"Criminal Minds" Heathridge Manor (TV Episode 2012) Poster

(TV Series)

(2012)

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8/10
'Criminal Minds' ups the creepiness to the maximum
TheLittleSongbird30 October 2016
Matthew Gray Gubler has always been one of my favourite 'Criminal Minds' directors. His episodes are some of the most visually atmospheric and stunning in 'Criminal Minds' history and at least three of them are among the creepiest in the show too.

"Heathridge Manor" is one of his better episodes in general, and one of the better, most atmospheric and most memorable episodes of the seventh season. It is not as good as the eerie and also poignant "Mosley Lane", one of the top 5 best episodes of Season 5, and especially the terrifying "Mr Scratch", for me the best episode of Season 10 and one of the show's best in recent years.

It is not perfect. The incestuous overtones do give off an uncomfortably weird vibe and felt very misplaced against the rest of the episode's content, unnecessary and like it didn't belong. Do realise that it was to add to already the unsub's already unsettling character, but he was that much already without it.

Also felt that there could have been more profiling. There was some and it was interesting, but not enough so the team didn't feel as utilised as they ought to have been. Plus they were reasonably clueless here in not realising the quite obvious connection to solve the case until quite far in and having the profile so far off with some jumping to conclusions accurately (as seen later) but without base. It felt somewhat too convenient for it to be solved by Reid, and even he could have solved it much better than he did.

Gubler however does an exceptional job directing, not just visually but also with the atmosphere and the quality of the storytelling. "Heathridge Manor" is one of the best-looking 'Criminal Minds' episodes to me, not just the splendidly Gothic and audacious production design but also the unsettlingly dark use of lighting and colours and clever and eye-catching photography. "Heathridge Manor" is also one of Gubler's creepier episodes, the creepiness, spookiness and eerie factors are upped up so much to the maximum that nightmares are guaranteed, the psychotic mother Catherine and her equally deranged son James only accentuating. Actually felt rather sorry for Lara.

Use of music is very effective, it is very haunting and grandiose but it doesn't feel too intrusive or melodramatic. The script is suspenseful and thought-provoking, with wonderfully twisted storybook-like dialogue between Catherine and James and Garcia bringing some welcome (and expertly interwoven) light-hearted levity to the episode, the highlight being "and it's not just a bunch of nerds in costumes eating turkey legs, you guys". The storytelling is not flawless, definitely could have done without the incestuous overtones and the team have solved cases far better than how they did here, but much of it is impeccable, especially with how much atmosphere is created and executed so effectively, of Season 7 "Heathridge Manor" is the most frightening and most suspenseful (which it also excels brilliantly at) by far.

Too much of the unsubs has also been a complaint in criticising this episode, but if the unsubs are interesting, the atmosphere is well done and the story always intriguing to an episode that's more, and deliberately so, a how-and-why-dunnit rather than a whodunit it doesn't seem a problem. Much of Season 11 failed in this regard because too many of the episodes failed to achieve those three things. "Heathridge Manor" more than succeeds at them, so the too much unsub flaw, while it easily could have been, wasn't an issue. Love the team dynamic still, and the chemistry between the Heathridge family is unnervingly twisted.

Acting is also very good as usual, Gubler also shines in his acting as Reid (not a surprise as he and the character have always been high-points of the show), Robert Englund is also great value and all three of the Heathridges are very well played especially Juliet Landau, terrifyingly psychotic as Catherine. Kyle Gallner is also sinister and Madeleine Martin plays a tormented character intensely but also movingly.

In conclusion, creepiness upped to the maximum, another winner from Gubler and despite a few faults it is one of Season 7's better episodes and one of the show's creepiest. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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9/10
A Gothic tale
Annalioncourt6 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
This episode is one of my favorite episode of criminal minds and they have great guest stars too, like Robert Englund from nightmare on elm street, Juliet Landau from Buffy. My favorite was Kyle Gallner who i never seen before but played a odd character.

This episode is about a brother and sister who lost their mother. The mother was a patient at a mental hospital. The brother has visions about her mother telling him to find women that are devils wife. The need to be sacrifice so he and his mother can go on. His sister sews dresses for the women to wear. The brother doesn't let her sister go to school anymore cause he think its not safe. The brother love and cares about his sister in a disturb way.

If you haven't seen this episode, you should its a great one!! 9/10 stars
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10/10
Heathridge Murder House
amckee-6406314 September 2017
Warning: Spoilers
A thrillingly dark and disturbing tale of incest, witchcraft, ghosts, and a cameo from Lucifer himself. James is a wonderfully deranged villain, and Catherine manages to be haunting years after her death. Our regular dish of crime solving, bloody horror, and madness is spiced with a fairytale-like quest to defeat evil and intense family drama.

James' fate is especially delicious--thrown down the very well where he tortured so many of his victims. Then there's the ominous ending; it looks like the Heathridges just can't escape the crazy, no matter what form it takes. I would really like to see Lara return in a future episode, perhaps wielding a bloody knife at her hellish boyfriend's side.
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10/10
10 stars just for Juliet Landau
crustedsalt14 October 2023
A wonderfully refreshing creepy episode. Madeleine Martin and Kyle Gallner created one of the great all-time insane brother-sister duos as Lara and James Heathridge . And 10 stars just for casting Juliet Landau as Catherine Heathridge, who inhabited our beloved Drusilla, the loony psychic vamp in the Buffyverse, for all those awesome years.

I was starting to get a bit tired of the seemingly same stand-off endings in the episodes in season 7, and this episode was a delightful change from the rest. Though a particular place used by James was probably inspired by Silence of The Lambs, the use of it was a nice twist.

I hope the rest of my Criminal Minds binge stays up at this level of this episode.
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