Archive for the ‘Criminal Minds’ Category

Criminal Minds Finale Inspires Mixed Reactions

Friday, June 4th, 2010

from BuddyTV.com
June 3, 2010
by Glenn DIaz

A week after Criminal Minds’ fifth season closed, fans are somewhat divided over the finale. Some decried the lack of any major event or cliffhanger, while others enjoyed the change of attack.

We reported previously that even newly trimmed Matthew Gray Gubler agreed that the season 5 finale of Minds didn’t measure up to the crazy closers the show’s had in the past, and executive producer Erica Messer conceded that it didn’t “end with as many question marks” as the past two seasons.

“We can’t do that little trick again unless we’re going to actually kill someone,” Messer said. For Gubler, it’s more of a choice to veer away from the usual Minds ending.

“Maybe I’m wrong, but I don’t think you even get the impression that Morgan’s going to die. I think it’s more like, ‘What is Morgan going to do?’ We pull a MacGyver cliff-hanger.”

The more passionate of the show’s legion of viewers, as they posted on the show’s official Facebook page, want Minds to go back to its psychology focus instead of turning into another crime drama.

On the other hand, those who loved the episode noted guest star Tim Curry’s outstandingly creepy portrayal of the killer and the fantastic case.

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‘Criminal Minds’ Celebrates 100 Episodes And We Continue To Celebrate Matthew Gray Gubler’s Hotness

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

from MTV.com
October 20, 2009
Written by Jocelyn Vena

91998781Congrats to “Criminal Minds” for celebrating its 100th episode at a cast party last night in Los Angeles. We assume Hollywood Crush’s invitation got lost in the mail and we forgive you. And just to show there’s no hard feelings we want to remind you guys we love the show and the smoking hot guys on it.

Shemar Moore you are a pleasure week after week as Morgan, the playboy FBI profiler on the show. And, you are the perfect guy to star alongside TV’s hottest nerd and Hump Day Hottie alumnus, Matthew Gray Gubler as Dr. Reid.

So, you could imagine our excitement when we were trolling Getty for photos from all of last night’s hot parties (arguably this looks like it was the greatest party held last night for the greatest show of our time) and couldn’t help but feel glee when we got to see the cast in the real world.

We’re hoping that MGG gets well soon since he was walking around with a cane. Still, he wore a cardigan that Dr. Reid would be proud of. Plus, he’s a babe. We like to write about babes here at Hollywood Crush in case you couldn’t tell.

We can’t wait until the 100th episode airs since we’re sure there are some great twists and turns in store for fans. And by fans we mean one particular Hollywood Crush writer. Hey, next time you guys throw a party feel free to give me her a call.

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Criminal Minds Season 5 Premiere

Monday, September 14th, 2009

from Daemon’s TV

Episode Synopsis: CRIMINAL MINDS “Faceless, Nameless” – Hotch’s unexplained absence quickly becomes apparent when the team is called back together to profile a killer who is targeting an emergency room doctor, on the fifth season premiere of CRIMINAL MINDS, Wednesday, Sept. 23 (9:00-10:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.

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Gavin Rossdale to Appear on Criminal Minds

Monday, September 14th, 2009

by RTTNews Staff Writer

rossdaleFormer Bush frontman Gavin Rossdale will appear on an episode of CBS’s Criminal Minds this season. The singer will play a Goth rock star who loses himself in his scary stage alter-ego, perhaps causing him to turn into a serial killer.

Rossdale, husband of Gwen Stefani, has had previous acting experience in the films Constantine, Zoolander, Game of Their Lives, Little Black Book, and How to Rob a Bank.

CBS has not announced if this will be only a one-episode appearance. The date the episode will air has also not been released. Rossdale just completed a world tour in support of his solo album, Wanderlust.

Criminal Minds, which first aired in 2005, is centered around the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit. The show stars Joe Mantegna and is beginning its 5th season.

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Posted in Criminal Minds |

DVD Review – Criminal Minds The Complete Forth Season

Monday, September 14th, 2009

by Blake Matthews – Blog Critics Video

Criminal Minds is series that premiered on CBS in 2005 and followed profilers from the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit (BAU) led by Jason Gideon (Mandy Patinkin). The team profiles various killers known as unsubs — unidentified subjects.

Due to creative differences between Patinkin and the creators, he left after the second episode of the third season. The departure of the lead could have been the death of the show; however Gideon’s second in command, Agent Aaron “Hotch” Hotchner, (Thomas Gibson) was put in charge of the profilers which include Emily Prentiss (Paget Brewster), Dr. Spencer Reid (Matthew Gray Gubler), Derek Morgan (Shemar Moore), and Jennifer ‘JJ’ Jareau (A.J. Cook), who is the agent who decides what case they take on each week. Rounding out the team in a tech support role is Penelope Garcia (Kirsten Vangsness) who is a computer whiz and helps get the team the information they need almost instantaneously.

After the profilers dealt with Gideon’s departure (he had a mental breakdown on the show and was seen driving off into the sunset) they added a new member to the team — David Rossi (Joe Mantegna), who is a more experienced agent and is a counterpoint to Hotch since Hotch can become emotionally detached from a case and Rossi adds some humanity.

The show is different from other crime shows as it concentrates on the killers instead of the crime and has the killer be either gender, whereas most serial killers portrayed in shows are male. The show has also had some great guest stars and season four is no different as Wil Wheaton, Jason Alexander, Luke Perry, Mitch Pileggi, Alex O’Loughlin Garret Dillahunt, Bruce Davison, Walton Goggins, C. Thomas Howell, Jackson Rathbone, and Jane Lynch have appeared as either the killer of the week or someone connected to the profilers.

Criminal Minds is dark, with the team delving into the psychological profiles of the killers and deducing what the unsub is trying to accomplish. This causes the team to get into some interesting cat-and-mouse games to bring the killer to justice and the writers have put many of the team in danger at one time or another. This season had a two-part finale that crossed from Detroit into Canada, and had a previous unsub return, putting Hotch’s life in danger as the screen faded to black.

The extras for Criminal Minds: The Fourth Season include “Working the Scene,” short (between three and six minutes) behind the scenes featurettes which concentrate on one aspect of the episode in question. These featurettes cover guest stars, stunts, directing, and more. There are eleven of these featurettes spread out over the seven discs, and they’re quite interesting.

“Character Profiles” gives each of the seven starring characters a three to four minute profile in which the writers, producers, and the actor who portrays the character discuss what drives the character.

There’s also a gag reel and several deleted scenes rounding out the extras. It would have been nice to have some commentaries, but with a new season about to start, maybe that DVD release will include some.

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Criminal Minds: The Complete Fourth Season – DVD Review

Monday, September 14th, 2009

By Patrick Luce – Monsters & Critcs

crim4dvdThe fourth season of Criminal Minds sees the show starting to be a bit formulaic, but still able to throw a surprise or two – especially in the final episodes of the season.
Criminal Minds follows the FBI Behavioral Analysis Unit as they crisscross the country helping various law enforcement agencies stop the country’s most twisted criminals (sometimes you wonder how they got some of these episodes on the air).

The team is made up of a variety of specialists – including street smart cop Derek Morgan (Shemar Moore); computer tech wizard Penelope Garcia (Kirsten Vangsness); FBI agent Emily Prentiss (Paget Brewster); genius Dr. Spencer Reid (Matthew Gray Gubler); public liaison officer Jennifer ‘JJ’ Jareau (A.J. Cook); by the book FBI team leader Aaron ‘Hotch’ Hotchner (Thomas Gibson); and profiler extraordinaire David Rossi (Joe Mantegna).
The show’s success rest in the ensemble cast and the excellent way the actors seem to play off each other. The series never feels like a vanity show with one actor as the main star and the rest just there for window dressing.

The writers do excellent work keeping each character involved in every episode and the series grounded in the world of the profilers – where very little time is spent on the characters’ lives outside the office.
With that said, I still feel Criminal Minds continues to suffer from the departure of Mandy Patinkin and his Jason Gideon character.

Watching the fourth season, I also felt several times that the show was in need of a cast shake-up and some fresh faces. There is a bit of a chance for this when JJ goes on her maternity leave and a new liaison is added to the team.
The show also seems to be on a bit of auto-pilot and just covering the same ground that has been used in past seasons or on other similarly themed crime shows. Most episodes find the team on the trail of their suspect and managing save the day at the last minute. While not every episode follows this pattern (“Omnivore” has to be the best episode of the season and sets up a great cliffhanger), it happens enough during the fourth season to make the show a bit of a drag.

