In this weekâs episode, though, we get two âclassic Matlockâ moments. One involves Mattyâs husband Edwin, who takes Alfieâs place as her assistant in the Jacobson-Moore pharmaceutical investigation. In their mansionâs study, Edwin lays out the evidence theyâve gathered so far in a presentation a lot like the kind Andy Griffith used to give to juries: so detailed and persuasive that Matty herself says, âYou go on one mission, and suddenly youâre Matlock.â
The other moment involves Olympia, who engages in another old Matlock tradition: effectively testifying while grilling a witness. In the Griffith show, Matlock would often blow past any objections from the prosecution to explain his theory of the case to the person heâd fingered as the actual guilty party, ending his speech by saying, âIsnât that right?â or something similar, to frame it all â sort of â as a question. Olympia doesnât go quite that far in this episodeâs case-of-the-week, but she does pull the trick of calling a seemingly friendly witness and then confronting her with a series of damning revelations until she breaks.
That sceneâs dramatic, for sure. But itâs also indicative of the overall flimsiness of this weekâs case, which, for the most part, is effective only for the conversations and revelations it leads to outside the courtroom, not for what happens in the trial itself.
The case is a class action suit, brought by several current and former inmates at a womenâs prison, against the private contractor that ran the place and allowed abuse to run rampant. The key witness is Katya Novik (Andra Nechita), an Eastern European immigrant who has struggled to get her life together since her release, due to ongoing trauma over the way she was treated inside. The problem? Katyaâs biggest issue is drug addiction, which makes it very risky to put her on the stand.
Enter that seemingly friendly witness I mentioned above: Warden Nicola Caruso (Kerry Cahill), a reformer who has cleaned up the prison in the wake of Olympiaâs lawsuit. In a twist that wasnât hard at all to see coming, we discover that the warden has secretly been tanking the case â including nudging Katya to relapse â because she thinks the money the plaintiffs are seeking could be put to better use. Olympia coaxes that out of her thanks to a security video Matty obtained from the nail salon where Katya works, showing a woman with the same birthmark on her hand as Carusoâs speaking to a clearly distressed Katya.
And thatâs ⌠good enough, I guess? Jacobson-Mooreâs social justice team banks another multi-million dollar settlement. Nothing to it â and I mean that in an unflattering way.
Ah, but the non-courtroom drama? Thatâs where this episode hits. Mattyâs intimate knowledge of how addicts behave â how they lie, why they lie â proves to be a real asset. It also tests her burgeoning alliance with Olympia, when her boss yells at her for prioritizing Katyaâs sobriety over the case and Matty yells back, âWhat if she was one of your twins?â
Their bond is restored by the end of the episode when Olympia incorporates much of Mattyâs righteous rant into her closing argument. But for the first time really, Sarahâs furious jealousy over Mattyâs rapid rise within J-M becomes plot-relevant, as Olympiaâs casual elevation of Matty to strategy-plotter and decision-maker â and Ms. Matlockâs inadvertent insensitivity to her coworkersâ feelings about this â ends up enraging Billy as well, forcing a reckoning and a reconciliation that culminates in what could be a fateful decision. Itâs a crafty piece of writing, having a few seemingly random bits of side business lead somewhere productive.
The main bone of contention for Billy is that while he and Sarah were meant to be providing support for Matty â as she tried to find and help a wayward Katya â she ghosted them and secretly called on Edwin instead, because he also knows a lot about dealing with an addict. (Itâs genuinely heartbreaking to see Edwin be the one to break down crying at home at the end of the day, after they trail Katya to an all-too-familiar drug den.) She then has to scramble to make up a lie for why she didnât call her colleagues, deciding to pen her absent-mindedness on Alfieâs school troubles.
Matty also tries to soften Sarah by setting her up with one of Jacobson-Mooreâs IT geniuses, Kira (Piper Curda). Of course, Matty has an ulterior motive. Sheâs trying to sneak one of Kiraâs fingerprints, to get access to the server room containing all of the firmâs old emails. But sheâs also genuinely concerned about Sarahâs workaholism. Matty is charmingly goofy as she tries to manipulate Kira: first by trying to get information about the server room by lying that she accidentally deleted a Costco coupon, and then by spilling her pills all over the lunchroom so that Sarah and Kira will âtrauma bondâ over her haplessness.
The end result of all this bickering and bonding with the other associates, though, is that Billy takes all of Mattyâs lies to heart and decides to help a lonely old lady out by creating a dating profile for âMadeline Matlock.â And within a day, she gets a match⌠with a man who recognizes her as Madeline Kingston.
Now thatâs the Matlock we love, right? The Andy Griffith version had its charms. But the new one has stingers.
Hot Dogginâ
⢠One of the downsides to Matlockâs case-of-the-week format is that the âpreviouslyâ montage that opens each episode really doesnât change much, does it?
⢠Before Edwinâs stint as Mattyâs helper takes a sadder turn â with him becoming emotionally overwhelmed by the responsibility â he makes a funny Archie to her Nero Wolfe, bumbling his way through legwork assignments while she guides him from afar. Heâs hilarious in this episodeâs opening scene in a computer store, making up lies about Olympiaâs laptop and getting so tongue-tied that the simplest version of his story (the laptop belongs to his grandson) becomes unnecessarily baroque (his grandson has a friend who recently died because he ânever ate his vegetablesâ).
⢠The reunification of Olympia and Julian continues this week as they talk about selling their brownstone and how moving will affect their kids. Julian has had almost no significant presence in any of the main Matlock storylines so far, but I suspect itâs only a matter of time before he gets his due â perhaps if Matty discovers that heâs heavily involved in the pharmaceutical cover-up.
⢠Even though the rushed, slack legal drama elements of Matlock sometimes leave me shaking my head, Iâm impressed by how well-woven the other elements are. Case-in-point: At the nail salon, Matty riffs with the proprietor about what it takes to maintain a fancy manicure; and after she gets her own nails done, Matty admits to Alfie that she once made fun of his mom for her nice prom nails (calling them âclawsâ) when she shouldâve just complimented her. This leads to an honest and bracing conversation about the nature of addiction. The last part couldâve happened without the earlier parts; but itâs so much more affecting to have the subject arise organically. Nicely done all around.