Network: Netflix.
Episodes: 19 (hour).
Seasons: Two.
TV show dates: October 13, 2017 — August 16, 2019.
Series status: Ended.
Performers include: Jonathan Groff, Holt McCallanay, Anna Torv, Hannah Gross, Cotter Smith, Stacey Roca, Joe Tuttle, Alex Morf, Duke Lafoon, Peter Murnik, Sonny Valicenti, Cameron Britton, and Happy Anderson.
TV show description:
From creator Joe Penhall, the Mindhunter TV show is inspired by the memoir of FBI veteran John Douglas, Mindhunter: Inside the FBI’s Elite Serial Crime Unit (written with Mark Olshaker). The crime drama centers on FBI Agent Holden Ford (Groff), who realizes the bureau needs a deeper understanding of violent psychopaths' motivations.
Ford teams up with seasoned agent Bill Tench (McCallany) of the Behavioral Science Unit. Together, they tour the country...
Episodes: 19 (hour).
Seasons: Two.
TV show dates: October 13, 2017 — August 16, 2019.
Series status: Ended.
Performers include: Jonathan Groff, Holt McCallanay, Anna Torv, Hannah Gross, Cotter Smith, Stacey Roca, Joe Tuttle, Alex Morf, Duke Lafoon, Peter Murnik, Sonny Valicenti, Cameron Britton, and Happy Anderson.
TV show description:
From creator Joe Penhall, the Mindhunter TV show is inspired by the memoir of FBI veteran John Douglas, Mindhunter: Inside the FBI’s Elite Serial Crime Unit (written with Mark Olshaker). The crime drama centers on FBI Agent Holden Ford (Groff), who realizes the bureau needs a deeper understanding of violent psychopaths' motivations.
Ford teams up with seasoned agent Bill Tench (McCallany) of the Behavioral Science Unit. Together, they tour the country...
- 1/26/2020
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Mindhunter has some new company. According to The Playlist, Andrew Dominik and Carl Franklin will direct season two of the Netflix TV show alongside David Fincher.The crime drama centers on FBI Agent Holden Ford (Jonathan Groff), who realizes the bureau needs a deeper understanding of violent psychopaths’ motivations. The cast also includes Holt McCallanay, Anna Torv, Hannah Gross, Cotter Smith, Stacey Roca, Joe Tuttle, Alex Morf, Duke Lafoon, Peter Murnik, Sonny Valicenti, Cameron Britton, and Happy Anderson.Read More…...
- 4/21/2018
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Vulture Watch Are FBI agents Holden Ford and Bill Tench still on the hunt? Is the Mindhunter TV show cancelled or renewed for a second season on Netflix? The television vulture is watching all the latest TV cancellation and renewal news, so this page is the place to track the status of Mindhunter, season two. Bookmark it, or subscribe for the latest updates. Remember, the television vulture is watching your shows. Are you? What's This TV Show About? Streaming on the Netflix paid subscription platform, Mindhunter stars Jonathan Groff, Holt McCallanay, Anna Torv, Hannah Gross, Cotter Smith, Stacey Roca, Joe Tuttle, Alex Morf, Duke Lafoon, Peter Murnik, Sonny Valicenti, Cameron Britton, and Happy Anderson. The crime drama is inspired by the memoir of FBI veteran John Douglas, Mindhunter: Inside the FBI’s Elite Serial Crime Unit (written with Mark Olshaker). The series...
- 11/30/2017
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Netflix has renewed its Mindhunter TV show for a second season. While they have not announced the news on its media site, the streaming service has released a promo for the Mindhunter season two renewal, which you can check out, below. We had expected this renewal, since casting began prior to the TV series premiere. Streaming on the Netflix paid subscription platform, Mindhunter stars Jonathan Groff, Holt McCallanay, Anna Torv, Hannah Gross, Cotter Smith, Stacey Roca, Joe Tuttle, Alex Morf, Duke Lafoon, Peter Murnik, Sonny Valicenti, Cameron Britton, and Happy Anderson. The crime drama is inspired by the memoir of FBI veteran John Douglas, Mindhunter: Inside the FBI’s Elite Serial Crime Unit (written with Mark Olshaker). The series follows ambitious FBI Agent Holden Ford (Groff) and seasoned Agent Bill Tench (McCallany). Together, they delve into the minds of convicted serial killers to understand...
