David E. Kelley Brings Legal Thriller The Lincoln Lawyer to Netflix
Adaptation of Michael Connelly’s book series is punchy, clever, and entertaining.

The Lincoln Lawyer. Available now on Netflix.
Economics has subverted the eccentricity and even the title of Netflix's legal drama The Lincoln Lawyer, which chronicles the adventures of a criminal-defense attorney who prefers working out of his plush automobile to an office. When The Brass Verdict, the novel from which The Lincoln Lawyer is loosely adapted, was published in 2008, gasoline was selling around $4.08 a gallon. These days such a guy would have to land an O.J. Simpson case a week to keep his lawyermobile moving.
But that's about the only flaw in The Lincoln Lawyer's distinguished creative chromosomal creative code. Based on a character created by the zillion-selling suspense author Michael Connelly, produced by the awesome David E. Kelley* and Ted Humphrey (The Good Fight), The Lincoln Lawyer would have refuted every concept of order in the universe had it failed.
And it doesn't. Punchy in its writing and crunchy in its casting, The Lincoln Lawyer is irresistibly entertaining, a Perry Mason for our time. (And yes, I remember that HBO already has a Perry Mason for our time, but we'll figure that into the rankings if its oft-delayed second season ever actually shows up.)
The Mason-esque character in The Lincoln Lawyer is Mickey Haller (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, From Dusk Till Dawn: the Series), once a crack Los Angeles defense attorney, now washed up by injuries from a surfing accident and an ensuring addiction to painkillers. But his career is catapulted back to life when a former colleague inexplicably rewrites his will to leave his entire practice to Haller and is promptly murdered, professional-hit style.
That's a boon to Haller's practically-disappeared career. But it comes with a considerable downside. He's now awash in cases he knows nothing about, including a trial-of-the-century extravaganza—of an obnoxious and possibly guilty young video-game mogul named Trevor Elliot (Christopher Gorham, Insatiable) who cops found standing over the bloody corpses of his wife and her lover—that gets underway in just a week. And Haller can't find any files on the case because they were apparently stolen by whoever gunned down his predecessor.
This leads to a possibly more troubling issue: Did the killing have something to do with one of the cases Haller inherited? Is he in danger now? It's quickly apparent that the answer to both questions is yes, giving birth to any number of intriguing—and deadly—subplots, each accompanied by a gut-wrenching episode cliffhangers.
In some ways, The Lincoln Lawyer is constructed much like a typical David E. Kelley legal drama (they include L.A. Law, Ally McBeal and The Practice, among many others), with a Garcia-Rulfo playing charming, brilliant defense attorney supported by a thoroughly lovable cast of finely honed supporting characters: Lorna (Becki Newton, How I Met Your Mother), Haller's acidly affectionate second ex-wife and office manager; Cisco (Angus Sampson, Fargo) as Haller's scruffy ex-biker investigator, as well as Lorna's current boyfriend; Maggie (Neve Campbell, House of Cards) as Haller's first ex-wife, a prosecutor whose cases sometimes brush shoulders with his; and Izzy (Jazz Raycole, My Wife and Kids), an ex-client and ex-junkie who works as Haller's chauffer. The messy agglomeration of relationships makes the show's barbed dialogue to fly thick and fast.
But there are also some oddities in The Lincoln Lawyer. In the early episodes, it often has the "Case of the Week" format of legal dramas on broadcast television as Haller tries to whittle down all the criminal trials he inherited with his new practice. As the show moves along, the Trevor Elliott case crowds out everything else. That may be the result of The Lincoln Lawyer's odd show-biz birth; it was originally slated for CBS, then abandoned to Netflix. The show's broadcast-net ancestry also doubtless accounts for its low levels of sex and violence compared to usual premium-cable fare.
Slightly more distracting, at least to fans of the 2011 film The Lincoln Lawyer (of which there are more than a few), which was based on a different book in the series, is the switch from the highly idiosyncratic Matthew McConaughey in the lead role to the much lower profile Garcia-Rulfo. The change works out pretty well. Garcia-Rulfo takes a pleasantly understated approach to his character. Like the rest of the cast (and very unlike that of the 2011 film The Lincoln Lawyer, based on a different book in the series, which starred Matthew McConaughey but also included William H. Macy, Marisa Tomei, John Leguizamo, Bryan Cranston and Michael Paré, all of them with too little to do), Garcia-Rulfo takes a pleasantly understated approach to his character. **
He brushes past both his appeal to the ladies and his bursts of legal wisdom. He's a bit more upfront about his squishy ethics—he's not above planting fake stories in newspapers and dancing right up to the edge (but never quite past it) of outright falsehood in the courtroom. He scoffs at lawyers who say they're searching for fair-minded jurors: "I don't want fair-minded jurors. I want them biased as hell—for me. I want 12 lemmings in a box." I don't know if they teach that in law school, but in The Lincoln Lawyer, it works very well.
CORRECTIONS: * The original version of this story misstated the producer's first name.
