Season 12 of the hit crime-solving psychological drama series, Criminal Minds, ended with a spectacular car crash caused by the creepy bad guy and serial killer, Scratch. Via the use of spike-strips, he is solely responsible for the Bau’s SUVs spinning out and then he runs into them with an eighteen-wheeler. In the Criminal Minds Season 13 Premiere, the accident results in the death of the new guy, Agent Stephen Walker, and the abduction of Emily Prentiss. Rossi, Jj, and Tara sustain some injuries and are taken to the hospital but Luke is uninjured. And, here are the top five
Criminal Minds Season 13 Premiere: The Top Five Moments...
Criminal Minds Season 13 Premiere: The Top Five Moments...
- 10/1/2017
- by Gale Robinson
- TVovermind.com
Criminal Minds kicked off Season 13 with two major deaths, including one of the team's own.
The first heartbreak came early on when it was revealed that Agent Stephen Walker (Damon Gupton) didn't survive the SUV crash that ended last season in a jaw-dropping cliffhanger. Unfortunately, this was
...
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The first heartbreak came early on when it was revealed that Agent Stephen Walker (Damon Gupton) didn't survive the SUV crash that ended last season in a jaw-dropping cliffhanger. Unfortunately, this was
...
Read More >...
- 9/28/2017
- by Megan Vick
- TVGuide - Breaking News
In picking up the pieces of May’s calamitous, Scratch-orchestrated car crash, Criminal Minds‘ Season 13 premiere ultimately set in motion a chain of events that reached out and touched Aaron Hotchner, who has been tucked away in Witsec.
RelatedCriminal Minds: Jamie Kennedy to Reprise Killer Cannibal Role From 2007
Shortly after Scratch plowed an 18-wheeler into the Bau’s pair of SUVs, Luke was able to walk away from the scene of the assault unscathed, while Rossi (wobbly leg), Jj (glass shards in temple) and Tara (undisclosed injuries) were hospital-bound. Agent Stephen Walker was the lone fatality, while...
RelatedCriminal Minds: Jamie Kennedy to Reprise Killer Cannibal Role From 2007
Shortly after Scratch plowed an 18-wheeler into the Bau’s pair of SUVs, Luke was able to walk away from the scene of the assault unscathed, while Rossi (wobbly leg), Jj (glass shards in temple) and Tara (undisclosed injuries) were hospital-bound. Agent Stephen Walker was the lone fatality, while...
- 9/28/2017
- TVLine.com
Recently, CBS announced that Daniel Henney (who starred in the recently canceled Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders) will be joining Criminal Minds season 13 as a series regular. This announcement was made only a week after we learned that Damon Gupton's character Stephen Walker will not be back for season 13. So what's with all the rotating characters? Criminal Minds is still wildly successful, but isn't anyone else tired of this revolving door? I sure am.
- 6/22/2017
- by editor@buddytv.com
- buddytv.com
Beyond borders… continued employment awaits.
CBS has announced that Daniel Henney has been added to the cast of Criminal Minds for Season 13, bringing over the character he played on the two-season spinoff Beyond Borders.
RelatedCriminal Minds: Kirsten Vangsness and A.J. Cook Secure Raises for Season 13
Henney’s hire comes on the heels of Damon Gupton being released from the role of Criminal Minds‘ Agent Stephen Walker after less than a full season, followed by the re-signing of series vets A.J. Cook and Kirsten Vangsness.
RelatedCriminal Minds: Damon Gupton Out After One Season
Formerly with the International Response Team,...
CBS has announced that Daniel Henney has been added to the cast of Criminal Minds for Season 13, bringing over the character he played on the two-season spinoff Beyond Borders.
RelatedCriminal Minds: Kirsten Vangsness and A.J. Cook Secure Raises for Season 13
Henney’s hire comes on the heels of Damon Gupton being released from the role of Criminal Minds‘ Agent Stephen Walker after less than a full season, followed by the re-signing of series vets A.J. Cook and Kirsten Vangsness.
RelatedCriminal Minds: Damon Gupton Out After One Season
Formerly with the International Response Team,...
- 6/20/2017
- TVLine.com
Original Criminal Minds cast members Kirsten Vangsness and A.J. Cook have sealed new deals to stay on as Penelope Garcia and “Jj” Jareau.
RelatedCriminal Minds: Damon Gupton Out After One Season
After costars Joe Mantegna and Matthew Gray Gubler re-signed for the fall, Vangsness and Cook held out for salary parity with the latter, our sister site Deadline reports, and emerged from their negotiations “essentially on par” with Gubler.
The actresses’ deals come on the heels of the news that Damon Gupton was not asked back for Season 13, after less than a full season as Agent Stephen Walker.
RelatedCriminal Minds: Damon Gupton Out After One Season
After costars Joe Mantegna and Matthew Gray Gubler re-signed for the fall, Vangsness and Cook held out for salary parity with the latter, our sister site Deadline reports, and emerged from their negotiations “essentially on par” with Gubler.
The actresses’ deals come on the heels of the news that Damon Gupton was not asked back for Season 13, after less than a full season as Agent Stephen Walker.
- 6/14/2017
- TVLine.com
Criminal Minds brought in a couple new characters in season 12 following the Bau losing both Morgan (after Shemar Moore left) and Hotch (after Thomas Gibson was fired), but thanks to the finale cliffhanger, it was unclear if everyone would (or should) be back. Now we know at least one person who won't be coming back: Damon Gupton's Stephen Walker.
Though it's still unknown how the show will write him out, it's hard to imagine all six agents involved in the cliffhanger crash coming away from it unscathed (nor should they), but is Stephen the character who should be leaving? That's debatable, especially since he fit in so well once he joined the team.
Though it's still unknown how the show will write him out, it's hard to imagine all six agents involved in the cliffhanger crash coming away from it unscathed (nor should they), but is Stephen the character who should be leaving? That's debatable, especially since he fit in so well once he joined the team.
- 6/13/2017
- by editor@buddytv.com
- buddytv.com
Criminal Minds cast shake-up, Part 2?
Sources confirm for TVLine that due to creative changes at the long-running CBS crime drama, Damon Gupton will not be returning as Supervisory Special Agent Stephen Walker for Season 13. The actor’s departure, revealed via Twitter over the weekend, comes just 15 episodes after he was added to the cast in wake of Thomas Gibson’s controversial exit.
