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

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9/10
This episode belongs to Diane Neal.
markthurman-4422827 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Which actress do I like better in the Assistant D. A. role, Stephanie March or Diane Neal? Both were outstanding, but I probably give the nod to Stephanie March by the absolute slimmest of margins.

And then I watch this episode and Diane Neal is exceptional.

Okay, it's a tie.

Also, I enjoyed Judith Light's limited but highly effective performance as the judge. This is a very strong courtroom episode.

There is one aspect of this episode that strikes me as rather unusual (the only reason why I deducted one star). A young woman is raped and murdered, although her body is never found. We the viewers are shown no visual evidence of the rape/murder, such as the body at the murder scene or at the medical examiner's office. Then, two of the young male defendants kidnap and murder the third young male defendant. There are no scenes of the kidnapping or the murder of the young man. We do see his body which is found in the next-to-last scene. That is the only scene in the entire episode in which we the viewers are shown any visual evidence that any criminal acts ever occurred during this episode. We only see the three young defendants presented in three different ways: either (1) on various surveillance camera footage the night the young lady from Toronto was last seen; or (2) being interrogated by the detectives with the boys' lawyers present; or (3) dressed up and sitting in court (or in the restaurant in the final scene) looking like choir boys. We never see them committing the criminal acts. We hear about the violent acts of these young men, but we never see either the criminal actions or the results (other than Jason's body being found near the end of the episode). When the two young men are arrested in the final scene, the whole thing seemed so sanitized to me that it didn't quite feel real.

Otherwise, the story and the courtroom drama were terrific!
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7/10
Three Preppy Punks
bkoganbing4 December 2013
Three Preppy punks are arrested for the murder of a young Canadian high school student on a trip to New York City. The only problem that Diane Neal has is that she doesn't have a body. But she makes the calculated decision to arrest these kids and in fact one of them is caught before he can board a private plane to Brazil.

So now SVU has to play catch up and hope they can find a body or some more evidence of murder before Neal finishes her case.

The three kids, Teddy Eck, Paul David Story, and Harry Zittel are three prime specimens of arrogance and privilege no doubt learned from their parents. You should see the length they go to cheat justice.

A good story with a most satisfactory ending.
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9/10
Court Officer
SarahKSeraSera5 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
I enjoyed the episode, but I was struck at the naivety of the court officer. Sure, she is young and easily swayed, but it is a stretch that she would risk her job and commit a crime because an accused asked her to and to bug a Judge's office. She had to know it was a crime. She then had sex with the accused because he was so charismatic, and she would do anything he asked. What kind of training do they give these officers where she would pick up a protected witness and deliver him to the accused because she believed all he wanted to do was to talk to him? I hope she would be charged with accessory to murder.
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10/10
High quality has not gone
TheLittleSongbird12 May 2021
"Gone" is one of those "ripped from the headlines" sort of stories. A type of story that the 'Law and Order' franchise often did well at when it did them, the original 'Law and Order' in its prime was particularly good at this. In this case, it is based on the Natalee Holloway case and made at the time where the case was quite fresh and feelings still raw. With it being quite closely indebted, those familiar with that case will find "Gone" a hard watch.

Actually knew about that case a long time after it happened and when the episode was aired and produced. After a big quality slump and a very up and down quality throughout the first half of Season 7, "Gone" shows that 'Law and Order: Special Victims Unit' still had greatness in it and not gone completely down the drain. To me, "Gone" is one of the best Season 7 episodes and the best 'Special Victims Unit' episode since "Raw". There are a few goofs, with the fourteenth ammendment one being particularly sloppy, but they weren't enough to bring down a fantastic episode.

So much is brilliant here. The production values are typically slick with the right amount of grit, nothing is too fancy or too gimmicky. Nor is anything too static, drab or garish. The music is not too constant or emotionally manipulative, meanig not over-emphasising the emotion to make one think that's how we should be feeling.

The script is intelligent and tautly structured, especially in the legal scenes in the increasingly desperate search for the prime witness. Despite being so faithfully based on a very emotionally raw case, it didn't feel in a way exploitative or quite too soon. The story is always absorbing and beautifully paced, really liked the increasing tension when things quickly fall apart and seeing Novak so involved was moving to see and not done too melodramatically. She's not out of character, she has shown a softer side more than once before such as in Season 6's "Night".

People may not like that not everything is fully resolved but in my view this was not a problem and was more tasteful that way. All the regular characters are well written, especially Novak and Donnelly. The only reservation being the underuse of Olivia, which to me didn't affect "Gone's" quality. Two of the three suspects are truly nasty and arrogant, appropriately so. All the performances are very good to outstanding, even from Fred Dalton Thompson who usually leaves me indifferent. Diane Neal is very moving here.

In summary, fantastic and one of the season's best. 10/10.
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10/10
Great episode!
sonya-679 September 2009
This episode of Law and Order: Special Victims Unit will keep you on the edge of your seat until the very last minute. I don't want to give away any details that would make this comment a spoiler, but I will say that I really enjoyed this episode. It was well-written and obviously the acting was terrific - as always. The only bad thing about this episode was that Olivia Benson (Mariska Hargitay, one of my favorite actresses) was barely present. Since it focused more on the court scenes than the actual police work, I guess she and Elliot had a break this week!

I started watching Special Victims Unit several years ago and have been hooked ever since. My husband and I used to watch it together, but we don't have time to do that now. Still, we've seen most episodes, but I wanted to watch them all again so recently I started at the beginning and thanks to Netflix, I started with season one and I'm now on season 7. Too bad I didn't think to start writing reviews when I was on season one!

Sonya :)
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10/10
If the law cannot protect
yazguloner16 May 2021
It is told, what will happen and the consequences if the law cannot protect. At the center of the story is the assistant prosecutor Casey Novak (Diane Neal).

The iceberg explains the reasons why law could not protect it. Failure to provide protection to the witness, the perpetrator being rich and powerful, bribery, irregularity, connivance, etc.

Unfortunately a realistic desperation.
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10/10
Fred Thomson Shows Just How BAD a Republican He Is
amauck-734-8188489 July 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Fred Thompson, the darling movie star of the Republicans (who are Strict Constructionists and would NEVER get the US Constitution WRONG) says at one point "The Fourteenth Amendment gives Nick & Doug the right to face their accuser."

WRONG!

It's the 6th Amendment that confers that right.

Now, you'd think that a dyed-in-the-wool conservative - who HATES what the 14th Amendment stands for (the party has gone on record they'd like to strip the 14th Amendment from the Constitution) would know that it's about Equal Protection and has NOTHING to do with what rights an accused has.

And yes, I realize he's an actor who was just delivering his lines, but THINK PEOPLE! He should have known it was wrong. It's obviously a blooper - but would a former Senator who flies a flag out his butt to prove how patriotic he is like Thompson allow himself to be caught in a blooper like that - which would and SHOULD be embarrassing to him? OF COURSE HE SHOULD HAVE!

I LOVED THIS EPISODE for this very reason - it shows just how idiotic that Republican hypocrite really is. I'm glad he's finally off the air and relegated to trying to bilk senior citizens with reverse mortgage ads on late-night TV! Oh how the mighty have fallen!

HA!
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