Law & Order: Trial By Jury - The Complete Series

Law & Order: Trial By Jury - The Complete Series

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Editorial Reviews

The jury is in! From creator Dick Wolf comes the most innovative Law & Order series yet: Law & Order: Trial by Jury - The Complete Series. Partner up with Jerry Orbach, Fred Dalton Thompson and Bebe Neuwirth to explore the judicial system like never before: not only from the point of view of police and prosecutors, but also the defense team, judges, jurors and the defendants themselves. This highly collectible three-disc DVD set contains all 13 original episodes of the entire series, including one never broadcast on network TV! Plus witness exciting deleted scenes, a landmark Law & Order: SVU cross-over episode starring Chris Meloni and Emmy winner Mariska Hargitay, the philosophy behind this unique show presented by the cast members, and powerful guest-star performances from Lorraine Bracco, Peter Coyote and Candice Bergen. You have the right to Law & Order: Trial by Jury!

There are plenty of things about Law & Order: Trial by Jury, the fourth series and third spinoff (after SVU and Criminal Intent) in executive producer Dick Wolf's popular and reliable franchise, that loyal viewers will find familiar, even comforting. There's the taut, ripped-from-the-headlines storytelling; the Kobe Bryant rape case (in "Pattern of Conduct") and the infamous Amadou Diallo shooting (in "Forty-One Shots") are but two examples among the fourteen episodes in this three-disc set. There are appearances, some of them recurring, by Sam Waterston, Fred Thompson, the late Jerry Orbach (in his final episodes as Det. Lennie Briscoe), and other stalwarts from the original series. There's an SVU "cross-over" episode, and another ("Skeleton") that follows up on the shooting of L & O detective Ed Green (Jesse L. Martin). And then there's the theme music, the intro ("In the criminal justice system")… and that ineffable sound that leads from one scene to another. Yet Trial by Jury also has many aspects that set it apart from the other Law & Order shows. In focusing not on police procedure but on the trial process, it shines a brighter light on the defendants (who in most cases have already been apprehended when an episode starts), the juries (including the selection process, deliberations, and the role of jury consultants), the various lawyers' strategies, and even the judges' personal opinions. All of that leads to some interesting situations, like the scene in "Forty-One Shots" that finds a group of policemen, barred from the courtroom for making a disturbance during the trial of a cop killer, waiting anxiously outside for the verdict. Nevertheless, there are reasons why Trial by Jury failed to connect with viewers, airing for just two months in 2005 before being canceled by NBC. The cast is one of them; for example, A.D.A. Tracey Kibre (Bebe Neuwirth), the lead prosecutor, is tough but not especially likable. More than that, with its predilection for tight close-ups, personal details, melodrama, and such, the series is simply too much like standard nighttime TV fare. Good but not great, Law & Order: Trial by Jury (the set includes a few deleted scenes and a short featurette) will certainly have its adherents, but it falls a little short of its distinguished predecessors. --Sam Graham

Customer Reviews

Why is this still not on?

Reviewed by Music Lover in Omaha, 2009-01-16

I really enjoy the original Law and Order series and still watch it all the time. I admit that I never saw the Trial By Jury series when it was on prime time. I bought the DVD after seeing an episode that was on TNT as it was part of a story that ran on Law and Order. Anyway, this series adds the perspective of seeing the defense team plan its strategy for the trial. I wish more people had watched it (myself included) because this is well done. The stories are intersting and the way the cases are handled were fun to watch. The acting was very good. I've seen all the episodes in the set now. (some twice) This is a set that I will no doubt be viewing more of even after repeated viewings. Love it.

Law & Order Trial by Jury

Reviewed by Elizabeth M. Ward, 2008-09-10

Another excellent series of this top show. Law and Order Trial by Jury doesn't disappoint their fans! All the favorite and new characters which make you want to cheer them on. Frustrating at times but justice does prevail. Would highly recommend this series and wish they could do another in the near future.

Addictive

Reviewed by B. Schubert, 2008-08-02

I bought this series cheap and it's one of my best purchases to date. Yes, i'm a fan of the other L&O programs but somehow i'd missed this series. Like others i wish i hadn't as it may still be on now. A different formula to the others in the franchise yet still (reassuringly) familiar. Bebe Neuwirth is good but just not perfect for the lead role..my only criticism. Beware, highly addicitve and then you realise it's only one series. Sad really.

Law and Order: The One That (Sadly) Didn't Make It.

Reviewed by Eric Pregosin, 2008-02-04

Since 1990, despite many cast changes, NBC's longest running drama series Law and Order has kept us interested in the inside and out of crime on the streets of my beloved homeland New York City. The original series introduced the show's concept, the police investigations for half the show and the D.A.'s prosecution the accused for the second half. As years passed, the show became more 60/40 sometimes 70/30 in favor of 1 half of the cast (sometimes the cops, sometimes the D.A.'s). In 1999, Special Victims Unit focussed on a team of sex crime investigators and the D.A. assigned to tackle those cases. In 2001, Criminal Intent, brought us a chance to see the 1 thing I thought we would never see in a cop show. We learn from the start who done it, the cops and D.A. spend the episode trying to decipher WHY he or she did it. Now in 2005, Trial By Jury was to bring the next logical step. The accused has been already scheduled for trial, now the cops and D.A.'s spent the early stages of the show preparing and interviewing their witness list followed by the trial itself. Sadly the series was cancelled after it's introductory 3 month season, with the death of Jerry Orbach who was retired off the parent series, so he could be helpful for this series. Apparantly, the powers that be had thought so well of his character from the parent series (which he joined the cast of in 1992) that he would be able to help this series get off the ground. Unfortunately, after episode 2 he was dead, so the series continued without him but was cancelled before the last episode and worse yet, not renewed. The final episode was eventually aired when the late Court TV ran a full day marathon of the entire series and fortunately for us was included in this set. My only grievance with this set is this. Like the other spinoffs, this series had crossover episodes with other Law and Order series. One episode had its "part 1" on Special Victims Unit and concluded here. We get both parts of the story in this set, although I am certain the original "part 1" story is included in the respective SVU season set. However, another crossover is made with the parent series. The original episode aired not long after Orbach left the series and was replaced by Dennis Farina. For this crossover, we are only given the second half of the story. Why the manufacturer gave us 1 crossover in its entirety but not the other, is unfair. If they give us the complete story (both the "part 1" episode and the "part 2" (Trial By Jury) episode, in the respective Law and Order season set, I will get on their case later. In any event, since this show was so short, make sure you get it whether you intend to buy the other 3 series or not. It is still "New York's finest" at their best like its predecessors, and we are not likely to see its like again. BUY IT!!!

Trial by Jury...

Reviewed by Michelle Polk, 2007-07-10

A good Law and Order series but not as good as the original one or the subsequent followers. The whole story is what is missing even though the end result is just as important.