RelatedCBS Fall Premiere Dates: Big Bang, NCIS, S.W.A.T., Young Sheldon and More
In January, Criminal Minds boss Erica Messer told TVLine that adding Gupton amid so much existing cast churn — Gibson’s aforementioned exit came...
Sources confirm for TVLine that due to creative changes at the long-running CBS crime drama, Damon Gupton will not be returning as Supervisory Special Agent Stephen Walker for Season 13. The actor’s departure, revealed via Twitter over the weekend, comes just 15 episodes after he was added to the cast in wake of Thomas Gibson’s controversial exit.
RelatedCBS Fall Premiere Dates: Big Bang, NCIS, S.W.A.T., Young Sheldon and More
In January, Criminal Minds boss Erica Messer told TVLine that adding Gupton amid so much existing cast churn — Gibson’s aforementioned exit came...
- 6/12/2017
- TVLine.com
Season 12 was one of change for the Bau on Criminal Minds. Sure, the team has had members leave before, but not to this extent. Morgan left last season, Hotch left at the beginning of this season and not only did we get two new agents, but a new Unit Chief (though fortunately someone very familiar) as well.
Prentiss returned to the team and took over leading it. Luke Alvez was brought in from the Fugitive Task Force as the hunt for the escaped convicts continued. When Emily found room in the budget, she brought in someone she knew from the Behavioral Analysis Program, Stephen Walker. Sure, it all worked when it came to getting the job done, but the team dynamic wasn't the same. And while change can be a good thing, there can be too much of it. That was the case here.
Prentiss returned to the team and took over leading it. Luke Alvez was brought in from the Fugitive Task Force as the hunt for the escaped convicts continued. When Emily found room in the budget, she brought in someone she knew from the Behavioral Analysis Program, Stephen Walker. Sure, it all worked when it came to getting the job done, but the team dynamic wasn't the same. And while change can be a good thing, there can be too much of it. That was the case here.
- 5/16/2017
- by editor@buddytv.com
- buddytv.com
"Unforgettable" was a nice break from Spencer Reid's incarceration on Criminal Minds. The last several episodes have been split between the team solving a case and Spencer dealing with prison. I liked watching Spencer in prison for a while, but it started to get old after several weeks. "Unforgettable" not only gave us a little break from Spencer's prison life, but it gave us a glimpse into Stephen Walker's past as well.
- 4/27/2017
- by editor@buddytv.com
- buddytv.com
Well, there's nothing like sitting through 44 minutes of humdrum narrative to get to one minute of reveal.
But that was the situation on Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 20.
Let's go through that humdrum portion first, then hopefully pick up more narrative momentum than this hour did.
Somebody was radioactively poisoning federal workers at random.
Was it The Russians?
That would have made for a more interesting storyline.
But no.
Instead, it was a woman who wanted to get rid of her husband and collect a $5 million insurance payout.
It couldn't be a simple murder. To be Bau worthy, it had to be complicated.
The nurse, a caretaker, had to collect radioactive materials from a bunch of different hospitals, then sandwich her husband's murder among four or five others.
Still, they managed to figure out Sarah's plot and gun her down before the last commercial break.
They didn't even need Garcia to...
But that was the situation on Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 20.
Let's go through that humdrum portion first, then hopefully pick up more narrative momentum than this hour did.
Somebody was radioactively poisoning federal workers at random.
Was it The Russians?
That would have made for a more interesting storyline.
But no.
Instead, it was a woman who wanted to get rid of her husband and collect a $5 million insurance payout.
It couldn't be a simple murder. To be Bau worthy, it had to be complicated.
The nurse, a caretaker, had to collect radioactive materials from a bunch of different hospitals, then sandwich her husband's murder among four or five others.
Still, they managed to figure out Sarah's plot and gun her down before the last commercial break.
They didn't even need Garcia to...
- 4/27/2017
- by Dale McGarrigle
- TVfanatic
Sick-and-twisted Criminal Minds will continue to be analyzed and hunted, now that CBS has renewed the long-running procedural for a 13th season.
RelatedCriminal Minds: Shemar Moore Returns — Why and For How Long?
The crime drama has endured more than its share of upheaval during Season 12, all in the wake of bidding adieu to original cast member Shemar Moore last spring. CSI: Miami vet Adam Rodriguez was added to the ensemble during the off-season, while Paget Brewster was tapped for a short-term encore that blossomed into a full-time return after original cast member Thomas Gibson was cut from the...
RelatedCriminal Minds: Shemar Moore Returns — Why and For How Long?
The crime drama has endured more than its share of upheaval during Season 12, all in the wake of bidding adieu to original cast member Shemar Moore last spring. CSI: Miami vet Adam Rodriguez was added to the ensemble during the off-season, while Paget Brewster was tapped for a short-term encore that blossomed into a full-time return after original cast member Thomas Gibson was cut from the...
- 4/7/2017
- TVLine.com
Spencer Reid’s dire circumstance is having a dramatic effect on the Bau.
On Wednesday’s episode of Criminal Minds, titled “Alpha Male,” the team struggles to adapt to their new reality after Reid (Matthew Gray Gubler), who allegedly murdered a doctor in Mexico, opted not to take a plea deal, and only Et has the exclusive first look.
Related: Aisha Tyler Talks Powerful 'Criminal Minds' Episode and Bau's New Look
In the sneak peek, J.J. Jareau (A.J. Cook), Tara Lewis (Aisha Tyler), Luke Alvez (Adam Rodriguez) and Stephen Walker (Damon Gupton) try to make sense of Reid’s options after he is alsodenied bail. At the moment, things aren’t looking so great. Then Penelope Garcia (Kirsten Vangsness) proposes a thoughtful way to make sure their pal is taken care of behind bars.
“We’re going to send him letters every day. We’re going to put money in his commissary account. We are...
On Wednesday’s episode of Criminal Minds, titled “Alpha Male,” the team struggles to adapt to their new reality after Reid (Matthew Gray Gubler), who allegedly murdered a doctor in Mexico, opted not to take a plea deal, and only Et has the exclusive first look.
