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Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent Review – Toronto Takes the Dick Wolf Formula Local

Authentically Canadian: Local Cast and Backdrop Deliver Unique Flavor

Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi by Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi
2 years ago
in Entertainment, Reviews, TV Shows
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You may have heard that the iconic “dun dun” of Law & Order is coming north to the Great White North. After years of dominating the American airwaves, the criminal justice juggernaut is setting up shop in Toronto for a homegrown spinoff – Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent.

For the uninitiated, Law & Order built its empire on riveting procedurals “ripped from the headlines” about big city cops and lawyers. This Canuck offshoot promises to deliver that classic formula, just with a localized twist – think Timbits meets New York City grit.

Front and center is our dynamic detective duo – worldly Henry Graff (Aden Young), known for his offbeat methods, and Frankie Bateman (Kathleen Munroe), a whip smart single mom. Backing them up is their wonderfully blunt boss, Inspector Vivienne Holness (scene-stealer Karen Robinson of Schitt’s Creek fame). Rounding out Team Canada is D.A. Theo Forrester (K.C. Collins), bringing on the charm.

Leading the creative charge are Tassie Cameron and sister Amy, daughters of acclaimed investigative journalist Stevie Cameron. So unraveling tantalizing real-life mysteries is basically in their blood.

While only the premiere is out, “The Key to the Castle” delivers on the hype, plunging us right into the untimely death of a shifty Bitcoin bigwig. With tight writing, slick production value and bold Canadian stories, it seems our friends up North may be poised to give Dick Wolf himself a run for his money.

So grab the ketchup chips and get ready, because this homegrown take on a classic franchise looks locked and loaded for criminal justice, Canuck style, eh?

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First Contact with the 6ix’s Finest

Going into the premiere, my expectations were sky-high. After all, I’d grown up watching the Law & Order mothership, with fond memories of Jerry Orbach leading the charge into gritty NYC crime scenes. And that iconic “dun dun” still gives me chills. So how would Toronto, the so-called NYC of the North, hold up with its own crack crime-fighting unit?

We open on a lavish yacht party, giving us an early glimpse of T-dot’s posh side. But that quickly turns dark when a crypto bigwig mysteriously vanishes overboard. Cut to those magical notes, and we crash land at the crime scene with Detectives Graff and Bateman, already knee-deep in clues.

The easy banter between worldly wild card Graff and whip-smart single mom Bateman pops from minute one. Graff spouts his encyclopedic knowledge of the city, name-dropping local landmarks like a true Torontonian, while Bateman plays grounded translator. It’s a classic odd couple dynamic that promises some prime procedural chemistry.

In those early moments, the crisp camerawork captures Toronto in all its cold, steel grey glory – this ain’t your grandma’s touristy postcard. We get tunnel vision following Graff and Bateman between interviews with suspects and persons of interest. Each location reveals new surprises in a city with many faces.

By the first act break, the show sinks its teeth into me. This ain’t CBS – it’s grittier, quicker…realer. The story keeps me guessing with intriguing leads pointing to scorned lovers, shady business deals, mafia vendettas. All while showing off my city as a character unto itself, in all its eclectic, multicultural glory.

As those addictive opening chords blare between scenes, it becomes clear – Toronto’s got its own authentic criminal underworld that I can’t wait to dive deeper into. The 6ix is officially on the case!

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A Cryptic Case with Canadian Flavor

The premiere throws us right into the deep end with the suspicious death of a Bitcoin billionaire during a ritzy boat bash. The cops dive in to untangle a web of twisted motives among Toronto’s elite. Hell hath no fury like an oligarch scorned.

Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent Review

The crypto connection brings a distinctly modern buzz to the first case. And the glitzy lakefront party spiraling into murder mystery? It screams salacious tabloid headlines. But the story still feels uniquely Canadian at its core.

We get some tantalizing personal drama related to the victim’s mysterious health issues. Yet the real hook for me is the corporate crypto scandal bubbling beneath the surface. Over $300 million in Bitcoin locked away without a passport, shady business deals leading to a man overboard, and a hastily covered-up audit. This has white collar corruption fiasco written all over it.

