Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Series / Rake

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rake1poster.jpg]]
2
3An Australian comedy series beginning in 2010 about the antics of an irascible, hedonistic, self-destructive lawyer operating in central Sydney - Mr. Cleaver Greene, portrayed by Creator/RichardRoxburgh.
4
5''Rake'' is a black comedy set within the justice system of New South Wales and its capital, Sydney. Each episode revolves around peculiar or well-publicized court cases that grab Cleaver's attention. In addition to his rebellion against the justice system, there are ongoing subplots about his relationship with ex-prostitute "Missy", his ongoing battle against the Australian Tax Office, his gambling debts to dubious underworld gangsters, and the dissolving relationship between Barney and Scarlet - his fellow lawyers and best friends from university.
6
7The series is noted for its well-written episodes (they manage to avoid most of the legal jargon seen in other court shows), and strong acting (with plenty of guest stars every episode).
8
9In January 2014, a US remake starring Creator/GregKinnear began airing on the Fox network, but [[{{Cancellation}} only lasted one season]].
10----
11!!!This show provides examples of:
12
13* AbortedArc: A few.
14** Missy becomes a world-famous author and socialite, but she then is abruptly driven back to Australia and cocaine addiction.
15** Missy passes law, but she never actually practices ever again.
16** Season 3 ends with the problem that [[spoiler:Barney's cancer has come back and he's probably not going to make it a second time.]] In Season 4, [[spoiler:Barney is fine and referred to as a "miracle"...that occurred offscreen.]]
17* AbuseMistake: Cleaver accidentally injures Felicity ''three times in a row'', making the police understandably suspicious, though she assures them he didn't do this on purpose.
18* AccidentalMisnaming / MaliciousMisnaming: The RunningGag that Cleaver can never remember anyone's name straddles these tropes. On the "malicious" side is probably Harry-Sorry-David, while the genuinely accidental (because he's never listening) is Nicole's one-time fiancee/husband Bevan.
19* AdaptationNameChange: In the US remake, Cleaver becomes "Keegan Deane," Missy becomes "Mikki" (short for "Michaela" as opposed to Melissa), Ben & Scarlet's last names become "Leon," and Nicole becomes "Leanne." Cleaver/Keegan's son is still named Finnegan, but is called "Finn" for short instead of Fuzz.
20* AllPsychologyIsFreudian: Cleaver seems to think so, making comments which invoke Freud to his ex-wife Wendy, who's a psychiatrist. It's averted with her actual techniques however.
21* AmicableExes: Cleaver and Wendy, to the point of barely being exes at some points, especially in Season 2 when she briefly falls back in love with him.
22* AmoralAttorney: Cleaver Greene - being an extremely proficient lawyer, Cleaver will twist the rules, consult outside sources and even ''sleep'' with his clients if he thinks it'll help. It’s played with, though; while Cleave does some pretty amoral things, he's shown to have a genuine moral compass that makes him reluctant to defend people who don't deserve his help like [[KnightTemplar Eddie Langhorn]], [[MorallyBankruptBanker Damien Trengrove]] or [[TheDon Mick Corella]].
23** He's also shown to be legitimately furious when he finds out too late that [[MadArtist Denny Lorton]] really was guilty of killing a teenager.
24* AmusingInjuries: Cleaver casually attempts to play backgammon with Barney, right after having his nose broken by Col.
25-->'''Barney''': Oh, please, I can't see the board with you dripping blood...\
26'''Cleaver''': Well I apologise for my subdural haematoma inconveniencing you, mate!
27** Most of Cleaver's injuries via Col fall into this, such as when he politely asks Col to kick him elsewhere, and he obliges.
28* AuthorAvatar: Executive producer Charles Waterstreet is himself a practising barrister from Sydney with a reputation that precedes him.
29* BaitAndSwitch: ''Constantly''. Notable examples include:
30** In Season 1, it seems like Cleaver has got himself off his gambling debt hook when meek abused wife Kirsty takes over the business from her murdered husband. Nope - turns out Kirsty has gone full FromNobodyToNightmare since taking over and while she is more grateful to Cleave, she tells him that business is business.
