User Reviews (14)

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  • kols20 May 2014
    10/10
    Bravo!
    Warning: Spoilers
    And Finally!

    Agree with both of the preceding reviews: would have been a great episode even without the ending, from Jane's quick solve in the beginning, whimsical and well-paced, to the 'new' team's consolidation as a working unit (wish Rigsby and Van Pelt were part of it) to Jane's final breakthrough or break-out flawlessly portrayed by Simon Baker.

    The whole thing has been foreshadowed all season as Jane has slowly adjusted to the absence of his boggy-man and the recapture of his humanity. But whether he and Lisbon would ever move beyond their close yet hands-off relationship was a real question. To the very end, I expected a 'too much, too late' ending; that Jane's 6 year obsession with Red John had poisoned the waters beyond the point of retrieval. That any attempt to get them together wouldn't work because of that history.

    Delighted to be wrong, really delighted. And surprised by how well it worked. With Jane getting slightly histrionic and Lisbon, in counter-point, providing a low-key but convincing denouement that fit glove-in-hand.

    However it works out in future episodes, this one could easily be considered Best-in-Series or, at least, most satisfying.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Hell Yeah!!! Why am I shouting and crying again? Oh yes Jane & Lisbon kissed (while in holding in TSA) and Jane confessed his feelings and a big 'I LOVE YOU' to Lisbon (which she returned later) in front of a whole plane load of people that apparently made all the women in the plane green with envy at Lisbon! – This is definitely the most invested I've got in seeing a duo getting together after Rick & Kate got together in Castle. – Amazing acting from Simon Baker and Robin Tunney, especially Simon (who is always at the top of his game but was simply marvelous today). His face was a mirror to the turmoil of emotions running inside him. – Best episode of Season 6 after the 'Red John' episode. Now CBS' decision to renew the show is put into perspective…we definitely need a Season 7!
  • wild_cat_oo620 May 2014
    Warning: Spoilers
    Fantastic finale. The whole episode was amazing , my enthusiasm grew and grew, till finally :Boom!! I didn't expect it. I was totally blown away. Lisbet and Jane are amazing , the relationship they formed is a really special one . From the fist episode, I had the feeling they would end up together , but as the show continued I got used to their friendship and I stopped thinking they could be a couple. This episode had everything it needed: humor , irony, a good puzzle , romance , the topically cliché : of course he had to stopped the plane to tell her he loved her. As for their acting needless to say : it was impeccable, an outstanding performance.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The Post Red Jon Mentalist continues to deliver great episodes that remain enjoyable.

    The ending is predictable knowing that a 7th season was picked up, but how they did it was enjoyable. It was nice to see a side of Patrick that we've never seen before.

    Thinking about the fake letter he sent, I can see how he wouldn't get in trouble with the FBI Chief. He did end up catching the original killer(s), no-one was killed so everything really worked out.

    This episode keeps up the standard. It opens with a note sent to the FBI chief in austin, about one of their cases in Miami. This allows for the audience to guess that Jane is involved some how. Even though he denies it you can't shake the feeling. The episode leaves some things guessable while keeping the suspense high.
  • It's June 2021. Yet as a I near the homestretch of serial streaming this series for the first time, without having left even one review to date, I am FORCED to pen something after the shock I just received with the ending of season 6.

    Let's be clear. This was a GREAT show. I really should say IS a great show, because in spite of the heart attack I just had at the news the producers committed series Hari-Kari by going all-romantic with Jane and Lisbon, there were great and laughing out loud funny moments (as usual) in the episode.

    Here's the thing. I came off of a serial replaying of all 7 MONK seasons, wondering if any of the other 2000 era detective shows could match what Tony Shalhoub had done with his character in that show. That show was COLUMBO and ROCKFORD FILES good. Maybe better.

    When I first saw that Simon Baker was the star of The Mentalist I was despondent. Baker had played an arrogant, smug, cutthroat financial executive in the most excellent post-2008 crisis film MARGIN CALL. Baker was so good in that movie I concluded that the actor was just playing himself. From his top of his curleylocks hair to the bottom of his effected walk, how could this guy play anything other than "smug"?

    And I was kind of right. Simon Baker simply has a congenital look of smugness to his natural facial expression. But in a brilliant move Baker and the producers of The Mentalist (think, the brilliant creator of ROME, Bruno Heller), did not fight that image. They played into it!

