"Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" Wet (TV Episode 2010) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
8 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
So so episode
marysammons-4222011 October 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This episode was okay. The funniest part was Olivia getting high on the mushroom fumes. "I'm not the one who stabbed the captain with a pickle!" Vincent Prochik was annoying.
11 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Another politically-driven pot-boiler
cpotato101022 April 2018
Warning: Spoilers
This one was not about soda per se, but the buying up of water rights, by among others the companies that make soda and bottled water.

The political part is not the main story, which is the semi-Romeo and Juliet of the grand-daughter and the Prof. Who will take the blame for the murder of the soda rep?

Notable guest stars: Paula Patton - A.D.A. Mikka Von - sorry, she does not even finish the episode. Pity she was not around longer. Between movies?

Amanda Fuller - Emma Brooks - the grand-daughter, most recently known as the eldest daughter of Last Man Standing

Melissa Benoist - Ava - blink at the beginning and you will miss her, the one with the man wanting to go skinny-dipping in the fountain, before finding it was occupied. Recently of Supergirl.
11 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
"Aunt May" scores as the grandmother from h**l!
garrard27 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
The fifth episode of the 12th season of "SVU" is a little too "preachy" as it takes the (usual) liberal take on the evils of big business, this time attacking soft drink companies as being responsible for leading an attempt to control the world's water supply. The suspicious discovery of a body in a fountain leads the SVU team to the halls of academia and the mansion of a wealthy dowager, played by veteran character actress Rosemary Harris, who had a business relationship with the murder victim.

Harris, who has been introduced to the younger generation as Peter Parker's "Aunt May" in the "Spiderman" movies, is extremely good as the unforgiving aunt of one of the suspects, played by guest star Amanda Brookss.

The final scene in the hospital between Harris and Brooks demonstrates the aunt's true character, leaving the viewer to be sympathetic to the niece who is revealed to be the actual murderer.
15 out of 33 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Smurfs Village
yazguloner6 July 2021
It's a great story, from the mushrooming to the water supply problem.

It is the Svu we are always looking for.

There are quotes and information to take note of. Consistent and balanced writing dominates. It is Svu that I always watch and always want to watch.

It's gripping as the team struggles to find the real culprit.

Icons are unforgettable: Rosemary Harris (Francine Brooks).

The guest star performances are great: David Krumholtz (Dr. Vincent Prochik).

A.d.a., one of the good: Paula Patton (a.d.a. Mikka Von)

The humor is very good in itself and at the right time: "I'm not the one who stabbed the captain with pickles!", "I didn't want the pizza, your honor" And Munch humor is a must.
12 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Good and Bad Acting
wrenleung26 April 2020
Rosemary Harris playing the grandmother was spectacular. The one who played the ADA however...
14 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Odd couple
bkoganbing16 November 2014
This one is a bit much. Yesterday I made sure when buying sodapop it was root beer with only 2% sugar content. We all have to read labels. But soda is a part of American culture whether the folks who wrote this SVU episode admit it or not.

The PR executive of a cola company is found drowned in a park. Later on video surfaces that shows said executive hot to trot and ready to get it on right there in Central Park. Lucy Owen's body shows that it was given a rather exotic quantity of mushrooms at a banquet earlier in the evening.

The verdict on Owen is mixed. Some regard her as a saint, some just good at her job, some as some kind of happy face put on a corporate monster.

In the end a rather odd pair of suspects are picked up, David Krumholtz a scientist and Amanda Fuller the screw-up heiress of the family who owned the cola company. What and how much culpability each has the crux of the episode.

There's also Rosemary Harris the grand dame of the cola company family who is one matriarch no one runs afoul of. She provides an interesting coda for the cola episode.
13 out of 36 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Left me cold
TheLittleSongbird30 May 2022
It is always frustrating when a subject interests you but any film or television episode that explores it doesn't do a particularly good job exploring it. 'Law and Order: Special Victims Unit' was a great show in its prime (a too brief too in retrospect), with the best Seasons 1-6 period of it, the original 'Law and Order' and 'Criminal Intent', and the previous four Season 12 episodes were so brilliant (especially a show high point "Behave"). So "Wet" did have potential.

Which it did too little with. By all means, it is a long way from being one of the worst episodes of Season 12 but it is sad that the brilliant start the season enjoyed wasn't continued with "Wet". It definitely has its moments and good things, such as a great guest performance and one part that made me laugh out loud, but the odd tone and heavy-handedness badly sink things. Not a terrible episode at all, but it did leave me rather cold, a disappointment after being so riveted, shocked and moved by the previous four episodes.

Beginning with the good things, the production values are slick, gritty and professional. The music is haunting while not spelling out the emotions too much. Some of the direction shows some nice tension in the character interaction.

A major highlight is the eerily icy guest performance of Rosemary Harris, her character not being the stereotypical grandmother character that it sounds on paper. David Krumholtz does crazy very well. "Wet" is worth seeing just the once for Olivia's reaction to the toxic mushrooms, that line about stabbing the captain with pickle made me laugh out loud.

However, a lot could have been done so much better. "Wet" is far too preachy, regarding with everything regarding the sugar. Making it clear what side of the argument the writers are on and with only that side being shown. The start of the episode is routine and too much of it is incredibly strange tonally and over offbeat. Paula Patton comes over as bland.

To me, "Wet" didn't feel like a 'Special Victims Unit' episode, or at least the second half certainly didn't. Instead it feels more like late 'Criminal Intent', can actually vividly imagine Goren reacting to the mushrooms in the way Olivia does except considering his personality it would have been even more priceless and would have fit into classic Goren territory. The dialogue tends to be rather heavy and could have been tighter, the offbeatness of it also didn't gel particularly well.

Overall, underwhelming. 5/10.
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Left wing propaganda
stratus_phere7 June 2018
Warning: Spoilers
The SVU police turn themselves into the sugar police. When they interview people, they always ask, "that doesn't bother you..." and then go into their anti-cola rant. Who do these people think they are? No one is required to justify themselves to these holier-than-thou jerk detectives.

I'm tired of so many episodes being ruined by pontificating left wingers. I'm so sick of hearing them discuss the so-called ills of society that are really nothing more than people living their lives freely in a free country. They talk about the soda tax like it's a good thing. A good thing is government staying out of peoples personal business.

This episode turned me off so much that I poured myself a big glass of cola. What are you going to do, arrest me?
13 out of 49 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

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


Recently Viewed