Bones

Bones

S11E19 - The Head in the Abutment

27.3. 19:00
STAR
60 minutes
2016

The team investigates the death of a popular professional hockey player whose headless corpse was dumped in the river. As Booth and Aubrey question the player's coach, Booth's depth of hockey knowledge is integral to solving the case, and he's reunited with a hockey rival from his past, putting him back on the ice once again to face off against him. Meanwhile, Hodgins and Oliver have a competition of their own when Hodgins builds two drones and they compete to retrieve the victim's missing head, and Booth and Brennan attempt to declutter their home.

More information

Episodes

Season 2
S02E01

The Titan on the Tracks

19.5. 10:25, STAR, 50 minutes

The Titan on the Tracks

S02E02

Mother and Child in the Bay

19.5. 11:15, STAR, 55 minutes

Mother and Child in the Bay

S02E03

The Boy in the Shroud

20.5. 03:45, STAR, 45 minutes

The Boy in the Shroud

When the body of a young man, who's been missing for nearly three weeks, is discovered, the investigation leads them to his girlfriend, who is a foster child. Bones becomes emotionally involved in the case since, she too, became a foster child after her parents disappeared.

S02E04

The Blonde in the Game

20.5. 04:30, STAR, 45 minutes

The Blonde in the Game

After digging up the skeletal remains of a young girl, the investigation points to a convicted serial killer on death row. The team follows cryptic clues that lead to another body, an accomplice, and a victim who may still be alive.

S02E05

The Truth in the Lye

20.5. 05:15, STAR, 45 minutes

The Truth in the Lye

There are two suspects with the same motive when Booth and Brennan investigate the murder of a man found in a bathtub full of chemicals. They soon discover that he had two wives and a girlfriend.

About show

2016

Dr. Temperance Brennan and her colleagues at the Jeffersonian's Medico-Legal Lab assist Special Agent Seeley Booth with murder investigations when the remains are so badly decomposed, burned or destroyed that the standard identification methods are useless.

Creators

Ian Toynton, Gene Hong