Tag: Vic Mackey (Page 3 of 4)

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.

Patience

After a particularly lackluster week, the writers of “The Shield” got back on track last night with an episode that – for all intents and purposes – set up one hell of a season finale. The cards are on the table, the bets have been placed, and now all we have to do is sit back, relax and wait to see who comes out on top.

Vic’s mission to earn a little goodwill (and behind-the-scenes help) before going in front of the appeals board next week crashed and burned when the city controller who he protected a few weeks back (by failing to disclose the real reason behind his daughter’s murder) came up short on his end of the deal. Knowing full well that Claudette’s lack of pity certainly isn’t helping the case, Vic makes the threat of the century by informing her that not only will he solve the San Marcos murders, but that after he does, she won’t have any other choice but to keep him onboard. So what does he do? He solves the freaking case. Thanks to yet another tip from Aceveda’s city planning friend, Cruz, the Strike Team pick up one of the suspects, but Vic and Hiatt butt heads on how to deal with him. Way to burn yet another bridge, Vic.

When they finally convince the slicer-and-dicer to give up his pals, Vic goes over Hiatt’s head and swoops them up, stashing them away in a freight container before anyone else can find them. Vic then makes good with the Mexicans by handing over two of three El Salvadorians, and a tip that the third will be out of prison in 18 months. Unfortunately, Claudette couldn’t care less, and despite Vic closing the San Marcos case (or at least clearing all those red names from the board), she informs him that he’s still on his way out. Aceveda wouldn’t have it any other way, but his friend Cruz feels differently. Despite his obvious connection to the murders, he thinks Farmington needs as many good cops as possible, and in order to keep Vic on the force, he gives him the one thing that will secure his future: the infamous cell phone picture of Aceveda’s rape.

Shane, on the other hand, is busy making friends with the Armenian mob. Well, at least one of them anyways, and now that he’s become Diro’s right-hand man, it’s only a matter of time before the two of them hook up. Along with schooling her on the ins-and-outs of the mob life, Shane uses his position as a cop to take down Diro’s biggest threat: the man responsible for killing that gas station attendant a few weeks back. With him out of the picture, Diro can seemingly rule as the new boss, but Vic’s keeping an eye on Shane’s back-alley deals, because the last thing he needs is more trouble knocking on his door.

Unfortunately, it looks like he’s about to get some, and real soon too. While trying to convince Diro to keep him in on the game, Shane drops Vic’s name as the one responsible for taking down the Armenian money train. Of course, he manages to expunge himself from the heist, using his failure to cooperate as the reason why Vic has attached a target to his back. Nice move, Shane. Too bad it’s going to bite you in the ass when it’s revealed that you were involved. Well, I guess we can all mark that up as one less trigger Vic is going to have to pull when all is said and done.

And finally, how could anyone talk about last night’s episode without at least a mention of the ongoing feud between Dutch and Billings. Clearly pissed off that Dutch has played the quick-meal vending machine card a little often over the last few weeks, Billings decides to get his own form of revenge. Using Hiatt’s possible relationship with Tina to fire back, Billings follows the pair back to Tina’s place and sends Dutch a text message (using Tina’s phone, which he stole back at the Barn) inviting him over. Minutes later, Dutch arrives with a bottle of wine in hand, but when he hears sex sounds coming from the house, he goes around to investigate. Through the window he spies Tina and Hiatt going at in the nude (and on a chair, no less), and is then caught in the act by Hiatt himself. Let’s no forget that Billings managed to drop a hint to Hiatt earlier in the episode about Dutch’s obsession with Tina, so it’ll be curious to see what comes of that next week. Will Hiatt confront Dutch, and will Dutch find out that it was Billings all along? Let’s hope so, because a battle has been brewing between those two ever since Billings was first named Captain.

Dead Horse

With only two episodes left in the season, you’d think that this week’s show would have been a little more significant to the big picture, but alas, it only served to amplify the same points that have been made throughout the course of the last few episodes. Hernan is still missing and his handler isn’t at all pleased. Claudette couldn’t care less as long as he holds up his end of the deal (that being the arrest of the San Marcos murderers), but she might have a problem soon enough, as Hernan most definitely doesn’t want to be found. Vic seems to think it’s because he’s so deep undercover, but it’s more likely that he’s simply fallen for the gang life. If that were the case, however, why would he give Vic a heads up about the automatic weapons burglary? That remains unseen, but what is clear is that Vic has found an ally in Hiatt.

The only Strike Team member not involved in tracking down Hernan is Shane (obviously), who is spending his time doing a little side work for the Armenian mob. Pissed about the unexpected death of the gas station attendant, Shane goes to visit the mob boss, Mr. Kesakhian, but is instead greeted by his daughter, Diro (Franka Potente), who apologizes and pays him for his “troubles.” Little does Shane know that Diro is actually running the family business while her father withers away on his deathbed until, of course, he eventually figures it out. That doesn’t change his position with the Armenians, though, and it’s only going to land him in some serious trouble in the future. My money’s on the Armenian’s finding out about his involvement with the money train a few years ago, and it might just be Vic who pulls the trigger.

Nonetheless, Shane is clearly trying to make as many friends as possible, and that doesn’t exclude persuading Ronnie to his side. Of course, when Ronnie confronts Vic about Terry later in the episode, I have to admit that I was a bit surprised at how well he took it. In fact, he seemed to agree that it was necessary, and his only regret was that Vic didn’t tell him about it earlier. Wow. I always knew Ronnie was a cool dude, and I really hope he plays a major part in whatever Vic has planned for Shane.

The rest of the episode was relatively tame. Dutch and Billings work a “stab and grab” involving a designer purse racket, Tina relishes in her newfound fame, and Aceveda unleashes his plans to run for mayor. The latter is probably the most exciting prospect of the episode, but one that will no doubt be saved for the final season. After all, Aceveda is at the top of Vic’s list when it comes to people he plans to take down with him, and once Shane is out of the way, there shouldn’t be anyone else remaining.

Back Off Bitch

“The Shield” went back to the days of old this week, where an episode would focus on a single case, and the topic at hand was the San Marcos massacre. After the Biz-Lats retaliate against the El Salvadorians by killing women and children at a street fair, tensions are heightened leading to a personal threat from the Asst. Chief to shut down the Barn. Blaming Hernan for the misinformation that has caused the case to remain unsolved for so long, Vic makes a deal with the undercover agent that will help him earn his stripes within the gang. Even though Vic thinks the guy “is kind of an asshole,” it’s difficult for him to turn down such a promising venture.

I have a feeling that Hernan is just looking out for himself (and quite possibly integrating into the gang he’s supposed to be investigating). Although his intel did land the Barn three of the six San Marcos murderers (who were engaged in a private gangbang when the Strike Team picked them up), his sudden disappearance at the end of the episode doesn’t bode well for the future.

Meanwhile, as Vic wraps up his end of the San Marcos case, Dutch and Billings set out looking for the final piece: Eduardo Ramiro, the Mexican bureaucrat whose right arm was found amongst the eleven other chopped up bodies at the motel. When they finally track him to a seedy hotel (sans right limb and in possession of a luggage full of money), Dutch can’t help but to bring him in, despite the fact that the guy has diplomatic immunity. Claudette chews him out for it, too, but it was definitely a smart move on Dutch’s part. Immunity or not, if this guy is the only surviving victim of a massacre, there’s no doubt in my mind that he’s incredibly important to the case.

The rest of the episode was pretty lackluster, filled up mostly by Shane’s counteraction to Vic’s threats. The guy’s hard at work covering his ass (gathering info on every dirty deal from Vic’s past) and he’s even made a request for transfer back to the vice unit. Oh boy, here we go again. Shane’s back to his season four evil self again, including dealing with criminals for some extra cash (this time with the Armenians), and he’s not afraid to let Vic and Ronnie in on his plan. He’s given Vic a copy of all his “notes” (assuring him that the original is in a safe place) and is ready to play ball. The only question is: does Vic have the onions to take the fall himself, taking Shane with him and saving Ronnie from any legal outfall? I think so, but we’ll surely have to wait a whole season to find out.

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