"Law & Order" Menace (TV Episode 1997) Poster

(TV Series)

(1997)

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9/10
Not everything is what it seems in Menace
safenoe26 February 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I think the first 10 episodes of Law and Order are the classics and this episode Menace doesn't disappoint at all.

What seems like a "road rage" incident is more than that, and the plot unfolds involving arson, blackmail, business on the brink of defaulting, father and son relationships, a bully. The script writer did a fantastic job keeping the audience guessing to the very end, and what an ending it was.

This episode also had a human element with the Benjamin Bratt character revealing his wife left him and took the kids. Cops are human.

Due credit goes to the supporting cast, especially the guy who played the menace.
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9/10
Menacing menace
TheLittleSongbird22 April 2021
"Menace" sounded very twisty and unpredictable, just the way a 'Law and Order' episode should be. On first watch, way back when beginning to watch the earlier seasons (having gotten into the show via the late Briscoe and Green period), it struck me as one that had a lot of tension and something that kept me guessing all the way through. Of this still early stage of Season 7, it stood out at the time as one of the best episodes in a period that was mostly good to brilliant.

A couple of rewatches later, my feelings on "Menace" are very much the same. Not quite in the top 5 best Season 7 episodes and not quite as brilliant as the previous outing "Legacy", but definitely in the better half overall of a not always consistent but often very impressive season and with similar reasons (plus others) to that episode. "Menace" as an episode of 'Law and Order' is truly great, fits the twisty and unpredictable adjectives very well and is very highly recommended.

Did feel on first watch that the truth could have been revealed earlier than it was, because it did feel rushed and cluttered at the end. Still feel that way today, "Legacy" also revealed the truth in the final stages but worked well with the whole searching for the truth feeling of the episode and the truth wasn't as complicated.

Otherwise, "Menace" is great. The photography and such as usual are fully professional, the slickness still remaining. The music is used sparingly and is haunting and non-overwrought when it is used, and it's mainly used when a crucial revelation or plot development is revealed. The direction has some nice tension while keeping things steady, without going too far the other way.

The script is rich and intelligent, with nothing feeling like extraneous fat and it never comes over as too simple or too complicated. The story is full of clever and unexpected twists and turns without them cluttering or confusing the case, and the case is suspenseful and consistently intriguing. While the policing is far from routine, "Menace" shines more in the legal scenes and the ever richly drawn character of McCoy, his shrewdnes and resourcefulness shine brilliantly here.

Expectedly the acting is great, Sam Waterston faring best of the regulars and a truly menacing Rusty De Wees being another standout, being very memorable despite short screen time, in a supporting cast with no weak link. John Ellison Conlee impresses as well as the most interesting supporting character.

Summing up, excellent. 9/10.
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9/10
The Best of Law & Order
s_l_wood26 May 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This was a very good episode of Law & Order, and displayed the best elements of the show. First, an initial investigation into a woman so terrified of a man chasing her she jumps to her death leads to a connected crime that almost escaped detection. This second crime, an arson, is extremely difficult to prove, and requires a legal genius like Jack McCoy. McCoys passion and brilliance are the greatest part of the entire Law & Order series, and he is at full strength here. He carefully manipulates the criminals into helping the prosecution, and narrowly avoids breaking the law to do so. When we as a society hear of trials in the news, we get the big picture, but do not get to appreciate the diligence and resourcefulness of the attorneys involved. McCoy is such a genius and so shrewd he deserves a show purely about himself. In addition to an elaborate story and masterful handling of the case by McCoy, this episode shows how difficult it is for the police to do their jobs when the public is afraid to cooperate, and a compelling situation where a man must choose between being honest or being loyal to his family. A must see episode.
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8/10
Like the folks you meet on the Brooklyn Bridge
bkoganbing13 October 2013
It could just as easily been a suicide, a woman jumping off the Brooklyn Bridge at night other than several witnesses that Jerry Orbach and Benjamin Bratt have to laboriously track down to find out that in fact she may have jumped to elude some guys pursuing her.

It turns out that the victim was formerly the secretary and bookkeeper for John Collum whose factory burned down in a suspicious arson fire. The fire marshals had previously said it was passing vagrants, but as things progress it turns out to be more suspicious than that for Collum and his son Christopher Cousins.

The bridge pursuers are a real credit to society. One is played by John Ellison Conlee with the name of Crazy Mike McDugan and he's a leg breaker for hire and doesn't have too much smarts. The other has the colorful name of Randall the Candle, he's the arsonist who did the deed. He only has one scene, but Rusty DeWees is one menacing dude and infinitely smarter than his prison pal as you'll see.

Great Law And Order episode as Sam Waterston builds his case and only at the very last minute is all revealed.
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