ADA Cabot is being investigated by the state bar because of a rape case, but Benson and Stabler are too preoccupied to come to her aid because Stabler's son and best friend are missing.ADA Cabot is being investigated by the state bar because of a rape case, but Benson and Stabler are too preoccupied to come to her aid because Stabler's son and best friend are missing.ADA Cabot is being investigated by the state bar because of a rape case, but Benson and Stabler are too preoccupied to come to her aid because Stabler's son and best friend are missing.
Photos
- Special Agent Dr. George Huang, M.D.
- (as B.D. Wong)
- (credit only)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- GoofsThe time on the ATM footage reads 11:52 AM but it is clearly nighttime outside.
It is not nighttime outside as you see the sun reflecting on Shane's face and if you look closely at the sky above the buildings behind Shane. The sky is blue. And when the detectives show Shane's mother a picture of Shane at the ATM. It is clearly daytime.
- Quotes
Elliot Stabler: [after Dickie is found assaulting a homeless man] I'm taking him home.
Olivia Benson: Elliot. Elliot, stop. Your son just assaulted a man with a 2-x-4. There's no way that he's going home. Don't make this worse than it already is.
Yet manages to handle it extremely well, with a lot more tact, intensity and poignancy than expected. "Turmoil" to me is a great episode, one of Season 11's best and the first close to outstanding one, the rating indicates otherwise but the previous episodes were mostly good but not great with one disappointment. It is a very character driven episode, and part of me was worried with it being focused on Stabler, who was very inconsistently and problematically written from Seasons 7-12, but this is one of the better episodes to revolve around him and a major family dilemma.
Did find the truth on the rushed side. Also didn't like the treatment of Cabot, she didn't deserve the rudeness she got.
So much is good though. It is extremely well acted, with Christopher Meloni giving one of his best performances of the show. Especially in the latter stages, that show his steely intensity and also a more vulnerable side. He definitely goes about things the wrong way and lets his emotions get the better of him, but his love for his family and son is clear and his intentions are good, did like too that for the first time in a while that his flaws are self-acknowledged. Jeffrey Scapperrotta also gives some of his best acting, really cared for him and rooted for him to get out of what was a truly tough situation.
On a visual level, the episode is solid and the intimacy of the photography doesn't get static or too filmed play-like. The music when used is not too over-emphatic and has a melancholic edge that is quite haunting. The direction is sympathetic enough without being leaden, while having enough momentum to make the drama sing in its atmosphere.
"Turmoil" is strongly and not too melodramatically scripted, not being over-serious while taking the tough subject very seriously. It is intelligently written too while never being exploitative. The story is intricate while not being convoluted, it has a real sense of tension and jeopardy and it is the closest the season has gotten at this point of it that feels like early 'Special Victims Unit' case-wise. The family stuff is a lot less soapy than most Stabler family dilemma episodes.
In conclusion, great. 9/10.
- TheLittleSongbird
- May 9, 2022