The Mentalist on CBS

I watched The Mentalist religiously in its earlier years, but gave up as the writers *****ed out and retconned the brilliant Red John reveal of Season 3, which resulted in the show developing an insanely complex mythology that the writers couldn't seem to keep track of. I watched the past few episodes to see how Red John ended. Here are my thoughts:

Very underwhelmed. I figured I would be. Some random schmuck sheriff turns out to be Red John? The chase scene was absolutely ridiculous. Seeing Red John beg for his life was even worse. Going as far as having him call 911....ugh...just pathetic, absolutely pathetic. It completely took the teeth off of the character and turned him into a sniveling coward.

It was so much more impressive in the season 3 finale. It was handled perfectly. The funny thing is, until Jane did his ridiculous magic trick to defeat Red John, it was basically the same exact conversation rehashed, only this time over acted to the point where Red John may as well have been twirling a long curled mustache and wearing a cape and top hat. The realistic element that made the season 3 finale so chilling was entirely removed.

Furthermore, no one's actions made a lot of sense. FBI agent chases Jane for some reason that no one really cares to explain. Then he lets Jane go under the philosophy that he can arrest him later? Umm...why? He was already arrested. There was no reason to let him go other than the fact that they needed to stretch out the episode with another chase sequence. Hell, that whole subplot with the hardass FBI agent just felt like a way to kill time until the reveal.

But you know whose actions made the least sense? Red John's! Jane didn't catch Red John. Red John just showed up at random. Why? Dunno. For the hell of it, I guess. Said something about framing Berchram, but that was already done. He was believed to be dead. Why even show up? Jane didn't catch him. He didn't solve the mystery. Red John revealed himself simply because the writers decided to make him reveal himself. There felt like no natural evolution of the story line, no build up. It just happened.

Plus, how do we even know that this was the real Red John? This was literally season 3 redux with a chase scene thrown in. What is to stop the writers from saying, "Uh oh! Ratings dipped! Time to bring back the REAL Red John!"?


Just overall disappointing. Maybe it would've been more satisfying if I watched the past 2 and a half seasons, but as it is....just pathetic. I'm glad I quit watching when I did. I choose to believe season 3's ending was the real ending.
 


So so so so so so so so much better. Writers got cold feet and retconned what would have been one of the most brilliant reveals and twists in television history.
 
That scene was good Matt I'll admit, but I wasn't too disappointed with the reveal. Mainly because it really lent itself to the fact that Jane really got RJ, he tricked him into appearing. Season 3 was luck that the guy was there.
 
But Jane didn't trick him at all. Jane was simply meeting with Berchram (who he knew was not Red John). Red John just happened to show up.
 
Not sure how I feel about the reveal. I think Brett Partridge would've made a better Red John personally.

RJ didn't get to tell how he knew who was going to be on the list. Obviously the writers didn't know either because they made it that Jane didn't care how.

McAllister's high pitched voice looked fake as if another voice was dubbed when he spoke.

I guess they aren't going to explain how Jane got away? Or maybe they'll brush over it quickly next week when there is the time jump. This did feel like it could've been the very final episode though. Maybe it should have been and at the end of the season instead.
 
I just caught up on the last three episodes and I have to say I'm a bit disappointed with the ending of the Red John arc. I just...didn't really care for it and didn't really find it suspenseful. I know part of the show's charm is to pull fake outs, but the way it all unfolded was a bit unsatisfying. Unfortunately, the worst part about it was while I was catching up I spoiled myself on Person of Interest because one of the commercials...le sigh. Now I'm off to catch up on that.
 
Dark Raven: Partridge would've been good because it would've tied into the first episode of the series but aside from that I don't know. he wasn't very strong and RJ has killed numerous people with injury to himself, I don't see Partridge being capable of that.

I do wish they told us the trick but obviously it was just that and I loved it that Patrick didn't care, because it showed that the time for tricks and games was over.

The voice wasn't fake, any good actor can do that, in fact I'm doing it right now!

They didn't exactly know where Jane was when he killed McAlister, so it's not too hard to imagine that he got away clean. Most likely next episode will tell us.
 
I wouldn't count on the next episode telling us a whole hell of a lot in terms of plot holes (like the list). Bruno Heller has already said that he doesn't intend to answer questions, that the story is over (in other words, "why answer questions to which we don't know the answers?"). This whole thing was written sloppily. Heller also confirmed that he only picked Red John recently. Basically, any clue we were given was pointless. You write a good mystery by starting at the conclusion and working backward. The fact that the writers didn't have a conclusion explains a lot in regard to the sloppiness of the story.
 
I also feel they didn't really have a plan on who Red John was. It was like all the red herrings where just put in there for the sake of the Red John plot when the writers didn't even know who he was at the time. I have been watching this show from the beginning and Red John being some local, no-name Sheriff didn't really work for me. LOL...there are fan sites that have graphs and charts listing all the clues they gave us, but none of that stuff was even real. It's kind of a let down really.
 
Dark Raven: Partridge would've been good because it would've tied into the first episode of the series but aside from that I don't know. he wasn't very strong and RJ has killed numerous people with injury to himself, I don't see Partridge being capable of that.

I do wish they told us the trick but obviously it was just that and I loved it that Patrick didn't care, because it showed that the time for tricks and games was over.

The voice wasn't fake, any good actor can do that, in fact I'm doing it right now!

They didn't exactly know where Jane was when he killed McAlister, so it's not too hard to imagine that he got away clean. Most likely next episode will tell us.

When I meant fake I meant that it looked dubbed and as if it weren't really coming out of his mouth. Maybe it wasn't completely in sync.

I personally think Timothy Carter was creepier and seemed more like RJ even though he wouldn't have been physically strong enough. But he or Partridge would've been a stronger presence than McAllister. Maybe Partridge could've possessed an unnatural strength.

McAllister didn't really demonstrate being a genius mind like Jane once he revealed himself as RJ.
 
I'm pretty sure they've closed the door on Red John. Or rather, slammed it shut without thinking about potentially greasing the hinges so it shuts better.

Shocking writing IMO. As was said, you can't plan to have a bad guy like RJ from the start of the first series if you don't know who it's going to be. Clues are clues for a reason, otherwise what's the point.

Appallingly and lazily written. The fact there were fan theories out there that read better than this 'professionally written' dross, shows you what a POS it was.

Terrible.
 
I'm pretty sure they've closed the door on Red John. Or rather, slammed it shut without thinking about potentially greasing the hinges so it shuts better.

Shocking writing IMO. As was said, you can't plan to have a bad guy like RJ from the start of the first series if you don't know who it's going to be. Clues are clues for a reason, otherwise what's the point.

Appallingly and lazily written. The fact there were fan theories out there that read better than this 'professionally written' dross, shows you what a POS it was.

Terrible.

Well you can have someone. HIMYM did it without knowing who exactly they were going to cast as the mother. But they did tie up all the clues together that were left and made sure to keep returning to it. And I think, on the whole, most people were satisfied with the actress when the mother was revealed.

Also, they've spent time in Season 9 showing us the mother and letting us get to know her a bit.

With RJ, they just did the reveal, but didn't really show us any of his character now that we had seen his face. It would've been good if he had been revealed maybe last episode and we actually got to see Xander Berkley acting like the Red John we all know. But he wasn't really at all like that character and we were just supposed to accept that he was this evil genius who was always one step ahead of Jane.
 
I'm pretty sure they've closed the door on Red John. Or rather, slammed it shut without thinking about potentially greasing the hinges so it shuts better.

Shocking writing IMO. As was said, you can't plan to have a bad guy like RJ from the start of the first series if you don't know who it's going to be. Clues are clues for a reason, otherwise what's the point.

Appallingly and lazily written. The fact there were fan theories out there that read better than this 'professionally written' dross, shows you what a POS it was.

