Mr. Mercedes | |
---|---|
Genre | |
Based on | Mr. Mercedes , Finders Keepers & End of Watch by Stephen King |
Developed by | David E. Kelley |
Starring | |
Opening theme | "It's Not Too Late" by T Bone Burnett (season 1) "I Shall Not Be Moved" Contents |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 3 |
No. of episodes | 30 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
|
Producers |
|
Camera setup | Single-camera |
Running time | 49–57 minutes |
Production companies |
|
Original release | |
Network | Audience |
Release | August 9, 2017 – November 12, 2019 |
Related | |
The Outsider |
Mr. Mercedes is an American crime drama television series based on the Bill Hodges novel trilogy by Stephen King, which consists of Mr. Mercedes , Finders Keepers , and End of Watch . The series premiered on Audience on August 9, 2017. It was developed by David E. Kelley, and stars Brendan Gleeson and Harry Treadaway. In November 2018, it was announced that Audience had renewed the series for a ten-episode third season, which premiered on September 10, 2019. In May 2020, the show was discontinued, with no indication of whether the show had been officially canceled or that it would return for a fourth season. Its existing three seasons were later picked up in September 2020 by streaming service Peacock.
Retired detective Bill Hodges is still haunted by the unsolved case of "Mr. Mercedes", who claimed 16 lives when he drove a stolen Mercedes through a line of job-seekers at a local job fair. Meanwhile, brilliant young psychopath Brady Hartsfield emerges to focus his attention on Hodges. What begins as an online cat-and-mouse game soon has deadly real-life consequences as an increasingly desperate Hartsfield becomes bent on leaving his mark on the world.
Actors are credited among main cast only in the episodes in which they appear.
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | |||
1 | 10 | August 9, 2017 | October 11, 2017 | |
2 | 10 | August 22, 2018 | October 24, 2018 | |
3 | 10 | September 10, 2019 | November 12, 2019 |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Pilot" | Jack Bender | David E. Kelley | August 9, 2017 | |
In 2009, in the fictional town of Bridgton, Ohio, an unidentified man massacres a crowd of people waiting in a job fair line using a stolen Mercedes-Benz. Two years later, homicide detective Kermit "Bill" Hodges retires after being unable to catch the killer and is contacted by him, being taunted by videos he sends that delete themselves. Hodges asks his tech-savvy young neighbor Jerome Robinson to retrieve the videos for him, and has him help install security cameras around his property when he realizes the killer knows personal details of how he lives. The killer is revealed to be Brady Hartsfield, an electronics store worker. As Hodges finds a tennis ball painted to look like Brady's smiley face insignia in his yard, Brady makes his rounds through Hodges' neighborhood at his second job as an ice cream vendor. | ||||||
2 | 2 | "On Your Mark" | Jack Bender | David E. Kelley | August 16, 2017 | |
His paranoia heightening, Hodges almost shoots a teenager cutting through his yard in the middle of the night. Brady sends Hodges a letter trying to subtly convince him to commit suicide and inviting him to talk on a website called "Under Debbie's Blue Umbrella". The letter reminds him of Olivia Trelawney, the owner of the stolen Mercedes who committed suicide after also being written to by Brady, and so he visits her sister Janelle "Janey" Patterson, who promises to help him. Brady programs his annoying boss Anthony Frobisher's computer to destroy itself, burning Frobisher's face, and returns home to find that Hodges has messaged him on Blue Umbrella. | ||||||
3 | 3 | "Cloudy, With a Chance of Mayhem" | John Coles | A. M. Homes | August 23, 2017 | |
As a child, Brady quietly observes his mother Deborah having sex, developing an attraction to her that she often reciprocates. In the present, Hodges reads over the letters Brady sent to Trelawney in which he guilted her into committing suicide, giving copies of them to his former partner Pete Dixon, who doubts their authenticity and advises him to drop the case. After Brady sends him another video encouraging him to kill himself, Hodges successfully provokes him by claiming the "real" Mercedes killer has been caught. Hodges and Janey discuss their true, vengeful motivations for trying to catch Brady, while Brady gets into bed with Deborah and lets her give him a handjob. | ||||||
4 | 4 | "Gods Who Fall" | Jack Bender | Dennis Lehane | August 30, 2017 | |
As Hodges tries to figure out how Brady got access to Trelawney's car, Jerome realizes anyone fluent in tech could have stolen her car's RKS signal and used it to open it, contradicting the blame the police put on Trelawney for supposedly leaving her key in the ignition. Hodges and Janey have dinner together and end up having sex. Brady follows a man who harassed his coworker Lou Linklatter and kills him by using a homemade device that interferes with electronic signals, manipulating traffic lights and causing a truck to total the man's car. As he dies, Brady remembers he killed his younger brother, who sustained brain damage from almost choking to death on an apple slice, by pushing him down the basement stairs. | ||||||
5 | 5 | "The Suicide Hour" | Jack Bender | Bryan Goluboff | September 6, 2017 | |
