Network: TNT.
Episodes: 18 (hour).
Seasons: Two.
TV show dates: January 22, 2018 — August 9, 2020
Series status: Cancelled
Performers include: Daniel Brühl, Luke Evans, Brian Geraghty, Robert Ray Wisdom, Douglas Smith, Matthew Shear, Q’orianka Kilcher, Matt Lintz, Dakota Fanning, Rosy McEwen, and Melanie Field.
TV show description:
Based on the Caleb Carr novel, The Alienist TV show is a period mystery drama, set in New City during the Gilded Age. The series centers on Laszlo Kreizler (Brühl), an alienist, i.e. a criminal psychologist.
In 1896, a ritualistic serial killer is targeting boys. When a young, male prostitute is found slain on the unfinished Williamsburg Bridge, Police Commissioner Theodore Roosevelt (Geraghty) hires his old Harvard chums Kreizler and John Moore (Evans), as part of his secret investigation into the murders.
As an alienist, Dr. Laszlo Kreizler studies mentally ill people who commit deviant acts and feel “alienated” not only from others but from their very selves. His Kreizler Institute provides respite for children determined to be “damaged.”
Thanks to his unconventional views, and the fact that his profession is held in some disdain, Kreizler is not always well received. Dogged in his work, to the point of obsession, he keenly wants to get to the root of the problems of the human mind. He is always in search of an answer to the question: what makes someone a serial killer?
Not nearly as industrious as he is good-looking, John Moore still mourns the death of his brother and remains depressed about a broken engagement. He works as an illustrator for the New York Times‘ society pages but otherwise spends his time numbing his pain with hookers and booze.
Kreizler elicits John’s help on the case, in the hopes that it will distract his friend from his self-destructive pastimes. Fortunately, John’s winning way with people helps buff out some of Laszlo’s rougher edges.
As the first woman hired by the NYPD, Sara Howard (Fanning) serves as Commissioner Roosevelt’s secretary but has set her sights on becoming the force’s first female detective. An only child who was the apple of her father’s eye, Sara knows she is as capable as the men around her. She serves as a liaison between the commissioner and Kreizler’s team and is fascinated by their big case.
Although he’s nearly as ambitious as he is intelligent, Teddy Roosevelt is a man of principle and is committed to reforming the corrupt police department. Since he lost his first wife and his mother on the very same day, Roosevelt is no stranger to tragedy and makes a point to be grateful for the good things, including his children and his second wife. Furious that the immigrant children in his city are being killed, he is committed to finding and stopping their murderer.
Fraternal twin brothers, detectives Sergeant Marcus (Smith) and Sergeant Lucius Isaacson are the force’s outcasts, in part because they’re of the Jewish faith, and in part because they favor a scientific approach to police work. They too are drafted onto the investigative team.
As his longest-serving employee, Cyrus Montrose works as Kreizler’s carriage driver. Thanks to his imposing size, he’s also something of a bodyguard. A former bordello pianist, this African-American man shares his passion for music with his boss, who once saved him from prison or life in a psychiatric institution.
Kreizler saved Stevie Taggart (Lintz) from a life on the streets. The boy now works as the doctor’s driver and houseboy and understands this is his second chance at a better life. Like Cyrus, Stevie becomes a part of the investigation.
Kreizler tries to keep his housekeeper, Mary Palmer (Kilcher), far from the case. As a former abuse victim whom he rescued from an asylum, Laszlo fears she is too vulnerable. He also has feelings for her.
At the commissioner’s request, this team works outside of the law, in order to avoid having their case tainted or thwarted by the corrupt NYPD, in hopes of stopping a killer. Will they succeed? Stay tuned.
Series Finale:
Episode #18 — Better Angels
While Sara Moore and Kreizler struggle with decisions about their future paths, New York is in the grips of an all-out manhunt for the killer; the team must overcome the wrath of the police and an underworld gang to save innocent lives.
First aired: August 9, 2020.
What do you think? Do you like The Alienist TV series? Should this TV show have been cancelled or renewed for a third season on TNT?
Renew it. Finally an intelligent show worth waiting for each week. Love it!!
Renew it!!! Finally an intelligent show worth waiting for each week. Love it.
Please renew
Very fascinating
Love it
Please renew this show! It is a brilliant drama and needs a second season!
Please Don’t Cancel….Criminal Minds 1800’s style. Love it.
Please keep this show going. Absolutely riveting! Loved the cast.
A wonderful show on many levels. I so want the show to be renewed. Incredible acting and recreation of the time period is accurate.
I hope it’s renewed. It’s a great show with an amazing cast, compelling characters.
I loved it and hope it comes back for another season.
I love the EVERYTHING about this program and find More to love in a second viewing. The story line, the language of the time, not to mention the wardrobes and furnishings. It must take a lot of money to put on such an undertaking each week, but I prey it continues…and yes, with a different story line, of course.
This show is spellbinding and addictive. Traveling back in History to observe how crimes were solved before fingerprints and forensics. Learning about the tier system at the turn of the century, government corruption and the personal tragedies suffered by the characters and how it shaped their lives. Amazing attention to historical detail, superb cast wouldn’t change anything or anyone. Please renew this show and keep millions of viewers happy. great job TNT !!
We want a lot more great show formed a watch group
My wife and I very much enjoyed this show. Actors were great and sets were well done. Hoping for season 2.
Love the show and the cast! Would love to see it continue!
Enjoyed the actors, their interrelationships, the historical time for the setting, costumes and “new” perspective on investigative work made a great show.