Saturday, March 31, 2018

Strike Back Retribution Episode 9

There's only one thing to say about this episode: The boys are BACK!


Catch next week's episode 10 of Strike Back for more of Scott and Stonebridge on Cinemax at 10pm Eastern.

Saturday, March 24, 2018

Law and Order: SVU Episode 17: Send in the Clowns

This was quite the episode. The case this week started out as, well... “normal” for the SVU squad and their intrepid ADA. 16 year old Haley, on a field trip with her music class and male music teacher (James), disappears after sneaking out to a club. The prime suspect is a very creepy guy who works in a butcher shop and has a fetish for clown masks. He has no alibi. Her blood was found in his apartment and car along with some of her belongings and he was captured on camera dragging a very heavy bag around in a landfill. There’s just one thing missing.... A body. And the creepy clown guy claims he’s innocent. 




So what’s Peter Stone to do? It’s not a slam dunk case by any means. He’s hesitant, and with good reason, to charge the guy. He’s trying to relax in the bar but the case is all over the news. Benson then walks in and starts to press him to charge the guy. It’s been three days. The family needs closure. The news shows the young girl, a music prodigy, exquisitely playing the piano. Peter is obviously moved by this, or maybe by the memories the footage stirs up. We don’t quite know. But in any case, he turns to Benson and says he’ll charge the guy. Now, you would think after all the pushing she did, Benson would be supportive and glad he’s agreed. Well not quite. She then questions his abilities and whether or not he can get a conviction. What the heck, Benson? Or maybe the better question is, what the heck writers?? 





As the case goes to trial, we notice an interesting pattern with the defense attorney. He does not question any of the prosecution’s witnesses. Why? Well, plain and simple... no body. That alone casts a reasonable doubt over the case even with all the evidence they have against the defendant. But Peter presses on. He tells the parents and James to trust him. Between the dad’s testimony today and James’ testimony tomorrow, he is confident they can win the case.

That confidence goes out the window when James, his star witness, is a no-show in court. Things take a very warped and twisted turn here. James and Haley appear to have set up the clown guy for murder so they could flee the country together. Benson pushed Peter to prosecute the wrong man. Maybe next time he will go with his gut and not with Benson’s heart.

Haley and James profess their love for each other as they are pulled out of bed and driven down to the police station where we get another twist in this tragic tale. It turns out Haley’s mom had an affair with James and that resulted in... yes, you guessed it... a love child... Haley. So not only is James sleeping with a minor, he’s also sleeping with his own daughter. When Haley learns of this, she is excited and happy. She truly is special and not the daughter of a garbage man. I can only echo Peter’s utterly confused reaction about it all while he walks out of the courthouse with Benson after James’ trial.

But now... now is when we learn the heartbreak that is keeping Peter in NY and are treated to more brilliant acting by Philip Winchester. Earlier, he had to skip Finn’s birthday party because he had an appointment he couldn’t miss. That appointment is his sister Pamela. Choking back tears, he tells Benson she is in a facility in upstate NY because she suffers from schizophrenia. Their dad would visit her every week, and with him gone, it is now something Peter promised he would do. He gave up the entire life he had built in Chicago to be in NY for his sister.



The heartbreak continues to pile on for poor Peter when he goes to visit Pamela and we see she has no memory of her brother, a brother who obviously loves her very much. The pain floods over Peter’s face. She calls him dad even after he says who he is. Possibly some dementia, too? He tries to laugh it off but it hurts, badly. This is one of Philip’s many shining areas of acting. He doesn’t need to breakdown completely for the audience to see that immense pain. In fact, that makes the impact much more powerful (for me anyway).

Now, let us hope the SVU writers don’t drop this storyline for Peter and we continue to learn what his and Pamela’s relationship was like growing up. Was she the older of the two? I tend to think so. We’re they close? I can only imagine they were, or at least Peter really looked up to her, for him to selflessly walk away from an entire life he built.


And wishing Philip a very wonderful birthday today! Thank you for bringing us such wonderful and complex characters to enjoy.

Law and Order: SVU airs Wednesdays at 9:00pm Eastern on NBC.

