"Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" Home Invasions (TV Episode 2012) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
9/10
Annihilation
TheLittleSongbird22 June 2022
Home invasions is another one of those familiar topics for the 'Law and Order' franchise, and the execution of the episodes that have them as their case have varied. Most are tense and heart-breaking ("Invaders" from the original), but others are too obvious and have too few twists ("Annihilated"). It is a case of familiar ground not mattering that much, as home invasions are not unheard of to put it lightly and there have been some truly shocking real life cases (ie. The Richmond spree murders).

One of the better examples of this type of story in the franchise is "Home Invasions". One of the best episodes of Season 13 by quite some way and the best since "Spiralling Down", if not quite as good as that episode. "Home Invasions" is also notable in providing some long overdue character development for a regular character that was still not settling properly at this point, and this aspect is also done very, very well indeed. So a great episode.

Almost everything works. 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 nice and at its best (such as towards and at the end) thrilling tension while keeping things steady, without going too far the other way.

The dialogue is taut and is not long winded or lacking in cohesion, and even with it being a familiar subject for 'Special Victims Unit' and 'Law and Order' in general the story is always intriguing, tense and suitably twisty. Not too simple or too complicated. The acting is extremely good all round.

Really appreciated Rollins' character development, it is also not too melodramatic while also being very relatable and it forwards her character in a way that none of her previous appearances had done. Also liked the chemistry between her and Fin, one of the better written character chemistries of Season 13. It was great to see Fin's sympathetic side, something we don't see enough of, underneath that tough exterior he really does have a big soft heart. Rollins' and Cragen's discussion of her addiction was great.

Will admit that the identity of the responsible was not a surprise, it is not new territory with this type of story in a case where the suspect count is pretty low. The motive though was less foreseeable and is shocking and sad, by the end of the episode personally found myself not hating the perpetrator.

In conclusion, great. 9/10.
15 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Family Wipeout
bkoganbing8 May 2014
Warning: Spoilers
A bloody crime scene greets the SVU squad where a man and his wife have been shot to death. The walls were graffitied with homophobic messages which would be natural as the wife was a lawyer who was counsel to a state gay rights organization. Their daughter was wounded and is in critical condition. When she comes out of her coma it is possible that Lauren Gray can tell what happened.

Until then the squad has to deal with three possibilities. That it is indeed a hate crime because of the graffiti and the fact that mother had gotten into a lesbian relationship and was to be leaving her husband. Secondly that Gray's boyfriend Jake T. Austin took matters into his own hands or his father Danny Mastrogiorgio who disapproved of her and the relationship did something.

A third possibility is that the father was killed for a gambling debt as an example. Turns out he was a degenerate gambler, a fact verified by housekeeper Elizabeth Rodriguez and her brother Esai Morales. Turns out the father was more than that.

This episode with the gambling angle also sheds a light on Kelli Giddish who has a bad gambling problem, gotten worse by her move from Atlanta to New York.

The solution is a great deal more sicker than any of these red herrings served up by the plot. The burdens some kids have to bear.
17 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Those who are more interested in Saving the world than Saving their child
yazguloner18 July 2021
"Everything is political." In the next svu episode, the owner of the newspaper uploaded to nypd will also say this sentence. Maybe he's right...

Women's Rights, universal human rights, however existential they are, are political.

But not everything is political. Everything is personal.

"The personal is political! In fact, the most political is the deep of the personal."

It's one of the most tragic and emotional svu stories I've ever watched. At least it is for me.

I couldn't hold back my tears at the last interrogations.

Ps. Amanda's gambling addiction is revealed.
15 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed