"Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" Users (TV Episode 2009) Poster

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8/10
Huang takes a job-threatening chance
garrard5 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
In an episode centered around the death of teenager, Dr. Huang (B.D. Wong)takes center stage as he becomes personally involved with one of the suspects: a drug-addicted young man, the victim's boyfriend. Other suspects include the girl's father and her psychiatrist.

The character of Dr. Huang, who has been featured prominently in previous episodes, gets to be more than just the "voice of reason"; he becomes a "man of action" as he jeopardizes his career to help the boy and reveal the psychiatrist's false treatment of his patients, who have included the boy and the deceased girl.

This installment lapses at times but has a satisfying resolution and features a standout performance from the actor playing the young addict.
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7/10
Dr. Huang takes a risk
bkoganbing4 January 2015
Warning: Spoilers
The murder of a young teen girl in an SRO hotel leads the SVU squad on to a sleazy therapist who has a great line and therefore access to some big bucks. The girl was a problem at home so her parents hearing about what a success that James Frain was consigned her to his career. He and his 'patients' all live together in nice style. Quite frankly it's a fashionable cult.

BD Wong makes it a personal crusade to bust this guy. Frain's having sex with the girls and even turning them out, as for the boys he's got them addicted to drugs. One of them is Ryan Kelley who is hooked on heroin and on a vicious cycle of dependency.

It's Kelley who turn out to be the key for getting Frain. But he has to come clean. It's here where Wong takes a risk and all I'll say it's one indictment of our pharmaceutical industry.

Frain is one scary dude. But an impressionable teen might find him charismatic. That's why he's so scary.

This episode belongs to be BD Wong.
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5/10
Out of control
TheLittleSongbird10 May 2022
On first watch, "Users" did very little for me. While appreciating the performances, the story just felt heavy handed and one-sided (criticisms not given out with pleasure). There was hope seeing it for the first time in a long time, with it being one of few episodes up to this point of the show's run to make me reluctant in re-watching it, that "Users" would be one of a number of 'Law and Order: Special Victims Unit' episodes that fared a lot better on re-watch.

Alas that wasn't to be. "Users" still doesn't do it for me, and my basic opinion pretty much stands in terms of what was good and what was bad about the episode. The subject is a tough one and that it was tackled is appreciated definitely, but "Users" could have done more with it and handled it a lot better and tactfully than it did. Do not agree with it being rated higher than the previous episode "Spooked", which was actually a very good episode in my view and the best of the previous episodes.

"Users" does have good things. Can't fault the slick production values, understated enough music or the direction. Did think too that the episode did start very intriguingly and unsettlingly, with some nice taut thoughtful writing.

The performances are near-uniformly strong. The SVU are all excellently performed, but it is the supporting cast that are even better. Ryan Kelley gives a moving performance as the one character worth rooting for at the end of the day despite his flaws. James Frain plays a monstrous sleazebag to scary effect.

Was however less keen on BD Wong. Wong usually performs Huang with calm authority beautifully, but here he didn't seem comfortable and his more emotional parts come over as overwrought. Didn't care for how Huang was written here too, with the writers continuing to show him as the completely different seeming person seen in "Hardwired". Although difficult cases do bring the worst out of people, Huang has dealt with more difficult cases than this and been much more collected. Here he is rather sanctimonious and aggressive and to me it felt out of character, plus Huang never behaved with such unprofessionalism before when he was usually by the book.

Moreover, the story generally didn't grab me. It could have done with a lot more tension and the second half could have been less rushed feeling. Its take on drugs is very preachy and another case of the writers making it too clear what side of the issue they are on when in Seasons 1-6 particularly there was more than one side shown. The portrayal of the internet was one-sided and over-generalised, it is known to be dangerous but it doesn't apply to all or everything that happens online, certainly not the irredeemably bad portrayal seen here. Some sloppy research regarding Hepatitis C as well. The ending makes one feel talked down to and too much goes on in the second half with the turns revealed at dizzying effect, making it come over as not always easy to follow.

Not a terrible episode by all means, but didn't work for me and in the lower half of Season 11. 5/10.
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