In the past, the series’ formulaic feel was able to rely on its cast to keep it interesting, but this season even the cast seems a bit out of steam. They all provide solid performances, but do little to add to their characters. We get a few glimpses of new ground being laid for the characters (mostly with Gubler’s Reid), but it isn’t enough to keep certain characters from being a bit boring.
I realize these characters are extremely serious and handle some of the worst crimes that no one should ever have to see, but the fourth season becomes a bit of a drag halfway through the episodes because it seems to be just grinding the same material again and again.

Gibson’s Hotch is dry and lacks any real emotion for most of the season – despite the choices past seasons forced his character to make to stay with the team. Brewster’s Prentiss seems to become easily forgettable mid-season. Moore’s Derek Morgan continues to serve little more purpose than giving the show its good looking tough guy with the heart of gold.
I also grew quickly bored with Mantegna’s David Rossi. Mantegna is a great actor, and does his best with the show, but I never could get past the feeling he was just another version of Patinkin’s Gideon – which in turn just reminded me of how good the show used to be.
Luckily, the fourth season saw Vangsness’ Penelope Garcia getting more screen time, and even getting out of her computer lair for a couple of “in the field” assignments. It seems all of these crime shows now need an “odd” tech to provide some comic relief or give the show character. Vangsness’ Penelope Garcia is the queen of these kinds of characters and she gives Criminal Minds its heart and its fresh feel.
I hope she continues to become a bigger part of the series and even maybe starts packing a gun. I can see Morgan running for the hills now. With the great cliffhanger, I hope the writers manage to shake-up the show some and get the characters out of their comfort zone.
With the fourth season, the writers seemed to have taken all of the characters to some pretty dark places, caused them to question their commitments to the team, and taken an emotional toil on each one. Now, I hope we will get to see the aftermath of all that work.
The fourth season comes with some expected special features that take you behind the scenes, give you a look at some deleted scenes, and some profiles. There is also a gag reel – which is always funny on a show as serious as Criminal Minds.
Criminal Minds: The Complete Fourth Season doesn’t break any new ground, but it also doesn’t do anything to make fans give up on the show. The series stays with what has worked in the past, and manages to end with a decent cliffhanger that will make fans want to tune in to the fifth season premiere to see what happens next.

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An Interview with Matthew Gray Gubler

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

By Rachel Thomas, About.com

Many actors really do lead interesting lives outside of work, and then there are truly unique actors like Matthew Gray Gubler who take creativity to the next level. Like his character on the hit CBS series Criminal Minds, Matthew is a brilliantly creative man who uses his intelligence and extraordinary humor to make the world a better place. I had the fortunate opportunity to chat with Matthew about his life, where his character is headed and his plans for the future.

Q: How old were you when you got into acting?

Matthew: “It was really when the show started that I got into it. I did filmmaking and through a roundabout manner, I got into this. I was 25 when the show started.”

Q: What do you think you’d be doing today if you weren’t acting?

Matthew: “My family and friends sort of chastised me. They’re kind of upset that I’m on the show to be honest because it wasn’t what I had set out to do. I would hopefully be directing movies now or writing them.”

Q: Your grandparents founded the first radio station in Las Vegas (KENO), did you ever work as a DJ on KENO?

Matthew: “No I didn’t, that was way before I was born. My mother was pretty active in it. I think they gave up the station in the mid-60’s.”

Q: Your web site is quite possibly one of the most unusual places I’ve ever visited, where did you get the idea for the design?

Matthew: “Oh, thank you so much for finding it, I’m honored! To be honest, the design was born out of not knowing anything about programming and what would be the simplest way of getting information out. I’m not the biggest fan of technique. I wanted to do a simple, honest, hand-written web page.”

Q: You’ve created several short films, going forward do you hope to do more work behind the camera?

Matthew: “Oh definitely. That’s what I’m better at doing than anything. I’ve been fortunate enough with the show that I’ve been able to work in some time. I did a music video recently. It’s what I’ll do one day when the show slows down or gets cancelled.”

Q: I understand you wear two different socks, what’s the significance?

Matthew: “My grandmother told me at a very early age that it was good luck to not wear matching socks, which I’ve come interpret to as bad luck to wear matching socks because the one time I wore matching socks in ten years was when I was acting in this movie called The Life Aquatic. We were doing a moment where Bill Murray is leading us in exercises and somehow I managed to sprain my ankle on camera. It actually wound up being in the movie. I attribute that entirely to me wearing matching socks.”

Q: Tell us about Dr. Spencer Reid.

