Meredith Quill October 7, 2014 Author Share October 7, 2014 A place to discuss particular episodes, arcs and moments from the show's run. Please remember this isn't a complete catch-all topic -- check out the forum for character topics and other places for show-related talk. Link to comment
Lnmop October 7, 2014 Share October 7, 2014 Having just watched the DVDs of Seasons 1-4, taking into account that Society and laws have changed, most of the cases hold up extremely well. Arnie's family practice cases, Michael and Victor's litigation, Grace's prosecution, Jonathan's race related cases (who can forget when a courtroom was destroyed after a case?) Douglas' often more amusing causes of action (representing 100 kids against a cereal company over a prize in the box, with Benny as named client!) and Leland stepping in as the big gun when needed. Their handling of religion, AIDS, women's issues, divorce as depicted 25 years ago, is still entertaining and thought-provoking. 1 Link to comment
Lnmop October 8, 2014 Share October 8, 2014 Here's a place to discuss Michael - aka Mickey. 1 Link to comment
Lnmop October 21, 2014 Share October 21, 2014 Michael was SO committed to his clients. My favorite was the Earl Williams case that spanned a number of episodes. The way he dealt with opposing counsel, Margaret Flannigan was brilliant. I was so happy to see Earl with his family that I think I actually cried. Michael had other memorable cases, but this was my favorite. 1 Link to comment
MrsRafaelBarba November 12, 2014 Share November 12, 2014 Can't recall how fans reacted back then, but I liked Grace and Victor together. Link to comment
Sir RaiderDuck OMS May 17, 2015 Share May 17, 2015 Favorite Brackman quote: Brackman tells the departed attorney Chaney's travestite secretary "You don't even have the guts to be a normal homo!" This is immediately followed by him eating a knuckle sandwich, courtesy of said secretary. Link to comment
Sir RaiderDuck OMS May 17, 2015 Share May 17, 2015 Michael was SO committed to his clients. My favorite was the Earl Williams case that spanned a number of episodes. The way he dealt with opposing counsel, Margaret Flannigan was brilliant. I was so happy to see Earl with his family that I think I actually cried. Michael had other memorable cases, but this was my favorite.Rarely has complete emotional exhaustion been portrayed so well than in Michael's final summation before the judge (after Williams' conviction had been overturned and the case sent back to LA court), which featured Michael breaking out the N-word in characterizing Flannigan's prosecution of the African-American Williams. Kuzak looked like he just couldn't take it anymore. Link to comment
Sir RaiderDuck OMS May 17, 2015 Share May 17, 2015 Easily my least favorite character amongst the classic cast: She was such a sanctimonious wet blanket. I could never figure out what Michael and Victor saw in her. Link to comment
Rinaldo May 17, 2015 Share May 17, 2015 My memory is that her character was introduced after the two-hour pilot. So I was thinking, "Great show! Solid cast with no weak links, can't wait!" And then the following week "Oh... her." 1 Link to comment
annzeepark914 June 6, 2015 Share June 6, 2015 Didn't the actor who played Leland recently pass away? I thought this character was wonderful: steady and sure, a calming influence when tempers flared. Link to comment
Rinaldo June 7, 2015 Share June 7, 2015 Yes. I hadn't heard, but on investigation I see that Richard Dysart died on April 5. Link to comment
AndySmith March 14, 2016 Share March 14, 2016 I liked her. Not my favorite character, but I did like her. 1 Link to comment
GHScorpiosRule March 22, 2016 Share March 22, 2016 I liked her. Not my favorite character, but I did like her. I liked her too. She and Harry had the most amazing chemistry, that I was devastated when Gracie and Micky broke up. Hey! I was a teenager still! I hated her with Victor. Didn't see any chemistry with them. I won't lie: I was ecstatic when Grace and Michael got back together in that reunion movie- where Grace was now the District Attorney. I so wish some channel would start airing this show again! The Bull Semen case will never NOT be funny! 1 Link to comment
