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| Index | 24 reviews in total |
24 out of 30 people found the following review useful:
Give this 'Law" a chance, 6 October 2010
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Author:
Carl Foley from United States
I'vde noticed most reviews here are not kind. They whine about no theme song or opening credits. They complain about bad chemistry & story and say its just another Hollywood show. They say that this is not real L&O. I say shame on them. Yes, the opening dialouge is gone and I miss it but it doesn't ruin the show. Yes..., the theme is gone, but I actually love how they play the most recognizable notes of the song in a ghostly manner as the new logo comes onto screen. As for the stories, there's only one to judge so far but I liked it. Ya, it had the Hopllywood to it, but the producers have said not every episode will be Hollywood focused like this weeks. As for the actors, they are great! The detectives have great chemistry and the same is said for the DA's. To sum this up: The show is well written, acted, and laid out. I hope that this show does run for many years and doesn't suffer the fate of the equally good Law & Order: Trial By Jury. Yes, it's never going to replace the mother ship that NBC shouldn't of canceled (I cried when they did), but I feel as time goes on the show which has started out great will get better and better. I hope everyone else will give the show a chance. From just one episode I have to agree with USA Today's assessment when they said "What you get from LA is a show that's as solid and reliable as a well-built sedan. You know, the kind that keeps running for 20 years."
11 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Give it a chance, 4 November 2010
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Author:
Angela Owar from United States
I have to admit, the 1st episode left something to be desired, but I have stuck with it and now enjoy the show -- give it a few episodes, get to know the characters, and it will be another L&O you will enjoy. The detectives have their own quirkiness that is enjoyable. I did like the episode where the one detective's wife was the arresting officer on a case that involved a woman that lost her kids to a fire -- where she said the woman admitted it -- and it was not true. I do like the setting of Los Angeles, because it does leave open many ideas for shows. Furthermore, the L&O seems to get back to the basics, where you see the police part, as well as the court room part -- whereas some recent L&O focus more on the police work nowadays.
14 out of 21 people found the following review useful:
Not a cookie cutter of the others! I like it!!!!, 7 October 2010
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Author:
zaenkney from United States
Skeet Ulrich and Alfred Molina achieved a rather potent premier in "Law and Order: Los Angeles". The first episode provided young, hot, Hollywood actors, burglaries of the rich and famous, murders and betrayal. There was bright sunlight in the daytime and night-lights after dark. Its a new "Law and Order" and I like it. Alfred Molina and Terrance Howard will take turns as Asst. D.A.s in different episodes. While I'm not sure how that will flow, I enjoy both actors and look forward to seeing how this plays out. Ulrich does his character justice and, so far, is not a carbon copy of other "Law and Order" copsters. I hope, he maintains his own distinct persona, as D'Onofrio certainly did. It never hurts to be exclusive, especially in a herd. I believe "Law and Order: Los Angeles" has the potential to be extra-Order-nary. Sorry, couldn't help myself. Watch it, you could like it! 10/07/2010
8 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
New Re-Tooled L&O: LA Regains lost Stature, 1 May 2011
Author:
Tommy from Boston, MA
Having suffered through the first half of the first season of L&O: LA,
and now watching the re-imagined second half of the same season, I'm
pleasantly surprised they actually pulled it off. That is, it's
becoming more like the original L&O and not some sunny disposition on
life in LaLa land and rampant medical marijuana.
They are also scouting out and actually using more locations as they
did in N.Y. so you don't feel confined to the same old places or inside
a studio's back lot. In the last episode, I counted about 15 non-studio
locations which really upped the ante as far as quality of story and
realism of plot.
I also noticed they brought in some veteran screenwriters from the
recently canceled L&O and are starting to "rip from the headlines"
more. Not to mention adding the beautiful Alana De La Garza to the
ADA's office (they never did explain her transplantation to L.A. but
that's par for the course with this franchise). We just need the
extraordinary writer Rene Balcer to pen a few scripts and we're halfway
home.
As for Alana, they desperately need to give her more lines. She's not
just a pretty face but a very good actress. She was always one to get
up in someone's face or talk back to some pushy witness or suspect (or
cop!).
