"Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" Russian Love Poem (TV Episode 2000) Poster

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7/10
Poetic betrayal
TheLittleSongbird25 September 2019
Am always impressed when a show starts off more than promisingly and settle quickly, though the latter doesn't happen an awful lot even with personal favourites. That is the case with 'Law and Order: Special Victims Unit', while Season 1 may not be the best of the show it does show why there is a personal general preference for the earlier seasons than the more frequently aired later seasons. The odd disappointment aside, most of the season's episodes are very good to outstanding.

"Russian Love Poem" is for me though one of the weaker episodes of the first season up to this point of it. Of the previous episodes, the only episodes lower rated by me are "Wanderlust" and "Stocks and Bondage" both of which still above average. That is not meaning that "Russian Love Poem" is bad, for me it was still decent. But compared to the previous episodes of the season, decent is a little disappointing considering the very high standard of most of them.

Will start with what could have been better. Other episodes do better at making me care for the case and characters, though "Russian Love Poem" doesn't do too badly generally on them. The pace could have been tighter in spots though especially to begin with.

There could have been more twists and when a victim is one that is reprehensible and not worth rooting for it makes it harder to care properly for getting the crime solved.

It is to "Russian Love Poem's" credit that it does become more interesting and twisty after the second death. The ending is a tense one. There are some nice character moments, standouts being a funny line from Olivia regarding a banana and what it had been used for, a nice scene between her and a suspect, Munch speaking Russian, one of the most entertaining portrayals of drunk people on television in a while and Elliot being hit upon.

As for the production values, "Russian Love Poem" looks suitably slick and doesn't look too drab, suiting the gritty tone more than convincingly. The taut and intelligent dialogue is allowed to do all the talking and is not drowned out by constant and over-obvious music, which is used sparingly and generally low-key apart from in major revelations. The main theme is not hard to forget. The dialogue entertains and provokes thought mostly and the story does get better. The acting from the leads is very good and good enough from supporting.

Overall, decent but not great. 7/10
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