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Television Review: Family Meeting (The Shield, S7X13, 2008)@drax104d
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  1. Television Review: Possible Kill Screen (The Shield, S7X12, 2008)@drax105d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Possible Kill Screen (S07E12)

    Airdate: 18 November 2008

    Written by: Charles H. Eegle & Evan Bleiweiss Directed by: Billy Gierhart

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    In the era often heralded as the Golden Age of Television, a distinct narrative architecture emerged, fundamentally altering how premium drama was consumed and structured. While traditional series relied on episodic self-containment, the new formula prioritised the season as a cohesive narrative unit. Within this framework, a particular trope became prevalent: the penultimate episode frequently reserved the most consequential "wham" moments, the seismic plot shifts that would define the series' conclusion, leaving the actual finale to serve merely as a narrative mop-up, tidying the loose threads remaining after the explosion. The Shield, a drama series often considered one of the most innovative and groundbreaking of its era, adhered to this new rule near its end. Possible Kill Screen, the twelfth episode of the seventh season, represents precisely one of those pivotal "wham" moments where major plot points are either resolved or appear decisively set on a path to resolution.

    The Shield continues with its tradition of uninspired or extremely complicated episode titles, and Possible Kill Screen is another such example—a reference which will probably be completely arcane to anyone who was born after 2000. The phrase originates from video gaming culture, referring to the concept of a player whose skill is so high that it breaks the game, advancing beyond the highest level into a glitched state where the game becomes unplayable. While the title might feel disconnected from the grit of the LAPD, the concept of the "kill screen" serves as a potent metaphor for the plot dealing with the main character, the "player" who apparently managed to "break" his own "game". It is Vic Samuel Mackey, former LAPD detective and leader of the Strike Team, whose numerous crimes and corruption have cost him money, career, friends and family. He was just about to lose his freedom or possibly life, with his former colleagues led by Captain Wyms turning his own wife Corrine into a possible witness against him. les of justice that should have ended him.

    The plot of the episode shows that Vic apparently uses the very last option his street smarts and contacts have given him, and he does it in a very ruthless manner. He apparently manages to win the trust of Beltran, a cartel figure, and becomes aware of a major drug smuggling operation that would flood the streets of Los Angeles. This operation involved not only the Guerrero Cartel but also local Black gangs organised into a "board of directors". Just as he was pestering Beltran to become his main "fixer" on the streets of Farmington, Vic had also been pestering ICE agent Olivia Massey to work as an undercover officer to bring down the cartels and gangs in the most spectacular bust ever made. Vic's price, however, is steep—he demands full immunity for all of his crimes and financial compensation in the form of federal employment.

    At first, it looks that such a deal will collapse when Vic brings Ronnie Gardocki, his last remaining and loyal friend within the Barn, to a federal building hoping to work out the same arrangement. Federal authorities refuse, and Vic, knowing that Ronnie will, unprotected by any deal, go down for his crimes, initially walks away. But when Wyms' attempt to arrest Vic during another planned exchange with Corrine fails because Vic has spotted undercover officers in the background, Wyms orders Corrine to be arrested in order to protect her cover. This inadvertently saves Vic, because, now with his ex-wife in custody, he feels extra pressure to accept the deal. He ultimately throws Ronnie under the bus, securing his own escape at the expense of his last remaining ally.

    While Vic has cleared the path towards solving all of his problems, the walls are closing in on Shane in the most tragic way possible. With hardly any money to provide for his pregnant wife and a young son, and knowing that his flight from the police in such condition won't last long, Shane snatches the last desperate attempt to improve his financial situation by robbing a couple of professional gamblers he had known since his Vice days. He goes into their home, only to find that the gamblers are about to rob him. It is Mara who intervenes in a desperate attempt to save her husband and does so, but at a terrible price. In the scuffle, she accidentally shoots a woman to death, while herself has her collarbone broken. The episode ends with her in a decrepit abandoned home, lying in intolerable pain and being tortured by conscience over the life she has taken, while Shane, forced to take drugs at the scene, is unable to help her.

    Vic, in the end, signs the deal, but before he could start working for ICE, he must give a full confession. The moment, which starts with 45 seconds of silence, is a tour de force. Vic calmly and confidently confesses everything—corrupt dealings with drug dealers, the murder of Terry Crowley, the Armenian money train robbery, covering for Shane's killing of Lem. When he ends, Olivia Massey is justifiably horrified, realising that the federal government just allowed the monster to remain unpunished for an unimaginable series of crimes. Wyms arrives at the building to protest, but it is too late; the papers are signed and Vic is untouchable. For Wyms, this is a catastrophic defeat that makes her lose her nerves, and she lashes at Dutch, who ultimately gets fired in the fallout.

    Written by Adam E. Fierro and Evan Bleiweiss, the latter having the debut near the very end of the series, Possible Kill Screen also represented directing debut for Billy Gierhart, a camera operator who was working on the series from the beginning. Gierhart has asked Shawn Ryan for the opportunity to direct, and Ryan agreed, but kept postponing until the very end. Despite initial reluctance to give such an important episode to the rookie, Ryan finally relented. Ryan's confidence in Gierhart was justified, because Possible Kill Screen is often considered as one of the finest episodes or even the finest pieces of television of its time. Most of the praise goes to Michael Chiklis, delivering a brilliant performance in the confession scene. Although he doesn't reveal anything the audience haven't already known, he finally drops all masks and shows the character of Vic Mackey as a ruthless, calculating sociopath he has always been.

    The episode also brings an excellent performance from Walton Goggins, playing the character the audience initially despised because of his racism and recklessness, but who is now transformed into a tragic figure. He is a man who is faced with the end of everything he lived for, watching his wife become a victim and his own future disintegrate into addiction and desperation. Furthermore, the episode again tries to tie up a couple of loose ends from storylines in previous episodes. Dutch mentions planting evidence against a paedophile, leading to Wyms' outburst against Dutch, while Dutch confronts Rita Denton over the calls she was making, setting the stage for the resolution of her son's storyline in the final episode.

    Possible Kill Screen represents great exmple of tension and character deconstruction. It encapsulates the very essence of The Shield's legacy: the moral ambiguity of its protagonists and the relentless momentum of its storytelling. By juxtaposing Vic's calculated ascent to impunity against Shane's chaotic descent into ruin, the episode solidifies the series' reputation as a dark, unflinching examination of law enforcement and human fallibility. The technical prowess displayed in the direction and acting ensures that the viewer is profoundly disturbed by the consequences of the choices made within these walls.

    RATING: 8/10 (+++)

    ==

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  2. Television Review: Petty Cash (The Shield, S7X11, 2008)@drax105d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Petty Cash (S07E11)

    Airdate: 11 November 2008

    Written by: Charles H. Eegle & Directed by: Gwyneth Horder-Payton

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    The conclusion of The Shield stands as one of the saddest pieces of television to emerge from the golden age of prestige drama, not because of a decline in quality, but due to the crushing emotional weight of the finale. The audience, having invested countless hours in these characters, is forced to watch their heroes finally receive long-postponed and well-deserved ends, yet they arrive in spectacularly embarrassing and humiliating fashion rather than through heroic sacrifice. The episode Petty Cash, which aired before the final two episodes were meant to deliver a devastating realisation, appears relatively quiet and uneventful on the surface. However, beneath this calm facade, the world of Vic Mackey and Shane Vendrell continues to collapse, building a sense of inevitable doom with a whimper before the inevitable bang that will define their legacy.

    Vic, having lost his LAPD badge, still deludes himself that he remains a serious player in the dysfunctional world of Farmington and beyond. He believes he has found an ingenious way to finance his future by playing a double game. He presents himself to Beltran as an experienced and well-connected player who can mediate a lucrative drug distribution deal between Mexican cartels and the Black “board of directors”. Simultaneously, he attempts to win extra favour by providing ICE agent Olivia Massey with blackmail files related to her, hoping that he will somehow secure freedom and employment from the federal government through this cooperation. Yet, for all of his grandstanding and calculated manoeuvres, at least some of the players are seeing through his last machinations. Aceveda is particularly astute, correctly assuming that Pezuela’s alleged suicide was a ploy to make him a co-operative witness for the federal government.

    While Vic can still play his self-described “superhero” while negotiating the deal between the Mexican cartel and Black gangsters, he is far less able to anticipate or deal with the dangers that have come from much closer to home, namely his own family. Corinne is now fully participating in Claudette’s and Dutch’s investigation and takes part in a sting operation made out of Shane’s last-ditch desperate attempt to secure 100,000 US dollars from Vic through blackmail. The operation, in which Corinne proves to be a bad actress and undercover agent, achieves nothing except sealing Ronnie’s fate. After being sent to the park to warn Corinne, Ronnie has confirmed that he is in cahoots with Vic, and it is only a matter of time before he could be arrested. Julien is asked whether he would help Claudette in bringing down his former partners, and Julien does so without hesitation, marking the final severing of loyalty within the Strike Team.

    While Vic managed to somehow snatch 100,000 US dollars by deceiving Black gangsters during the negotiations, Shane has much bigger problems obtaining money. He needs it more than Vic, having been on the run together with his pregnant wife and two-year-old son. He still possesses some street smarts and the ability to obtain a well-hidden gun and evade capture, but in the end, he has to rely on his wife to help him rob her former employer’s office. The robbery, during which Shane is forced to hold a cleaning crew at gunpoint and Mara has to arrive to help him with the safe combination, is both tragic and comical in the same instant. In the end, it nets barely 2,500 US dollars, with Shane’s former acquaintance telling him that the loss of his badge meant the loss of all leverage. In the final, devastating scene, Mara tells Shane that they don’t have any friends in the world but themselves, highlighting their isolation.

    Petty Cash, written by Charles H. Eegle and Jamaal Turner, was notable for being directed by Craig Brewer, a filmmaker famous for Hustle & Flow and Black Snake Moan. Those films, dealing with characters down on their luck, corresponded perfectly with the general theme of this episode. The direction brings a raw, musical energy to the despair, mirroring the characters' struggle to find rhythm in their collapsing lives. While Vic and Shane had done evil things, the script made the last-ditch efforts to humanise them. While talking with Beltran, Vic explains that his grandparents did what society expected them to do and followed the law only to die broke and unhappy. Vic is again shown as someone who, at least, was a good parent when he expresses genuine pride during his last meeting with Cassidy, who is revealed to have good grades in math. Shane is also shown as genuinely loyal to his family, having abandoned everybody and everything else to protect them.

    Yet, the episode is far from perfect. It still sticks to the formula of procedural storylines, this time dealing with Cardell Rhodes, a local high school prodigy football player who got killed in the neighbourhood. Julien is sent to help with the investigation, because he knew the victim, described as something of a hero and role model with a bright future. The killing occurred while the victim was in company with a recruiter who was the actual target. The killer is revealed to be Mia, played by Virginia Watson, a grieving mother of a teenager who had been passed by the same recruiter and killed in gangland violence. Apart from showing that the tragedies will continue to happen in Farmington even without Vic and Shane around, this storyline, presented in a typical “blink and you miss it” style, does not serve any purpose at this stage of the series. It feels like a lingering habit from a procedural format that has long since outgrown its structure.

    Additionally, the scene in which Shane has to retrieve a hidden gun from homeless people is also a little bit too melodramatic and tries too much to symbolically show the depths Shane has fallen to. While effective in its visual storytelling, it borders on theatricality that undermines the gritty realism the rest of the episode establishes. Ultimately, however, Petty Cash remains a pivotal moment of quiet desperation in a series defined by its chaos.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

    ==

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  3. Television Review: Party Line (The Shield, S7X10, 2008)@drax106d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Party Line (S07E10)

    Airdate: 4 November 2008

    Written by: Angela Russo & John Hlavin Directed by: Gwyneth Horder-Payton

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    As The Shield marched toward its bleak conclusion in the autumn of 2008, the world outside the television screen was undergoing its own catastrophic collapse. The global financial crisis, precipitated by the imploding US real estate market and the subsequent Wall Street crash, cast a shadow over the entire nation. Viewers in America and across the globe were grappling with their own grim financial futures, watching their savings evaporate in real time. This convergence of fictional tragedy and real-life misery—where too many shady shenanigans destroyed lives and fortunes—provided a potent backdrop for one of the most resonant episodes of Season 7, Party Line.

    At the heart of the narrative lies the continuous, deteriorating conflict between former best friends, Vic Mackey and Shane Vendrell. Vic, having abandoned the LAPD, is now the hunter, while Shane is on the run as the hunted, wanted for attempting to kill Ronnie Gardocki. Shane has fully embraced the fugitive lifestyle, yet he is burdened by the company of his pregnant wife, Mara, and their two-year-old son, Jackson. However, Mara proves unexpectedly useful during their flight; leveraging her background as a former real estate agent, she notices the aftermath of the market collapse. With many properties, including grand mansions, left unsold and empty, she identifies a suitable location for the Vandrells to squat. This decision to hide in such a residence transforms their narrative from one of mere survival into one of temporary displacement in luxury.

    This squatting in a mansion provides the backdrop for perhaps the season's most poignant, if fleeting, moments. While not the most critical plot point in terms of forward momentum, this domestic scene is undoubtedly the most touching. Despite their dire circumstances and the temporary nature of their stay, the life within the mansion looks like the realisation of dreams for both spouses—a good life that Shane had been willing to cross every moral boundary to achieve. In one particularly tender scene, Mara invites Shane to join her by the pool, and later, Shane entertains his dancing wife and young son by playing the piano. It is a brief, almost idyllic picture of domestic bliss, a stark contrast to the violence that surrounds them.

    Yet, this domestic tranquility is shattered when the property is suddenly visited by a real estate agent. Shane is forced to hold her at gunpoint to prevent her from alerting authorities and allowing himself and his family to flee. The Vandrells are then faced with another manifestation of the real world's ugliness when they are ambushed by two Latino gangbangers seeking to collect the $10,000 bounty Vic placed on his former partner's head. Shane manages to negotiate his way to freedom, but only at the cost of $100,000—the very money the Vandrells need to continue their flight. Shane subsequently contacts Vic and demands that he produce this recompensation, threatening to send incriminating evidence to the Barn.

    This prospect is deeply troubling for Ronnie, who has managed to retain his job at the Barn. Unlike Vic, Ronnie fears that Shane will be caught and forced to flip. He suggests that running to Mexico would be the wisest option for both himself and Vic to escape the inevitable. Vic disagrees, clinging to the belief that he can catch Shane before the LAPD does. Furthermore, Vic believes an emerging ICE undercover job could secure him favour and salvation, demonstrating his persistent, albeit delusional, confidence.

    However, this avenue opens in a manner Vic never intended. He arrives at Pezuela's place only to see Beltran watching Pezuela being viciously beaten by Councilman Aceveda, who has finally had enough of his humiliations. Beltran's lack of reaction suggests that Pezuela has outlived his usefulness for the cartels. Vic immediately tries to win Beltran's favour by volunteering to take out Pezuela for him. In a twist of fate, Pezuela actually comes to Agent Murray and agrees to flip on the cartels, leading Vic to stage his fake suicide.

    While this little drama unfolds, Vic suffers his biggest setback from an unexpected direction—although he is not yet aware of it. Corinne, Vic's ex-wife, has had enough. Disgusted by Vic's murderous plans against Mara, she decides to inform Claudette and Dutch about the situation. The two detectives monitor her conversation with Mara, and Claudette offers Mara the chance to turn herself in, promising the best possible deal for her, her children, and even Shane. Mara reacts by revealing that Corrine has decided to cooperate with LAPD to Shane, unwittingly opening the avenue for another round of violence to play out in last three episodes of the series.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

    ==

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  4. Television Review: Moving Day (The Shield, S7X09, 2008)@drax106d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Moving Day (S07E09)

    Airdate: 28 October 2008

    Written by: Adam E. Fierro & Lisa Randolph Directed by: Rhon Schmidt

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    Following the seismic "wham" event that concluded the previous episode, where Vic Mackey severed his final ties with the LAPD and Shane Vendrell transformed into a wanted fugitive, Season 7 of The Shield marches inexorably toward its grim, inevitable conclusion. However, despite the ticking clock and the harrowing stakes, the narrative momentum feels somewhat sluggish, more akin to the series' frenetic earlier seasons. Screenwriters Adam Fierro and Lisa Randolph once again rely heavily on the vagaries of chance and the convenient mechanisms of random acts of fate. These contrivances serve as the primary plot devices for sparing certain characters from immediate death and delaying the resolution of entrenched conflicts, adding a layer of artificiality to an otherwise gritty realism that fans expect. While the trajectory is clear, the execution lacks the punch that defined the previous episode, leaving the audience to endure a slower burn than anticipated as the axe hangs over the remaining characters.

    It is patently obvious that Shane Vendrell, having escaped the Barn mere seconds after being identified as the architect of the hit on his partner Ronnie, is not a man to be caught so easily. The necessity of his escape and the imperative to cover his tracks were established long before this moment, and a person with Shane's extensive contacts and tactical experience would surely possess a sophisticated plan to evade the police dragnet. Yet, Shane is not undertaking this harrowing journey alone; he is burdened by the presence of Mara and his two-year-old son, Jackson. Jackson is suffering from whooping cough, a condition exacerbated by his mother's negligence in managing his medication while fleeing their home. As the family is forced to hide in seedy motels, the boy's condition deteriorates rapidly. After a series of terrifying close calls, and following Mara's refusal of his very sensible suggestion that she turn herself in to the authorities, Shane agrees to a truly pathetic solution: he will hide his family as squatters in one of the many unsold real estate properties that litter the city, a grim testament to his financial and social ruin.

    Shane finds himself hunted not only by the LAPD but also by Vic Mackey himself. Vic, at first, appears outwardly unperturbed by the loss of his police badge, viewing it merely as a temporary inconvenience. However, he soon realises that the badge was the only leverage he had to extract information from the street, and his resolve to track down and eliminate Shane before the police can do so hardens into a singular focus. Much to the horror of Ronnie, Vic expresses a chilling determination to take Mara down with him, regardless of the fact that she is pregnant. The two-year-old Jackson is slated to be spared simply because, as a child, he is incapable of testifying. However, fate intervenes in a profoundly dramatic fashion when Jackson actually catches the Vendrells at a hospital while they attempt to secure medicine and treatment for his ill boy. Just as Shane prepares to fire, there is an almost miraculous arrival of LAPD officers, and Mara’s quick thinking manages to diffuse the situation with a lie. Despite the chaos, Mara has maintained contact with Corrine, and when she finally shares the harrowing details of what has transpired, Corrine appears to have lost the last vestiges of loyalty to her husband, finally viewing him as the monster he truly is.

