Thursday, December 25, 2008

Status Report #18: Happy Holidays!

Hey readers,

Just wanted to take a moment to wish everyone a Happy Holidays. Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukah, Happy Chanukah, Happy Kwanza, Happy Boxing Day, Happy Festivus, Happy Belated Equinox and Happy Life Day! Whatever you celebrate or if you celebrate nothing, enjoy yourself.

And for those looking for new material, sorry it’s been slow coming out. Hopefully that’ll change. I’m currently working on a year end wrap up of my favorite episodes of 2008, which will hopefully be ready by New Year’s. My top five is more or less set, but I’m scouring what I’ve seen this year (and even in an off year like this one there’s a lot to choose from) to figure out the final list.

Hope everyone enjoys themselves and stays safe.

Peace & Humptiness Forever,

Matt

Friday, December 19, 2008

Post-Mortem: The Shield: 2002-2008

“Good cop and bad cop have left for the day. I'm a different kind of cop.”
-Vic Mackey, The Shield “Pilot”

Loose canon cops have been fodder for movies and TV shows for a long time. Who cares about the cop who just does what he’s told? It appeals to that desire to rebel against authority and pursue our interests. At first glance, where Vic Mackey’s roughing up drug dealers, The Shield feels a lot like that, a wish fulfillment of seeing the worst of society be punished by someone with the power we lack. However, in the pilot’s closing moments Vic, having just shot down a drug dealer, takes the dealer’s gun and murders fellow Officer Terry Crowley, who was working with David Aceveda to take down Vic’s corrupt team. Vic Mackey wasn’t going to be a typical loose canon, and The Shield wasn’t going to be the typical cop show.

Much like The Sopranos helped build HBO into the place for quality, literate drama, The Shield built FX into the place on basic cable for boundary pushing entertainment. It paved the way for the graphic surgeries and sex of Nip/Tuck, the self destructive anti-heroes of Rescue Me and the Seinfeld on crack antics of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia. The Shield also proved to the premium snobs that quality drama works on basic cable. In the years since, cable networks have stepped up with high quality shows from FX’s offerings, the burgeoning AMC’s Mad Men & Breaking Bad and Sci-Fi’s Battlestar Galactica franchise. It’s going to be interesting to see how FX fares without its flagships shows or whether it’ll dip like HBO has lately.

The Shield took advantage of what might’ve been considered a deterrent: the limits of basic cable content. Because there is a perception of more limits of what to show on basic cable, The Shield is more shocking on FX than if it were on HBO (a similar case can be made towards South Park on Comedy Central). HBO would have to go pretty far to produce something genuinely shocking now. When the series premiered, I remember ads proudly promoting The Shield as the show networks were too afraid to produce, and it worked as a launching pad for the series and the network as a whole.

Premiering six months after 9/11, it was risky to pick up a show about crooked cops when the public eye was so focused on the heroism of the profession, especially as it’s the network’s first attempt at a major drama. However, that issue seemed to disappear quickly, although I’m sure there were plenty of police continually offended by some of the portrayals seen on the show. There was a clear effort to show these were fictional cops and not a scathing expose on how police operate. On the show the cops wear their shields on the wrong side, and aren’t exact reproductions of the shields real police wear. The biggest divider between fiction and reality is that never in the series’ seven years do they mention LAPD, instead focusing on the fictional Farmington district in Los Angeles. Of course, that won’t stop some people from making that connection since the LAPD doesn’t have the best reputation.

As the series progressed, the question often brought up seeing Mackey rough up the bad guys is how much are we willing to put up with to feel safe. In the pilot, Claudette remarked that most people don’t care if a cop beats up someone in the ghetto, so long as those who commit the crimes are caught. The Shield went to the extreme, showing Vic burning a child rapist’s face against a stove place, almost drowning another in oil and tying up and brutalizing the man he believed to be behind a colleague’s murder. This became increasingly relevant in the wake of prisoner abuse scandals in the War on Terror.

Of course, this leads to comparisons to another law enforcement official on TV, 24’s Jack Bauer. A lot has been written about Bauer torturing suspects to get information, including some from people who argue as if he were real, but that’s another topic altogether. Bauer’s methods go as far as they can for network TV, but Jack never faces the scrutiny for his actions the way Vic has. He may get verbally reprimanded, but the results he provides are more than enough to justify his means. This may simply be a result of the format of 24, where Jack’s tactics reinforce the urgency facing whatever threat Jack is trying to avert and the constant crisis doesn’t allow much for legal consequences. Jack’s actions have been portrayed more favorably than Vic’s, but both have suffered major consequences for their actions: Jack has also lost most of his friends and family.

The other character worthy to compare Mackey to is one of his likely inspirations: Tony Soprano. Soprano opened the door for Mackey, as well as the plethora of anti-heroes that have been on TV in the subsequent decade. Placing him on the other side of the law gives him more of a moral code than Soprano. While the oft-maligned and maybe misunderstood Sopranos finale was harshly criticized for its lack of closure, the fates of Soprano and Mackey are very similar: both survived close wars with rivals that devastated their status quos, but survived to live with the consequences.

Unlike its fellow shows on FX, The Shield didn’t have any significant dip in quality. As a serialized show, it’s one of the few to have a definite beginning, middle and end point, something few of them end up doing. Thanks to its hybridization of the arc and case of the week stories, the show didn’t get too bogged down in its story, save for the second half of season six and the first half of the final season. Often that can make rewatching early episodes difficult knowing a satisfactory end isn’t there (X-Files). However, that doesn’t apply here. The series gets strong as it progresses and ends satisfyingly. My favorite season, the fifth, is a huge turning point in the story when the end game begins to be clear. How many shows can claim their best season was the fifth?

While Michael Chiklis’ brilliant portrayal of Detective Vic Mackey, one that gave him the first Emmy for a basic cable show, is certainly worth all its commendations, the rest of the cast is certainly deserving. On top of ones mentioned in the series finale review, there’s Jay Karnes’ Dutch, the nerd who could always be counted on to crack the worst cases; Kenneth Johnson’s Lem, the conscience of the Strike Team whose murder was the beginning of the end of the series; Benito Martinez’s David Aceveda, a politician with dreams of reform that erode as the series’ progresses. Then there are the recurring special guest stars, each of which could’ve been mere stunt casting, but rose above it. Glenn Close’s turn in season four as reform minded Captain Rowling turned into a comeback role, leading to her acclaimed performance on FX’s Damages. Forest Whitaker, a year before he won his Oscar in The Last King of Scotland proved a worthy foil to Vic in the season five cat and mouse game between them. The most surprising turn, however, was Anthony Anderson, previously best known for goofy comedies, as bloodthirsty kingpin Antwon Mitchell. This role was a turning point in his career, and lead to him landing roles in dramas like K-Ville and the Law and Order franchise.

Really, the series should be delved into deeper, and someday I hope to do a more in depth discussion of the series’ arc, perhaps seasonal overviews because a few pages isn’t enough. That’s one reason why it’s taken so long to get this review out.

2008 saw the end of two significant crime dramas, this one and HBO's The Wire (coincidentally, both series’ pilots and finales were directed by actor Clark Johnson). With a glut of TV shows about cops and detectives, especially of the CSI variety, both stood out with their bold styles and stories. Some have even compared the two shows. However, both shows have a different mission statement. The Wire was a defiant social commentary about political corruption and urban decay. While there was plenty of corruption, urban decay and epic tragedy featured on The Wire, The Shield was a character driven, action-adventure show. The Shield wasn’t about how the streets became what they are and why they stay that way. Regardless, both shows leave a huge void in the TV landscape. There will always be cop shows, but CSI: Miami won’t cut it until the next brilliant one comes along.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Special Review: The Shield "Family Meeting"

Family Meeting
Original Airdate: November 23, 2008
Writer: Shawn Ryan
Director: Clark Johnson

Last month FX closed the book on its flagship program The Shield. For six years, seven seasons or 88 episodes, The Shield told an epic tragedy of a team of dirty cops fighting and committing crime in an area of LA overpopulated by gangs and drug dealers and how their extracurricular activities lead their downfall. While many series’ final episodes tend to be disappointing, if a viewer sticks around that long in some cases, The Shield was riveting to the very end.

The finale was a brutal realization of the tragedies that have been building since the first episode. Fans have wondered whether Vic would get killed, go to prison or eat a bullet in the final chapter for his crimes. Instead, Shawn Ryan plotted something cleverer. Mackey, having confessed all of his sins, got a full immunity deal from the feds. However, it turns out the job he agreed to serve for immunity is a metaphorical hell, a desk job where you label your lunches and have to deal with an army of Bill Lumberghs (Mackey would rather take his chances with the worst of LA’s gangs no doubt) and will never do field work in his tenure. Also, his wife agreed to turn state’s witness and is now under witness protection (finale director Clark Johnson cameos as the agent showing her and her kids the new digs), leaving all traces of his life destroyed.

