"Law & Order" Trust (TV Episode 1992) Poster

(TV Series)

(1992)

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9/10
Deadly gun control
TheLittleSongbird17 April 2020
'Law and Order' was always very good when it had stories inspired by ripped from the headlines cases. It was also very good often when it came to raising interesting questions and moral dilemmas of subjects not easy to discuss and cause much debate. "Trust" is a case of both, talking about the consequences of gun control and based on the case of Rod Matthews, a harrowing case in itself and still would have been relatively raw for some at the time the episode was aired.

"Trust" was to me a great episode actually and one of the better ones of Season 2's second half in my view. Its story is just as disturbing as the case it's based upon and the questions it raises about the subject it covers are interesting and handled tactfully and without bias. And rightfully so, considering the timing for reasons mentioned already and because it is something that many will feel strongly about. Would not have been as lenient perhaps if it was not so tactful, while acknowledging that this is not an easy subject to talk about.

Sure, things like everything to do with how the gun came into possession when that could easily have been avoided can be called into question. It is not as questionable though when remembering what the case is about and how Jamie came to be the way he became.

Issues to me here in "Trust" are next to none, though some may disagree. It didn't grab me completely straightaway but that did turn around quite dramatically once the legalities and moral dilemmas came in and the revelations kept mounting.

On the other hand, "Trust" is shot and lit with the right amount of grit and slickness, the editing noticeably tighter than it was in the first season and that is true for the whole of Season 2 and not just "Trust". The direction has momentum but has breathing space when necessary, so the case mostly doesn't feel dull yet we have time to take in what is being said which is a lot. The music is not overused or too melodramatic.

Regarding the writing, "Trust" is tautly and sensitively written, making one think hard about the issues being raised. Stone's answer to being asked as to whether he would testify against his own child really does resonate and gives chills. The story is not an easy watch, not a problem as it is not an easy subject (if it was an easy watch it would have meant the real impact of the issues raised would not have been there), and it is presented powerfully and hard-hittingly. Jamie is one truly disturbed character and one can't help feeling a lot of anger towards Ian, with him playing a major part in why the events came to be.

All the acting is very good, Michael Moriarty being the standout of the regulars and Harley Cross, in a truly harrowing performance not easily forgotten, giving the performance of the episode.

Summarising, great. 9/10
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9/10
"Timely" discussion of Gun rights & Gun Control
rbkjr27 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
A young boy who has been coached, trained, and eventually convinced, both mentally & psychologically, that it's okay to not only use a gun...But to threaten his own mother, and later his school friends, by convincing them that it's all a game which turns out to be "Deadly!" After a second boy is shot and killed by playing this game of "chicken", the boy's mother brakes the rules of her divorce and the events that caused the Break-Up, which was her son's killing of the first school friend, before he decided to do the same later on, after he was supposed to be under psychological guidance and counseling, while under the supervision of the father who had custody. Eventually, the boy is sent to jail while the mother just stares in disbelief from the back of the courtroom, and then glares at the father who was next to the defense attorney representing his son, as they both see the boy walked off into the back of the courthouse to be sent away to prison. When Robinette asks Assistant District Attorney, Stone if he could have testified against his own child, he classically says "not without it ripping me in half"...and the episode ends. Gun control and kids' involvement in it, is still a big question and an ordeal, especially after the Nicholas Cruz school shootings in Florida a few days back. The whole gun issue is "ripping this nation into two halves", like A.D.A. Stone said, who both believe they're right, and the other side is DEAD wrong...with the emphasis on DEAD!!
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7/10
Trust me
safenoe17 August 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Harley Cross guest stars in Trust, from the second season of Law and Order. I sometimes wonder what happened to child stars who appear in Law and Order, and Wikipedia shows he's had a storied career.

Anyway, here Trust deals with white teenagers and guns, so no racial issues that Law and Order need to contend with if you know what I mean. It seems this episode was based on Rod Matthews. This episode is quite harrowing and I don't think it's for everyone, especially if you're on one side of the gun rights debate.

I like watching the early seasons of Law and Order and hopefully the series can bring back Chris Noth.
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6/10
Childhood Games.
rmax30482310 December 2010
Warning: Spoilers
A fifteen-year-old boy is found shot through the forehead in the basement of an old building and the murder weapon is found among some junk nearby. Serreta and Logan trace it back to another young teen-aged boy living with his father in comfortable circumstances.

It's Dad's gun, and a big one. The kid claims he was playing chicken with his friend and the gun went off without his planning it. Dad used to take him to the range where the target pistol, a .22, needed to be cocked before it could fire. This one, a .357 magnum, doesn't need to be cocked.

The kid has a juvenile record but it's sealed. The detectives find the arresting officer who handled the case two years ago and discover that the crime was almost identical, including the kid's excuse that they were just playing a game. Furthermore, the manager at the firing range remembers the boy being taught to fire the .357.

It raises a couple of interesting points. One is that Good Old Dad should DEFINITELY have kept that pistol in a place where his son couldn't get at it -- especially after the first lethal shooting -- but nothing is made of this obvious fact.

Second, why would a boy of thirteen or fifteen ever WANT to shoot and kill another human being? Or -- let's state the question more generally -- why do humans so often find that the answer to conflict is violence, sometimes war, sometimes merely murder. What is it that prompts us to want war with others? Is there something in some subcortical center of our brains, tucked away in the reptilian brain, fueled by testosterone and enhanced by the media, that causes us to raise our pistols and pull the triggers? Actually, I minored in social psychology in graduate school and attended a seminar in aggression and here's the best answer available at that time: Nobody knows. Yet the impulse is there, on prominent display. At any given moment around the world, some tribe is hard at work killing members of some other tribe. It can't be ALL biological, of course, because we do have the Amish and the Quakers. And it can't be ALL the fault of the media either because Seattle and Vancouver, BC, watch the same TV programs but one city has eight times the homicide rate of the other. I do wish they'd hurry and find out what's up. The episode itself offers no answer. How could it?
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5/10
A very disturbed young man
bkoganbing3 November 2017
The finding of a dead body by some kids brings Paul Sorvino and Chris Noth to the scene at a deserted waterfront warehouse. The body is that of a teen not much older than the youths who found him.

One other thing is found. A large caliber pistol on the edge of a pier where the perpetrator tried to fling it in the water. It has an owner Tom Mason who has a son Harley Cross, a very disturbed young man.

The parents are divorced and Mason has custody. It also turns out that there was another similar incident a few years back.

Justice is going to be hard to come by here. A combination of the father's wealth and sealed records which have to be obtained.

Cross gives a fascinating performance that makes one hearken back to the classic film The Bad Seed. He truly is one, but this seed got nurtured and developed in his father's house.
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