Brady deletes footage from Hodges' security cameras and breaks into his house, slicing up an apple and leaving it in his kitchen. He schemes to kill Jerome's dog with poisoned hamburger meat, but is spotted by Jerome before he can, leaving before he can be identified. Hodges visits Janey's mother with her to learn more about Trelawney before her suicide, and she explains that Brady convinced her to form a suicide pact that he did not follow through on. She recognizes him and tells Janey that he was one of the detectives that publicized the idea that Trelawney left her keys in her car, and Janey angrily stops speaking to him. Jerome tells Hodges about the incident with his dog, and Hodges crassly warns Jerome to stay away for his own safety. He video calls Brady on Blue Umbrella, who answers with his face and voice disguised. Brady decides to kill Hodges when he deduces his incestuous relationship with Deborah, and is forced to push her off when she tries to have sex with him. | ||||||
6 | 6 | "People in the Rain" | Jack Bender | Dennis Lehane | September 13, 2017 | |
In 2005, Hodges allows his delinquent daughter Ally to go to jail after her repeated offenses, and now that she is sober, she no longer speaks to him. In the present, Janey tells him that her mother had a stroke and he goes to the hospital, where he meets Janey's OCD-afflicted niece Holly Gibney. As Holly becomes anxious, he offers to take her to get food, where she explains that it was the "voices" Trelawney heard that ultimately killed her. Deborah tries to get sober and get her old job back, but an old associate attempts to sexually extort her. Brady interviews for the managerial position of his workplace but begins to fantasize about killing everyone around him, bombing the interview. He goes searching for Deborah, seeing Hodges and Holly return to the hospital, the former hugging Janey after her mother dies. He captures the RKS signal on Hodges' car. He returns to find Deborah waiting for him, and coaxes her into drinking to keep her docile. | ||||||
7 | 7 | "Willow Lake" | Jack Bender | Dennis Lehane | September 20, 2017 | |
Hodges apologizes to Jerome and introduces him to Holly, putting them to work on going through Trelawney's computer and finding what killed her. Deborah searches through Brady's things while he is at work and finds the mask he wore during the massacre, although he bluffs it off when she confronts him. Hodges and Janey reconcile and reaffirm their desire to catch Brady, going to her mother's funeral together. During the procession, Brady plants a bomb in Hodges' car. Holly is scolded by her mother after the procession, so Hodges offers to drive her home and asks Janey to get his car. As she drives it to them, Brady detonates the bomb, killing her. | ||||||
8 | 8 | "From the Ashes" | Laura Innes | Bryan Goluboff | September 27, 2017 | |
Brady contacts Hodges on Blue Umbrella to confirm himself as Janey's killer while Deborah eats the poisoned hamburger, and Brady watches her die instead of risking calling 911. He drags her body upstairs and lays it in her bed. Hodges goes to talk to Ally for the first time in a decade to warn her about Brady, but she is clearly apprehensive to see him. Upset that her parents do not seem to care about Janey, Holly runs away to stay with Hodges and cracks the password on Trelawney's laptop, discovering with Jerome that it was programmed to play accusatory screams at random intervals and had a program installed that could control it remotely. Hodges turns it in to Dixon, who now believes the legitimacy of his pursuit of Brady. Hodges forces Holly to go back to her parents and promises that he will kill Brady. Brady sees a news report for the upcoming opening of an art center and lays next to Deborah's corpse, promising that he will "make you proud." | ||||||
9 | 9 | "Ice Cream, You Scream, We All Scream" | Kevin Hooks | Bryan Goluboff | October 4, 2017 | |
Hodges and Dixon go to Brady's place of work and talk to Frobisher, asking which employee helped Trelawney with her technology. Hodges recognizes Brady as the ice cream man and gets his address, although he cannot immediately secure a search warrant. Holly and Jerome learn that there is a job fair in two days and theorize that Brady will likely attack there if he is planning something. Brady breaks into Frobisher's apartment and kills him. Dixon secures a search warrant for Brady's house and the SWAT team trip a countdown on his computers in the basement just as Hodges finds Brady curled up in bed with Deborah's corpse. The countdown triggers an explosion that sets the bedroom on fire. The next day, Hodges stares at the burnt corpses as Dixon assures him that they got Brady, and he mutters "maybe." | ||||||
10 | 10 | "Jibber-Jibber Chicken Dinner" | Jack Bender | Dennis Lehane | October 11, 2017 | |
Convinced that Brady is not dead, Hodges learns that his basement had an escape tunnel built in and the manner in which Deborah was killed is inconsistent with how he framed it in a video he left for the police. Frobisher's superior calls the police when he does not show up to work, and they discover blood on his walls. Brady, having used Frobisher's corpse to fake his death, shaves his head and fits a wheelchair with a bomb. Hodges realizes Brady is going after people he cares about and is likely going to the art center opening, where Jerome is speaking. Brady is recognized at the opening by Lou, but he stabs her and makes his way into the crowd. Hodges finds her and she warns him about Brady, although he has a heart attack just as he confronts him. Before Brady can detonate the bomb, Holly uses a paperweight that belonged to Ally that Hodges gave her to bash his head in while Jerome disarms him. Some time later, Holly and Jerome are hailed as heroes while Hodges is prepped for release from the hospital. He spends his last day visiting the comatose Brady, telling him that he knows he will wake up one day and that he will be waiting to finish him off. |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