- 11/30/2017
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Sneak Peek new key art and images from "Justified', the FX action drama series, now in its fourth season, based on crime author Elmore Leonard's "Pronto", "Riding the Rap" and "Fire in the Hole".
"...Deputy Us Marshal 'Raylan Givens' is something of a 19th century–style lawman in modern times, whose unconventional enforcement of justice makes him a target of criminals and his 'Us Marshals Service' bosses alike.
"The Lexington, Kentucky Marshals office's jurisdiction includes 'Harlan County', a hopelessly impoverished, backwoods, coal-mining community in southeastern Kentucky which Raylan hates...and thought he had escaped for good, when he was younger..."
Cast includes Timothy Olyphant, Nick Searcy, Joelle Carter, Jacob Pitts, Erica Tazel, Natalie Zea, Walton Goggins, Raymond J. Barry, David Meunier, Damon Herriman, Jere Burns, M.C. Gainey, Brent Sexton, Linda Gehringer, William Ragsdale, Jeremy Davies, Margo Martindale, Joseph Lyle Taylor, Brad William Henke, Peter Murnik, Kaitlyn Dever, Jim Beaver,...
"...Deputy Us Marshal 'Raylan Givens' is something of a 19th century–style lawman in modern times, whose unconventional enforcement of justice makes him a target of criminals and his 'Us Marshals Service' bosses alike.
"The Lexington, Kentucky Marshals office's jurisdiction includes 'Harlan County', a hopelessly impoverished, backwoods, coal-mining community in southeastern Kentucky which Raylan hates...and thought he had escaped for good, when he was younger..."
Cast includes Timothy Olyphant, Nick Searcy, Joelle Carter, Jacob Pitts, Erica Tazel, Natalie Zea, Walton Goggins, Raymond J. Barry, David Meunier, Damon Herriman, Jere Burns, M.C. Gainey, Brent Sexton, Linda Gehringer, William Ragsdale, Jeremy Davies, Margo Martindale, Joseph Lyle Taylor, Brad William Henke, Peter Murnik, Kaitlyn Dever, Jim Beaver,...
- 1/16/2013
- by M. Stevens
- SneakPeek
Spoiler Alert! If you haven’t watched Justified’s bloody, emotional season 3 finale “Slaughterhouse” (story by showrunner Graham Yost, teleplay by exec producer Fred Golan), stop reading now. As we’ve done each week throughout the season, we asked Yost to take us inside the writers room. Bonus: He also looks ahead to season 4. (Jump straight to that scoop here.)
Among the twists in the final hour: It was Arlo (Raymond J. Barry) who’d shot and killed Trooper Tom Bergen (Peter Murnik) last week, and for all Arlo knew, the “man in a hat” who’d been pointing a...
Among the twists in the final hour: It was Arlo (Raymond J. Barry) who’d shot and killed Trooper Tom Bergen (Peter Murnik) last week, and for all Arlo knew, the “man in a hat” who’d been pointing a...
- 4/11/2012
- by Mandi Bierly
- EW - Inside TV
Episode 312: “Coalition”
He scraped, he scrapped and he limped on for nearly two full seasons but Dickie Bennett (Jeremy Davies) finally reached the end of his run caught red handed while trying to steal the money left behind by his mother, Mags Bennett. Raylan (Timothy Olyphant) finally put a bullet into him, though it’s not clear if it was enough to kill him.
Raylan: You keep thinking you’re tough and you keep going to jail to remind you your not.
Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins) will not be satisfied knowing that Dickie is back in jail or is dead at Raylan’s gun instead of his hands; he wants to finish what he started at Johnny’s bar. As Dickie laid on the ground shot, the camera panned upward to Limehouse (Mykelti Williamson), proudly sitting before him, giving Raylan the tip he needed to save Loretta (Kaitlyn Devers...
He scraped, he scrapped and he limped on for nearly two full seasons but Dickie Bennett (Jeremy Davies) finally reached the end of his run caught red handed while trying to steal the money left behind by his mother, Mags Bennett. Raylan (Timothy Olyphant) finally put a bullet into him, though it’s not clear if it was enough to kill him.
Raylan: You keep thinking you’re tough and you keep going to jail to remind you your not.
Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins) will not be satisfied knowing that Dickie is back in jail or is dead at Raylan’s gun instead of his hands; he wants to finish what he started at Johnny’s bar. As Dickie laid on the ground shot, the camera panned upward to Limehouse (Mykelti Williamson), proudly sitting before him, giving Raylan the tip he needed to save Loretta (Kaitlyn Devers...