    And, to my surprise, Baker is an outstanding actor. Combined with the unique storylines of Heller, this show trapped me in and I've been enjoying the ride for all these six seasons.

    But the question with a highly successful, long running series is always the same.... how long before they screw it up? It pretty much always happens. Anyone remember NORTHERN EXPOSURE? A great example of a series we came to love and trust taking its own life toward the end. So sad when this happens. For me, The Mentalist made it this far; Episode 22 of Season 6. There have of course been many missteps to date, and the reveal of Red John is controversial, but in my view the sign of a truly great show is that it can survive its foibles.

    But the admission of love by Jane, and the subsequent kiss between Jane and Lisbon had me throwing up all over my TV (well, laptop actually. And I'm being metaphorical). I saw it coming but I kept screaming, "No! No! Don't do it! Have Lisbon leave the show. That would be much better. And credible. Less credible would be for her finance to be another serial killer. Like what happened to Van Pelt. Disappointing, yes. But it would not have driven the show over the cliff, Thelma and Louise style. Which is what they did the moment Jane professed his love to Lisbon.

    So, am I going to watch season 7? Of course. Like a say, I love the show.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Season 6 is the best season so far. As far as relationships go on TV shows, this is the best, most satisfying one. The dialogue was beautifully written.
  • Not buying the Lisbon rant about Jane's twisted workings. She's not in love with Pike, she's in love w/ Jane and SHE can't say as much to Jane. Did she really think those dresses appeared in a moment after check in? No. Did she not tell Jane she was leaving -- and left it to others to tell him? I don't like that they made it look like Patrick is the only one with hangups. Boo hiss on Lisbon. You go, Patrick, you're the stronger and more-loving one of the two!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    When the FBI receives an anonymous letter with new evidence for an old case, Patrick Jane and Teresa Lisbon are assigned to travel to Florida posing as a couple to re-investigate the case. Patrick and Lisbon interview the persons involved in the case and Patrick plots a plan to find the real killer. When Lisbon discovers the truth about the anonymous letter, she heads to the airport to travel to Washington and Patrick is forced to take his ultimate decision.

    "Blue Bird" is a funny episode of "The Mentalist". Patrick Jane unsuccessfully trying to court Lisbon is hilarious and the final scene is very romantic. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "Blue Bird"
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Seeing the two of them kiss was nausea inducing. I knew it was coming because I came late to the series (sadly I knew who Red John was before the big reveal). But it feels like the entire romance between Jane and Lisbon was crammed in there to juice a seventh season out of the show. Platonic friendships can be entertaining too! Just look at Rizzoli and Isles.

    They should have ended the show soon after he killed RJ, the whole FBI just isn't working for me, probably won't watch season 7.

    6/10. The actual murder mystery plot saves this episode a little.
  • Jim-Eadon8 April 2017
    Warning: Spoilers
    The Season was pretty bad. I enjoyed the first 5 series in a guilty-pleasure way, and the Red John story arc was tantalising. Then suddenly they decided to finish the arc - mid-series! Why episode 8??, shouldn't the resolution be a cathartic final episode of the season job? Assuming that the Sheriff isn't another red herring, pun not intended, then the identity was deeply unsatisfying. And he did not act like the criminal mastermind he was supposed to be. The entire thing rang false, I did not buy it. And so the series replaces the dippy, amicable Grace and Rigsby with an FBI team who were po-faced and dull dull dull. Agent Fischer is just a charisma-free clone of Lisbon - so we have two exasperated woman boss characters, often in the same shot, standing there, looking bemused at Jane's antics. The boss guy is just an affable teddy bear kind of fella, there was no intimidation / tension between him and Jane, and the show needs upper-management vs out-of-control, maverick consultant tension. After the first case, the FBI guys actually seemed grateful to go along with Jane's cunning plans. A joy of the earlier seasons was the political nightmares and headaches that Jane gave the stuffed shirt bosses - including Lisbon herself, at least earlier on, before she became an apologist for Jane. The show started to lose its edge at that point. The only new character of any interest was Wiley, who was far less dumb than the agents and more likable. Then we had the pointless plot where Lisbon has to chose between Jane and Mr Nice. As Jane always gets his way, after all, he IS a master manipulator of people, then the outcome was obvious, so there was no tension. I'll probably watch Season 7 and hope that they make some of this season make sense as a build up to a clever set of twists, because this season just doesn't make any sense at all, on any level. It doesn't work on any level. Terrible casting. Lousy plotting. Dreary story lines and the dialogue was ho-hum, regurgitating lines from previous series, with very few new great lines. Oh, and, oddly for a show about psychology, the love between Jane and Lisbon did not come over at all, I did not feel it. The acting was really awkward and stilted.
  • swax858 April 2020
    Warning: Spoilers
    I agree with a couple other reviews here that the whole change in dynamic between Jane and Lisbon is awful! I loved that there wasn't that predictable and awkward sexual/ romantic tension between them. No hint of attraction from either towards the other. Yet suddenly, we're supposed to believe they've been in love this whole time? And Abbot is the only one who can tell? Simon Baker plays the scene on the airplane well, but the ending kiss was cringe-worthy, especially the way they froze the genre and faded to black. Way too cheesy and again, I hate that they're suddenly so in love, wtf. I wish they'd pursued something between Jane and Kim. What else was the point of her character?

    Also, like someone said, awful that they ended a 6 series arc mid-season. And so anticlimactic to have the sheriff be Red John. He did not portray this supposed cold blooded serial killer well. He was just a scared middle aged man blinking back tears.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    For 6 seasons, what I liked best about the series was the dynamics between Jane and Lisbon, which were always markedly non-sexual.

    All other series with a male-female duo started going downhill the minute they "found each other", starting from Moonlighting, up to Castle.

    Lisbon was always more like big-sister to Jane, which he loved to jerk around, as she would always get mock-mad at him, all blissfully without sexual tension, which made the series more special than its peers.

    The romantic interlude prerequisite was fulfilled by Van Pelt and Rigsby, and very rarely weighed down on the script.

    I always told my wife I'd turn the TV off the minute Jane and Lisbon first kiss, feeling quite confident, as the series went on, that this won't happen - even in the last chapters, where Jane's behavior could be consistently described as the little brother afraid of being left behind by his guardian sister...

    I fear that the next season will revolve mostly around their relationship at the expense of any other aspect of the story line, until that is all that will be left...
  • skay_baltimore5 January 2021
    A lousy finale to go with a lousy 6th season. Some shows go off the rails jump the shark after a few good seasons; this show just drove itself off a cliff and into a bottomless pit. What a shame. It started out edgy and creative and bold and turned into total mush -- like somebody left a cake out in the rain in MacArthur Park. It turned from a witty drama into a goofy soap opera. The writers and directors should be ashamed. Better yet...they should be arrested because what they did was criminal.
  • My overall rating of "The mentalist"'s Season 6: 2/10.

    In Season 6 "The mentalist" takes some of its sharpest genre turns and zigzags. It sheds its heavily-serialised jokey police procedural skin bit by bit to reveal the layer underneath, which has always been visible through the translucent covering, but now becomes vibrant, which is the dramatic, tantalising overarching plot. Then it briefly crosses the shore of romcomy implications to jump into the river of unfunny comedy where the heavily-serialised police procedural crystallises right back onto its skin, except worse in quality, as its waters can't draw out the crystallised dramatic gold by interplay with the overarching plot and themes. Its overarching skin cracks into tiny, poorly-done, pathetic arcs. But then "Blue Bird" comes about. The river of unfunny comedy leads into a wondrous, shiny sea of actually reasonably funny comedy.

    And then the show beaches itself in the desert of romcom mawkishness, tearing its flesh against rocks of cliché. I don't know whether the 7th Season is its being taken for taxidermy to be proudly displayed in a museum for posterity, or an inglorious end as fertiliser, and I don't care. I can't take any more of it. S6 killed "The mentalist" for me.

    To address specifically this episode: Jane's too wimpy and too much of an open book emotionally; his manipulativeness is in-character but everything else isn't. The comedic interlude in his room is really great and hilarious - it makes next to no sense logically, but the pure comedic value is worth it. It's been an almost forgotten feeling for me to feel something other than cringe while watching "The mentalist". I don't love this bit, but it gives an interesting counterfactual: if "The mentalist" was a pure comedy, which it wasn't and shouldn't seek to be, this is what it would hopefully look like - and it's glorious, but just not the genre I tuned in for.

    And then everybody drowns in sap, and is crushed by the cliches. The usual "The mentalist" flaws and the bizarre stock footage insert in the middle don't help, but any flaw looks good against the backdrop that is the plane scene, and Lisbon's decision.