Related: Aisha Tyler Talks Powerful 'Criminal Minds' Episode and Bau's New Look
In the sneak peek, J.J. Jareau (A.J. Cook), Tara Lewis (Aisha Tyler), Luke Alvez (Adam Rodriguez) and Stephen Walker (Damon Gupton) try to make sense of Reid’s options after he is alsodenied bail. At the moment, things aren’t looking so great. Then Penelope Garcia (Kirsten Vangsness) proposes a thoughtful way to make sure their pal is taken care of behind bars.
“We’re going to send him letters every day. We’re going to put money in his commissary account. We are...
- 3/1/2017
- Entertainment Tonight
True Detective’s Cary Fukunaga is working on a project about a device that can leave pretty much anything—not just time—as a flat, rubble-strewn circle: the atom bomb. Deadline reports that Fukunaga, whose past credits include Sin Nombre and Beasts Of No Nation—has signed on to direct Shockwave, an adaptation of Stephen Walker’s non-fiction book about the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima.
Walker’s book looks at the bombing—which killed 300,000 people in the initial blast—from numerous perspectives, from the people who built the weapon, to the president who ordered its use, to the people whose lives it took. Hossein Amini—best known as the screenwriter for Nicolas Winding Refn’s Drive—will work to distill Walker’s far-flung atomic narrative into a script.
Walker’s book looks at the bombing—which killed 300,000 people in the initial blast—from numerous perspectives, from the people who built the weapon, to the president who ordered its use, to the people whose lives it took. Hossein Amini—best known as the screenwriter for Nicolas Winding Refn’s Drive—will work to distill Walker’s far-flung atomic narrative into a script.
- 2/17/2017
- by William Hughes
- avclub.com
Cary Fukunaga, best known for steering the first season of HBO’s True Detective, is in negotiations to direct Working Title and Universal’s adaptation of atomic bomb drama Shockwave: Countdown to Hiroshima.
Hossein Amini, who wrote Snow White and the Huntsman and 47 Ronin for Universal, will adapt the screenplay, The Hollywood Reporter has confirmed.
Shockwave, written by Stephen Walker and published in 2005, told of the three weeks leading up to the dropping of Little Boy, the world’s first atomic bomb that leveled Hiroshima. It looked at the time preceding the event through the eyes of scientists, pilots and victims.
...
Hossein Amini, who wrote Snow White and the Huntsman and 47 Ronin for Universal, will adapt the screenplay, The Hollywood Reporter has confirmed.
Shockwave, written by Stephen Walker and published in 2005, told of the three weeks leading up to the dropping of Little Boy, the world’s first atomic bomb that leveled Hiroshima. It looked at the time preceding the event through the eyes of scientists, pilots and victims.
...
- 2/17/2017
- by Borys Kit
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Universal Hatches Hiroshima A-Bomb Tale ‘Shockwave’; Cary Fukunaga To Direct, Hossein Amini To Write
Exclusive: Universal Pictures is negotiating with Cary Fukunaga to direct and for Hossein Amini to write a film based on the Stephen Walker non-fiction book Shockwave: Countdown to Hiroshima. The film will be produced by Working Title Films' Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner and Liza Chasin. The book told a story of events that led up to a Monday morning in August 1945 when a five-ton bomb—dubbed Little Boy by its creators—was dropped from an American plane onto the Japanese city…...
- 2/17/2017
- Deadline
Thinking back to June/July, Criminal Minds boss Erica Messer says the challenge facing her back then with regards to Season 12 indeed was mighty quaint, compared to the flurry of cast changes she would end up having to accommodate.
“That’s exactly right. We’re shooting the serialized arc [for the back half of the season] right now, and I was like, ‘Remember when this was the big thing we were doing this year?’ That was all we were sort of worried about.”
At that point in the summer, all Messer had on her plate was writing in Luke Alvez, the agent who would wind up filling...
“That’s exactly right. We’re shooting the serialized arc [for the back half of the season] right now, and I was like, ‘Remember when this was the big thing we were doing this year?’ That was all we were sort of worried about.”
At that point in the summer, all Messer had on her plate was writing in Luke Alvez, the agent who would wind up filling...
- 1/13/2017
- TVLine.com
What makes a family?
That's the theme of Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 10.
This isn't the first time this season that this topic has been tackled.
In fact, Rossi offered a whole toast about it on Criminal Minds Season 10 Episode 6. Then there was Lewis' messed-up family on Criminal Minds Season 10 Episode 7.
It's almost like the producers are trying to hammer home a message: "Yeah, Hotch and Morgan are gone. But these guys will grow on you if you give them a chance."
Let's come back to that, and focus instead on a family that didn't work: The drug-driven misfits in the case of the week.
The quintet that came together from bad circumstances and became a family unit would be admirable, if not, you know, for the fact that they're trashing homes and robbing and killing people. That's just frowned upon and is bound to attract the wrong kind of attention.
That's the theme of Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 10.
This isn't the first time this season that this topic has been tackled.
In fact, Rossi offered a whole toast about it on Criminal Minds Season 10 Episode 6. Then there was Lewis' messed-up family on Criminal Minds Season 10 Episode 7.
It's almost like the producers are trying to hammer home a message: "Yeah, Hotch and Morgan are gone. But these guys will grow on you if you give them a chance."
Let's come back to that, and focus instead on a family that didn't work: The drug-driven misfits in the case of the week.
The quintet that came together from bad circumstances and became a family unit would be admirable, if not, you know, for the fact that they're trashing homes and robbing and killing people. That's just frowned upon and is bound to attract the wrong kind of attention.
- 1/12/2017
- by Dale McGarrigle
- TVfanatic
Girls just want to have fun. And sometimes, a girl just wants to be part of a gang, rob some rich people and then bring that gang home to the parents so she can get her revenge, as is the case in this episode of Criminal Minds, "Seek and Destroy."
Elsewhere in the episode, Stephen Walker continues to settle in to the Bau and uses his free time to catch up on Mr. Scratch, who has been quiet since terrorizing Tara and her family. But smarter men have tried to take down the team and failed, as Prentiss tells the newest team member.
Elsewhere in the episode, Stephen Walker continues to settle in to the Bau and uses his free time to catch up on Mr. Scratch, who has been quiet since terrorizing Tara and her family. But smarter men have tried to take down the team and failed, as Prentiss tells the newest team member.
