"Criminal Minds" Unforgettable (TV Episode 2017) Poster

(TV Series)

(2017)

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6/10
Not unforgettable, not bad either
TheLittleSongbird12 June 2017
In its prime (Seasons 1-5, with Season 4 to me being the best and most consistent season with a lot of classic episodes and even the weakest episodes being far from awful) 'Criminal Minds' was one of my favourite shows. From Season 6 it did become hit and miss, with the odd gem, but a lot of average episodes and some stinkers.

Season 12 has been an inconsistent season but has been nowhere near as underwhelming as Season 11. The best episodes of Season 12 ("Spencer", "Elliot's Pond" and "Mirror Image") are not classic/elite, while the worst ones ("True North", "The Anti-Terror Squad" and "Hell's Kitchen") are not bad enough to be stinkers/low-points. "Unforgettable" fits in neither extreme, somewhere in the middle as far Season 12 goes though much better than "True North".

Visually, the episode looks great as to be expected. Very well shot and lit and is overall stylish, gritty, classy and atmospheric. The music is moody in the haunting and melancholic sense and fits well, without either enhancing or distracting from it. The direction is alert, tense and accommodating.

The acting is very good, masterclass quality in the cases of Matthew Gray Gubler and Jane Lynch. Their chemistry is very touching here, and Diana's dialogue about coming to terms with her illness is heart-wrenching but also inspirational. The writing is of uneven quality but their scenes were written beauty.

Finally, Walker is more interesting, with a well-interwoven back-story that proves essential to the case and his chemistry with Sam also resonates strongly. The team work cohesively, together and with proper investigation, their concern for Reid also notable.

However, the case itself is pretty humdrum and lacks tension and suspense. It also ends on an incredibly anti-climactic and rushed note, even for 'Criminal Minds'.

As much as Reid is one of my favourite characters on the show, him and Rossi nowadays are my favourites, the prison subplot started off really well but now feels like it has gone on too long and has felt eventually too drawn out over the season, by the end of the episode the subplot was practically begging for a resolution.

In conclusion, not bad but not one's definition of unforgettable. 6/10 Bethany Cox
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6/10
Unforgettable
bobcobb3014 July 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Damon Gupton's Stephen Walker is among the most boring characters on television right now. I knew eventually we'd get a Walker-centric episode, and this one lived up to the badness I was expecting. Random scenes from Moscow, an uneventful poison scare, this episode wasn't awful, just absolute mediocrity.
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8/10
Another disappointing ending
CrimeDrama12 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I already knew Lindsey Vaughan would be in Red Light and Green Light but it has taken too long to find Mr. Scratch with a lot of nothing this season. It was already a ridiculous dealbreaker that NO ONE can get Reid in protective custody. Everything happening to Reid in prison is forced drama. It would have been better for someone to help Reid escape from prison to find Mr. Scratch, who is behind everything. This episode...for the majority of this series, Reid has bragged about his Eidetic memory. So why doesn't he recall soon enough that Lindsey Vaughan was actually the one who drugged him? It contradicts the definition of Eidetic memory! If he saw her face, it is in his memory! The writers force drama so they delay the memory up until the point that Reid realizes she is posing as his mom's home nurse. How was Vaughan able to visit Reid while his mom is with him but she wasn't there when his mom first arrived? I don't think prisons would allow that. One of my brothers has worked in prisons for over 20 years. Season 12 has been so disappointing due to cookie cutter episodes and bad writing. One good thing is the acting is always solid.
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9/10
Strongest episode of the season so far
LoveIsAStateOfMind1 July 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Criminal Minds has been a bit of a chore to watch this season if I've being honest. The cases haven't been that interesting, I think the whole Scratch arc has dragged out too long and Reid being in prison for so long is simultaneously yawn-worthy and signs of writers scraping the bottom of the barrel.

Then there's the new team member of Stephen Walker who seems like a very nice gentleman, just a bit boring and one dimensional. Three episodes away from the end of the season and I'd already written him off so when the episode started and it was clear that it was going to be Walker-centric and a chance to give him some backstory, it was all a case of too little too late for me.

Despite my reservations though this episode did pull me in. I was invested in poor Sam and rooting for his reunion with his son. I liked that the whole Russian spy thing was a misdirection and wasn't the cause of his poisoning but rather a means of showcasing the friendship between him and Stephen. And a female serial killer using poison as her weapon of choice at least matches all the criminal profiling out there even if the use of poison didn't flag to the BAU team that they ought to be considering a woman killer.

In tandem with that, the whole Reid in prison arc suddenly got interesting ....

I wasn't spoiled for this episode in that I haven't read any reviews out there but I did notice Joe Mantegna's daughter credited in the opening credits which tingled my spidey senses. My automatic assumption was that due to nepotism they brought her in again but to play a different character because in my head she is still that young teenager that she was in the first episode she starred in. Crap that was almost ten years ago.

There were some really lovely moments between Spencer and his mum, showing her both in the throes of panic but also in her lucid moment blaming herself for Reid being in prison and how she will forget who he is before he is released. When she mentioned about having a new nurse I guessed that the new nurse was the woman working for Scratch and being Reid's mother's caretaker is a novel of inflicting torture on Reid ..... it was only due to the flashbacks at the very end that convinced me that they actually brought back Joe's daughter to play the same character as she was before and she is Diana Reid's new nurse! Now I have a ton of questions: do I need to go rewatch that 2008 episode to fully appreciate why Joe's daughter wants revenge? Is she working for Scratch or is her master plan totally unconnected to that? Have I really been watching Criminal Minds for over a decade with no concept of time?!
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