IMDb रेटिंग
7.8/10
1.7 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA powerful Los Angeles law firm handles high-profile, media-circus cases.A powerful Los Angeles law firm handles high-profile, media-circus cases.A powerful Los Angeles law firm handles high-profile, media-circus cases.
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10pamhiga
Justice is the best court room drama show that I have ever watched. I love the way that the show is done. I hope that the Fox network will decide to bring back Justice for a new season. All of the shows that I have seen are exciting and well played out. I especially love the way they show how the jury is chosen and all of the other behind the scene action of the defense attorneys. It is so interesting to find out in the end what actually happened. It really is a great way to portray the justice system. It really makes you wonder about how big cases are won. It also shows you how much money and a good defense attorney matters in a persons case. Justice is so much better than Law and Order. I really hope that the people from Fox will think about bringing this series back, I assume that the change of the days from Monday to Friday was a bad decision because it was hard to remember that it was on Friday night, I was used to seeing it on Monday after Prison Break.
This show really was great. It gave you the full court case from jury selection all the way through the trial and even the verdict. Then at the very end, they showed you what actually happened so you got to see how all of the evidence came into play, what the lawyers speculated about based on the the evidence that they received and whether or not they got it right or wrong. You got to see if the person actually committed the crime and if the jury got it right or got it wrong. My wife and I looked forward to this show every week and then they ended it. The closest this to this show that I've seen is the new show, also on Fox, called Accused.
It was an interesting concept. And I loved how the justice department was seen under a microscope. And the way each cases events were shown afterwards. Only it quickly ran out of steam, and after a very sub par second episode, they went full on PC on episode 3 conclusions. And that's where the show lost all its appeal. Only to be regained by episodes not involving « delicate » matters. A shame really, this series, though heavily inspired by CSI, is pretty entertaining and some cases keep you hooked and invested. While others took the safest and most predictable paths. Making it surprisingly polished for a show that was supposed to push the envelope...
10blessedd
I really like this show. It's also quite unique in how the shows end. I keep looking for it in the Television listings, but it's not there anymore. When is it going to be on Television again so I can see it. It's one of my favorites. It is a great show. I don't know what else to say to get 10 lines in my comments so I can submit this. I tried to find a way to contact FOX TV, but I couldn't easily see the link. If I recall correctly, it took me to a long distance phone number to call. Is there any other way to voice my opinion on the show "Justice." I'd love to see it airing on television again.... and hopefully for the next several or more years. Thanks for listening! I really like the show.
Network: Fox; Genre: Crime/Legal Drama; Content Rating: TV-14 (violence, adult content and language); Perspective: Contemporary (star range: 1 - 4);
Season Reviewed: Series (1 season)
A crack team of defense attorneys, including a media manipulation expert played by Victor Garber, the requisite young hot-shot attorney played by Kerr Smith and the model-esquire female attorney trying to restrain the guys played by Rebecca Mader ("Starved") , defend the rich, famous, and scandalous in LA. After the trial concludes we will see a flashback that shows if they really are innocent or got away with murder.
David E. Kelly's memorable "The Practice" for all of its eventual wallowing in whoa-is-me melodrama was great at delving into the psyche of a defense attorney and the emotional baggage that comes with a job that when done right can set a murderer free. Under the eye of producer Jerry Bruckheimer, "Justice" reshapes the defense attorney with the "CSI" template and a cast of TV veterans that needs no introduction. The stories are self-contained, the characters are only superficially attended to and there is plenty of blood, gore and that trademark "CSI" visual flair. The show looks damn good and a few creative visual tricks keep it moving at a pace so smartly quick that "Justice" can actually work as a passable guilty pleasure watch the first time or two around. That novelty quickly wares of as it did with "CSI" for me long ago.
There is a place for this show's premise, which updates the "Law & Order" process of building and delivering a case for the technologically-advanced, media-dependent new millennium. These lawyers look like they have better technology and more resources to defend the guilty than the cops actually solving the crimes. The way Garber's character doesn't just manipulate the media, but relies on that manipulation as part of his case to get a message to the jury pool would in the right hands - make for sweet revenge satire toward that Nancy Grace/Greta Van Sustren niche of the media that has become crime-obsessed.
The potential audience-grabbing gimmick of "Justice" is that ending in which we learn the truth about what happened in the case. But in most of the few episodes that aired, that ending is exactly what you're expecting, either what the defense guessed or what the prosecutors said. No surprises here, no creative, outlandish "Holy cow" twists.
Despite a snappy, cracker-jack performance from an always good Victor Garber and a welcome callous look at lawyers after years of sympathizing with them, "Justice" is still yet another reincarnation of Bruckheimer's brainless, eye-candy crime formula. Not bad, kind of fun to fix your eyes on, but nothing special either.
* * / 4
Season Reviewed: Series (1 season)
A crack team of defense attorneys, including a media manipulation expert played by Victor Garber, the requisite young hot-shot attorney played by Kerr Smith and the model-esquire female attorney trying to restrain the guys played by Rebecca Mader ("Starved") , defend the rich, famous, and scandalous in LA. After the trial concludes we will see a flashback that shows if they really are innocent or got away with murder.
David E. Kelly's memorable "The Practice" for all of its eventual wallowing in whoa-is-me melodrama was great at delving into the psyche of a defense attorney and the emotional baggage that comes with a job that when done right can set a murderer free. Under the eye of producer Jerry Bruckheimer, "Justice" reshapes the defense attorney with the "CSI" template and a cast of TV veterans that needs no introduction. The stories are self-contained, the characters are only superficially attended to and there is plenty of blood, gore and that trademark "CSI" visual flair. The show looks damn good and a few creative visual tricks keep it moving at a pace so smartly quick that "Justice" can actually work as a passable guilty pleasure watch the first time or two around. That novelty quickly wares of as it did with "CSI" for me long ago.
There is a place for this show's premise, which updates the "Law & Order" process of building and delivering a case for the technologically-advanced, media-dependent new millennium. These lawyers look like they have better technology and more resources to defend the guilty than the cops actually solving the crimes. The way Garber's character doesn't just manipulate the media, but relies on that manipulation as part of his case to get a message to the jury pool would in the right hands - make for sweet revenge satire toward that Nancy Grace/Greta Van Sustren niche of the media that has become crime-obsessed.
The potential audience-grabbing gimmick of "Justice" is that ending in which we learn the truth about what happened in the case. But in most of the few episodes that aired, that ending is exactly what you're expecting, either what the defense guessed or what the prosecutors said. No surprises here, no creative, outlandish "Holy cow" twists.
Despite a snappy, cracker-jack performance from an always good Victor Garber and a welcome callous look at lawyers after years of sympathizing with them, "Justice" is still yet another reincarnation of Bruckheimer's brainless, eye-candy crime formula. Not bad, kind of fun to fix your eyes on, but nothing special either.
* * / 4
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe premiere episode on Fox Television was viewed by 8.9 million people, winning the number one spot in its time slot.
- कनेक्शनReferenced in Family Guy: Family Gay (2009)
- साउंडट्रैकLawyers, Guns and Money
Written and performed by Warren Zevon
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- How many seasons does Justice have?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
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