Two student suicides are connected to a university drug study. The investigation uncovers that the pharmaceutical company that commissioned the study may have known about adverse side-effect... Read allTwo student suicides are connected to a university drug study. The investigation uncovers that the pharmaceutical company that commissioned the study may have known about adverse side-effects, but tried to cover it up.Two student suicides are connected to a university drug study. The investigation uncovers that the pharmaceutical company that commissioned the study may have known about adverse side-effects, but tried to cover it up.
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- DA Arthur Branch
- (as Fred Dalton Thompson)
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- (as Wass M. Stevens)
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It turned out to be a very good episode. Almost as good as the previous outing "Brotherhood" and continues the big improvement seen with that episode compared to the first two episodes of Season 15. It does a very good job with its subject matter, which is a difficult one and not explored enough, both at the time and now. "Coming Down Hard" doesn't shy away, but at the same time it also doesn't lay it on too thick. Which is the case with any episode that explores their subjects well.
Like a lot of 'Law and Order' episodes (admittedly, and this is coming from someone who loves the show and franchise at its best), one half is better than the half. The first third or so is a bit ordinary and Fontana is still one of those characters that isn't a complete mess but doesn't have quite enough to him yet.
Elisabeth Rohm is still stiff and robotic.
However, a huge amount is great. Completely forgot to say that there is a ripped from the headlines approach to the story, that aspect didn't come over as sleazy, exploitative or too faithful to what it's based on. The episode looks slick and has the right amount of grit, while the music isn't overused or melodramatic. It's alertly yet sympathetically directed.
The script is taut and thought-provoking, particularly in the latter stages of the legal portion. The story compels and isn't too simple or convoluted, the legal half having the right amount of tension. The ending isn't too rushed this time and the episode doesn't shy away from showing the full impact of this gutsy topic. The acting is very good, while almost all the regular cast are fine it's Peter Strauss who comes off best. Playing a character where a conviction is rooted for.
Concluding, very good. 8/10.
The doctor conducting at L&O's mythical Hudson University is Phillip Goodwin. But the chain leads up to CEO Peter Strauss. The kind of businessman you just love to hate. Life imitates art as we've seen with Martin Shrekeli the pharma CEO who was jacking up the prices on AIDs meds.
Seeing Strauss caught in the criminal justice system is worth watching this one for.
Did you know
- TriviaThis episode appears to be based on the 2003-2004 slew of suicides that took place at New York University.
- GoofsThe doctor said a child recovered from an anaphylactic reaction by having one epinephrine shot. It takes at least two epinephrine shots plus a trip to the ER for other medications to recover from an anaphylactic reaction.
- Quotes
A.D.A. Serena Southerlyn: I was doing catch-up on discovery.
D.A. Arthur Branch: Discovery? You're halfway through trial.
Jack McCoy: The defense disclosed dozens of boxes of paperwork. They're trying to drown us.
A.D.A. Serena Southerlyn: They have nine paralegals, and we just have me. But I don't think they meant to disclose this.
Jack McCoy: [Serena hands him a sheet of paper] Miss Southerlyn, you've outdone yourself.
D.A. Arthur Branch: Do I get to see it?
[Jack hands the paper over]
D.A. Arthur Branch: Well, let's see if Dr. Cedars can wiggle his way out of this one.