11 | 1 | "Missed You" | Jack Bender | Dennis Lehane | August 22, 2018 | |
Felix Babineau, the neurosurgeon that saved Brady's life, starts to inject him with an experimental Chinese drug provided by his wife Cora, the head of marketing at a pharmaceutical corporation, as part of a trial. Over the course of a year, Hodges' visits to Brady become less frequent as he focuses more on his private investigator business, Finders Keepers, that he runs with Holly. Dixon suffers a fatal heart attack after helping Hodges rebuild his neighbor Ida Silver's gazebo, and Hodges has a nightmare about Brady waking up and rising from Dixon's empty grave. With pressure mounting from both Cora and the threat of investigation if Brady dies, Babineau ups the dosage of Brady's drug. Hodges visits Brady and briefly considers killing him, but leaves before Brady's eyes start to move. Brady awakens in his basement, now full of objects that represent the most important aspects of his life, and attempts to turn his computers on. | ||||||
12 | 2 | "Let's Go Roaming" | Jack Bender | David E. Kelley | August 29, 2018 | |
Hodges becomes disillusioned with his work after a couple of jobs that put down desperate, disadvantaged people. His ex-wife Donna, with whom he is talking again as well as Ally, advises him that his line of work may not be right for him. Brady's epileptic nurse, Sadie MacDonald, is prone to brief fits of catatonia when she stares too intensely at screens. She lapses into one of these when she stares at Brady's monitor, and he briefly enters her perspective. Sadie reports Brady looking at her to Babineau, who orders her to not tell anyone, but she ends up telling her friend and fellow nurse Maggie Wilmer, who spreads it around. District attorney Antonio Montez, eager to prosecute Brady, hears of this and visits his room, trying to elicit a reaction by causing him pain, but Brady only moves his eyes when he leaves. He again enters Sadie when she has another fit, making her walk around and noticing Hodges, having come to visit Brady after hearing the rumors. Brady makes her get a scalpel to kill Hodges with, but he is unwittingly saved by Wilmer, and Brady is ejected from Sadie's head. | ||||||
13 | 3 | "You Can Go Home Now" | Jack Bender | Mike Batistick | September 5, 2018 | |
Hodges finds the scalpel in Brady's room, although Wilmer insists Sadie would not hurt anyone. Hodges visits Donna, disturbed by the idea that Sadie tried to kill him and Brady may have woken up, and they spend the night together. She advises him to stay away from the hospital. After Brady learns that Sadie is applying for a transfer, he tries to make her overdose an elderly patient on morphine, but Wilmer catches her and contacts Hodges. As Brady tries to get Sadie to run over Wilmer with her car, Hodges confronts and stops her. Realizing she is a liability, Brady makes her go up to the roof of the hospital and jump. | ||||||
14 | 4 | "Motherboard" | Jack Bender | Samantha Stratton | September 12, 2018 | |
In the wake of Sadie's death, Babineau warns Wilmer to not tell Hodges about Brady's experimental treatment. Hodges insists to Montez that Brady is secretly conscious, but is told to stop visiting him. He gets Sadie's phone from her mother, which he has Jerome open and finds that she tried to tell her boyfriend about Brady's control over her. Lou's girlfriend moves out after her unwillingness to process the severe trauma of her stabbing begins to affect their relationship. She picks up a woman at a lesbian bar, but is arrested after she assaults a man who harasses them, being bailed out by her girlfriend, who leaves her. Brady takes control of Al Jursak, a volunteer who passes out books to patients, after he loses focus while playing a game on a tablet. He makes him deface the memorial for the Mercedes massacre and drive in front of Hodges' house, as inside, Hodges realizes Brady likely forced Sadie to kill herself. | ||||||
15 | 5 | "Andale" | Peter Weller | Alexis Deane & Sophie Owens-Bender | September 19, 2018 | |
Montez notes that despite Brady's increased brain activity, he is not waking up, threatening to pull his support from Babineau and allow him to be investigated if he does not show any progress. Cora gives Babineau an experimental variant of the drug to use. Jerome hacks into the hospital's files on Brady to prove to Hodges that he is not conscious, but this only spurs him into getting Wilmer to try and steal from Babineau's office. She gets caught, and Montez warns him not to go back to the hospital or he will have his license for Finders Keepers pulled. Brady has Al kill Montez's dog, break into his house, and steal his gun. Montez meets with Hodges and reveals Al wrote a phrase on his patio with his dog's blood that he used while hurting Brady, offering to lay off him if he figures out who killed his dog. | ||||||
16 | 6 | "Proximity" | Laura Innes | Bryan Goluboff & Alexis Deane | September 26, 2018 | |
Hodges searches Al's car and finds blood that he identifies as canine. He and Montez find the knife he used to kill the dog in his house and arrest him, despite Al's insistence that he did not do anything. Lou sneaks into Brady's room to ask him why he did not finish her off, and he manages to operate a text app that is connected to his brain activity, attempting to tell her that he wishes he killed her. She is escorted out before she can see, although Babineau notices. He asks Brady to cooperate with him, but Brady uses the app to curse him out. Babineau orders an MRI and finds that Brady's brain is functioning, and when Hodges hears of the drug testing through Wilmer, he tries to convince Babineau and Cora to let him provoke Brady into waking up. Cora demands Babineau find a way to wake Brady up, despite telling him that a test in China ended with the patients forcing people to kill themselves. Hodges visits Brady to try and provoke a reaction out of him, and later gets a text from an unknown number repeating something he said to Brady. | ||||||
