Untangling the Timeline: A Deep Dive into The Lincoln Lawyer Season 3!
The Lincoln Lawyer Season 3: Time Jumps, Flashbacks, and a Complex Case
Netflix's The Lincoln Lawyer season 3 is a wild ride! It adapts Michael Connelly's novel The Gods of Guilt, focusing on Mickey Haller's (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) defense of Julian La Cosse, accused of murdering his former client Glory Days. But this thing isn't a straightforward story – it throws in time jumps and flashbacks which are all important – they're woven together expertly! This makes it tricky to follow; so get ready for that deep-dive, folks!
The season begins right where season 2 left off, which helps enormously; and uses these intense and well-timed flashbacks throughout; making those transitions between different periods work. But the time jumps can get confusing. This article will sort things out and provide that clarity you desperately need!
Decoding the Time Jumps: How Much Time Actually Passes?
The main focus is Julian La Cosse’s jail time and trial, from when Mickey takes the case to their final victory. We learn early on (episode 2) that Julian will be held for the duration before the trial, although we learn from various dialogues and scenes that it involves significant amount of delays which changed this initial planned schedule. While Mickey initially guesses eight months, this ends up lasting for nine, before the courtroom action begins!
Then come some crucial time jumps. A six-month gap between episodes 2 and 3 is critical – establishing several details in the relationships: we discover that Andy and Mickey have begun dating, and Lorna's focus on bar exam preparations.
Episode 6? It's two months before the trial. And the entire courtroom proceedings play out to that later part, immediately followed by a massive four-month jump following the trial and its resolution – that total timeframe from episode beginning and resolution equals a full 13 months. This may feel somewhat like the plot itself uses compression techniques; using multiple time periods in creative methods that make the storytelling more efficient.
Flashbacks: Peeling Back the Layers of the Past
These aren’t simply added—these help give insight to current events.
Flashback 1: Mickey’s First Case Against Neil Bishop
This opens the story (episode 1), revealing that Mickey had an earlier legal showdown against Neil Bishop (a detective!), showcasing an extremely important encounter which shapes the entire narrative, including the reasons for their profound conflicts which involve betrayal of trust and those important insights to Neil Bishop’s flawed morality. It sets the stage perfectly!
Flashback 2: Mickey Meets Glory Days
(Episode 2). This isn't exactly critical but still awesome! It helps establish Mickey's and Glory Days' early bond – that early kindness Mickey shows to Glory Days (recognizing that struggles from substance use disorder could severely harm many individuals and using those issues to shape this earlier plot points within this narrative) adds significant depth, and this encounter and portrayal highlights those points far more subtly.
Flashback 3: Agent De Marco and Neil Bishop
(Episode 10). This helps tie Neil Bishop's complicity in the murder and those previously unaddressed issues of hostility towards Mickey into the present story, highlighting Neil Bishop’s past choices; those acts and the motives are explored far better, clarifying many questionable aspects in Neil Bishop’s behavior, showcasing those incredibly subtle layers of corruption to finally generate enough answers for curious fans who needed far more depth!
Conclusion: Masterful Storytelling Through Time
The Lincoln Lawyer season 3 cleverly uses time to weave that suspenseful tale. These jumps are really not simply plot devices; but integral elements which shape every individual's development, emphasizing many details from character relations, all those complex moral choices, the importance of a flawed justice system, all brilliantly and strategically positioned, shaping every piece involved, including the ending. Even without all those smaller moments in time highlighted; the audience would remain satisfied!