Thursday, May 13, 2021

Law & Order SVU “Trick-Rolled At The Moulin” Recap, Review, Discussion


“Trick-Rolled At The Moulin” was the first half of the 2-hour crossover event, and most of it set the stage for Law & Order Organized Crime, “An Inferior Product”. It provided some closure for Benson about her brother’s death, and a perfect segue to the Organized Crime story.

 Too much time was spent on the set up of the crime. In fact, I would have preferred they omitted it altogether and just had Fin and Kat be called to the scene where the body was found.  I felt it was about 3+ minutes wasted.  In addition, I’m not clear as to why SVU was called to investigate this.  I would have thought homicide  would investigate first as a suspicious overdose. What sex crime was SVU investigating? Does being tied to a bed constitute a sex crime even though it could have been consensual?  WE know the victim was incapacitated,  but the police first on the scene wouldn’t know this.

This case eventually leads Benson to finding out how her brother Simon really died.  While she digs deeper into Simon’s death, she challenges ME Warner on her conclusion about Simon’s accidental death, and she challenges a detective about how he handled the case. She seems upset with everyone for not questioning things at the time of Simon’s death, but Benson herself could have kept the pressure on at that time as well.  Did she accept Warner’s conclusions at the time as it was the easiest explanation?  Despite the bad drugs, is it still considered an accidental death, so did nothing really change relative to the cause of death?  Is it only Benson’s  conscience that is clear because Simon apparently never listened to her voice mail cutting ties with him?  

Benson and Stabler finally meet up and talk face to face.  Stabler is clearly upset and feels Kathy was the target of the car bomb. Benson encourages him to have Intel to handle it.   Of course we know Stabler will never let go until he solves Kathy’s death. 

At the crime scene, as Fin says “You can’t find this at Home Depot”,  he picks  up one of the restraints – with what looks like his bare hands.   (Note: it was pointed out in the comments below that Fin lifted the item with a pen. I watched the scene a few times more and he does, in fact, lift it with a dark-colored pen, likely because his hands WERE bare.)

Amanda Rollins was nowhere to be found,  we are left to assume she is still dealing with her father's illness.  It was great to have ME Warner back for this episode!


Update May 18, 2021 – In case you’re wondering about the diner scene that was in the promo for this episode but never appeared IN the episode: Via "Give Me My Remote" - Warren Leight explains cut diner scene:

Here is the recap: 

Benson listens to Stabler’s voice mail message saying that his wife Kathy was the intended target of the car bomb. She calls him back but as he doesn’t answer, she leaves him a message to call  her back. 

After a night of partying with three women, a man is found dead in the Hotel Bordeaux. It is Xavier Garcia, who was also involved with Kat’s cousin Lilly (seen in the episode Law & Order SVU, “The Only Way Out Is Through” ). Kat questions Lilly. Benson speaks with ME Warner about the death by acute intoxication including street drugs. There was no DNA from any women there. Warner says, “He went, he didn’t come.”

In a parking garage, Benson and Stabler meet. He explains that Sacha Lenski saw Kathy get into the car. Benson thinks that doesn’t prove she was the target but he is convinced otherwise. She tells him it is not his case and he should give it to intel.  He says he did, but he thinks they are shining him and he doesn’t know where they are with the case. He asks her to reach out to then as she has connections but she can’t. She says many people are telling her to stay away from the case and from him. He wants to know who is telling her that, and she asks if she heard anything she said to him the other night. She tells him slow this all down, to go home, eat something, get some rest. He needs to do this for  himself and his kids.  As he walks off he says he hears her, and Benson says good. He asks if they are good, and she says she hopes so. 

When another man dies, ME Melinda Warner helps to identify the cause, which takes the detectives on a search for who is supplying a deadly drug that appears to be a knock-off of Richard Wheatley’s “Purple Magic.”   When one of the dead men is found at the Hotel Moulin,  Benson realizes this is the same hotel where her brother Simon died.  This makes her question his death.  The problem for Benson is that Simon’s death doesn’t quite match the pattern of the others – he wasn’t a “high roller” like the other victims.   Benson also gets testy with Warner about Warner’s original cause of death as being accidental. 

