Tag: The Wire season five (Page 2 of 2)

The Wire 5.4 – Transitions

As the title suggests, tonight’s episode was all about transitions – from expected promotions to unexpected (ahem) demotions – and the biggest of them all was Burrell’s resignation as Commissioner of the Baltimore Police Department. Yep, you heard right. After a visit from Daniels assuring Burrell he had nothing to do (or knew nothing about) Carcetti’s plans to replace him, and another visit from Council President Campbell promising a pension and comfy gig if he leaves quietly, the grizzled vet officially threw in the towel. Of course, not before he entrusted Campbell with the dirt he’s got on Daniels – which may or may not affect Carcetti in the future.

I can’t imagine it will, however, since this is the final season of the show, but if it were to go on, Campbell might just have exactly what she needs to deny Carcetti the Governor’s chair and replace him as Baltimore’s new mayor. Then again, if McNulty’s able to raise the profile on his fabricated serial killer, Carcetti will undoubtedly earn serious brownie points by claiming himself a man of the people, and by default, of the homeless population as well.

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For the time being, McNulty’s still searching for more bodies, but that should get a little easier over the next few weeks now that Lester’s old partner has agreed to give them a heads up on any victims that float his way. You can also count on Alma’s next article about McNulty’s killer hitting the front page; especially when dead homeless start popping up with teeth marks (Lester’s idea) all over their bodies. Sure, it’s sick and twisted, but it’s also pretty funny.

What’s not funny, however, is the fact that no one seems to take Marlo seriously. I mean, McNulty and Co. obviously want to catch the guy (but only because he’s bad), Omar wants to kill him (but only because he drew first blood), and Prop Joe (perhaps the most clueless of the bunch) wants to domesticate him. For being such a smart gangster, Joe sure trusts a lot of the wrong people. Upon hearing that Omar believes he had something to do with Butchie’s torture/murder, Joe decides to take a leave of absence, but before he’s able to get the hell out of the city, Marlo arrives to bid farewell.

Joe’s death is probably the most surprising revelation of the fifth season thus far, but believe it or not, he was the glue that held together Baltimore’s criminal hoi polloi, and with him out of the picture, you can expect some blood to be shed over the next few weeks. Slim Charles will no doubt be gunning for Cheese after hearing of his disloyalty, and without Joe to oversee the co-op, Marlo will probably take out the rest of the major drug runners as well. The Greeks are also going to learn that agreeing to work with Marlo was a bad idea (especially if McNulty and Lester have anything to do with it), and Omar is going to do what Omar does best. Sorry, Chris and Snoop. This truly is the beginning of the end. Here’s hoping David Simon and Ed Burns can piece together an ending a little more compelling than onion rings and Journey.

The Wire 5.3 – Not for Attribution

I ended last week’s blog entry with a remark about how I hoped the Baltimore Sun scenes would begin fitting in to the main story arc sooner rather than later, and wouldn’t you know it, my wish came true, courtesy of Jimmy McNulty. Acting as a one-man revival of “Dexter” and “The Shield,” McNulty is currently breaking more laws than Bunk can count in his quest to create a serial killer that both the mayor’s office and the police department will actually pay attention to. Planning his killer around two details – homeless victims and red ribbons – McNulty goes back into the vault to find unsolved murders to would bend to his specifications. He discovers two, and makes it three when he plants evidence on the homeless man that he (re)killed last week.

Hoping to grab someone’s attention other than Bunk (Landsman just shoves it aside in a hilarious ten-second scene), McNulty takes the info to Alma at The Sun, who graciously accepts the lead after her last article (about murders, no less) got bumped from the front page in place of a skydiving article. No joke. Unfortunately, her latest story is buried in the back of the Metro section, and just when it looks like McNulty is about to give up, Lester Freamon surfaces to convince McNulty otherwise – suggesting he sensationalize his murder (i.e. give him a menacing nickname, etc.) in order to garner more press.

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Of course, that’s just one way The Sun has suddenly become integral to season five. Though the ongoing cutbacks will undoubtedly fuel the fire for the remaining journalists in the coming weeks, City Editor Gus has secured his place at the paper, and you can certainly see why. With friends like Norman (Carcetti’s right-hand man, in case you forgot), Gus is virtually indispensable, and he proves his worth when he squeezes some info out of Norman about Carcetti’s plans to axe Burrell and prep Daniels for the job. Whether or not Carcetti decides to give the temporary position to Rawls or Valchek remains to be seen, but what you can expect is that Burrell is going to put up a fight, and after butting heads with Carcetti later in the episode, his biggest ally could very well be Clay Davis. Shiiiiit, indeed.