GHScorpiosRule March 29, 2016 Share March 29, 2016 The first four seasons are my favorite. Five? Not do much and both Mike and Victor are gone at the end of the season. I plan to get the DVDs - I think the first three are available. But until then, I'm gorging on the episodes on YouTube! They are the one aired on A&E, so the quality is really good. Mike and Victor are my favorite characters, I just love them both so much! 1 Link to comment
Charlesman March 10, 2017 Share March 10, 2017 Just started a rewatch from the beginning. Haven't really watched since they originally aired. This show stands up to time better than most. A few overly talky scenes, but, overall it moves pretty fast and is still a good watch. 2 Link to comment
vb68 March 11, 2017 Share March 11, 2017 (edited) I liked her, too. I thought she use to get the short end of the stick storywise because she didn't work at the firm....until year 5 or 6. One of my favorite episodes with Grace is the second time she went up against James Earl Jones. She was still steaming from the first time where he royally kicked her ass. She basically clubbed him like a seal and ran over him for extra measure, even putting him on the stand to challenge his summation. The judge called a mistrial. I was also excited when she joined the firm after not liking being a judge. I knew it would be messy. Edited March 11, 2017 by vb68 1 Link to comment
Charlesman March 12, 2017 Share March 12, 2017 I do feel it's oddly structured she wasn't part of the firm for so long. Harry got this home-life B plot that none of the other characters really did. 2 Link to comment
KHenry14 March 12, 2017 Share March 12, 2017 For me, I was just glad that Susan finally got a decent part. It didn't matter if the part or the show was any good. Quote 1 Link to comment
Charlesman March 13, 2017 Share March 13, 2017 Is it just me, or was there a lot of liberty taken with courtroom process, especially in season 1? I think a few times it seemed a witness went up for cross examination before being questioned on direct. Link to comment
FormerMod-a1 April 13, 2017 Share April 13, 2017 This is probably true. Unfortunately it's pretty par for the course for TV shows to mess courts and trials up. 1 Link to comment
Charlesman May 8, 2017 Share May 8, 2017 Finished season 6, the "reboot" season. Weird how they quickly bumped up a lot of cast members to "series regular" status (putting them in the opening credits, and, presumably, paying them a flat fee for the season instead of per-appearance) then went a few episodes without using them. Susan Bloom disappeared for two or three episodes, as did her underling Frank. Her whole thing just kind of fizzled... she comes in on a whirlwind, shakes up the firm, makes it into the opening credits of the show, then, just once it seems she's firmly in place, the writers can't think of anything to do with her anymore and she disappears. It was also weird how they keep shoehorning in a DA side to things, instead of just focusing on Mackenzie Brackman exclusively. This time Zooey Clemmons replaces Grace Van Owen and we spend the entire season taking mid-episode breaks from the law firm to follow her cases around. And one episode into season 7, and it's a re-reboot. Grace Van Owen, Susan Bloom, and Frank are gone for good it seems. And CJ Lamb, one of my favorites off the bench, is gone too (much for the shows positive attitude toward homosexuality for the era, it was still and odd gag to say she left to join the LPGA). A Martinez steps in, and Sheila Kelley, who had been series regular for most of season 6 as a secretary/aide (again, why the promotion? Did they really think they would use her in every episode that year?) is now a clerk to Anne as she continues law school. Also, Sheila Kelley became a quarter-answer to an obscure trivia question: What husband & wife have co-starred with John Spencer in a major NBC drama? In addition to Michael Tucker & Jill Eikenberry (the Markowitz's), Sheila Kelley and her husband Richard Schiff (Toby Ziegler from The West Wing) make up the other duo. In another slight West Wing parallel, season 7 of LA Law starts with real-life events impacting the show (the LA riots are in the first episode, but this will carry forward into future episodes, unlike the non-continuity "Isaac and Ishmael" 9/11 episode of The West Wing). Link to comment