    Meanwhile, Vic attempts to carve out a new role for himself as an undercover agent for ICE. It quickly becomes apparent that the federal government views Councilman Aceveda as a far superior candidate for the role. Consequently, Aceveda is forced to endure a humiliating public dressing-down from Cruz Pezuela, who employs the tactic in front of Guillermo Beltran (Francesco Quinn), a representative of the Guerrero Cartel sent to supervise Pezuela’s operations in Los Angeles. Aceveda suffers this indignity because winning the trust of Pezuela is crucial for the ICE sting operation, something he hopes will serve as the springboard for his own mayoral campaign. The scene highlights Aceveda's utter desperation, willing to degrade himself personally to advance his political ascent, a stark contrast to Vic's chaotic decline.

    The careers of two detectives at the Barn become collateral damage in the wake of Vic Mackey's collapse. Captain Wymms formally dissolves the Strike Team, a bureaucratic move that necessitates Julien's transfer back to uniform duties, a prospect that Julien clearly despises. Ronnie, attempting to be pragmatic amidst the wreckage, breaches the code of silence by telling Claudette about Vic's own doubts regarding whether Shane actually killed Lem.

    Two other detectives find themselves entangled in their own ethical quandaries that reflect the moral decay surrounding them. Steve Billings learns from his estranged wife Allison (Hannah Cox) that a convicted paedophile, Irving Heep (Spencer Huckabee), has moved into their neighbourhood and is apparently fixated on their teenage daughter, Agnes (Natalie Dreyfuss). Allison begs her husband to intervene, but Billings lacks the jurisdiction to act, a bureaucratic dead end that leaves the family vulnerable. Yet, an anonymous tip and the conveniently found cache of child pornography are enough to send Heep to jail. Dutch is all but convinced that his partner has planted the evidence, but he is powerless to prove it.

    In a separate but equally disturbing thread, Dutch’s obsession with Lloyd Denton and his theory that Lloyd is a serial killer in the bringing brings Lloyd's mother, Rita, to his home. Rita misinterprets Dutch’s intense interest in her son as something romantic, forcing Dutch into an awkward and uncomfortable situation. The dynamic becomes even more unpleasant after Rita all but confirms Dutch's darkest suspicions about her son, leaving Dutch to grapple with the possibility that he is right.

    Moving Day is undoubtedly a well-acted episode, showcasing the cast at the height of their abilities, yet the plot is still significantly slowed down by the baggage Shane carries with his family and by Vic missing his golden opportunity to end the Vendrells once and for all. Nevertheless, it is an episode that all but completes Vic Mackey’s moral descent, cementing his image as a ruthless killer who is not above taking out a pregnant woman. Shane, for all the heinous crimes he had committed throughout the series, appears somewhat ethical in this episode, actually attempting to do the right thing by advising Mara to turn herself in. She, of course, refuses, because doing so would simplify the narrative structure and bring the end of the series much closer than its creators had desired.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  5. Television Review: Parricide (The Shield, S7X08, 2008)@drax107d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Parricide (S07E08)

    Airdate: 21 October 2008

    Written by: Kurt Sutter & Elisabeth A. Hansen Directed by: Guy Ferland

    Running Time: 47 minutes

    Parricide is the second episode of The Shield’s final season to be titled after a relatively obscure Latin word used for a specific type of killing; however, unlike Genocide, which was originally aired a few weeks earlier, nobody actually gets killed during it in the literal sense. This absence of bloodshed, however, does not imply that nothing dies; in fact, the episode is riddled with symbolic fatalities that carry far more weight than physical ones. The list of casualties includes the complete disintegration of a police unit, the shattering of a family, and the professional career of the series' main character, Vic Mackey. The death of his career had been hinted at as a possibility and was viewed as a near-certainty for the entire series, but seeing it come to fruition in this episode brings a grim finality to the narrative.

    The episode marks the moment when the long-standing charade of friendship and professional brotherhood that had kept Strike Team finally comes crashing down. By this point, Vic and Ronnie have already attempted to take out Shane, and Shane, having survived the attack, strikes back. His tool is Two-Man, a low-level pimp whom Ronnie had manhandled during a recent arrest. Shane recruited Two-Man to assassinate Ronnie, setting the stage for a violent night. Shane himself waits in ambush for Vic. However, Two-Man misses his target, and Ronnie, alerted to the danger, manages to warn Vic. Consequently, Shane misses his chance to eliminate him, leaving him exposed and vulnerable.

    To make things even worse for Shane, his attempt on a police detective, even if it is unsuccessful, is bound to make Captain Wyms put all the resources of the Barn into finding the perpetrator. The investigation is assigned to Dutch and Billings, the Barn’s best investigators, and Two-Man has the misfortune of having his motorcycle, which was used during the attack, spotted by witnesses. The bike is easily identified, leading to Two-Man’s capture. He is brought into the Barn, and despite Shane’s desperate attempts to prevent the inevitable and talk him into remaining silent, Two-Man ultimately cracks under the pressure. He points to Shane as the person who hired him as the assassin. Realising he has no choice, Shane is forced to flee the Barn, knowing full well that he will become a wanted man.

    Shane, however, was not completely incompetent and had some plans for this eventuality. Mara and his little son, Jackson, are joining him on the long escape, but not before Mara arrives at Corrine’s home and spills everything she knows about Vic’s misdeeds, including the murder of Terry Crowley. This action is calculated to act as a warning to Vic—a reminder that Shane still possesses the means to bring him down with him. It is a desperate bid to ensure that Vic cannot simply walk away unscathed from the inevitable conflict.

    Yet, instead of ending the conflict, Shane’s actions only fuel the escalation. Vic, now knowing that Corrine would never again have anything to do with someone as destructive and dangerous as himself, has nothing left to lose. Captain Wyms also commits a significant miscalculation when she thinks that Vic could be ordered to simply sit in the Barn for the last few days before his termination. Instead, Vic resigns on the spot, walks out of the Barn, and finally unburdens himself of the last vestiges of law and professional considerations. He decides to hunt Shane on his own, turning the dynamic from a team effort into a personal vendetta."

    "Before this paradigm-changing development, the script by Kurt Sutter and Gary Lennon actually bothers to remind the audience that Vic and Shane's antics occur in a world that does not always revolve around him. Vic's last foray as the head of Strike Team and some sort of positive force in Farmington deals with Father Morton (Silas Weir Mitchell), a Catholic priest. It turns out that the priest was apparently involved in drug dealing in cahoots with the E Park Johnnies, a local African American gang. After some inquiry, it is revealed that the church stood in the way of Pezuela's real estate development and that the local gang had actually blackmailed the priest by having his girlfriend and illegitimate child. Strike Team sets them free, showing Vic’s street smart efficiency even in his final days as policeman.

    Even before that, Vic had offered his service to the federal government via Olivia and her ICE bosses, volunteering to act as an undercover agent against Pezuela. However, the script leaves this plan hanging in the air, raising questions about how this operation would be relevant after his resignation.

    Silas Weir Mitchell, a character actor specialised in roles of psychopaths and lunatics and best known of them being Haywire in Prison Break, delivers a very good performance in one of the last notable guest appearances in the series, playing a priest burdened by some wrong choices he had made during his career.

    Directed competently by Guy Ferland, Parricide isn't among the truly best episodes of the series, but it logically and, to a degree, efficiently propels the series plot towards its grim and credible conclusion. It serves as a necessary piece of machinery in the narrative engine, consolidating the themes of betrayal and survival that have defined the show from the beginning.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

    ==

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  6. Television Review: Bitches Brew (The Shield, S7X07, 2008)@drax107d

    (source:imdb.com)

    Bitches Brew (S07E07)

    Airdate: 14 October 2008

    Written by: Charles H. Eegle & Elisabeth A. Hansen Directed by: Stephen Kay

    Running Time: 47 minutes

    With Bitches Brew, the seventh and final season of The Shield reaches its midpoint. With only six episodes remaining, the narrative pace must accelerate to drive Vic Mackey's saga toward its logical and, by all appearances, increasingly grim conclusions. The episode possesses a structural elegance, generating an overarching symmetry with the preceding episode, Animal Control. In the former, Vic devised a plan revealed throughout; in Bitches Brew, elements of a plan appear, and Shane constructs a plan from those elements at the end.

    Time is indeed running out for Vic, whose career will end much sooner than he expected. The mishandled investigation into the city controller Robert Martin's assassination, combined with David Aceveda handing the "blackmail box" to federal authorities, has conspired to have his police board hearing scheduled much sooner. Vic loses—and loses badly; he will be terminated from the LAPD and lose his pension in just ten days. In desperation, he attempts to win some points with Cruz Pezuela, the Mexican cartels' representative, but Pezuela suddenly loses interest in him.

    Even bigger danger for Vic, although he does not know it yet, is Shane. Having evaded Vic's trap by chance and survived the Mexican attack on the Armenians, Shane knows that Vic and Ronnie want him dead. The only way to evade this fate is to strike first, while his two former friends still believe that he didn't realise that he knows about their intentions. The way he could do it comes, ironically, by reappearance of the ghost from Vic's past.

    That ghost is Farrah, the street prostitute who years ago manipulated Vic to do her bidding. Vic, with palpable lack of enthusiasm, is called to investigate the case of Farrah's pimp, Bombay, who is suspected of beating another prostitute to death. Strike Team is called to investigate because Bombay is involved in meth cooking. After roughing up Two-Man (Billoah Greene), one of Bombay's enforcers, Strike Team raids Bombay's lab. However, Bombay tries to run guns blazing, forcing Julien Lowe to shoot him dead. Vic later learns that Farrah apparently warned Bombay about the raid, and did it deliberately, knowing that he would confront police and get killed. Farrah later triumphantly admits to Vic that she orchestrated the whole affair to get even with Bombay for kicking her out. While disgusted Vic realises that he has been played by crack-addict whore again, he isn't aware that Two-Man is being approached by Shane and hired to kill Ronnie.

    As Vic's world continues to crumble, he still finds ways to make lives miserable for people around him. He starts a lawsuit against Danny over custody of Lee. After Danny talks with Corrine, Vic is seemingly willing to work out a compromise. However, instead, Danny has enough and begins to pack her belongings, apparently wanting to escape LA and Vic's presence, even if it would mean end of her career. This is the second time one of Vic's baby mamas has hit the road to get away from this guy.

    While Vic's relations to people around him turn increasingly toxic, Dutch and Claudette actually bond because of another case. A burglar was apparently shot by home owner and Dutch's investigation discovers pattern of increasingly brazen break-ins. Claudette's home is in the neighbourhood and Dutch, being concerned for her well-being, goes there and finds her house in complete disarray. The investigation points to Lester, former policeman and security expert who organised break-ins in order to increase the sale of security systems among frightened neighbourhood. After solving the mystery, Dutch confronts Claudette who admits that her lupus is much worse than she told and that she simply can't maintain her home. Dutch offers to help her by paying cleaning lady from his pocket. Dutch telling her he was hiring a cleaning lady to help her was incredibly sweet and a great moment between the two, who have always had one of the best and most interesting relationships not only on The Shield.

    Written by Charles H. Eegle and Elisabeth A. Hansen, "Bitches Brew" is one of the better episodes of Season 7, albeit not perfect. The plot concerning "blackmail box" is still confusing, turning it into MacGuffin and making the storyline about Mexican cartels, Aceveda and corrupt agent Olivia Massey too complicated and too distracting for this stage of the series. Such a crucial story beat so close to the show's endgame really shouldn't be so fundamentally illogical.

    When the episode actually deals with Mackey and his apparent ignominious end, it is much better. The last three episodes, including Bitches Brew, has brought back that sick feeling with a vengeance. Frankly, it's been uncomfortable at times (in a good way) watching Vic Mackey being systematically picked apart as The Shield comes to a close. The episode works very hard to show Vic as arrogant and destructive, destroying the little sympathy he had enjoyed among audience and making his coming end look well-deserved. Vic is growing increasingly blind to what's around him, lashing out for no real reason and it's notable that he doesn't trust Farrah at all, which is why her manipulating him again is so notable.

    The presence of Farrah and Lester—two side characters from previous episodes—also serves this episode well. Farrah shows that Vic is so arrogant that even crack-addicted prostitute can play him like violin despite his stated unwillingness to have anything to do with her. The last shot of Farrah, leaning back against the car in a horror parody of a pinup girl, is so vicious and exactly right for her exit.

    Lester, morally challenged "security expert" shows the best possible future for Vic if he somehow keeps his life or freedom at the end of the series. If Vic somehow survives Shane's wrath, and avoids getting killed by the cartels, Lester's life is the best thing he has to look forward to, and he has no one to blame but himself.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

    ==

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  7. Television Review: Animal Control (The Shield, S7X06, 2008)@drax108d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Animal Control (S07E06)

    Airdate: 7 October 2008

    Written by: Jeff Hlavin & Angela Russo Directed by: Gwyneth Hordern-Payton

    Running Time: 47 minutes

    Animal Control, the sixth episode of the seventh season of The Shield, serves as a perfect illustration of a famous quote by Prussian military theorist Carl von Clausewitz: "no plan survives contact with the reality." This phrase could be applied to many episodes of the acclaimed crime drama, particularly when it comes to the scheming and often doomed plans of Detective Vic Mackey. Animal Control provides yet another example of this principle in action.

    The main plot development revolves around Vic hatching another of his 'brilliant' plans, one that he believes will simultaneously solve a multitude of his problems. The crux of this plan is to manipulate the Armenian mob and their leader Rezian into a meeting with a representative of the Mexican cartels named Rios. During this rendezvous, the Armenians are supposed to purchase what is referred to as the "blackmail box" from the Mexicans. However, the Mexicans have no intention of selling anything to the Armenians; instead, they view this meeting as an opportunity to deliver a devastating blow to the Armenian organization.

    Meanwhile, Vic, who has finally accepted the perspective of his partner Ronnie that Shane must be made to pay for the murder of their friend Lem, sets his sights on eliminating Shane during the meeting with the Armenian mob. Vic goes so far as to secretly remove the bullets from Shane's gun, ensuring that his former partner will be unarmed and vulnerable during the anticipated shootout.

    As the episode unfolds, it appears that Vic's plan is going off without a hitch. However, Shane somehow manages to survive the attack. This survival is due to rather sheer chance. In the aftermath of the failed hit, Shane returns to the home of his wife Mara, revealing that he is fully aware of Vic's treachery. He states plainly that he knows Vic tried to set him up and that his former partners believe him to be too foolish to realize the truth. This revelation serves as the ultimate "wham" moment, permanently shattering any hope of reconciliation between Vic and Shane.

    Before this climactic event, Shane is forced to confront a specter from his past that serves as a painful reminder of another "wham" moment in his life. Detective Tavon Garris, a former member of the Strike Team, arrives at the Barn as a Vice detective seeking Shane's assistance in apprehending a particularly vicious rapist. Shane had established a rapport with a teenage girl who is key to the investigation, and Tavon requires Shane's expertise to handle her. The investigation proves successful, but in the end, Tavon confronts Shane about their violent altercation that left Tavon nearly dead and robbed of his memories. Even more damagingly, Tavon knows that he was manipulated into believing that he attacked Mara. This confrontation leads to no real resolution and has little consequence beyond providing Shane with additional motivation to request a transfer out of the Strike Team.

    In addition to the main storyline, *Animal Control'*features another subplot that ultimately proves to be rather weak in comparison. Officer Tina Hanlon discovers a naked man, later identified as Jack Busada, in an alley. Busada, a recovering alcoholic, is brought to the Farm, where records reveal prior arrests for indecent exposure, which he attributes to sleepwalking. Dutch, still obsessed with the idea of catching serial killers, becomes intrigued by Busada's unusual sexual practices and strange behavior, leading him to suspect that the man may have harmed or killed a woman. Busada confesses to having bizarre fantasies and later, presumably haunted by a sense of guilt, takes his own life in the interrogation room. This event causes Dutch to realize that he may have overstepped his bounds in his investigation, prompting him to request Billings to restrain him in future investigation.

    Meanwhile, Vic discovers that his wife Corrine, under the stress of their turbulent family life, has begun taking "downers" to help her sleep and is on the brink of addiction. This latest complication is temporarily resolved when Corrine relinquishes the pills to Vic, who is left to deal with the situation.

    Written by the newly introduced writing team of John Hlavin and Angela Russo, Animal Control would have been a classic episode of The Shield if it had focused solely on the Armenian vs. Mexican and Vic vs. Shane plotlines. However, the inclusion of the various melodramatic distractions, such as the side plot involving nudity and suicide, detracts from the main narrative. Tavon's brief return also feels like inconsequential filler, and even the central plot relies too heavily on the Armenian mobsters, who, by this point in the series, should have been savvy enough to avoid falling into such an obvious trap.

    Despite these shortcomings, Animal Control remains a solid episode that showcases the complex and often morally ambiguous world of The Shield.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  8. Television Review: Game Face (The Shield, S7X05, 2008)@drax108d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Game Face (S07E05)

    Airdate: 30 September 2008

    Written by: Charles H. Eegle Directed by: Michael Chiklis

    Running Time: 49 minutes

    Perhaps Shawn Ryan and the rest of his creative team have been hoarding their best narrative tricks for the actual series finale, as the general run-of-the-mill quality of the first five episodes of the final season of The Shield suggests such a strategy. These instalments did little to distinguish themselves, neither achieving great heights nor committing fatal flaws, existing instead as a holding pattern for the show's conclusion. The fifth instalment, titled Game Face, serves as a quintessential example of this mid-season lull—competent but utterly unremarkable, marking time before the curtain falls.

    The central narrative continues to follow the three surviving members of the original Strike Team as they find themselves standing between the Armenian mob and Mexican cartels, each bringing a radically different philosophy to the table regarding how to go through this dangerous terrain. Vic, ever the manipulator, believes he can engineer the warring factions to continue their conflict indefinitely to his own benefit. Shane, conversely, has adopted a far more pragmatic and fatalistic approach, suggesting that they simply surrender the "blackmail box" to the Mexicans and wash their hands of the affair. Ronnie, caught in the crossfire, remains torn between these two extreme options. Vic, during a conversation with Shane, articulates his ultimate aim in bringing down Pezuela, the cartel representative, not simply as a tactical victory but as a "downpayment for being able to live with myself." He frames it as a noble gesture, a good deed intended to make Farmington a better place and serve as some form of penance for the countless crimes he has committed over the years. Shane, who also appears to be grappling with his own troubled conscience, offers a far more cynical and pragmatic perspective, arguing that taking down a powerful evil crime lord like Pezuela is a futile exercise because it will only create a vacuum that someone else will inevitably fill.

