"Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" Infected (TV Episode 2006) Poster

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9/10
Affected by death
TheLittleSongbird29 April 2021
On first watch, "Infected" came over as a truly powerful and intelligent episode. Didn't consider it one of my favourites of Season 7, but saw it as an episode that got the season back on the right track. 'Law and Order: Special Victims Unit' has been a bit on and off as a show for me for a while now. The early seasons saw a lot of brilliance with only a small handful of disappointments, but from this point on it became more variable and generally it's past its sell by date.

"Infected" however is a good example of how truly great 'Special Victims Unit' could be. It is not one of my favourite episodes and is not quite on "Raw" and especially "911" level as far as Season 7 episodes go. It is though a massive improvement over the hugely disappointing previous episode "Alien" (the worst of the quality slump between "Raw" and this). It also sees the show and season back on the right track, just like as remembered. It still strikes me as powerful and intelligent, more so now.

There is very little to fault here. Gordon Clapp doesn't quite click and came over as a bit bland in a departure role.

However, "Infected" is hugely successful everywhere else. Loved the performances, with Mariska Hargitay being typically sympathetic and determined and Malcolm David Kelly is deeply touching as Nathan. Loved the chemistry between them, which was heartfelt and shows how beautifully Hargitay works with children. Diane Neal has great authority in the courtroom, with strong beliefs yet doing so without cutting corners, and Judith Light is witty and at times cunning. Good to see the Donnelly back that we know and love and not the Donnelly that hammered home too much what her views on abortion were in "Rockabye". Nathan is an interesting character whose actions are uncondonable but it is very hard to not feel sorry for him and understand why he did it.

Writing is very intelligent and thoughtful, with the moral dilemmas of the controversial subject of gun control being sensitively but not in a sugar-coated way handled. What it has to say about gun control is insightful and it is a lot more balanced than a few of the previous episodes in expressing where the characters and writers stand on the issues addressed. This time one sees it from more than one side rather than leaning too far one way or expressing just one view like a few of the previous Season 7 episodes did (i.e. "Alien"). The story is very sad and a hard watch, appropriately so, apparent from the very beginning. The ending is surprising but didn't feel unsatisfying or unrealistic.

The 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 direction has enough taut urgency when needed while giving the case breathing space.

Concluding, great. 9/10.
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8/10
First Strike
bkoganbing11 September 2012
Warning: Spoilers
In all the Law And Order episodes on all the franchise series, sometimes the investigation or the trial runs into areas far afield from what the crime was. In this story a pair of murders leads to a first strike attempt by gun manufacturers to head off a possible civil suit.

Young Malcolm David Kelley is in a closet unbeknownst to a man who murders his crackhead mother in their apartment. When the detectives find him with the body, Mariska Hargitay takes him under her wing. The kid blows the lineup however and later when he sees Gordon Clapp in handcuffs outside, he puts two and two together and goes up to Clapp's office and shoots Clapp very dead.

Clapp plays a real bottom feeding sex fiend. He's the head of a foundation and in that guise of giving grants to poor people, he gets sex in exchange. The poor are crackheads like Kelley's mom who need the money bad.

Still the kid did kill him and has to face trial. But sensing a civil lawsuit the gun manufacturers move to suspend the trial going on in Judith Light's courtroom and ask for a hearing on the exposure to television violence more than access to a gun is the root cause of Clapp's untimely demise.

David Aaron Baker who is the attorney for the gun people is another bottom feeder only with a law degree. Light, ADA Diane Neal, and defense attorney Annie Potts team up in a unique alliance to foil Baker. Although Baker does himself in rather neatly in court.

Some nice performances topped by a very touching Malcolm David Kelley characterize this episode. But those who hate shyster attorneys will love how Baker trips himself up.
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7/10
Judge change
melrmc10 January 2023
Just a funny note. Judge Malloy on this episode is Judge Wright on several L&O episodes and a L&O: TbJ episode. There are several actors who have fulfilled various roles in the L&O franchise. Most of the time, they are spaced far enough apart that it might not be recognized. In any case, this particular character does a really good job making himself unlikable as a judge and seeming as though he has difficulty actually abiding by the law he's supposed to adjudicate. I;m pretty certain there are judges like that in the real world, and that's really sad, since they should be absolutely honest and dependable.
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10/10
If the criminal and the victim are a boy
yazguloner16 May 2021
If the criminal and the victim are a boy child

Naivety, innocence, tragic ... and sad so sad...

This story In summary, I wish everything was like in the movies.

Malcom David Kelly 👏👏👏
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1/10
Another political episode, just like the one before it.
rjacome242 November 2019
Another political episode. This episode started out interesting but then it took another political crash. Just like the episode before it, a political message was forced on to us. If I had wanted to watch a political show, I would have chosen one. Unfortunately I feel as if TV shows no longer focus on quality, and more on politics.. This episode is a perfect example.
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3/10
Normally Good, Maybe too Political
PartialMovieViewer29 July 2021
Warning: Spoilers
To excuse someone for their crimes brought on by one's surroundings???
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