"Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" Rhodium Nights (TV Episode 2012) Poster

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10/10
Tension filled nights
TheLittleSongbird24 June 2022
Found Season 13 to be much better than expected. Despite loving Seasons 1-6 and Seasons 7-9 had some real hits as well, Seasons 10-12 saw a big overall downturn in quality despite all three still having some very good and more episodes. Season 13 also had to deal with a good deal of change, including the introduction of two major characters and Stabler being written out. While the previous four episodes were disappointments, there were winners in the season such as "Home Invasions" and especially "Spiralling Down".

Another winner is the season finale "Rhodium Nights", tieing with "Spiralling Down" as the best episode of Season 13. 'Law and Order: Special Victims Unit' really varied when it came to its season finales (it had a better track record with its premieres) and "Rhodium Nights" is among the best ones. Also easily the best since Season 8's "Screwed", saying easily because of disliking Season 9's "Cold", Season 10's "Zebras", Season 11's "Shattered" and Season 12's "Smoked". Would also go as far to say that it is even better than "Screwed".

"Rhodium Nights" is highly successful in every way. It is shot with the right amount of intimacy without being claustrophobic and that the editing has become increasingly tighter over-time has been great too. Nice use of locations too. The music doesn't get over-scored or overwrought, even in the more dramatic revelation moments. The direction is also accommodating. There is a tight, thoughtful script that crackles in tension.

The story is suitably intricate and suspenseful, with plenty of surprises. Usually don't like the type of ending "Rhodium Nights" finishes on, with the danger with another season not happening (especially when it's a two parter but spread out over two seasons), but this one shocks and makes one excited for what is to come.

Moreover, the acting is great all round. Particularly Dann Florek, who does authoritative and conflicted so well, and a wonderfully loathsome Peter Jacobson (he always plays those sort of roles extremely well). Dean Winters is also well cast as Cassidy.

Concluding, brilliant end to a pretty solid and better than anticipated season and makes one excited for what's to come in Season 14 (the premiere for that being the second part of what is essentially a two parter). 10/10.
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7/10
The Whore War
bkoganbing17 February 2015
This episode was the start of a string of episodes where the SVU squad gets quite the shakeup after responding to a call at a high rise penthouse where a dead girl was found, an underage one from Winnipeg at that.

The squad gets the lovely sight of all kinds of VIPS fleeing like mad, but being trapped in an overloaded elevator. The local precinct is more than happy to hand this one over to SVU because all the guests are connected, at least the male ones. The females as it turns out are high end escorts from an agency run by Peter Jacobson.

Another long running element is introduced here with the feud that starts between Danny Pino and Dean Winters who comes back after a 12 year hiatus as Detective Brian Cassidy. Winters left the SVU squad back in 2000. In those years he's moved to undercover work and he's working as such in a long running sting involving Jacobson. He's worked his way into Jacobson's operation as muscle. In those years also he's changed from callow youth in those first episodes of SVU into now one nasty character. And to prove his nastiness when the squad comes knocking on Jacobson's door, Winters punches out Pino earning him a trip downtown where he explains his role to his old mates. But Pino wasn't an old mate from the good old days and that sock on the jaw leaves him with a bad attitude toward Winters.

What conclusion Captain Cragen comes to is that we've got a whore war going on New York's number one Madam Brooke Smith trying to destroy a relative interloper in Jacobson. She's ruthless and well connected and members of the squad feel what she and her high priced lawyer Ron Rifkin are capable of. In fact the show ends with one of them in a real bad jackpot.

This one leaves you wanting more. And you get it.
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