Part 1: [Warning: This article contains major spoilers from the season premiere of The Mentalist. Read at your own risk!]
Red John is back with a vengeance on The Mentalist. The serial killer who has made a game out of tormenting Patrick Jane (Simon Baker) promised Jane in the Season 5 finale that he was going to start killing again until Jane captured him — or vice versa. And he didn't waste any time in sticking to his word.
By the end of the Season 6 premiere, Red John has lured Jane's partner, Teresa Lisbon (Robin Tunney) to a house, where she discovers his latest victim: Brett Partridge (Jack Plotnick). (Guess we can officially eliminate Partridge as a Red John suspect! One down, six to go.) Seconds after a dying Partridge spits out Red John's poetic calling card, "Tiger, Tiger," Lisbon herself is snatched by John.
The episode ends with Red John using Lisbon's phone to call Jane, and painting his signature smiley face in blood over Lisbon's (unconscious? dead?) face. TVGuide.com asked Mentalist creator Bruno Heller to weigh in on the game-changing season premiere. What's Jane's next move? Is Gale Bertram (Michael Gaston) now the prime suspect? And what's the hidden clue in the final scenes? Read our Q&A with Heller below to find out:
Well, no one can say Season 6 is off to a slow start! Why the decision to kick off the season with such a cliff-hanger? Heller: Things are happening essentially in real time, and it's the final showdown. So as promised last season, Red John is getting active again and things are going to go all guns firing until the denouement, for sure. It had to be that way. And it's great fun making it that way. These last few episodes have been such fun to make, because up to now, we've been taking tiny baby steps towards the truth. Now the light at the end of the tunnel is coming closer. For the writers and actors, it's immensely exciting.
There is a clue buried in that final sequence that will pay off big time in the finale of the Red John story. A very big clue. No one will get it from the clue as it is laid out in the episode, but it will pay off later.
Going back to the beginning of the episode, we see Lisbon and Jane struggling with hiding their suspicions, particularly about Bertram, as they continue to do their jobs. Assuming Lisbon is still alive, is this a struggle that will continue for the rest of the season? Heller: Not for the rest of the season, but it's certainly a problem for these first few episodes. How do you confront these people when they know what you know, but you don't know which one of these seven people is your man? They very much have to get into each one of these suspects' business and to look and them and to investigate them and to spend time with them. So, it's a game of cat and mouse. It's not clear who's the cat and who's the mouse.
Bertram taunts Jane and Lisbon about getting close to Red John and says coyly, "I am many things to many people." That exchange certainly casts a lot of suspicion on Bertram. Heller: Yes, it does. He's a very suspicious character, and those suspicions are not without foundation. [But] they're not necessarily the foundation that we think they are. One of the things that is going to be revealed in these next few episodes is that there is a whole lot more going wrong in California law enforcement than simply Red John. And Bertram is both a prime suspect as Red John, but also deeply involved in that other plot.
So his motivations for sending Lisbon and Jane away may have nothing to do with Red John? Heller: He might be a good guy with a secret agenda, or he might be a bad guy with a secret agenda.
Lisbon tells Jane he seems like he doesn't know what to do next. Knowing Red John has the list of seven names seems to have really shaken him up. Heller: Every time Red John has fooled him or tricked him before, Jane has been able to work out, at least in theory, if not in practice, how it was done. Jane is a magician himself, and magicians pride themselves on knowing how tricks work. There's no such thing as magic. It's a trick. But here's a trick that's been played on him that he simply can not work out how he did it. And that really does throw him for a loop, because in his arrogance and pride, Jane has ... never contemplated the notion that this guy could be that much smarter than him. And it raises the issue that Lisbon raises that Jane dismisses as strongly as he can. ... Maybe he is psychic. What if Red John is the real deal? That's kind of a mind-blower for Jane, and he really doesn't want to grapple with that. But he has to, because how the hell did he do that otherwise? That's what confronts Jane and that's what sort of paralyzes him, to a degree.
Bruno Heller on the Shocking Season 6 Premiere: "It's the Final Showdown" Continued
Part 2:
Was it a good move for Lisbon to tell Van Pelt (Amanda Righetti) about the Red John suspects? Heller: It was both the right move and the wrong move. She's a cop and she has to do what a cop would do. When Jane seems to be unable to work out what to do next, just as Red John's revelation about the list is shocking for Jane, Jane's shock is shocking to Lisbon. So she falls back on her training and protocol and procedure. And it starts to open up a fissure between Jane and Lisbon, because the closer they get to Red John, the more the fundamental differences between them become clear. As long as Red John was a sort of theoretical target, the differences in the way they go about their business could be papered over. But now we're getting to a point where Lisbon's moral code and her professional code, and Jane's willingness to do any damn thing required, comes to a crunch.
As Jane and Lisbon get closer to solving the mystery of Red John, what effect does the case have on their personal relationship? Heller: They start imagining what life would be like after Red John, and a great deal of the buried emotions between them are coming out. They've always been very much in a brother and sister relationship. But they're not brother and sister. Both of them are discovering feelings about the other one that they didn't really know they had, because there's been this overarching mission that they're both on that has masked that. Now those feelings are starting to bubble up to the surface. Especially for Lisbon ... now that she's looking to the future and can visualize a world in which they're not chasing Red John together, she's looking at the prospect of finding Red John but losing Jane. Because clearly after Red John is captured, Jane is not going to be wandering around Sacramento solving homicides. He was there long enough to do this job, so now things are going to be different. Although she can't articulate it to herself, she's beginning to feel the pangs of separation. Jane himself is going to get glimmers of his old self back, his old life, and that brings up the same issues for him.
Is it fair to say that if Jane catches Red John, he'd also destroy a part of himself? Heller: What we'll be dealing with after that is very much about, what happens when you achieve your heart's desire, but what your heart desired was something very dark? He's going to be satisfying bloodlust. I guess he is making the world safer for other people, but that's not his motivation. His motivation is personal, angry, hate-filled revenge. Jane has always had that dark rage inside him, but he's made it a point of pride never to show that. He always seems graceful and light on his feet and full of positivity, but he's been driven by this dark force. And once that cloud is lifted from him, it's both joyful and baffling, because what do you do next? And how are you changed by doing something like that?
At the end of the episode, Partridge is dead and Red John has Lisbon. What's Jane thinking in that moment when he gets the phone call from Red John? Heller: He's both incredibly guilty for allowing Lisbon to go off on her own and also, as usual with Jane, thinking, "Dammit, I knew I was right. I knew you were wrong. You really screwed up now." And that moment of realizing that he has put Lisbon (or Lisbon has put herself) in such great danger is also illuminating for him, because I think at that moment he's realizing ... this is someone I love, and I have put her into the hands of a very evil man. And that's my fault. So for him, it's a quiet but stunning realization that she's not just a colleague, but someone he can't live without. And also it doubles down on his desire to kill the man that's done this.
Warning: Do not read this post if you haven’t watched the season premiere of The Mentalist.
At the end of last season of The Mentalist, we narrowed down the list of Red John suspects to seven. And by the end of tonight’s premiere, that number had changed.
Yup, RIP Partridge. He was the first suspect to fall. But will Lisbon (Robin Tunney) be the next victim? Read on for our chat with executive producer Bruno Heller.
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Obviously, you started off the season big by killing off one of the suspects right away. Tell me about the decision to kill Partridge first. BRUNO HELLER: It wasn’t my decision; it was Red John’s decision. And it’s part of a much larger, dastardly plan that will reveal itself over the next few episodes. This is a good question. This is the first time I’ve been asked this question, but it’s a very good point. Why DID he kill Partridge? What possible reason could he have for that? A very good reason will be revealed down the line. So it’s both a fun way to start the season and embedded in that scene is a big clue to the identity of Red John that will pay off big time later.
Well, he did whisper ‘Tiger’ before dying. Yes, he did. And that’s another clue that will have big ramifications later on. These next few episodes, essentially the first episodes of this season, all have those kinds of revelations and clues and hints and big steps forward in the mystery. And all will be revealed.
When do we revisit the Tiger clue? Watch episode 4 and you will get some answers to that in episode 4. I can start to be very specific now about those. Episode 4 will give you some answers that go a long way to answering that question.
I have to admit, Partridge was my No. 1 suspect. So after he died, I thought to myself, ‘Of course he’s going to go first!’ That’s the thing. Everyone has different No. 1 suspects, which is good. That’s one of those things as a writer; you can spend a lot of time weighing which one people think is the likely suspect. That’s very much a subjective choice. I know that are a lot of people out there who think Jane is Red John still.
…even though you’ve said explicitly he’s not! I know. They don’t necessarily have to believe me, I suppose. I’ve never denied that it was Lisbon. So I suppose it could be Lisbon.
For you, as a writer, was it ever going to be someone else first? No. Because like I say, as convoluted and as elaborate as the plotting might appear, you have to know exactly what you’re doing way before you do it. So things might seem mysterious or too complicated to work out what the hell is going on, but as these episodes unfold, the story will unfold itself in a clean and clear fashion. It was very important that Partridge die at this point in the story. It’s not just — he didn’t just kill him as an act-out.
Can we expect more deaths among the suspects? Yeah, you can expect more deaths of suspects; I think I can say that without giving too much away. It’s not a Seven Little Indians thing, where one drops dead every week. But part of Red John’s plan involves bad intentions toward the other suspects on that list. It’s not a good list to be on.