31** In Season 2, it seems like she might spare him once he engineers her getting together with Col. Nope, as she tells him, business is still business.
32** In Season 2, Cleaver seems to have extricated himself from [[spoiler:the murder charge]] by accusing [=McGregor=] of corruption, but [[spoiler:as the judge points out, none of this prevents himself from having conspired to commit the murder...so he goes to prison anyway.]]
33* BatmanGambit: When Cleaver's not up to his [[XanatosSpeedChess usual tricks]], he excels at this trope. Best exemplified in his bringing mouldy, catpiss-soaked tax documents into his audit, successfully delaying the case again with a dismissal and charge of contempt.
34* BecomingTheMask[=/=]SecretIdentityIdentity: Missy goes through a variation of this.
35* BelligerentSexualTension: Cleaver and Scarlet have a simmering, powerful attraction to each other dating back to their university days, but for various reasons, neither one is ever willing to commit to the other. When his and Scarlet's [[ShipSinking ship sinks]], he and Wendy develop more of a relationship akin to this.
36* BestialityIsDepraved: In a Season 1 case Cleaver defends Dr Bruce Chandler - a respected physician - from a charge of [[ThreeWaySex bestial relations with the family dog and his wife]]. Cleaver humorously subverts this sentiment in his closing statements.
37-->'''Cleaver''': Australians, as a nation... have always rooted for the underdog!
38* BettyAndVeronica: In Season 1, Harry-Sorry-David (Betty) and Cleaver (Veronica) to Missy (Archie).
39* BigDamnHeroes: David, on several occasions.
40** He tackles a gun-toting neighbor in Season 1.
41** In Season 3, he jumps in front of a van (getting stuck under it) to save a baby in a pushchair that has been falling down a long flight of steps.
42* BittersweetEnding: A season finale staple, particularly in Season 2; Cleaver has successfully brought down Cal [=McGregor=], but is stuck with fourteen years in prison for conspiracy to commit murder.
43* {{Blackmail}}: Cleaver gets blackmailed into doing things more than once, as he's got no shortage of dirt which can be used against him. He in turns blackmails other people to get things at times.
44* BlindWithoutEm: David Potter is extremely nearsighted without his glasses, and eventually decides to get laser correction for his vision.
45* BlondeBrunetteRedhead: The three women in Cleaver's life - Missy (blonde), Scarlet (red), and Wendy (brunette).
46* BolivianArmyEnding: The common ending for all of Rake's seasons is that Cleaver will face somehow insurmountable odds. Special mentions goes to Season 2, which ends with [[spoiler:Cleaver going to prison for twenty years]], and Season 3, which ends with [[spoiler:Barney's cancer coming back and Cleaver dangling from a hot air balloon.]]
47* BrokenAce:
48** In Season 3, Misty goes from being a highly respected ex-prostitute / lawyer who returns from America ''addicted to drugs'' and even makes a drunken pass at Barney in an attempt to get drugs.
49** Cleaver to a much lesser extent as he is more able to bounce back, despite being a drunken, drug-addicted JadedWashout.
50** Harry becomes a tragic version in Season 4. [[spoiler:After Scarlet's sudden death, he goes to trial for murder, is accused of being a domestic abuser, and loses his reputation.]]
51* TheBusCameBack: After 19 years, Geoffrey Salter (from ''Series/{{Frontline}}'') reappears in a fourth season episode.
52* ButtMonkey:
53** Played with in the case of Cleaver Greene; sometimes he deserves some of the things that happen and sometimes he doesn't.
54** Harry-Sorry-David gets hit with this trope repeatedly — he quits the bar to (unknowingly) become a back-bencher in the Opposition, he goes steady with Missy - who everyone but him knows is an ex-prostitute - and he gets shot twice on top of everything else.
55** Both Keegan and Ben in the US remake, with Keegan getting it from the mayor, the police, and all of his loan sharks, and Ben getting it from his coworkers.
56* ByronicHero: Cleaver hits pretty much every trait; intelligent, passionate, cynical, selfish from time to time, and endlessly self-destructive.
57* TheCameo: Creator/CateBlanchett plays a LargeHam [[AdaptationalSexuality lesbian]] Cleaver in the adaptation of Joshua Floyd's life. Creator/ElizabethDebicki plays Missy.
58* TheCasanova:
59** Cleave has no trouble whatsoever in hooking up with the opposite sex, and has a long string of affairs and sexual trysts with various married women. Not to mention his regular visits to the brothel.
60** Even his ex-wife Wendy briefly falls in love with Cleave all over again in series 2.
61** Subverted with Missy, who spurns nearly every advance he ever makes on her after she quits the brothel.
62* CampGay: In the US remake, Keegan's StraightGay pimp poses as such in order to avoid being perceived as a ScaryBlackMan when expecting delinquent johns to pay him.
63* CelebrityParadox: Creator/CateBlanchett, who plays [[CrossCastRole Cleaver]] in the film of Missy's book, starred opposite Richard Roxburgh in the film ''Thank God He Met Lizzie''.
64* ClingyJealousGirl: Trophy wife turned mob boss Kirsty Corella is this for Cleaver, and her position means Cleaver's in no position to reject her advances.
65* CoincidentalBroadcast:
66** Cleaver gets up and watches TV in the early hours, and during some rolling credits, the channel announces that Alfred Hitchcock's movie 'Rope' is on next. This flicks a lightbulb in Cleaver's head, and it turns out that this exact movie was the inspiration for a stabbing by two sociopathic teenage girls (one of who Cleaver is defending).
67** This trope is sorely abused in almost every episode of series 3.
68* ConditionedToAcceptHorror: Cleaver weaponizes this trope in the defense of a bestiality charge. He shows the implicating footage to the jury several dozen times, frame by frame, second by second, until the shock horror of the clip has worn off on the jurors.
69* CorruptPolitician: Basically all politicians which have any focus at all, except for David Potter. They accept bribes, extort people or even order murders in some cases.
70* CurbStompBattle: The lawsuit equivalent happens in the US remake's episode "Staple Holes," where Keegan wins the case on Day 1 of the trial [[TitleDrop by noticing some staple holes in a document entered into evidence]], [[NiceJobBreakingItHero much to the dismay of his coworkers who wanted it to go on for a long time simply to rack up billable hours.]]
71* CurseOfBabel: Wendy suffers from this in Season 3, when the breakdown of her engagement to Roger and the revelation of his criminal enterprises cause her to start speaking in Indonesia - much to everyone else's confusion.
72* DeceptiveLegacy: In Season 5, [[spoiler:Nicole]] learns from her mother and sister she was actually conceived from a tryst with [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Plimpton George Plimpton]], to her shock. They had kept this from her for many years.
73* DiscOneFinalBoss: Mick Corella becomes this in Season 3 following his imprisonment at the end of Season 1, getting [[spoiler: killed off in prison by his brother George before the season starts. George Corella fares no better, achieving this trope when Col kills him off on Kirsty's orders.]]
74* DirtyCop: Edgar Mitchell has a number of corrupt cops in his pocket, including one who's his girlfriend. She laments that she'd been honest before they met.
75* DisasterDominoes: Cleaver has a profound ability to drag everyone around him into the shit with him. As Wendy puts it, in a particularly vitriolic speech:
76-->'''Wendy''': You are the chaos. You're not the end result of some butterfly effect. You are ''the'' butterfly... You are the original fucking polka-dotted butterfly that causes every bit of chaos on this planet!
77* DisproportionateRetribution: Lawrence Fenton, a retired English teacher and associate of Cleaver, breaks into an ASIO-[=MI5=] symposium to protest about the dilution of modern language, with the detection of his infiltration majorly humiliating Cal [=McGregor=]. The Attorney General's response to a simple non-malicious trespass? Seven years in maximum security on trumped up anti-terrorism charges.
