"Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" Man Down (TV Episode 2018) Poster

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7/10
Quality has gone a little down
TheLittleSongbird4 May 2023
"Man Down" is a continuation of the harrowing events of the Season 20 premiere "Man Up", a very good episode and pretty darn impressive by the generally disappointing season's standards, following on directly from the ending of that episode. Was also impressed by "Man Down" on first watch when the episode first aired in my country, while finding a few issues with it and finding it a long way from being one of the best 'Law and Order: Special Victims Unit' episodes.

Feelings on rewatch were pretty much the same for the same reasons as on first watch, positive and negative. Positive and negative reasons being fairly similar to "Man Up". Of the two episodes, "Man Down" rates marginally lower, namely down to it being less consistent. Some 'Special Victims Unit' episodes have one half being better than the other, and that is the case with "Man Down" with it starting off so well but the final act brings it down quite significantly.

There are so many good things here. The production values are well done, subtly stylish and intimate without being claustrophobic. The lighting is better here. The music isn't too melodramatic and the direction lets the drama breathe while not dragging the momentum out. The script on the whole is thought provoking and uncompromising, especially when at the school.

As said earlier, "Man Down" starts off incredibly well, with some legitimate nail biting tension in the scene at the school. Did appreciate that the personal lives weren't melodramatic or too heavily focused on, though have always found everything with Olivia and Noah tired and dragged out. All the regulars are very good, especially Peter Scanivino who shines most in his chemistry with Bryce Romero, again knocking it out of the park in a moving performance. Dylan Walsh gives the creeps.

On the other hand, not everything works. The final act does bring the episode down, just found it very rushed and predictable with the truth never being in doubt. The writing in this section can be needlessly heavy handed and it was like being talked at and down about things known and made clear already.

Phillip Winchester is still very bland and stiff, and Stone never really worked as a character. Too little personality and too little development.

In conclusion, good but not great. 7/10.
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10/10
Toxic Masculinity
audaciousness5 December 2018
This was perhaps the most emotional and heartbreaking episode in several years covering toxic masculinity and school shootings. Seeing that poor boy and all the damage he'd gone through because of his horrible father who abused him emotionally, mentally, and physically every single day of his life... it was truly heartbreaking.

The best two-part arc in so many seasons.
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6/10
Man Down
bobcobb3012 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Once again SVU continues to play fast and loose with the law. This is a show that tries too hard to prove a moral or political point at the expense of believability in the courtroom.

I could handle that if the story made sense or the episode was entertaining, but this got off the rails in a hurry.
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4/10
Disappointing and Forced
dome-1541230 September 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I've seen worse episodes of SVU than this two parter but this season opener was mediocre at best. It failed on a few levels. I sensed they were going for epic here but rather than come up with something original or at least a twist on something they've done before, they took a "throw in everything minus the kitchen sink" approach and unconvincingly linked several issues (rabid masculinity, parental bullying, molestation, school gun violence, dysfunctional parenting and legal responsibility etc etc etc) into a ridiculously forced mess of a story. The writing was lazy and preachy. They set up several ongoing cliched story arcs for some of the main characters (ie squeaky clean Clark Kent Winchester starts drinking and having orgies to deal with the pain of his sister's death). Noah (who kind of drags down everything he's in) goes snotty belligerent bratty at the end and the list goes on. It was watchable with some good performaces (Carisi and the shooter son in particular) but nothing close to noteable considering it was the opener to an important and historic season.
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3/10
Poor, Pretentious Start To Season 20
stp4329 September 2018
Warning: Spoilers
SVU opens its landmark 20th season, but the inconsistent to poor quality of the series in the last few seasons sadly continues in this poorly written and pretentious two-parter.

Sam Conway is an insecure teenager who is assaulted, and the episode has telegraphed the guilty party by Act III of the first part; the rest is just an exercise in the caricature that is the concept of "toxic masculinity," the latest sham social "ill" seized on by the intelligentsia and the culture to "explain" social problems. Every step is not a believable development, it is just a predictable caricature - the malicious macho father, the spineless mother, the school shooting, and the dumb speech by DA Peter Stone after he concocts a phony justification for what amounts to double jeopardy, the strikingly common outcome used in the series of late, most notably the boorishly stupid episode "Contrapasso."

Even the subplots are uninteresting or worse. Amanda Rollins becomes pregnant again - a plot necessity given the much-happier real life bundle of joy pending for star Kelli Giddish - but it never resonates as anything. Olivia Benson meanwhile is having two problems - she's out of shape and can't get it going, while her relationship with her adopted son has begun to collapse. Where this disturbing development goes is of course unknown, but one senses it will end badly for all involved.
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1/10
Jumps the Tracks 3/4 of the Way Through
bababear6 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I'm Law and Order: SVU's biggest fan. So it pains me to see such sloppy writing drag down a lot of really great actors.

Imagine it's the day before payday and you have to pull together supper for the family with just what's in the refrigerator. Goodness knows what strange combination of foods you'll serve the family tonight.

That's what the writing in this episode is like. Unplanned pregnancy. Acting out because of the death of a sibling. Characters suddenly realizing that time is catching up with them. Adopted children who may turn into leftovers from THE OMEN. And these are the series' regular characters. The guest stars are more of a mess.

The thing is, for a while it works. A crime victim is manipulated by his awful parents- macho father, spineless mother- and won't cooperate with the PD in an awful crime that may or may not have been committed by his father. Unable to process what is happening, the boy finally breaks and takes a gun to school. At that point I was so involved in the story that I was almost in tears and my guts were tied in a knot.

Then they introduce a Negligent Homicide case against the father and manage to get a conviction based solely upon the fact that every SVU case ends with a conviction.

Yes, the environment the father created presented a toxic role model of masculinity for his boys to try to live up to. But this asks us that a jury of rational adults would actually return a guilty verdict with no motive on the father's part and no malice on his part toward the shooting victims, who he barely knew.

Yes, I can tolerate the authors getting in a sermonette in some episodes about Guns Bad, Second Amendment Even Worse. I see that online often enough that it's water off a ducks back.

Here's hoping my favorite scripted drama show manages to get its groove back, and soon.
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3/10
More male bashing and pro abortion garbage
marysammons-4222023 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
While Olivia tries to convince Amanda to think king and hard before killing her baby she says it's her decision alone to make. I'm so sick of fathers being dismissed in this debate. It's not just the woman's child. That coupled with the worst stereotype of toxic masculinity this episode was garbage.
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