21

In the beginning of Men in Black Detective Edwards (who would later be known as J) was pursuing a suspect who turned out to be an extraterrestrial.

What was Edwards chasing him down for?

Valorum
  • 689,072
  • 162
  • 4,636
  • 4,873
Nu'Daq
  • 26,163
  • 11
  • 84
  • 220

2 Answers2

22

We don't know, but there are certainly some clues we can get from context as well as the script and the novelisation

1) The "Perp" was hired by the Bugs to locate the Galaxy. His failure prompted them to send Kerb (the Bug) to finish the job.

"No! He's coming! He'll kill me! I failed and he'll kill me!"

MIB: Screenplay

2) He tried (successfully) to get hold of a weapon suitable for assassination.

KAY: A carbonizer is an assassin's weapon, Jeebs. Who was the target?

MIB: Screenplay

3) On arrival, the Bug heads straight for Rosenberg's shop. Clearly he has intel on his location.

4) The novel indicates that the Perp was fleeing a "bust".

Edwards put the pain into a holding area and started after the perp again. This guy sure was going to a lot of effort to avoid a bust for what would probably get bargained down to a misdemeanor. Didn't make any sense.

MIB: Official Novelisation

5) Rosenberg takes a short cab ride from his jewellery shop to his final destination, Leshkos Restaurant (on 2nd Avenue), itself within walking distance of the Guggenheim Museum (on 5th Avenue).


So, what can we ascertain? It's very easy to imagine that the 'Perp', panicking about having failed in his assignment, was hanging around suspiciously late at night outside Rosenberg's dwelling place or jewellery shop, having decided to take a more direct approach and kill him (or at least threaten him) his fancy new gun in order to reveal the location of the Galaxy before Edgar's arrival. He was approached by a policeman as a probable drug dealer or would-be burglar. He fled on foot and that's where our scene opens.

Valorum
  • 689,072
  • 162
  • 4,636
  • 4,873
  • 1
    Ehm, the "bust" in the novel quote is an arrest – Mr Lister Nov 07 '17 at 07:49
  • @MrLister - The novel identifies him by name. – Valorum Nov 07 '17 at 08:43
  • 2
    The running starts near grand central station cause that's where he jumps off the overpass and Edwards jumps onto the double decker tourist bus. It's a good 2 miles from the Guggenheim. As a New Yorker that always bugged me (pun not intended) that they covered over 2 miles without incident beyond jumping on a NYPost delivery truck and the idea that he could stay on that truck for nearly 50 blocks and follow the guy that way is too improbable. I think they figured most people wouldn't recognize the distance between the landmarks. – userLTK Nov 07 '17 at 09:32
  • I just want to add, the "short" cab ride came to $72. That may have been a joke on dishonest cab drivers though. – userLTK Nov 07 '17 at 09:36
  • He was running for "casing the joint" - basically watching and investigating the place before robbing it. Rosenberg owns a jewelry shop. If you hang out around jewelry shops without buying anything, it can be reasonably concluded that you want to rob it. The problem is, it is hard to prove and can be bargained to misdemeanor (loitering). To quote Pratchett: It is much better for policeman to say "Here's the crook that done it." after the fact than "Here's the crook that was intending to do the robbery.". – jo1storm Nov 07 '17 at 09:45
  • @Holger - The novel identifies the bug by name. His name is Kerb – Valorum Nov 07 '17 at 10:39
  • You still refer to the bug as “Edgar” at the end of your answer. – Holger Nov 07 '17 at 10:59
  • 3
    @userLTK: that’s common to a lot of movies that protagonists move across existing places in way that would be either, impossible or nonsensical, in the real world, whether NY or Berlin (where I noticed it) or somewhere else. Of course, 99.9% of the world don’t know… – Holger Nov 07 '17 at 11:01
6

Unknown.

For an unknown offense, a Cephalapoid is on Earth running from the police, who quickly wince and pant. James Edwards, at the time a member of the NYPD, is the only one who is able to chase it.

Skooba
  • 60,372
  • 26
  • 294
  • 368