- 1/11/2017
- by editor@buddytv.com
- buddytv.com
It has been a time of change for Criminal Minds. Last season featured Morgan's departure, and this season saw Hotch go into witness protection, leaving the Bau without two of its members, agents who had been around since the beginning.
At the beginning of season 12, Luke Alvez joined the team from the Fugitive Task Force. Though Prentiss originally came back when Hotch was supposedly on a temporary assignment, she ended up sticking around -- and taking over as Unit Chief -- once it was revealed where he really was. And, when she managed to find a way to increase their budget so that they could hire a new agent, she reached out to someone she knew: Stephen Walker.
At the beginning of season 12, Luke Alvez joined the team from the Fugitive Task Force. Though Prentiss originally came back when Hotch was supposedly on a temporary assignment, she ended up sticking around -- and taking over as Unit Chief -- once it was revealed where he really was. And, when she managed to find a way to increase their budget so that they could hire a new agent, she reached out to someone she knew: Stephen Walker.
- 1/5/2017
- by editor@buddytv.com
- buddytv.com
Did the team manage to solve the case in Yakima?
That was a key question on Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 8 when the team went on the move to try and make sense of what happened to dozens of people whose remains were found along a creek bed.
Watch Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 8 Online
Stephen Walker, seasoned profiler from the Behavioral Analysis Program of the FBI accompanied them for the trip, but did they warm to him quickly?
Use the video above to watch Criminal Minds online to get caught up on the latest drama for the characters.
That was a key question on Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 8 when the team went on the move to try and make sense of what happened to dozens of people whose remains were found along a creek bed.
Watch Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 8 Online
Stephen Walker, seasoned profiler from the Behavioral Analysis Program of the FBI accompanied them for the trip, but did they warm to him quickly?
Use the video above to watch Criminal Minds online to get caught up on the latest drama for the characters.
- 12/8/2016
- by Paul Dailly
- TVfanatic
The changes, they keep a-coming at the Bau.
One is in and another is temporarily out in the end, but first, there's a bizarre serial killer (if that's not redundant) to find on Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 8.
I liked that the unsub was a man who had been psychologically warped by his religious zealot of a father, to the point that he's walking around his barn dressed like a scarecrow.
Talk about your radical Christianity! Look at all the victims that eventually resulted from one man's fanaticism.
And his neighbors are clueless. That nice young fella down the road, when he's not wrapping up dead prostitutes in burlap and barbed wire, never a good look.
It was effective how the desperate sex worker/young mom tapped into the unsub's daddy issues to eventually gain his sympathy and get herself set free.
Stabbing him in the back and running blindly through...
One is in and another is temporarily out in the end, but first, there's a bizarre serial killer (if that's not redundant) to find on Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 8.
I liked that the unsub was a man who had been psychologically warped by his religious zealot of a father, to the point that he's walking around his barn dressed like a scarecrow.
Talk about your radical Christianity! Look at all the victims that eventually resulted from one man's fanaticism.
And his neighbors are clueless. That nice young fella down the road, when he's not wrapping up dead prostitutes in burlap and barbed wire, never a good look.
It was effective how the desperate sex worker/young mom tapped into the unsub's daddy issues to eventually gain his sympathy and get herself set free.
Stabbing him in the back and running blindly through...
- 12/8/2016
- by Dale McGarrigle
- TVfanatic
Criminal Minds‘ Bau team got a bit of a surprise upon returning to HQ at the close of this Wednesday’s midseason finale.
No, no, Mr. Scratch wasn’t laying in wait on their home turf. Rather, the new hire whom some of them had speculated about during the episode was just checking out his new digs (and apparently looking for paper clips), as seen in the video clip above.
Thus marked the introduction of the latest change-up to the team, Behavioral Analysis Program recruit Stephen Walker, played by new series regular Damon Gupton (Bates Motel). His casting comes on the heels of,...
No, no, Mr. Scratch wasn’t laying in wait on their home turf. Rather, the new hire whom some of them had speculated about during the episode was just checking out his new digs (and apparently looking for paper clips), as seen in the video clip above.
Thus marked the introduction of the latest change-up to the team, Behavioral Analysis Program recruit Stephen Walker, played by new series regular Damon Gupton (Bates Motel). His casting comes on the heels of,...
- 12/8/2016
- TVLine.com
This week on Criminal Minds, the Bau team heads to Yakima, Washington after the remains of a dozen people are found along a creek bed.
Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 8 is titled "Scarecrow" and in this exclusive clip, the team discusses the similarities of the victims uncovered to other known cases and hone in on a particular body.
With another girl missing, it's time for the Bau to get to work. They need to save Cherry Jones.
This is also another pivotal hour for the team because Alvez might not have to suffer at the hands of Garcia for much longer.
Suffer how, you ask? As "Newbie"!
That's right. There's another new character joining the cast and this one comes in the form on Damon Gupton.
He'll play Stephen Walker, a seasoned profiler from the Behavioral Analysis Program of the FBI.
Will Walker be someone Prentiss has worked with before and...
Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 8 is titled "Scarecrow" and in this exclusive clip, the team discusses the similarities of the victims uncovered to other known cases and hone in on a particular body.
With another girl missing, it's time for the Bau to get to work. They need to save Cherry Jones.
This is also another pivotal hour for the team because Alvez might not have to suffer at the hands of Garcia for much longer.
Suffer how, you ask? As "Newbie"!
That's right. There's another new character joining the cast and this one comes in the form on Damon Gupton.
He'll play Stephen Walker, a seasoned profiler from the Behavioral Analysis Program of the FBI.
Will Walker be someone Prentiss has worked with before and...
- 12/6/2016
- by Carissa Pavlica
- TVfanatic
The Bau will undergo one final change this week on CBS’ Criminal Minds, sparking speculation between two current team members in this exclusive sneak peek.
RelatedCriminal Minds Reveals Hotch’s Fate — and 30 Percent of TVLine Readers Guessed Right
In Season 12’s fall finale, titled “Scarecrow” and airing Wednesday at 9/8c, the team heads to Yakima, Wash., after the remains of a dozen people are found along a creek bed. In the clip above, Alvez has his thoughts on the type of agent Prentiss will add to their mix, while J.J. is just happy to get another helping hand...