Matthew: “He’s an eccentric genius, with hints of schizophrenia and minor autism, Asperger’s Syndrome. Reid is 24, 25 years old with three PH.D.’s and one can’t usually achieve that without some form of autism.”

Q: What’s ahead on Criminal Minds for Spencer?

Matthew: “I’ve heard some pretty exciting stuff! I’ve heard I have an archenemy coming up. He’s a kid I went to school who is one I.Q. point smarter, a little bit taller, better looking. He lives in New Orleans and plays jazz. They’ve hinted at shades of schizophrenia with Reid. I know his mother was schizophrenic and he has a fear of going schizophrenic himself. I’d like to think that one day down the line he will go schizophrenic and maybe turn into the type of person they’ll chase relentlessly.”

Q: How is your personality similar to your character?

Matthew: “He’s not too similar. He’s a genius and I’m technically and functionally retarded [laughs]. In the show, Reid was sort of hand-picked from college. He’s in the FBI, but he didn’t strive to achieve that or have any intention of doing that. Gideon (Mandy Patinkin) recruited him and I feel kind of akin to that because I had no real intention of being an actor or being on a show. I’ve sort of fallen into it. Reid makes the most of it and so do I. It’s fun and quite an honor.”

Q: How are you different?

Matthew: “He’s a PH.D. in physics and mathematics and nobody knows what the third one is and I’m in no way scientifically minded. I think he’s way more analytical than I am.”

Q: What’s ahead for Matthew?

Matthew: “Thanks to the show, I’ve been drawing and painting a lot because we have a lot of down time on the set and it’s the perfect amount of time to make pictures. I’ve had a few art gallery exhibits and I hope that continues. I hope to direct some more. I just shot a movie with John Malkovich and Tom Hanks that is coming out in April.”

Q: Anything you want to say to the fans?

Matthew: “I’m beyond proud and happy – I never imagined I would have one fan, and there seems to be a few. I just couldn’t be happier that people seem to like what I’m doing and seem to respond to it. If they weren’t there, I don’t know what I’d be doing right now.”

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Sneak Peek of ‘Criminal Minds’ 4.11: Normal

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

A woman driving a luxurious car in a highway is being attacked by a serial killer in the preview of “Criminal Minds” episode 4.11. The snippet highlights on the tag that the killer is always the one others least expected. It also hints that the killer admits his crime to his family, but his confession is not taken seriously.

In the episode entitled “Normal”, the Behavioral Analysis Unit team is faced with a serial killer called “The Road Warrior”, who kills luxury car owners while they are driving on freeways in Southern California. The stakes are raised even higher when the team is put in a race-against-time situation to find the killer before he kills his entire family.

To be aired next Wednesday, December 17 at 9/8c on CBS, “Normal” will see once again Joe Mantegna, Thomas Gibson, Shemar Moore and Matthew Gray Gubler among others as the BAU team members. Joining them are guest stars, Faith Ford and Mitch Pileggi. The epi is directed by Steve Boyum from Andrew Wilder’s script.

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Criminal Minds: You Can’t Help But Watch

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

The last time I took a stab at watching Criminal Minds, the story revolved around an adorable young boy who enticed women shopping at the mall into helping him find his daddy.

What the women discovered was a deadly trap — Daddy was a serial killer who found them first, then kidnapped and tortured them until they died horrific deaths.

The creepy closing scene had a captured pop proudly telling the cops that he didn’t even ask for the last victim; his elementary school-aged boy had brought her to him all on his own.

That’s when I decided the nightmares weren’t worth sticking with this show.

But after seeing the series steadily holding in the Top 10 primetime Nielsen ratings week after week, there seemed to be something I was missing. So, putting the creep factor on hold, I plunged in and discovered that this show has become an addictive delight.

The series focuses more on the character of the criminal than the crime itself, although most of the heinous acts play out in excruciating detail. These crimes aren’t for the fainthearted, though there’s more humor and humanity in the series than what first meets the eye. Seldom, however, have there been lead characters with such dark back stories attached.

Booth from Bones might have had a troubled childhood with a hard-core dad and a brother he now keeps covering for, but he had a downright 1950s Leave it to Beaver family life compared to Criminal Minds’ resident hottie Derek Morgan, played by pin-up guy Shemar Moore. Morgan is smooth as good whiskey around the ladies, and he leads his team with an unwaivering self-assurance. But when he was 10, his father died and he was put under the protective wing of the leader of a local youth center. The leader helped him out of his poverty by getting him a football scholarship, but the closet predator also sexually abused Morgan for most of his young life.