Saturday, March 17, 2018

Law and Order: SVU Episode 16: Dare

This was very powerful and overall well written episode about organ donation without consent. In NY it is illegal wrong to harvest organs without consent. Period. Only one color on that palette. Morally, however, the palette is covered in shades of grey. Colors that Peter Stone is becoming all too familiar with.


The subject matter hits a bit close to home for me so forgive me for going off on a tangent a bit for a moment. Six years ago my mother passed away suddenly. The day after, I received a phone call from the hospital because they wanted to harvest one of her organs but she wasn't listed as a donor on her driver's license. Because her passing was sudden, I never had the chance to speak with her about her true wishes. The decision was one of the easier yet hardest things I had to do. She hadn't consented so did I have the right to change that decision after her passing? I ultimately said yes, for a myriad of reasons I won't go into but, whether or not I really had the right to go against what appeared to be her wishes always tugged at the back of my mind.

In the case Peter Stone was handed, again a no-win scenario, a child's organs were harvested without her parents' consent. Her heart was seconds away from being flown to another city to save a child's life. Had this been a one off case, maybe the doctor would not have been held accountable. But 31 other children were victims of the same thing.  Yet, 31 children were alive because of it. The doctor had forged signatures on consent forms so the donor organs would be accepted. The case, however, isn't about the legality of organ harvest. It's about forgery, which Peter sees as cut and dry. Out of the courtroom though, the morality of it is what each of the SVU squad and the ADA struggle with.

Peter struggled on two fronts with this and that struggle was beautifully played out by Philip Winchester's acting. Facing the young boy, Harry, who was denied the harvested heart, the sorrow was plainly seen on Peter's face. Later fighting back tears and nearly losing the battle, he tells Olivia of how his father passed when he'd left the hospital room for a few moments and how upset he'd have been if he came back only to find his father's organs had been removed. The dialogue was well written and excellently delivered with those emotions.


However, my first big gripe with the way the episode was written comes when Peter says he's seeking jail time to make an example of the doctor because he doesn't want to "seem like a pushover". Wasn't he, for the past two shows, worried about being a hard ass? Make up your mind please writers... how about consistently in the middle of the two? My second issue is when Olivia throws the emotional confession about his dad's passing back in his face by suggesting he's overcompensating for his guilt by seeking the jail time instead of just letting the doctor lose her license. You just don't do that to someone who you supposedly have respect for. I, personally, might have a lost a little respect for Benson over that. As if all that wasn't a punch in the gut for him, Rollins comes in to tell them that Harry died about an hour prior. Since a picture is worth a thousand words, instead of trying to describe the sorrow, I'll end with a touching picture of it.


Law and Order: SVU airs Wednesdays at 9pm Eastern on NBC.

Sunday, March 11, 2018

Law & Order: SVU Episode 15: In Loco Parentis Review

I'm not really going to recap this episode. I am going to assume (dangerous, I know) that you've seen it 😊

THE GOOD

  1. While I have issues with some of the material and direction he was given (covered The Bad and The Ugly sections), Philip did an outstanding job in this episode. One thing that always makes for great performances from him is his ability to convey emotion in his body language and facial expressions. From the tilt of his head to the furrow of his brow to the drumming of his fingers on the notebook, it says more than dialogue ever could or makes the dialogue all the more powerful.
  2. High five to Finn for defending Peter. Telling Rollins to stop blaming Peter for Barba's action was great and 100% spot on. I have a feeling Rollins is going to be the major thorn in Peter's side for awhile. Which is fine. I don't expect everyone to like him from the get go. But make sure you're not disliking him for the wrong reasons.
  3. Benson's faith in Peter's abilities when Carisi questions them. Peter may be new to SVU, but he has plenty of solid and successful prosecution experience behind him.
  4. Peter doing what Peter does best... kicking ass in the courtroom. He is great at getting the defendant riled up by pretending to agree and condone their actions. Sympathizing with them and their anger and frustration. And then, the defendant does the rest: insert foot in mouth, salt and pepper to taste. Nothing like getting the defendant to admit his own guilt right up on the stand.


