"Law & Order" Legacy (TV Episode 1997) Poster

(TV Series)

(1997)

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8/10
The Gun In The Poop Bag
bkoganbing30 November 2010
Frances Sternhagen was the guest star in an unusual Law And Order episode where she plays a mother who hires a hit man to kill the second husband of her daughter-in-law. She's got good reason she feels to want him dead, she thinks he actually killed her son although the incident was desultorily investigated and listed as an accident. A fresh look opens the investigation there and her daughter Jenny Robertson's second husband Bradley White is arrested.

Two things about this episode were interesting. Although the DA's office make an arrest, Sam Waterston and Carey Lowell can't quite make the motive out, they can't prove any kind of affair while Robertson was married to husband number one. This episode proves the mantra that legal system has for itself, that a trial is a search for the truth. In most instances it's a question of proving a known truth, here the trial is well in process before the truth comes out for Waterston, Lowell, and the audience.

Secondly there is one droll performance by Tom Riis Farrell who plays a most ordinary looking hit man. He's the kind of a guy you wouldn't look twice at, in fact he's one of the coolest acting hit men I've ever seen on the big and small screen. He walks around on his job with his dog and keeps the weapon in the bag he says is keep the poop he's scooped. He answers questions quite calmly at the scene and is visibly holding the poop bag while Jerry Orbach and Benjamin Bratt question him. What a pair this one has.

This episode takes a few unexpected twists in it, try not to miss it when broadcast.
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7/10
I Married My Stalker.
rmax3048236 November 2012
Warning: Spoilers
An interesting case in which Frances Sternhagen married son is murdered by a friend who is interested in the son's wife. The weapon: a baseball bat. The two men are friends. Both drink some beer in Central Park and decide to climb a high rock. Only Bradley White, the guy who is after Sternhagan's daughter-in-law, bashes Sternhagen's son over the head with a bat and claims the victim fell.

That was five years ago. Sternhagen had suspected something was going on between White and her daughter-in-law but the police weren't interested. As far as they were concerned, a drunk fell and bashed his head on a rock in Central Park. So Sternhagen hires a chubby little hit man to take revenge on White. White survives the attack but is later convicted of the five-year-old murder.

The plot has a few holes but it's so complicated that it would take too much time and space to explain them. I'll mention one. On the night of the attempted hit, Sternhagen, her former daughter-in-law, her grandchild, and White went to dinner. At the same time, the unprepossessing hit man sat in a nearby café and waited. Just as the Sternhagen party, including the intended victim were leaving the restaurant, the hit man got a call that they were leaving and showed up in time to put a bullet into White. But how did the hit man know that it was time to leave the café? Someone at the restaurant must have called him. No one was seen making the call, but Sternhagen had gone back inside because she'd "forgotten something." It was then that she presumably called the hit man and alerted him. But it's a weak assumption. Any of the guests or staff in the restaurant could have made the call. The hit man might have had a friend or accomplice in the restaurant keeping an eye on the Sternhagen party. It's a minor thing but it was a snag that my attention caught on and my disbelief was momentarily suspended.
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10/10
Searching for the truth
TheLittleSongbird22 April 2021
'Law and Order' was incredibly good at exploring challenging topics and themes that hit hard and are still relevant and important to address. It was also, as has been said more than once in previous reviews, incredibly good at exploring them in an honest and pull no punches way and in a way that still holds up. This was evident in so many episodes of the previous six seasons and evident too in the previous episodes of Season 7.

While other episodes did all this even better, "Legacy" still executes its subject extremely well. To me, it is the best episode since "Corruption", one of the better episodes of Season 7 and definitely a massive improvement from the disappointing (in an uneven way, not a bad one) previous two outings. Also agree that there are a couple of things that makes it stand out compared to what came previously in the show. "Legacy" is an episode that requires full attention, but does so in a way that is richly rewarding.

As usual for 'Law and Order' and its spin offs, the production values in "Legacy" 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 while also taut.

The script is always very thought-provoking, especially the legal scenes and the moral dilemmas that come with the case, and while it is very rich and complex it doesn't become too much so that one becomes lost. Nothing simplistic about it either. The story is absorbing in both the policing and the legal scenes, the latter of which are a return to the powerful and thoughtful ones the show is known for and not the improbable and too complicated ones of the previous two episodes. Plenty of clever and unexpected twists and turns that make it unpredictable all the way to the end. The pace is deliberate but never dull and is taut.

Furthermore, as mentioned already, "Legacy" is quite different. Not many episodes where the entire truth is figured out and revealed very late in, pretty much right at the end without the explanations feeling rushed or too much of an afterthought. It is indeed an episode that a vast majority of the time searches for the truth.

Cannot fault any of the performances, Sam Waterston and Carey Lowell (the latter has settled very well indeed) stand out of the regulars. While Frances Sternhagen unsettles in her role and Tom Riis Farrell playing the quirkiest and most deceptive hit man imaginable.

In summary, brilliant and a return to form. 10/10.
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10/10
Don't Get Murdered on a Busy Weekend
stillparker-125 May 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I don't want to reveal spoilers, but as another reviewer has pointed out, there is a hit man not to be forgotten in this one, both for his modus operandi and for his sangfroid. The performances of Jenny Robertson (IMO an underrated actress who enhances any of her material) and the great Frances Sternhagen stand out, and you will not be bored. Another reviewer complains of plot holes, but I say picky picky. I've watched this perhaps three times, and I've never been brought up short by a plot issue. The late great Jerry Orbach (RIP) has a very nice scene with Ms. Sternhagen, and the episode includes many funny quips (yes, most of the Law and Order episodes have funny quips, but I think this episode's are particularly funny).
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