78* TheDreaded: Edgar Allan Thompson has this effect when he makes a return to public life in Season 4. Cops and crooks alike are terrified of him - even the rather imposing Cal [=McGregor=] has a [[OhCrap noticeable reaction]] when he sees Thompson's face on the front page of the newspaper.
79* DrivenToSuicide:
80** Attorney General Joe Sandilands throws himself off a cliff after scandalous media revelations about his brothel visits. [[MoodWhiplash He is shown cheerfully whistling to some Gilbert & Sullivan in his car only moments before.]]
81** [[spoiler: Malcolm]], after his plans on the outside fall through, jumps from a freeway overpass because he feels like there is nothing left for him, despite Cleaver pleading with him not to.
82* DynamicEntry: Cleaver enters Season 4 by smashing through the window of [[BigBad reclusive ex-lawyer Edgar Allen Thompson]]... bringing a lot of publicity and problems for them both.
83* EasilyForgiven: This is one of Cleaver's great strengths, due to his own...[[JerkWithAHeartOfGold shortcomings]]. He forgives Nicole in a minute for embezzling hundreds of thousands from him, and [[CrossesTheLineTwice lets her keep doing it]]. He also takes his rocky relationships with Scarlet and Barney in his stride.
84* {{Ephebophile}}: Fiona, Fuzz's English teacher/lover in Season 1.
85* EverybodyHasLotsOfSex:
86** Cleaver, of course, with just about ''everybody'' from criminals, to one-night stands, to homicidal drug lords...
87** Including his best friend's wife Scarlet.
88** Fuzz has a revolving door of girlfriends.
89** Missy starts off the series as a prostitute but also has sex consistently throughout (with David, with Cleaver, with Joshua...)
90** Even Barney, who has been faithful to Scarlet, and Nicole, who has only had one boyfriend (Bevan), before [[spoiler: have sex in Season 2.]]
91* {{Expy}}:
92** Missy starts dating Joshua Floyd in the second season; Floyd is wanted internationally for treason after leaking sensitive government information via his website in a situation not at all unlike that of Julian Assange in real life.
93** 'Smoking Guy', Cleave's MysteriousInformant in season 2 is very similar to [[Series/TheXFiles Deep Throat]]. Missy even lampshades this by calling Cleaver Agent Mulder.
94** Tikki Wendon - a powerful and rather bullish female tycoon and property developer - is really just Australia's own billionaire Gina Reinhardt with the numbers filed off.
95** Edgar Allan Thompson - Cleaver's intellectual equal, and a well-connected criminal mastermind hiding in plain sight as a lawyer - is very reminiscent of Arthur Conan Doyle's Professor Moriarty.
96* FriendlyEnemy: Mostly just about everybody, though slightly unusually, it doesn't ever interfere with their antagonism towards him: Kirsty and Col are two of the clearest examples, but Harry-Sorry-David and Polly both fall into it occasionally.
97* GracefulLoser: Cleaver really can roll with the punches.
98* GoodGirlsAvoidAbortion: After she gets pregnant from Fuzz, Sally has an abortion. This upsets him, but no one else opposes it.
99* GroinAttack: One case deals with a man having his penis severed using garden shears. The neighbor he's been in a long-running feud with was charged with the crime, but later he gets ''his'' cut off too.
100* HangingJudge: Cleaver runs into a few judges of this type.
101** Judge Beeson is an elderly, demented, iron-willed neo-fascist brought in to oversee Lawrence Fenton's trial. He's said to be in favour of the practice of having guilty thieves' hands cut off like in the days of yore, and a freshly-humiliated Cal [=McGregor=] selects him for the trial with the nigh-certainty of a guilty verdict and harsh sentence.
102** Judge Cowper is introduced openly talking to himself on the toilet about how he'd give a man life or a death sentence assuming this was possible for being ''[[DisproportionateRetribution drunk and disorderly]]''. He later gives the guy four years in prison, although it's suspended by saner judges. He finds it offensive that the defendant pled guilty at all, with Cleaver ranting that this behavior from Cowper is typical.
103* TheHedonist: Cleaver himself, but he'll insist to anyone who'll listen, especially Fuzz and Wendy, that AtLeastIAdmitIt.