    In the meantime, a more immediate crisis looms for Vic and his temporary ally, Aceveda, who is currently campaigning for the position of LA mayor. The primary concern is determining exactly what the ICE agent, Olivia Massey, knows about Vic's ongoing operation against the cartels, especially now that she has been compromised. Vic decides to confront her directly. In a tearful admission, Massey reveals that she has indeed been blackmailed by the cartels, the leverage being her brother's involvement in illegal bookmaking operations. This revelation highlights the precariousness of Vic's position; one wrong move could spell the end of his operation and his freedom.

    Separately, Captain Wyms finds herself haunted by the spectre of the past in the form of the imprisoned serial killer Kleavon Gardner. Gardner, acting as his own attorney in a civil suit, has deposed former detectives in the Barn to gather evidence. Through these manoeuvres, Gardner has uncovered sensitive information about Wyms' lupus and her previous drug usage. This information is precisely calibrated to sow enough reasonable doubt in a potential jury's mind to undermine his conviction. Wyms is forced to watch helplessly as she is outmanoeuvred by a man she put behind bars. ADA Beth Encardi capitulates to the pressure, accepting a plea deal that spares Gardner the well-deserved death penalty he so richly deserves, leaving Wyms to contend with the injustice of it all.

    While Wyms deals with a serial killer from the past, Dutch Wagenbach becomes fixated on a potential serial killer of the future: 16-year-old Lloyd Denton. Dutch is desperate to determine if the boy killed his schoolmate in cold blood or in self-defence. To ensure accuracy, he consults with an actual crime profiler, who, alongside Kleavon Gardner, points to Lloyd as the most likely candidate for being a murderous psychopath. In a desperate bid to force a confession, Dutch visits the Denton family home, only for his intervention to be abruptly interrupted by the boy's mother.

    In a rare moment of competence within the Strike Team, Julien Lowe proves himself to be a valuable asset. He plays crucial part well-organised sting operation that leads a group of specially "deputised" gangbangers on a raid against a particularly nasty gang of carjacking rapists. The real target, however, is not the gang itself, but the daughter of a Cuban crime lord who was accidentally taken by the carjackers; the raid must be conducted in a way that makes the release look like an accident. Julien executes this plan with flying colours. Conversely, while collecting intelligence for the raid, Vic and Ronnie stumble upon the car thief Deena.

    Back at the station and in his personal life, Vic's world begins to crumble beneath the weight of his own making. His daughter, Cassidy, acts out with increasing destructive behaviour. Vic discovers that she attended a "Pimps'n'hoes" party and, later, receives devastating news that she was personally supplying drugs. As Vic confronts the harsh reality of his own daughter being entangled in the drug trade, he simultaneously burns bridges with Danny. He demands custody of her son—a concession he had previously made—adding another layer of toxic drama to his already complicated existence.

    The episode was written by Michael Chiklis, who, interestingly, declined to have his daughter Autumn on screen this time. This was a wise decision, as Autumn Chiklis' acting abilities left much to be desired; consequently, most of the drama revolving around Cassidy occurs through expository dialogue rather than organic performance. Ultimately, the script, credited to Charles H. Eegle, feels a little overcooked. It attempts to balance too many serial killer storylines, diluting the impact of the main narrative. The cliffhanger involving Olivia Massey feels a little too neat, lacking the gritty unpredictability that the series is known for.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  9. Television Review: Genocide (The Shield, S7X04, 2008)@drax110d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Genocide (S07E04)

    Airdate: 23 September 2008

    Written by: Lisa Randolph Directed by: Dean White

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    The creators of The Shield have historically struggled with the art of nomenclature, often opting for words that sound significant but lack the necessary gravitas to match the narrative weight. This tendency is evident even in the fourth instalment of the final season, which borrows a term coined in the twentieth century to describe unimaginable apocalyptic atrocities. It is a word that is often misused today for scoring cheap political points in various international conflicts. For many viewers, a title like this would suggest that the episode would feature equivalent ethnic carnage on the streets of Los Angeles, perhaps mirroring the gang warfare that defines the show. However, scriptwriter Lisa Randolph takes a different route, trading the expected bloodshed of the city for a historically resonant tragedy that serves as the backdrop for the season’s final act.

    The "genocide" in question is not a hypothetical future event but the Armenian Genocide. This is a horrific event that is in many ways the cornerstone of Armenian ethnic identity, a trauma that has been maintained especially throughout the Armenian diaspora via Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, commemorated every year on 24 April. The plot of the episode is set strictly during these times, coinciding with the apparent escalation of the war between the Armenian mob and Mexican cartels that Vic Mackey and Shane Vendrell have so callously enflamed in order to solve their own financial and professional problems.

    The war appears to escalate rapidly with the arson of Rezian's safe house, which leaves two of his lieutenants dead. The perpetrators appear to be the Mexicans. Since this happens just before the very public commemoration, which Rezian is supposed to attend, Vic fears that the Mexicans might try to kill him in a way that could result in too much collateral damage among Armenian civilians. Much of the conflict stems from Pezuela, the cartel's top representative, believing that it was Armenian mobsters who had stolen the "blackmail box." Rezian insists that Vic sets up a meeting with Armando Rios (Jose Pablo Cantillo), Pezuela's surrogate. Much to Vic's surprise and concern, Rios claims that he possesses the box. At the actual meeting, Rezian changes his tune, denies that he has the black box, and offers peace.

    This is something Vic would not like, and instead, he hatches a plan with Aceveda to prolong the conflict. The key is Robert Martin, a corrupt city controller who has been blocking funding for an Armenian Genocide memorial in the city. In a Machiavellian move, Vic, through Aceveda, blackmails Marin into releasing the funding, ostensibly to signal his allegiance to Armenians. This is designed to make the Mexicans believe that Armenians have the leverage of the black box. However, this scheme backfires terribly when Marin, who came to attend the commemoration, gets killed by Mexican assassins. Martin is very publicly punished for his supposed treachery, and the execution is styled to send a clear message.

    Vic is at the very end of the episode faced with the complete collapse of his strategy when Aceveda tells him that Agent Olivia Massey, whom he relied upon to rein in the Mexicans, is actually in the "blackmail box." Furthermore, Aceveda reveals that she has been most likely working with the Mexicans. This means that Pezuela and the cartel might be aware of both Vic's and Aceveda's machinations, making their lives next to worthless. The episode ends with this devastating revelation, shifting the power dynamic entirely and leaving Vic to deal with the consequences of his arrogance.

    In the regular procedural storyline, Dutch Wagenbach investigates a strange case involving a high school student with a criminal record who breaks into the home of Lloyd Denton (Kyle Gallner), his schoolmate. The student is shot to death in what appears to be self-defence. Dutch begins to suspect something more sinister after seeing that Lloyd, apparently a very intelligent yet academically unaccomplished young man, shows a strange lack of emotion following the incident. Dutch thinks that Lloyd is a psychopath who manipulated his schoolmate into the fatal break-in only to kill him, and that he is actually a serial killer in the making.

    The episode also features a continuation of Cassidy Mackey acting out against her parents, making another awkward visit to Danny and the home of her half-brother. While this subplot fleshes out the domestic consequences of Vic's life, it is secondary to the main tension.

    Genocide is a solid, albeit unremarkable, episode. It uses the "blackmail box" as a relatively efficient MacGuffin to drive the plot forward, though the device itself is somewhat flimsy. The episode ends with an interesting cliffhanger twist that sets up the final act of the season. It also features further characterisation of Vic as a self-deluded man who believes that a couple of ethical missteps can be justified with the greater good, and he is aghast when Shane expresses a total lack of interest in what happens to Farmington after the Byz Lats and cartels complete their takeover. Finally, the subplot involving the young psychopath in the making, starring veteran actress Frances Fisher as his mother, looks rather standard and clichéd by this point in the series' run.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  10. Television Review: Money Shot (The Shield, S7X03, 2008)@drax110d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Money Shot (S07E03)

    Airdate: 16 September 2008

    Written by: Adam E. Fierro Directed by: Terrence O'Hara

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    As the curtain falls on The Shield with only a handful of episodes remaining, the narrative architecture of Vic Mackey’s world becomes increasingly claustrophobic. The avenues for the Strike Team leader to continue the story and evade facing the true consequences of his endless misdeeds are rapidly shrinking. Yet, in "Money Shot," Vic demonstrates a flicker of his former brilliance, acting once again as a shameless liar and strategic manipulator. However, this episode serves as a stark reminder that his actions, while tactical victories in the moment, are actually staving off or even hastening the complete collapse of his professional and personal life.

    The main storyline revolves around a complex pact between Strike Team and the Armenian mob, a move that forms part of Vic’s even greater scheme to manipulate this faction into a war with the Mexican gangs. Despite this grand design, the Armenian gang boss, Rezian, remains delusional about his position in this relationship—at least where Shane Vendrell is concerned. Rezian is acutely aware of traditional LAPD practices regarding the destruction of impounded guns for public relations purposes. Consequently, he devises a scheme to steal this specific stash, intending to sell it on the streets of Chicago to create a level of carnage far exceeding what is seen on the streets of Los Angeles. Rezian issues a chilling ultimatum to Shane, warning that a death sentence will be carried out against his and Vic’s families unless they deliver the guns.

    Vic, upon learning of Rezian’s scheme, experiences a moment of second thoughts. This hesitation stems from a core part of his character: sending weapons to incite genocide on the streets is a line that even his completely compromised moral code refuses to cross. Instead of refusing outright, he decides to execute a brilliant deception. He pretends to go along with Rezian’s demands. However, during the actual handover, the Armenians are raided by federal agents. This operation was orchestrated by ICE Agent Olivia Murray, who Vic had tipped off beforehand. Vic arrives at Rezian’s headquarters just in time to warn the boss about the impending raid. But his intervention is more than just rescue; he plants a critical bug that will point the finger at Rezian’s lieutenant, Khalulian (Yorgo Constantine). This move proves to be a masterstroke, a brilliant way for Vic to win back—or rather, restore—trust from various factions: the federal government, Rezian himself, and, most importantly, Shane. Shane, who had been tentatively trying to become his best friend again, is won over by this display of tactical superiority.

    The episode houses one of its most powerful scenes near the end, a quiet yet devastating conversation between Shane and Vic regarding the murder of Lem. For the first time, Vic appears to find genuine understanding for Shane’s crime, suggesting that it was the right thing to do under the circumstances. This moment of empathy is heavy with irony. Ronnie, who has always been pragmatic but has developed a deep-seated dislike for Shane after his confession of the murder, is aghast at Vic's apparent forgiveness. After the scene, Ronnie looks at Vic with a sense of dread, wondering whether Vic truly meant it or if he is merely lying to deceive his former best friend to maintain team cohesion.

    It is Ronnie who, much like Lem in previous seasons, emerges as the most normal and moral of all Strike Team characters, despite having cold-bloodedly killed a captured Armenian hitman earlier in the episode. Ronnie voices a pragmatic view to Vic, arguing that all his efforts to extricate himself from the mess he had created would only bury him in a much deeper hole. This dialogue serves as a grim illustration of the trajectory the series has taken.

    Written by Adam E. Fierro, the script masterfully juxtaposes Vic's professional triumph with disaster on the family front. His autistic son, Matthew, had to be brought back home after being left unattended and wandering aimlessly on the street. Separately, Corrinne catches Cassidy drinking, and the ensuing verbal row leads to Corrinne’s brief arrest. Later, a physical altercation between mother and daughter takes place, witnessed by a horrified Vic who is forced to intervene. The Mackeys, just like the old Strike Team, begin to disintegrate in a violent, chaotic manner.

    The episode maintains the formula of using a procedural subplot to ground the show in reality. In this instance, a teenager alerts Detective Claudette Wyms that her best friend, Wan Lee (Susan E. Lee), has inexplicably gone missing. Dutch Wagenbach and Steve Billings investigate, only to find the girl’s family completely uncooperative. Wan Lee eventually emerges with obvious signs of violence, revealing she had been abducted and raped. Billings manages to extract the horrible truth: Wan Lee is a lesbian, and her traditional Chinese family hired a "therapist" to "offer her alternatives," effectively aiming to "rape lesbianism out of her." It is a harrowing look at cultural intolerance.

    Another storyline brings back Axl, a sleazy producer of "granny porn" videos. He contacts the police to arrange a sting operation against his business rival, Larry, who pays his actresses in drugs and is allegedly in possession of a large stash. A sting is set up with Officer Tina Hanlon posing as prospective talent for Larry’s films, accompanied by Julien Lowe, who poses as Tina’s boyfriend. This subplot adds a layer of sleaze to the narrative, highlighting the seedy underbelly of the city that the Strike Team patrols.

    Finally, the last storyline of the episode is the weakest, primarily because it relies on a rather unrealistic premise. It depicts a police officer whose face has been plastered all over posters and billboards across Los Angeles working undercover. This logistical impossibility undermines the otherwise high quality of the episode, dragging it down to the level of a mere watchable TV episode rather than the gritty masterpiece the series usually strives for.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  11. Television Review: Snitch (The Shield, S7X02, 2008)@drax111d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Snitch (S07E02)

    Airdate: 9 September 2008

    Written by: Gary Lennon Directed by: Gwyneth Horder-Payton

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    Throughout the seven seasons of The Shield, viewers have been treated to a visceral display of bloodshed and mayhem orchestrated primarily by Vic Mackey and Shane Vendrell. While their internal machinations are the engine of the show, Snitch, the second episode of the final season, serves as a stark reminder that much of the tragedy and dysfunction plaguing Farmington—and Los Angeles in general—are often the result of forces beyond the control of the Strike Team or the LAPD. It is a narrative device that effectively punctures the series' bubble of pure corruption, reminding us that the city is a living, breathing ecosystem of external pressures. This episode is a nice reminder of that, shifting the focus from the characters' agency to the systemic chaos surrounding them.

    However, the central narrative thread of this episode, focusing on Vic’s desperate attempt to cling to the remnants of his Farmington fiefdom by orchestrating a gang war between Armenians and Mexicans, is one of the weaker and less memorable aspects of the instalment. The stakes are raised when Vic learns that the Mexicans have "greenlit" hit on Rezakian, the Armenian boss currently incarcerated. The situation becomes precarious when Rezakian reveals a chilling "life insurance policy," detailing execution orders against both policemen’s families should he be harmed while in custody. Vic attempts to neutralize this threat by leveraging Moses, the leader of the One-Niners, to station their incarcerated gang members as Rezakian’s bodyguards within the prison. Simultaneously, Shane reaches out to Grubman (William Carlton), the manager of Rezakian’s lucrative port smuggling operation, and communicates, in a convoluted and unmistakable manner, the suggestion for Grubman to recant his testimony, thereby facilitating Rezakian’s release. Despite the initial assassination attempt failing, Rezakian survives. Vic then makes the strategic decision to release Aramboles, a former Mexican cartel operative and keeper of the blackmail box, allowing him to slip back into Mexico. Following this, Vic contacts Pezuela and demands extra compensation, stipulating that his service be paid in the form of tenure instead of the postponement of his retirement, while also securing a promise that the Mexicans will restrain themselves while waging war on the Armenians. While the plot is intricate, it feels like a weak continuation of the main story arc, lacking the visceral punch of other seasons.

    This convoluted strategy feels like a weak continuation of the main story arc, whereas the episode truly shines in its side storylines. The standout narrative involves the Los Angeles mayor’s ill-conceived initiative to publicly name and shame the city's leading street gangs. Initially intended to intimidate, the gangbangers instead view the exposure as a means to boost their street cred, escalating violence to secure their positions on the chart. When three white men become victims, Captain Claudette Wyms must deploy every resource at her disposal to prevent further bloodshed. The investigation is surprisingly aided by an elderly Black woman, who, despite being warned by a street observer not to be a "snitch," points the authorities toward two "babies on bicycles"—teenagers—who are later identified as the culprits. In a parallel development, the federal government becomes engrossed in an investigation based on hearsay that al-Qaeda has recruited local gangs for terrorist activities. This leads to a comedic yet frustrating denouement when the perpetrators are identified as a pair of unrepenant, aspiring teen gangbangers connected to the Spookestret gang, who are simply proud of killing white men. During an interrogation, one boy admits to the crime, leaving Wyms aghast. Later, she attempts to guide the boy back to his ways, but in a moment of frustration, she uses the n-word. She is subsequently reported for racism—an absurd accusation given that she is also Black.

    Another compelling subplot involves a woman, an aspiring singer, who is killed by a cinder block deliberately dropped from a roof. The motive appears to be the persistent noise and cigarette smoke from band members, which made life unbearable for the neighbors. Despite the presence of numerous witnesses, no one comes forward. In desperation, Dutch Wagenbach brings every tenant to the Barn to extract a lead. With the aid of Billings, they ultimately confront Nacio (Mike Gomez), the building manager. Nacio had attempted to intimidate the annoying musicians to help the tenants and, being a kind and efficient manager, had secured their loyalty.

    The episode is rife with irony. Instead of the corrupt police and ruthless gangsters usually responsible for the violence, a new round of chaos is triggered by a poorly thought-out policy initiative by the local government. Furthermore, the federal government, all-too-eager to maintain its War on Terror, may have inadvertently worsened the situation by chasing false leads. Additionally, the perpetrator of the killing is revealed to be a good and decent man who did not want to hurt anyone, yet his actions ultimately deprive the tenants of a quality service.