Beyond the timely crypto plot, the regional references make Toronto a character in its own right. As we bounce across the city, Bateman and Graff take us everywhere from the ritzy Royal Canadian Yacht Club to the notorious biker gang haunt Filmores Hotel to working class Moss Park. No postcard sheen here – this is the authentic 6ix.

With an airtight script, the fast-talking walk-and-talks move at a brisk clip. Just when I think they’ve nailed their perp, another twist throws us off course. The final reveal ties the whole sordid affair up in a satisfactory, if not entirely surprising, bow.

While most of the story sticks to tried and true procedural formula, that closing crypto gag suggests more complex serialized elements to come. And I’m already craving answers.

There’s no denying the first case leans hard on some wild coincidences and lucky breaks to neatly tie the bow. But the layered characters, regional authenticity, and modern Crime-of-the-Week had me hooked. As the series stretches its legs in later episodes, I’m hoping the unique Canadian flavor permeates even deeper. Either way, consider this Canuck viewer sold on Toronto’s criminal underbelly! Let’s dive back into the seedy 6ix.

All-Star Ensemble Brings the Heat

Any good cop show lives and dies by its leads. After all, we’ve got to want to grab some Timmy’s and ride along on stakeouts with these folks for years to come. Luckily, Law & Order Toronto assembles an all-star Canuck ensemble with chemistry to spare.

Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent Review

Leading the charge into Toronto’s criminal underworld are Detectives Graff and Bateman, played with aplomb by Aden Young and Kathleen Munroe. Young makes the peculiar genius Graff leap off the page, spouting his unique food-inspired philosophies in that thick, comforting accent between bursts of investigative inspiration. Munroe provides the perfect grounded foil as Bateman, juggling her single mom status with a uncanny knack for teasing clues out of tight-lipped suspects. Together, they balance humor and grit for a dynamic partnership I’m already deeply invested in.

The legendary Karen Robinson threatens to steal every scene she’s in as the wonderfully incisive Chief Inspector Holness. Robinson clearly relishes Holness’ no-nonsense sensibilities – watching her dress down the mayor while munching on a sandwich makes me want to stand up and salute.

While K.C. Collins’ baby-faced D.A. Forrester takes more of a backseat, his natural charm and swagger leaves me wanting to see him take on the city’s corrupt fat cats in court. There’s an Easy Rider rebel spirit brewing behind those kind eyes that promises plenty of fireworks to come.

With fully-realized characters portrayed by fantastic Canadian talents clearly stoked to rep the 6ix, Law & Order Toronto has assembled a true dream team. They already share an easy, infectious camaraderie that has me fully invested. So here’s hoping we get to share a double-double with Toronto’s finest for many seedy cases to come!

A Polished Package Showcasing the 6ix

From those opening shots soaring over the Toronto skyline, it’s clear no expense was spared bringing our fair city to vivid life. Law & Order Toronto delivers a slick production with visual flair worthy of its NYC predecessors.

Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent Review

Crisp cinematography captures T.O.’s chilly metropolitan energy, all icy blues and grey concrete. The cold color palette feels tailored to the story’s stark twists and turns. Whether we’re peacocking over crystal lakes or prowling dank alleyways, the camerawork keeps us locked in.

And Toronto has never looked better – or grittier. Beyond dazzling aerial views, much of the action lives at street level. The heightened realism pulls us right into tense suspect chases through Moss Park and bumpy rides out to the Scarborough Bluffs crime scene. We become one of the city’s millions, sharing intimate views of both polished high society and working class grit.

With its seasoned creative team, polished camerawork and authentic on-location shoots, Law & Order Toronto delivers the slick production value essential to live up to its iconic franchise roots. Compared to the globally recognized NY mothership, this baby spinoff already looks poised to stand tall.

Visually speaking, I’d stack these thrilling opening episodes capturing Toronto’s many personas against the best of the long-running U.S. series. So whether we’re initiating lakefront palm scans or reluctantly downing Filmore’s famous picklebacks, consider me all in on T-dot’s slick and stylish small screen glow-up! Strap in for a wild visual ride with the 6ix’s new top cops.