Charlesman May 31, 2017 Share May 31, 2017 Done with the series, going to tackle the movie next. A definite drop-off in quality, and the shuffling of characters for little rhyme or reason certainly didn't help the tail end of things. However, I swear, I must have re-wound and re-watched this little bit from S08E10 about a dozen times. That musical joke was so unexpected... the woman was suing the guy for "sexual fraud"... letting her believe he was a cop because she had a thing for men in uniform, when he really wasn't. After he shows his heroic side, she agrees to drop the suit and agrees to another date with him. Then, those three chords, blended so well into the normal "LA Law" 'light theme' music, had me laughing uncontrollably. Completely out of left field and so brilliant. Loved it. Also, Debi Mazar used to scare me as a kid. Still triggers that a little watching again now. Link to comment
Rinaldo May 31, 2017 Share May 31, 2017 (Gotta say, very slick how you linked to a particular second of the video! I didn't know that was doable, but I just looked up how it can be done and will undoubtedly use it myself in the future. Thanks for tipping me off!) More to the point, thanks for pointing out that musical joke. I must have noticed it on first viewing all those years ago (I watched the series to the end), but it had completely left my memory and it was a kick to re-encounter. Link to comment
heatherchandler September 19, 2017 Share September 19, 2017 Where can I watch this? I don't see it being rerun on cable. I don't want to buy the dvds but I'd like to go a rewatch of this awesome show from the beginning. Link to comment
Sarah 103 January 5, 2018 Share January 5, 2018 On March 22, 2016 at 11:57 AM, GHScorpiosRule said: I so wish some channel would start airing this show again! The Bull Semen case will never NOT be funny! Me too! I wish they had released the entire series on DVD. I'm surprised one of the many rerun based channels (METV, Cozi TV, Antenna TV) hasn't started airing it yet. What I loved about the Bull Semen case is that both lawyers and the judge acknowledged how funny and silly the case was in private, but in public they acted like this was a super serious regular case. 1 Link to comment
Sarah 103 February 10, 2018 Share February 10, 2018 I am almost sure the characters debated mandatory minimums at some point, but I can't remember which episode. It's also possible that I am confusing this series with another TV series from the same era. Was there ever an episode of L.A Law that dealt with this issue? Thanks to anyone who can help. Link to comment
MusubiMyHomie May 6, 2018 Share May 6, 2018 (edited) Quote I am almost sure the characters debated mandatory minimums at some point, but I can't remember which episode. It's also possible that I am confusing this series with another TV series from the same era. Was there ever an episode of L.A Law that dealt with this issue? Thanks to anyone who can help. I don't know if L.A. Law had such a debate between characters, but that same debate was a West Wing episode subject and the title of the episode too. And Leo, who happened to have been played by a former L.A. Law regular, was at the center of the debate. A dedication ceremony for the Fox lot's newly renamed Bochco Building united a shitload of actors from L.A. Law, NYPD Blue and Doogie Howser. THR posted a photo of the ceremony but didn't bother to identify the Bochco alums in the caption. It's almost like that recent Marvel Cinematic Universe class photo, except it's Phases Three and Four of the Bochco Televisual Universe and it's all people from the Bochco shows I grew up watching. From left to right, here's who the Bochco alums are: 1. Dennis Franz 2. Jimmy Smits 3. Mark-Paul Gosselaar 4. James McDaniel 5. Gordon Clapp 6. Corbin Bernsen 7. I don't know 8. I don't know 9. Debra Christofferson from NYPD Blue and Carnivale? 10. I don't know 11. I don't know 12. Michele Greene? 13. Jill Eikenberry 14. Michael Tucker 15. Belinda Montgomery 16. Susan Ruttan 17. James B. Sikking 18. Kim Delaney 19. Peter Onorati 20. Lawrence Pressman Can somebody identify the ones I couldn't identify? If that's Michele Greene, then that makes L.A. Law the show with the most alum/guest star presence in the photo. Edited May 6, 2018 by MusubiMyHomie Link to comment