- 4/4/2012
- by Ernie Estrella
- BuzzFocus.com
Spoiler Alert! This week’s episode of Justified, “Coalition,” written by Taylor Elmore and directed by Bill Johnson, revealed who really had Mags’ money, set Boyd (Walton Goggins) and Quarles (Neal McDonough) on a collision course designed by Limehouse (Mykelti Williamson), and gave Raylan (Timothy Olyphant) another reason to want Quarles dead. As we’ll be doing each week throughout the season, we asked executive producer Graham Yost to take us inside the writers’ room. Bonus: This week he also offers five teases for next week’s season 3 finale.
Entertainment Weekly: We need to discuss Quarles smoking Oxy through a...
Entertainment Weekly: We need to discuss Quarles smoking Oxy through a...
- 4/4/2012
- by Mandi Bierly
- EW - Inside TV
Last week’s procedure-heavy episode “Cut Ties,” the witness protection program was featured, as were Art’s (Nick Searcy) Marshal skills, and the futile advances of Assistant Director Karen Goodall’s (Carla Gugino) towards Raylan (Timothy Olyphant). This week’s “Harlan Roulette” put the focus back on Harlan and the chess pieces continued to move around the board without any being taken off, but that doesn’t mean nothing happened. Boyd (Walton Goggins) got out of jail, and it looks like Dickie Bennett (Jeremy Davies) could follow. We learn more about the mysterious Ellstin Limehouse (Mykelti Williamson) and the enigmatic Robert Quarles (Neal McDonough). Raylan messes up, Boyd’s words are beginning to fall on deaf ears, and OxyContin is a drug that makes the world–well, at least Harlan–go ‘Duh.’ It was another superb week in what’s been a flawless third season of Justified.
The last time...
The last time...
- 2/1/2012
- by Ernie Estrella
- BuzzFocus.com
Spoiler Alert! This week’s episode of Justified, “Harlan Roulette,” featured the welcome return of Wade Messer (James LeGros), a lot of gunplay courtesy of Dixie Mafia member Glen Fogle (Pruitt Taylor Vince), and a memorable first meeting between Raylan and Quarles. As we’ll be doing each week throughout the season, we asked exec producer Graham Yost to take us inside the writers room.
Entertainment Weekly: The story Raylan told Wade about why he won’t go into someone’s house uninvited — that goes back to the pilot, when he met Dewey Crowe at Ava’s.
Graham Yost:...
Entertainment Weekly: The story Raylan told Wade about why he won’t go into someone’s house uninvited — that goes back to the pilot, when he met Dewey Crowe at Ava’s.
Graham Yost:...
- 2/1/2012
- by Mandi Bierly
- EW - Inside TV
Trooper Tom Bergen (Peter Murnik) had the right idea by going to the Us Marshall office hoping to borrow Raylan (Timothy Olyphant) in “Cottonmouth.” Raylan replied, “I know my people” and when dealing with anything in Harlan County, extracting information and breeding familiarity are the best weapons that don’t fit inside a holster. They are Raylan’s most important skills even though his dead aim and quick draw get more headlines. Raylan repeatedly uses it to get information from Dewey (Damon Herriman) and victimized him again in the opening scene.
It’s also been a useful ploy in getting a sense for what the Bennett clan is up to each week and Raylan used it to get his father Arlo (Raymond Berry) bothered when he finally decided to turn the money he owed the Marshalls–as expected much of the $20,000 was gone. Raylan put his daddy in his place...
It’s also been a useful ploy in getting a sense for what the Bennett clan is up to each week and Raylan used it to get his father Arlo (Raymond Berry) bothered when he finally decided to turn the money he owed the Marshalls–as expected much of the $20,000 was gone. Raylan put his daddy in his place...
- 3/10/2011
- by Ernie Estrella
- BuzzFocus.com
We now return you to your regularly scheduled episode of Children of the Corn, or maybe it's a sequel to The Village? Please, no. We're talking about the fall finale of The Event, "Everything Will Change." Still stuck in the cornfields, Sean (Jason Ritter), Leila (Sarah Roemer), and Dempsey’s (Hal Holbrook) henchman Berg (Peter Murnik) came to an impasse. After rummaging through his coat, Sean realized he wanted Leila, not Abby and when he pressured for information Samantha’s whereabouts with his own gun, Berg calls Sean’s bluff. Instead Sean takes the needle intended for Leila, and injects all of it into Berg’s neck. To their surprise (not ours) he looks up, aged 30-40 years older and begging for them to take him to Willow Brook hospital. This is a dark turn for Sean. He didn’t outright kill a man, but Sean mustered up the guts...