Benson and Carisi speak to the officer responding to Simon’s death – Detective Fernandez - thinking he missed something.  It’s clear not much was investigated at the time, saying Simon had not been rolled.  

Benson gets Simon’s phone out of evidence and realizes that Simon never heard her last voice mail message to him which basically cut ties with him. 

The investigation points them to Edward Buddusky, who initially presented himself as a Simon’s sponsor. 

When a doctor OD’s but doesn’t die, Benson and Carisi question him. He quickly folds and points them in the direction of one of the three women involved – Piper Thomas.   They find a file on Piper’s tablet marked “insurance” showing selfies with the current victims and others.  Also on her tablet is a picture from October 2019 with Edward Buddusky – with Simon.  

This brings Benson, Fin, and Carisi back to confront Buddusky who  says he knew Simon from high school. Simon was in a bad way and had no money but with his record he couldn’t hire him.   He just made bad choices.  He got him high and Simon went on about his father killing himself and his wife left him.  Simon said he was supposed to meet his sister for lunch but he was too embarrassed to show.  He couldn’t help Simon so he thought he could change his mood and show him a good time. He knew Piper and things progressed from there.  They ended up at the hotel and they had access to “party favors” and Simon’s eyes lit up.  Buddusky said it was like something he’d never done before.  He passed out and they were gone, and Simon was ice cold on the bed.  He put his clothes back on and cleaned up the room.  He called 911 but he was dead. He could only tell himself that Simon died happy and he had one last good time. 

The 3 girls – Piper, Despina, and Jade -  get picked out of  line-ups. Carisi wants to know who supplied the drugs to charge them with manslaughter.  They question all three girls but they don’t get the dealer/pimp.  ME Warner says the drug used is like Purple Magic but it included MDMA and a higher concentration of Fentanyl. As Organized Crime is working Purple Magic, Warner tells them to check there. 

Benson and Fin meet with Stabler at the Hotel Moulin and bring him up to speed.  Off the record Stabler says they are investigating Wheatley.  Fin gets a video from Kat which shows the circumstances of Simon’s death. Fin recognized a man in the video as someone posing as Piper’s driver – Felix-  but realized he’s the dealer.  Stabler has never seen him before and says they should find him before Wheatley does. 

They continue to question Jade, trying to find Felix.  They find Felix is her daughter’s father. They explain the situation with Wheatley and the fact that she’s in prison now.  Felix is not looking out for her or her daughter, which gets Jade to cooperate. 

Later, they have Felix in interrogation and when they explain the bad drugs he was giving out,  he says he just delivers it. When Fin explains he’s a marked man once he out of there OR in prison, he cooperates.

Later and elsewhere, Benson and Stabler are listening as Felix is wired and speaking to his contact about the knock-off Purple Magic. Stabler thinks the contact is taking it but Benson thinks they made him. When Felix gets outside, there are a bunch of people hanging around the outside on bikes, wearing helmets and masks. Fin watches and radios where Felix is going to the others. Another group of people on bikes approach from the other direction. Benson realizes they have to get Felix out of there, thinking something is going down. But she then tells Stabler to wait. Shots are fired and Felix is killed. Quickly more shots are fired directly at the car where Stabler and Benson have been watching. Stabler moves to protect Benson from the gunshots and the shattering windshield. As Stabler leans over, the episode changes to the Law & Order Organized Crime, “An Inferior Product”

17 comments:

Keith said...

I loved the episode! It was nice to see ME Warner again, linking her to the Simon case and having her ask about Stabler. I love the continuity in the franchise and how the show really uses its history.
Seeing Benson/Stabler interrogate and investigate together really made this episode standout
Holding out hope for an excuse to bring in Alex Cabot or another vet for more of these crossovers
I enjoy when the series picks up from previous episodes and I'm really looking forward to next weeks episode!

Chris Zimmer said...

The updated recap has been posted here! Thanks for your patience.

A said...

STOP SHOWING THE CRIME! Seriously, stop it. Let the viewer learn what's going on as the detectives do.

Bringing Xavi back was really pointless since he and Kat's cousin become forgotten about pretty much immediately. He could've been an all-new character and there would be no significant difference. Tying it to Simon is fine I guess, but then to Wheatley is a bit much of a stretch.

