One of the few spin-offs that actually equals the original in terms of
quality, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit has another stellar
season in its third year. Detectives Olivia Benson (Emmy winner Mariska
Hargitay) and Elliot Stabler (Christopher Meloni) continue to investigate
sexually-based crimes with compassion and vigor.
There are a slew of guest stars playing roles we're not accustomed to.
Former Saved By the Bell child actor Mark-Paul Gosselaar makes a
heartbreaking appearance as a newlywed who gets involved in the gay porn
industry to support his baby and indifferent wife. John Ritter guest-stars
as a doctor who may have been involved in his pregnant wife's death. And
Diane Neal--who joins the cast in the show's fifth season as attorney Casey
Novak--plays a cocky businesswoman whose friend is found dead after a wild
girls' night out.
With a supporting cast that includes detectives Tutuola (Ice-T) and Munch
(Richard Belzer), as well as Captain Cragen (Dann Florek), and psychiatrist
George Huang (B.D. Wong), SVU tackles cases so heinous that viewers
are never certain whether the detectives will be able to make it to the
next case.
Good storytelling aside, the biggest draw to the show are the characters
of Benson and Stabler, whose chemistry is based on fierce loyalty and trust.
That they haven't slept with each other is a testament to the skilled writing
on the series. The show is so good that a romance between the two doesn't
have to be forced on the viewers to keep us interested.
From the first episode (involving a therapist who may have encouraged her
patient to commit a crime) to the last (where the detectives uncover a
sex scandal in the Catholic church), the stories stick with the viewer
long after the episodes have been watched. The third season ran from 2001
to 2002 on NBC, but time hasn't tempered the impact of this powerful series. |