Tag: The Shield season 7 (Page 3 of 3)

The Shield 7.3 – Money Shot

Poor Ronnie. I mean, the guy just can’t catch a break, can he? First, his face gets a little oven burner action courtesy of Armadillo, and then, his arm becomes a giant chew toy for a fierce pit bull. If anyone deserves to walk away from this current situation involving the Armenians, it’s definitely him. In the meantime, however, he’s busy leading the Strike Team while Vic and Shane take care of their other problem. Axl, the porn shop owner from last season (you know, the “Dick in Grannies” guy), has come to Ronnie with information on a producer who pays his actresses in drugs. They bust the guy for offering blow to an undercover Julian and Tina, and convince him to give up his dealer, Demetris Harms, but when the Strike Team heads to Harms’ house to arrest him, they find it completely empty – that is, except for his guard dog. Ronnie suspects that it was Axl who warned Harms of their impending takedown, and, well, he’s right. Apparently, Axl is deathly afraid of Harms, and though this little excursion certainly gave Ronnie something to do on tonight’s episode, I’m still not sure how it fits into the big picture.

If I know Shawn Ryan as well as I think I do, we won’t hear anything about it for weeks, only to have him revisit the subplot later down the road. Whether or not we get any sort of conclusion from that case doesn’t really matter, though, because Ryan and Co. are really grooving with their main story. With Rezian out of jail, the Armenian mob boss is beginning to cash in his favors from Shane, and his first request is to recover a shipment of processed guns from the police station. Vic doesn’t like the idea of putting untraceable weapons in the hands of killers, but when he discovers that Aceveda has destroyed any leverage he might have access to by moving the blackmail box, he agrees under one condition – that Rezian only get three favors, and when they’re all cashed in, Vic, Shane and both of their families are left alone for good.

The Shield 7.3

With all that sorted out, Vic and Shane plot a way to sneak into the police compound where the guns are being held. They mentioned that there was only one guard on watch, so I figured they would just sneak in without him noticing, but Vic’s eventual plan is much smarter. He pulls over a former CI named Burnout and takes him back to the Barn, leaving his brand new Escalade to be temporarily seized and taken to the very same police compound holding the guns… only Shane is hiding in the back. With the lone security guard left to fend for himself, Shane loads up the SUV with the guns and hightails it out of there. When he meets up with Rezian and Vic at the drop-off point, he’s unaware that Vic has an ace up his sleeve. In order to prevent the guns from landing in the hands of the Armenians, he’s informed Agent Murray about the takedown, allowing just enough time for him, Shane and Rezian to get away before the feds come in to break up the brouhaha. In doing so, Vic also comes off looking like he just saved Rezian’s ass, and to solidify that feeling, the trio heads back to Rezian’s office where Vic plants a bug to make it look like it was the Armenian’s number two who sold him out.

Meanwhile, in what may just be his most interesting case in quite some time, Dutch teams up with Danny to work a missing persons case involving an Asian girl whose mother refuses to admit she’s actually missing. When he goes back to check in on her a day later, he discovers that the girl is indeed at home, but she looks the worse for wear. When he takes her back to the Barn to investigate, Danny suggests she should talk to her instead, and after opening up about her recent encounter, the girl tells Danny that she was kidnapped and sexually assaulted. As it happens, that’s not exactly the case. When the family discovered that the girl was engaged in a lesbian relationship, her brother hired a man who got some boys to literally “rape the homosexual” out of her. Um, yeah. This is the kind of stuff you can only find on “The Shield,” and while it sucks that Dutch is still in the background, at least they’re finding more interesting things for him to do.

Nevertheless, the real revelation of the night was when Ronnie told Vic that he was sick of ignoring the fact that Shane had killed Lem. Not only that, but he admitted to Vic that he’s not going to drown for either them. I’m not sure what this actually means for Ronnie (would he really turn them in to save his own skin?), but Vic and Shane do seem like they’re on the road to forgiveness. Shane even gives Vic his only copy of his back-up plan, while Vic tells Shane that he’s beginning to understand why he had to do what he did. Are either of them telling the truth? Probably not, but with more than half of the season left, can you really expect any less?

The Shield 7.2 – Snitch

After last week’s episode set up the arc for the rest of the season, tonight’s show was a little more laid back. That isn’t to say that nothing happened, but it wasn’t quite as jaw-dropping as the events that transpired in the season premiere. No chopped-off feet to speak of, and no crazy shootouts in the middle of Farmington. There were plenty of confrontations (Dutch and Billings, Vic and Corrine, Danny and Tina), however, but nothing we haven’t seen before. Still, I love that the writers make the most of the Dutch and Billings pairing, because even though the latter may get on Dutch’s nerves most of the time, you have to admit that when he tries, Billings is a damn good detective. Unfortunately, Dutch’s character has fallen to the wayside over the last two seasons (to the point that his character is almost as insignificant as Danny, Tina or Julian), and though this season is first and foremost about how Vic is going to save his badge, I’d like to see Dutch become involved in the fate of Vic’s future before the end.

With the Armenian/Mexican gang war in motion, Vic decides that it’s high time to get Aramboles out of the country, so he orders Shane to set up “travel arrangements” to Mexico with the same coyotes that were originally going to get Lem across the border. I’m not exactly sure why Vic is helping Aramboles (he’s already set him up as the fall guy, so why go through all the trouble?), but it probably has something to do with the fact that he just doesn’t want to give Pezuela the pleasure of killing him. Speaking of which, Vic’s carefully plotted gang war is already beginning to spin out of control when the Mexicans greenlight a hit on Rezian. Worried that Rezian’s death will result in the Armenian mob’s second-in-command following through with the assassination of his family, Shane visits the Armenian number one in prison to warn him, thinking that by doing so, he’s insured his loyalty to him. Instead, Rezian simply confirms his fears: if he dies, so do Shane and Vic’s families.