104* HeroicBSOD: Missy goes through one following [[spoiler:her fiance's murder.]]
105* HeterosexualLifePartners: Cleaver and Barney, who even recover from [[spoiler:Cleaver sleeping with Scarlet]] in Season 1, with a great deal of HomoeroticSubtext that gets called out in Season 3.
106-->'''Cleaver''' (going in for a hug): If it leads to sex, it leads to sex!
107* HidingBehindReligion: Cal [=McGregor=] makes a show of having "got religion" while in prison, wearing a crucifix and carrying a Bible at all times, from which he quotes liberally. This was only to better his chances of parole however. The moment he gets out, he's back to his old ways, bedding two prostitutes and doing cocaine.
108* HollywoodAtheist: Cleaver is mentioned as being an atheist once, and definitely fits in the "hedonist" category too. However, he still goes to confession, being raised Catholic. In fact it's his former priest who brings up the odd fact of him still confessing to a God he doesn't believe exists. One episode also has Cleaver starting to invoke this regarding an atheist witness as a stalling tactic before Barney brings some evidence.
109* HookerWithAHeartOfGold: Melissa "Missy" Partridge used to be one of these and much of her plot in Season 1 is about covering this fact up.
110* HorribleHousing: Cleaver lives in a tiny little apartment above Kings Cross, which more often that not reflects the spectacular disarray and chaos of its tenant. A line of dialogue in Season 1 reveals that Cleaver bought it as a stopgap after being kicked out by Wendy... 12 years ago. Cleaver's oven is an impromptu library, and his hot food is prepared via a laundry iron.
111-->'''Scarlet''': On my return, I went to turn on your oven, which of course, was a fool's errand because on opening it, I did discover it is in fact a library.
112-->'''Cleaver''': Well, that may well be the case, Red, but I won't have a word said against this iron. This iron has heated up many a fine casserole for me over the years.
113-->'''Scarlet''': How do you ''live'' like this?
114-->'''Cleaver''': By setting it on cottons.
115* IdiosyncraticEpisodeNaming: Every episode for the first four seasons is R, or the Crown, vs whomever Cleaver happens to be defending in that episode.
116* ImAHumanitarian: Professor Graham Murray in the pilot. Unlike most examples of the trope, Murray is not villainous nor murderous, instead being rather curious and ultimately regretful of his culinary choices. His "dish" was also a suicidally depressed man who agreed to have his body eaten after killing himself.
117* InsistentTerminology: However much Cleaver insists, he wasn't acquitted on charges of conspiracy to commit murder, he was 'exonerated'.[[note]]Acquittal means a jury has found you not guilty, which is a legal status. Exoneration means that evidence has been produced that proves that a person cannot be guilty of a crime with which they were charged.[[/note]]
118* InterplayOfSexAndViolence: A common theme, with Missy's fiance Joshua being killed off shortly after he returns to Australia, but the clearest example is Cleaver's "relationship" with Kirsty: forceful, aggressive, and only continuing because of Kirsty's constant threat of violence. It actually gets more like this when Cleaver persuades Kirsty to hook up with her lackey Col, although they are MakeOutKids and frequently shown doing it before brutally beating or threatening Cleave.
119* KarmaHoudini: Immoral con-artist Lane Hole is set up as this in series 2. He is dragged to court by Cleaver, harassed in person and even has a hit from Cleave's gang mates placed on his head, but he miraculously escapes every single encounter through sheer luck and fate. This is finally averted right at the end of the series, when Lane faceplants after Fuzz knocks him off his bike. [[spoiler:It's a tiny consolation though, as Cleaver is imprisoned for 14 years for conspiring to murder Lane.]]
120* KarmaHoudiniWarranty: Right after being acquitted of all charges against him, [[spoiler:Edgar]] is shot to death by his girlfriend, who walks in on him [[WomanScorned having sex with another woman]].
121* KavorkaMan:
122** Barney is a fat, balding, soppy old romantic, with barely a tenth of the roguish nihilism and hedonism that Cleave possesses. Not only is he married to the rather foxy Scarlet, he has an affair with secretary Nicole, and ends up with both women living with him together in the same house.
