
This week, Law & Order turns its focus to “The Perfect Family.” But there was nothing perfect about the Chapmans. The episode had all the ingredients for a gut-wrenching drama—filicide, mental illness, moral dilemmas, and legal maneuverings—but somehow, it never ignited. Instead, it stayed procedural, with every character playing their tragic role as expected.
Detective Riley (Reid Scott) and Lieutenant Brady (Maura Tierney) investigate the murder of 13-year-old Emily Chapman (Riley Vinson), pushed to her death—but by whom? The parents, Derek (Brett Zimmerman) and Melinda Chapman (Alison Miller), are devastated. At first, suspicion falls on an overly attentive coach, but it’s too obvious. He has no solid alibi, which is OK because he didn’t do it.
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“A Perfect Family” – LAW & ORDER, Pictured: Allison Miller as Melinda Chapman. Photo by: Virginia Sherwood/NBC @ NBCUniversal Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved. |
The DA’s office determines the real issue at the heart of the case: untreated postpartum psychosis—and the ripple effects of a husband’s rigid worldview. Derek Chapman, shaped by his mother’s suicide while taking antipsychotics, refused to allow his wife treatment. He sees mental illness as weakness. As an ex-Navy Seal, Melinda’s broken mind was something he could not tolerate. His decision led to tragedy, leaving Executive ADA Nolan Price (Hugh Dancy), with no choice but to charge Derek Chapman with manslaughter.
In contrast to Derek Chapman, who is willfully blind to his family’s suffering, Riley’s desire to bridge the communication gap with his daughter is palpable. At one point, he texts Bridget at school. However, Bridget’s immediate suspicion—accusing him of ‘testing’ her—highlights the strain in their relationship, revealing a dynamic laced with power struggles and misunderstandings. He simply wants reassurance that they are still tethered. When she finally offers him a hug, it’s a quiet, beautiful moment.
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“A Perfect Family” – LAW & ORDER, Pictured: Delaney Quinn as Amanda Chapman. Photo by: Virginia Sherwood/NBC @ 2025 NBCUniversal Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved. |
The courtroom’s “high-noon” moment—a father watching his ten-year-old daughter being called to testify—has the potential for an emotional reckoning. But the DA folds after the child’s simple admission, “He’s, my daddy.” Price’s case could have been a gripping fight for accountability, but instead of a dramatic conclusion, his case collapses in slow motion. It feels like a pulled punch. Chapman is left with his own guilt, but the episode never forces him to truly confront it.
“The Perfect Family” isn’t a bad episode—it’s well-written, well-acted, and follows the legal drama formula. But for a story tackling such high-stakes material, it never transcends expectation. Instead of moral ambiguity, we get resignation. Instead of an indictment of the father, we get a quiet unraveling of a case that maybe shouldn’t have been pursued at all.
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