    For six years, the audience has watched Autumn Chiklis, Michael Chiklis' daughter, mature on screen. What began as a small role for Cassidy has evolved into something larger and more demanding. However, this growth has exposed the limitations of her acting talent. A particularly poorly thought-out scene, where she acts out as a teenager reporting her father of Mara's abduction, stands as one of the weaker points of the episode and the series in general. It breaks the immersion in a way that the gritty realism of the rest of the show could not afford.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  12. Television Review: Coefficient of Drag (The Shield, S7X01, 2008)@drax111d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Coefficient of Drag (S07E01)

    Airdate: 2 September 2008

    Written by: Kurt Sutter Directed by: Guy Ferland

    Running Time: 50 minutes

    The Shield returned to the small screens in the autumn of 2008 to deliver its seventh and final season following a significant fifteen-month hiatus. The season was meticulously designed by Shawn Ryan to serve as the definitive conclusion to the series chronicle. The narrative arc was ostensibly built around the premise that the crimes would finally catch up to Vic Mackey, delivering the brutal punishment that the series had been hinting at for years. However, within the dysfunctional world of Farmington and the creators' boundless imagination, the show has a history of providing repetitive stays of execution for its anti-hero, and this premiere is no exception to that enduring pattern.

    The season premiere, titled Coeficient of Drag immediately suggests that the series is prepared to go very dark, signalling that the protagonists, particularly Vic, are crossing ethical lines they have not traversed in previous seasons. The episode opens with a visceral image of Mara, Vic’s wife, being gagged. This act is revealed to be Vic’s retribution against Shane Vendrell for kidnapping Corrine and Cassidy in the previous season's finale. When confronted by Vic, Shane offers a desperate justification, claiming he acted to protect Vic's family from the Armenian mob. He cites the Armenian mob's internal conflict and his own debt to the incarcerated boss, Ellis Rezian, as the reasons for the abduction. The episode captures the claustrophobia of this familial betrayal and the shifting power dynamic within the Strike Team.

    The narrative then shifts to Vic and Shane’s plan to eliminate the immediate threat posed by Zadofian, played by Raff Anoushian, an Armenian hitman in the service of the exiled Diro. Zadofian had previously wounded Shane while attempting to take out Vic's family. Vic and Ronnie track him to a motel, where they capture him and have him bound to bed. The scene takes a turn towards macabre violence when Ronnie Gardocki executes Zadofian in cold blood. Realising that the killing will draw attention, Shane is forced to chop off Zadofian's leg to stage the scene as signature work of the Armenian mobsters, thereby faking internal conflict within their ranks. This sequence highlights the extreme lengths to which the characters must go to maintain their facade and protect their interests.

    Amidst these personal vendettas, the long-standing conflict between the Mexican Byz Lats gang and the Salvadorean mobsters flares up again. Two bodies are deliberately dragged along the streets, creating a gruesome spectacle. As Captain Wymms walks through the messy aftermath, he is forced to rely on Vic to try to calm things down. This chaotic investigation attracts the attention of ICE agent Olivia Murray (Laurie Holden), who arrives at the scene. She appears to be attempting to tie some loose ends from the San Marcos murders she had been investigating prior to this episode.

    The political machinations of the Strike Team are also on full display. The blackmail box containing compromising materials on Los Angeles politicians works its magic once again. Vic, much to Wymms' displeasure, successfully wins a thirty-day postponement of the hearing that would seal his forced retirement. Wymms attempts to rein in Vic by appointing Ronnie as the head of Strike Team and warning him that once Vic is finally out, all his misbehaviour in the next thirty days would negatively affect his friend. In the meantime, Shane attempts to win favour with Rezian by claiming that the Mexicans are responsible for the actions against the Armenians, while simultaneously, Vic manipulates Pezuela into believing that the Armenians are trying to move into Mexican interests. The result of these intricate efforts is, as Vic smugly observes at the end of the episode, a gang war that they can simply watch from the sidelines.

    In a significant subplot, Billings makes a return to the Barn, despite his retirement and a multi-million dollar lawsuit over bad working conditions that left him physically and mentally invalid. He is called back to assist Dutch Wagenbach with a murder case that originally ended in acquittal. While delivering past case notes, Billings is manipulated into confronting Lorena Francisco, a woman connected to a suspect, which results in him making the recantation of his previous testimony. Billings' performance in the interrogation room is recorded on video, which might be used as proof in his civil suit, effectively counteracting his claims of diminished physical and mental capacity. Ultimately, Billings is talked into giving up the suit and his retirement, choosing instead to rejoin the LAPD and the Barn as a detective. While this storyline is well-done and provides some comic relief, it feels like an artificial device used to bring back an interesting character and re-establish the dynamic between Dutch and Billings that worked so well previously.

    Written by Kurt Sutter and directed by Guy Ferland, the episode demonstrates the complete moral collapse of Vic. He begins the episode by threatening the wife of his best friend, a betrayal that speaks volumes about his prioritisation of self-preservation over loyalty. Furthermore, Ronnie Gardocki, who had previously been the quietest, most professional, and least compromised member of Strike Team, also crosses the line by committing a cold-blooded murder. However, the most consequential example of this moral descent is Vic deliberately staging a gang war to save his own skin. The policeman who has long justified his morally questionable actions by simply getting things done and keeping the streets quiet is now willing to flame the very same bloodshed and destruction he was supposed to stop. This hypocrisy is the hallmark of his character's inevitable downfall.

    The subplot involving Billings is effective in its execution, yet it serves as a reminder of the show's reliance on familiar tropes. It feels like a calculated move to reintroduce an intriguing character and re-establish the semi-comical dynamic between Dutch and Billings, offering a brief reprieve from the grim main plot. Similarly, the introduction of Laurie Holden, one of the most tragically underused actresses of the previous few decades, brings some star power to the show. She is brought in as Olivia Murray in what, at least initially, looks like a standard one-note role that nevertheless has some potential to develop by the end of the series. Additionally, another attempt at levity involves Dutch misunderstanding Danny's job-related approach as the start of a discussion about their previous hook-up; however, this moment is brief, inconsequential, and ultimately feels clichéd.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  13. Television Review: Spanish Practices (The Shield, S6X10, 2007)@drax120d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Spanish Practices (S06E10)

    Airdate: 5 June 2007

    Written by: Shawn Ryan & Scott Rosenbaum Directed by: Paris Barclay

    Running Time: 61 minutes

    The Shield has established itself as a bastion of uncompromising television, but its sixth season finale, Spanish Practices, is a peculiar anomaly within the series' impressive catalogue. It is widely regarded as the weakest and least memorable season finale in the show's history, a sentiment rooted not in a lack of ambition, but in a fundamental disconnect between the production team and the network regarding the series' trajectory. The primary culprit for this narrative inertia was the timing of the decision to greenlight a seventh and final season; Shawn Ryan and his writers only learned of FX's commitment to another run midway through the production of Season 6. Consequently, the latter half of the season, including this penultimate episode, feels less like a conclusion and more like a deliberate stalling tactic, a series of interconnected scenes designed merely to bridge the gap between the narrative present and the eventual, long-awaited conclusion of Vic Mackey's saga.

    Had Spanish Practices been the actual series finale, the audience could have reasonably anticipated a visceral, violent death for Vic Mackey, or perhaps a dramatic arrest that finally brings his criminal empire crumbling down. Alternatively, given the previous episodes of Season 6, the most banal option—the forced retirement of the show's antihero—was a distinct possibility. However, as the date of his retirement approached, Vic engaged in a desperate, almost frantic scramble to convince anyone who would listen that his accumulated flaws as a LAPD detective were negligible compared to the good he could provide for his community, his colleagues, and The Powers That Be, who were always in need of a few favours. By the end of the previous episode, Vic had finally secured a significant break in these efforts: a compromising photograph of Councilman Aceveda from the politically influential construction entrepreneur Cruz Pezuela.

    Armed with this potent leverage, Vic approaches Aceveda with the explicit demand that he pull his weight and ensure the police review board votes against his forced retirement. Aceveda initially responds with disdainful rejection, but the arrival of Aceveda's attorney at the Barn to threaten him convinces Vic that the photograph is a vulnerability Aceveda truly cannot afford to expose. Further inquiries into Pezuela's operations lead Vic to a stark realisation: the entire blackmail operation was not designed to make Vic a useful tool for Pezuela, but rather to prevent Vic from digging up the dirt on the shady dealings Pezuela and his people were conducting. Realising that he would benefit more from a temporary alliance with his former nemesis Aceveda, Vic manages to locate the office of Pezuela's partner, Luis Aramboles, which is revealed to be the headquarters for a very complex and very illegal operation. Aramboles and Pezuela are exposed as the fronts for Mexican cartels, who have strategically chosen Farmington to establish a network of legitimate businesses to cover for their illegal activities, as well as to create a political machine to protect this new empire. At the episode's conclusion, Vic hijacks a car belonging to one of the cartel operatives and discovers a treasure trove of tapes, documents, and other blackmail material that is being used against the most influential politicians in Los Angeles and California—a discovery that suggests the "blackmail box" is a far more powerful weapon than even Vic imagined.

    While Vic plays the high-stakes political game, Shane Vendrell finds himself in a terrifying predicament of his own making. He realises that his ill-advised plan to create a partnership with the Armenian mob was a catastrophic error, and he significantly underestimated the chances of being caught between two rival factions. After the Strike Team's involvement in the money train heist is revealed, Diro Khesian makes it clear that she will take revenge not only on Vic and Ronnie but on their family members as well. Shane is horrified, suspecting that such bloodshed might point directly towards him. In a desperate bid to save Vic's family, he even forces Corrine and Cassidy into a container to hide them from Diro's assassins. The other avenue he pursues is to approach Ellis Rezian in prison and offer to make evidence against him disappear in exchange for sparing the lives of the policemen and their families. Rezian agrees, taking a pragmatic approach, but warns Shane that he will have to pay the money train debt by doing errands for him. Shane then confronts Diro just as her father is dying and informs her that with Rezian out of prison, her life is in immediate danger. Diro agrees to leave for Germany after euthanasing her father.

    The subplot involving Dutch Wagenbach and his partner Billings, had escalated into such a childish and petty rivalry that it bordered on farce. The situation culminated in Dutch being publicly humiliated by the sight of Officer Hanlon having sex with Detective Hiatt, a scene that hung over the Barn like a cloud. The eventual resolution to this arc is incredibly anti-climactic; Billings announces his retirement and sues the LAPD over work-related injuries, much to Dutch's disgust. Meanwhile, Hiatt's tryst with Hanlon becomes an open secret in the Barn, and Hiatt reacts by shunning Hanlon in an ungentlemanly manner. Captain Wyms, after learning of this, decides to transfer Hiatt out of Strike Team. Dutch attempts to make amends with Hanlon, who seems understanding, yet Dutch still feels hurt and humiliated. In a poignant locker room scene, he breaks down, being comforted by Danny Soffer, who kisses him.

    Written by Shawn Ryan and Scott Rosenbaum, Spanish Practices is at least fifteen minutes longer than the average episode. Despite that, the episode fails to resolve the main plot strands established in the previous episode's reveal of secrets. Vic's fate as a LAPD detective remains in limbo, and the episode ends only by implying that the Epstein-size archive of blackmail material could serve as Vic's tool in the near future. Even Shane's admission about the money train heist to Diro fails to launch the expected bloodbath; the ultimate outcome is merely a suspended sentence over Vic, Ronnie, and Shane. This lack of closure transforms what should have been a crescendo into a whimper.

    Probably the most disappointing aspect of the episode is the anti-climactic way Diro Khesian, arguably one of the most intriguing and potentially useful characters in the series, leaves the plot. Despite being portrayed as tough and ruthless, she simply takes the path of least resistance and flees. This was largely due to Franka Potente, originally hired for guest appearances, being engaged with other projects and not being able to take part in Season 7 with the stories Ryan and his team envisioned for her character. It is a shame, as her departure feels like a missed opportunity to deliver a truly spectacular finale.

    RATING: 5/10 (++)

    ==

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  14. Television Review: Recoil (The Shield, S6X09, 2007)@drax121d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Recoil (S06E09)

    Airdate: 29 May 2007

    Written by: Sarah Fain, Elizabeth Craft and Adam E. Fierro Directed by: Guy Ferland

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    The sixth season of The Shield is defined by a singular, corrosive motif: the catastrophic failure to maintain confidentiality. In Recoil, the ninth and penultimate instalment of the season, this motif reaches its zenith. While television convention dictates that the season finale serves primarily as a narrative mop-up, the penultimate episode is traditionally reserved for the most jarring revelations. Recoil adheres to this structure, stripping away the narrative fat to deliver the hard blows that define the season's arc.

    The central conflict of the episode revolves around Vic Mackey and the inexorable march of his retirement. With exactly five days remaining before he is forced off the force, Vic is operating with the desperation of a cornered animal. His Strike Team successor, Detective Hiatt, views this transition as an opportunity to ascend to the mantle of leadership, a shift Vic is desperately attempting to sabotage through sheer force of will. Vic believes that solving the San Marcos murders will serve as his golden ticket, a demonstration of competence that might persuade Captain Claudette Wyms and City Controller Robert Marin to intervene. However, both remain unmoved by his pleas. Marin, despite the leverage of his own daughter's shady past, refuses to use his political capital to save Vic's job. He recognises that Vic has cultivated a vast network of enemies, extending far beyond the precinct walls, making his survival a matter of political calculus rather than merit. The system has turned against him, and no amount of tactical brilliance can reverse the bureaucracy's inevitable decision.

    The investigation into the San Marcos murders, initially intended as a lifeline for Vic, instead becomes the noose that tightens around his neck. The arrest of Rincon (Vinicius Machado), a Salvadoran implicated in the killings, opens a Pandora's box involving wealthy businessmen and politicians on both sides of the border. Cruz Pezuela, a construction entrepreneur, emerges as a pivotal figure. His sudden interest in the case and willingness to facilitate the investigation betray a deeper anxiety: he fears the exposure of his own corrupt associates. Pezuela attempts to curry favour with Aceveda, suggesting that keeping Vic in the LAPD would be a mutually beneficial arrangement. When Aceveda, currently positioning himself for a mayoral run, rebuffs this overture, Pezuela deploys his nuclear option. He produces a damning photograph of Aceveda fellating Juan Lozano at gunpoint. This image is not merely a piece of evidence; it is a perfect weapon of blackmail, capable of derailing Aceveda's political aspirations instantly.

    Simultaneously, Shane Vendrell is orchestrating a complex power play within the Armenian community. His goal is to secure an alliance with Diro Kesakhian, ensuring her succession to the mob leadership. The primary obstacle is Ellis Rezian (Ludwig Manukian), a gang boss controlling the lucrative port smuggling operations. Shane brings Diro to Barn, posing her as an unwitting accountant who stumbled upon financial irregularities. This ruse brings Ronnie Gardocki into the fold, though reluctantly, as he reunites with his former partner to dismantle Rezian. The dynamic shifts when Shane, in a moment of candour, admits his role in the Armenian money train heist. Diro’s reaction—neither shock nor disgust—signals a shift in the power balance. The two begin to plot, contemplating whether to eliminate Vic as the next step in their ascent.

    Recoil is a product of the writing team Sarah Fain, Elizabeth Craft, and Adam E. Fierro. They manage to weave together these disparate threads into a cohesive tapestry of revelation. The episode establishes plot strands that suggest a potential continuation of the series or, conversely, a resolution so intricate that it demands exceptional writing to satisfy. Vic now possesses the blackmail leverage to remain in the LAPD, yet his life is simultaneously imperilled by the exposure of his involvement in the Armenian affair. Director Guy Ferland handles these momentous developments with a restrained, business-like efficiency. He eschews the sensationalist violence that characterised previous seasons, allowing the actors to convey the tension through performance rather than action choreography. The result is a tense, dialogue-heavy episode that relies on subtext and the calculated movements of power brokers.

    Despite its strengths, the episode is not without its flaws. The subplot involving Dutch Wagenbach and Steve Billings, while technically proficient, feels increasingly strained. Billings has consistently demonstrated that he possesses a level of intelligence and sociopathic cunning that rivals the show's most formidable villains. In this episode, he exploits Dutch's unrequited feelings for Tina Hanlon. Hanlon herself is portrayed as easily swayed by attractive men, her infatuation with the hunky Detective Hiatt serving as a convenient distraction. Billings' scheme—stealing Hanlon's phone to type a false text message that lures Dutch to her house—is diabolically simple and cruel. He watches from the shadows, delighting in Dutch’s heartbreak as he stumbles upon the scene of Hanlon and Hiatt having sex. While the acting is commendable, the narrative beats feel too juvenile and petty. This sort of high school melodrama clashes with the ultra-realistic, gritty atmosphere of The Shield, making it feel like an intrusion from a different genre. It is a well-acted scene, but one that ultimately feels out of place in such a mature and darkly complex drama.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  15. Television Review: The Math of the Wrath (The Shield, S6X08, 2007)@drax122d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    The Math of the Wrath (S06E08)

    Airdate: 22 May 2007

    Written by: Charles H. Eglee Directed by: Rhon Schmidt

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    Season six of The Shield was never going to be an easy watch. It was marked by a palpable sense of scarcity, a stark contrast to the chaotic excesses of previous years. The void was made palpable by the death of Lem, but the real void was the scarcity of the ways the story of Vic Mackey could end. With his lieutenants fractured and his career on the line, the show was running out of steam, trapped in a narrative loop where the same old tactics yielded the same old results. So, when a significant change appears near the end of the season, particularly in an episode like The Math of the Wrath, it looks like a breath of fresh air. It cuts through the gloom and offers a glimpse of something new, something that threatens to upend the stagnant power dynamics that have defined the show for six years.

    The catalyst for this shift is the introduction of a new character, Diro Kesakian, played by Franka Potente. She is a figure of clear potential, poised to become a formidable antagonist for Vic, or perhaps a terrifying ally depending on how the chips fall. The episode opens with Diro as an ordinary, almost plain-looking woman, sewing her own clothes while listening to Armenian music. It is a domestic scene that feels incredibly grounded and unassuming. However, the reveal hits hard: she is the daughter of a powerful Armenian mob boss currently on his deathbed in a hospital. The twist is that she wants to keep this fact hidden from the rest of the world because she knows the minor Armenian gangsters will use her father's illness to seize power. This creates a perfect storm of ambition and insecurity that Vic can exploit, but it also establishes Diro as someone who is used to operating in the shadows.

