"Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" Repression (TV Episode 2001) Poster

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8/10
Ripped apart
TheLittleSongbird27 May 2020
It was hard to not expect a lot from Season 3 of 'Law and Order: Special Victims Unit'. Considering that the previous two seasons were consistently decent to superb and also because the previous season's finale "Scourge" was a sizzler of a finale that left such a big impact on first watch and still does. It is completely understandable as to why anybody that loved the previous two seasons and that episode would expect a lot from Season 3's opener "Repression".

Which turned out to be a solid and very well done one, lots of things to admire here and there is much genuine emotion. "Repression" though doesn't quite start Season 3 off on a bang and doesn't quite have the amount of tension that one kind of expects for a season opener and for this premise. It is a fairly subdued episode in comparison but one can understand considering the timing, with it having to be pushed back because of 9/11.

As said, it could have perhaps done with a little more tension once more things were revealed.

Perhaps too it could have been a little more clearer as to whether the prime suspect was actually innocent completely or not, though admittedly strong feelings to the contrary were felt once the truth about another character came out.

"Repression" as ever for 'Special Victims Unit' though is slickly made, even more polished than the already improved standard of the second season's production values. The music doesn't over-emphasise too much the more dramatic moments, never drowning out the dialogue, and is only used when needed which is not a lot really. The dialogue is the kind well worth hearing, the tautness and thought probing still remaining.

Despite the need for more tension, the story is compelling and makes one both sad and angry. One really feels sorry for the daughters for the suffering the family goes through and Dr Warden is a character one really hates by the end of the episode, the truth about her shocking to the core. The regular characters and how they work together don't disappoint in any shape or form, Munch and Fin are so delightful together and an individual highlight scene is when Cragen finds out about the charges. All the performances are great, Mariska Hargitay is as good as she was in the previous two seasons while the moving Amy Irving and nasty Shirley Knight give particularly strong supporting turns.

Summing up, very solid season opener but could have been even better. 8/10
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6/10
Discredited methods
bkoganbing23 April 2013
Warning: Spoilers
The third season of SVU started with a young girl who is the eldest of three daughters of Amy Irving and Brian Kerwin coming the squad and reporting a rape to Mariska Hargitay. Sad to say though the perpetrator she says is her father.

As it is there is tension in the family anyway. Kerwin is the son-in-law of a powerful tycoon with whom he just wrested away control of his company. This accusation from out of left field as he sees it has messed his world up pretty good.

Though he's released as the squad tries to gather sufficient evidence for a case, Kerwin is then found shot to death in his office and they've got a family full of potential suspects.

Presiding over all of this is Shirley Knight a psychotherapist with a few issues of her own and using outmoded and discredited methods of treatment. It turns out she's the bottom of all the problems.

Knight is truly some piece of work and what happens with her should serve almost like a public service announcement for people if they're seeking mental health treatment research carefully whom you seek it from.
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Star power meets plot gimmicks
lor_14 August 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Amy Irving and Shirley Knight are the big-name cast members in this complicated but familiar story about the lack of reliability of children's testimony in rape/incest cases due to overly zealous therapists convincing the young victim that they were abused, finding "repressed memories".

T's a solid and realistic gimmick for dramatics, in this case Knight cast as the therapist and former superstar Irving as the mom who at first couldn't believe her big-shot husband would do such a thing but later turns against him. Mariska is of course the solid-as-a-rock sympathetic cop in charge of the case, plowing through the accelerating details.

The script is convoluted and full of too many twists & turns, but the overused gimmick of how therapists (oft-discredited in dramas like this one) coach or influence youngsters into imagining horrific treatment by adults spoils the suspense -one can see this revelation coming a way ahead of time, plus one of those ultra-hokey endings.
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1/10
Was this the real pilot?
jasonaldrich-8723923 December 2022
Somehow this is by FAR, THE, WORST, ACTED episode I've ever seen of SVU. I'm 18 minutes in and Finn says "look at the date", which says on the screen "10/08/01", but then Finn continued with "February thirteenth." How was this poor on to television? Someone edited this and said to themselves, "YUP! That's the one, the best it's gone get!"

Really horrible. And somehow I have 219 characters required left, so I'm going to say that this is too many characters. I hope this episode, called "Repression", never gets played on any type of TV anywhere, ever.

However, Don Cragen DOES play a very masculine patriarch.
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Omg
ashley-4686222 September 2018
Stabler just mispronounced his own name when answering his phone 😂
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