Current:Home > MyReview: Zachary Quinto medical drama 'Brilliant Minds' is just mind-numbing -Wealth Legacy Solutions
Review: Zachary Quinto medical drama 'Brilliant Minds' is just mind-numbing
Surpassing Quant Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-03-11 05:18:46
Zachary Quinto once played a superpowered serial killer with a keen interest in his victims' brains (Sylar on NBC's "Heroes"). Is it perhaps Hollywood's natural evolution that he now is playing a fictionalized version of a neurologist? Still interested in brains, but in a slightly, er, healthier manner.
Yes, Quinto has returned to the world of network TV for "Brilliant Minds" (NBC, Mondays, 10 EDT/PDT, ★½ out of four), a new medical drama very loosely based on the life of Dr. Oliver Sacks, the groundbreaking neurologist. In this made-for-TV version of the story, Quinto is an unconventional doctor who gets mind-boggling results for patients with obscure disorders and conditions. It sounds fun, perhaps, on paper. But the result is sluggish and boring.
Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox
Dr. Oliver Wolf (Quinto) is the bucking-the-system neurologist that a Bronx hospital needs and will tolerate even when he does things like driving a pre-op patient to a bar to reunite with his estranged daughter instead of the O.R. But you see, when Oliver breaks protocol and steps over boundaries and ethical lines, it's because he cares more about patients than other doctors. He treats the whole person, see, not just the symptoms.
To do this, apparently, this cash-strapped hospital where his mother (Donna Murphy) is the chief of medicine (just go with it) has given him a team of four dedicated interns (Alex MacNicoll, Aury Krebs, Spence Moore II, Ashleigh LaThrop) and seemingly unlimited resources to diagnose and treat rare neurological conditions. He suffers from prosopagnosia, aka "face blindness," and can't tell people apart. But that doesn't stop people like his best friend Dr. Carol Pierce (Tamberla Perry) from adoring him and humoring his antics.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
10 best new TV shows to watch this fall:From 'Matlock' to 'The Penguin'
It's not hard to get sucked into the soapy sentimentality of "Minds." Everyone wants their doctor to care as much as Quinto's Oliver does. Creator Michael Grassi is an alumnus of "Riverdale," which lived and breathed melodrama and suspension of reality. But it's also frustrating and laughable to imagine a celebrated neurologist following teens down high school hallways or taking dementia patients to weddings. I imagine it mirrors Sacks' actual life as much as "Law & Order" accurately portrays the justice system (that is: not at all). A prolific and enigmatic doctor and author, who influenced millions, is shrunk down enough to fit into a handy "neurological patient(s) of the week" format.
Procedurals are by nature formulaic and repetitive, but the great ones avoid that repetition becoming tedious with interesting and variable episodic stories: every murder on a cop show, every increasingly outlandish injury and illness on "Grey's Anatomy." It's a worrisome sign that in only Episode 6 "Minds" has already resorted to "mass hysterical pregnancy in teenage girls" as a storyline. How much more ridiculous can it go from there to fill out a 22-episode season, let alone a second? At some point, someone's brain is just going to explode.
Quinto has always been an engrossing actor whether he's playing a hero or a serial killer, but he unfortunately grates as Oliver, who sees his own cluelessness about society as a feature of his personality when it's an annoying bug. The supporting characters (many of whom have their own one-in-a-million neurological disorders, go figure) are far more interesting than Oliver is, despite attempts to make Oliver sympathetic through copious and boring flashbacks to his childhood. A sob-worthy backstory doesn't make the present-day man any less wooden on screen.
To stand out "Brilliant" had to be more than just a half-hearted mishmash of "Grey's," "The Good Doctor" and "House." It needed to be actually brilliant, not just claim to be.
You don't have to be a neurologist to figure that out.
veryGood! (863)
Related
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- The origins of the influencer industry
- In the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Unintended Consequences of ‘Fortress Conservation’
- Amy Schumer Crashes Joy Ride Cast's Press Junket in the Most Epic Way
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- The Year in Climate Photos
- A ‘Living Shoreline’ Takes Root in New York’s Jamaica Bay
- How Prince Harry and Prince William Are Joining Forces in Honor of Late Mom Princess Diana
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- DC Young Fly Shares How He Cries All the Time Over Jacky Oh's Death
Ranking
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Warming Trends: Weather Guarantees for Your Vacation, Plus the Benefits of Microbial Proteins and an Urban Bias Against the Environment
- What Does Climate Justice in California Look Like?
- A magazine touted Michael Schumacher's first interview in years. It was actually AI
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- A South Florida man shot at 2 Instacart delivery workers who went to the wrong house
- Well, It's Still Pride Is Reason Enough To Buy These 25 Rainbow Things
- Warming Trends: Laughing About Climate Change, Fighting With Water and Investigating the Health Impacts of Fracking
Recommendation
Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
Inside Clean Energy: Who’s Ahead in the Race for Offshore Wind Jobs in the US?
The dark side of the influencer industry
San Francisco is repealing its boycott of anti-LGBT states
California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
Judge prepares for start of Dominion v. Fox trial amid settlement talks
Cynthia Nixon Weighs In On Chances of Kim Cattrall Returning for More And Just Like That Episodes
This Next-Generation Nuclear Power Plant Is Pitched for Washington State. Can it ‘Change the World’?