Rinaldo May 6, 2018 Share May 6, 2018 From other articles, #7 seems to be Fox executive Gary Newman, who acted as MC. The most recent Mrs. Bochco, Dayna, was present, so she must be one of the women in the middle. His son Jesse was there too; would he be the youngest man, #11? Also present were another Fox CEO, Dana Walden, producer/writers David Milch and Bill Clark. The latter pair actually leaves us with too many men to fit into the photo. I'm slightly surprised by some who didn't show up who live in the LA area. Like Michael Warren, who doesn't seem to be unmanageably busy these days. 1 Link to comment
HawaiiThad May 14, 2018 Share May 14, 2018 Is there anyone here who can help me find a particular episode? Near the end of it, Douglas is trying to cut costs and points out that Leland bills the fewest hours by far and suggests that he doesn’t deserve a full share of the money the rest of the partners carve up. Everyone comes to his defense and explains how he saves them time on their cases and displays how invaluable he is. Does anyone know what episode that’s in or have any suggestions as to how I might find it? Thanks! Link to comment
Charlesman May 14, 2018 Share May 14, 2018 11 hours ago, HawaiiThad said: Is there anyone here who can help me find a particular episode? Near the end of it, Douglas is trying to cut costs and points out that Leland bills the fewest hours by far and suggests that he doesn’t deserve a full share of the money the rest of the partners carve up. Everyone comes to his defense and explains how he saves them time on their cases and displays how invaluable he is. Does anyone know what episode that’s in or have any suggestions as to how I might find it? Thanks! I think you're looking for "Slum Enchanted Evening", which is listed as either number 6 or 7, depending on how you count. Here's the scene (about 33 minutes in): 1 Link to comment
Brian Cronin August 5, 2020 Share August 5, 2020 LA Law is now streaming for pretty much the first time ever! It's on IMDB.TV, which is ad-supported, so you don't have to buy it to get access to it. Just add it to whatever streaming device you use. 1 Link to comment
BetterButter December 18, 2020 Share December 18, 2020 'L.A. Law' Sequel With Blair Underwood in the Works at ABC 1 Link to comment
FormerMod-a1 February 1, 2021 Share February 1, 2021 I have been wanting to rewatch L.A. Law for a while now and saw it was on Prime a while back. I finally started watching this last weekend and was enjoying it until I saw they were missing episode 5. I didn't figure that out right away, I was just letting it play the next episode an d the previouslies for showed a LOT that I hadn't seen. So I went back and tried to manually do it and that's when I saw it was missing. So I pulled up the entire series on Prime using my computer and I see they are missing 5 episodes from Season 1 (5, 7, 13, 16, 22) and 5 from season 2 (4, 8, 9, 15, 17) and I stopped looking after that. The rest of the seasons are probably just as holey. 😕 It has ruined my enjoyment of it and I am already stopped in my tracks. This was such a serialized show and on-going storylines (and not just about the cases). This sucks. Up until then I was really enjoying it. I did watch it in its original run, but I was so young a lot of the finer points either went over my head or were boring to me at the time. I remember some of the big things and plot points, and all the characters, but I was liking watching from an adult vantage point. Link to comment
ifionlyknew February 2, 2021 Share February 2, 2021 15 hours ago, aquarian1 said: I have been wanting to rewatch L.A. Law for a while now and saw it was on Prime a while back. I finally started watching this last weekend and was enjoying it until I saw they were missing episode 5. I didn't figure that out right away, I was just letting it play the next episode an d the previouslies for showed a LOT that I hadn't seen. So I went back and tried to manually do it and that's when I saw it was missing. So I pulled up the entire series on Prime using my computer and I see they are missing 5 episodes from Season 1 (5, 7, 13, 16, 22) and 5 from season 2 (4, 8, 9, 15, 17) and I stopped looking after that. The rest of the seasons are probably just as holey. 