Sun-bleached California noir. The show looks like a late-afternoon shadow—warm but ominous. No moody blue filters; just harsh light and long silences.

The ghost in the machine. For six seasons, the serial killer is both a brilliant hook and a narrative tar pit. Early episodes thrive on the mystery; later arcs strain under its weight. The eventual reveal is divisive—some call it poetic, others a letdown. But the hunt gives Jane his blade’s edge.

Where the show shines. The procedural format is cozy, clever, and occasionally formulaic. But Jane’s solutions are never lab reports—they’re psychological traps. He’ll gaslight a murderer into confessing by pretending to be a ghost. That’s the fun.

Starts as a thriller, matures into a character study, ends as a redemption story. Skip the Red John obsession; stay for the humanity.

Cho’s deadpan, Rigsby’s earnestness, Van Pelt’s hidden steel. The Lisbon-Jane dynamic is the quiet MVP: not romance for five seasons, but mutual exasperation that deepens into loyalty. Robin Tunney grounds Baker’s theatricality. She’s the anchor; he’s the kite.

Rather than a star rating, let me offer an index of what makes this show compelling, frustrating, and ultimately rewatchable.

Here’s a draft of an interesting, slightly unconventional review of The Mentalist , framed as an “index” of the show’s defining elements.

The gravitational center. Simon Baker plays a former con man turned CBI consultant with a feral grin and eyes that hold a permanent wake. Jane solves crimes by noticing tells, not trace evidence. He’s a Sherlock without the Asperger’s—charming, manipulative, and broken in a way that feels earned. His tragedy (Red John) is the show’s engine.