A guest visit from Linus Roache or Lupo or Anderson or Epatha would be
gimmicky but a lot of fun. Who cares? It's T.V. Does anyone really
believe a murder trial starts and ends in less than a month? Real
murder cases take years. But on T.V. you have to speed things up or you
end up with a show like Murder One or viewers changing the channel. Too
bad they can't find an L&O franchise for Lupo.
The East Pasadena episode is a perfect example of "headline ripping"
that actually happened to one Calif. principality, then utilizing
another incident that actually happened in Florida where a man went to
a city council meeting waving a gun and finally shot himself, and then
tying it all together with a murder mystery.
I'm especially glad to see Mr. Ulrich gone (shot! killed! never to
return!) and Molina taking his place. Whilst Ulrich is an O.K. actor,
half the time his eyes were bloodshot and he looked very tired and
fatigued. I don't think the pace of T.V. sits well with his move
schedule metabolism.
Molina is a veteran actor and it shows. He is literally the anchor for
the show now. Let's hope he doesn't depart prematurely. And they need a
prominent out gay character other than a shrink like on SVU.
And Corey Stoll looks so much better without the 'stache it's amazing.
He'll be one of People magazine's hottest men of the year in no time
(barring the show's cancellation). Having played second fiddle in so
many shows, it's about time he was recognized for his talent.
Rachel Ticotin, who still looks great since Total Recall, makes a tough
but charming Lieutenant. Still haven't figured out the role of the DA
played ephemerally by Peter Coyote. He's simply not memorable and not
sure what his function is other than to bark at his subordinates.
With all the above being said, I'm very excited about the rest of the
season and hope it continues to deliver above-excellent scripts and
performances to make up for the horrible first half of the year.
Worst
Episodes
Ever
I doubt L&O: LA will have the staying power of the
original L&O, and NBC (now owned by Kabletown), is infamous for putting
garbage on T.V. or doubling-up on what they consider a good thing
(read: the Today show went from 2 hours to 4 to 5 to ?). Maybe Katie
Couric can do the sixth and seventh hours! I'd like to see more
episodes about the intricacies of Calif. law and business practices as
they've done in a few episodes and on the original L&O. I always
thought New York was a nanny state but Calif. makes N.Y. look like
their babysitter's dead (don't tell Mom or Bloomberg!). I can now
understand why so many businesses are fleeing CA for points East, and
why people are moving to other states where the cost of living isn't so
crippling.
So if you gave up on the show, give it another shot. I don't believe
you'll be disappointed and like me will look forward to next week's
episode. Who knows, maybe they'll shoot a couple of episodes during
California's rainy season for a change of outdoor atmosphere. Flooding,
rampage, riots, and of course, a floater.
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
MUCH better, 26 April 2011
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Author:
hotseatotsie from United States
At first I was sad to see Skeet Ulrich go, but the new lineup is working much better. It's grittier, more suspenseful, more like real L&O should be. I like the switchup of Alfred Molina's character, it adds some depth to the story. The UK Version is still my favorite now that the original is off the air, but I plan on hanging in there with this one. They took the ratings and feedback seriously and made changes. I'm not sure why Skeet was apparently part of the problem, I thought he was good and there was good chemistry with his partner, but the new mix works also. We don't see much of the Lieutenant anymore either. But I'll take any chance to look at Terrence Howard on a weekly basis!
8 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Superb television, 29 January 2011
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Author:
kayaker36 from Queens, NY
Skeet Ulrich and Corey Stoll, two relatively unknown actors, make an
intriguingly contrasting pair--one a handsome young family man with a
quick mind and a nose for the hidden truth, the other older, single
(possibly gay?), completely bald and endlessly patient, and bringing a
profound knowledge of human nature to crime solving.
Here is a wealth of original ideas such as subtitling each episode with
an area of Greater LA, which Dick Wolf knows intimately. The whole idea
is to spotlight the differences between Los Angeles, a new city shaped
by and built to suit the automobile, and centuries-old New York, a
product of the age of sail.
