallinger's mental health rapidly deteriorates as Everett finds her paying little attention to their adopted child, Grace. Nurse Elkins puts her own job at risk in various efforts to help Thackery. | |||||||
10 | 10 | "Crutchfield" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | October 17, 2014 | 0.413[12] | |
Cornelia, picked up by Cleary (to her surprise), receives an abortion from Sister Harriet. After a visit from Edwards, their clandestine relationship is ended, to her dismay. She marries Philip, and Edwards is brutally beaten in a street fight. After Barrow is attacked by Bunkie, he attempts to enlist Thackery's help in alleviating his debt by asking Ping Wu to kill the loan shark. Rejected, he goes to Wu anyway, feigning himself as representing Thackery's interest. Wu kills Bunkie, and takes on the latter's loans. Gallinger visits his wife at the mental hospital, only to discover that the doctor has performed radical treatments for her instability, leaving her toothless. Bertie is sent by Thackery, whose obsessive competition with Zinberg borders on paranoia, to investigate the latter's willingness to collaborate on a blood transfusion theory. After Thackery unwittingly kills a girl during an experimental blood transfusion procedure, Bertie recognizes the doctor's addiction has finally reached a critical point, and asks his father to check Thackery into a recovery clinic for his cocaine addiction. There he registers under the alias "Crutchfield", his mother's maiden name. After being admitted, a doctor gives Thackery a shot, claiming it is a safe drug and will eliminate the misery of withdrawal. The drug is revealed to be heroin. |
Season 2 (2015)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | U.S. viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
11 | 1 | "Ten Knots" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | October 16, 2015 | 0.269[13] | |
Picking up in 1901, John Thackery is still in the clinic, where he is now heavily addicted to heroin, and performs underground procedures on prostitutes for drug money. Algernon Edwards is the acting chief of surgery, a position he attempts to make permanent. However, he learns that he now has a detached retina from injuries suffered while fighting in bars, and the hospital board expresses its absolute unwillingness to solidify his position. Sister Harriet has been arrested for performing abortions, and Cleary resolves to pay for a good lawyer. Cornelia is pulled back to New York by her father in law, who seeks to have Philip and Cornelia live in his home. After taking time off to care for his still-unstable wife, Gallinger returns and is shocked to find Edwards the chief of surgery. Hoping to return Thackery to his position, Gallinger kidnaps Thackery and forces him to detox on a boat in the middle of the ocean. After a painful withdrawal process, Thackery is sober enough to return to shore. He has an epiphany regarding addiction, and expresses his intention to treat it as a sickness, and hopefully find a cure. | |||||||
12 | 2 | "You're No Rose" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | October 23, 2015 | 0.229[14] | |
Inspector Speight is found dead in the water, and written off as a drunk gone overboard. Cornelia doubts this, as Speight was a teetotaler. She attempts to recover his body to be examined, and commissions Cleary to dig it up. They find the grave to be empty. In return, Cleary asks Cornelia to provide funds for Harriet's lawyer. Thackery returns to the Knick, to trepidation from his coworkers. Bertie resigns from the Knick upon Thackery's return, transferring to Mt. Sinai, a Jewish hospital run by Dr. Zinberg. Nurse Elkins is rejected by Thackery, but assigned to the awkward position of examining his body for signs of drug use. Her father, a pastor, arrives in town as well, setting up a congregation. Barrow is forced by Wu to set up a clinic for Wu's prostitutes at the Knick. A doctor named Mays volunteers to run the clinic for evidently lecherous and unethical purposes. Cornelia's father in law extends the construction schedule on her and Philip's house, forcing them to stay in his home longer. Edwards seeks Thackery's help to perform a retinal reattachment operation on him, but Thackery is shaky and distracted, apparently from lingering withdrawal, and unable to carry it out. | |||||||
13 | 3 | "The Best with the Best to Get the Best" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | October 30, 2015 | 0.202[15] | |
Cleary drugs his fixed boxer with cocaine, hoping to improve his performance, but the boxer overdoses in the ring. Cornelia asks Philip to help pay for Harriet's defense, but he adamantly refuses. Bertie courts a journalist, Genevieve, after meeting her at Mt. Sinai. She reveals herself to be the woman who went undercover at a mental institution to uncover its corruption and poor conditions, and also reveals that she herself is Jewish, working under a gentile pseudonym for greater publicity. Barrow becomes frustrated with Junia's larger client list, worrying that he is just another client to her. Junia convinces Barrow, with ambiguous sincerity, that she actually wants to spend her life with him. Nurse Elkins makes a confession at her father's church, only for him to erupt in rage later at home, beating her for her sins. Thackery procures the corpse of an overdose victim and begins his research with Edwards. Agitated by Thackery's favor for Edwards, as well as his wife's continuous mental disturbance, Gallinger falls in with a group of eugenicists at a class reunion. Edwards is surprised by an English woman who arrives at his parents' home, revealing herself to be his wife Opal. | |||||||
