I hate Sarah. Not sorry. Every time she opens her mouth, my blood pressure climbs.
She’s what happens when idealism curdles — a reminder that the most dangerous people in any system are the ones who believe they’re just “doing their job.”
The Rainmaker Season 1 Episode 9 is about people like her and people like Rudy, who refuse to play that game even when it costs them everything.
From the start, The Rainmaker makes it clear: this isn’t just another courtroom drama. It’s a morality play dressed up in legal jargon, and everyone’s soul is on the docket.
It starts with Rudy and Deck — two men sharing the kind of friendship that makes you want to believe good people still exist.
Deck’s faith in Rudy is almost heartbreaking. When he tells him, “I see the man I always wanted to be,” it’s pure old-school Frank Capra sincerity.
He’s talking about the kind of lawyer who fights for people, not power. And you can see how much that belief both humbles and terrifies Rudy. Because somewhere deep down, he knows Deck deserves a hero — and the system might just eat him alive.
The courtroom scenes feel like a war movie, and Rudy walks in with a popgun.
Rudy’s opening statement, meant to be safe and by the book, becomes an emotional confession. He blurts out the unthinkable — murder — and instantly turns his case into a circus. The judge’s gavel can barely keep up, and Leo’s fake outrage fills the room.
Yet in that moment, Rudy speaks the one true sentence in the entire trial: that a nurse at North City Hospital killed Donny Ray Black, and the people in charge covered it up.
Of course, the law doesn’t reward honesty; it punishes it. Almost.
In chambers, the judge dresses him down, Leo feigns outrage, and Rudy’s passion is treated like a rookie’s tantrum. The irony? This judge might be the only one in the room with a soul.
There’s a photo on her bench — a woman, maybe her mother — a quiet reminder that even the arbiters of justice are someone’s child, someone’s memory. It’s a sliver of humanity that sits in judgment of the inhuman.
Jackie’s first turn on the stand is electric. Rudy’s got her ready to testify, the missing piece he needs to prove Great Benefit’s guilt.
Her claim — that 15 patients died under the care of Melvin Pritcher — should break the case wide open. But Leo hides behind procedure, crying foul over HIPAA violations, and the judge suppresses the USB data she stole.
Even so, Rudy scores a small miracle: she lets both his malpractice and murder claims stand. He’s battered, but still in the fight.
Rudy and Deck come up with another way to compel the evidence by widening the net and signing the families of all of the others who died under suspicious circumstances under Keeley’s watch. But by the time they realize that, it’s already too late.
Tinley Britt’s been one step ahead, sending Sarah to quietly lock down every grieving family they hoped to recruit. She’s the smiling assassin, turning potential allies into signed settlements. Even Jackie’s ex’s new wife, whom Melvin banged up, got the pitch.
That’s when Rudy and Deck realize the trap they’ve sprung on themselves: by chasing justice, they’ve cornered the one man who could expose it all — Keeley.
That fight turns to triumph when Rudy does what Leo never expected — he listens to Bruiser. Her advice to “show them the cover-up still happening” lights the spark he needs.
When Jackie returns to the stand as an expert witness, Rudy uses her to expose Leo’s biggest lie. The defense’s whole argument depends on the claim that the Narpense machine wipes its own data every 90 days — a convenient way to explain away missing evidence.
And they almost got away with it. Clearly, they don’t know Rudy as well as they thought they did, as evidenced by Rudy’s discovery of the facts. The machine doesn’t auto-erase and can’t erase a thing without a senior executive’s code. Great Benefit didn’t lose the data — they destroyed it.
Watching Leo squirm as that truth unravels is the best kind of justice. Rudy finally beats them at their own game, and the judge’s glare says everything: “Your client hid evidence and you knew it.”
That mistake costs them a lot. The stolen evidence is allowed back into the case, and Jackie can take the stand.
And then Sarah strikes.
If the first half of Jackie’s testimony shows truth fighting to survive, the second shows what happens when the system decides it shouldn’t.
Sarah’s cross-examination is the kind of scene that makes your stomach twist. She tears into Jackie — not on the facts, but on her personal life, her relationships, her character. It’s “nuts and sluts” dressed up in legal polish, and it’s disgusting. It’s frankly mindboggling that it’s even allowed in a court of law. But here we are.