17 | 7 | "Fell On Black Days" | Jack Bender | Samantha Stratton & Mike Batistick & Dennis Lehane [a] | October 3, 2018 | |
Donna and Hodges begin planning a trip to Ireland together. After Babineau fails to rouse Brady with brain surgery, he approaches Lou and asks for her help provoking him, but she turns him down. When Cora claims her company is sending her to China to continue her deal, he deduces that she is instead trying to abandon him and let him take any legal repercussions for their experiments. Al's brother bails him out of prison and he admits his belief that something is controlling him. They agree to get out of town, but Brady re-enters Al when he uses his tablet, making him cut his brother's throat. He breaks into Hodges' house with Montez's gun and waits for him to come home, attacking him and nearly beating him to death, but Ida is drawn to the commotion and distracts Al long enough for Hodges to shoot and kill him. | ||||||
18 | 8 | "Nobody Puts Brady in a Crestmore" | Jack Bender | Samantha Stratton & Mike Batistick & Dennis Lehane [a] | October 10, 2018 | |
Hodges is taken to the hospital for his injuries and eventually released. Montez gets the hospital administrator to approve Brady's transport to a less proper facility, but Babineau convinces Montez's superior that Brady will wake up and be properly put on trial after he moves his finger. Cora reveals to Babineau that she is pulling his backing from her company, leaving him to take the legal consequences of their actions. Brady fully wakes up as Hodges gets an uneasy feeling, going to the hospital to find his bed empty. | ||||||
19 | 9 | "Walk Like a Man" | Jack Bender | Dennis Lehane and David E. Kelley | October 17, 2018 | |
Hodges assaults Babineau until he admits to his experiments on Brady. Brady breaks into Babineau's house and admits that he has started feeling regret over his crimes, while Babineau tells him he needs another dose of the drug in three days or he will die. He forces him and Cora to take him to the police station, and makes Cora kiss him before turning himself in. While insisting on his remorse to the man interrogating him, he offhandedly mentions Hodges almost killing him. Hodges is interviewed, and the detective speaking to him brings up his assault on Babineau and his role in the deaths of Sadie and Al. Hodges responds flippantly, and is arrested and put in a cell next to Brady. Cora and Babineau manage to spin Brady's awakening in their favor with the media. | ||||||
20 | 10 | "Fade to Blue" | Jack Bender | David E. Kelley & Jonathan Shapiro | October 24, 2018 | |
Montez reveals that he put Hodges with Brady to see if he can provoke him. Hodges tries to strangle him and is eventually bailed out, but recognizes that the "real" Brady is still in there. Brady's hearing begins, where he and his attorney use the argument that he is legally incompetent to stand trial because his "Mr. Mercedes" personality committed the murders. Bill admits to Donna that the case of the Mercedes killings is and was the last thing he plans to do with his life as a cop. He requests of Lou that she talk to Brady and testify when he realizes Brady might go free, and she too recognizes that Brady is still himself. She recounts this in court, but pulls a 3D-printed gun and shoots Brady in the head with it. Some time later, Donna invites Hodges to see Ally with him next week, and he agrees. As she leaves, the new ice cream man pulls up in front of Hodges' house and a kid accidentally hits a tennis ball into his backyard. Hodges looks at it, and then paints Brady's insignia into the painting he is working on. |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date [1] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
21 | 1 | "No Good Deed" | Jack Bender | David E. Kelley | September 10, 2019 | |
Two men break into the house of John Rothstein, a famous author. Morris Bellamy, one of the robbers and a volatile fan of Rothstein's work, derides the ending he wrote for his most famous character, and Rothstein distracts him long enough to grab a gun and kill Bellamy's accomplice. Bellamy kills him and takes his money and several manuscripts, crashing his car as he escapes and winding up in the hospital. Hodges, a big fan of Rothstein, is devastated by the news of his death. He learns that Lou's case for killing Brady has gone to trial, and he tries to convince her to plead insanity while her attorney, Roland Finklestein, tries to get her charges dropped. Teenager Pete Saubers discovers Bellamy's crashed car while walking his dog, and takes the money and manuscripts. Bellamy returns to find the car empty, and assumes the man who took him to the hospital stole it, tracking him down and killing him. | ||||||
22 | 2 | "Madness" | Jack Bender | David E. Kelley and Jonathan Shapiro | September 17, 2019 | |
The uncompromising judge of Lou's case, Bernard Raines, deems her mentally unfit to stand trial and orders her placed in a psychiatric hospital until she can be evaluated. Bellamy positions the man's body in his car to make him look like Rothstein's killer, although Montez, tipped off anonymously by Pete, examines the body and determines the man died by being shot instead of from a car crash. Pete buys a pair of expensive sneakers with Rothstein's money, and his depressed and short-tempered father Tom, a disabled survivor of the Mercedes killings, discovers them and suspects foul play. Pete hides the manuscripts in his wall after Tom nearly discovers them. Rothstein's ex-lover and the woman who gave Bellamy his location, Alma Lane, deduces that Bellamy killed him and encourages him to kill whoever has his money after having sex with him. Lou has a hallucination of Brady in her room in the hospital. | ||||||
23 | 3 | "Love Lost" | Jack Bender | Jonathan Shapiro and David E. Kelley | September 24, 2019 | |
Alma begins to map out the area surrounding the crash and determines that passersby could not have seen it from the road, so it had to be a local walking through the woods that took the money. Bellamy's girlfriend Danielle catches him having sex with Alma, and he tries to get her to stay with him by stating that Alma has been grooming him since he was thirteen. She goes to Alma's house to confront her and notices the map on her wall, realizing she has something to do with Rothstein's murder, and Alma kills her and hides her body. Pete and Hodges separately go to a bookstore owned by Andrew Halliday, a criminal associate of Bellamy's, and inquire about Rothstein. Halliday show Bellamy video footage of both of them. Jerome pulls files on Rothstein from a library and he and Hodges discover a file of past affairs Rothstein kept, one of them being Ida, who admits to Hodges that she loved Rothstein. Despite hallucinating during her competency exam, Lou passes. | ||||||
24 | 4 | "Trial and Terror" | Jack Bender | David E. Kelley and Jonathan Shapiro | October 1, 2019 | |
Bellamy and Alma identify Pete from Halliday's footage, and Bellamy breaks into his house but does not find anything. Jerome discovers that the man Bellamy killed was reported as taking someone to the hospital on the night of Rothstein's murder, although Bellamy used a fake identity while there. Raines disallows Finkelstein from using self-defense as a valid argument in Lou's trial, so he instead tries for involuntary manslaughter when the trial begins. Lou posits to him that they could call Holly as a witness, as she also attacked Brady and did not suffer any consequences. | ||||||
25 | 5 | "Great Balls of Fire" | Laura Innes | David E. Kelley and Jonathan Shapiro | October 8, 2019 | |
The district attorney representing the state calls Hodges to the stand during Lou's trial, where she gets him to admit that he does not disapprove of her killing of Brady. The police begin visiting houses close to where Bellamy's car crashed, informing them of the missing money, and Pete's parents begin to suspect him due to his recent obsession with Rothstein. Alma innocently converses with Pete's mother Marjorie, suspecting she is upset about something, while Bellamy crosses paths with Hodges in court and gains his sympathy by mentioning that he is a survivor of the Mercedes killings. Alma gets rid of Danielle's body by carving it up and throwing the pieces into a woodchipper. | ||||||
26 | 6 | "Bad to Worse" | Jack Bender | David E. Kelley and Jonathan Shapiro | October 15, 2019 | |
Holly takes the stand in court and performs extremely well, making way for Lou to give her own statement. She hallucinates multiple times during it, but manages to keep it together. Jerome visits the father of the man Rothstein killed, finding a picture of him and Bellamy together. Ida, Pete's English teacher, informs Hodges of his recent interest in Rothstein. Bellamy approaches Pete and offers to let him keep the money, wanting only Rothstein's manuscripts. Pete offers to sell the manuscripts to Halliday, but only gives him a page until he can prove that he has a buyer ready. Bellamy almost runs Pete off the road, prompting him to shoot Bellamy in the leg with a gun he purchased using Rothstein's money. | ||||||
27 | 7 | "The End of the Beginning" | Jack Bender | Jonathan Shapiro and David E. Kelley | October 22, 2019 | |
Pete learns that Halliday secured a buyer, but is still hesitant to give him the manuscripts when Halliday tries to renegotiate the terms of their deal. After Halliday lies to Bellamy about Pete having the manuscripts, Alma visits the store and tortures him until he admits that Pete has them, and she kills him. Pete goes into hiding, while Hodges visits Tom and asks to talk to Pete when he comes home. Both Finklestein and the state attorney give their closing arguments, and Lou is found not guilty of first degree murder. Raines deems her guilty of second degree, but decides that the months she has spent in prison qualifies for her sentence, allowing her to serve the rest on probation. | ||||||
28 | 8 | "Mommy Deadest" | Michael J. Leone | David E. Kelley and Jonathan Shapiro | October 29, 2019 | |
In the wake of her release from prison, Lou moves in with Holly temporarily and goes on a talk show with Finkelstein, where she expresses beliefs that she later admits to him were Brady's, still hallucinating him. Jerome discovers Alma's hate mail to Rothstein in his file on women. Pete goes to Ida for help but refuses to talk to Hodges, so he has Finkelstein go to him and offer to help him deal with the police. Pete refuses. Bellamy kidnaps Marjorie from the Saubers home after a struggle, and Alma ties her up in her shed. They contact Pete and Tom separately, warning them both not to go to the police and telling Pete to give them the manuscripts the next day or they will kill his mother. | ||||||
29 | 9 | "Crunch Time" | Jack Bender | Jonathan Shapiro and David E. Kelley | November 5, 2019 | |
