"Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" Trials (TV Episode 2008) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
If the rapist falls in love with his victim
yazguloner19 June 2021
An interesting question was asked, "If the rapist falls in love with his victim," and the classic answers came.

In fact, a strong answer could be made with this question.

Did love rehabilitate the rapist? The answer is within the classic story.

It was good to watch Luke Perry.

This episode is the result of Olivia asking for help, being attacked at the end of season 9, and her efforts to adopt. It is also the first opening of their situation that will extend to the 15th and 16th Seasons.
12 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Season 10 off to a poor start
erichanson-3993816 February 2020
Getting sick of Stable's spoiled brat daughter. Just leave her out. Rest of the story is confusing. An angry abused kid, and somehow Olivia just happened to find the his birth mothr. Just a farstretcch story.
11 out of 24 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Trials and tribulations
TheLittleSongbird27 October 2021
Was really hoping that the Season 10 opener "Trials" would be better than the disappointing previous season's finale "Cold". It certainly struck me so when watching both episodes for the first time six or seven years ago. 'Law and Order: Special Victims Unit' has some cracking season openers, Season 1's "Payback", Season 4's "Chameleon" and Season 6's "Birthright". Having said that, Season 10 was for me was a mixed to unimpressive season which was disappointing.

It took some time to find its feet, with the first great episode being "Persona", and it did have some wonderful episodes in its middle period such as "Hothouse", "Ballerina" and "Liberties" ("Transitions" has fantastic things too) before ending badly with "Zebra". "Trials" was, or at least it struck me as on subsequent rewatches, a less than promising start for Season 10. It is not a terrible episode by all means and it is better than "Cold". By 'Special Victims Unit' standards, which was at its best brilliant in Seasons 1-6 and had many flashes of brilliance since, this was disappointing regrettably.

"Trials" did have good things. It does look good, with the usual slickness and subtle grit. Really liked too that the photography was simple and close up but doing so without being claustrophobic. The music has presence when used, and luckily it isn't constant, and when it is used it doesn't feel over-scored. Some of the direction is quite good, if more early on than later.

All the regular and guest performances are excellent. Mariska Hargitay particularly is good of the regulars and Jae Head frightens and at times moves. The episode starts quite promisingly, Olivia's personal life subplot was touching and there is some taut scripting.

Not much else works sadly. It is agreed too convoluted and far-fetched, especially everything after the perpetrator is figured out and how to go about proving it. The conclusion is one of the wildest (to an excessive degree) of the early-mid seasons. The truth is shocking due to the nature of the crimes, but it was considered by me a possibility some time before. What shocked me more was the naivety of one character when it's revealed. Most of the time "Trials" is too slow going. Most of the personal life stuff felt too much like padded filler, Stabler's was pure soap opera that doesn't say much new and doesn't see any of the characters come off positively. Only Olivia's trauma struggles interested or made sense, as well as making emotional impact, even that felt like it was setting things up.

Some of the writing is taut, but most of it is too exposition heavy, especially the newly introduced Greylek's, and talky. Speaking of Greylek, she doesn't make a good impression at all and she did nothing for me throughout her stint on 'Special Victims Unit'. She is too full of herself and aloof, with everything to do with the plea being far too rash a decision (something that Cabot and Novak would never had considered) and unrealistic. Micaela McManus plays her with the emotions of a robot.

Concluding, disappointing. 5/10.
9 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Out of control kid
bkoganbing15 February 2013
Warning: Spoilers
My criticism of SVU has always been that unlike Law And Order prime occasionally they get way way out in their stories. This is a perfect example of that although the players do well in putting it over.

The SVU squad catches a case with an 8 year old Jae Head stealing his parents car and racing through the city like mad causing all kinds of damage. The squad is called in and sure enough Benson and Stabler smell an abused kid.

Young Jae Head is really frightening as this kid who's out of control so much so that his birth mother gave him up and Luke Perry and Julie Bowen the foster parents are about at their wit's end.

Some DNA from the kid leads back to the birth mother who happens to have been the victim of a rape that Mariska Hargitay handled several years ago. That in turn leads to tracking a serial rapist and the conclusion is really wild to say the least.

Hargitay is dealing with rape trauma herself from when she was undercover in a previous episode. As the child of a rapist, she truly gets into the case here. In the end she gets counseling for her own situation.

A little too far out for my tastes.
10 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

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


Recently Viewed