There are some lyrical camera shots, almost elegiac, of the canyons and
vistas of Los Angeles, of its suburbs-in-search-of-a-city lifestyle, of
its public beaches, its palatial beachfront homes and its slums. Best
of all is its exploration of human types, so varied yet so...well, so
LA.
Alfred Molina in a recurring role as a trial prosecutor, is part
Englishman, part Spaniard, he has no non-European ancestry at all. Yet
he is believable as a boy of humble Latino origins who has risen high
in public service. There are exciting guest stars, original yet
believable plots with the "ripped from the headlines" aspect remaining
an L&O trademark.
If this show fails it will be because of its harshly realistic view of
gender. The first two episodes feature women who have killed without
legal justification. There are other repugnant acts committed by women.
L&O - SVU, this ain't!
What it is is a crime show with scripts that other great chronicler of
Los Angeles Raymond Chandler might have written.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Good show confused about how episodes were shown, 12 October 2011
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Author:
jenlove-184-20961 from United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
I enjoyed this show I do like seeing new characters gelling together, the one main point that really let this show down is the fact that Skeet died half way though and then appeared back about 5 episodes later which really frustrates me as I like to see how the characters develop together as the show progresses and there was no way this could happen. I watched it on Hallmark channel and before every episode they said showing it in the order it was shown in the US. I don't care just get it right!!!!!!! I did like seeing Decker wish he was in it more and was getting a bit confused who was what rank within the DA's team but I suppose the more series there are the more I can get used to it. It was quite funny to see the lady from the Scary Movie films Regina Hall I was so expecting to see her crack a joke, run from a room screaming or kill someone.
9 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
Nothing Law and Order About It, 1 October 2010
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Author:
SamanthaGilbert-1 from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Bad, bad, bad! There was absolutely nothing "Law & Order" about this show. One reason many people love the Law & Order television shows is because of the artistic cinematography that is unique to them, but the way in which this TV show has been shot was anything but the great cinematography we are accustomed to. The theme music had been altered so much and in a annoying, techno-music fashion, that if I had not read the title or heard the iconic "doink doink" sound, I would have thought this was a TV show crated by pure amateurs. The fact that it wasn't created by amateurs makes it all the more disappointing. Even the story line made it seem as though Law & Order needed to fit in every headline in the gossip section it has missed out on in the past few months, in order to catch up, and thus leaving a mumble jumble of an episode. Sadly NBC has managed to shoot themselves in the foot by getting rid of a great show and putting in its place a big heap of steaming garbage.
10 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
This is replacing the original?, 29 September 2010
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Author:
Michael J. Lynch from San Diego, CA
The first episode has come and gone faster then you can remember. The
new L&O is actually terrible. While many will argue that the casting is
terrible, in actuality the casting is quite good. The problem with the
show is the writing. The angles for the story are not written well,
none of the characters feel like they have a point. We know nothing
about the characters, and we know nothing of the story.
I am hoping the show gets better over the season as it does have a lot
of promise to it. The acting is good, I just think the storytelling
needs some work. I will continue to watch this season in hope it gets
better.
5 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Get back to your roots and keep Law & Order alive, 22 January 2011
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Author:
ChicagoTVFan from United States
Every Law & Order fan waited for the new franchise, many of us willing to give it time, yet, it is missing the basic elements that make us watch Law & Order re-runs. Cops, prosecutors, defense attorneys, defendants and an environment that is a character as well. Actors, unknown to most of us, who later in life become stars, like Melissa Leo. Slowly, we become attached to the cops and their partner relationship. The prosecutor, we all loved Sam Waterson, his conflict with his blue collar roots, watching the struggle with values and the law as he prosecutes. These unfolded over time. But all of the characters stood in snow, in rain, they sweat in heat... struggled with the environment of urban living, crammed into small work spaces and that was essential to the formula of Law & Order. People were not pretty; they were interesting or funny, but not slick. As much as everyone wants to defend Hollywood and LA, it is not urban; it is suburban. The buildings, the streets, the weather. It's a young city and it's an industry city. Everyone is too pretty, too clean, too smooth. I hope the franchise survives; I hope it returns to its roots, to head to an urban environment with history, weather, its "run and gun" feel, gritty, interesting actors, and gives us both Law and Order.
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