123** Harry-Sorry-David is also kind of this, but it might cross over with InformedAttribute. He describes himself as [[TheBore a bore]] who nevertheless manages to propose to Missy and hook up with Scarlet, but he's really not ''that'' bad.
124* LaserGuidedKarma:
125** Nicole openly admits to embezzling $90,000 from Cleaver over the course of her employment, and minutes later is knocked straight into hospital by a falling gargoyle head.
126** Eddie Langhorn - a firebrand political commentator and radio host - is caught bribing testimonies and using said results to incite a race riot. Her punsihment? [[FateWorseThanDeath Relegation to her station's midnight skeleton shift.]]
127* LeftHanging: Every season ends on an inconclusive note, but special mention goes to Season 3, which features Cleaver literally hanging, floating off into the sky tethered to an errant hot air balloon.
128* LikeFatherLikeSon:
129** Fuzz — over the course of four seasons — becomes more and more like his philandering father, culminating in his seducing a princess whilst doing charity work in Africa.
130*** It's worth noting that Cleave isn't happy with this development, and does everything in his power to stop his son from becoming like him. It doesn't work.
131* MadArtist: Denny Lorton in Season 1 was an award-winning artist before he lost his mind and became the homeless painter Pica, and in the episode proper he kills a [[DisposableSexWorker rent boy]] in the pursuit of his art.
132* MayDecemberRomance: This becomes a RunningGag with Cleaver's teenage son Fuzz, who almost exclusively dates much older women, ranging from his teachers, his mum's friends and even the wives of foreign diplomats.
133* MistakenForPedophile: Due to some cases of {{not what it looks like}} Cleaver gets taken as a paedophile. He's blackmailed over it by Cal.
134* MoodWhiplash: In the second episode, one scene shows David and Melissa having a humorous discussion about Melissa's fictitious relative Angus. The next scene has David getting shot twice in an attempted murder.
135* MrViceGuy: Cleaver, who has sex with prostitutes, is a [[TheAlcoholic functional alcoholic]], and a somewhat unorthodox lawyer.
136** Cal [=McGregor=] is also this, hiding a corrupt and vice-ridden personality behind a veneer of upstanding. It becomes especially pronounced in Season 3, where he pretends to embrace piety and wholesomeness in prison... only to enthusiastically jettison both as soon as he's a released private citizen.
137* MysteriousInformant: The Smoking Guy.
138* NewOldFlame: Jack, Hilary's ex-girlfriend, appears in Season 4, to Cleaver's surprise (he had no idea she was into women). They get back together again after this.
139* TheNicknamer: Cleaver Greene, especially where Harry-Sorry-David Potter, the Shadow Minister for Toasters, Lobotomies and Nasal Hair is concerned. Ironically, he is hurt when he learns that Wendy and Fuzz call him "El Fucko" occasionally behind their back.
140* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Political activist Joshua Floyd in Season 2 is a thinly-disguised Julian Assange.
141* NominatedAsAPrank: This is how Cleaver ends up as a politician at the end of Season 4. Unlike most examples of this trope, he nominates himself as a prank, to mess with his much-disliked sister Jane, who is running for office. He intentionally runs without policies and the prank gains him so many fans that he wins the election.
142* OffscreenTeleportation: Parodied in a season 2 episode. While talking to the Smoking Guy, Cleaver is distracted by the sound of a car and turns around. When he turns around, he's actually surprised that the guy ''hasn't'' disappeared while he wasn't looking.
143* {{OutGambitted}}: Cleaver publicly trolls, trashes and coaxes Cal and the DPP into upgrading his charges, from 'manslaughter of Albert Platt' to 'murder of Albert Platt', on the premise that murder would be impossible to prove and therefore leading to automatic acquittal. It seems like a great piece of XanatosSpeedChess, until Cleave finds out he's been out-gamed; [[spoiler:the charges are unexpectedly upgraded to 'conspiracy to murder Lane Hole' instead.]] This mistake proves extremely costly for Cleave, [[spoiler:who is found guilty of conspiracy to murder, and sentenced to ''fourteen years'' in prison. The original manslaughter charge would have only gotten him two years.]]