14 | 4 | "Wonderful Surprises" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | November 6, 2015 | 0.166[16] | |
After refusing to grant Edwards a divorce, Opal moves in with him, and the couple have an awkward meeting with Cornelia and her family. Dr. Mays dies in a freak operating-room accident. Barrow meets with a Tammany Hall boss, who demands 15 percent of the profits from all of his schemes in exchange for Tammany's protection. After his wife Eleanor is accosted by an Italian-American child beggar, Gallinger discusses the sterilization of immigrants with a eugenicist friend. Frustrated with being exploited and abused by the men in her life, Nurse Elkins confides to Harriet that she wants something better for herself. Bertie learns his mother is dying from an esophageal tumor and resolves to cure her, despite his father and Dr. Zinberg's opinion that the tumor is inoperable. Cornelia searches Inspector Speight's home for evidence regarding his death. Cleary blackmails his and Harriet's wealthy former clients into pressuring the judge to dismiss the charges against her. Spurred on by Abigail's worsening condition, a desperate Thackery attempts to cure her syphilis by raising her body temperature to over 107 degrees Fahrenheit, despite Edwards' objections; the treatment is successful. | |||||||
15 | 5 | "Whiplash" | Steven Soderbergh | Steven Katz | November 13, 2015 | 0.255[17] | |
Abigail returns home, provided with quinine should her malaria return. Thackery demonstrates electrical stimulation to the brain of a morphine addicted patient, in hopes of isolating the section of the brain which controls addiction. An overseeing nun orders all residents to snub Harriet under pain of starvation, after Harriet offered to assist another resident. Edwards suggests Pierre Curie's recently published research may hold promise to Bertie's mother. An explosion on the subway expansion on Park Avenue demands that Thackery, Edwards, and Gallinger treat multiple patients simultaneously. Nurse Elkins displays skill at triage during the crisis. Robertson informs Barrow The Knick will waive all fees associated with the disaster, likely to protect his investment in the subway. Bertie suggests to his father a course of treatment based on Curie's research, receiving his father's approval. Robertson suggests to his father they liquidate their assets for new investments, still unaware of his son's investment in the subway. Robertson learns the subway company will need to remunerate all residents displaced by the explosion at a great cost. Cornelia discovers an immigrant Speight was investigating prior to his murder was infected with bubonic plague. Gallinger suggests to Thackery that sterilization is the best course for ridding society of drug addicts, later suggesting it at his club to the superintendent of a home for boys deemed mentally defective as a means of preventing progeneration. Robertson and Nurse Elkins exchange a passionate kiss after dining together. Barrow's wife attempts to seduce him unsuccessfully, who leaves abruptly, humiliating her in the process. Edwards appears spellbound by a lecturer of Black nationalism. The Chickerings are taken aback upon learning of Genevieve's religious background and heritage. Mrs. Chickering is later relieved to learn of her genuine affection for Bertie, and appears to accept her. Barrow intimates to a realtor showing him a two floor apartment that intends to reside there with Junia alone, after settling his debt with Wu and negotiating her release from him. Thackery removes part of the brain of the addicted patient seen earlier, confident of its success, but with unintended results. Dr. Gallinger is shown preparing to perform a series of vasectomies on a group of boys committed to the home run by the superintendent seen earlier. | |||||||
16 | 6 | "There Are Rules" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | November 20, 2015 | 0.195[18] | |
Thackery witnesses a hypnotist at a sideshow and wonders if hypnosis could cure addiction. He also sees a pair of conjoined twin sisters, who perform violin music. He speaks to the man who introduces them, who reveals that he "owns" them, about allowing Thackery to study them in the hospital. The man agrees as long as he is paid, which Thackery agrees to. Bertie enlists Edwards to perform a risky procedure in secret to help save his mother, while Dr. Chickering Sr. looks away in horror. Zinberg catches them and erupts in rage, though he attempts to help once he sees the progress of the surgery failing. Mrs. Chickering dies as Bertie continues in vain with the surgery, emotionally distraught. Bertie later argues loudly with Zinberg before resigning from Mt. Sinai, saving Zinberg the trouble of firing him. Thackery gets his audience with the conjoined twins, who are from Minsk (now Belarus.) He learns that their entire story is fabricated by Mr. Brockhurst, their "owner." After they leave, Thackery and Cleary break into Brockhurst's home. Cleary beats Brockhurst violently while Thackery removes the girls. Thackery later attempts to hypnotize Cleary into quitting smoking. Cleary plays along, and eventually reveals that the hypnosis did not work as he laughs. Gallinger returns home to find that his wife has invited Dr. Cotton, the psychiatrist who pulled her teeth, over for dinner. Cotton attempts to make conversation with Gallinger, who openly expresses his displeasure at the situation. Cotton eventually experiences a stomach ache and quickly leaves. | |||||||
