"Law & Order" Promote This! (TV Episode 2009) Poster

(TV Series)

(2009)

User Reviews

Review this title
5 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
9/10
Hard hitting promotion
TheLittleSongbird2 December 2022
When it comes to talking about the early seasons of 'Law and Order', 'Special Victims Unit' and 'Criminal Intent', those for 'Law and Order' were to me the most consistent in quality. Seasons 1-10 had some disappointments but were overall of a solid standard, whereas 'Special Victims Unit' was already inconsistent by its Season 7 and 'Criminal Intent' for half its run (both with outstanding episodes, but when 'Special Victims Unit' in particular missed it misfired big time.

Found myself very impressed by 'Law and Order's' penultimate season Season 19, and wasn't expecting to after finding this particular partnership less than promising to begin with (Lupo and Bernard fortunately have come on a long way since). Only two episodes didn't do much for me and another episode disappointed, but all the others were good to brilliant. One of the best and most powerful is "Promote This", made by the twist and one supporting performance.

It is at its weakest in the slightly too ordinary first quarter and the very ending felt slightly abrupt.

"Promote This" otherwise is truly excellent. The production values are solid and the intimacy of the photography doesn't get static or too filmed play-like. The music when used is not too over-emphatic and has a melancholic edge that is quite haunting. The direction is sympathetic enough without being leaden. The script is tight and thoughtful, especially in the cross examination.

The story is always compelling and is both disturbing and heart wrenching, the twist really took me by surprise and is very affecting. It's intricate but easy to follow still, the verdict is also interesting while the climax sears in tention. The acting is very good from all, with some of the best support acting of the season. Teresa Yenque in particular hits hard, particularly when on the stand.

In conclusion, great and one of the best episodes of the second half of the season. 9/10.
10 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Heart-rending for everyone involved
michelleishappy29 March 2021
3 spoiled teens attack hispanics looking for day work. They kill one, put another in a coma. The issues presented in this episode (against illegals and racism) have been around in the U. S. pretty much since the country's birth.

The mother (Teresa Yenque) of one of the victims, the one left comatose (Oswaldo Morales), turns in a spectacular acting performance. She's why I looked up info on this episode--to see who she is. As well, the hispanic mother of one of the perps, shows her own intra-cultural bias, using a derrogative term on the witness stand, for hispanic laborers, considering herself of a better class than they.
7 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
One of the Better Later Law and Order Episodes Except They Play It Safe
bkkaz17 May 2023
This is one of the better Law and Order episodes -- keep in mind, this was 2009, before America started to pay more attention to racial crimes against people based on their race.

Hispanic men are being targeted for random, race-based attacks until inevitably, one is left beaten and brain dead. The case leads to a group of White teens who for kicks and in the shadow of their parents' venal racism decide to take out their kicks on "illegals" -- including one victim born and raised in Michigan.

It's a scenario that plays out over and over again, more recently with the uptick in violence against Asian Americans.

In particular, the actress playing the mother of the victim is incredible. She conveys the pain and horror of a poor woman who raised her son right and loves him with all her heart, only to have him taken away by evildoers raised by animals with money.

But there are two offensive parts. 1) At the end, after the mother of one of the innocent victims who is only being kept alive by life support signs a DNR, Sam the Eagle observes coldly, "Everyone games the system." Really? Sometimes, Sam the Eagle is presented as a smarmy Hawkeye-Pierce-like liberal, but then others, he's just cold, especially to minorities, as though he's got some serious bigotry issues of his own. 2) They had to include a Hispanic person among those who attacked the Hispanic victims. Seriously, that just chickens out of dealing with the cold reality of who frequently and routinely commits race-based hate crimes.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Privileged kids beating illegals
bkoganbing25 May 2013
The beating of an illegal Hispanic immigrant is the case that Anthony Anderson and Jeremy Sisto are assigned to in this Law And Order story. The man isn't dead, he's in a deep coma and on a machine. Still it is a crime that could turn into a homicide.

The investigation leads to the eastern end of Suffolk County and three high school kids who don't look like they've missed too many meals, Michael Drayer, Jordan Burt, and J.P. Serret. Serret's an interesting suspect, his mother is from Argentina. His possible motivation comes out in Linus Roache's cross examination.

The best witness is the victim himself even if it just his presence to testify to his injuries. But our health care system bundles him off to Honduras where he's originally from. Alana DeLa Garza has to travel there to get him back at a cost of travel and maintenance for a comatose man that Sam Waterston's primary opponent uses as an issue.

Another Hispanic male is killed with a similar M/O and the two cases are tried together. An interesting verdict occurs and the end of the episode is not the end of the story.
12 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Miscast
bettye-360-1335561 January 2019
Good episode with a heartbreaking twist, but it always bothered me that the actress cast as the native Argentinian mother of one of the suspects looked more like she was from a country closer to the Equator, like Mexico or Cuba, where the residents are more likely to be darker-complexioned. All the Argentinians I've known look white...
4 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