The Patient: Can Therapy Contain a Serial Killer? [R E V I E W]


There are series, or rather miniseries, that can be analyzed from relatively simple and convenient angles. In other words, where offering a brief summary of the plot or mentioning how audiences have received it is more than enough. However, after watching The Patient on FX, I honestly have the feeling that if this production had been released by HBO, Netflix, or even AMC, it would be everywhere, widely discussed and likely sweeping awards across the board.
The performance delivered by Steve Carell in The Patient is truly remarkable. He plays a psychotherapist who comes from a Jewish background but keeps any expression of faith strictly separate from his professional practice, limiting himself to what is purely scientific. One day, he is forced to confront the most challenging decision of his life. His wife has recently passed away from cancer. His relationship with his eldest son, who has become an Orthodox rabbi, is strained and distant. And on top of that, he finds himself fighting for his life day after day. Why would a therapist be fighting simply to stay alive?




Without warning, a new patient arrives at his office. He appears anxious, visibly desperate for help, burdened by intense and unmistakable inner conflicts. This is where the miniseries truly begins. Imagine for a moment being a mental health professional and suddenly discovering that the person sitting across from you is a serial killer whose values and perception of reality are profoundly distorted. Of course, you do not realize this at first. But the most significant and terrifying struggle of your life has already begun.
Psychopaths have been heavily exploited within the film industry. Their violent behavior and patterns have become almost a cinematic staple. Yet personally, I had not encountered a script that devotes ten episodes to exploring how the mind of a socially integrated psychopath can spiral toward absolute moral collapse. He kidnaps. He murders. He tortures. And yet he claims he wants, with all his heart, to stop. Knowing this, does the therapist choose to continue treating him? Evidently, not out of free will.
Kidnappings, witnessing a murder firsthand, navigating the twisted reward systems and psychological traps of the co protagonist, who is also a killer, are not merely plot devices. They are essential to the development of the multiple twists that unfold across just ten episodes. The series can move you to tears, provoke anger, unsettle you through its exceptional sound design and cinematography, and immerse you in a way that feels deliberate and precise. It may sound strange, but watching this series feels almost voyeuristic, as though you are intruding on something you were never meant to see. The Patient is dark, but it will not leave you indifferent. Highly recommended.
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