RelatedCriminal Minds Reveals Hotch’s Fate — and 30 Percent of TVLine Readers Guessed Right
In Season 12’s fall finale, titled “Scarecrow” and airing Wednesday at 9/8c, the team heads to Yakima, Wash., after the remains of a dozen people are found along a creek bed. In the clip above, Alvez has his thoughts on the type of agent Prentiss will add to their mix, while J.J. is just happy to get another helping hand...
- 12/6/2016
- TVLine.com
Remember how Prentiss increased the budget so they could hire a new agent? You'll get to meet that new team member, Damon Gupton's Stephen Walker, a seasoned profiler from the Behavioral Analysis Program of the FBI, in Criminal Minds' "Scarecrow."
As for the case, the team heads to Yakima, Washington, after the remains of a dozen people are found along a creek bed.
As for the case, the team heads to Yakima, Washington, after the remains of a dozen people are found along a creek bed.
- 12/6/2016
- by editor@buddytv.com
- buddytv.com
Finally, the spotlight shines on Dr. Tara Lewis, the criminally underused member of the Bau.
Not only do we get to learn more about Lewis on Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 7, but the season's on-and-off storyline about the escaped serial killers is on again, with Mr. Scratch front and center.
And his whole plan hinges on some long-simmering family drama.
The episode starts innocently enough, with Lewis, who's been missing for a few episodes already this season, asking for the day off.
But then Garcia whips out her inner profiler for Prentiss, explaining that Lewis's deep, dark secret is that she's estranged from her younger, equally brilliant brother Gabriel, who has thrown his life away on get-rich-quick schemes.
And Lewis admits that Gabriel, who seemingly wasted the chance for a full ride to Yale, has disappointed her.
When it comes to my brother, hostility and dismissal are my specialty.
Lewis...
Not only do we get to learn more about Lewis on Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 7, but the season's on-and-off storyline about the escaped serial killers is on again, with Mr. Scratch front and center.
And his whole plan hinges on some long-simmering family drama.
The episode starts innocently enough, with Lewis, who's been missing for a few episodes already this season, asking for the day off.
But then Garcia whips out her inner profiler for Prentiss, explaining that Lewis's deep, dark secret is that she's estranged from her younger, equally brilliant brother Gabriel, who has thrown his life away on get-rich-quick schemes.
And Lewis admits that Gabriel, who seemingly wasted the chance for a full ride to Yale, has disappointed her.
When it comes to my brother, hostility and dismissal are my specialty.
Lewis...
- 12/1/2016
- by Dale McGarrigle
- TVfanatic
Aisha Tyler is taking center stage on Criminal Minds.
On Wednesday’s episode, titled “Mirror Image,” Tyler’s character, Dr. Tara Lewis, is targeted by Mr. Scratch, one of the remaining serial killers at large that the Bau team has been chasing. He grabs her attention by kidnapping her brother and sending a man under his spell, Desmond Holt (Alimi Ballard), to play the part of Dr. Lewis’ missing sibling.
Related: 'Criminal Minds' Reveals What Happened to Thomas Gibson's Character
The episode, directed by series star Joe Mantegna, is a slight departure from the usual procedural elements that make the CBS crime drama tick. As Tyler explains, exploring Dr. Lewis’ backstory, family history and why she has a vested interest in serial killers was a mandate the writers always intended to delve into.
“It was the extension of a conversation with [executive producers] Erica Messer and Breen Frazier when they first brought me on the show...
On Wednesday’s episode, titled “Mirror Image,” Tyler’s character, Dr. Tara Lewis, is targeted by Mr. Scratch, one of the remaining serial killers at large that the Bau team has been chasing. He grabs her attention by kidnapping her brother and sending a man under his spell, Desmond Holt (Alimi Ballard), to play the part of Dr. Lewis’ missing sibling.
Related: 'Criminal Minds' Reveals What Happened to Thomas Gibson's Character
The episode, directed by series star Joe Mantegna, is a slight departure from the usual procedural elements that make the CBS crime drama tick. As Tyler explains, exploring Dr. Lewis’ backstory, family history and why she has a vested interest in serial killers was a mandate the writers always intended to delve into.
“It was the extension of a conversation with [executive producers] Erica Messer and Breen Frazier when they first brought me on the show...
- 11/30/2016
- Entertainment Tonight
It's been two episodes of Criminal Minds without Hotch, and what you're seeing on-screen right now is the new normal. The team now consists of Rossi, Prentiss, Reid, Jj, Tara, Garcia and Luke.
This isn't the first time the Bau has lost a member, and the team has managed to bounce back each time. (The show is, after all, in its 12th season.) But perhaps it stings a bit more this time because it came so soon after Morgan's departure near the end of last season. Bringing Prentiss back right now has helped because it's like she never left, but the team still feels like it's in a state of flux, in great part due to Morgan and Hotch's departures, Prentiss' return and the additions of Luke and still-to-come Damon Gupton's Special Agent Stephen Walker (debuting in episode 8) all happening practically at the same time.
This isn't the first time the Bau has lost a member, and the team has managed to bounce back each time. (The show is, after all, in its 12th season.) But perhaps it stings a bit more this time because it came so soon after Morgan's departure near the end of last season. Bringing Prentiss back right now has helped because it's like she never left, but the team still feels like it's in a state of flux, in great part due to Morgan and Hotch's departures, Prentiss' return and the additions of Luke and still-to-come Damon Gupton's Special Agent Stephen Walker (debuting in episode 8) all happening practically at the same time.
- 10/27/2016
- by editor@buddytv.com
- buddytv.com
This Wednesday on CBS’ Criminal Minds, Aaron Hotcher was sent away on assignment for temporary duty — in a move that will eventually tee up original cast member Thomas Gibson’s permanent exit.
RelatedCriminal Minds‘ Thomas Gibson Details Kick That Got Him Fired, Hopes ‘Good Work Is What People Will Remember’
In Season 12’s third episode, titled “Taboo,” Hotchner was revealed to be on special assignment at the Director’s request. Arriving to help the team during his absence was Bau member turned Interpol unit chief Emily Prentiss. Once again reunited with Jj, Rossi et al — as well as meeting...
RelatedCriminal Minds‘ Thomas Gibson Details Kick That Got Him Fired, Hopes ‘Good Work Is What People Will Remember’
In Season 12’s third episode, titled “Taboo,” Hotchner was revealed to be on special assignment at the Director’s request. Arriving to help the team during his absence was Bau member turned Interpol unit chief Emily Prentiss. Once again reunited with Jj, Rossi et al — as well as meeting...