- 12/1/2010
- by Ernie Estrella
- BuzzFocus.com
It's Thanksgiving on Wisteria Lane on the all new episode of Desperate Housewives on November 14. Below are four sneak peeks and a synopsis from ABC. After this episode, Desperate Housewives will be on a short hiatus until December 5.
Gabrielle And Carlos Host The Sanchez's To A Thanksgiving Feast And Learn Some Surprising News About Them, And Bree Discovers Some Family Secrets Of Her Own When She Invites Keith And His Parents To Her Home For Thanksgiving, On ABC's "Desperate Housewives"
Brian Austin Green Guest Stars as Keith
John Schneider and Nancy Travis Guest Star as Keith's Parents, Richard and Mary
"Sorry Grateful" - Thanksgiving on Wisteria Lane finds Gabrielle and Carlos hosting Carmen, Hector and Grace to a bountiful feast. But the Solis's discover some surprising news about the Sanchez's that could threaten their time with Grace. Meanwhile, Bree invites Keith's parents (John Schneider and Nancy Travis) to partake in...
Gabrielle And Carlos Host The Sanchez's To A Thanksgiving Feast And Learn Some Surprising News About Them, And Bree Discovers Some Family Secrets Of Her Own When She Invites Keith And His Parents To Her Home For Thanksgiving, On ABC's "Desperate Housewives"
Brian Austin Green Guest Stars as Keith
John Schneider and Nancy Travis Guest Star as Keith's Parents, Richard and Mary
"Sorry Grateful" - Thanksgiving on Wisteria Lane finds Gabrielle and Carlos hosting Carmen, Hector and Grace to a bountiful feast. But the Solis's discover some surprising news about the Sanchez's that could threaten their time with Grace. Meanwhile, Bree invites Keith's parents (John Schneider and Nancy Travis) to partake in...
- 11/11/2010
- by Clarissa
- TVovermind.com
Well-intentioned but unsatisfying, "The Hungry Bachelors Club" is a quirky romantic comedy with all the forced charm of a failed TV pilot.
Based on the self-published novel of the same name by Atlanta-based author Lynn Scott Myers, the independent production has its share of eccentric characters and a tangled web of subplots that play like a Southern-accented "thirtysomething." But despite some pleasant performances, the flat direction and writing -- leading up to a difficult-to-digest surprise ending -- will leave audiences unsated.
Serving as the story's heart and soul is Delmar Youngblood (Jorja Fox), a food-loving divorcee with a young son who works as an insurance adjuster but dreams of opening her own restaurant (Overworked Screen Cliche No. 127).
During one of the dinner parties she hosts with her best friend and roommate, Hortense (Suzanne Mara), Delmar is greeted with a little business proposition from Hortense's lawyer boyfriend Stanley Paul Provenza). If she's willing to become a surrogate mother for the wife of his smarmy boss Michael Des Barres), he'll be made a partner in the firm, while she'll receive enough cash to finally open that eatery, to be called, naturally, the Hungry Bachelors Club.
While Delmar ponders the offer, her vintage car-obsessed brother Jethro (Peter Murnik) and his drunken slug of a buddy Marlon (David Shackelford) meet up with Moses (Bill Nunn), an ex-con who has taken up residence in his 1956 Cadillac, which is awaiting its fate in a wrecking yard.
Jethro takes in Moses and his Caddy, while Marlon is out to prove to Hortense that women might think they want to be with respectable guys in suits but are really attracted to bad boys who eat with their hands. Delmar, meanwhile, agrees to the little deal and gets pregnant immediately. But by the time the third trimester rolls around, she decides she wants to keep the baby, leading to the aforementioned twist ending that proves to be anything but conceivable.
As directed by Gregory Ruzzin from an adaptation by Fred Dresch and Ron Ratliff, "The Hungry Bachelors Club" and its various ingredients never quite gel. Despite some nice work from its ensemble -- Fox, Murnik and Nunn, in particular -- the end result feels hastily assembled and unsubstantial.
Production values are fine, but, curiously, for a film revolving around a culinary theme, all that food never looks particularly appetizing.
