
Tonight marks the return of
Law & Order: Criminal Intent to NBC, following a season spent banished to NBC's sister cable company, USA Network. The
Law & Order spin-off will take the 9pm timeslot and serve as lead-in for the returning parent show, which opened its 18th season last week with a two-hour premiere.
In a desperate move, major networks have had to resort to some last-minute repurposing in order to fill in the vacuum that's been left by a running out of original scripted episodes due to the two-month long writers' strike. So while
Law & Order: Criminal Intent's seventh season has been airing on USA since October, NBC will still begin with the season opener tonight, before proceeding with the rest of the seventh season in weeks to come.
Your Take
bigfan123 said:
i watch criminal intent here in the uk. and just love it. vincent d'onofrio (bobby goren) is my favourite a...
In related news, not only is
Law & Order crossing over sister networks, the franchise has been crossing continents, languages and cultures. At the moment, there are already French and Russian versions of
Law & Order: Criminal Intent, as well as a Russian edition of
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.
Most recently, NBC and Dick Wolf, the man behind the entire
Law & Order universe, have been in talks with a British company for the creation of the first ever international version of the oldest of the
Law & Order series.
According to reports, the U.K. edition tentatively called
Law & Order: London will be produced by Kudos Films, the same outfit responsible for
Life on Mars and
Hustle. Broadcaster ITV is in line to air the show, pitching an uncommon 13-episode commitment to begin with.
As with the French and Russian renditions of
Criminal Intent and
Special Victims Unit, the proposed British
Law & Order will make use of existing scripts from the original NBC program which will be tweaked and modified to allow for the difference in criminal justice systems.
-Rosario Santiago, BuddyTV Staff Columnist
Source: Zap2it, The Hollywood Reporter
(Image Courtesy of NBC)