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Zachary Quinto is a big reason why Brilliant Minds works in its first episode. But for it to continue to work, the rest of the characters need to be developed, and Quinto’s character needs to have his flaws explored in more depth.
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In the first six episodes screened for critics, Brilliant Minds regularly swings back and forth between unsettling and downright cheesy, like when one character tells Wolf that his face blindness is a gift because it inspires him to “look deeper” to see the stuff that other people miss. It’s hard to tell where the tone will land in the long run, although the early episodes at least suggest the show is willing to try stuff out until it decides what fits.
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As Quinto plays him, he’s a warmer version of his big-screen Spock. .... As in most medical dramas, there are big questions about life and death one might find disturbing depending on one’s own life and circumstances. However, some comfort may be drawn from Wolf waxing thoughtful on a relevant element of human condition.
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The pacing of individual episodes is clumsy as well. Each one I’ve seen has reached its narrative climax roughly two-thirds of the way through, leaving 10+ minutes of protracted resolution. It works when the emotional investment is immediate, but that isn’t always the case.