LAW & ORDER: THE COMPLETE ORIGINAL SERIES (DVD)
1990-2010
20,718 min (20 Seasons; 456 Episodes; 104 discs)
Review by Carl, the Couch Potato😸
The original Law & Order gets my vote for the greatest TV series of all time. Even if one doesn’t concur, you’d be hard pressed to name another show that remained so remarkably consistent after 20 years, while surviving countless casting changes. Ratings may have dipped in later years, but in terms of new stories, the quality of writing and an uncanny knack for introducing viable new characters to replace departing ones, it never wore out its welcome. Not bad for a series where the narrative structure of every episode was almost identical.
Not to date myself, but I remember getting hooked on the show back in the 90s, when it aired on Thursdays at 10:00. Juggling both work and college at the time, this was the only weeknight I was compelled to stay up a bit later. Sure, I’d be a little groggier on Friday, but these stories (“Ripped from the Headlines!”) were almost always worth the need for that extra cup of coffee the next morning.
Syndication was a godsend, since many of the cable networks picking up the show knew its bingeworthiness before binging became commonplace, and there was nothing better than a Law & Order marathon on TNT or A&E. On another personal note, a life-threatening illness once put me in the hospital for three months, and during those endless hours & days between tests and procedures, those marathons (which seemed to air almost daily) were some of the few bright spots of those dreary, bedridden days. It didn’t matter that I’d seen most of the episodes before, because they were almost always rewatchable, and as it turns out, timeless. Today, it’s still hard not to get sucked into an old episode when it shows up on TV. Even my two daughters, who weren’t even alive when it first aired, have gotten into it.
What’s ultimately great about having all 20 seasons of the original Law & Order on DVD is you’re not subjected to the scheduling whims of whatever network is currently airing re-runs, to say nothing of having to sit through commercials. Better yet, no streaming service required! But best of all, it turns out that even after 35 years, I still hadn’t seen every episode ever produced, and it wasn’t until now that I finally caught the series pilot, “Everybody’s Favorite Bagman” (which didn’t actually air until episode six of Season One). In fact, there were quite a few episodes during the first couple of seasons that were new to me, probably because it was during the Jerry Orbach era (starting Season Three) that I originally got hopelessly hooked (and it doesn’t seem like those earlier years show up in reruns quite as often).
 |
| Jerry hands Chris his pink slip. |
For the sake of expediency, I have not gone through every single episode (yet). That would literally take weeks…without pausing to sleep, eat or go to my day job. So instead, I viewed a few episodes from each era, determined by major casting changes. I’m personally partial to those featuring Sam Waterston, S. Epatha Merkerson, Jesse Martin, Benjamin Bratt, Dennis Farina and, of course, Jerry Orbach, who made Lenny Briscoe the show’s greatest character (losing Orbach was a huge blow, but successor Farina was wonderful in his own right). But there are great episodes from every year, including the last couple (which I felt were the weakest, but still featured solid storytelling). In addition to good writing and well-rounded characters, one thing I always liked about the show was its unpredictability. Never afraid to tackle dark (sometimes very dark) subject matter, you never knew whether or not a particular episode was going to end happily, with justice being served. Even the actions and motives of its major characters would occasionally be morally or ethically ambiguous. Much like real life, I suppose.
Every season has been released on DVD before, but never together in a single massive boxed set. I don’t know if there are any technical upgrades for this one, but the overall picture and sound quality is very good, though the older seasons show some inevitable signs of age. Speaking of which, Law & Order has been around so long that the first four seasons were shot in the 1.33:1 aspect ratio, which was standard for TV back then (dark days indeed), so I had to adjust my settings. Subsequent seasons widened things up to 1.78:1. Each season come in its own individual keepcases, all of which are housed in a sturdy, nicely designed box.
While Law & Order has since been revived with new seasons (and a mostly new cast), this set features only the original series run. That suits me just fine because, while decent, the rebooted series just doesn’t quite have the same punch (or maybe the formula has finally run its course). The twenty seasons featured here (on 104 discs!) represent dramatic television at its very best. If you haven’t already been collecting this stuff on DVD over the years, Law & Order: The Complete Original Series is a must own.
EXTRA KIBBLES
DELETED/EXTENDED SCENES
CAST PROFILES
SET TOUR
CROSSOVER EPISODES - Episodes of other NBC shows of the era where L&O characters appeared.