    Diro’s is contacted by Shane Vendrell, whose arrangement with the Armenian mobsters hasn't exactly been a success. What started as a simple intimidation of a rival Iraqi gas station owner has escalated into murder—a fact Shane didn't agree to and is now trying to rectify. He wants to complain to the leadership, and his trail leads him to Diro. She approaches the situation with a business-like efficiency that Shane, desperate for a lifeline, finds attractive. She proposes that Shane prove his worth by solving a problem: African American robbers have been decreasing the value of Armenian-owned rental property. Shane investigates, only to discover that the victims are a duo of Russian prostitutes. He extracts enough information from the cynical victims to identify the perpetrators and dutifully hands over their names. Later, he learns the gruesome truth: the two men were found castrated. Diro is not the sweet, innocent daughter of a mob boss that Shane assumed; she is a cold, calculating operator who operates on a level of brutality that Shane is all too familiar with. Nevertheless, the two of them continue their alliance. This alliance has the potential to turn into something very different, and that is exactly something Shane desperately needs. He is all but shunned by the Strike Team, having lost lifelong friends and seeing his police career all but over. Diro offers a new path, one that is just as dangerous but potentially far more lucrative.

    In the meantime, the remains of the old Strike Team finally catch up with the reality of the situation. Hiatt informs Vic that Claudette lied about the police board review. Instead of staying, Vic is going to be forcefully retired from the LAPD very soon. Separately, Ronnie is finally updated on what went on with Lem. Shane, when confronted, tells him exactly what Vic did with Terry Cerowley. Ronnie’s reaction is surprisingly calm and uneventful. It is far from shock; he had probably spent years contemplating the possibility that the Strike Team dynamic would turn on him. He has always been the observer, the one who doesn't quite fit in, and this revelation adds a new, heavy dynamic to the major characters' relations. The old camaraderie is gone, replaced by a cold, hard reality where betrayal is the only currency that matters.

    The supporting plotlines, however, feel a bit off-key and banal. Hernan, the unfortunate ICE mole who was helping Strike Team and Barn maintain the peace, has his cover blown. The Salvadorans, instead of hacking him to pieces in a typical gangland fashion, do something more efficient: they ensure his loyalty by forcing him to hack someone else and bringing him back up to Salvador. It is a bureaucratic cruelty that fits the show's tone but feels a bit dry compared to the visceral violence of the main narrative.

    Another subplot deals with Eleanor Morrison (Tereza Rizzardo), a woman from an upscale part of LA who is stabbed in Farmington by a robber apparently attracted by an expensive bag. The investigation reveals the bag is a high-quality knock-off distributed by a nearby shop owned by Mrs. Kim (Christine Dao). As a sign of gratitude, the Barn officers offer female officers—Danny and Tina Hanlon—as well as Corrine some of their merchandise. It is a subplot that feels more like a sitcom bit than a gritty drama, lacking the visceral edge of the main narrative and serving as a distraction rather than a contribution to the overarching themes.

    Written by Charles H. Eglee and directed by Rohn Schmidt, "The Math of the Wrath" functions as a regular, by-the-number episode. It simply tries to tie some loose ends and move the plot toward the supposedly explosive season finale. Its main asset is undoubtedly the presence of Franka Potente, an immensely talented German actress who is usually not that well-used in Hollywood films. Here, the authors do their homework. Instead of trying to pass her off as a genuine Armenian, they mention her life as a student in Berlin in order to make her German accent plausible. This attention to detail grounds the character and elevates the performance, making her a believable player in the cutthroat world of LA crime.

    Another interesting detail in the plot is Councilman Aceveda forming an exploratory committee to prepare for an eventual mayoral run. This can be interpreted as a nod to The Wire and the character of Tommy Carcetti, who was that series' equivalent of Aceveda. The scene shows LA as dysfunctional and cynical as Baltimore, with Aceveda's aides discussing ethnic politics and the need to pander to various groups based on whether they vote or not. It is a reminder that the world of The Shield is vast and interconnected, and that the political machinations of the city are just as deadly as the police work on the streets.

    Ultimately, The Math of the Wrath is a bridge episode. It is a functional, if unremarkable, piece of television that serves to reset the board for the finale. The introduction of Diro Kesakian is the standout feature, injecting the season with the necessary tension and potential for a spectacular conclusion. The Shane-Diro alliance is the most intriguing thread, offering a glimpse into a future where Shane is no longer a broken man but a dangerous player in his own right. While the subplots are a bit weak and the episode lacks the raw energy of earlier seasons, the promise of what is to come makes it a necessary stop on the road to the end.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  16. Television Review: Exiled (The Shield, S6X07, 2007)@drax123d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Exiled (S06E07)

    Airdate: 15 May 2007

    Written by: Scott Rosenbaum & Kurt Sutter Directed by: Dean White

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    The sixth season of The Shield represents a turning point in Shawn Ryan’s masterful run, and the seventh episode, Exiled, serves as a pivotal moment that attempts to reconcile the show’s chaotic history with a looming conclusion. In the preceding episode, Ryan made the bold decision to blow the lid on the series' most significant character secret to date: the revelation that Shane Vendrell was responsible for the murder of Lemansky. While Vic Mackey became aware of the truth, his previous urge for vengeance—sparked by Lem's death—had cooled, leading him to refrain from acting against Shane in the same brutal manner he had used against other perceived enemies. The script by Scott Rosenbaum and Kurt Sutter demonstrates a keen understanding of the fractured dynamic between two former partners and best friends, recognising that their relationship simply cannot remain the same. However, the writers also manage to find a somewhat satisfying way to explain why the situation would not result in another round of bloodshed.

    That solution is a rational and logical concept of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD). Shane, fully cognizant that Vic would eventually move against him in one way or another, had meticulously gathered a dossier of evidence concerning Vic’s past wrongdoings, a collection of memories that would have been revealed to the authorities had something happened to him. Furthermore, Shane, knowing he can no longer work alongside Vic, has requested a transfer back to Vice Squad, a move that signals his desire to sever ties. He is also apparently preparing for the eventuality of having to start a new life in Mexico, a prospect he views with a grim determination. To secure the necessary funds for this exile, Shane finds a way to earn extra money by doing some shady business for the very same Armenian mob he had robbed years ago with Vic, effectively burning bridges on all sides.

    In the meantime, the district of Farmington is struck by another crisis due to an escalating conflict between Mexican and Salvadoran gangs. Despite previous talk suggesting that the Mexicans butchered in the San Marcos restaurant were victims of rival Mexicans, the Byz Lats decided to very publicly retaliate against the Salvadorans by a deadly shootout during a Salvadoran street festival. Vic sees this opportunity to remind Captain Wyms of his ability to handle vicious street gangs and gets in touch with Hernan, an ICE mole embedded within the Salvadorans, trying to coordinate the best possible response. The effort aims to stop the bloodshed through sweeping police raids while at the same time preserving Hernan's cover. That proves to be difficult, because the existence of the ICE mole becomes known to Aceveda, who, always willing to maintain as much political clout as possible, relays information to influential Mexican real estate developer Cruz Pezuela (FJ Rio), thereby compromising Hernan. The raids, however, achieve their aim—Santi Galas, the leader of the Byz Lats, is detained—but ultimately agrees to offer of tentative truce and handing over three of the festival shooters in exchange for the number of Salvadorans being discreetly being given up by the Barn. Captain Wyms isn't happy over three out of six shooters walking free, but she concedes that this imperfect compromise is at the times the best way to stop the carnage.

    The investigation into the San Marcos massacre gets further complicated when the mystery of Romero (Baxter Humby), a mid-level Mexican government official whose severed hand had been found on the site, is actually found alive. He is discovered without an arm in a hotel room alongside a large stash of cash. Romero attempts to invoke diplomatic immunity, but Captain Wyms finds a way to keep him in LA by creating bureaucratic complications over the return of the cash, effectively using the legal system as a weapon to hold him hostage.

    From a production standpoint, the episode is well-directed and well-acted, but it lacks the visceral impact of its predecessors. Some scenes feel like filler, disrupting the otherwise tight pacing of the season's narrative. The subplot involving Shane’s wife, Mara, and her increasingly hostile interactions with Vic, and later, threats made via a meeting with Corrine, makes her arguably one of the less sympathetic characters in the ensemble. While it is nice to see Katey Segal, the wife of episode co-writer Kurt Sutter, appear again as the widow of Nancy, the widow of Vic's disgraced mentor Gilroy, whom Shane apparently tries to coerce into giving her late husband's contacts in Mexico, her presence feels somewhat superfluous. The episode would have worked better if it had focused more on the gang killings subplot, particularly when it reveals high-level government corruption from both sides of the border.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  17. Television Review: Chasing Ghosts (The Shield, S6X06, 2007)@drax125d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Chasing Ghosts (S06E06)

    Airdate: 8 May 2007

    Written by: Shawn Ryan & Adam E. Fierro Directed by: Frank Darabont

    Running Time: 49 minutes

    In the unforgiving and claustrophobic landscape of Shawn Ryan’s Farmington, no secret remains buried for long. This is a universe where information is the ultimate currency and revelation is a constant threat, yet the fallout of these revelations rarely results in the apocalyptic upheaval that more conventional television dramas typically employ. Instead, the consequences are often mundane, lingering, and painfully real, creating a sense of grounded despair that defines the series. Chasing Ghosts, the sixth episode of the sixth season and a script co-written by Shawn Ryan and Adam E. Fierro, serves as a quintessential example of this unique brand of storytelling. It is a tight, character-driven piece that prioritises psychological erosion over dramatic explosions, delivering a narrative that is as much about the ghosts of the past as it is about the crimes of the present.

    The narrative weight of this episode is carried by the lingering trauma of the last season’s closing event. The season concluded with Shane ending the life of his partner, a veteran Strike Team member and one of his closest friends. This was a betrayal that has since tortured Shane. The revelation that he was manipulated by paranoia, misunderstandings, and his own deteriorating mental state has turned him into a nervous wreck, a dysfunctional shell of the man he once was. The narrative tension builds slowly, with the dam threatening to break. Less than half a season later, and in the previous episode, Lem finally broke down, confessing his crime to his wife, Mara. With one person privy to the secret, the inevitability of the truth spreading to the wider community becomes a foregone conclusion.

    One of the first casualties of this inevitable truth is Vic Mackey, the show’s central figure. For weeks, Vic has been driven by a desperate, single-minded need for revenge. He tortured and executed Salvadoran drug king Guardo, believing he had finally found Lem’s killer. However, new information from federal sources reveals that Guardo was innocent, a tragic mistake that Vic refuses to let derail him. Undeterred, he launches his own investigation, a course of action that proves fruitless and increasingly desperate. He even resorts to visiting Antwon Mitchell, his gang lord archnemesis, to fish for information from inside prison. The encounter is tense, but it yields nothing. Just as Vic begins to accept that the killer might never be caught, Ronnie, with no other alternatives left, casually mentions Shane’s name.

    Vic pursues this line of investigation reluctantly, clinging to the hope that he is wrong. However, the cold logic he applies as a detective leaves him with no choice but to accept the devastating truth. After informing Ronnie that Shane is innocent, Vic arranges a private meeting to confront his former partner. Shane, having already established a precedent of confession with Mara, admits his deed with surprising ease. What follows is not a moment of remorse, but one of defiance. Shane accuses Vic of hypocrisy, dragging up the killing of fellow officer Terry Crowley to remind Vic that he is no saint. Vic, who has already contemplated killing Shane in a previous confrontation, cannot bring himself to do it. He simply leaves the meeting in disgust, the silence between them speaking louder than any shout.

    While the Strike Team’s internal dynamics unravel, the fallout of these revelations begins to erode what little is left of Vic’s family life. Cassidy, who has been his most loyal daughter until this point, begins to act out with hostility after learning that Vic fathered a son with Danny Sofer. The betrayal cuts deep, as it threatens to replace her with a new sibling she never asked for. In a desperate attempt to salvage his family unit, Vic tries to come clean, arranging a meeting between Cassidy and Danny and allowing his daughter to see her new baby stepbrother for the first time. It is a noble, if somewhat naive, attempt to paper over the cracks in his personal life.

    Meanwhile, the Strike Team is tasked with a case that, under normal circumstances, would be a routine murder investigation suitable for Dutch and Billings. A young woman named Emily Martin is found stabbed to death in a "problematic" part of Farmington. What makes this case particularly delicate is that she is the daughter of Robert Martin (Michael Bofshever), the city controller responsible for LAPD finances. Aceveda wants the case solved quickly and quietly to avoid embarrassment for the bereaved family. This leads to the discovery that Emily was a heroin addict who prostituted herself and was killed by her boyfriend and pimp, Snail (Kyle Davis). The investigation reveals the gritty reality of Emily’s life, contrasting sharply with the high-stakes political maneuvering of her father.

    The episode also features a return to the fold in the form of Officer Tina Hanlon. Despite her status as the poster girl for the LAPD due to her striking looks, it becomes clear that she loves the actual work of policing too much to be just a pretty face. She is partnered with Sergeant Danny Sofer as a mentor, a dynamic that allows Dutch another opportunity to pursue his romantic interests, further highlighting the diverse motivations and personalities within the precinct.

    The episode was directed by Frank Darabont, one of the most renowned filmmakers to have ever worked on the series. While the episode has its moments—routinely efficient scenes of raiding and shooting, and Vic’s graphic and efficient discovery of a suburban mom's drug abuse—the true highlight is undoubtedly the acting. The episode culminates in an end scene that features another intense confrontation, showcasing Michael Chiklis and Walton Goggins at their absolute best. The chemistry between the two actors is palpable, conveying years of history, resentment, and a grudging respect that words alone cannot express.

    This confrontation is the crux of the episode's critical value. On most other shows, such a devastating secret being revealed would result in a dramatic shootout, with Vic or Shane, or perhaps even both, dead or in jail. However, Shawn Ryan, despite his formulaic tendencies, insists on proving that The Shield is his own series with his own rules. Therefore, despite the terrible secret being revealed, the aftermath is prolonged, anticlimactic, and messy. It mimics real life all too well, where trauma does not resolve itself in a single, satisfying act of vengeance but lingers in the silence of a car ride or the cold stare of an ex-partner.

    Finally, the episode offers a moment of meta-commentary through the casting of Autumn Chiklis, the daughter of Michael Chiklis. Now grown up and playing her fictional counterpart, she is given an expanded role that allows her to demonstrate some acting skills. While many fans of The Shield had previously complained about her abilities, this episode gives her a platform to prove her worth, adding a personal layer to the show's legacy. Chasing Ghosts is a great example of understated drama, proving that sometimes the quietest moments are the most devastating.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

    ==

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  18. Television Review: Haunts (The Shield, S6X05, 2007)@drax126d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Haunts (S06E05)

    Airdate: 1 May 2007

    Written by: Glen Mazzara & Charles H. Eglee Directed by: Michael Chiklis

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    Season 6 of The Shield initially presented itself as a period of respite, promising a return to normalcy that Vic Mackey desperately craved. After surviving the Internal Affairs Division (IAD) investigation and believing he had successfully avenged his close friend Lem, Vic believed the worst was behind him. However, this fragile state of affairs was destined to be short-lived. As Haunts illustrates, Farmington remains as dysfunctional and violent as Vic remains corrupt, and the ghosts of the past inevitably find their way to haunt the members of Strike Team, dragging them back into the mire of their own making.

    The episode opens with a stark reminder of the district's endemic violence through a massacre so horrific that the very existence of the Barn comes into question. The brutal murder of twelve Mexican illegals serves as a political hot potato for Councilman Aceveda, who immediately pushes Captain Wyms to have the crime solved at any cost. Wyms is placed under immense pressure, being told that a failure to solve the case will result in unacceptably high crime statistics and the closure of the Barn. In a discreet but calculated move, she informs the Strike Team leaders, including the newly appointed Detective Hiatt, about it. While their efforts fail to yield immediate results, they nonetheless provide valuable intelligence, narrowing the field of suspects to those more likely to be Mexicans than Salvadorans. A significant breakthrough occurs when Dutch informs Hiatt about a federal undercover informant named Hernan (Clifton Collins Jr). During a raid, Hernan tells the Strike Team in no uncertain terms that Guardo did not kill Lem. This revelation hits Vic hard, as he is forced to confront the terrifying reality that he has killed a wrong man.

    While Vic grapples with the professional fallout of the massacre, Shane Vendrell is being tortured by his conscience over the murder of Lem. However, before he can fully pay for his past crime, he finds himself in trouble over another misdeed. His ill-advised sexual liaison with Tillie, a Black teenager and girlfriend of Moses, escalates into a situation far more dangerous than he anticipated. Although Moses does not take insult from Tillie's sexual activities, her stepfather is a different matter. He ambushes Shane and beats him so badly that Shane ends up in Mission Cross, barely recognisable and forced to rely on Percocet and increasingly potent pain medication. The situation worsens when Mara discovers condoms in Shane's possession and soon realises the extent of her husband's infidelity. Shane, desperate over losing a close friend and a family unit, haunted by his conscience, and affected by his dependence on Oxycontin, Shane comes to Mara with a gun in his hand. He begs for forgiveness and admits to killing Lem, marking a pivotal moment of emotional collapse.

    In the meantime, Vic Mackey, after some consideration, agrees to help his old friend and mentor, Joe Clark, with shady security and mercenary job. Joe has been hired by a landlord to evict a gang of Jamaican drug dealers from an apartment building. Vic initially considered the job too risky and only agreed to join Joe after witnessing Joe's hotheaded and violent partner, Lester (Patrick St. Esprit). The mission succeeds, but Vic is deeply disgusted by Lester's methods, which include sadistic beating and humiliation.

    Dutch Wagenbach and Steve Billings continue to work on the serial rapist case and receive unexpected assistance from Carlos Morganza (Brian Howe), a man who volunteers at a shelter for runaway teens and provides information about potential victims. Morganza claims to be motivated by the unresolved case of his missing teenage daughter who ran away three years ago. Billings, however, suspects that Morganza might actually be the serial rapist himself, viewing his volunteerism as a way to boost his ego and gather intelligence. One of the victims eventually recognises his voice, and when confronted, Morganza offers a full confession in exchange for a television interview in which he would call his daughter to return. He admits to sexually molesting his daughter, which he claims was the reason for her running away. Later, an anonymous tip leads detectives to a shallow grave containing the daughter's remains, and Billings confronts Morganza, accusing him of indirectly causing his daughter's death.

    Written by Glen Mazzara and Charles H. Eegle, Haunted represented the second directorial effort of Michael Chiklis. The episode is well-made, but it follows a somewhat formulaic approach to its plot, taking a business-like stance that prioritises drama over visceral action. There is relatively little actual violence in the episode, with more emphasis placed on the internal psychological states of the characters and the regular goings-on within the Barn. The introduction of Julien as the new Strike Team member is handled unevenly, lacking the spectacle usually associated with such a significant personnel change.