Watching Sarah drag another woman through the mud to impress her boss is a special kind of vile. Leo is so proud he’s beside himself, calling it the best takedown he’s seen in thirty years, while Brad — the firm’s lapdog with a conscience he keeps trying to drown — watches the whole thing curdle.
And Brad is in a bit of trouble he didn’t expect, as the Tinley Britt subplot quietly sets the table for what’s coming.
Every time he takes an envelope or runs an errand, he’s digging himself deeper. Leo uses him for the dirty work, letting him touch every crime he masterminds so his own hands stay clean.
This time, Jane Allen resurfaces, capturing photos of Brad paying off Prince and Lyman. Leo knew how Brad would react to Sarah’s promotion and had evidence on hand to keep his dog quiet. I don’t feel sorry for Brad, but it doesn’t mean I don’t want to hurl my contempt at Leo (and the system).
If the finale hinges on Melvin Pritcher learning that Tinley Britt might’ve set the fire that killed his mother (and I think it does), it’s about to get explosive. If Rudy can flip Melvin, everything changes — not just the case, but the entire corrupt ecosystem that’s been feeding off it.
Through all of it, Bruiser remains steadfastly awesome. Her visit to Rudy is raw and perfect: “You still think you’re one of them.” That single line sums up the episode.
Bruiser knows there’s no winning inside the system; the only victory left is refusing to become it. She’s too jaded to believe in justice but too loyal to let Rudy stop believing. And that, weirdly, is what keeps him human.
But Bruiser isn’t just fighting Rudy’s battle. She’s quietly fighting her own.
Her visits with Lyman finally break open the wound she’s been carrying since Rosalie’s death. For once, her father doesn’t manipulate or guilt her — he gives her something better: permission.
When he tells her to do whatever she needs to do to get herself out of this, it’s the first real act of love he’s ever shown. Whether she acts on it or not almost doesn’t matter. What matters is that she’s finally free to stop cleaning up his messes, to stop living in penance for choices that weren’t hers.
That moment is as important to The Rainmaker’s moral fabric as anything happening in the courtroom. Because Bruiser, too, has been trapped in a system — one of family loyalty, power, and guilt — and for the first time, she gets to choose herself.
It’s not unlike what Sarah is experiencing, but she’s making clear choices while Bruiser was entangled in her father’s story because she loved him.
By the time Dot tells Rudy his mom would be proud, the words hit with real weight. It’s not even about victory in the courtroom — it’s about the survival of conscience.
When Rudy’s mom walks into the courtroom on The Rainmaker Season 1 Episode 10 (and you know she will), it’s going to get emotional. Rudy may never win on paper, but he’s already doing something Leo and Sarah never will: he’s telling the truth out loud. What mother wouldn’t be proud?
And how would seeing Rudy’s mother in court play on the judge’s heartstrings when it seems she still holds hers so near?
And then we hit that final twist — Melvin Pritcher, bound and gagged in Prince’s basement — the literal embodiment of everything this episode’s been saying.
The truth isn’t gone; it’s buried. The guilty keep burying it, thinking it’ll stay down. But like every secret in this show, it always finds a way to claw back to the surface.
The Rainmaker is no longer about legal victories. It’s about moral ones and the people who still believe, even when the system tells them not to.
Leo says the courtroom isn’t a place for emotion, yet every move he makes is powered by it — rage, greed, vanity. The only difference between him and Rudy is that Rudy feels something worth saving.
Perhaps that’s the point. If emotion has no place in the courtroom, maybe it’s because it’s the one thing that scares the powerful the most.
If you’ve stuck with The Rainmaker Season 1 this far, you’re probably as emotionally wrung out as I am — but that’s what makes it so good. It’s about fighting for decency in a world that keeps rewarding the opposite, and that fight isn’t over yet.
If you’re drawn to stories that mix moral complexity with a dash of righteous fury, do yourself a favor and check out The Last Frontier.
It’s cut from the same cloth — flawed people facing impossible choices, trying to do the right thing even when the system’s stacked against them.
Both shows remind us that integrity doesn’t always win, but it always matters.
Now, let’s talk it out in the comments below! Where do you stand with Sarah’s antics? Can she ever be pulled out of the gutter?
I can’t wait to hear from you!
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The post The Rainmaker Season 1 Episode 9 Review: The Truth, The Trash, and the Lie of the Law appeared first on TV Fanatic.