"Law & Order" Choice of Evils (TV Episode 2006) Poster

(TV Series)

(2006)

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8/10
Born bad?
TheLittleSongbird17 August 2022
Have said more than once about my long term admiration for 'Law and Order's' handling of heavy and controversial topics, some of them being ones that many shows would go nowhere near, and how it does not hold back when it approaches any of them. Regardless of the overall execution of the episodes, this aspect always is deserving of credit. "Choice of Evils" joins the already long line of Season 16 episodes that tackled a serious and relevant issue.

And handles it very, very well, though to me there was room for it to go even deeper than it did. "Choice of Evils" is a very good episode while not quite great, while having many great things. Is it one of the best episodes of Season 16? Not quite, though considering the subject matter it had a good deal of potential to be. Is it one of the worst? Again, no and even the weaker episodes were much better than most of the show's seasons at their worst.

"Choice of Evils" is a slight slow starter and more could have been done with whether the victim was born bad or had become a psychopath. That would have made for a very interesting debate.

There is so much that is worth recommending. Molly Price gives a very affecting performance as someone whose behaviour you cannot condone but also someone where it was very difficult to hate them considering the circumstances. This is a case of the victim being hated more. The regulars are also excellent, especially in the legal portions.

Production values are still slick and suitably gritty (without being too heavy in it). The music is not too melodramatic and is not used too much, even not being too manipulative in revelations. The direction is tight and involved while having breathing space.

Writing is very thought provoking and doesn't over simplify or come over as inaccessible, like all 'Law and Order' episodes it is talk heavy but it doesn't feel too much so. The story is one that becomes truly disturbing and sad in a way that hits hard, where it becomes easier to sympathise with Price's character.

Overall, very good though could have been great. 8/10.
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8/10
I know it makes him sound bad, but I know he loved me. He gave me this baby
Mrpalli7710 January 2018
A real estate agent was about to sell an empty warehouse when she noticed what seemed to be a bum covered by a blanket. The guy was shot dead and he got no ID with him. A local priest recognized him: he was without a family and he spent most time on the street, committing some little crimes. Fontana, thanks to forensics, realized his biological father, a serial killer rapist, was recluded in Attica, spending a life sentence. Detectives found out the victim had a mother who stated he ran away from the household six months before the accident. The girl (Lauren Hodges) he hooked up with in underground New York was pregnant and they both wanted some money from the kid's mother. The mother was arrested and she confessed to kill him fearing that he could follow the father's footsteps.

That's crazy that a citizen killed her own son for the greater good. It seemed hilarious even for McCoy. Maybe, some decades from now, people will build a monument on her memory. LOL
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6/10
One greatpedigree
bkoganbing23 March 2019
S. Eptha Merkersen gets to deal with the criminal mothers once again in this episode where with a bit of a heart to heart with a suspect while Dennis Farina and Jesse Martin are dealing with her husband.

A homeless teen who was squatting in a building under construction is found shot to death. The first thing for Fontana and Green is to identify him and he's got a great pedigree. His DNA connects with a serial rapist/murderer doing life in Attica.

When they locate Molly Price who is the mother they find her married with two younger kids. Price never told her son about his father, but score this one on the side of nature as opposed to nurture. When his very presence threatens her marriage that is when she shoots him.

Hard not to sympathize with Price and what her kid had to be putting her through. Still will a jury not hold her responsible for the murder that she no doubt committed?

Maybe some people are just born bad. In any event see how this one works out for Sam Waterston.
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1/10
A sign of those times
lanestogasd10 July 2022
Well written and well acted but sends an awful message that child to parent abuse is acceptable and demonstrates a bloodthirsty DA wanting a win at any cost. Watching l&o now, I see how sexist and racist it really was (I count at least five times Chris Noth calling women who don't faint at his character's feet 'b**ch' and I've lost count of the number of racist slurs towards the Irish. No snowflake here - just educated - but people are dumb enough to adopt what they see on TV.
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