The next episode looks interesting (boy did I hate that kid the first time around; hope they finally send him to hell where he belongs), though I'd rather see what became of the guys from Juvenile.

brit said...

Seemed like a lot of going over old ground for the writers best part of this episode was the title. Next

magix74 said...

This was just a carbon copy of the movie The Hustlers. Was it supposed to be? It really didn’t leave much to the imagination if you’ve seen the movie.

Dawgdays said...

Totally agree with you about Fin handling evidence without gloves

Esaul said...

Fin didn't have gloves on, but he didn't use his bare hands either. I had to rewatch it again to make sure, but it's subtle. Before he touches it, you can see that he's holding a pen in his hand that appears to go back into his front pocket. But instead, he uses it to lift the evidence.

Chris Zimmer said...

@Esaul - you are right! He DOES lift it with a black pen. Very hard to see because the pen is so dark it blends in, especially because his clothes are black. I was watching the episode on a very clear, large screen TV and it was still hard to see! I'll make a note of it in my blog post. Thanks for the info!

300tps said...

I was glad to see Warner again. Otherwise I really can't say more than the bait and switch for organized crime is getting a little hamfisted. As was said, this was clearly not an SVU case and we are now just watching Olivia go through steps of muted closer.

300tps said...

I sincerely miss the cold opens of a random person stumbling on the crime. I don't know which season they decided to do cinematic opens but they don't offer us any real insight of anything and ultimately wind down any sense of mystery or even revelation.

Have the maid open the door and then say the exact same lines and the manager can say something snappy and boom introduce the detectives. Now it feels like they rush through the crime so we don't have to figure out more than the "surprise bad guy" and finally have a quick resolution point.

Bring back the spirit of the early seasons.

Laurie F said...

Way too much time spent on showing the crime. Why spoil it for everyone? Let there be something for viewers to get engaged with. This was one of those crossovers that the story crossed over better than most.

It made me cringe that the situation with Simon being killed by a bad drug was engineered to put Olivia back in the sainted category. Up until now she sounded cold when she cut contact off before he died and it looked like that was what drove him over the edge. Now we know Simon never heard the message so Olivia is absolved (cringe). The fact is her brother wanted to get high and he took a risk with something new for a bigger high. It didn't matter his "friend" egged him on. Simon had issues and he was still an addict. The death may have been due to the drug but it doesn't erase his mental struggle or the fact that Benson cut off contact because of it.

I thought the OC episode was much better that the SVU story.

Anonymous73 said...

The episode was good but simple, but it was complicated by the fact that Olivia was personally involved with her brother also being a victim of the perps, which added a level of tension. I was very pleased to see Simon's storyline revisited and brought to a conclusion. I didn't like how the episode in S21 just brought him back to die so it was good to see some closure to his story and for him to receive justice.

It was good to see Warner back but she didn't have any interactions with Stabler, however we did get some scenes with Benson, Stabler and Fin which was nice.

We get to see Olivia's niece on Simon's phone which I dread is foreshadowing for her reintroduction into SVU, for probably many scenes with Noah. Yikes!

Interestingly enough, the song in the opening scene, "Love Song" by Zak Abel, was also used in the opening scene of the S20 episode 9 "Mea Culpa" with Peter Stone. A form of foreshadowing maybe? but I didn't notice any similarities

Anonymous73 said...

I just wanted to add Chris that I'm not sure if Rollins's father is dead.

Chris Zimmer said...

@Anonymous - you're right! My mistake. I forgot that she was still dealing with arranging his care. I fixed it above.

Chris Zimmer said...

FYI - I updated the recap to add a link to a story that explains why the diner scene in the promo for this episode never appeared in the episode. The link is right before the recap. I had to insert it there as I can't post a link in the comments.

Unknown said...

Can you write the names of the episodes of the crossover in order? i'm so confused

Chris Zimmer said...

@Unknown (Aug 25 2021 comment) it's right in the first paragraph of the post:

"“Trick-Rolled At The Moulin” was the first half of the 2-hour crossover event, and most of it set the stage for Law & Order Organized Crime, “An Inferior Product”. It provided some closure for Benson about her brother’s death, and a perfect segue to the Organized Crime story."

So...SVU Trick Rolled aired first. OC"Inferior Product" was second.

Maybe I don't understand your confusion...?