"Law & Order" Cut (TV Episode 2004) Poster

(TV Series)

(2004)

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8/10
My patients love me. They wait six months for an appointment.
Mrpalli7713 December 2017
In a fancy hotel, a guest was found dead by the maid. She had a cosmetic surgery the day before and something could have gone wrong. The victim was a well-known novelist who used a stage name for publishing her books, she was recently divorced (her former husband left her for a much younger woman) and few hours before the accident she had an argument with her former agent, a man with a "snooty" accent. Forensics pointed out her death was caused by a lethal interaction of drugs. Detectives, after taking a look to the intake forms, realized the doctor who performed her surgery might have known about the danger, but he is too greedy and nothing could stop him before money. Branch wants all cameras witnessing his arrest, in order to shut down his entire career, no matter what he would be found at trial.

An interesting episode, focused on a smart middle-aged woman who is willing to do everything to look younger. I think McCoy is right: some people should pay a visit to a psychologist rather than a cosmetic surgeon to raise their self-esteem.
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7/10
"My patients love me"
bkoganbing9 May 2020
A famous novelist dies soon after she had her umpteenth round of plastic surgery. It sure doesn't look like homicide until the medical examiner notices the woman had more drugs than she could handle with her system. After that Dr. Bruce Altman. At that point the charge is criminally negligent homicide.

Altman while making himself mega rich in the process, is a man who is reckless thinking surgery cures all the vanity that middle-aged women have about keeping their looks. He's greedy and feckless.

The high point of the episode is when Altman confronts Sam Waterston outside the court. He truly can't believe he's on trial at all.

It's a scene and an episode you will remember.
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9/10
Cutting edge
TheLittleSongbird26 July 2022
The premise of "Cut" could have gone either way in execution. It could have been unsettling and probed a lot of thought. Or it could have been too sleazy and too predictable. It still sounds very intriguing, even if it is not on paper the most novel of cases and straightforward. If one is a fan of 'Law and Order' and of the franchise, for a long time have liked it very much, it is hard to not expect a lot from "Cut", despite the latter seasons being nowhere near as consistent as the earlier ones.

Season 15 did get off to a shaky start, as did the character of Fontana, but saw steady improvement as it went along. Or at least the first half (the second varied wildly). One of the best episodes of the season is "Cut", which fortunately is in the former category of unsettling and thought probing and managing not to be too derivative. And this is a kind of story that could have been derivative and been problematically executed, but turned out not to be.

"Cut" is great in almost every area. The production values are suitably slick and gritty, with photography that is reliant on close ups that have an intimacy without being too claustrophobic. The music is didn't come over as too melodramatic or like it was emphasising the emotion too much. The direction is sympathetic while still giving momentum. A vast majority of the acting is excellent, with the standout being a very sleazy Bruce Altman. The highlight scene dramatically is agreed the big scene between him and Sam Waterston's McCoy outside court.

Furthermore, the script is very sharp, thoughtful and punchy, especially in the dramatically scorching final third. The subject is handled tactfully but at the same time also unflinchingly, leaving me both shocked and angry at how anybody could even contemplate let alone do what is done. The story keeps one glued to the edge of the seat and keeps one guessing all the way through to the episode's not predictable end. The legal portion being even better than the still enormously entertaining and grippingly gritty policing, an aspect that has come on a good deal since the season's first episode.

Only dull Elisabeth Rohm doesn't come off particularly well.

Great episode all in all. 9/10.
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7/10
Hilarious actors going after plastics they use
evony-jwm14 March 2021
Odds of an actor getting treatment by cosmetic surgeon is 90% so this story was concocted to laugh at the actors in law and order.. lots of before & after photos online. Sam Watermelon should stick to ocean plastics, however Waterson won't because China is the number one polluter.
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