"Law & Order" Carrier (TV Episode 1998) Poster

(TV Series)

(1998)

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8/10
Strain
TheLittleSongbird21 July 2021
The subject matter immediately is enough to grab the attention. It is yet another very sensitive and difficult topic to discuss, and if anybody has doubts about whether the execution would be tactful enough without being preachy, one-sided and too heavy that is understandable (those are common traps with this kind of topic and similar). Anybody though that has always admired how 'Law and Order' approached tough subjects and how it did so will be intrigued.

"Carrier's" subject matter is one of the most controversial ones of Season 8 and one of those subjects that should not be trivialised or sugar-coated but also be approached with caution and tact. "Carrier's" approach to this subject matter is far from trivialised or sugar-coated but it also still manages to do it in good taste and not make too much of a judgement (even when hating the perpetrator so much). It is a very good episode, though it is one of those Season 8 episodes where one half is superior to the other.

For me it was a bit on the routine side to begin with, actually had a big feeling right off the bat that the actions were done with intent and the perpetrator's attitude alone is a giveaway.

However, everything else is done wonderfully. It is as ever shot with the right amount of intimacy without feeling too up close, even with a reliance of close up camerawork. That the editing has become increasingly tighter over-time is great too. The music isn't over-scored, manipulative or used too much. There is intimacy and tautness in the direction. The performances are excellent across the board.

Script is intelligent and lean with no signs of fat. It also has intensity, emotional impact and even the odd sprinkle of humour, and is especially good when arguing whether the actions of the perpetrator were intentional and providing any proof. The story in the legal portions is hugely riveting and raises so many questions, especially everything centered around the confidentiality. The debating is intriguing and thought-provoking, though it is one of those cases where one cannot see how anybody would want to defend somebody as disgusting as the perpetrator.

In conclusion, very good and nearly great. 8/10.
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8/10
Finally an episode I could genuinely enjoy.
m-4782611 January 2024
Showing what a good and fair lawyer, McCoy can be when he wants to. Maybe Jamie Ross is finally rubbing off on him... I knew someone who stumbled upon the kind of creep portrayed in « Carrier », and there are clearly cases where you can't ignore a threat, at the risk of having more victims on your hands. The political aspect was pertinent for once. It had nothing to do with race, sexuality or even people in general, just a question of public health. Lobbies entering the fray, were just being hypocritical as heck as ever, and I was a hundred percent behind the lawyers decision to prosecute no matter the cost. Of course, writers didn't took too much risk either, considering the way the episode unfolded and concluded, but it was a very gripping one, neatly written and just as flawlessly acted.
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5/10
The ultimate judge
bkoganbing19 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Once again another and bigger case springs from one homicide. Jerry Orbach and Benjamin Bratt come to an apartment where one big party had been going on. But a girl is found dead in her bedroom with a bullet in her head and the gun right beside her. That case closes quickly enough as a kid who was going out confesses she was diagnosed with AIDS and things get out of hand.

The diagnosis however sets Briscoe and Curtis on a chase for who might have given their victim the HIV virus. With some help from a subpoena which involves a huge legal fight with the Department of Health over confidentiality. That fight continues with lawyer Glynis O'Connor zealously representing Jason Hayes who has vowed to take as many women with him.

Up in my corner of the USA we had a case involving a gentlemen named Nushaun Williams who was doing what Hayes was. Of course Williams was poor and black and a criminal while Hayes was a rich spoiled white kid. I really couldn't work up much sympathy for Hayes, no more than I could for Williams in real life.

In the end the ultimate judge took care of Hayes or at least was well on the way to.
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