Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA pair of art critics are found dead, leading Goren and Eames to discover a series of forged paintings.A pair of art critics are found dead, leading Goren and Eames to discover a series of forged paintings.A pair of art critics are found dead, leading Goren and Eames to discover a series of forged paintings.
Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesThere really was an original Salvador Dalí painting at Rikers Island. Dalí was set to visit the prisoners on 26 February 1965, but he was unable to attend due to illness. Instead, he quickly painted a surrealist version of Jesus' crucifixion, and inscribed it with (spelling errors intact) the following: "For the dinning room of the prisoners Rikers Island S.D."He sent it along with his associate, who was told to say, "He'd like to give a message to the prisoners that you are artists. Don't think your life is finished for you. With art, you have to always feel free." It was, quite disrespectfully, hung next to the trash cans in the cafeteria and, when prisoners disposed of their trays, the painting became splattered with leftover food. In 1981, a new warden moved the painting to an office, where it sat for several years before being moved to a spot next to the vending machines. The painting was stolen on 1 March 2003--not by prisoners, but by two deputy wardens who thought they could fence the painting for at least $1 million. They triggered a false lockdown and then removed the painting and hung a replacement. By June 2003, four members of prison staff had been arrested and charged with grand larceny: one was sentenced to 3 years in prison, one received 5 years probation, another received 3 years probation, and one was acquitted. The painting has never been recovered.
- PatzerThere is no such drug as "roofinol". The name was likely inspired by flunitrazepam, also known as Rohypnol, street name "roofies'. This is done intentionally throughout each Law & Order franchise, such as in Poison (2001) where the drug that was randomly poisoned was called "Necedrol", a play on Tylenol (of the famous Tylenol poisonings of 1982) and "Anacin", another over-the-counter painkiller. The show is not allowed to use brand names like Tylenol or YouTube, so they make up new brands that sound similar (Necedrol and YouLenz, respectively) in order to avoid litigation or confuse the public.
- Zitate
Sylvia Moon: [crying] You don't know what it's like!
Detective Robert Goren: What, to work so hard?
Sylvia Moon: Yes.
Detective Robert Goren: And still be a nobody.
Sylvia Moon: Yes.
Detective Robert Goren: Welcome to the human race.
Ausgewählte Rezension
The dark side of art
The original 'Law and Order' will always to me be the best of the 'Law and Order' shows (other than the UK 'Law and Order', but that feels more like its own separate show or at least how it feels to me). Do feel though, since seeeing them regularly through late night re-runs though that both 'Special Victims Unit' and 'Criminal Intent' are worthy spin-offs, if more in the earlier seasons than the later ones.
"One" was a very good if not completely settled start. "Art" sees 'Criminal Intent' continuing to go strong and actually find it an even better episode. Whereas the original 'Law and Order' and 'Special Victims Unit' saw a slight step down in quality between their respective first and second episodes, 'Criminal Intent' instead got better in this regard which is what it really should be. It got me hooked and there wasn't the feeling of being unsure or having the decision as to whether continue or bail.
Goren and Eames' chemistry gelled and settled more in subsequent episodes, though can't be too hard on the episode on this front because the show has literally just begun.
Wasn't admittedly left completely floored by the denouement, though it is a clever and plausible one.
Besides, "Art" is a fine example of the beauty of 'Criminal Intent' being in how Goren and Eames get to the truth, their methods, Goren's being unusual and the more psychological approach. Very intriguingly done and doesn't come over as overdone or rocky. The writing is a good balance of not being overly-simple or too complicated, treating the viewer with respect with neither making them feel dumb or losing them. The story is a more complex one than the one for "One", with twists and turns that are plausible, don't complicate things too much and are clever. The dark side of art is not a novel concept but is treated very well here.
"Art" is a slick looking episode, like the production values for 'Law and Order' and 'Special Victims Unit' and the music thankfully doesn't intrude or feel ham-handed. The direction has momentum and breathing space, so it's not hard to digest what is going on yet it doesn't become dreary either. The detective methods and psychology are very intriguing, as is the character of Goren. A character brilliantly portrayed by Vincent D'Onofrio and there is a nice softer contrast in Kathryn Erbe. Tomas Arana is not one to forget as Langer and Elizabeth Marvel is just as strong.
In summary, great second episode. 9/10
"One" was a very good if not completely settled start. "Art" sees 'Criminal Intent' continuing to go strong and actually find it an even better episode. Whereas the original 'Law and Order' and 'Special Victims Unit' saw a slight step down in quality between their respective first and second episodes, 'Criminal Intent' instead got better in this regard which is what it really should be. It got me hooked and there wasn't the feeling of being unsure or having the decision as to whether continue or bail.
Goren and Eames' chemistry gelled and settled more in subsequent episodes, though can't be too hard on the episode on this front because the show has literally just begun.
Wasn't admittedly left completely floored by the denouement, though it is a clever and plausible one.
Besides, "Art" is a fine example of the beauty of 'Criminal Intent' being in how Goren and Eames get to the truth, their methods, Goren's being unusual and the more psychological approach. Very intriguingly done and doesn't come over as overdone or rocky. The writing is a good balance of not being overly-simple or too complicated, treating the viewer with respect with neither making them feel dumb or losing them. The story is a more complex one than the one for "One", with twists and turns that are plausible, don't complicate things too much and are clever. The dark side of art is not a novel concept but is treated very well here.
"Art" is a slick looking episode, like the production values for 'Law and Order' and 'Special Victims Unit' and the music thankfully doesn't intrude or feel ham-handed. The direction has momentum and breathing space, so it's not hard to digest what is going on yet it doesn't become dreary either. The detective methods and psychology are very intriguing, as is the character of Goren. A character brilliantly portrayed by Vincent D'Onofrio and there is a nice softer contrast in Kathryn Erbe. Tomas Arana is not one to forget as Langer and Elizabeth Marvel is just as strong.
In summary, great second episode. 9/10
hilfreich•92
- TheLittleSongbird
- 18. Juli 2019
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