This is brought home in that amazing final scene. In the dialogue free last five minutes, Mackey dwells in his office surrounded by fluorescent light (killed every night at 6 unless he calls up and tells them he’s working late) and pictures of his children and Lem, the Strike Team member who never betrayed or was betrayed by Mackey. His glory days of breaking down doors are over and the closest he’ll get to that again is seeing patrol cars from many stories up. He is free from prosecution, but he has lost everything that made him fight to stay free. Absolutely brilliant.

Speaking of brilliant, Walton Goggins, along with Chiklis and CCH Pounder, needs to be nominated for an Emmy for his work (should be a great race between him and the Michael Emerson/Terry O’Quinn dream team on Lost). He’s always been good, but ever since Lem’s murder at the end of season five he’s been a revelation. His story in these final episodes, on the run with his pregnant wife and child, has been increasingly heartbreaking. Their hiding took increasingly heavy tolls, between losing their cash and Mara killing a woman, thereby assuring her a place in jail and Jackson a spot in foster care if they get caught. The moment where Shane helps Mara use the toilet (she had broken her collar bone in a fight) while Jackson, oblivious to the tragedy unfolding, plays in the tub, was sad, but didn’t compare to when Shane learned his last piece of leverage, the confessional of all of the Strike Team’s dirty deeds, was negated by Vic’s deal. With nothing left, Shane’s story was on a collision course with horrifying tragedy.

Shane’s “family meeting” (where the episode title comes from) is chilling from the moment he says those fateful words. Killing his wife and son to keep them from facing the consequences for his actions and doing himself in before he can finish the suicide note was a shocking moment. It The Shield has never shied away from dark territory, but this was unbelievable, yet so true to the show’s world and those characters. When we saw Mara and Jackson lying peacefully across the hall from where Shane shot himself, there were no words necessary, mostly because my jaw was on the floor.

Shane’s death, while motivated by it, negates the importance of Vic’s immunity deal. However, it makes the tragedy all the more potent, especially with the arrest of Ronnie, the last Strike Team member standing. Ronnie, while a favorite among my friends who watched the show, was until Lem’s death the Zeppo of the Strike Team, acting more to serve the story than to develop his own character. This element makes him the perfect candidate to take the fall for everything the Strike Team did in those three years. Not to mention Ronnie’s arrest shows a true compromise in one of Vic’s chief tenants: loyalty to his team.

On other fronts, Claudette’s facing mortality as she's no longer getting treatment for her lupus, choosing to come to work every day “until [she doesn’t]”. Claudette has always stood as the conscience of the Barn, one of the few characters whose character was unquestionably good. With the Strike Team gone, there’s no need for that counter, although they don’t go the obvious route and kill her off in this episode.

In a final season filled with guest stars popping up for one more appearance, Outkast rapper Andre Benjamin returned as Robert Huggins, former store owner vigilante turned mayoral candidate running on the promise of a “new paradigm”. He is an open challenger to David Aceveda, although how much of a chance he stood is presumed small. His assassination at the end of the episode could be taken as a blow to the hope Farmington has towards some kind of peace, but Tina, who arrests him at one of his illegal rallies, shows her support as his heart stops.

As the Strike Team is expelled from the Barn and Claudette stands before mortality, there are the rookies filling in their place, with Danny and Julien serving as teachers. Several stories also don't get closure that's expected. Dutch's season long crusade to corner burgeoning serial killer Lloyd, brought back thanks to his “missing” mother, isn't resolved. Her body isn’t even found. That the viewer knows well that Lloyd killed her is enough in this case. Julien's latent homosexuality, which has been long dormant, is revisited as he sees a happy gay couple enter a restaurant: enjoying the life his beliefs won't allow him to, but it isn't given more screen time than that. While this open ended resolution might’ve been frustrating, it’s played well enough to leave us to our own conclusions as to their futures.

Some viewers are theorizing that Dutch, in a desperate attempt to nail Lloyd, killed Rita and framed him. There are also people who suspect Aceveda put the hit on Huggins. I doubt either scenario. It’s not unusual for Dutch to get engrossed in a case, but to kill someone is going too far. For the latter, I don’t see what Aceveda has to gain by killing Huggins. If this were real, Huggins would likely be a Ralph Nader-esque third party candidate with no real threat. Really Huggins was there to show what a shell of a politician Aceveda’s become.

Overall, this finale was a stellar cap for one of TV’s finest cop shows. The major stories get wrapped up, but enough is left open for a proper “life goes on” motif. Even though Vic will get by the three year tenure for his immunity and pursue some type of private security/vigilantism afterwards no doubt (him tucking the gun in shows he’s not completely castrated by his new job), that his life he protected is no longer there is a brilliant way to have a tragic ending without copping out at all. This is one of the best finales I’ve ever seen, period.

Overall Score: 10/10