Terrible.

But did they really shut it? Why exactly is McAllister Red John? Because Bruno Heller says so? He said that Jane killed Red John in the season 3 finale. Because he did a voice? So did the guy in season 3. That guy at least described Jane's family in vivid detail. What did McAllister do to cement his status? Really nothing. There is nothing keeping the writers from getting lazy if the ratings dip and just pulling another, "Gotchya! It wasn't the real Red John!"
 
Very underwhelmed. I figured I would be. Some random schmuck sheriff turns out to be Red John? The chase scene was absolutely ridiculous. Seeing Red John beg for his life was even worse. Going as far as having him call 911....ugh...just pathetic, absolutely pathetic. It completely took the teeth off of the character and turned him into a sniveling coward.

It was so much more impressive in the season 3 finale. It was handled perfectly. The funny thing is, until Jane did his ridiculous magic trick to defeat Red John, it was basically the same exact conversation rehashed, only this time over acted to the point where Red John may as well have been twirling a long curled mustache and wearing a cape and top hat. The realistic element that made the season 3 finale so chilling was entirely removed.

Furthermore, no one's actions made a lot of sense. FBI agent chases Jane for some reason that no one really cares to explain. Then he lets Jane go under the philosophy that he can arrest him later? Umm...why? He was already arrested. There was no reason to let him go other than the fact that they needed to stretch out the episode with another chase sequence. Hell, that whole subplot with the hardass FBI agent just felt like a way to kill time until the reveal.

But you know whose actions made the least sense? Red John's! Jane didn't catch Red John. Red John just showed up at random. Why? Dunno. For the hell of it, I guess. Said something about framing Berchram, but that was already done. He was believed to be dead. Why even show up? Jane didn't catch him. He didn't solve the mystery. Red John revealed himself simply because the writers decided to make him reveal himself. There felt like no natural evolution of the story line, no build up. It just happened.

Plus, how do we even know that this was the real Red John? This was literally season 3 redux with a chase scene thrown in. What is to stop the writers from saying, "Uh oh! Ratings dipped! Time to bring back the REAL Red John!"?


Just overall disappointing.

Good summary. For the final showdown, I was expecting (justifiably, I think) a duel between genius masterminds. That’s been the context for the entire series. But in the end, Red John was reduced to a generic, desperate villain; and Jane more-or-less got lucky. Disappointing indeed.
 
Maybe it should've been a 2-part episode where RJ had already been revealed. Then he could do some evil mastermind plot again and actually showcase his intellect and how he manages to stay one step ahead of Jane.

Because they showed nothing of RJ's prowess, it felt like we were supposed to just accept McAllister as RJ. Of course, if Xander Berkley had the kind of personality that automatically screamed RJ, we would've more easily accepted him, just like with Timothy Carter in Season 3 (or even Brett Partridge, if he had been RJ).

I think even Brett Stiles would've made a better RJ. Would've been better if RJ didn't have the tattoo at all, but when Beth Riesgraf got killed off and described the shoulder tattoo, it was merely one of RJ's minions who carried out the job.
 
'The Mentalist' Red John episode: Creator, star answer 20 burning questions

http://insidetv.ew.com/2013/11/24/the-mentalist-red-john-interview/

MAJOR-MAJOR SPOILERS: You have questions, yes? CBS’ The Mentalist team has answers — 20 answers for 20 burning questions following Sunday’s huge “Red John” episode. Reporters were given a sneak peak of the hour, then interviewed creator Bruno Heller and star Simon Baker during a nearly hour-long conference call.

As you now presumably know, tonight Patrick Jane (Baker) discovered Red John was a not-dead-after-all Sheriff Thomas McAllister (Xander Berkeley), then shot him and throttled him to death. Below the team talk about the big moment and what’s to come (transcript edited for length and coherence; questions paraphrased):


1. When did Heller decide Red John’s identity?

Bruno Heller: I’m not sure. It kind of just emerged over the last couple years. There was always three or four possibilities. And it just happened, really. It seemed like the natural correct choice.