What I found interesting was that you brought the rest of the team into the fold so quickly. Tell me about that decision. Well, because, we’re getting to the point right now where they’re getting so close to Red John that the cracks between Jane and Lisbon and how they like to operate are becoming much clearer. When Red John was an abstract target, Lisbon could put up with Jane’s very different moral universe. Now that they’re getting closer, it’s exactly that kind of issue that’s going to cause conflict between them. Jane’s obsessive secrecy is very much in conflict with Lisbon’s professional and personal desire to keep things above board and honest. She needs and wants the help and support of the team because she feels uncomfortable freelancing — because she’s not a freelancer, she’s a cop. And Jane has the freedom to do whatever he wants but she has to think about the law. So partly for that reason, and partly because….up until this point, Red John has been able to pull all kinds of tricks on Jane but he’s always been able to work out how a particular trick was done and how Red John got the better of him. But here, Jane has no idea how it’s possible Red John got that list, and it raises the terrible prospect in the back of his mind that maybe Red John is a psychic. Maybe Jane has been wrong his whole life. In which case, his whole set of beliefs have been thrown into question and Lisbon — seeing that in Jane — is a little spooked because she’s never seen Jane genuinely stymied and genuinely unable to workout what the hell is going on. So she feels she has to take the initiative and take control of the situation. As you see it, it ends up to be the right decision in the moment but the wrong decision by the end of the episode.
Preview the next episode. That story continues. I’ll tell you, one of the outstanding questions for Jane leftover from last season is how the hell did Red John get into his head and know about that young woman who died who was a child in Jane’s childhood. How did he do that? That question is going to be answered. But at the same time, every week we’re still telling a closed whodunit story which is solved every week. So it’s as much that story as the other story.
'Mentalist' EP Bruno Heller Discusses Lisbon's State and What's Next Should viewers be worried about Lisbon at the end of the premiere? THR talks to Heller.
The final chapter in the Red John mystery is in full effect on The Mentalist.
But at the end of the season six premiere, the list of seven Red John suspects was whittled down to six after Red John murdered CBI forensic investigator Brett Partridge (Jack Plotnick).
The Hollywood Reporter asked executive producer/showrunner Bruno Heller a few of the key questions following Sunday's season opener.
With Partridge eliminated as a suspect, Heller promised that the format for the rest of the season won't feature a Red John suspect being knocked out of contention each week.
"It won't be one suspect a week until we get down to one suspect," Heller reassured. "But, a few episodes in, a few suspects have been knocked off the list."
The premiere also ended with Teresa Lisbon (Robin Tunney) in a worrisome state, presumably dead at the hands of Red John. But things may not be as they seem.
"Things look very bad for Lison at the end of that first episode. What I can tell you is that there is a very cryptic clue in that last sequence of episode one that will eventually explain — when all is revealed — what happened to Lisbon and why," Heller said.
While Heller was coy about said clues, he said that Lisbon fans don't have anything to worry about, for the most part. "I’m loathe to give away too much but for those people who love Lisbon, as I do, they needn’t worry too much. They should worry but you know …," he hinted.
It sure does, Hayseed...and hadn't we already figured that one out? I'm sure we have discussed that possibility on another thread somewhere. Possibly in the season 5 finale discussion? In fact, I believe it was Sylvia who first raised the possibility.
Message edited by AgentM - Wednesday, 02-Oct-13, 8:35 PM
Date: Thursday, 03-Oct-13, 1:12 AM | Message # 131
Bee's Knees
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I sure did, and maybe they'll bring back Jane's old "flame" so as to give her to R.J. who'll then caress Jane's sanity once more with her being served for dinner.
Tin snips in one pic and an electric charger aka electric torture for tv. Looking for those two fingers for RJ Bob? That's one terrific crazy Bob solo pic of Corrigan, bravo!
WOW it seems Kirkland's going off track… He took the list stolen in Jane's attic very seriously, and it confirms the reason why we've seen this smile on Jane's face after he discovered his attic has been visited.
Seems possible that Kirkland is the one murdering B Partrige and wanting to kill every suspect on the list he got? That would explain why Lisbon hasn't been killed.
Seems possible that Kirkland is the one murdering B Partrige and wanting to kill every suspect on the list he got? That would explain why Lisbon hasn't been killed.
I don't think so, because Partridge is on the real list so I don't think he would have been on the fake one. My thinking is that Lisbon needed to be left alive because she's an important witness to Partridge's "death", and also that her condition distracted Jane from paying full attention to the crime scene. This latest development does seem to confirm that Kirkland is acting on the fake list, so I'm also thinking that rules him out as a Red John suspect.