Tag Archives: Mentalist

Librarians, among others

This is a site where we write articles when we have meaningful things to say, or share.  When we want to bring shows to people’s attention, have podcasts we are releasing, but this is not a site dedicated to making sure an article is posted hourly or daily.

With that in mind, I found it hard to not flood the site with articles today, which felt ironic given we do not guarantee to write even 1 article every day.

While Sundays are not famous for being the best night on Television, it looks like tonight is going to be a very good night for a lot of viewers.

The second season of The Librarians, on TNT, is starting.  While John and I have not yet recorded a podcast about the first season, we do have one about the movies that led up to the show, and this is another example of a show doing a nice job of taking a character from the movies, and world where viewers had come to understand the logic and how that world operated, and from those things a fun and entertaining show was created.

 If you have not already listened to the podcast we did about the movies, now may be a great time to do so.  Noah Wyle’s character is in all three movies, and recurs in season 1, and he and the Library itself serve as the binding threads if you will between the movies and the series.  The podcast discusses  The Librarian: Quest for the Spear television movie including a little about the other two television movies The Librarian: Return to King Solomon’s Mines and The Librarian: The Curse of the Judas Chalice.

Madam_Secretary_CBSAlso on Sunday night’s is Madam Secretary, a show I do not write about often, but do watch by appointment every Sunday Night.  There are several reasons for this, one of which is they way they blend stories that are “ripped from the headlines” with things that have not happened, and yet once they toss out the possibility, you realize how they could, and there is something enjoyable about seeing a working government (and yes, this show strives to show a WORKING government) strive to tackle the problem.   This CBS show avoids talk of specific political parties, instead it has scenes where two people who really ought to be working together but come from different divisions of government make statements along the lines of, “this isn’t your time to shine,” or you aren’t on  “my time” and later discover why our government functions so much better whenever everyone in those positions is working towards the single minded goal of the best America possible.  (An idealistic view, no doubt, and yet one that perhaps we need to see if we are not to become to cynical to both survive, and find a way through, gridlock.)

Quantico - ParrishFinally a show I have not yet taken an opportunity to write about, in part because I am still forming an opinion on it.  Quantico on ABC.   If you watched the ABC show The Nine several years ago, Quantico has a similar format to the episodes — flashing back to FBI training 9 months ago in Quantico, while currently trying to solve the question of who is responsible for a present day terrorist  attack, using 1 clue — a tip that the person responsible for the attack was a member of that class of trainees at Quantico.  Their trainer Liam O’Connor, played by Josh Hopkins, is working the case in New York, and is convinced it is Alex Parrish (played compellingly by Bollywood star Priyanka Chopra), in part because she was found, unconscious, within the blast radius (ie where someone who had just set of the device might have been.)  

Quantico - BOothWhy am I wavering in how I feel about the show?  It is pretty solid entertainment, but most weeks it feels like we get the back story, or a reason to mistrust, yet another member of the trainee class.  A bit expected to be honest.  We are getting a lot of 9 months ago drama, which I am enjoying, but little in the way of compelling information today, few people being introduced as truly believable or viable terrorists, for me.  I keep watching thinking I missing something, that they are giving me a set of characters I like, especially Ryan Booth (Jake McLaughlin) the one FBI agent that Alex Parrish is sure from the moment she knows she has been framed that she can trust.   Part of me does not want one of Alex’s fellow trainees to have been the terrorist, and another part of me is begging the writers to have been playing fair with us as viewers.

In addition, I am particularly enjoying Yasmine Al Massri‘s portrayal of twins who are taking turns as 1 recruit, trying to prove that 2 people could go undercover as 1 person and share the responsibilities and role of an FBI agent.  She has had some particularly good scenes with Aunjanue Ellis as the head of FBI training, Miranda Shaw.

Sunday has suddenly become an evening where my DVR and I are very busy… and very happy.

kay

The Mentalist Season 6

the-mentalist-955Just in time for Season 7 of the Mentalist to start airing on CBS November 30, John Mayo, of ComicBookPage, and Kay Kellam, of PopArtsPlace, have a spoiler filled discussion about the sixth season of The Mentalist, and the Red John story arc that has been with the show since it’s pilot episode and was wrapped up in the sixth season of the series.