Sticking to Its Canadian Guns

Let’s be real – after 1300+ episodes across the pond, Law & Order basically has its formula down to a science. Toronto’s maiden voyage fits comfortably into the franchise mold, delivering all those deliciously predictable procedural trappings we crave.

Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent Review

We get the usual paint-by-numbers plot: start with a dead body, stitch together seemingly disconnected clues, throw in some false accusations and red herrings, close with a final gotcha reveal. The slick camerawork, quick-fire script, and abrupt act breaks separating interviews from action scenes? Classic L&O rhythm.

And you know what? I’m 1000% here for it. This is precisely what I tune in for – tossing theories back and forth with friends between commercial breaks and chasing that formulaic high. In an age of messy antihero dramas, Law & Order Toronto brings back delicious escapist closure. Crack the case, serve up justice, see you next week.

The story itself breaks little ground – scorned lovers, corporate vendettas, mafia payback feel ripped from the NYC headlines. But the Canadian flavor adding regional authenticity offers a fresh twist. By episode’s end, Toronto stands out more than the mystery itself.

While most of the premiere clicks along predictably, that tantalizing crypto tease suggests serialized character drama bubbling beneath the surface. I’d love to see future episodes lean harder into complex local stories and serialized personal arcs without losing the procedural backbone that makes this franchise so addictive.

But really, Law & Order Toronto gets the tone, tension and format down pat out the gate. In the battle between reinventing the wheel and playing to its strengths, I’m thrilled the show chooses the latter. The 6ix stitching its own crimes together by the book? I’ll gladly plead guilty to those irresistibly formulaic, wildly entertaining charges for years to come.

Guilty…of Being Highly Bingeable!

After that thrilling maiden voyage into Toronto’s seedy criminal underworld, consider this Canuck viewer all in on Law & Order’s great frozen North expansion. T-dot’s finest deliver a slick, steadily paced procedural bursting with regional flavor.

Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent Review

The show nails the tense tone, brisk writing and tantalizing whodunnits that make this franchise so addictive. And the premiere introduces a fantastic ensemble bringing depth and personality to the classic archetypes. Young and Munroe boast natural chemistry as our central odd couple, while scene-stealer Karen Robinson threatens to walk away with the whole 6ix.

Visually speaking, Toronto has never felt more alive or cinematic. The cold color palette and gritty authenticity has me craving a double double while chasing leads across town. This definitely ain’t a sanitized postcard vision.

Story-wise, I’d love to see future cases push deeper into uniquely Canadian crimes that feel embedded into the local culture. While the crypto caper plot was fun, it lacked some of the social impact of the original series’ best “ripped from the headlines” cases. Though that closing crypto twist hints at more complex themes to come.

Of course the central formula stays crispy as ever – this spinoff knows not to mess with the special sauce too much. But as the series stretches its legs, I hope to see more daring risks woven into the tried-and-true template.

All in all, Law & Order Toronto should have no trouble finding its rightful place in the expansive franchise family tree. It delivers everything I love about these shows, with just enough regional singularity to stand out from the herd. So consider this Canuck hooked on the 6ix’s criminal underworld. I’d gladly binge-watch Toronto’s finest crack casos from Timmy’s to T-dot and back. Here’s hoping the show fulfills its bingeable potential and sticks around a long while.

The Review

Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent

8 Score

Law & Order Toronto delivers a slick, binge-worthy spinoff tailor-made for franchise fans north of the border. While the central formula stays tried-and-true, regional authenticity and a fantastic Canadian ensemble inject vital fresh energy into this iconic procedural stalwart.

PROS

  • Strong lead performances with great chemistry between detectives
  • Slick production value and visually captivating portrayal of Toronto
  • Formulaic but entertaining plot with some intriguing twists
  • Promising development of wider character arcs and serialized elements
  • Authentic local flavor from setting to script to cast

CONS

  • Relies heavily on established procedural formula without much innovation
  • Plot conveniences and coincidences wrap up first case too neatly
  • Serialized storytelling still quite limited in early episodes
  • Cases not as socially impactful yet compared to original series

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: Aden YoungCitytvDick WolfDramaFeaturedK. C. CollinsKaren RobinsonKathleen MunroeLaw & Order Toronto: Criminal IntentRené BalcerTassie CameronWanda Chaffey
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