EPISODE
SEASON
SCHEDULE
Mindhunter - Season 1
In the overdue 1970s, two FBI retailers enlarge crook technological know-how via delving into the psychology of murder and getting uneasily near all-too-real monsters.
7 August 1973, Hackensack, New Jersey, USA
7 June 1979, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
28 May 1986, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA
5 March 1977, Canton, Ohio, USA
16 April 1994, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
17 September 1971, New York City, New York, USA
October 17, 2017
Mindhunter is telling a long story, one that is engaging on multiple levels, understanding that you need strong characters and a compelling episodic structure to make a show great.
October 16, 2017
The [David] Fincher Zodiac-eque deliberate and unflinching gaze keeps it worthwhile. For now.
October 12, 2017
Most TV crime dramas are whodunits. Columbo famously reversed things by starting with the murder, and making it a "How'd he get him?" Mindhunter, in contrast to both those approaches, is all about motive. It's a "Whydunit."
October 17, 2017
Mindhunter is one of Netflix's most artful, substantial series.
October 18, 2017
Watching David Fincher return to the world of serial killers is like watching Martin Scorsese make another gangster picture, or Steven Spielberg taking off into space.
October 17, 2017
It is a disturbing premise about a disturbing topic. Mindhunter capitalizes on all the skin-crawling discomfort of it.
October 13, 2017
Beautifully composed and tensely paced, Mindhunter is darkly addictive. The show deals with more than a few disturbing concepts and cases - those with a weaker constitution for such grim matters may find the stark details a little challenging to bear.
October 17, 2017
Rather than the expected fountains of gore, Fincher has given us something spare, thoughtful and elegant - and all the more haunting for it.
October 13, 2017
The show's at its most absorbing when it's spending time with monsters...
October 13, 2017
Under the direction of Fincher, there is an unshowy, meticulous cinematic quality that draws you in, irresistibly, to its pale-brown world of desk jobs and smoky cinemas.