144* PairTheSpares:
145** After his and Scarlet's marriage breaks down, Barney cheats on Scarlet with [[spoiler:Nicole]]. [[spoiler:They eventually get together after his divorce.]]
146** After this, Scarlet gets together with [[spoiler:Harry, Cleaver and Barney's onetime legal, and now political, rival.]]
147* {{Polyamory}}:
148** In Season 1, Cleaver defends celebrity chef George Dana against charges of bigamy when it is revealed that the man has two loving families across the state. [[spoiler: The situation complicates itself when Dana is revealed to be a ''trigamist'', with a new third family in the making.]]
149** Practiced, of all people, by mob boss Mick Corella and his wife Kirsty. Mick, rather amusingly for an elderly crime lord, [[SeriousBusiness enjoys exploring his and his wife's sexuality with other male partners in a safe environment]]... it's men [[BerserkButton romancing her with bookshops and cafes that he gets murderous about.]]
150** One young woman who Cleaver meets during his Senate campaign also proposes he push for legalizing polygamy, adding that she's got four sisters and he could then marry them all.
151* QuestionableConsent: Cleaver is basically coerced into getting involved with Kirsty by Col. While he isn't specifically forced to be with her, Col unsubtly makes it clear he'll get hurt if she isn't kept happy. This includes sleeping with her, as Cleaver clearly thinks she won't be happy if he refuses. It only ends when he gets Col to confess his feelings for Kirsty, so they get together instead.
152* RaceLift: In the US remake Ben becomes Latino and Scarlet becomes Persian.
153* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Cleaver delivers one to a rich socialite wife at a dinner party in S01 E02, which ends with him receiving a glass of wine to the face.
154-->'''Cleaver''': When somebody says something that you agree with, you don't say 'yes' or 'uh-huh', or even, 'you go, girl!', you say 'correct'.
155-->'''Leanne''': ...I'm sorry, you've lost me Cleaver.
156-->'''Cleaver''': Oh, well it's sort of like a school teacher talking to a ten year old, you know? You're not actually agreeing, you're ''approving''. It's as if the statement is invalid until you deem it so.
157-->'''Leanne''': Your point being?
158-->'''Cleaver''': Well, it's like you're an arbiter of the truth. It's a way of being smug and superior, Leanne, which is why so many fuckwits in the city use it. And now it's spread into the mouths of the spouses like some sort of contagion. Your kids'll be saying it soon from the backseat of the four wheel drive Porsche, feeling safe and smug and superior! Buying a Porsche SUV, for the sake of the kids' safety, I don't think I've heard such transparently banal bullshit in my entire life! You go girl!
159-->''[Leanne's friend slings her glass of red wine into Cleaver's face]''
160** Fuzz also does this to Cleave several times, crossing over with CallingTheOldManOut.
161** Cleaver later gives one to HangingJudge Cowper, the judiciary and New South Wales' entire justice system, which gets him disbarred when it turns out this was all caught on tape.
162* RedHerring: In Season 1, Cleaver defends a street artist against the charge of the murder of a rentboy, for whom the only witness is Stanley "Shrimpo" Shrimpton - a [[ObviouslyEvil skeevy-looking pimp with a criminal background]]. But whilst Shrimpo is involved in the affair as a purveyor of lost boys, he is ''not'' the murderer.
163* RefugeInAudacity:
164** Throughout Season 1, Cleaver avoids a ruling on his fraudulent taxes by prolonging their retrieval, citing rain damage and improper storage. The climax of this ongoing saga? Cleaver bringing a pile of taxes drenched in catpiss and foul yoghurt into the courtroom, an act so audaciously repulsive and scandalising that the judge has no option but to put Cleaver in holding for several days and have the records thrown out... which is exactly what Cleaver wants.