- 10/13/2016
- TVLine.com
Damon Gupton has joined the cast of “Criminal Minds” as a series regular. His character will be introduced in this season’s eighth episode, on the CBS Television Network. Gupton will play Special Agent Stephen Walker from the Behavioral Analysis Program… Continue Reading →...
- 9/30/2016
- by shadowandact
- ShadowAndAct
The Criminal Minds family is still growing.
Today it was announced that Damon Gupton (Empire) has been added to the already sizeable cast.
He'll be a series regular.
Gupton has been added as fans are still bracing for what will become of the show after the loss of Thomas Gibson, although his character will not be taking over as the lead of Bau.
Gupton will be playing Special Agent Stephen Walker from the Behavioral Analysis Program, which is the counterintelligence division of the FBI. As a seasoned profiler Agent Walker will bring his spy-hunting skill set to the Bau.
“Our Bau family is growing,” said Erica Messer, Criminal Minds’ executive producer/showrunner. “We’re excited to have Damon join the show and work alongside our amazing cast and crew.”
View Slideshow: 15 Shows with Major Behind the Scenes Drama!
Thomas Gibson will be airing through Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 2 as Agent Hotchner,...
Today it was announced that Damon Gupton (Empire) has been added to the already sizeable cast.
He'll be a series regular.
Gupton has been added as fans are still bracing for what will become of the show after the loss of Thomas Gibson, although his character will not be taking over as the lead of Bau.
Gupton will be playing Special Agent Stephen Walker from the Behavioral Analysis Program, which is the counterintelligence division of the FBI. As a seasoned profiler Agent Walker will bring his spy-hunting skill set to the Bau.
“Our Bau family is growing,” said Erica Messer, Criminal Minds’ executive producer/showrunner. “We’re excited to have Damon join the show and work alongside our amazing cast and crew.”
View Slideshow: 15 Shows with Major Behind the Scenes Drama!
Thomas Gibson will be airing through Criminal Minds Season 12 Episode 2 as Agent Hotchner,...
- 9/30/2016
- by Carissa Pavlica
- TVfanatic
In the wake of Thomas Gibson's firing from Criminal Minds, the CBS drama has added a new member to its Bau team.
CBS revealed Friday that Damon Gupton has joined the cast and will serve as a series regular. Fans can expect to see his character's introduction in the eighth episode of the current season 12.
Gupton, 43, will play Special Agent Stephen Walker from the Behavioral Analysis Program who will bring his spy-hunting skill set to the Bau.
"Our Bau family is growing," executive producer/showrunner Erica Messer said in a statement. "We're excited to have Damon join the show...
CBS revealed Friday that Damon Gupton has joined the cast and will serve as a series regular. Fans can expect to see his character's introduction in the eighth episode of the current season 12.
Gupton, 43, will play Special Agent Stephen Walker from the Behavioral Analysis Program who will bring his spy-hunting skill set to the Bau.
"Our Bau family is growing," executive producer/showrunner Erica Messer said in a statement. "We're excited to have Damon join the show...
- 9/30/2016
- by Natalie Stone, @natalie_j_stone
- People.com - TV Watch
In the wake of Thomas Gibson's firing from Criminal Minds, the CBS drama has added a new member to its Bau team. CBS revealed Friday that Damon Gupton has joined the cast and will serve as a series regular. Fans can expect to see his character's introduction in the eighth episode of the current season 12. Gupton, 43, will play Special Agent Stephen Walker from the Behavioral Analysis Program who will bring his spy-hunting skill set to the Bau. "Our Bau family is growing," executive producer/showrunner Erica Messer said in a statement. "We're excited to have Damon join the show...
- 9/30/2016
- by Natalie Stone, @natalie_j_stone
- PEOPLE.com
“Criminal Minds” has added a new series regular for Season 12, CBS announced on Friday. Damon Gupton will join the cast of the CBS cop drama beginning with the eighth episode of the season playing Special Agent Stephen Walker from the Behavioral Analysis Program, which is the counterintelligence division of the FBI. He’s described as a seasoned profiler who will bring his spy-hunting skill set to the Bau. Gupton’s addition comes following the departure of original cast member Shemar Moore at the end of last season, and Thomas Gibson’s recent dismissal following an on-set altercation with one of the show’s writers.
- 9/30/2016
- by Reid Nakamura
- The Wrap
It looks like the Bau may have just found their Hotchkiss replacement. CBS announced that Damon Gupton has joined the cast of Criminal Minds as a series regular in the wake of original cast member Thomas Gibson's firing following a physical altercation on set. He'll make his first appearance in the eighth episode of season 12 as Special Agent Stephen Walker, a seasoned profiler from the Behavioral Analysis Program (aka the counterintelligence division of the FBI) who will bring his spy-hunting skill set to the Bau. "Our Bau family is growing," showrunner Erica Messer said in a statement. "We're excited to have Damon join the show and work alongside our amazing cast and...
- 9/30/2016
- E! Online
Criminal Minds‘ Season 12 cast evolution continues with the addition of Damon Gupton in a series regular role.
RelatedCriminal Minds: Jane Lynch to Return for Season 12 Arc as Reid’s Mother
TVLine has learned that Gupton will be introduced in this season’s eighth episode as Special Agent Stephen Walker, a seasoned profiler from the Behavioral Analysis Program (the counterintelligence division of the FBI) who will bring his spy-hunting skills to the Bau.
“Our Bau family is growing,” Criminal Minds showrunner Erica Messer said in a statement. “We’re excited to have Damon join the show and work alongside our amazing cast and crew.
RelatedCriminal Minds: Jane Lynch to Return for Season 12 Arc as Reid’s Mother
TVLine has learned that Gupton will be introduced in this season’s eighth episode as Special Agent Stephen Walker, a seasoned profiler from the Behavioral Analysis Program (the counterintelligence division of the FBI) who will bring his spy-hunting skills to the Bau.
“Our Bau family is growing,” Criminal Minds showrunner Erica Messer said in a statement. “We’re excited to have Damon join the show and work alongside our amazing cast and crew.