THE HUNGRY BACHELORS CLUB
Mama's Boys Prods.
Taggart Transcontinental and
Managed Passion Films present
A Mama's Boys production
of a Gregory Ruzzin film
Director: Gregory Ruzzin
Producers: Dan Gifford, Amy Sommer
Executive producer: Kimberly Becker
Screenplay by: Fred Dresch, Ron Ratliff
Based on the book by: Lynn Scott Myers
Director of photography: Robert Smith
Production designer: Timothy Duffy
Editors: Stephen Myers, Andrew Frank
Costume designer: Monique "Nikki" Smith
Music: Larry Brown
Color/stereo
Cast:
Delmar Youngblood: Jorja Fox
Hortense: Suzanne Mara
Moses Grady: Bill Nunn
Jethro Youngblood: Peter Murnik
Marlon Price: David Shackelford
Hannibal Youngblood: Candice Azzara
Stanley Diggers: Paul Provenza
Missy Bainbridge: Katherine Kendall
Mr. Ringold: W. Morgan Sheppard
Mr. Spinner: Michael Des Barres
Running time -- 93 minutes
MPAA rating: PG-13...
Based on the self-published novel of the same name by Atlanta-based author Lynn Scott Myers, the independent production has its share of eccentric characters and a tangled web of subplots that play like a Southern-accented "thirtysomething." But despite some pleasant performances, the flat direction and writing -- leading up to a difficult-to-digest surprise ending -- will leave audiences unsated.
Serving as the story's heart and soul is Delmar Youngblood (Jorja Fox), a food-loving divorcee with a young son who works as an insurance adjuster but dreams of opening her own restaurant (Overworked Screen Cliche No. 127).
During one of the dinner parties she hosts with her best friend and roommate, Hortense (Suzanne Mara), Delmar is greeted with a little business proposition from Hortense's lawyer boyfriend Stanley Paul Provenza). If she's willing to become a surrogate mother for the wife of his smarmy boss Michael Des Barres), he'll be made a partner in the firm, while she'll receive enough cash to finally open that eatery, to be called, naturally, the Hungry Bachelors Club.
While Delmar ponders the offer, her vintage car-obsessed brother Jethro (Peter Murnik) and his drunken slug of a buddy Marlon (David Shackelford) meet up with Moses (Bill Nunn), an ex-con who has taken up residence in his 1956 Cadillac, which is awaiting its fate in a wrecking yard.
Jethro takes in Moses and his Caddy, while Marlon is out to prove to Hortense that women might think they want to be with respectable guys in suits but are really attracted to bad boys who eat with their hands. Delmar, meanwhile, agrees to the little deal and gets pregnant immediately. But by the time the third trimester rolls around, she decides she wants to keep the baby, leading to the aforementioned twist ending that proves to be anything but conceivable.
As directed by Gregory Ruzzin from an adaptation by Fred Dresch and Ron Ratliff, "The Hungry Bachelors Club" and its various ingredients never quite gel. Despite some nice work from its ensemble -- Fox, Murnik and Nunn, in particular -- the end result feels hastily assembled and unsubstantial.
Production values are fine, but, curiously, for a film revolving around a culinary theme, all that food never looks particularly appetizing.
THE HUNGRY BACHELORS CLUB
Mama's Boys Prods.
Taggart Transcontinental and
Managed Passion Films present
A Mama's Boys production
of a Gregory Ruzzin film
Director: Gregory Ruzzin
Producers: Dan Gifford, Amy Sommer
Executive producer: Kimberly Becker
Screenplay by: Fred Dresch, Ron Ratliff
Based on the book by: Lynn Scott Myers
Director of photography: Robert Smith
Production designer: Timothy Duffy
Editors: Stephen Myers, Andrew Frank
Costume designer: Monique "Nikki" Smith
Music: Larry Brown
Color/stereo
Cast:
Delmar Youngblood: Jorja Fox
Hortense: Suzanne Mara
Moses Grady: Bill Nunn
Jethro Youngblood: Peter Murnik
Marlon Price: David Shackelford
Hannibal Youngblood: Candice Azzara
Stanley Diggers: Paul Provenza
Missy Bainbridge: Katherine Kendall
Mr. Ringold: W. Morgan Sheppard
Mr. Spinner: Michael Des Barres
Running time -- 93 minutes
MPAA rating: PG-13...
- 11/12/1999
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.