165** Cleaver's campaign for Senate also runs entirely on this, for instance proposing that people be fined if they use air quotes or "correct", plus cutting the healthcare budget so people die earlier as it's less of a burden on the taxpayer. It's eaten up by enough people that he's elected.
166* RightForTheWrongReasons: Cleaver successfully defends the widow of a Muslim terrorist in Season 2 for involvement in a botched terror bomb plot, against implicitly racist reactions from his peers and colleagues. [[spoiler: As it turns out, the widow is indeed ''guilty'', but only of plotting to murder her rather moronic husband. She harbours ill will, murderous desires or terroristic thoughts at all beyond that. Cleave even expresses a mote of astoundment for her success in hiding a very real big crime inside an even bigger but much less pursuable crime.
167* RunningGag: After his release from prison, Cleave insists to everyone around him that he was 'exonerated' of all charges, but practically the entire city knows he was actually 'acquitted'. He doesn't succeed in fooling anybody.
168* ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections: A lot of people get away with their crimes due to having friends in high places, like Edgar Mitchell with his dirty cops.
169* SettingUpdate: The US remake transplants it to UsefulNotes/LosAngeles.
170* ShadowArchetype: Edgar Allan Thompson - Cleaver's mentor, and one of the most feared criminals in New South Wales - is a charming, roguish, literate, moderated and utterly blackhearted villain; essentially Cleaver if he had neither his weaknesses or redeeming qualities.
171* ShowWithinTheShow: The film ''Judgemental'', starring several of the main cast's actors, produced by many of the actual crew, and a hit of the [[BlandNameProduct Raindance Film Festival]], seen on posters in the fifth season.
172* TheSociopath: Cleaver defends two teenage girls in Season 2 who are implicated in the death of one of their classmates. The situation complicates when Cleaver eventually realizes both have this disorder, and the accidental manslaughter is actually premeditated cold-blooded murder. The girl explicitly compared to Leopold and Loeb, two similar (though male) "thrill killers" in Chicago during the 1920s.
173* SpottingTheThread: Barney discovers Cleave and Scarlet's tryst in Season 1 through their separate but successive references to the uncommonly named 'John Bartrop' - a name Cleave specifically admits to using as an alias.
174* StealthHiBye: Comically subverted in Season 2, when Cleaver meets a mysterious informant in an underground garage. After the conversation, Cleaver turns away at the sound of squealing tires, and is startled when he turns back and the informant is still there.
175* TactfulTranslation: During talks with Chinese officials, their translators render insults, including numerous expletives, as very bland replies by comparison.
176* ThoseTwoGuys: During their political careers, David Potter and Cal [=McGregor=] both have their own pairs of sycophantic special advisers who follow them everywhere.
177* TeacherStudentRomance: Finn, Cleaver's son, has a relationship with his English teacher, which lasts until she leaves him... [[spoiler: for a younger boy.]]
178* TeensAreMonsters: In Season 2 Cleaver ends up defending (and sleeping with) Michelle, who is charged with killing one of the actors in her student film. When Cleave determines the murder was deliberate, Michelle attempts to blackmail him into continued service by revealing she's not even 16 yet.
179* TomboyishName: Wendy's girlfriend goes by Jack (presumably it's a nickname for Jacqueline). Oddly enough, aside from this she's not at all tomboyish expert for her aggressive personality (if one considers that masculine).
180* TooGoodToBeTrue: Cleaver suffers from this when Kirsty and Col resolve his outstanding debt by also buying the albatross of a restaurant he's stuck with. [[Spoiler: Too bad the restaurant is worth a lot to an American chain franchise who are willing to buy it for a ''hell'' of a lot more than Cleaver sold it for, meaning Kirsty cheated him out of millions.
181* TwoFirstNames: Cleaver gives this as a reason for disliking Joshua Floyd.
182* UndyingLoyalty: Missy has a platonic version for Cleaver, and vice versa (although less platonic on his side).
183 * VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory:
184** A lot of season one's legal proceedings are based on interesting aspects from cases in the casebook of one of the Executive Producers (who is a practicing barrister).
185** Missy's book is this in-universe, as many of the characters in it are based on her former clients.

Top