Holly is given ownership of Trelawney's Mercedes, which Hodges strongly disapproves of her keeping. He visits Tom to ask about Pete and notes his suspicious behavior. Jerome pieces together the evidence he has collected on Bellamy and his murders to uncover his identity, and Ida, Bellamy's former teacher, mentions to Hodges that he was rumored to be involved with an older woman. Pete gives Bellamy one of the manuscripts to keep Marjorie alive. After finding pictures of Rothstein and Pete in Bellamy's apartment, Hodges returns to Tom and gets him to admit everything he knows. He goes to visit Alma, but she bluffs him off. Just as Bellamy discovers a locket Danielle wore in the shed, Alma attacks him, and he kills her in the struggle. | ||||||
30 | 10 | "Burning Man" | Jack Bender | David E. Kelley and Jonathan Shapiro | November 12, 2019 | |
Lou decides she needs to get a job and tries to get work at the electronics store she and Brady worked at, but is turned down. Jerome encourages Hodges to see the car as a way of releasing the memories attached to it, which he seems to accept. Ally unexpectedly comes home, informing Hodges that she is pregnant and asking to stay with him. He goes back to Alma's shed and finds it empty, Bellamy having hidden her body. After Hodges and Ida contact Bellamy and try to get him to see reason, he demands Pete meet him immediately or he will kill Marjorie. As Jerome traces Marjorie's phone, Pete and Bellamy meet, where Pete reveals that he will light the manuscripts on fire if Bellamy kills him or his mother. Bellamy decides to kill Marjorie, but Hodges arrives and shoots him, startling Pete into dropping his lighter on the manuscripts. Bellamy burns to death trying to read them, while Hodges sees an apparition of Rothstein watching them. The Saubers family reunites, Holly returns the paperweight she used to stop Brady to Ally while she moves in with Hodges, and Lou takes Brady's old job as an ice cream vendor, now at peace. |
In 2015, Sonar Entertainment optioned the screen rights to Stephen King's novel Mr. Mercedes with the intent of developing into a limited series. David E. Kelley was set to write the series while Jack Bender would direct. Executive producers were expected to include Kelley, Bender, Marty Bowen, Wyck Godfrey, and Gene Stein. Production companies involved with the series were to include Temple Hill Entertainment and Sonar Entertainment. [2]
On May 25, 2016, it was announced that Audience had given the production a series order for a first season consisting of ten episodes. The previously announced creative team was still expected to be involved. In addition to writing and executive producing, David E. Kelley was also announced to be serving as the series' showrunner. Additional executive producers announced included Christopher Long, Bart Peters, Jenna Glazier, and Tom Patricia. [3] On May 11, 2017, it was announced that the series would premiere on August 9, 2017. [4]
On October 10, 2017, the Audience Network renewed the series for a second season consisting of ten episodes. It will be based on the three novels in the Bill Hodges trilogy, Mr. Mercedes , Finders Keepers and End of Watch . [5] On April 15, 2018, it was announced that the second season would premiere on August 22, 2018. [6] On November 19, 2018, it was announced that Audience had renewed the series for a third season consisting of ten episodes, [7] which premiered on September 10, 2019. [8]
In May 2020, Audience was discontinued, with no indication of whether the show had been officially canceled or that it would return for a fourth season. [9]
Alongside the series order announcement, it was confirmed that Brendan Gleeson and Anton Yelchin had been cast in the series' two lead roles. [3] Following Yelchin's death in June 2016, it was announced that his role had been recast with Harry Treadaway assuming the part. [10] In December 2016, it was announced that Kelly Lynch and Ann-Margret had been cast in the series. [11] [12] In January 2017, it was reported that Jharrel Jerome, Justine Lupe, and Breeda Wool, Scott Lawrence, Robert Stanton, and Ann Cusack had joined the main cast, that Mary-Louise Parker was cast a recurring character, and that Ann-Margret's role had been recast with Holland Taylor following an illness in Ann-Margret's family. [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] On April 25, 2017, it was reported that Stephen King would have a cameo in the series. [19] In January 2018, it was announced that Jack Huston, Maximiliano Hernandez, and Tessa Ferrer had been cast as series regulars in season two. [20] [21] In March 2019, Kate Mulgrew, Brett Gelman, and Natalie Paul joined the series for the third season. [22] On April 25, 2019, Meg Steedle had been cast in a recurring role for the third season. [23]
In February 2017, principal photography for the first season began in Charleston, South Carolina. [24] That month, filming took place in the Wagener Terrace area of the city as well as at the Upper King Street restaurant Little Jack's Tavern. [25] [26] Filming concluded for the first season by the end of May 2017. [27] In January 2018, Audience announced production for season two would commence the following month in South Carolina. [28]
During filming on March 2, 2019, special effects technician Mike Wilks survived a near-electrocution on set. [29]
On May 8, 2017, Audience released a series of "first look" images from the series. [30] On June 5, 2017, Audience released a "behind-the-scenes" video for the series featuring interviews with the cast and crew. [31] The following day, the first teaser trailer for the series was released. [32] By the end of the month, Audience released a set of promotional photographs featuring the series' main cast. [33]
On July 19, 2018, the series held a panel at San Diego Comic-Con in San Diego, California to promote season two. The panel featured executive producer and director Jack Bender as well as series stars Jack Huston, Max Hernandez, Breeda Wool, Justine Lupe, and Nancy Travis. [34] On July 30, 2018, the official trailer for season two was released. [35]
