EPISODE
SEASON
Lie To Me - Season 2
Season 2 opens with a young woman approaching Lightman at his book signing, believing she has psychically seen a murder. Lightman finds that the woman has multiple personalities, and he believes that one of her personalities witnessed the murder.
30 March 1979, Marshfield, Wisconsin, USA
20 May 1983, Bellflower, California, USA
12 June 1970, New York City, New York, USA
4 July 1975, Portadown, Northern Ireland, UK
7 May 1985, Los Angeles, California, USA
August1957, Germany
29 May 1969, Maywood, Illinois, USA
8 June 1969, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
17 December 1948, Upland, California, USA
26 July 1961, USA
23 July 1961, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
26 January 1969, Los Angeles, California, USA
24 November 1979, Munster, Indiana, USA
24 December 1977, Michigan, USA
1976, Virginia, USA
6 December 1972, Newmarket, Ontario, Canada
15 November 1974, New Baltimore, Michigan, USA
28 May 1978, Evanston, Illinois, USA
October 09, 2018
A refreshing start to the season is always a good sign of things.
October 09, 2018
Though the writers still drop far too many hints and come up with some ridiculously contrived confrontations, they at least keep us guessing, and that's a good thing.
October 09, 2018
The premise still intrigues me, and the writing has toned down the "explain as we go" moments, which got mighty annoying in the previous season.
October 09, 2018
We've seen some amazingly written episodes this summer. Conversely, we've also suffered through some rushed and fractured episodes. I'd classify [season finale] "Black and White" as a mixture of both.
October 09, 2018
The second season...has fluctuated wildly in quality since the day it hit the air, a fact that was underlined when the great Shawn Ryan...came on-board and seemed to find the program's personality, only to leave it and watch it drift again.
October 09, 2018
"The Core Of It" doesn't reinvent the Lie To Me wheel so much as it tightens and strengthens the spokes.
October 09, 2018
Roth is riveting. He plays Lightman with a combination of inscrutable intensity and loose-limbed nonchalance that elevates the entire show, even when the plots are a bit predictable or the story arcs uneven.