Sweet geeks have remained a crime drama staple, puttering around their labs and looking up to the real detectives. But behind sweet geek Dr. Spencer Reid (Matthew Gray Gubler) is another very troubled childhood. Dad deserted him and he was left in the care of mom, a paranoid schizophrenic who he later had to institutionalize. Talk about some guilt. And the young genius took more than his fair share of bullying over the years, including once being tied up naked to the school’s football goalpost for all the students to see. Thank goodness for early graduation.

In one particularly touching episode — well, it did also include the plot about a guy who picked up women and then tortured them to death in a ritual involving cleaning fluids — Morgan helped Reid connect with a comely bartender. Reid even raced to her rescue at the end before cleaning became the death of her.

Then there’s the perpetually morose unit chief Aaron “Hotch” Hotchner. At first I thought it was just the years that actor Thomas Gibsom had to spend in the odd sitcom Dharma & Greg that made him go for the dark side. But no — turns out his character suffers from not being able to put his family first. Can you blame him after what he had to put up with when he was married to dippy hippie Dharma? Wait, I’m mixing characters.

In any case, Hotch has lost the wife who loved him and his young son — she decided that playing second string to a life of chasing down depraved killers just wasn’t how she saw her future.

Oh, and Hotch is almost deaf because of car explosion last season. It smacked a little of the old CSI storyline with Grissom’s brush with deaf, but we’ll forgive CM for now.

Meanwhile, I’m going back to those past season episodes to play catch-up. Any suggestions?

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Five Reasons We Love Matthew Gray Gubler

Friday, May 9th, 2008

by Amanda Mae Meyncke

Editor’s Note: Honestly we don’t have a real reason to run this column other than sheer passion and our recollection that the last time we wrote about MGG the people seemed to love it. And really we’re all about the people. So here’s Amanda Mae with an ode to the Gubes!

What is it about Matthew Gray Gubler? The young Criminal Minds star is catching eyes and melting hearts across the nation! Here are the definitive reasons why:

1. He is a particular brand of handsome. Some folks might disagree, but fans of Gubler are voracious in their praise of the young, lanky, Vegas-born actor. While the 6′1″ star was attending Tisch, he began working as a model, both on the runway and in print ads for such names as Marc Jacobs, Burberry, Tommy Hilfiger and Louis Vuitton. Tall, dark and handsome, Matthew Gray Gubler is at once both slightly nerdy and intensely attractive.

2. He’s multitalented. He’s an artist and filmmaker in addition to being an actor. Gubler’s paintings and drawings are mainly line drawings, quirkily sketched and painted. His films have random titles, like The Cactus Who Looked Like A Man. Gubler even claims filmmaking as his first love, with acting falling in somewhere behind. While attending film school in New York, he interned for Wes Anderson’s The Life Aquatic, and Anderson encouraged him to try out for a part in the film, which he won. The role led to several subsequent auditions and eventually to a lead role on the CBS show Criminal Minds.

3. He has the most awesome website of any minor celebrity out there. MatthewGrayGubler.com is one single black page chock full of pictures of his quirky art, as well as handwritten “updates” to the site, scanned directly from his journal and posted by Gubler himself. While the updates are sporadic, the content is amusing, and the idea of an analog website in a digital world — while not an original concept — is certainly artistic.

4. He has a wonderful sense of humor and isn’t afraid to make fun of himself. Over the past year or two, he’s been getting big laughs with his YouTube mockumentary series, Matthew Gray Gubler: The Unauthorized Documentary. Just hit up YouTube and you will find several short episodes all portraying Gubler as an insufferable Hollywood diva. The episodes feature random guest stars such as James Van Der Beek (”Jimmy from the creek!”) and various Criminal Minds co-stars, but the finest moments lie in Gubler’s rants on the “pressures” of celebrity, as well as the “perks.” Some of Gubler’s finest acting is contained in these short episodes.

5. He’s only just begun. At 29, this young actor is just beginning his career, and with his strong background in several fields, we have decades to see where he’ll end up. In between his burgeoning feature film career, weekly appearances on the popular show Criminal Minds (finally, a crime show that isn’t the ever-boring CSI!) and artistic abilities, Matthew Gray Gubler can continue to showcase his varied talents for years to come.

How do you feel about Matthew Gray Gubler?

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