Brilliant Minds review: uplifting new series seeks to change the discussion about mental health

Zachary Quinto's new series is poignant and inspiring.

Zachary Quinto as Dr. Oliver Wolf in Brilliant Minds
(Image: © Peter Kramer/NBC)

What to Watch Verdict

Poignant and inspiring, this fresh new take on medical dramas is as thought-provoking as it is entertaining. Zachary Quinto was destined to front a medical drama.

Pros

  • +

    Zachary Quinto is in his element

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    Whip-smart writing, compelling stories keep the show moving

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    Phenomenal supporting cast bring added layers to the story

Cons

  • -

    If only real-life doctors could spend this much time on patients.

NBC's new series Brilliant Minds is an inspiring new medical drama that puts a fresh spin on traditional medical procedurals, moving beyond entertainment to provide thought-provoking stories meant to challenge and inspire the audience. Based on the life of the famed author and physician Dr. Oliver Sacks, Zachary Quinto is Dr. Oliver Wolf, a brilliant neurologist whose focus on mental health is personal and professional.

"I want to change the way the world sees my patients," Dr. Wolf tells the hospital board. His focus is on not only helping his patients, but it's on making important changes in the way mental health and mental illness are perceived, even within the medical field. Mental health is not cut and dry, it's nuanced, and it's in that nuance that Quinto's Dr. Wolf thrives. 

Quinto was destined to front a medical drama. This isn't his first stint as a TV doctor; he made his case as the diabolical Dr. Thredson in American Horror Story: Asylum. Here he's in his element, playing a character not only haunted by his past but is dealing with face blindness, a condition that challenges his daily life as much as his personal life. 

Dr. Wolf is the kind of outside-the-box doctor who makes TV medical dramas interesting. The first time we see him, he's sneaking an Alzheimer's patient out of the hospital so that he can attend his granddaughter's wedding. Though he can't recall anything, Wolf has discovered the patient has moments of lucidity through music and his impromptu performance at the wedding brings the room to tears. It also gets Wolf in trouble at his hospital, leading Wolf's friend Dr. Carol Pierce (Tamberla Perry) to offer him a new position at her crowded hospital in the Bronx. 

Well aware of Wolf's brilliance and his quirks, Dr. Pierce puts him in charge of four fresh-faced interns who have their own mental health issues. Dr. Ericka Kinney (Ashleigh LaThrop), Dr. Dana Dang (Aury Krebs), Dr. Jacob Nash (Spence Moore II) and Dr. Van Markus (Alex MacNicoll) all believe Wolf hates them until they witness him in action and come to understand his eccentricities, many of which are linked to his condition and his past. Suddenly, the team clicks and they're off and running. 

The series only gets stronger as it goes. The writing is smart, with lots of whip-fast jokes and asides that keep things light even in the middle of the most challenging cases. 

Brilliant Minds offers something different in the crowded world of medical dramas in the fall TV lineup. It's the perfect show for fans missing New Amsterdam and The Resident, and, like those long-running shows, Brilliant Minds has legs to go on for several seasons if it can keep up the high-level storytelling that sets it apart.

Brilliant Minds airs Mondays at 10 pm ET/PT on NBC, with episodes available to stream the following day on Peacock

CATEGORIES
Sarabeth Pollock
Editorial Content Producer

 

Sarabeth joined the What to Watch team in May 2022. An avid TV and movie fan, her perennial favorites are The Walking Dead, American Horror Story, true crime documentaries on Netflix and anything from Passionflix. You’ve Got Mail, Ocean's Eleven and Signs are movies that she can watch all day long. She's also a huge baseball fan, and hockey is a new favorite.  

When she's not working, Sarabeth hosts the My Nights Are Booked Podcast and a blog dedicated to books and interviews with authors and actors. She also published her first novel, Once Upon an Interview, in 2022.