"Law & Order" Slave (TV Episode 1996) Poster

(TV Series)

(1996)

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7/10
Mom, What Happened To YOU?
rmax30482323 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
A complex story that begins with the usual false lead. A woman is shot through the head from a nearby rooftop. Brisco and Curtis manage, however implausibly, to track down the person responsible for the shooting. He's just a snotty kid of about twelve who is the "slave" of a local drug dealer (Agustin). The kid (Adam Zolotin) runs errands, delivers cocaine, and sees to it that someone is bumped off when it's necessary. The dealer is the kid's virtual father.

How did this arrangement come about? The kid's mother (Karen Young) is a crack addict, and the small-time drug lord keeps her happy. The price is that the kid has become the Agustin's willing "slave." The kid worships only two things: his boss Agustin and his crack-head mother.

The episode is engaging for two reasons, aside from the depressing and Dickensian plot. There are a couple of outstanding performances. Not Agustin, the head villain. He's a stereotype and the part could have been phoned in. But Karen Young as the beaten-up, abject mother does a splendid job of projecting a kind of angry hopelessness. She was a shy but compliant whore in "American Psycho," which illustrates her range as an actress. Make up has made her blond hair and ordinary features convincingly lusterless.

The other is Adam Zolotin as the defiant and thoroughly corrupted kid who hates cops and refuses to involve his boss or his mother in the murder. Where does anyone find a twelve-year-old boy who can act so well? I'm not sure he could add such zest to any other role. It's hard to imagine his playing some introverted accountant. But that's just to emphasize how compelling his performance is here.
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7/10
Growing up without love
bkoganbing5 November 2017
One of the saddest episodes in the history of Law And Order is this one where when all is said and done will a juvenile perpetrator ever get his head straight. The consequences of growing up without love can be devastating.

Young Adam Zolotin was on an apartment rooftop trying to shoot the even younger George Gore,II and with one bullet he fires it goes through an apartment window and kills a woman who is a complete stranger.

The problem that Sam Waterston has is getting young Zolotin to forget about the code of the streets and roll on the drug dealer he works for. Agustin Fernandez is said drug dealer and a nastier piece of work and bigger lowlife you won't find.

But depending on your version of the pecking order Zolotin's mother is higher or lower. Karen Young is Zolotin's mother and all she lives for is the almighty crack cigarette. She gave her kid over to Fernandez for his own use as a drug mule and God knows what else. What to do with them God also only knows.

When all is said and done young Zolotin just wants a little love in his life. Maybe the saddest thing going in this old world is how too many are denied same.

This will break your heart.
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9/10
No other love
TheLittleSongbird4 March 2021
On first watch "Slave" struck me as a very powerful episode and one of the episodes of Season 6 that hit me hard emotionally. Which took some doing as there are quite a few episodes in the season that stirred emotion in me. It has one of those subjects that makes one feel a lot of anger and sadness internally and externally, emotions that is felt naturally rather than feeling forced to feel those things. Something not unusual for the 'Law and Order' franchise overall before and since.

My feelings on "Slave" are exactly the same on rewatch and perhaps slightly stronger, due to getting a little more out of the story a few years on. It is not quite one of the very best episodes of Season 6 but it is very close to being up there. There is one aspect that have done with having more dimension, but the execution of the difficult subject matter is beautifully handled and the two main guest star performances leave a huge positive impression.

Almost everything in "Slave" works beautifully. The episode is slickly photographed throughout, a perfect match for the gritty tone, and New York looks both striking and atmosphere-filled. The music is only used when necessary and when it is used it does stick in the mind and not done so ham-handedly. Both the main theme and opening voice over are memorable. It is directed with a confident and sympathetic edge. The script is intelligent and concise.

Nothing in the script feels extraneous or too flowery, there is no trouble understanding what is being said and there is not a sense of just one side being taken. "Slave" has a powerful story that has scary tension and also heart-wrenching emotional impact, have always been left with goosebumps on every watch. The character interaction between the regulars, especially in the legal scenes (though the chemistry between Briscoe and Curtis has come on a long way since the beginning of the season), is reliably strong.

"Slave's" supporting characters are very interesting, especially Cassie who leaves me feel both hate and pity for. It is also incredibly hard to not feel for Nacho for what he has to endure. Karen Young does resentment and vulnerable so well, it was both unnerving and affecting watching her. All the regulars are great typically. The performance that captivates most though is a heart-rending Adam Zolotin.

Did feel however that for a character meant to be despicable, Morales could have done with being written with more menace and less stereotypically. Augustin's performance is to me a little too broad.

In summary, great and very close to being one of the season's very best. 9/10
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8/10
You'll feel for Nacho
jackdevries-6422219 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Lonnie Rickman aka 'Nacho' is indentured to work his mother's drug dealer Rosco to pay off her debt. When he's put up to kill one of his friends by Rosco he can't follow through, but a stray bullet strikes an older woman in her sleep from another building.

After being arrested and tried, we learn about his mistreatment from his drug addicted mother who he's trying to provide for in return for no love or comfort and the horrifying circumstances Rosco puts him under. Lonnie takes a plea deal of 5 years in juvenile prison which is set in family court as the last scene of the episode. His reaction surmises the extreme torment and unfairness of his childhood and current circumstances. We get one final shot of McCoy looking on, ascertaining his own discomfort and remorse for even including jail time in his deal.

The whole episode is very well produced with good and concise dialogue as we see a very unique case and prosecution. The only worthy gripe would be the introduction and how it fails to link in enough with the investigation and prosecution - a sleeping wife shot by accident from 100 yards away on a rooftop. Maybe something more probable or relevant to criminal activity would have helped lead the story in?

Either way the episode is agonising for poor Nacho.
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