2. Was now the best time to solve the Red John case?

Simon Baker: There’s a lot of different ways they could have gone. I always thought there was legs in the Red John story, as a show that wasn’t procedural. You could have milked that whole Red John thing out, but it would have been in the style of 24 where you’re picking up exactly where you left off [each week]. It would have been really interesting to explore that. But we’re on CBS and they love a procedural TV show and they know how to market those. So we did this little dance of doing a crime-of-the-week and then bouncing back to this Red John story … That was a difficult dance to balance those two things.

I guess it got to a point where some people were like, “We love the Red John episodes, and we love the stand-alone episodes as well, is there a way to deal with one completely and move forward from there?” To be honest with you, those decisions are not for me to make. I’m always for going for it, pushing it a bit more. These last five months working on the show has been really exciting for me. I’ve had this sort of enthusiasm I had in the first season because it’s new and fresh from week to week and it’s going somewhere. Sometimes the frustration for me as an actor is we’re not going anywhere, we’re not moving forward, and this is definitely going somewhere and it gives me something to do.


3. Was Baker satisfied with Red John’s identity?

Baker: I was eventually satisfied with the way I killed him — how about that? I always felt the scariest [thing was] it could be the guy you see every day on the way to work who’s watering his lawn two blocks away, the everyday guy … so when we found out who it was, that fulfilled that category… Ultimately with anything like this there’s a level of disappointment because like anything when there’s mystery you paint a picture in your head of what it’s going to be, particular when it’s a mystery that holds you underwater so long, the mystery of who it is is mythical.

Heller: Ideally you want it to be Sean Connery with horns and a tail in a cave, but that guy doesn’t exist.

4. Why did Jane kill Red John? And what was most important to you in creating this episode?


Heller: It was about giving Patrick Jane exactly what he has hunted for all these years. I don’t think it was a moment for cleverness or moral ambivalence. He wanted revenge and he got it. And I think that’s what the audience wanted and that’s what we gave him. … I always hated heist movies where they don’t get away with the heist, or revenge movies where they don’t actually wreck their revenge. That always seemed like a cheat. The show started with [Jane] having a very good reason to catch and kill this guy and it would have been almost dishonest not to have that as the conclusion to this chapter.

Baker: You can look at any plot and analyze it and pull it apart until the cows come home, but I did feel a sense of pressure since we’ve been working toward this for so many years … I thought it’s gotta live up to that in that one moment. It’s also the one moment in the life of the character where he’s stepping out into the unknown and he’s been talking about it and made a commitment to do that. Also the way we do it was important. I felt like to pull the trigger [of a gun], it’s just puling the trigger and the gun does the killing. To grapple with somebody and kill them with your hands is far more intimate–

Heller: — and real and honest and visceral … with all that pressure and all that story that’s gone by and all the baggage, he did a really beautiful intimate killing there. It’s hard but good to watch.

Baker: Whatever happens in the course of the series, there’s reasons and things you sign on, and there’s very important elements to the character that you make a connection with immediately. A lot of those things were laid to rest in this episode. If felt incredibly personal to me. I’ve always been very invested in what my character does and how he reacts to his personal story — which is the Red John story. Not so much what’s thrown at him, but how he reacts and how he deals with it. What can best serve the story that feels [realistic] as opposed to the character behaving a certain way to drive the plot forward.

The challenge and most difficult part of working on this show is playing a tragic character that has a very raw and unprotected emotional side to him but has this sort of whimsical tap-dancery thing going on with a sense of humor as bravado — to dance between the two tones of the show has always been very challenging. I get very protective of the personal stuff with that character — so things like the tea cup and obviously how we kill him, Bruno knows that I’m going to be waiting outside his door to weigh in on all that stuff.


5. But is Red John really dead?

Heller: Red John is dead. It’s passed that point.

