Maybe you’re familiar with Oliver Wolf Sacks. Before he died in 2015, he was a neurologist who wrote about the strange and fascinating nuances of the brain for The New Yorker magazine, as well as in nonfiction books including “Awakenings” and “The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat.”
Or maybe you’re just in the mood for a medical drama a lot like “House” but … not “House.”
Toss those two ideas together you have the premise for NBC’s “Brilliant Minds,” which is far better than anticipated despite a title that is boringly generic but also uncomfortably similar to “A Beautiful Mind.”
Well, not all titles can be bangers. But the “Brilliant Minds,” which airs at 9 p.m. Mondays on NBC, itself comes awfully close.
The first episode drops you into the world of a Bronx hospital, where Dr. Oliver Wolf (Zachary Quinto) and his interns solve the neurological mysteries ailing their patients. There’s no sludgy exposition needed — you instantly understand the show’s premise.
Except — whoops — as I watched subsequent screeners, I realized I had somehow started with Episode 3. What an interesting and unintentional experiment, one that left me thinking: How do I tell NBC they should have ditched their pilot (which overexplains everything) and started with Episode 3 instead?
The pilot isn’t bad, but it isn’t persuasive either. I recommend picking up “Brilliant Minds” a couple of episodes in, once it finds its footing. You won’t be lost because it follows the “House” template, with a slightly less cranky man at its center.
But the similarities are too numerous to overlook. Wolf is an iconoclast with blazing self-confidence and disrespect for rules or authority. He’s unorthodox, unapologetic and often exasperating to everyone, which includes his best friend (the Wilson equivalent here is a psychiatrist played by Tamberla Perry); his boss (the scolding Cuddy figure is not only Wolf’s supervisor but his mother as well, played by Donna Murphy); and brood of young duckling doctors trailing after him.