    The subplot involving Joe's mercenary work looks predictably grim, but it somehow feels disjointed in this episode, although it serves as a cautionary illustration of what might await Vic after he gets forcibly retired from the LAPD. The greatest work on the episode, however, is done by the character actor Brian Howe, who is impressive as the seemingly helpful citizen who slowly reveals himself to be a monster. However, the true standout performance comes from Walton Goggins, as usual, who stands out for his strong emotional performance as Shane in a moment when he starts to fall apart. His meltdown is raw and terrifying, followed by an interesting cliffhanger in which Shane's secret is shared with his wife, completely changing the prospects of that secret remaining secret for very long.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  19. Television Review: The New Guy (The Shield, S6X04, 2007)@drax127d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    The New Guy (S06E04)

    Airdate: 24 April 2007

    Written by: Sarah Fain & Elizabeth Craft Directed by: Clark Johnson

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    Following the seismic events of the preceding episodes, which served as a cathartic purge of the series' long-running antagonists and the tragic death of Lem, The New Guy attempts to recalibrate the tempo of The Shield. The show, usually a blur of high-octane violence and desperate survival, seemed to take—or at least the authors of this specific instalment seemed to think they were taking—a slightly slower, more measured approach. The expectation was a return to the mundane horrors of the Farmington district, with lower stakes and a focus on the regular dysfunction of the Strike Team. However, while the setup promised a breath of fresh air, the execution feels like a reluctant step backward into melodrama.

    Vic Mackey, having survived Kavanaugh’s Internal Affairs investigation and exacted revenge for Lem’s death, believes he is finally at a good place. He takes the reins of the Strike Team, ready to reassert his hegemony on the streets. Yet, a palpable void remains. It is not just the absence of Lem, but the strategic maneuvering of Captain Claudette Wyms. With the unit’s ranks thinning, Wyms sees an opportunity to bring in fresh blood and, crucially, a replacement for Vic. This new arrival is Detective Kevin Hiatt (Alex O’Loughlin), a former INS agent with four years of experience working the Mexican border.

    The tension peaks in a restaurant scene where a bloody gunfight broke out between One-Niners and a group of gang members attempting to defect. It is a particularly nasty situation, and Hiatt proves his worth by helping Vic, Shane, and Ronnie handle the chaos. Wyms uses this moment to formally introduce Hiatt to Vic, effectively crowning him as her successor. Vic, desperate to keep his job and maintain his empire, attempts to mentor the newcomer, playing the benevolent father figure. However, Wyms reveals a cruel twist: the appeal board hearing for Vic’s forced retirement was a fabrication, a lie told solely to make Vic behave and work with the new guy.

    In the meantime, Vic attempts to prevent further bloodshed on the streets by intervening in the conflict between Moses and Vantes (Kevontay Johnson). Vantes, a former One-Niner and self-styled "revolutionary" leading a gang away from crime, becomes an obsession for Vic. As bodies pile up, Vic becomes fixated on saving Vantes' life. When he finds the wounded Vantes after shootout, it is tragically too late. Vic brings him to Mission Cross Hospital only to watch him die. It is a moment of profound vulnerability; Vic breaks down in front of his wife, Wyms, and his colleagues, exposing the depth of his grief and his desperation to replace the friend he lost.

    While Vic struggles with his emotional demons, Dutch and Billings are tasked with a particularly nauseating serial rapist case. The perpetrator targets vulnerable runaway teens, drugging them with GHB. The case is doubly embarrassing for Claudette because the Modus Operandi matches the testimony of a girl whose story was previously disregarded. Dutch is driven to solve it, convinced the rapist will eventually escalate to murder. This subplot provides a gritty, procedural counterpoint to Vic's emotional turmoil, grounding the episode in the messy reality of police work.

    Unbeknownst to Vic, Wyms continues to dismantle the Strike Team from within. Officer Julien Lowe is offered a position within the unit. After agreeing, he is told to join the team the next day, further signalling the fragmentation of the unit’s original dynamic.

    Written by Sarah Fain and Elizabeth Craft, The New Guy is a solid episode, but it feels merely functional. It tries to compensate for the relative banality of its content with enhanced melodrama. The Strike Team members are constantly reminded of Lem’s absence, which leads to Shane feeling utterly miserable and Vic trying to compensate for his friend's loss with a bizarre, almost delusional idea: making Vantes, an idealistic martyr, some sort of replacement for Lem. It is a desperate, pathetic attempt at catharsis.

    The most bizarre element of the episode is undoubtedly the scene in which Corrine suddenly appears at the Clubhouse to recount a dream involving Lem. Each of his friends interprets the dream in different ways, and the sequence itself shifts into a realm of mysticism or surrealism. It is the closest The Shield came to fantasy, and it feels awkward, as if the writers forcefully transplanted a scene from a less realistic drama into their gritty police series. It disrupts the immersion and feels forced.

    On the acting front, Alex O’Loughlin, the Australian actor who would become a big star a few years later as the protagonist of the Hawaii 5-0 remake, makes his debut here. Apart from his physically imposing presence, he doesn't make a massive impact, but the script leaves plenty of room for his character to grow in the episodes to come. He provides a physical counterpoint to Vic, but the episode lacks the chemistry to fully establish him as a genuine threat or partner. The New Guy is a transitional piece, necessary for setting up the changing of the guard, but it suffers from trying too hard to be emotionally resonant while relying on contrived dream sequences.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  20. Television Review: Back to One (The Shield, S6X03, 2007)@drax128d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Back to One (S06E03)

    Airdate: 17 April 2007

    Written by: Adam E. Fierro Directed by: Gwyneth Horder-Payton

    Running Time: 48 minutes

    The narrative trajectory of The Shield is frequently characterised by a biting, relentless form of tragic irony, a theme that reaches a fever pitch in the third episode of the sixth season, Back to One. Immediately following the episode in which the series' protagonist, Detective Vic Mackey, received a long-sought yet unexpected reprieve for his past crimes, this instalment serves as a stark reminder that certain characters are incapable of accepting the way out when it is offered to them. The central lesson of Back to One is that the consequences of previous tragic misunderstandings manifest in the form of another set of misunderstandings, bound to generate a new cycle of tragedies that no one seems capable of breaking. It is a grim meditation on how the pursuit of vengeance can blind a protagonist to the reality of his own actions, trapping him in a loop of violence that offers no true resolution.

    At the commencement of the episode, the dark shadow of Lieutenant Kavanaugh and his Internal Affairs investigation has finally lifted, yet the lingering consequences of his tenure continue to cast a pall over the precinct. Kavanaugh, unwittingly and tragically, caused the death of Curtis "Lem" Lemansky, Vic’s closest friend and a loyal Strike Team member. However, for Vic Mackey, the true culprit is Salvadorean gang boss Guardo Lima. The plot of the episode is driven entirely by Vic's relentless effort to avenge his friend in the most direct and brutal way possible, a path that leads him far beyond the law and into the realm of personal retribution.

    Prior to the events of this episode, Vic and his fellow Strike Team members executed a calculated abduction of Guardo’s girlfriend, Nydia Hernandez, specifically to lure the gang boss out of Mexico. Vic orchestrates a meeting designed to facilitate the ransom exchange, but instead of securing a payoff, he captures Guardo and transports him to an isolated house. There, Vic intends to subject him to horrendous torture, attempting to extract a confession that would validate his vendetta. The sequence is visceral and almost unbearable to watch; it is a masterclass in tension that highlights the moral decay of the main characters. The situation becomes even more psychologically taxing for Shane Vendrell, who feels enormous guilt over killing Lem and now finds himself forced to watch someone else suffer for his own crime.

    Vic attempts to exact a confession by threatening to rape Nydia, a threat that strips away any remaining humanity from the scene. This is particularly devastating for Shane, who has recently learned that Nydia is pregnant. The psychological pressure mounts as Guardo refuses to confess, and his attempts to give false information only serve to infuriate Vic further. Shane, consumed by guilt and the gruesome reality of the situation, desperately pleads with Vic to give up his revenge. His efforts, however, come to nothing. In a moment of cold-blooded resolve, Shane shoots Guardo, ending the torture and the episode's central conflict. Following the murder, Vic, Shane, and Ronnie Gardocki dispose of the body, leaving the audience to ponder the futility of the violence just enacted.

    Ronnie Gardocki is fortunate enough not to witness the entirety of the affair because he was temporarily assigned to Detective Dutch Wagenbach and his partner Billings. This separation allows him to assist with the investigation of a robbery homicide that leads to a meth dealer and, ultimately, his suppliers.

    When Vic returns to the Barn after his long absence caused by the Guardo affair, Captain Claudette Wyms cannot fail to notice that he feels strangely relieved, as if a heavy weight has been lifted from his shoulders. Later, Dutch Wagenbach’s night meeting with Officer Tina Hanlon, which she interprets as something of a date, is interrupted by the arrival of Agent Zinman (Julie Dretzin). She informs him that federal authorities could not fail to notice Guardo leaving Mexico for Los Angeles and wants Dutch to investigate what was so important to make such a powerful gang boss make such a risky move.

    Vic’s triumph is rendered hollow by the reality of his own mortality. Captain Wyms reminds him that he is soon to be forcibly retired and orders him to bring another detective to his Strike Team and train him as his replacement. This command serves as a constant reminder that his time is running out, a fact that makes his recent bout of brutality feel even more futile. The episode does not allow its characters a moment of rest; it constantly pushes them toward the next cliff edge.

    Written by Adam Fiero and confidently directed by Gwyneth Horden-Payton, Back to One is remembered by many fans as one of the least pleasant episodes of the series. This aversion stems largely from the extended scenes of torture, which are difficult to watch not merely because of their graphic violence, but because they depict Vic, the series' anchor, going way off the dark side. He is shown abducting women, torturing and ultimately killing a man in cold blood. Even Shane, who used to be one of the more uncontrollable characters, suddenly becomes the voice of reason, pleading for mercy in a scene where Vic has lost all empathy.

    The scene was made even more disturbing for the American audience at the time because Guardo’s torture reminded viewers of similar images that had occurred in real life at the US military prison in Abu Ghraib. Although Guardo was hardly the nice guy, with Vic reminding him and the audience of bombing innocent people, the whole torture was rendered pointless by the audience's knowledge that the real killer of Lem was Shane. In many ways, this episode served as a powerful allegory for the Iraq War: it depicted a chaotic, messy, and violent descent into depravity made under false pretenses.

    Ultimately, while Back to One is a harrowing watch, it also offers a glimpse into the potential future of the Strike Team. The episode showed Ronnie, one of the relatively underused characters, suddenly receiving more emphasis. His subplot suggests that his character and temperament would have been more useful while being partnered with "regular" detectives like Dutch instead of increasingly unhinged vigilantes like Vic. As the season progresses, it becomes clear that the only way for the Strike Team to survive is for Vic to let go of his need for control and vengeance, a lesson that he seems destined to ignore.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

    ==

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  21. Television Review: Baptism by Fire (The Shield, S6X02, 2007)@drax129d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Baptism by Fire (S06E02)

    Airdate: 11 April 2007

    Written by: Scott Rosenbaum Directed by: Guy Ferland

    Running Time: 48 minutes

    Most events and character arcs in The Shield, despite the authors' attempts to spice them up with a soapish "out there" twist or two, were marked with an aura of inevitability. The audience knows that Vic Mackey will, sooner or later, pay for his crimes; just as it was inevitable that Lem, the most positive and the most conscious of his accessories, would be the first to depart the plot in a tragic manner. This fatalism can be seen even in the fate of some side characters, including the one whose departure in Season 6 episode Baptism by Fire is, paradoxically, one of the most banal of all.

    The character in question is Lt. Kavanaugh, whose crusade to bring down Vic and his cabal of corrupt officers has not only indirectly led to Lem's death, but also brought himself to a very dark place. He leads a fresh investigation against Vic, fuelled by claims of Emolia Melendez, Vic's former CI, that he gave up Lem to Salvadorean gangsters. He manages to obtain a search warrant for Vic's house, and this search leads to actual physical evidence—a map with the marked location of Lem's demise—which Dutch, already sceptical about the whole affair, considers too convenient to be true.

    This investigation coincides with Vic's own relentless crusade, fuelled by his conviction that it was Guardo, leader of the Salvadoreans, who ordered Lem's death. His plan is simple: capture Guardo and exact his own simple, murderous brand of justice. Yet to obtain Guardo, he would have to spend a day checking and extorting contacts within the Salvadorean and Mexican underworld. Guardo is currently in Mexico, and to bring him over the border would require doing some service to shady but influential characters in that country—specifically, to return children held by a hit man named Rocha (Julian Scott Urena) to his wife, the daughter of a powerful family. In order to obtain intelligence, Vic has to go into the gated compound of the Byz Lats and, armed with a gun with a single bullet in the chamber, abduct the gang's leader Santi Galas (Benny Hernandez) and catch Rocha whilst he is trying to conduct a contract killing on a One-Niner in the street. The plan works, but Vic's Mexican contact tells him that Guardo is untouchable. Vic decides on an alternative approach: abducting Nydia Hernandez (Lela Loren), Guardo's girlfriend, in order to lure him over the border.

    Vic proceeds with his scheme despite, owing to the investigation, becoming an actual wanted man. He nevertheless sends Shane and Ronnie to the Barn to "act as his eyes and ears" as he contemplates his next move. Shane and Ronnie, much to their surprise, see the investigation against Vic falling apart before their eyes. Dutch is so suspicious about the evidence against Vic being too good that he conveys his concerns to Claudette, who wants to question Emolia—on whose testimony the entire case rests—personally. Kavanaugh's desperate attempts to stop this only convince Captain Wyms that she was right all along. Seeing where this would inevitably lead, Kavanaugh approaches Wyms and freely admits that he has falsified evidence. Because of this, he has his gun and shield taken from him, is arrested, and is brought to prison. In the final scene, Vic comes to gloat over him, but Kavanaugh takes comfort in knowing that he will not have to deal with Vic anymore, and warns him that he is currently at the point that awaits Vic in the future.

    Written by Scott Rosenbaum and directed by Guy Ferland, Baptism by Fire benefits a great deal from being almost completely focused on the main plot. The only possible distractions are a brief scene in which Wyms announces that Danny has passed her sergeant's exam and is likely to advance in the ranks, and another in which Aceveda, as former captain, coaches Wyms in bureaucratic tricks over jurisdiction that manipulate crime statistics.

    And this focused approach benefits the episode considerably, providing a departure for Kavanaugh that is the least shocking of all major characters' departures, and the one made by a character actually doing the right thing. Kavanaugh finally realises that he has gone too far, and that by pursuing the wrong path, and even lying about it, he would become the very monster he was trying to slay. This was an excellent way for Forest Whitaker to depart the show, and the final scene in prison, in which he is well-matched by Michael Chiklis, is one of the more memorable moments of the series. In humiliating defeat, Kavanaugh restores his moral clarity and tells Vic that he will not be tortured by conscience, nor will he have to worry about "the universe taking out its trash."

    There are hints that Vic might indeed go to a place much darker than he has ever been. His crusade against Guardo—ironically misguided—led him to a near-suicidal gambit in the Byz Lat den and to actually abduct his target's girlfriend. At the same time, Shane is the one who appears to be the voice of normalcy, and, being actually tortured by his conscience, even contemplates giving himself up for Lem's death to save Vic.

    Captain Wyms now becomes the real moral anchor of The Shield, explaining to Dutch that she had to disregard Kavanaugh's false evidence and that pursuing the truth—even when it shows things they do not want to see—is the only proper way.

    Dutch discussing the concept of Occam's Razor with Officer Tina Hanlon is an interesting scene, which confirms the nerdishness of his character and shows his clumsy way to impress a protégé towards whom he might harbour romantic feelings.

    Baptism by Fire thus stands as a pivotal episode in The Shield's penultimate season, one that dispenses with the elaborate machinations that often characterise the series in favour of a stark moral reckoning. Kavanaugh's fall from grace is rendered all the more poignant by Whitaker's performance, which has consistently portrayed the Internal Affairs lieutenant as a man whose obsession with Vic Mackey has consumed him utterly. The irony is palpable: in his zeal to bring a corrupt officer to justice, Kavanaugh becomes corrupt himself, planting evidence and subverting the very system he has sworn to uphold. His admission to Claudette represents a moment of redemption that Vic himself seems incapable of achieving—and this, ultimately, is what distinguishes the two men. Vic remains convinced that his ends justify his means, whereas Kavanaugh, in his final moments as a lawman, recognises that they do not.

    RATING: 8/10 (+++)

    ==

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  22. Television Review: On the Jones (The Shield, S6X01, 2007)@drax131d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    On the Jones (S06E01)

    Airdate: 3 April 2007

    Written by: Kurt Sutter Directed by: Michael Fields

    Running Time: 51 minutes

    Season 6 of The Shield begins in a rather conventional manner, attempting to resolve the tragic cliffhanger of the previous season's finale in a way that feels organic rather than contrived. The characters, most of them utterly oblivious to what has truly transpired, struggle to make sense of the chaos and act accordingly. This approach, whilst functional, lacks the visceral shock that characterised the fifth season's conclusion, choosing instead to methodically unpick the emotional and investigative threads left dangling.

    The episode is dedicated to the memory of Scott Brazil, a producer and director who had died from complications arising from ALS and Lyme disease—a poignant tribute to a creative force behind the series. Interestingly, the episode had been preceded by an obscure web-exclusive fifteen-minute prequel depicting how the officers of the Barn reacted to the killing of Curtis "Lem" Lemansky. This supplementary material, whilst not essential to the narrative, adds texture to the communal grief that permeates the precinct.

    The actual episode, written by Kurt Sutter and directed by Michael Fields, opens with a powerful emotional scene during which Vic, Shane, and Ronnie visit the grave of their fallen comrade. In a moment of grim intimacy, they use their pistols to fire a twenty-one-gun salute—"the one he deserved," as they see it. It is a striking image: three corrupt officers performing a ritual usually reserved for fallen heroes, for a man whose death they themselves set in motion through their manifold sins.

    The plot subsequently explores the ripples emanating from Lem's death through the immediate investigation, with various characters harbouring vastly different conceptions of what truly occurred. Vic becomes convinced that Lem met his end at the hands of Salvadoran gangsters and their leader Guardo, for whom he promises an identical fate—"only slower." This Salvadoran angle is simultaneously being pursued by Detective "Dutch" Wagenbach, who finds himself frustrated by the curious phenomenon of numerous Salvadoran immigrants deliberately confessing to crime they did not commit, seemingly to exhaust and derail the investigation through sheer attrition.