6. How long was The Blake Association part of the show’s master plan?

Heller: The Blake Association was there from quite early on, though hidden. Frankly, it gives you a logical, coherent reason for Red John’s immense power that is not down to him being supernatural being. That notion of a villainous Freemasonry inside law enforcement seemed like a realistic idea because it’s happened in other places and a deeply creepy idea.

7. Red John said he was psychic. Is that to be believed?

Heller: I would leave that thread dangling … Jane feels very strongly, as I do, that psychics don’t exist. But you can’t tell that to the many millions of people who go to psychics every week and get genuine comfort and solace and understanding from what those psychics say. So that’s very deliberately a way of not being doctrinaire about that issue and leaving it to the audience. All answers to that question are correct and it depends on your point of view.

8. Can Baker mentally stitch together the whole Jane story now?

Baker: I don’t think I could put the pieces together in my mind. Far too many pieces. But there’s definitely there’s kind of key scenes in the journey of the character that he was going to exact revenge and it was going to be personal showtime and then possible an existential crisis afterward.


9. At what point did Xander Berkeley (McAllister) learn he was Red John and how did he react?

Heller: At the very last moment and he was thrilled.

10. Wouldn’t it might have been better for Red John to be captured so his other victims’ families could get some closure too?

Baker: I like it. I like that idea. We’re going to steal that.

Heller: There you go. That’s where me and Baker disagree. I was like, “No, kill the guy.”

Baker: Not the only thing we disagree on.

Heller: Not the first, won’t be the last.

Baker: I think if you really looked at it, if there’s any kind of sense of regret ever about that thing, that would totally be it.

Heller: That’s the difference between me and Baker. I thought the only regret would be not to take longer killing him … it’s a good question, tough to play if that were [to happen]. My sense [it] either destroys you with guilt or you get a certain amount of strength from it. And I think Jane gets a certain amount of strength. This is not the first time he’s killed somebody. And like primitive men used to think, when you kill somebody, you take a certain amount of strength with them.

11. How will murdering Red John change Jane?

Heller: Jane is this tragic figure who has gotten his heart’s desire. He’s found the sort of evil Grail he’s been chasing all these years, but what does that do to him as a person? Can he begin a new life? And what kind of life does he want for himself, and how will he define himself, now that that part of his life is over? … this fresh version of the show is about is what happens afterwards. In a very real sense, he’s a happier person, a weight has been taken off his shoulders. In that way, a weight has been taken off the show. So it’s going to be the same show, to some degree, but a show with less darkness at the edges, and more freedom to roam. Jane has more freedom and a sense of possibility and liberty.

12. Might Jane finally have a love life?

Heller: Might.

13. Will Jane and Lisbon (Robin Tunney) get closer now?


Baker: Yeah, I think, absolutely.

Heller: They’ve been so engrossed in this massive task they haven’t really looked around at the people around them and think about who those people are what they really mean to them. Now Jane and Lisbon have a chance to take a breath and think about each other in a way that they haven’t before.

14. Is Jane going to face legal ramifications for killing Red John?

Heller: Yes, he is. You can’t go around killing people willy-nilly without some kind of ramifications. Very much so.

15. Will Jane continue to want to work in law enforcement?

Heller: Not immediately. I can tell you he’s going to be placed in a position where his personal desires are not the point. What he does in the future is not going to be entirely up to himself.

16. Will the show return to being a weekly crime procedural?

Heller: Yes, we’ll be returning to crime solving. Not necessarily the same kind of crime solving.

17. Will The Mentalist succeed without Red John?

Heller: Not really concerned … It felt to all of us like that chapter of the story was done. I think, frankly, the great asset of value of the show is in Baker’s head and what he does. Red John never even appears as a character until this last episode. He was a feeling in the show and an objective, but in terms of moment-by-moment pleasures of the show, those are delivered by Simon Baker and [the rest of the cast], not by Red John. I think it’s going to be a great show after Red John. Then it’s up to the audience to decide if they like it or not.

18. What does this mean for the other characters?

Heller: I hadn’t really thought of it in those terms. It’s a little like the children of divorce. What’s next? They’ve been enthralled in somebody else’s mission and now that mission is gone. They were in a world they didn’t choose and now that world is changing around them again.

19. Will we get more information about Red John?


Heller: We won’t be going back. … Once the curtain is drawn back from these evil Wizard of Oz characters they tend not to be very interesting dinner companions. They tend to be ego-maniacal one-track minds … There is a great deal of [backstory], if anyone waned to ask those questions, I’d be happy to answer. There’s a lot of questions about motivations and what [Red John] was doing and when and how… It makes for great Internet fodder, but it’s not very entertaining for a weekly TV audience.

Baker: When Red John dies there’s a part of Jane that dies in that moment as well. It’s kind of what he’s been about since we met him. It takes a little time to get back on his feet again. He doesn’t have a wife and kid, he doesn’t have a relationship with anyone other than those he worked with at the CBI and this perverse relationship/obsession with Red John, which is now over … In the very next episode there was a line that referenced Red John and I was pretty adamant about losing it. Because we’ve said “Red John” about 4 million times and 3 million in the last 7 episodes … It’s nice to have to have a good clean cut and not have Jane speak of him … Even if he speaks [of killing him], he doesn’t mention “Red” or “John” in same sentence.

20. Does this mean episode titles will no longer have variations on “red” in them?

Heller: Oh yes … very happy about that.


Interesting to read that Simon Baker doesn't sound like he's completely satisfied with Red John's identity. He gives a roundabout answer to the question: "I was eventually satisfied with the way I killed him — how about that?"

Also, it sounds like Baker and Heller don't completely agree on the fate of Red John and that perhaps Baker thought maybe he should've been captured instead of killed.
 
I'll be patient, I like that Cho already works for the FBI. Did not see the twist with that lady being an FBI agent too. Wow.
 
I'll be patient, I like that Cho already works for the FBI. Did not see the twist with that lady being an FBI agent too. Wow.
I had a feeling she was FBI, especially with how Agent Abbott showed up around the same time as her meeting Jane. Plus, with the actress playing her (Emily Swallow) joining the cast as a regular, it made it easier to predict.
 
I honestly didn't know that. I try to avoid spoilers when I can. I knew Abbot was coming in as a regular but not her.

Also I thought that Abbot being there was easily explained from his interaction with Lisbon and we found out he knew about the letters. Oh well, it made it fun for me.
 
It did cross my mind that she might not be all that she seems to be. Why does her name sound like an Austin Powers character though? Is it spits or swallows? :hehe:

So are they going to be based out of Texas now?
 
Had a feeling Kim was FBI when Jane guessed she was from Virginia.

I wonder if theyre going to keep the blue tint they used in the scenes in Austin.
 
I really like Simon Baker so I'm going to keep watching this show, but this vibe of him working with the F.B.I. is strange.
 
I've been slippin' ,and just got caught up on this season. All I can say is WTH was that crap!!!???! I figured it would be the no name Sheriff after that episode where they kept making a point that he seemed to be afraid of heights and then he saves Jane's life by climbing the ladder. I was like "Either he was playing mind games w/ Lisbon and Jane or he overcame his fears because he couldn't allow Jane to die." Either way it just screamed Red John to me.

To me (Like others have stated) Season 3's finale was handed so much better. It would have been better if right after the minion dude killed Bercherm that he is also randomly killed. Now all of the names off of Jane's list are presumably dead and we spend the rest of the season trying to figure out who Red John "Really" was. Then after dissecting all of his gruesome crimes and finding out where such and such was at the time of such and such murder we're left that Red John was just a Myth. All 7 men collectively were Red John at one particular time.
 
Wow, over a year has passed and I guess I'm the only one still watching this series? The latest 2-part episode was handled beautifully. I'm generally happy for these two.
 

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