17 | 7 | "Williams and Walker" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | November 27, 2015 | 0.347[19] | |
Thackery devises a surgery that appears to successfully separate the conjoined twins, and has Henry Robertson document the three-hour surgery on his motion picture camera. Genevieve is permitted into the surgery as a reporter, and eagerly takes notes. Thackery visits the grave of the girl on whom he botched the blood transfusion, revealing that he personally paid for a large, ornate headstone for her. Cornelia discovers that her father's shipyard has been paying off guards to allow diseased immigrants into the country, rather than spend the extra money to return them to their home country. Cornelia is confronted by Hobart Showalter, who purchased back his mother's earrings, which Cornelia had sold. Hobart proceeds to berate her for not making Henry happy, finishing his rant with, "you should be pregnant." The hospital staff attends a ball, where Mrs. Barrow introduces Williams and Walker, a vaudeville comedy act featuring two men in blackface making fun of "coons." This angers Opal Edwards, who confronts the Robertsons. During a surgery performed by Dr. Edwards, Gallinger doubles the strength of the drug Curare, a muscle relaxer. Algernon injects the patient, who nearly dies as Gallinger rushes from the audience to save him, knowing exactly how to do so. Edwards does not realize this, and is crushed by the failure, and being upstaged by Gallinger. He cries as Opal comforts him. | |||||||
18 | 8 | "Not Well at All" | Steven Soderbergh | Steven Katz | December 4, 2015 | 0.266[20] | |
A drunken Brockhurst barges into the hospital with a gun and demands Thackery return the (now-separated) conjoined twins to him, but he is subdued by Cleary. The hospital board shuts down Thackery's addiction experiments after one of his subjects dies from drinking embalming fluid. Cornelia explains the results of her investigation to Henry, including her suspicion that their father may have had Speight killed to cover up the smuggling of sick passengers past the health inspectors. Barrow buys Junia's freedom from Wu and tells his wife to move out of their home. Cleary makes romantic advances to Harriet, which she angrily rejects. Nurse Elkins's father suffers a stroke while frequenting a brothel, and is taken to the Knick for treatment. When a detective comes to the Gallinger house to investigate Dr. Cotton's death, Eleanor confesses to her husband that she poisoned him. Gallinger has her permanently committed to a mental institution, after which he becomes intimate with his sister-in-law Dorothy. Edwards discovers Gallinger's records of the vasectomies he is performing on mentally disabled teenagers and wants him punished for ethical violations, but Thackery says he can do nothing. While being prepared for further plastic surgery on her nose, Abigail has an unexpected reaction to the anesthetic and dies on the operating table in front of a stunned Thackery. | |||||||
19 | 9 | "Do You Remember Moon Flower?" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | December 11, 2015 | 0.199[21] | |
In a flashback, Thackery meets Captain August Robertson in Nicaragua, held prisoner and blamed for an outbreak of smallpox Thackery is summoned to treat. Thackery bargains for Robertson’s release, in exchange for treating the victims. Returning to 1901, Thackery is seen attempting to treat his abdominal pain unsuccessfully. The separated conjoined twins take their first steps since the operation, to everyone’s delight. To his visible surprise and relief, Gallinger is informed Dr. Cotton's sons are blamed for his death. While preparing to leave for Ohio, Phillip insists that if Cornelia will not accompany him, he will find someone who will. Edwards informs Thackery the twins have been adopted by a family in Missouri. The twins depart the Knick, seen off by Bertie and Edwards. It is discovered Thackery's intestines are ischemic due to drug abuse, and surgery is suggested. Thackery insists on non surgical treatment, which is met with incredulity. Effie Barrow blackmails Barrow, having acquired evidence of his fraud and kickbacks for the new hospital. Desperate for cash, Barrow tries unsuccessfully to slow progress of construction on the new Knick, both with the architect, and with Henry Robertson. Henry and Cornelia agree to confront their father at the new hospital that evening. Gallinger is cleared by the state medical board, agreeing that eugenics is a worthy field of study, and that the vasectomies were legally performed. Harry proves to be a more adept salesperson of condoms than Cleary. Lucy pays a visit to her bedridden father, and compares his life to that of a mule they owned, which failed to take instruction, until it was too old to be of use, and was put down. She injects him with a lethal dose of drugs, while confessing her many sexual encounters. Cornelia confronts her father at the new hospital about his bribery and the murder of Speight. Captain Robertson denies her accusations, but their conversation is ended when fire is discovered on the lower floors. The stairwell consumed with flames, Robertson helps Cornelia escape by holding a too short ladder down an elevator shaft, insisting she fall the final few feet. She escapes meeting her brother in front of the fully engulfed building. With no means of escape, Robertson is seen jumping from the upper floor of the new Knick, presumably to his death. In a final flashback in Nicaragua, Robertson is freed, and departs with Thackery, during which Robertson suggests working at the Knick. | |||||||