** The original version of this review misstated the ethnicity of Haller in the books.
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I used to watch Netflix streaming, had several dozen shows arranged in the order I wanted, watched a few every week. Then the idiots dropped the list format for some horizontal scrolling pictures, and randomized the order. Worse yet, once you watch the last episode of the last season before the next season comes out, they started thinking the next episode I should watch was season 1 episode 1, and what with all the pandemic shutdowns, the stopped producing new shows. Short story: I no longer know what shows I was watching, or what episode I last saw.
Then there's the matter of no bonus features available for streaming. Some shows I watch on DVDs because the deleted scenes are interesting and useful; but hoo boy, their streaming and DVD divisions don't talk to each other, so there's no way to tell from the DVD pages which season/episode you should watch to be coordinated with streaming. You have to search for titles twice. Searching for "lincoln lawyer" only shows the movie in the DVD section.
I've given up watching Netflix streaming; they keep sending me notices to "Continue watch Better Call Saul", except their damned site thinks I should continue with season 1 episode 1, and because it's been a year or two since I last watched, I'd have to go back and watch the last episode or two to get back in context, and there's no way to find out from their web site. I used to be able to download the streaming and DVD histories to manually search them, but last time I tried, they'd fucked that up too.
DVDs I rented a few years ago are no longer available; whether that is laziness in re-ordering on their part, or trying to discourage DVD rentals, or screwed up partnerships with the movie owners, I don't care. But I've pretty much given up even looking for 1950s crime noir or 1930s screwball comedies, or anything oddball; they used to be great for obscure old movies, but now, nope.
Their last little anti-woke internal email provides some hope I won't have to wade through piles of LGBTQWERTY+ crap to find actual entertainment .... except their system is so fucked up that I don't have any interest in trying. They can shuffle off this Wall St coil for all it matters now. They've spent years degrading their brand and it will take years to restore it, which means they never will.
tl;dr -- I originally signed up with Netflix for the DVDs because I live in the boonies, and because they had a great back catalog of old, quirky, obscure movies and TV series. I added streaming but most new shows are crap, like everything else, because the crap never survives to become golden oldies. Their wokism just creates more instant crap, making it even harder to find simple entertainment, and their internal lack of communication and coordination ruins their ease of use. Fuck 'em.
Their last little anti-woke internal email provides some hope I won't have to wade through piles of LGBTQWERTY+ crap to find actual entertainment .... except their system is so fucked up that I don't have any interest in trying.
I dunno, I kind of like the new systems for segregating shows by race the streaming services have now. It's like driving through town, it helps me know which neighborhoods to stay away from. I mean, imagine if it was all just mixed together. Bleh.
Matthew maccaughnahey (sp?) Just had a school in his home town shot up and you seek to replace his movie? Have you no shame?
McConaughey engaged with Jordan Peterson. This shooting is literally his fault.
Long work on the development of artificial intelligence led to the emergence of automated satellite systems that can work reliably for a long time, dragonfly startup. Such technologies are especially important for observation satellites and are used in various fields of state and commercial activities.
It's a good show. I love the books. I like the Bosch stuff on Amazon as well, though I'm irritated that they moved it to their free-with-ads service.
Slightly more distracting, at least to readers of the original Michael Connelly novels, might be the decision to turn Haller from gringo to Hispanic.
they have to do that. It's literally required now. And funny, I was reading through the article waiting to see if there was a race or gender swap. You literally can't miss.
Whether that was for diversity reasons or just because the producers wanted Garcia-Rulfo for the role is impossible to dope out.
No it's not.
Looks like indie films are about to make a comeback, as the public turns away from woke junk.
Garcia-Rulfo is an American who speaks English as a first language. The producer meets the diversity quotas, there are loads of black actors. They don't ruin the show, it's still good.
But in the books Haller is Hispanic, isn't he? At least on his mother's side.
Isn't it David E. Kelley?
Yes, but there are like 15 other typos in the article too, so getting the guy's name wrong is par for the course....Reason is scrimping on the proofreading.
The Lincoln Lawyer was watchable, but don’t over hype it. I guess that with so many shows available to watch, that most of them are garbage is to be expected, so “watchable” probably means it deserves a B. But Bosch is much better.
"Watchable" is right - though I was annoyed that the description of the "uncanny valley" was wrong. Odd error to make.
Fyi- I hope the author of this article knows the man's name is David E. Kelley... not Michael E. Kelley.
I plan to check it out, but I'm skeptical about David E. Kelley's being "awesome". His "Big Sky" series, based on very good C. J. Box books, started out OK but soon became dreadful. Mediocre actors seemingly chosen for their looks. Improbable plots ("Hey, let's give this villain from season one an evil twin!") and silly character arcs ("Hey, let's make this trans hooker from season one into a private eye!") I think C. J. Box must wince a bit when he cashes his checks from "Big Sky".
Thanks! That saves me the time...I always found his books tightly plotted. Clearly the adaptation was not.