- 9/30/2016
- TVLine.com
Chicago – The legacy of the classic Chicago storefront theater has been celebrated at the Mary-Arrchie Theater Company for over 30 years, so for their final piece of stage craft they’re going out with a proper and gritty production bang, “American Buffalo,” by David Mamet.
Play Rating: 4.0/5.0
Set in Chicago in the bad old 1970s, the play has the feel of a storefront production, because it appropriately takes place inside a store. Playwright Mamet’s Chicago-accented take on losers looking for the big score is perfectly suited for Mary-Arrchie Founder Richard Cotovsky, and his stage cohorts Stephen Walker and Rudy Galvan. They take Mamet’s f**k-you-dialogue-rhythms and formulates a atmosphere of dread and sadness. The intimate setting lends an in-your-face experience, and is delivered with majesty by the three players.
Don (Richard Cotovsky, background) and Teach (Stephen Walker) in ‘American Buffalo’
Photo credit: MaryArrchie.com
Don (Richard Cotovsky) runs a...
Play Rating: 4.0/5.0
Set in Chicago in the bad old 1970s, the play has the feel of a storefront production, because it appropriately takes place inside a store. Playwright Mamet’s Chicago-accented take on losers looking for the big score is perfectly suited for Mary-Arrchie Founder Richard Cotovsky, and his stage cohorts Stephen Walker and Rudy Galvan. They take Mamet’s f**k-you-dialogue-rhythms and formulates a atmosphere of dread and sadness. The intimate setting lends an in-your-face experience, and is delivered with majesty by the three players.
Don (Richard Cotovsky, background) and Teach (Stephen Walker) in ‘American Buffalo’
Photo credit: MaryArrchie.com
Don (Richard Cotovsky) runs a...
- 2/11/2016
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
The number of films dealing with age is rising as older people take up more of the cinema-going audience
The world's population is ageing. Today, there are about 600 million older people around the world, three times more than 50 years ago – and by 2050 there should be three times more again. The effect of that is already apparent in almost every sector, including culture, which of course includes the cinema. In the early 20th century, the brand-new film industry symbolised glamour and eternal youth before being relegated to a largely teenage audience, and then being caught up by age in the following century: the age of its audience, its creators, its characters and its subject matter.
The cinema has always found ways of dealing with the subject. For many years it simply skirted the issue in two ways. One was by using farce, with truculent old rogues, as in Frank Capra's...
The world's population is ageing. Today, there are about 600 million older people around the world, three times more than 50 years ago – and by 2050 there should be three times more again. The effect of that is already apparent in almost every sector, including culture, which of course includes the cinema. In the early 20th century, the brand-new film industry symbolised glamour and eternal youth before being relegated to a largely teenage audience, and then being caught up by age in the following century: the age of its audience, its creators, its characters and its subject matter.
The cinema has always found ways of dealing with the subject. For many years it simply skirted the issue in two ways. One was by using farce, with truculent old rogues, as in Frank Capra's...
- 7/30/2013
- by Jacques Mandelbaum
- The Guardian - Film News
Grit-meister Paul Andrew Williams switches to the key of C major for a commercial crowdpleaser about a seniors' choir
Paul Andrew Williams is a director associated with edgy and challenging movies, one of which, the gritty London to Brighton, was one of the best British films of the last decade. But now, just to show versatility, he has created a likable, mainstream and commercial heartwarmer about old people in a choir. It's a movie in the key of C major – perhaps inspired by Stephen Walker's 2007 documentary about the Young@Heart chorus of eightysomethings in the Us who cover rock standards. This is a sweet-natured, charming, if modestly conceived picture, which is much better than Dustin Hoffman's recent oldie-song drama Quartet – more relaxed, more persuasive, and it actually delivers the all-important musical climax that Hoffman somehow managed to omit. Terence Stamp plays Arthur, the grumpy old husband of Marion,...
Paul Andrew Williams is a director associated with edgy and challenging movies, one of which, the gritty London to Brighton, was one of the best British films of the last decade. But now, just to show versatility, he has created a likable, mainstream and commercial heartwarmer about old people in a choir. It's a movie in the key of C major – perhaps inspired by Stephen Walker's 2007 documentary about the Young@Heart chorus of eightysomethings in the Us who cover rock standards. This is a sweet-natured, charming, if modestly conceived picture, which is much better than Dustin Hoffman's recent oldie-song drama Quartet – more relaxed, more persuasive, and it actually delivers the all-important musical climax that Hoffman somehow managed to omit. Terence Stamp plays Arthur, the grumpy old husband of Marion,...
- 2/22/2013
- by Peter Bradshaw
- The Guardian - Film News
Blending sass and pathos, the Belgian comedy "The Over the Hill Band" ("Meisjes") has a neatly conceived premise. Like Stephen Walker's delicate nonfiction portrait "Young@Heart," it's a genuine heart-tugger about senior citizens rediscovering their youth by singing pop music; like Craig Brewer's crowdpleasing "Hustle & Flow," it sympathizes with a struggling rap artist without glossing over his flaws. Unfortunately, "The Over the Hill Band" isn't nearly compelling as either of ...
- 2/24/2011
- Indiewire
DJ Perry is a prolific actor who has starred in over fourty movies. He is also the producer of several other films including the upcoming Renovation, Timberwolf and State of Hate. Here, DJ talks not only of the horror film Renovation, but of Karma, Sherwood Horror, Blood Ties and others in this exclusive interview with 28Dla.com.
(Michael Allen) Hi Perry, thanks for being here and taking part in this interview. The first time I saw you in film was in the picture Blood Ties directed by Nathaniel Nose. In the film you were the central hero in the film. What were some of the highlights in working with Nathaniel on the set of this fairly bloody horror film?
(DJ Perry) Really? Blood Ties was your first? Maybe you will get a chance to explore some other titles. I am sailing here and there in the great sea of films.
(Michael Allen) Hi Perry, thanks for being here and taking part in this interview. The first time I saw you in film was in the picture Blood Ties directed by Nathaniel Nose. In the film you were the central hero in the film. What were some of the highlights in working with Nathaniel on the set of this fairly bloody horror film?
(DJ Perry) Really? Blood Ties was your first? Maybe you will get a chance to explore some other titles. I am sailing here and there in the great sea of films.
