"Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" Sophomore Jinx (TV Episode 1999) Poster

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8/10
"If I go down on the spot I die, you better make sure this never happens to it or I'll haunt you the rest of your days"
TheLittleSongbird4 August 2019
Despite only being Season 1, which usually for most shows tends to be "finding its feet"/"taking time to settle" period, 'Law and Order: Special Victims Unit' has fared very well up to this point of it. Was disappointed personally in "Wanderlust" but the rest of the episodes were very good to wonderful, so mostly a consistently high quality that one doesn't always get with shows so early on in their run. Not everybody will agree with that and that's fine, just my thoughts.

"Sophomore Jinx" is another very good episode. Do prefer especially "Payback" (compared to a lot of first episodes this one compares very favourably) and "Hysteria", but it is a big improvement over the previous episode "Wanderlust". Which actually despite being disappointed by it had a lot of good qualities still. One might have noticed that with me when saying that something disappointed me, that doesn't mean that it's bad, merely saying that it didn't live up to higher expectations.

In my view, the victim could have had more development outside of what she was really like. The way she was written seemed on the one-dimensional side, meaning under-explored and unlikeable, which made anything to make one connect with her in any way emotionally very difficult.

There are a huge amount of good things, that far outweigh any reservations. The case is absorbing, with its fair share of twists and surprises that catch one off guard and being surprised when one thinks that something they thought they were certain about was not correct after all. It is disturbing at times, though not quite in an unpleasant aftertaste way. Did like Abbie Carmichael's appearances and yes Angie Harmon acts disgust more than adeptly. Stabler's personal life is touchingly done and doesn't feature too heavily or feel too irrelevant.

Script is thoughtful and sometimes hilarious, with Stabler having two of the best lines. One when at the memorial with Olivia and the other in response to a character's sperm sample refusal. The character writing for the regulars is not biased this time and Olivia is much more likeable here, having been put off by how she behaved in "Wanderlust". The gritty visual style is still here, as is the spare but not intrusive music. The acting is fine, with Christopher Meloni and Mariska Hargitay being solid and a well matched pair. Richard Belzer is amusing.

All in all, very good. 8/10
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6/10
Way to much to trust
bkoganbing1 March 2013
The death of a popular sophomore student brings the SVU squad to St. Raymond's College which as it happens is the alma mater of Dann Florek. Not that the college is bending over backwards to help an alumnus. In fact they're throwing all kinds of roadblocks into the SVU squad investigation.

This episode also as they were trying to establish characters in those early years shows a bit of Elliott Stabler home life. Christopher Meloni is most concerned the late hours that daughter Erin Broderick is keeping. As he says in his job he sees way too much to trust.

It turns out that the victim had sex with two people that night under different circumstances to say the least. One of them is French literature professor Lothaire Bluteau and his description of the night's events leaves even the SVU squad which has thought they heard it all kind of gasping. That is nothing however compared to ADA Angie Harmon who was crossing over from Law And Order prime. I have rarely seen disgust portrayed so well on the big screen and small.
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