DVD

  Anime 
  DVD's
  Soundtracks
  Graphic Novels
  System Video
  Interviews
  All Features

Areas

  3DS
  Android
  iPad
  iPhone
  Mac
  PC
  PlayStation 3
  PlayStation 4
  Switch
  Vita
  Wii U
  Xbox 360
  Xbox One
  Media
  Archives
  Search
  Contests

 

The Mentalist: The Complete Fifth Season

Score: 96%
Rating: Not Rated
Publisher: Warner Brothers Home
                  Entertainment

Region: 1
Media: DVD/5
Running Time: 932 Mins.
Genre: Drama/Comedy/TV Series
Audio: English 5.1 Surround Dolby
           Digital

Subtitles: English SDH


Features:

  • The Artistry of Action: From Script to Screen
  • Arresting Excitement: Keeping It Real with the CBI

Simon Baker as Patrick Jane once again delights audiences in The Mentalist: The Complete Fifth Season as he continues his pursuit of the nefarious serial killer Red John. At the end of last season, Red John had once again eluded both the CBI and the FBI, but his mistress, Lorelei Martins (Emanuelle Chriqui) was in custody. Jane believes he can get Lorelei to talk because of their personal connection, but he will soon see that it is easier said than done. Through a series of maneuvers, Lorelei is taken into the FBI's custody, than spirited away, presumably at Red John's hand. However, Jane doesn't give up and when he finally locates her, he blows her mind with some astonishing news connecting Red John to her beloved and dead younger sister. Amidst the fallout, Lorelei lets a crucial piece of information slip to Patrick – Red John is someone he knows. Throughout the rest of the season, Jane will use his brilliant mind to narrow down the list of suspects to a mere handful of men, as he edges closer and closer to Red John's true identity.

Aside from the ongoing Red John storyline, the CBI will get into lots of sticky situations and see the return of some familiar faces like Agent Ray Haffner (Reed Diamond), Summer Edgecomb (Samaire Armstrong), Cho's C.I./ hooker girlfriend, Internal Affairs agent J.J. LaRoche (Pruitt Taylor Vince), and the enigmatic Bret Stiles (Malcolm McDowell). Rigsby (Owain Yeoman) and Van Pelt (Amanda Righetti) rekindle their relationship after a good deal of time apart and I was often amused at the clever camera work throughout the season as Righetti's real-life pregnancy was concealed. Suffice it to say that she works the desk a lot.

Jane, Lisbon (Robin Tunney) and the gang continue to investigate a myriad of crazy cases, including a radio talk show host with a foot fetish, an old gold mining town turned murder site, a devious kidnapping, a gory suicide where Jane's mind plays tricks on him and he is visited by his now teenaged daughter, a look back at Patrick Jane's childhood roots, and finally, a handful of murders from Red John specifically designed to prick Jane's heart. The Mentalist: The Complete Fifth Season even includes the show's 100th episode, which was a fun episode focusing on the first appearance of Patrick Jane at the CBI and just how he wormed his way into the graces of Teresa Lisbon and the team. Aside from the one-off cases, there's an episode where Rigsby reconnects with his criminal father, Cho (Tim Kang) joins the Rapid Response Team which causes some personal conflict for him, and Van Pelt goes off to L.A. for a White Hat training session (and, I assume, to give birth to her child while on hiatus) and meets a romantic interest while she's there. There's also a multi-episode story arc where the team is dealing with a fiendishly clever and politically connected billionaire named Tommy Volker (Henry Ian Cusick, Lost). Suffice it to say that he is a formidable opponent for Lisbon and Jane. Lastly, there's a mole in the CBI and I.A. bloodhound J.J. LaRoche is determined to sniff the culprit out. When the rat is finally revealed, leave it to Jane and company to do it in style and on a grand scale.

There are only two special features, but both are enjoyable. The first focuses on the action scenes and stunts in the show and how they are set up, where the other highlights the reality that they try to infuse into the show and the training the actors undertake to get it just right under the watchful eye of Karl Sonnenberg, their Police Technical Advisor.

This show never ceases to amuse me. I love the character of Patrick Jane and no one could play it as well as Simon Baker. The mischievous twinkle in his eye as he effortlessly toys with people's minds is just fun TV. I love crime-solving shows, but The Mentalist continues to offer thrilling and interesting cases, but coated with a light-heartedness that you don't often see in these types of shows. I hope Jane never finds Red John, because I don't want The Mentalist to end, but as we edge closer to the true identity of the serial killer, The Mentalist: The Complete Fifth Season keeps you hooked until the very last episode. Highly recommended.



-Psibabe, GameVortex Communications
AKA Ashley Perkins

Related Links:



Blu-ray Movie Arrow: The Complete First Season DVD Movies My Little Pony: A Very Minty Christmas

 
Game Vortex :: PSIllustrated