😕 It has ruined my enjoyment of it and I am already stopped in my tracks. This was such a serialized show and on-going storylines (and not just about the cases). This sucks. Up until then I was really enjoying it. I did watch it in its original run, but I was so young a lot of the finer points either went over my head or were boring to me at the time. I remember some of the big things and plot points, and all the characters, but I was liking watching from an adult vantage point. This happened when the Practice was first on Hulu. Now all episodes are available. Perhaps that will happen in LA Law. I have it on my list to watch but like you said it's hard to get invested in it when you know some episodes are missing. I haven't seen this show in almost 30 years. I'm not going to remember every plot. 1 Link to comment
BetterButter October 5, 2021 Share October 5, 2021 ‘L.A. Law’ Sequel Series Starring Blair Underwood Ordered to Pilot at ABC Link to comment
Egg McMuffin October 6, 2021 Share October 6, 2021 It’s interesting that Jonathan is the main character - and presumably the senior partner - in the new show, and that it focuses on Mackenzie Brackman’s high powered litigation department. When we last saw the firm in the 2002 TV movie, the firm had shut down its litigation department, and Jonathan was nowhere to be seen. Link to comment
tv echo February 4, 2022 Share February 4, 2022 (edited) ‘L.A. Law’: John Harlan Kim Joins ABC Revival Pilot By Alexandra Del Rosario February 3, 2022https://deadline.com/2022/02/l-a-law-john-harlan-kim-abc-revival-pilot-supporting-role-1234926472/ Quote ABC’s drama pilot L.A. Law, a revival of the Steven Bochco legal drama, expands its cast with the addition of John Harlan Kim. He joins original cast members Blair Underwood and Corbin Bernsen, who are reprising their respective roles as Johnathan Rollins and Arnie Becker. He also joins Toks Olagundoye, Hari Nef and Ian Duff, who will play new characters in the revival. In the pilot, written by Marc Guggenheim and Ubah Mohamed and to be directed by Anthony Hemingway, the venerable law firm of McKenzie Brackman — now named Becker Rollins — reinvents itself as a litigation firm specializing in only the most high-profile, boundary-pushing and incendiary cases. * * * Kim joins L.A. Law as Chad Park. He is an up-and-coming attorney at the firm described as a “shark-in-training” whose ambition sometimes gets ahead of his ethical standards. He’s a brilliant attorney who takes on his first murder trial and must devise an inventive legal strategy when his client drops a bombshell in open court. Guggenheim and Mohamed executive produce alongside Hemingway. Dayna Bochco and Jesse Bochco also executive produce for Steven Bochco Productions with Underwood. Edited February 4, 2022 by tv echo Link to comment
BetterButter February 23, 2022 Share February 23, 2022 ‘L.A. Law’: Kacey Rohl To Star In ABC Revival Pilot Link to comment
DXD526 February 24, 2022 Share February 24, 2022 I wonder why more of the originals aren't coming back. Harry Hamlin? Susan Dey? Were they asked? Would love to see them again. Link to comment
Egg McMuffin February 24, 2022 Share February 24, 2022 (edited) I think it’s a demographic issue. They don’t want the show populated by a bunch of sixty- and seventy-somethings. Blair Underwood is still relatively youthful, and they can use Corbin Bernsen/Arnie as the eccentric older guy. But Alan Rachins is almost 80, Michael Tucker is in his late 70s, and Jill Eikenberry is 75. And Susan Dey retired from acting years ago. That said, my guess is that we’ll see some of the former cast members in guest roles at some point if the show lasts long enough. Edited February 24, 2022 by Egg McMuffin Link to comment
Egg McMuffin March 11, 2022 Share March 11, 2022 Jill Eikenberry to appear as Ann Kelsey in the pilot for the new L.A. Law This is enough to make me tune in - I always had a soft spot for her. Ann is no longer working for the firm (now called Becker/Rollins); instead, she’s a judge. 2 Link to comment
Hiyo March 11, 2022 Share March 11, 2022 Hopefully they write her character well and not throw her under the bus just to prop up some of the newer characters. Link to comment
tv echo March 20, 2022 Share March 20, 2022 (edited) Edited March 20, 2022 by tv echo Link to comment
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