"Law & Order" Guardian (TV Episode 1995) Poster

(TV Series)

(1995)

User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Derivative of at Least One Other L&O Episode; A Bit Bland
Better_TV14 May 2018
This one felt, to me, like a rich folks' version of the season 3 episode "Mother Love." That episode also dealt with a wayward, drug-addicted female child whose repeat offenses tested the patience of the those around her - family included. But while the family in that story was working or middle class, these folks are private school-educated and born with spoons in their mouths.

"Used to be South Bronx, Alphabet City. Now these junkies have trust funds," Detective Logan muses about 15 minutes in.

"Hey, 10 years ago they were tooting coke through $100 bills. Maybe they've heard needles are chic this year," Detective Briscoe replies.

The episode is ultimately a bit bland, though there are some decent performances. Dallas Roberts is here in a very early role as the victim's brother; he would later go on to star in the brilliant but short-lived "Rubicon" and co-star in a few seasons of "The Walking Dead." And Gerry Bamman is good as a competent, refreshingly non-slimy defense attorney.

I do have to ding this one for some wooden acting on the part of José Serrano as the judge, however; he's apparently a real-life Congressman from New York, and he sounds like he is reading from a script.

This one isn't bad, just forgettable.
6 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
No cleaning up this family mess
bkoganbing27 January 2015
The finding of a dead junkie behind a dumpster usually isn't considered murder and if this were some ordinary uptown junkie no one would give this a second look. But it turns out that the woman found was from a rich family, a trust fund baby from the family of a man who ran for US Senate once. The widowed mother Joan McIntosh has disowned her daughter and the world of low lives she now hangs out with.

The charge of her daughter and son Dallas Roberts rests with the Jon Cypher who is the executor of her husband's estate. In a crime of neglect or what the Catholics call the sin of omission she dies of an overdose and Cypher is charged.

He's guilty, but I can kind of understand the man. I knew many people with drugs habits and a lot of them died by a sin of omission as they resolutely refused to get help. Sounds like this victim was one of them and in fact her mother disowned her. Something in Cypher snapped and he just wasn't going to clean up the family messes any more. People that I knew also resolutely refused to grow up and that's part of the problem as well.

Still Cypher winds up paying worse than he thought.
7 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Lethal protection
TheLittleSongbird3 December 2020
A large part of me had a very strong feeling that "Guardian" would be at least decent, and was really intrigued in seeing what the episode would do with such a harrowing and relevant topic that is hardly out of date now. It was not original territory for 'Law and Order', Season 3's "Mother Love" did it too and did it better, but it is a subject that is always worth addressing. Another reason for anybody expecting a lot is if they are long-term admirers of the franchise's guts in exploring hard-hitting themes and how it did it.

Part of me though was somewhat disappointed in "Guardian". In no way is it a bad episode, the opposite and it handles the subject quite well. It did strike me though as somewhat bland, especially when following on from an episode as great as "House Counsel" was and because there was more potential to do more with the theme if the plotting had more distinction. As said, as has been said above and in a previous review "Mother Love" handles this subject better.

"Guardian" does have a lot of good things. The photography and such as usual are fully professional, the slickness still remaining. The music is used sparingly and is haunting and non-overwrought when it is used, and it's mainly used when a crucial revelation or plot development is revealed. The direction has some nice tension while keeping things steady, without going too far the other way. The script is thought-provoking and doesn't ramble.

Enough of the story does intrigue and nothing comes over as ridiculous or confused. The moral dilemmas of the subject are handled very tactfully. Kammen is a very interesting character. The acting from all is very good, with the regulars being without complaint, Jon Cypher giving what could have been a standard character some complexity and Gerry Bamman plays an attorney that refreshingly doesn't make one irritated.

However, "Guardian" did feel rather derivative and there is not much that surprises, the guilty party is too obvious too early for instance. As a result, and because it could have afforded to be more pull no punches, it feels on the bland side at times.

Do agree that Jose Serrano looks ill at ease and goes through the motions. Also that Kammen's indignant attitude at one critical point comes too out of nowhere.

In conclusion, not bad at all but could have been more. 7/10
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Arrogance.
rmax30482324 October 2011
Warning: Spoilers
There's nothing out of the ordinary about this episode. No Grand Social Issue is brought up, and the story doesn't echo a notorious contemporary crime. But it's a good solid entry in the series.

A wealthy young woman is found dead of a heroin overdose behind a playground dumpster. Brisco and Logan find a tangled tale of circumstances involving a mother practicing "tough love" on an addicted daughter, a brother complicit in the death, and a real estate broker with power of attorney who has been dipping into the daughter's trust fund to the tune of $350 thousand dollars.

The critical act took place in an apartment the trust fund manager, Jon Cypher in a neat performance, had been letting the victim live in and in which she died before he transported her dying body to the dumping place.

The victim had discovered Cypher's embezzlement or whatever it is and was blackmailing him to support her habit. When he found her dying, he claims to have been transporting her to a hospital, though he couldn't remember which one. It appears that he allowed her to expire in order to get rid of a blackmailer.

If the story has a weakness, it's that Cypher becomes indignant when faced with the evidence of his crime and begins shouting that he was like a father to the two kids, while their mother treated him as a servant, ordering him around and telling him to fetch things. The resentment and arrogance in this rant is something that we haven't seen in his character before, and only seems to be there to provide McCoy with the final tag line. "Maybe twenty years in Attica will cure him of his sickness -- arrogance." The characters are otherwise all believable in appearance and demeanor. The victim's brother, a second-year law student at Yale, is especially convincing. He looks a little like John Ritter with long hair and his resigned deflation on the witness stand is perfectly done.

I never realized, by the way, that drug addiction was considered an illness in New York City, worth -- in this case at any rate -- $750 a month. It's not much, especially in New York, but it occurred to me that she gets more as a drug addict than I get from Social Security. Quick, Watson, the needle.
6 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed