Starring: Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Neve Campbell, Becky Newton, Angus Sampson, Jazz Raycole, Cobie Smulders, Elliott Gould
The Lincoln Lawyer is still a serviceable courtroom drama series, but it won't elevate into anything greater. That's fine. It doesn't need to. However, this season's case involves Michael Haller (Garcia-Rulfo) on trial for murdering a former client who was found in the back seat of his convertible at the end of last season. Fast forward to this season, and Haller is in county jail awaiting arraignment while serving as a pro bono attorney for other prisoners. It's a good way to keep others from messing with you.
Meanwhile, Haller's pending trial is causing his clients to drop him and his associate/ex-wife Lorna Crane (Newton) to try and scrape for clients just to keep the practice going. Haller is still equipped with his loyal staff which includes Lorna, investigator Cisco (Sampson), paralegal and part-time driver Izzy (Raycole), and Haller's other ex-wife Maggie (Campbell), who joins the team to defend him in court. The quasi-family vibe here works well, and the best scenes are the courtroom ones because of the inherent drama involved as Haller tries to defend himself while also figuring out who set him up and why.
Of course, Haller gets away with legal maneuvering that doesn't seem plausible nor would a judge continue to allow it. Garcia-Rulfo remains a solid lead, but he's not the Michael Haller from the 2011 movie. That is Matthew McConaughey and McConaughey will continue to be the actor people think of first when The Lincoln Lawyer is mentioned, but Garcia-Rulfo is smart and slick. Newton is also a standout as the tireless, loyal Lorna, who is married to Cisco and we scratch our heads as to why a spark plug like Lorna would be married to the monosyllabic Cisco whose hygiene is suspect, although he is quite a good investigator.
The case itself doesn't wrap up satisfactorily. It is anti-climactic with no true stunning developments or a suspect out of left field we didn't anticipate. Instead, the final moments hint at a crossover with Bosch, which I never saw but I heard was entertaining. I hope I don't have to catch up on multiple Bosch seasons in order to enjoy next season's Lincoln Lawyer. Don't make me work so hard.
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