    Yet it is Lieutenant Kavanaugh who continues his relentless pursuit of Vic, becoming increasingly convinced that it was Vic himself who killed Lem to prevent him from testifying. He manages to persuade Assistant Chief Phillips to "discreetly" join the investigation and even locates Emolia Melendez, Vic's former Salvadoran confidential informant, whose testimony had landed Lem behind bars in the first place. Kavanaugh proceeds to coach her into lying about Vic having foreknowledge of where and how Lem would meet his end. However, Kavanaugh's heavy-handed and increasingly unethical tactics begin to unsettle almost everyone around him. Aceveda admits to Vic that he, having been in cahoots with Kavanaugh, deliberately lied about Lem testifying against his friends in hopes of provoking a reaction—and that this reaction may well have led to the killing. Dutch grows sceptical of Emolia's reliability, a doubt shared by Captain Wyms, creating a quiet but significant rift in the investigative consensus.

    The devastating realisation that Lem never actually intended to flip—and that the Strike Team was deceived—strikes Shane with particular brutality, given that it was he alone who orchestrated Lem's killing without the others' knowledge. Consumed by guilt, Shane descends into suicidal despair, recklessly endangering his own life during a volatile confrontation with a mentally ill heroin addict in methadon clinic who has taken a baby, a woman, and a doctor hostage. The scene is tense and morally murky, showcasing the series' knack for placing characters in situations where their psychological states are laid brutally bare.

    As with any episode of The Shield, supporting storylines abound. Danny's baby becomes an unexpected source of friction with Corrine, who remains bitter about her divorce from Vic. A semi-serious subplot involves a young Black man attacking sex shops after recognising his own grandmother in an amateur pornographic video—an act with which Officer Julien Lowe, owing to his devout Christian beliefs, finds himself sympathising. These threads, whilst occasionally feeling tangential, contribute to the show's rich tapestry of moral compromise and human frailty.

    The hostage subplot receives broader socioeconomic context through the arson attacks on methadone clinics, explained as resulting from these clinics being lucrative revenue streams for both drug-dealing gangs and government entities alike. This narrative choice underscores the series' continued engagement with the complexity of addiction and the profound futility of the War on Drugs—a recurring thematic concern that elevates The Shield above typical police procedurals.

    On the Jones functions competently as a season premiere within the show's established context and overarching plot, though it hardly ranks among the series' most memorable instalments. It features the formulaic blend of multiple storylines, shifting alliances, and plot developments unfolding in a reasonably realistic fashion that viewers have come to expect. Perhaps the most intriguing element is the continued moral descent of Lieutenant Kavanaugh, whose crusade against Vic transforms into something deeply personal, crossing ethical boundaries through evidence manufacture and witness manipulation. In doing so, the Internal Affairs investigator becomes virtually indistinguishable from the corrupt policeman he sought to bring down—a compelling study in how obsession can erode one's moral foundation.

    Walton Goggins, however, delivers the episode's strongest performance as perhaps the most guilt-burdened character in the ensemble. His portrayal of Shane Vendrell—tortured by the realisation that he killed his partner and friend based on a cruel deception, and that this shameful secret is one he will carry to his grave—is nothing short of extraordinary. Goggins communicates Shane's internal devastation through small gestures and haunted expressions, making his character's silent suffering palpable. It is a performance that elevates the material and serves as a powerful reminder of why The Shield remained such compelling television: at its core, it was always a study of broken men and the consequences of their choices.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  23. Television Review: Postpartum (The Shield, S5X11, 2006)@drax145d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Postpartum (S05E11)

    Airdate: 21 March 2006

    Written by: Adam E. Fierro & Shawn Ryan Directed by: Stephen Kay

    Running Time: 67 minutes

    Season five of The Shield distinguished itself from the conventions of American television drama even before a frame was broadcast. In an era where cable series were standardising the 13-episode half-season, Shawn Ryan’s gritty police saga delivered a taut, 11-episode run. This truncation, arguably a pragmatic correction following the two-episode elongation of season three, intensified the narrative pressure, funneling every subplot toward an inexorable climax. The season finale, Postpartum, however, represents a fascinating confluence of adherence to and subversion of formula. On one hand, it delivers the requisite ‘wham’ event mandatory for a season closer, compounded by a devastating cliffhanger designed to guarantee viewer return. On the other, it executes this within a framework that had, throughout the season, systematically dismantled the possibility of a tidy resolution. Furthermore, the episode’s extended runtime—a growing norm for prestigious cable finales—affords it the space to balance profound tragedy with the series’ characteristic, often jarring, levity. The result is an episode that serves as both a conventional punctuation mark and a brutally unconventional character study, cementing its place as one of the series’ most pivotal and emotionally grueling hours.

    The ‘wham’ event itself—the death of Detective Curtis “Lem” Lemansky—was, in narrative terms, hardly unexpected. The entire season had functioned as a meticulous process of narrative entrapment, with the relentless Internal Affairs investigator Lieutenant Kavanaugh methodically tightening the vice around Vic Mackey’s Strike Team. Kavanaugh’s strategy was pinpoint: identify the weakest link. That link was always Lem, the team’s moral centre, the sole member burdened with a conscience that extended beyond the crew’s insular loyalty. His inherent goodness became his fatal flaw. His desire to rescue his friend, the volatile Shane Vendrell, from a disastrous deal with gang lord Antwon Mitchell, led him to possession of package of heroin. This act of misguided protection provided Kavanaugh with the perfect leverage: a simple, brutal ultimatum. Testify against Vic and walk free, or face the full weight of justice. Lem, again striving for the honourable path, attempted to negotiate a confession that would see him serve time while shielding his comrades. Kavanaugh, using a malicious pragmatism, ensured Antwon Mitchell was informed, transforming any California prison sentence into a death warrant. Thus, by the finale’s opening, Lem’s options have evaporated to two grim realities: a fugitive’s life in exile, orchestrated by Vic, or certain murder behind bars.

    Postpartum meticulously chronicles the final, agonising failure of these options. From the outset, it is clear Lem is ill-suited to the life of a fugitive. His exile in a trailer park is ruptured by compassion; he helps an injured infant, an act that triggers a police call and forces him to flee. This incident underscores the fundamental tension: Lem’s decency is incompatible with the demands of perpetual hiding. In a desperate bid for a life, however diminished, he contacts his attorney, Rebecca Doyle, seeking to renegotiate his fate. His proposal—a longer prison sentence in exchange for serving on the East Coast, far from Antwon’s reach—is a testament to his tragic calculus. He is willing to sacrifice years of his freedom to preserve a sliver of safety and, most importantly, to still refuse to give up Vic. This stubborn loyalty sets the stage for the episode’s central, fatal confrontation.

    The narrative mechanics that engineer this confrontation are typically Shield-esque in their blend of institutional manoeuvring and raw street policing. Kavanaugh, reinvigorated by Lem’s failure to report to custody, proposes a psychological operation against Vic. Councilman Aceveda, ever the political creature, conveys a false message that Lem is ready to flip. Vic, whose survival instinct is unparalleled, is not deceived. Instead, he insists on a late-night meeting to ascertain Lem’s true position. This meeting is scheduled after a routine Strike Team raid on a Salvadoran gang, a raid that yields confiscated hand grenades—a seemingly incidental detail that becomes the instrument of tragedy. In a meticulously executed sequence, Vic, Shane, and Ronnie employ counter-surveillance tactics to shake Kavanaugh’s tail. Shane arrives first, and what follows is not a tense standoff, but a heartbreaking dialogue between two lifelong friends.

    This scene is the episode’s devastating core, and its power derives from performances of exceptional nuance. Kenny Johnson portrays Lem’s resolve as a weary, resigned certainty. He is not angry, but profoundly sad, finally accepting a fate he no longer has the energy to outrun. Facing this, Walton Goggins as Shane delivers a masterclass in tragic desperation. His attempts to convince Lem to flee to Mexico are laced with a panicked love. When Lem remains adamant, Shane’s decision—to conceal a live grenade in a bag of food—is portrayed not as a cold-blooded execution, but as the catastrophic culmination of a man realising he must destroy what he loves most to save the only family he has left. Goggins’s face cycles through anguish, terror, and a horrifying resolve, making the subsequent explosion feel less like a plot point and more like an emotional detonation. The aftermath, with almost the entire Barn—Wyms, Aceveda, Kavanaugh, Dutch, Julien, and the incompetent Officer Hanlon—gathered at the scene of a cop’s murder, is a panorama of shock and grief. Kavanaugh’s careless, accusatory remark to Vic sparks a brief, cathartic fistfight, a raw expression of the collective devastation. The immediate hypothesis, that Salvadoran gangsters retaliated for the earlier raid, provides Vic with a convenient scapegoat. His vow to Shane and Ronnie to find whoever is responsible and kill him closes the episode on a cliffhanger of profound irony. The audience knows the killer stands beside him, promising a season six that will unravel from within, guaranteeing at least one more Strike Team fatality before the series’ end.

    The writing by Adam E. Fierro and Shawn Ryan excels in its orchestration of this inevitable exit. By this penultimate season stage, the narrative logic permitted only two conclusions: Lem’s removal or Vic’s. The latter would end the series; the former could conclude a season. Lem’s departure was therefore structurally necessary, but Postpartum elevates it from a mere plot necessity to a profound character tragedy. It acknowledges the inevitability while investing every moment with authentic emotional weight, ensuring the loss resonates through the remainder of the series.

    True to The Shield’s complex tonal formula, Postpartum counterbalances its central tragedy with minor subplots that provide crucial, if often jarring, levity. The most explicit, as signalled by the title, involves Officer Danny Sofer giving birth to a son, Lee. Vic’s arrival at the hospital to confirm his paternity is a fleeting moment of personal reckoning inserted amidst the professional chaos, a reminder of the fragile domestic lives existing parallel to the Barn’s turmoil.

    A more substantial, darkly comedic thread involves Tori Burke (Ally Walker), a community volunteer savagely assaulted by taxi driver Gilbos Arakelian (Ammar Daraiseh). Upon arrest, Arakelian offers a bizarre defence: he mistook her for a street prostitute who had previously lured him into a beating by two Black men. Detective Dutch Wagenbach, ever the social observer, is initially baffled that a woman of apparent academic bearing could be thus mistaken. The arrival of her “attorney,” Tyrez Wallace—who is, in fact, her pimp—reveals the humiliating truth. In a brilliantly written and performed monologue, Tyrez (Yul Spencer) explains to Dutch how he exploited Tori’s vulnerabilities—her age, her abandonment by a boyfriend for a younger woman—to manipulate her into becoming his “bitch.” This subplot, which ventures into audacious territory with a sex encounter between Tyrez and Tori in an interrogation room, serves a dual purpose. It provides a necessary tonal release from the Lem storyline, and it showcases the talents of Ally Walker, an actress whose potential was often underutilised in her career. Notably, series producer Kurt Sutter would later cast Walker as Agent June Stahl in his own series, Sons of Anarchy.

    This theme of psychological manipulation even permeates a tertiary, semi-humorous subplot involving Dutch. He discovers the Barn’s vending machines are faulty, only to learn they are supplied by a company owned by the disgraced former Captain Billings. Infuriated by this corruption, Dutch prepares to report it to Captain Claudette Wyms. Wyms, however, is concurrently battling her own dilemma: she wants to fire the hopelessly incompetent Officer Tina Hanlon, but is bound by a prior agreement with Billings to cover up a scandal involving Hanlon’s semi-nude photos. Wyms’s Solomon-like solution is to partner the demoted Billings with Dutch and assign Dutch to mentor Hanlon. Dutch, secretly attracted to Hanlon, then employs the very psychological tricks outlined by Tyrez Wallace. The circularity concludes at the site of Lem’s death, where Tina breaks down in tears, her professional facade shattered by the horror, perhaps unwittingly becoming more susceptible to Dutch’s guidance.

    If the episode possesses a discernible flaw, it lies in the clumsy and gratuitous subplot involving Kavanaugh. His attempt to psychologically wound Vic by visiting Vic’s ex-wife, Corrine, and engaging in a seduction that borders on coercive, is a narrative misstep. The scene is utterly unpleasant and feels tonally disconnected from the rest of the episode’s sophisticated moral complexities. It plays as a crude, almost cartoonish display of villainy, saved from crossing a further line only by the timely arrival of Vic’s daughter, Cassidy. This moment does little to deepen Kavanaugh’s character beyond mustache-twirling malice and stands out as an aberration in an otherwise meticulously constructed hour of television.

    Postpartum is a landmark episode not merely for its shocking conclusion, but for the masterful way it earns that conclusion. It synthesizes the season’s relentless tension, the fundamental decency of a doomed man, and the brutal pragmatism of his friends into a climax that is both inevitable and horrifying. It balances this profound tragedy with the series’ signature, gritty levity, using subplots about birth, manipulation, and bureaucratic pettiness to reflect the messy, multifaceted reality of its world. It fulfills the conventional requirements of a season finale—the cliffhanger, the game-changing event—but does so through profoundly unconventional emotional and moral terrain, ensuring that the death of Lem Lemansky resonates as a tragic, irreparable fracture at the heart of The Shield’s corrupt world.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

    ==

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  24. Television Review: Of Mice and Lem (The Shield, S5X10, 2006)@drax145d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Of Mice and Lem (S05E10)

    Airdate: 7 March 2006

    Written by: Charles H. Eglee & Kurt Sutter Directed by: Gwyneth Horder-Payton

    Running Time: 49 minutes

    By 2006, the rules of American serialised television were still in a state of flux. The now-common practice of situating a season’s most explosive narrative climax in the penultimate episode, reserving the finale for introspection or narrative mop-up, was not yet firmly established. The Shield had experimented with this formula before. As Season 5 hurtled towards its conclusion, all signs pointed to Of Mice and Lem being precisely that kind of “wham” instalment, given the incendiary cliff-hanger of Lem’s arrest. Yet, while the episode delivers significant and dramatic developments, it ultimately pulls its most earth-shattering punches, functioning more as a tense and grim prologue. It methodically tightens the noose around Lemankowski, reserving the true, devastating closure for the season finale.

    The previous episode, Kavanaugh, concluded with former Strike Team member Lem, caught redistributing confiscated heroin, bailed out and awaiting his fate. IAD Lieutenant Jon Kavanaugh’s relentless pressure for a deal to bring down Vic, Shane, and Ronnie hangs over him. Lem’s loyalty is strained to breaking point, manifesting in crippling stomach problems—a physical symbol of his moral indigestion. His ultimate, desperate decision forms this episode’s tragic core: he informs Vic that he will become the “sacrificial lamb.” He will accept Kavanaugh’s deal, serve a year or two in prison, and allow his brothers to continue their lives and careers unimpeded. It is a heartbreaking act of misplaced loyalty, born of exhaustion and a futile hope for peace.

    On its surface, Lem’s sacrifice appears a clean, if painful, solution. Kavanaugh’s position is weakening; his abrasive tactics have alienated even those within the LAPD hierarchy who despise Vic. Emboldened, Vic feels comfortable enough to get particularly cruel revenge: visiting Kavanaugh’s estranged, mentally fragile wife, Sadie, under the guise of concerned friendship, culminating in a sexual encounter he later flaunts to torment his pursuer. The Barn itself seems to be moving on, with Assistant Chief Phillips promoting a recovered Claudette Wyms to Captain, replacing the incompetent Billings. One of her first acts is to rightfully reclaim her office from Kavanaugh, signalling a return to order and expelling the corrosive influence of his investigation.

    However, Vic’s confident plans are catastrophically undone by Kavanaugh’s previous move involving imprisoned gang lord Antwon Mitchell. In a chillingly calm prison visit, Antwon elucidates the brutal reality Lem faces. Lem’s presence in any California prison would be seen as an opportunity for bloody retribution against the Strike Team that imprisoned him. Antwon presents Vic with a devil’s bargain: facilitate a robbery of a police warehouse holding confiscated merchandise, and he will ensure Lem’s safety. Vic, in desperation, agrees. The robbery, however, is a disastrous double-cross. Antwon uses it not only to acquire the goods but to eliminate a potential rival, Kern Little—a failed rapper returned to his One-Niner roots—and, more crucially, to have a guard murdered in a manner designed to get further leverage on Strike Team. When part of the loot subsequently disappears, Antwon seizes the pretext to void the deal entirely, effectively condemning Lem to death. With all exits sealed, Vic is forced to make the agonising decision to tell Lem he cannot, under any circumstances, go to prison. The episode concludes with Vic arranging Lem’s desperate, last-minute escape to Mexico, a temporary salve for a now-terminal wound.

    The script by Charles H. Eglee and Kurt Sutter handles this labyrinthine plot with remarkable deftness. Even seemingly sensationalist elements, such as Vic’s seduction of Sadie Kavanaugh, are grounded in the characters’ vindictive pathologies and play out with a grim naturalism. The episode also deftly ties up a lingering procedural subplot concerning a serial attacker placing rat traps in glory holes. After a near-fatal incident, Dutch and Claudette must coax information from a reluctant witness, Alarico Trujillo, whose involvement leads to his wife accusing him of homosexuality and resulting in domestic violence. This thread provides a rare and excellent spotlight for Officer Julien Lowe. He deals with pressure from gay activist Art Gadway (Derek Webster), who accuses him of not doing enough for “their people,” while also using his own complex identity—a gay man with deep Christian faith—to extract a confession from the perpetrator, Jarod Stahl (Derk Chetwood). Julien recognises Stahl as a repressed homosexual channelling his self-loathing into violence against other “abominations.” It is a powerful, nuanced scene that adds significant depth to Julien’s often-underused character.

    The episode also smartly utilises continuity, briefly resurrecting Kern Little from Season 1 only to have him brutally and unceremoniously dispatched. This is not fan service but a stark reminder of the show’s ruthless, pragmatic world where past connections offer no protection, only targets.

    Where the episode stumbles is in its direction. Gwyneth Horder-Payton, a veteran assistant director on the series, delivers competent but unexceptional work in her directorial outing. The crucial warehouse robbery sequence feels slightly confused in its geography and editing, diluting the tension of the double-cross. Furthermore, the musical montage near the end, scored to “Disarm” by Smashing Pumplkins, aims for poignant gravity but lands closer to televisual cliché, an uncharacteristically sentimental beat in an otherwise ruthlessly unsentimental narrative.