Links:
The Mentalist @ CBS: http://www.cbs.com/shows/the_mentalist
The Mentalist @ IMDB.com: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1196946/

The Mentalist On The Web: http://www.cbs.com/primetime/the_mentalist/
FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/TheMentalist
TWITTER: @Mentalist_CBS

The Mentalist Cast on Twitter:

Tim Kang: @Tim_Kang
Rockmond Dunbar: @RockmondDunbar
Joe Adler: @JpAdler
Josie Loren: @ josloren

Discount Comic Book Service: http://www.DCBService.com
Comics Podcast Network: http://www.comicspodcast.com
League of Comic Book Podcasts:http://www.comicbooknoise.com/league/

Email us at TheGuys@ComicBookPage.com

Join the discussion on our forum at: http://forum.comicbookpage.com

This podcast episode originated on the Comic Book Page website:http://www.ComicBookPage.com

The Mentalist – Season 6

Season 6 of the CBS show The Mentalist brought a new status quo.  Finally free of the Red John serial killer that had in many ways weighed down the show, Patrick Jane (Simon Baker) was now with the FBI instead of the CBI (California Bureau of Investigation) and with the entire country to dabble in, new and hopefully more interesting cases, and part of a new team with a few familiar faces, he was able to back to the original antics that made the early episodes so much fun.

The DVD for The Mentalist The Complete Sixth Season includes an interesting featurette in which members of the cast and production talk about both the mythology of Red John, and Patrick Jane, as they put it, Redeemed, Recovered and Restored.  For me that was particularly interesting, and gave me a better understanding of the minds behind the show, and a fundamental difference of opinions they and I have had for the past six seasons.

They viewed Red John as Patrick Jane’s great white whale.  The serial killer was the foe he would go to the ends of the earth to find and slay.  For me, Red John was the catalyst of the show.  as I recall the pilot and the premise, losing his family to Red John sparked a transformation in Patrick Jane at some level.  While one can not say it changed him entirely as a man, it prompted him to be a better man.  He joined the CBI, and instead of being a con-man psychic he started using his gifts and powers of observation for good.  Instead of doing things that either qualified as committing crimes, or walking very near the edge of that line, he was now on the side of good and catching those who would commit crimes.

Red John inspired Patrick Jane in many ways, the point at which Red John’s crime spree crossed paths with Patrick Jane’s life was a turning point and while Red John may not have been captured, and may not have been changed, Patrick Jane was.

To me, having that as the catalyst was enough.  I did not need my damaged hero to go out on a path of vengeance and hatred.  Nor did I desire to see Patrick commit crimes once more.  Rather I enjoyed seeing him aspire to be someone his family could be proud of — and often achieve that goal.  I enjoyed watching the redemption of Patrick Jane through his weekly actions with Lisbon (Robin Tunney) and her team.

If Red John had never been a plot point again after the pilot, I would have been happy.  If he had occasionally been mentioned as a piece of Patrick Jane’s back story that would have been enough for me as a viewer.

Watching the featurette and discovering that the producers/writers/directors and powers that be of the show had always considered Red John to have a much more significant role to play in the show was a surprise to me.  I had wondered over the course of the seasons when he would be woven back into the story if that had always been the plan or not, and the mythology of Red John answered a lot of questions for me.

It also gave insight into the current roles of Cho (Tim Kang), Rigsby (Owain Yeoman) and Van Pelt (Amanda Righetti).  I was particularly intrigued by the conversation pertaining to the passage of time between seasons 5 and 6.  When I had heard the show would move forward 2 years I had wondered how the various characters would have spent the time, and as the episodes aired, and we saw how the lives of our cherished team members had unfolded each had taken a very satisfying path… well… okay… part of me felt Lisbon (Robin Tunney) was treading water, just waiting for the return of Patrick Jane (Simon Baker), but even that had felt in character.

Mentalist is. at heart, a fun show.  Patrick Jane is an irreverent character, with a fairly good understanding of the law and what the law enforcers can do, and yet he is constantly challenging them to try something unique, bend the rules just a tad and let him try something creative all in the name of capturing the bad guys, and make sure justice prevails.

How can you not enjoy a man, with a child’s heart, and a con-man’s soul, who wants to do whatever it takes to see justice prevail?

Season 6 of the Mentalist is currently available on DVD, and season 7 is scheduled to return to CBS in January.