The series airs on RTÉ1 in Ireland, [36] on Canal+ in Poland, [37] and on Starzplay in the United Kingdom. [38] The first three seasons of Mr. Mercedes were picked up in September 2020 by streaming service Peacock. [39]
Season | Rotten Tomatoes | Metacritic |
---|---|---|
1 | 83% (29 reviews) | 71 (17 reviews) |
2 | 100% (11 reviews) | 76 (4 reviews) |
The first season of Mr. Mercedes got a positive response from critics. On the review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, the first season holds an 83% approval rating with an average rating of 6.42 out of 10 based on 29 reviews. The website's critical consensus reads, "Mr. Mercedes propels its tense, creepy narrative with quick-witted dialogue, strong characters, and terrifying surprises." [40] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the season a score of 71 out of 100 based on 17 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [41]
The second season also received a positive response from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, the second season holds a 100% approval rating with an average rating of 7 out of 10 based on 11 reviews, with the critical consensus reading, "Mr. Mercedes gains a new, supernatural dimension in a rollicking second season that pits the talents of Brendan Gleeson and Harry Treadaway against each other, generating enough sparks to dazzle mystery aficionados and horror buffs alike." [42] Metacritic assigned the season a score of 76 out of 100 based on 4 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [43]
Year | Award | Category | Nominee(s) | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | Irish Film and Television Awards | Best Actor in a Lead Role – Drama | Brendan Gleeson | Nominated | [44] [45] |
Saturn Awards | Best Action-Thriller Television Series | Mr. Mercedes | Nominated | [46] [47] | |
2019 | Satellite Awards | Best Actor – Television Series Drama | Brendan Gleeson | Won | [48] [49] |
Best Television Series – Drama | Mr. Mercedes | Nominated | |||
Saturn Awards | Best Action-Thriller Television Series | Mr. Mercedes | Nominated | [50] | |
2020 | Satellite Awards | Best Actor in a Drama / Genre Series | Brendan Gleeson | Nominated | [51] |
Best Drama Series | Mr. Mercedes | Nominated |
The character of Holly Gibney that was first introduced in the Bill Hodges trilogy was one of the main characters in King's 2018 novel The Outsider . That novel was adapted for the 2020 miniseries by HBO, with the Gibney character portrayed by Cynthia Erivo.
Big Little Lies is an American black comedy drama television series based on the 2014 novel by Liane Moriarty. Created and written by David E. Kelley, it aired on HBO from February 19, 2017, to July 21, 2019, encompassing 14 episodes and two seasons. Originally billed as a miniseries, Jean-Marc Vallée directed the first season, while Andrea Arnold directed the second season. In November 2023, Nicole Kidman stated a third season would be made.
Six is an American military drama television series. The series was ordered by the History Channel with an eight-episode initial order. The first two episodes were directed by Lesli Linka Glatter. Six premiered on January 18, 2017.
Goliath is an American legal drama television series by Amazon Studios. The show was commissioned with a straight-to-series order of eight episodes on December 1, 2015 and premiered on October 13, 2016, on Amazon Prime Video. On February 15, 2017, Amazon announced the series had been renewed for a second season and confirmed that Clyde Phillips was joining the series as showrunner. The trailer for season 2 was released on May 1, 2018. Season 2, consisting of eight episodes, was released on June 15, 2018. On December 11, 2018, the series was renewed for a third season, which premiered on October 4, 2019. On November 14, 2019, Amazon announced the series was renewed for a fourth and final season, which premiered on September 24, 2021.
Breeda Wool is an American actress, writer and producer. She is best known for her roles as Lou Linklatter in the Audience crime drama series Mr. Mercedes (2017–2019) and Faith Duluth in the Lifetime/Hulu drama series UnREAL (2015–2018).
SEAL Team is an American military drama television series created by Benjamin Cavell. The series is produced by CBS Studios, and began airing on CBS on September 27, 2017, until October 31, 2021. Afterwards, the series moved to Paramount+ for the remainder of its run, and concluded on October 6, 2024.
The Last O.G. is an American comedy television series created by Jordan Peele and John Carcieri that premiered on March 31, 2018, on TBS. The series follows a convict released after serving fifteen years who returns to Brooklyn to find his old neighborhood has changed, and his ex-girlfriend is raising their children with another man. It stars Tracy Morgan, Tiffany Haddish, Allen Maldonado, Ryan Gaul, Taylor Christian Mosby, Dante Hoagland, and Cedric the Entertainer.
Condor is an American thriller television series based on the novel Six Days of the Condor by James Grady and its 1975 film adaptation Three Days of the Condor written by Lorenzo Semple Jr. and David Rayfiel. The series stars Max Irons. The series was created by Todd Katzberg, Jason Smilovic, and Ken Robinson and premiered on June 6, 2018 on Audience. In July 2018, the series had been renewed for a second season, although in January 2020, Audience announced it would be ending operations in its current format. The second season, already filmed at the time of the announcement, premiered on June 9, 2020, on C More and RTÉ2. In December 2020, its existing two seasons were picked up by Epix. They began premiering the second season on November 7, 2021.
