"Law & Order" Encore (TV Episode 1996) Poster

(TV Series)

(1996)

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8/10
"Coma" Part 2
TheLittleSongbird24 February 2021
Season 6 of 'Law and Order' was a bit of an up and down one. Curtis didn't settle straightaway (understandably to be fair) and neither did his and Briscoe's chemistry (also understandable), though it was a case of them being fine in some episodes and regressed in others. It was more though to do with the quality of the episodes, there were some fantastic ones but also a few disappointments. None were misfires though and even the weakest episodes showed good intentions.

"Encore" is closely linked to Season 5's "Coma", a very good episode if not one of my favourites from 'Law and Order', and sees the return of the character of Michael Dobson (played perfectly by Larry Miller, who made him entertaining and loathsome at the same time). It is as good as that episode and while not one of the best episodes of Season 6 it's somewhere around high middle in ranking. Once again, like "Coma", succeeding in making something very interesting and not as simple as feared out of a premise that sounds very ordinary.

The one thing that didn't quite work here is how difficult to buy Dobson giving up as easily as he does here. Considering the nature of his character, that easy and convenient a give up was too hard to swallow for my tastes.

However, "Encore" is excellent everywhere else. Miller once again steals the show, doing fast-talking with ease while also giving the creeps. Giving a pretty cliched and potentially annoying type of role a refreshingly unsettling personality without being too obvious or unbalancing things. The case is always intriguing and is not too obvious or convoluted, there are a couple of decisions in the writing mentioned already that don't quite come off but it was always compelling and didn't feel too ordinary. All the performances are great (do agree that Briscoe's reaction to coming across Dobson at the medical examiner's office was a highlight moment), but Miller is the one that one doesn't forget for a long time after.

Character interaction has tension and snap, but also looks natural and never too rehearsed that it comes over as clinical. Production values are slick and have a subtle grit, with an intimacy to the photography without being too claustrophobic. The music isn't used too much and doesn't get too melodramatic. The dialogue is smart and always intriguing, with plenty of it moving, chilling and provoking thought.

On the whole, very good with a terrific guest star. 8/10
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7/10
Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice -- umm.
rmax30482318 March 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Up to the usual series standards, this is the story of a man who kills his first wife for insurance money, gets away with it, then kills his second wife a year later and is convicted by the canny folks at the DA's office. What tips the scales this time around is that McCoy gets the man's exploited girl friend to turn around.

It must be tempting to kill your spouse for the insurance. After all, a million dollars will pay off a lot of debts and keep your kneecaps intact. It's just human nature. But then, as Rose says in "The African Queen," "Nature, Mister Allnut, is what we were put on earth to rise above." If anything makes this episode outstanding it's the performance of the balding, pock-faced, steely-eyed Larry Davis as the wife murderer. His character is so slimy, so sarcastic, that he carries a faint sour odor with him whenever he appears. He's one of the few characters in the series who could clear a room without using a gun. He has a snotty remark for everyone, including the cops who, in my experience, would rearrange his features given half the insults he throws at them. It's a great performance, but Davis's appearance limits the kinds of roles he's suited for. The young woman he's manipulating does a fine job as well.

A weak point in the plot is when McCoy brings the two of them together and exposes Davis's supposed affection for her as a sham. The script has him give up the ruse too easily. When she stares at him tearfully, he shrugs and says bitterly, "Women!" A good con man -- and he IS that -- would never give up so easily. It's the equivalent of the witness breaking down on the stand and sobbing, "Okay, I did it, I did it, but I didn't mean to kill him!" That is, it's cliché.

But it doesn't detract from the overall quality of what is otherwise a fine episode in an unusually good television series.
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7/10
Chutzpah in the first degreer
bkoganbing10 August 2020
It'a almost worth watching this episode for the look on Jerry Orbach's face when he sees Larry Miller at the medical examiner's office. As he explains to Benjamin Bratt, he and Chris Noth arrested Miller previously for the murder of his first wife. Sadly in that epsode the conection between the actual doer of the deed and Miller did not come to light until charges were dismissed with prejudice.

Miller like in real life is a comedian and owned a comedy club and now he and the deceased second wife own a high end restaurant. As such they have connections to some organized crime figures.

Miller has more chutzpah than just about anyone in TV series history. He got away with it once and he's got one elaborate scheme to get away with it again.

The police and the DA work trile overtime on this one.
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