- 12/22/2009
- by Michael Ross Allen
- 28 Days Later Analysis
When critics found themselves unexpectedly moved by the documentary Young@Heart last year, it was mostly because the film by Stephen Walker didn't go the sentimental route, telling the story about an elderly chorus singing pop songs in a straightforward and honest manner, letting the audience get emotional when they chose to. It wasn't manipulative Hollywood stuff, basically. But now it has the chance to be. According to THR, there's a narrative remake of Young@Heart in the works, to be written by Will Reiser for Working Title. Reiser also wrote the screenplay I'm With Cancer based on his own experiences, and the movie is currently being produced by Seth Rogen and starring James McAvoy. I'm sure Reiser will stay true to the original documentary's tone and will avoid the kind of cringeworthy "rapping granny" moments you'd expect in a worst-case scenario. But I still just can't come up with...
- 11/16/2009
- cinemablend.com
Working Title has brought Will Reiser on board to rewrite Young@Heart, their narrative-based remake of the acclaimed documentary of the same name.Directed by Stephen Walker, the 2007 documentary told the story of an Oap choir who, inspired by their younger choir leader, made a name for themselves by reinterpreting classic rock songs, by bands like Coldplay and The Clash.It’s an idea that’s got enormous crowd-pleasing potential, something that Working Title recognised when they snapped up the rights in 2007.Reiser, who’s hot at the moment because of his comedy script, I’m With Cancer, which has Seth Rogen attached and which is based on his own life, is the second writer on the project. Bob Nelson took a stab at an earlier draft.
- 11/16/2009
- EmpireOnline
New York -- "I'm With Cancer" scribe Will Reiser is in talks to write "Young@Heart," Working Title's narrative remake of Fox Searchlight's singing-senior documentary.
Working Title acquired remake rights to "Heart" in 2007, with the project now potentially getting a new burst of development. Bob Nelson wrote a previous draft of the screenplay.
Stephen Walker's original "Heart" tells the story of a group of Northampton, Mass., seniors who, under the tutelage of a younger choir director, sing versions of songs from artists such as The Clash, Coldplay and James Brown.
In addition to reveling in the comedy of seniors performing blues and punk numbers, it also focuses on the lives of the performers, several of whom passed away during the course of production.
The pic earned $4 million domestically in a difficult climate for documentaries.
The UTA- and Thruline-repped Reiser has writing experience with true-life tales: "Cancer," about a twentysomething...
Working Title acquired remake rights to "Heart" in 2007, with the project now potentially getting a new burst of development. Bob Nelson wrote a previous draft of the screenplay.
Stephen Walker's original "Heart" tells the story of a group of Northampton, Mass., seniors who, under the tutelage of a younger choir director, sing versions of songs from artists such as The Clash, Coldplay and James Brown.
In addition to reveling in the comedy of seniors performing blues and punk numbers, it also focuses on the lives of the performers, several of whom passed away during the course of production.
The pic earned $4 million domestically in a difficult climate for documentaries.
The UTA- and Thruline-repped Reiser has writing experience with true-life tales: "Cancer," about a twentysomething...
- 11/15/2009
- by By Steven Zeitchik
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
For the first 45 minutes of this film I was wondering what the point of it was. I could easily appreciate the gimmick of seeing an aging choir from a rural American backwater touring the world with renditions of Jimi Hendrix, Radiohead, Sonic Youth, and the Clash (to name but a few); but I couldn’t understand why this justified a feature-length documentary. The film seems, at first, more like an extended ‘making of’ for the forthcoming tour; and the interviews with individual choir members only serve to highlight the absurdity and gimmickry of the situation (a 92- year old woman with a Kenneth Williams sense of “oh I say!” humour, and a 79-year old man who drives a sports car and refers to his girlfriend as his “squeeze”). But then one event catapults the film into the realm of emotional depth and social gravity that justifies the acclaim it has received.
- 9/23/2009
- by Nicholas Deigman
- t5m.com
Talent Show Contestant Lima Sahar In Director Havana Marking'S Afghan Star. Courtesy Zeitgeist Films. Following in the footsteps of such filmmakers as James Marsh (Man on Wire), Stephen Walker (Young@Heart) and Parvez Sharma (A Jihad For Love), Havana Marking is the latest director of a British TV-funded documentary to find her film in the theatrical spotlight Stateside. The intrepid director went to school in Dorset, England, before studying Anthropology at the University of London's School of Oriental and African Studies. Subsequently, she began working in documentary television, progressing from researcher through to producer, on shows as disparate as Himalaya with Michael Palin, the Gordon Ramsay studio cooking show The F Word, and...
- 7/8/2009
- by Nick Dawson
- Filmmaker Magazine-Director Interviews
By Neil Pedley
Prom queens and street kings hold court this week at the multiplexes while the college professors of "Smart People" and "The Visitor" preside at the art houses.
"Body of War"
Talk show legend Phil Donahue hands over the mic to Iraqi war veteran Tomas Young in this hard-hitting documentary that contrasts Young's struggle to re-enter civilian life as a paraplegic and anti-war activist with archival footage of an overeager U.S. Congress and what the filmmakers view as their hasty decision to greenlight the invasion. Although the film, co-directed by Donahue and Ellen Spiro, was named best documentary of 2007 by the National Board of Review, "Body of War" has earned equal attention for its soundtrack led by two tracks from Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder, with all proceeds going to the non-profit organization Iraq Veterans Against The War. (Check out our interview with Spiro and Donahue.)
Opens in New York.
Prom queens and street kings hold court this week at the multiplexes while the college professors of "Smart People" and "The Visitor" preside at the art houses.
"Body of War"
Talk show legend Phil Donahue hands over the mic to Iraqi war veteran Tomas Young in this hard-hitting documentary that contrasts Young's struggle to re-enter civilian life as a paraplegic and anti-war activist with archival footage of an overeager U.S. Congress and what the filmmakers view as their hasty decision to greenlight the invasion. Although the film, co-directed by Donahue and Ellen Spiro, was named best documentary of 2007 by the National Board of Review, "Body of War" has earned equal attention for its soundtrack led by two tracks from Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder, with all proceeds going to the non-profit organization Iraq Veterans Against The War. (Check out our interview with Spiro and Donahue.)
Opens in New York.
- 4/7/2008
- by Neil Pedley
- ifc.com
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