And finally, there’s Marlo. After visiting Vondas about a direct relationship with the Greek (and consequently getting turned down because his money was “dirty”), the Baltimore kingpin heads to Prop Joe for help cleaning his cash. Half of his investment is turned into clean bank money (for the Greek, of course), while the other half is transferred to an account in the Cayman Islands. Marlo doesn’t exactly understand the concept of a wire transfer, however, so he hops on a plane and heads south to check out his account in person. Meanwhile, Snoop and Chris hit a roadblock in their search for Omar, so instead, they just torture and kill his blind friend Butchie, therefore ensuring his return. As it turns out, Omar is currently living the sweet life on some unnamed island (whether or not it was the same island as Marlo’s bank is unclear), but it hardly matters now. Omar is back, and Marlo would be wise to muscle up.

The Wire 5.2 – Unconfirmed Reports

The second episode of season five has come and gone, and you can officially color me worried. Not for the quality of the show, mind you – because that’s always remained first-class – but of the questionably slow pacing. True, previous seasons of “The Wire” have always taken four or five episodes before jumping into the meat of the story, but with three less episodes than usual this time around, doesn’t it seem like David Simon and Co. should be getting a move on? It seemed like that may have been the case with tonight’s show, but when all was said and done, I still felt like that there was something still missing from the big picture.

With Lester and Sydnor working on the Clay Davis case (who, as we all saw, is so worried about the upcoming Grand Jury hearing that he never once uttered his trademark, confidence-boosting phrase), and the rest of the Major Crimes detail back on Homicide, Marlo has been given the all-clear to get back to business (i.e. killing people). That includes hunting down Omar (who has yet to make his season five debut) and going behind Prop Joe’s back to make a deal with the Greeks. And who other than Avon Barksdale to help the kid out? Sure, Marlo declared war on the Barksdale clan when he was on the rise, but we all know how Avon feels about Prop Joe, so it shouldn’t surprise anyone that he’s chosen to side with a fellow West-sider.

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What Marlo doesn’t realize, however, is that a lack of OT pay hasn’t stopped Lester from bringing the drug-slinging murderer down, and within days, he’s back on stakeout duty. When he discovers that Marlo, Chris and Snoop are already back to their sloppy tactics, Lester enlists the help of McNulty for the case, but without any financial backing from the BPD, the pair go looking for help elsewhere, including the local Feds. Unfortunately, not even the FBI wants anything to do with the hanging 22 murders (nor any other federal task force, for that matter). Bunk and Lester claim that it’s because most of the dead bodies are blacks, so what does McNulty do? He creates an imaginary serial killer by “strangling” an already dead (white) male with the hope of gaining the mayor’s attention. Will it do the trick, or just land McNulty in some serious Vic Mackey-type trouble?

There’s plenty more to talk about – like how Carcetti’s mayoral decisions seem to favor his upcoming run for governor (though is that a bad thing?), how Bubbles is clean but doesn’t seem happy about it, or how the Baltimore Sun scenes still don’t fit in with the main story arc (seriously, who cares about that whiny reporter, Scott?) – but it simply isn’t worth spending time on until it actually begins to matter. Here’s hoping it’s sooner rather than later.

The Wire 5.1 – More with Less

The premiere of the fifth and final season of “The Wire” is finally upon us, and while it doesn’t look to be as good as last year, the show continues to trump just about everything you see on TV. The biggest problem with the first episode was that not a lot really happened. It served more as a building block for the next nine episodes than anything else, and while very few new ideas were presented, we now have a good idea where Ed Burns and David Simon are going with their plans to interject the media into their stories.

And since we’re on the subject, I might as well begin there. Simply put, I wasn’t very impressed with the Baltimore Sun scenes that dominated much of the second-half action last night, but I also wasn’t a very big proponent of the political subplot at the beginning of Year Four, either. There’s definitely a few things to like about the new setting – namely actor/director Clark Johnson as City Editor Gus Haynes – but I can’t imagine anything of real interest being drawn from the concept that the newspaper is in danger of being downsized. Whether that threat was just motivation for the writers to dig deeper into the city’s corruption or if it’ll play a bigger role later down the line remains to be seen, but there’s no doubt in my mind that it’s definitely important to the story.

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As for the rest of Baltimore, things are pretty much the same since we last left them. Bunk is still playing tricks on street thugs (how that kid ever fell for the photo copier “lie detector” is beyond me), McNulty and Co. are back on Marlo, Bubbles is still clean (and apparently working for The Sun selling papers), and Carcetti’s busy juggling the city budget between the schools and police department. This hasn’t made the new mayor a very popular man, either, as cops continue to work overtime without pay, and the Major Crimes detail is disbanded almost as quickly as it was formed.

There have been some changes, albeit minor ones. Carver is now a Sergeant (and in charge of the West district), Herc’s working as an investigator for a criminal DA, and Dukie’s taken off corner duties in order to play nanny to Michael’s younger brother. Oh yeah, and McNulty’s drinking again. As if you didn’t see that coming. Here’s hoping he doesn’t screw over Beadie in the process, because she was one of my favorite characters from season two. I’m also patiently awaiting the return of Omar, Cutty, Randy, Namond and the countless others I’m forgetting about, but with only 9 episodes remaining, I can’t imagine their absence going on for much longer.

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