THE BAD

  1. This is yet another case, within a few months, in which an SVU detective is personally involved. What is this, the Kobayashi Maru SVU style for him? Sorry for those who don't get the Star Trek reference but these cases are almost no-win scenarios for him. If he loses, he sucks as an ADA. If he wins, he sucks because he put one of their own or someone they care about behind bars. This week is an exception to the last one because winning was good but if he had lost, Carisi would have hated him. It's like the writers are giving every opportunity for the squad and fans to dislike him.
  2. The dinner invite and blatant flattery. If having dinner with Benson is strictly a throwback to the history of his eating meals & discussing cases with Anna, I'm good with that. But if it's hinting at anything else, especially with all the uncomfortable flattery and what happens in The Ugly section....
  3. When did Peter forget that he's a kick ass prosecutor? Telling Benson he's used to going to trial with more evidence... back in Chicago, he took on weak cases with extreme self-assuredness frequently, much to Mark Jefferies' chagrin.
  4. Benson telling him that if he's in this (meaning the prosecution of sex crimes) to win, he's in the wrong place. Really? I think maybe some of the previous ADA would disagree with that. Sure, you want to go to trial, as she points out, so the victim can tell their story and confront their attacker, but you want to win, too. Prosecution and conviction is the ADA's purpose. You want justice for the victim, don't you?


THE UGLY


  1. The gratuitous shirtless scene. Okay, from a strictly aesthetic standpoint, those few frames are quite pleasing to the eye. But from a character and necessity standpoint, what the heck?? Peter would have never changed in his office in Chicago. Yet he changes here and doesn't bother to lock the door or even find out who's knocking before telling them to come in. Aren't there bathrooms or a locker room or some place he can change? Or is he living out of this office and that's why he doesn't have all his ties yet? It was pointless. It marginalized and sexualized the character in a way that has never happened before on the show. And again with the forced flattery/charm to Benson with the Mets tickets for her son. Writers: PLEASE stop making Peter try so hard. Let his natural pleasant personality win the SVU folks over. 




Law & Order: SVU airs Wednesday nights on NBC at 9pmET.

Saturday, March 3, 2018

Law & Order: SVU's Newest ADA

With the airing of the Law & Order: SVU episode "Undiscovered Country" on February 7th, Philip's Chicago Justice character, Peter Stone, became the newest ADA for the Special Victims Unit in New York.



After just 13 episodes Dick Wolf's Chicago Justice series met with cancellation but within days, Philip found himself with the opportunity to bring the character back to life on the hit SVU series. Although not known to him or the fans at the time, Raul Esparza, who had played the ADA on the show for 6 years, decided to depart the series leaving the need for someone to fill that ADA role. Philip was just the person for the job. His character already had ties to NY as his father, Ben Stone, had been a major player in the legal system for years. It was his father who prompted him to leave NY and now it would be the death of his father that would bring him back.




Originally just slated as a supporting actor for the show, after episode 13 aired and Esparza's departure from the show was known, it was announced Philip would be promoted to series regular. This was great news for Philip fans and Peter Stone fans. As the lone ADA of the show, he would be appearing in almost all of the remaining episodes for season 13. Fans would now have the opportunity to find out more about what makes Peter Stone tick since most of what was seen of the character in Chicago Justice was in the courtroom. Not much was known of him aside from a career ending baseball injury being the reason for going into law and the aforementioned fact he left NY to get away from his father.

Philip's performance on these 2 episodes of SVU has been outstanding. Subtle nuisances in his acting, such as the slight nod and smile when Barba was acquitted and softening of the eyes when learning of the molestation of Reggie Price and Brian Cassidy, show the viewers that Peter Stone may not like what he's doing but he does it because he has to. Because, as he himself said, "it's the law."

It's not going to be smooth sailing for Peter with the SVU folks. He just prosecuted their ADA and then went after Olivia's ex in episode 14 "Chasing Demons" so he wasn't quite winning them over. Peter is still finding his feet with prosecuting special victims crimes, though, so as the season progresses fans are sure to see the dynamics of the unit change and friendships emerge.

Brittany Frederick of OneChicagoCenter had a wonderful interview with Philip about his new role on SVU. Read her two part interview:

Part One
Part Two

You can also read great episode reviews by Kelsey Nolen for the first two episodes Philip was in:

Episode 13 - Undiscovered Country
Episode 14 - Chasing Demons

Be sure to tune in Wednesday nights at 9:00PM on NBC to catch Philip on Law & Order: SVU.