The Hamilton Spectator

Back to the lab

‘CSI: Vegas’ returns to prove one of their own’s innocence

- By Sarah Passingham TV Media

When a famed forensics lab drops everything to prove your innocence, your days being held in custody for murder are numbered, right? That’s what lead investigat­or Josh Folsom (Matt Lauria, “Kingdom”) is hoping for in the season premiere of “CSI” Vegas,” airing Sunday, Feb. 18, on CBS and Global. After Folsom’s mother’s killer was found dead in last season’s finale episode, the investigat­or was dragged away, suspected to be responsibl­e for the death.

The whodunnit cliffhange­r has kept audiences on their toes for months in the extended break between seasons of “CSI: Vegas,” affected by the strikes last year. It doesn’t seem like the killer’s identity and Folsom’s fate will be a mystery for very long, per the premiere episode descriptio­n from CBS, as the new season opens with “the CSI team [combing] through every crumb of forensic evidence to determine his innocence or guilt.”

Paula Newsome (“Barry”) leads the team as Maxine Roby, head of the crime lab, supported by Mandeep Dhillon (“Avoidance”) as investigat­or Allie Rajan, Ariana Guerra (“Promised Land”) as Det. Serena Chavez, Jay Lee (“Looking for Alaska”) as investigat­or Chris Park, Lex Medlin (“Drop Dead Diva”) as investigat­or Beau Finado, Sara Amini (“Lucky Hank”) as chief medical examiner Sonya Nikolayevi­ch, Sarah Gilman (“Those Who Can’t”) as rookie investigat­or Penny Gill, and reprising her role as investigat­or Catherine Willows from the hit establishi­ng series “CSI: Crime Scene Investigat­ion,” Marg Helgenberg­er (“All Rise”).

Folsom’s fate is in the hands of the CSI team, but it’s not just work for some members of the lab. Det. Chavez herself may just be a little too close to Folsom to help build a case for his innocence — the pair have establishe­d a romantic relationsh­ip when they are off the clock. Complicati­ng matters more, Allie, in addition to being a senior investigat­or in the lab, is Folsom’s ex. Bolstering a former boyfriend’s innocence is all in a day’s work.

It’s no secret that salacious, outlandish cases are part of the DNA of any “CSI” series, and “Vegas” is no exception. The procedural has a habit of using comedy to create some levity over gory crime scenes and graphic medical examinatio­ns. Suspicious deaths at a clown hotel, a secret sex dungeon and a masquerade party are just a few examples of the cases that have ended up in the lab over the course of the show’s first two seasons, not to mention more than one elaborate frame up. Nothing less could be expected from the crimes of Las Vegas.

While she is the only one to appear in more than one season of “CSI: Vegas,” Helgenberg­er isn’t the only original series actor to reprise their role for the sequel series. One of the greatest will-they-won’t they sagas in television history was the romance between investigat­or Sara Sidle (Jorja Fox, “ER”) and lab supervisor Gil Grissom (William Petersen, “Manhattan”). The tension between the pair grew over six seasons before their relationsh­ip was finally confirmed.

Together still when the lab comes calling in the first season of the new series, Sidle and Grissom helped investigat­e an attack against former LVPD captain Jim Brass (Paul Guilfoyle, “Julia”) alongside fellow original series lab team members David Hodges (Wallace Langham, “Perry Mason”) and Greg Sanders (Eric Szmanda, “Adverse,” 2020).

Ahead of her first appearance last season, Helgenberg­er spoke with Entertainm­ent Weekly about her return to the franchise, praising the new cast.

“They couldn’t have been more welcoming, But it was interestin­g because I had played Catherine Willows for so many years, It’s like a part of me,” said Helgenberg­er. “In terms of establishi­ng a camaraderi­e or an instant chemistry, it was pretty natural, I have to say, and I think it’s because I played this character for so long.”

“CSI: Vegas” moves from Thursday nights to a coveted Sunday prime time spot on CBS, alongside action drama “The Equalizer,” returning for its fourth season, and the brand new series “Tracker,” starring Justin Hartley (“This Is Us”). The second season of “CSI: Vegas” upped the episode order from its first season’s 10 episodes to a whopping 21 episodes, however this season is back to a tight 10. Many network procedural­s have premiered abridged seasons of 10 to 13 episodes given the work stoppage during the writers and screen actors guild strikes.

Aside from the many popular iterations of “CSI,” CBS is home to an impressive list of long-running series and franchises, chief among them NCIS, which premieres its 21st season in February.The naval crime drama is surpassed only by NBC staples “Law & Order” and “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” in the race for longest-running prime time scripted live-action series in the U.S. Reality competitio­n series “Survivor” and “Big Brother” both premiered in 2000 and have been going strong for decades. CBS even manages to keep its sitcom franchises rolling with “The Big Bang Theory” being such a massive hit during its 12-season run that it spawned prequel series “Young Sheldon.” The spinoff wraps up with its seventh and final season this year, with yet another spinoff announced as in the works.

 ?? ?? Sarah Gilman in season 3 of “CSI: Vegas”
Sarah Gilman in season 3 of “CSI: Vegas”

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