20 | 10 | "This Is All We Are" | Steven Soderbergh | Jack Amiel & Michael Begler | December 18, 2015 | 0.275[22] | |
Thackery collapses again, but refuses his colleagues' offer of help. Now in full control of the Robertson company and fortune, Henry decides not to rebuild the new Knick. A police detective begins harassing Barrow, accusing him of setting the fire at the Knick. Lucy extracts a further commitment from Henry in exchange for accompanying him on a vacation. Barrow signs many of his assets over to Junia to prevent their being seized, and uses his new social connections to force the detective to back down. After learning that Henry, not Captain Robertson, managed shipping operations for the family, Cornelia confronts Henry and accuses him of murdering Speight and setting the fire to kill her and their father; he admits his guilt and threatens her life to ensure her silence. Cleary proposes to Harriet. While taking confession, he admits to the priest that he informed on Harriet to the police so that the Church would expel her, allowing him a chance to pursue her romantically. The next day, Harriet accepts his proposal. Thackery performs bowel surgery on himself, using a mirror and his own spinal block technique in lieu of anesthesia. The surgery proves complicated and he accidentally nicks his abdominal aorta, causing him to bleed out and lose consciousness. Bertie tries to revive the dying surgeon with adrenaline, but it is not shown whether the treatment is successful. Cornelia boards a ship to Australia, hoping to flee her brother. Gallinger accepts an offer to travel the world promoting eugenics. Edwards decides to continue Thackery's work on addiction, since he can no longer practice as a surgeon due to his damaged eye. He begins by using Abigail's talk therapy on the last patient on Thackery's addiction ward. |
References
- Bibel, Sara (July 9, 2014). "'The Knick' Starring Clive Owen & Directed by Steven Soderbergh to Premiere August 8 on Cinemax" (Press release). TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on July 13, 2014. Retrieved July 10, 2014.
- Andreeva, Nellie (March 23, 2017). "'The Knick' Canceled After 2 Seasons As Cinemax Focuses On Action Dramas". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved March 23, 2017.
- Kondolojy, Amanda (August 11, 2014). "'The Knick' Premiere Draws 1.7 Million Total Viewers Across HBO and Cinemax Airings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on August 12, 2014. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
- Metcalf, Mitch (August 18, 2014). "SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 25 Friday Cable Originals – 8/15/14". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved August 19, 2014.
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- Metcalf, Mitch (October 20, 2014). "SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 25 Friday Cable Originals (& Network Update): 10.17.2014". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved November 15, 2014.
- Metcalf, Mitch (October 19, 2015). "UPDATED: SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 100 Friday Cable Originals & Network Update: 10.16.2015". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved October 19, 2015.
- Metcalf, Mitch (October 26, 2015). "UPDATED: SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 100 Friday Cable Originals & Network Update: 10.23.2015". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved October 27, 2015.
- Metcalf, Mitch (November 2, 2015). "UPDATED: SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 100 Friday Cable Originals & Network Update: 10.30.2015". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
- Metcalf, Mitch (November 9, 2015). "UPDATED: SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 100 Friday Cable Originals & Network Update: 11.6.2015". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
- Metcalf, Mitch (November 16, 2015). "UPDATED: SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 100 Friday Cable Originals & Network Update: 11.13.2015". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved November 16, 2015.
- Metcalf, Mitch (November 23, 2015). "EXPANDED SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 150 Friday Cable Originals & Network Update: 11.20.2015". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved November 23, 2015.
- Metcalf, Mitch (December 1, 2015). "EXPANDED SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 150 Friday Cable Originals & Network Update: 11.27.2015". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved December 1, 2015.
- Metcalf, Mitch (December 7, 2015). "UPDATED: SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 150 Friday Cable Originals & Network Update: 12.4.2015". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved December 7, 2015.
- Metcalf, Mitch (December 14, 2015). "UPDATED: SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 150 Friday Cable Originals & Network Update: 12.11.2015". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved December 14, 2015.
- Metcalf, Mitch (December 21, 2015). "UPDATED: SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 150 Friday Cable Originals & Network Update: 12.18.2015". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved December 21, 2015.
External links
- Official website
- The Knick – list of episodes at IMDb
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