The Shield 7.2

As if things couldn’t get worst, the mayor has just initiated a Most Wanted list that ranks the area’s top ten gangs. Vic is worried that it will only create competition (he likens the list to the sports standings, with every team making a push for the playoffs), and he’s right. Within hours, a white businessman is gunned down for no good reason, and before the afternoon is over, another white couple is shot in the middle of gangland. When an old woman comes forward as a witness to the second shooting and fingers two youngsters wearing Spook Street colors, Vic brings in the gang’s leader, Jamal, for questioning. As it happens, Jamal really doesn’t know anything about the hits, but when he learns that Homeland Security is involved due to an Al Qaeda-related threat tied to the murders, he realizes that an earlier joke involving the terrorist group might have been taken out of context as an order. Whoopsie daisy, indeed.

Of course, there is some good that comes of this. By relieving the pressure on another gang leader (Moses) suspected of the murders, Vic is able to call in a favor to some of his guys in lockup to keep Rezian safe. Meanwhile, Shane visits the accountant testifying against the Armenian mob boss, and though the deputy sheriff is sitting in the room with them the whole time, he still manages to threaten the man’s life (along with his family’s) should he refuse to recant his testimony. I’m actually kind of surprised the accountant was able to understand the intended threat, but kudos to Shane for relaying the message without actually saying a whole lot. Of course, that deputy sheriff is an idiot if she didn’t notice the change in the accountant’s behavior after Shane mentioned the livelihood of his daughter, but maybe she’s unfamiliar with the concept of a crooked cop.

With Rezian safe for the short-term, however, Vic is more than happy to gloat about it to Pezuela. He’s also ready to renegotiate a new deal, and for every week that Vic’s tenure isn’t preserved, Pezuela will have to cough up $10,000 for his services rendered. Unfortunately, I’m not convinced Pezuela cares about money (he was willing to take a hit financially by ordering the hit on Rezian), so if Vic thinks that draining his pockets will do him any good, he’s in for some bad news.

The Shield 7.1 – Coefficient of Drag

FX may be heavily promoting this year of “The Shield” as its last, but tonight’s season premiere felt like it could have taken place anywhere in the show’s timeline. Sure, Vic may be hanging on to his career by a thread, and Shane continues to dig himself into an even bigger hole every time he tries to do “the right thing,” but something about the forthcoming season reads like a page out of the show’s golden years. What’s even better is that it actually makes sense. After all, Vic is trying to save his job and protect his family, so what better way to do both then to pit those standing in your way against one another?

Picking up almost immediately where season six left off, Shane arrives home to discover Mara bound and gagged on the couch. Before he can do anything to help her, Vic and Ronnie grab him from the shadows and begin to beat him up as payment for kidnapping Corrine and Cassidy. When Shane explains that he was only trying to protect them (because the Armenians know about the money train), Vic has no other choice but to join forces with Shane in order to stop the Armenians from exacting revenge. This includes tracking down Zadofian (the hitman sent to kill Vic’s family) who, coincidentally, Shane has also been ordered to find. Unfortunately for him, Vic arrives first (though Ronnie is the one who actually kills him, assuring Vic is clear of any suspicion). And so Shane, desperate to cover his ass, makes the murder look like Kazekian’s handiwork by chopping off the feet. When Rezian questions how she could possibly be getting anything done while on the run, Shane suggests she’s in cahoots with the Mexicans.

The Shield 7.1

Meanwhile, as Pezuela continues to fuel the Mexican and Salvadorian turf war in order to make room for future business ventures, Vic and Aceveda are busy deciding how to best use the recently acquired blackmail files to take him down. Vic is hoping to perform a little blackmail of his own so that he may save his job, but when Aceveda informs him that doing so would ruin the chance of building a real case against Pezuela, Vic is forced to change his game plan. Instead, he goes straight to source, giving Pezuela fake intel about an ongoing bidding war for the missing documents, and in return, earning a 30-day reprieve from his forced retirement. Vic makes Pezuela believe that the Armenians desperately want that box of files, and by forcing him (and by default, the Mexicans) into a gang war with the Armenians, Vic hopes to kill two birds with one stone. Then again, it’ll probably only make things worse.

The rest of the episode was a bit of a mixed bag. Dutch and Claudette trick Billings into voiding his own lawsuit when he solves an old case, Ronnie puts in a transfer request to SIS (and also gets promoted to Strike Team leader in the same day), and the Mexican/Salvadorian bloodbath lures a federal agent named Olivia Murray to town hoping to regain favor with her bosses. I’m not exactly sure how the third subplot is going to pan out, but I really wish that they would have saved her introduction for an episode with more time to explain things. Murray is briefly introduced in the opening sequence, only to disappear for the rest of the episode, and I’d like to think I would’ve understood why she was there a little better if there wasn’t so much going on.

Of course, when Vic is crashing cars into buildings (Best. Diversion. Ever.) and Shane is chopping off people’s feet, it’s easy to miss some of the episode’s subtler moments. Nevertheless, this is a great start to the new season. Now all Shawn Ryan and Co. have to do is keep it up.

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