9-1-1 is an American procedural drama television series created by Ryan Murphy, Brad Falchuk, and Tim Minear. The series premiered on Fox and currently airs on ABC. The series follows the lives of Los Angeles first responders: police officers, paramedics, firefighters, and dispatchers.
Loudermilk is an American comedy-drama television series created by Peter Farrelly and Bobby Mort. The series stars Ron Livingston, Will Sasso, Laura Mennell, Anja Savcic, Mat Fraser, Toby Levins, and Mark Brandon. The show premiered on October 17, 2017, on the AT&T Audience Network. In December 2018, it was announced that Audience had renewed the series for a third season. In April 2020, the series was left without a home after the network ceased operations.
Kidding is an American family tragicomedy television series created by Dave Holstein that premiered on September 9, 2018, on Showtime. The series stars Jim Carrey, Frank Langella, Judy Greer, Cole Allen, Juliet Morris, and Catherine Keener. Michel Gondry serves as executive producer and directed several episodes. In October 2018, Showtime renewed the series for a second season which premiered February 9, 2020. In July 2020, the series was canceled after two seasons.
Strange Angel is an American historical drama television series that premiered on June 14, 2018, on CBS All Access. The series is based on the biography of Thelemic magician and scientist Jack Parsons, and was created by Mark Heyman, who also executive produces and writes for the show. On October 29, 2018, it was announced that CBS All Access had renewed the series for a second season that premiered on June 13, 2019. In November 2019, the series was canceled after two seasons.
City on a Hill is an American crime drama television series created by Charlie MacLean, based on a story by Ben Affleck and MacLean. The series stars Kevin Bacon, Aldis Hodge, Amanda Clayton, Cathy Moriarty, Kevin Dunn, and Jill Hennessy. The series premiered on June 7, 2019 (online) and June 16, 2019 (Showtime). On August 2, 2019, Showtime renewed the series for a second season, which premiered on March 28, 2021. On June 2, 2021, the series was renewed for a third season which premiered on July 31, 2022. On October 27, 2022, Showtime cancelled the series after three seasons.
Dirty John is an American true crime anthology television series, based on the podcast of the same name by Christopher Goffard, that premiered on November 25, 2018, on Bravo. Outside the United States, it was made available through Netflix on February 14, 2019. The series was created by Alexandra Cunningham also an executive producer alongside Richard Suckle, Charles Roven, Mark Herzog, Christopher G. Cowen, and Chris Argentieri. The series was initially given an order for two seasons. In May 2019, it was announced that the series will be moving from Bravo to USA Network, ahead of the premiere of the second season. The second season is titled Dirty John: The Betty Broderick Story. A trailer for the season was released on March 25, 2020, featuring Christian Slater and Amanda Peet in the role of Betty Broderick. In April 2020, it was announced that the second season would premiere on June 2, 2020, with a sneak peek of the first episode of the second season airing on May 31, 2020.
The Undoing is an American mystery psychological thriller television miniseries based on the 2014 novel You Should Have Known by Jean Hanff Korelitz. It was written and produced by David E. Kelley and directed by Susanne Bier. The miniseries stars Nicole Kidman and Hugh Grant and premiered on HBO on October 25, 2020.
Into the Dark is an American horror anthology television series produced for Hulu, with each stand-alone episodic installment based around a different holiday. The first season premiered on October 5, 2018, and consists of twelve feature-length episodes of television films. Into the Dark was renewed for a second season, which premiered on October 4, 2019, and also consists of twelve episodes.
New Amsterdam is an American medical drama television series, based on the book Twelve Patients: Life and Death at Bellevue Hospital by Eric Manheimer. The series aired on NBC from September 25, 2018, to January 17, 2023, with 89 episodes over five seasons. The series was created by David Schulner and stars Ryan Eggold, Freema Agyeman, Janet Montgomery, Jocko Sims, Anupam Kher, Tyler Labine and Sandra Mae Frank.
The Purge is an American action horror anthology television series, based on the franchise of the same name and created by James DeMonaco. The first season premiered on USA Network on September 4, 2018, and stars Gabriel Chavarria, Hannah Emily Anderson, Jessica Garza, Lili Simmons, Amanda Warren, Colin Woodell, and Lee Tergesen, with Cindy Robinson reprising her role as the voice of the Purge Emergency Broadcast System from the films.
The Twilight Zone is an American anthology television series developed by Simon Kinberg, Jordan Peele, and Marco Ramirez, based on the original 1959 television series created by Rod Serling. Peele serves as narrator, in addition to executive producing through Monkeypaw Productions. The weekly series premiered on April 1, 2019, on CBS All Access, and was renewed for a second season halfway through its first set of 10 episodes. The second season was released in its entirety on June 25, 2020. In February 2021, the producers announced the series would not return for additional seasons.
P-Valley is an American drama television series created by Katori Hall. The series is an adaptation of Hall's play Pussy Valley, and follows primarily African-American women working at The Pynk strip club in the Mississippi Delta under the femme non-binary proprietor Uncle Clifford Sayles. P-Valley stars Brandee Evans, Nicco Annan, J. Alphonse Nicholson, and Elarica Johnson. It premiered on Starz on July 12, 2020, and was renewed for a second season two weeks after its premiere. The second season premiered on June 3, 2022. In October 2022, the series was renewed for a third season.