The SVU investigates a he-said, she-said case when a woman crashes a wedding to accuse her therapist of sexual assault.The SVU investigates a he-said, she-said case when a woman crashes a wedding to accuse her therapist of sexual assault.The SVU investigates a he-said, she-said case when a woman crashes a wedding to accuse her therapist of sexual assault.
Ice-T
- Sergeant Odafin 'Fin' Tutuola
- (as Ice T)
T.J. Thyne
- Dr. Joshua Hensley
- (as TJ Thyne)
Michelle Alba Yazvac
- April
- (as Michelle Yazvac)
Shannon Weiss
- Beth
- (as Shannon J. Weiss)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- Goofs9:52 Caption reads 97 West 19th Street which would be near the corner of 6th Ave. However as Kitty is talking to Rollins and Carisi, the view through the window shows multiple buildings in each block with no high rise apartment buildings further down on the left side of 6th Ave. Each block along the left side of 6th Ave facing north from West 19th Street on up either has a landmark single building with chain stores inside or a high rise apartment building.
- Quotes
Kitty Bennett: I just wanted somebody to know.
Olivia Benson: Well, now everyone does.
Featured review
Honestly I don't know why I keep watching
Seriously what is going on with this show? Paper thin storylines and inconsistent directing choices.
In this particular episode, like quite a few this season, the supposed perp is completely believable and the accuser isn't. They then shift suddenly to the baddie being a hand rubbing villain all while the SVU detectives completely step all over whatever character consistency they've had or supposed professional experience to suddenly act all conflicted or distraught. Multiple times in an episode they'll be completely sure about something unsupportable by what we see on screen, and completely oblivious to what is obvious to the audience.
It's like all conflict has to be forced into these paper thin premises because the writers can't come up with interesting storylines or the producers are imposing bad "we need ACTING moments!" Emmy bait for cynical reasons.
Characters I've loved for multiple seasons are increasingly unlikeable and frustrating.
Every once and a while there is a great, fun episode so it's not all bad. It's getting hard to believe this is just a rough patch, though.
In this particular episode, like quite a few this season, the supposed perp is completely believable and the accuser isn't. They then shift suddenly to the baddie being a hand rubbing villain all while the SVU detectives completely step all over whatever character consistency they've had or supposed professional experience to suddenly act all conflicted or distraught. Multiple times in an episode they'll be completely sure about something unsupportable by what we see on screen, and completely oblivious to what is obvious to the audience.
It's like all conflict has to be forced into these paper thin premises because the writers can't come up with interesting storylines or the producers are imposing bad "we need ACTING moments!" Emmy bait for cynical reasons.
Characters I've loved for multiple seasons are increasingly unlikeable and frustrating.
Every once and a while there is a great, fun episode so it's not all bad. It's getting hard to believe this is just a rough patch, though.
helpful•72
- mmmtastysandwhich
- Jun 11, 2023
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