    Finally, the episode’s coda—Officer Danny Pilar going into labour and being rushed to hospital by Julien—feels like a jarring, soap-opera convenience. While it serves to tie off Danny’s pregnancy arc, its placement amid the high-stakes, life-and-death manoeuvring surrounding Lem creates a tonally discordant note, a forced attempt at juxtaposing “life” against the encroaching “death” that governs the Strike Team’s world. It is a rare moment where the machinery of serialised plotting becomes visible, slightly undermining the otherwise airtight tension of the main narrative.

    Of Mice and Lem is a superbly written, intricately plotted instalment that expertly tightens the screws on its central characters. It excels in its nuanced handling of complex moral dilemmas and its willingness to let grim inevitability replace explosive action. If it falls short of being a classic penultimate episode “wham,” it is because it understands that the true explosion is yet to come, choosing instead to meticulously assemble the powder keg that the finale will ignite.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  25. Television Review: Smoked (The Shield, S5X09, 2006)@drax146d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Smoked (S05E09)

    Airdate: 7 March 2006

    Written by: Sarah Fain, Elizabeth Craft & Glen Mazzara Directed by: Dean White

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    Season Five of The Shield delivered some of television’s most electrifying moments, largely because its narrative engine finally began closing its walls around Vic Mackey and his Strike Team. This mounting pressure was crystallised by the introduction of Lieutenant Jon Kavanaugh, portrayed with ferocious intensity by Forest Whitaker, who emerged as Vic’s most formidable and psychologically astute adversary. Yet, much like Kavanaugh himself, Season Five occasionally had a habit of overplaying its hand, pushing compelling tension into moments of strained melodrama. A prime example of this is Smoked (Season 5, Episode 9), a fundamentally solid episode that nonetheless stumbles with a narrative misstep so jarring it threatens to undermine the gritty realism the series had so painstakingly built. The episode functions as a necessary, if occasionally mechanical, bridge to the season’s explosive finale, but it is let down by one profoundly ill-considered scene.

    The plot deals directly with the fallout from Kavanaugh’s rash, Gordian-knot-cutting decision to finally make his move against the Strike Team by incarcerating Lem. The situation for Lem is dire; remanded in custody, he is surrounded by criminals, many of whom he helped put away, and the shadow of a corrupt deal between Kavanaugh and imprisoned gang lord Antwon Mitchell looms large. Mitchell’s desire to see Lem transferred to his prison for execution adds a layer of visceral dread. Vic, ever the loyal commander, vows to bail Lem out within twenty-four hours. Kavanaugh, however, has anticipated this. He freezes the assets of every Strike Team member and their immediate families, cutting off all legitimate avenues for the $100,000 cash bond. This financial stranglehold exacerbates existing fractures, most notably pressuring Corrine into a furious confrontation with the pregnant Danny Sofer over her affair with Vic. Forced into a corner, Vic must now rely on his deep, illicit knowledge of the streets to shake down the requisite funds.

    The solution arrives with a conveniently timed case: the discovery of Artemis Cooke’s body in a dumpster. The official story of Cooke being an organ courier to Canada is immediately suspect to Vic’s practised ear. He deduces, with characteristic swiftness, that Cooke was actually smuggling high-potency cannabis from Vancouver for a dealer named Dijon Reynolds (Montae Russell) and was murdered during a robbery. Seeing an opportunity, Vic offers to retrieve the stolen cash and drugs in exchange for a “finder’s fee.” The investigation leads to Cooke’s own stepson, the pot-smoking Jaden Reed (Ricky T. Chaney), whose admission of the murder—motivated by anger over being fired—feels like a neat, almost too-convenient resolution. The real tension comes from a race against time as Shane and Ronnie retrieve the bag of cash just moments before Detectives Claudette Wyms and Dutch Wagenbach can arrest Jaden, who is found passed out atop the money. It is a classic Shield manoeuvre: the team exploits police procedure for personal gain, with old associate Smitty posting the bail and the cash destined to be laundered through a legitimate front. This subplot is efficiently executed, reinforcing Vic’s resourcefulness and the team’s precarious, parasitic relationship with the very justice system they are meant to uphold.

    Parallel to this, the political machinations continue. Kavanaugh appears to have mended fences with Councilman—and now Reserve Officer—David Aceveda. Displeased with the Internal Affairs investigation’s direction, Aceveda resigns his commission and launches a council probe into the IAD itself. In a masterful scene of political jujitsu, Vic visits Aceveda. Sensing the bad blood between the councilman and the lieutenant, Vic offers a stark, pragmatic choice: if Aceveda helps bring Vic down, the ensuing scandal will obliterate Aceveda’s own political aspirations; conversely, being “nice” to Vic offers a clearer path to the mayor’s office. It is a brilliant reminder of the show’s understanding of power as a currency, traded in threats and mutual vulnerabilities.

    A secondary, almost satirical subplot involves the profoundly incompetent Officer Tina Hanlon. Her career seems terminally doomed after she draws her service weapon on a misidentified undercover officer. However, in a darkly comic twist, Dutch's discovery of a secret camera in the women’s locker room—which captured compromising photos of Hanlon—inverts the power dynamic. The cowardly Billings, who had camera installed allegedly over petty thefts, is now compromised, and offers to not only preserve her job but fast-track her advancement in exchange for her silence. Dutch’s subsequent offer to mentor her adds a layer of tragic irony to the Barn’s endemic corruption.

    Written by Sarah Fain, Elizabeth Craft, and Glen Mazzara, Smoked is a textbook example of a formulaic yet solid episode. It dutifully advances the season’s overarching plot, tightening the screws on the Strike Team and laying crucial groundwork for the final two episodes, which promise an explosive conclusion. No new thematic ground is broken: Billings confirms his cowardice, Aceveda his political opportunism, Kavanaugh his relentlessness, and Vic his willingness to sacrifice anything for his team—and his own survival. It is a well-oiled piece of narrative machinery.

    However, one glaring detail nearly derails the entire enterprise. In a bid to intimidate Shane and Vic, Kavanaugh stages a meticulous reconstruction of Terry Crowley’s murder. The scene’s tension is palpable until Kavanaugh produces Crowley’s brother, Drew (Christopher May), a San Diego PD officer, to witness the proceedings. Not only does Drew declare himself utterly convinced of Vic’s guilt, but he then launches into a bizarre, biblical tirade, promising Old Testament-style retribution. This moment is not merely theatrical; it is tonally inappropriate, a jarring descent into soap-operatic revelation. It represents a rare but significant narrative sloppiness for The Shield. The sudden arrival of a previously minor character—played by a different actor in his sole Season 1 appearance—feels like a cheap retcon, a desperate attempt to inject personal stakes that the episode, and Kavanaugh’s formidable presence, did not require. It undermines the gritty, procedural realism that gives the show its power, substituting it for a contrived, melodramatic flourish. It is the moment where ‘Smoked’ overplays its hand, reminding the audience that even the greatest of adversaries can be poorly served by writers reaching for an emotional crescendo that rings fundamentally false. The episode succeeds in moving the pieces into place for the endgame, but this misstep leaves a stain on an otherwise competent instalment, a warning that even in a series as ruthlessly intelligent as The Shield, the pull of convenient drama is a constant threat to its core integrity.

    RATING: 5/10 (++)

    ==

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  26. Television Review: Kavanaugh (The Shield, S5X08, 2006)@drax148d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Kavanaugh (S05E08)

    Airdate: 28 February 2006

    Written by: Scott Rosenbaum & Shawn Ryan Directed by: D. J. Caruso

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    Some of the greatest works of cinema are often described as “happy accidents”—serendipitous moments of improvisation or error that birth something iconic. This same alchemy of mere chance can and does play a part in television production, with The Shield in its stellar fifth season providing a particularly fascinating example. During the filming of the earlier episode Rap Payback (S5E06), actor Forest Whitaker, fully immersed in his role as the relentless Internal Affairs investigator Lieutenant Jon Kavanaugh, forgot to remove his wedding ring. Rather than reshoot the scene or digitally erase the unwanted detail, series creator Shawn Ryan made a character-defining decision: he kept it. This inadvertent prop was woven into Kavanaugh’s backstory, becoming a poignant symbol of his fractured personal life and a central narrative engine for the season’s eighth episode, aptly titled Kavanaugh. What emerges is not merely a plot contrivance but a great example of turning production happenstance into profound character study.

    By this point in the season, the series has firmly established Lieutenant Kavanaugh as the prime adversary of Vic Mackey and his Strike Team. He is a relentless Internal Affairs Division investigator who takes his job of eradicating the quartet of corrupt policemen not just seriously, but personally. His drive, however, is a double-edged sword. Coupled with significant personal issues, it renders him undiplomatic and strategically reckless, burning bridges with potential allies through sheer force of abrasive will. This self-sabotaging trait is immediately evident in the episode’s exploration of his failed overtures. The opening scene introduces one such potential ally: Antwon Mitchell, the gang boss now serving a life sentence after being brought down by Vic for killing two Farmington policemen. Mitchell, who had Shane Vendrell in his pocket, presumably possesses a treasure trove of dirt on the Strike Team. His price for cooperation is simple and vicious: he wants Vic and his men delivered to the same prison where he will spend eternity gloating over them. Kavanaugh, however, in a display of rigid, perhaps misguided, principle, refuses to make the deal, closing a door that could have swiftly ended his crusade.

    Another avenue presents itself in the form of Detective Dutch Wagenbach, who harbours his own deep-seated reasons for disliking Vic Mackey, ranging from being the object of Vic’s macho pranks to his complicated feelings for Vic’s estranged wife, Corrine. Yet, Kavanaugh’s strong-arm tactics and profound lack of tact quickly create an unbridgeable chasm between them. Dutch, the cerebral detective, operates on procedure and evidence; Kavanaugh, the zealot, operates on conviction and pressure. Their methodologies are irreconcilable, and Kavanaugh’s inability to harness Dutch’s insider knowledge and moral ambivalence towards Vic represents another critical strategic failure.

    Kavanaugh’s single-minded investigation is further complicated by a regular, yet explosively dangerous, procedural case. Someone has used hand grenades to massacre members of the Spokestreet Souljahs, with Salvadoran gangsters emerging as the prime suspects. In a tense operation, Emolia Melendez—the very criminal informant Kavanaugh previously used against Lem and Vic—is recruited to help the Salvadorans assemble live grenades during a sting. Desperate to preserve this valuable source, Kavanaugh personally supervises the ensuing raid, a decision that nearly costs him his life when a grenade is activated. In a moment of supreme irony, his life is saved by the quick thinking of Lemansky, the very man he is obsessively trying to destroy. This act of mercy does not engender gratitude but rather seems to amplify Kavanaugh’s cognitive dissonance, highlighting the moral ambiguity that he is so desperate to purge from his world.

    Yet, it is a far more intimate and devastating personal issue that ultimately shatters Kavanaugh’s professional façade and pushes him over the edge. He receives a call from his ex-wife, Sadie (played by Gina Torres), reporting that she has been raped in Farmington. The case immediately becomes entangled with the Barn, with Julien Lowe and Tina Hanlon as the first responding officers, Corrine as the examining nurse, and Dutch leading the investigation. Dutch, with his meticulous eye, quickly uncovers troubling inconsistencies in Sadie’s story, and her identified assailant possesses a rock-solid alibi. The tragic truth is revealed: Sadie, who had a history of mental health issues prior to their divorce, has fabricated the entire assault. Kavanaugh is ultimately forced into a horrific confrontation with her, charging her with filing a false report and having her institutionalised. This scene is one of raw, intimate humiliation, a personal collapse conducted in the sterile environment of a police facility.

    Crucially, this private catastrophe does not remain private. Vic Mackey, via a surveillance camera in the interrogation room, witnesses the entire, devastating exchange. In that moment, Kavanaugh’s deepest vulnerability—his failed marriage and his ex-wife’s instability—is laid bare before his arch-nemesis. Realising his opponent now holds this knowledge, Kavanaugh acts on pure, venomous impulse. In a ruthless counterstroke, he formally charges Lemansky for heroin possession and has him very publicly arrested in the Barn, caging him alongside common criminals. The episode concludes with Kavanaugh returning to prison, this time willing to meet Antwon Mitchell’s demands, signalling a dark new willingness to cross ethical lines he once refused to broach.

    Kavanaugh stands as one of the series’ more memorable episodes, and its status as a pivotal turning point in the grand narrative scheme is underscored by series creator Shawn Ryan co-writing it with Scott Rosenbaum. Its brilliance lies in its narrative daring: for almost its entire duration, the main story is shown from the perspective of the antagonist. Kavanaugh is portrayed, to put it charitably, as a complex and profoundly difficult character. Yet upon closer inspection, the episode serves as a devastating mirror. Apart from the badge and an obsessive, albeit twisted, idea of “doing what is right,” there is disturbingly little to differentiate the IAD detective from Vic Mackey. He is obsessed with his wife and easily manipulated by her, only to react by callously “throwing her to the wolves.” He acts on impulsive rage due to personal humiliation and, in return, publicly destroys a man who literally saved his life mere hours earlier. This merciless treatment contrasts starkly with Vic’s own code; for all the trouble Emolia caused him, Vic never hesitated to risk his life to save hers during the raid on the Salvadorans. Kavanaugh, in his righteous fury, proves himself capable of being even colder.

    The final, chilling scene suggests Kavanaugh is now prepared to make the very nasty deals with irredeemably evil characters like Antwon Mitchell that he once found unconscionable. He is poised to take a dark route, crossing the same moral line previously traversed by Vic and Aceveda, thereby completing his tragic transformation from would-be saviour to a monster forged in the same fire as those he hunts. The episode is superbly directed and features a career-high, brilliantly unflinching performance from Forest Whitaker, who masterfully conveys the quiet torment and eruptive fury of a man disintegrating under the weight of his own mission. If Gina Torres’s performance as the unstable Sadie feels somewhat less convincing in comparison, it is only because Whitaker’s work is so utterly commanding and immersive. In the end, Kavanaugh is a devastating psychological portrait and a crucial inflection point, proving that on The Shield, the most dangerous enemy often bears the most unsettling resemblance to the hero.

    RATING: 8/10 (+++)

    ==

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  27. Television Review: Man Inside (The Shield, S5X07, 2006)@drax148d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Man Inside (S05E07)

    Airdate: 21 February 2006

    Written by: Adam E. Fierro & Emily Lewis Directed by: Dean White

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    The Shield operated on a narrative engine that was both its greatest strength and, at times, its most glaring weakness: the multi-threaded, hyper-kinetic episode structure. This formula, which juggled serialised arcs with self-contained procedural plots, could yield masterpieces of tension and moral complexity. However, it also risked producing episodes so stuffed with competing storylines that individual threads felt undercooked or shoddily resolved. Season 5’s Man Inside (S5E07), written by Adam E. Fierro and Emily Lewis, is a telling example of this dichotomy—an episode where the compelling force of one powerhouse storyline ultimately compensates for the more pedestrian elements elsewhere, resulting in a solid, if not exceptional, instalment.

    The primary serialised narrative continues the engrossing saga of Lieutenant Jon Kavanaugh’s (Forest Whitaker) obsessive crusade to dismantle Vic Mackey and his Strike Team. Fresh from coercing information about the unexplained $65,000 from Vic’s ex-wife, Corrine, Kavanachev expertly weaponises this intelligence. His aim is to systematically fracture Mackey’s world. He sows seeds of distrust within the Strike Team itself, and successfully turns the team’s lawyer, Rebecca Doyle, into a wary adversary. This pressure forces Vic into a reactive, cornered position. In a moment of rare vulnerability, he is compelled to come clean to Doyle, pleading that his corruption is “a thing of the past” and promising to “turn a new leaf.” This same hollow promise is extended to Corrine, in a chillingly pragmatic manipulation where he instructs her to cooperate with Kavanaugh precisely because her hands are clean—a stark admission of his own irredeemable soil. Kavanaugh’s methodology is brutal and effective, yet it is undermined by a critical, almost tragic, misreading of a potential ally.

    This flaw is evident in his dealings with Councilman David Aceveda. Despite Aceveda’s own deep-seated vendetta against Mackey—a chain of events he inadvertently set in motion, culminating in Terry Crowley’s murder at the very beginning of the series—Kavanaugh is convinced the councilman is in league with Vic. He misinterprets Aceveda’s prison visits to Juan Lozano and his shady negotiations with gang boss Antwon Mitchell as components of Mackey’s grand scheme. Kavanaugh remains completely blind to the intensely personal, political, and sexual humiliations that drive Aceveda’s actions, a blindness that isolates him from a powerful ally and reveals the tunnel vision of his crusade.

    Running parallel is the episode’s obligatory procedural plot, which begins with the contrived levity of a precinct softball game. Here, Vic catches the eye of Detective Paul Reyes (Paul Ben-Victor), head of an LAPD elite citywide task force. Despite the game ending acrimoniously, Reyes is impressed by Mackey’s reputation and recruits him to aid a grim murder investigation involving a woman and a young girl. The ensuing hunt leads to methamphetamine dealer and victim's boyfriend Mauricio Ochoa (Frank Alvarez), who possesses a solid alibi, and then to the true perpetrator: Ted Shusett (John Hillard), a meth addict. The climax, involving a hostage situation resolved by Reyes blowing a hole in a wall with an improvised explosive, is serviceably tense but ultimately routine for the series. The pathos of Shusett’s belated realisation that the murdered girl might have been his own daughter offers a momentary glimmer of depth. Reyes’s offer to Vic—to join his elite team—serves mainly to highlight the ever-tightening noose of the IAD investigation, a promise of escape now permanently foreclosed.

    It is the third storyline, however, that elevates “Man Inside” from the routine to the memorable. Detectives Dutch Wagenbach and Claudette Wyms’s pursuit of serial killer Kleavon Gardner is a great example of psychological tension and character-driven drama. Aware that Gardner is too accustomed to his techniques, Dutch cedes the interrogation to Claudette, whose physical decline is painfully evident—her nose bleeds mid-questioning, a visceral symbol of her deteriorating health. The discovery that Kleavon’s sister Fatima is alive and in hiding presents a dilemma. In a morally ambiguous but devastatingly effective gambit, Claudette chooses to deceive the killer, coldly informing him that Fatima was found strangled. This calculated lie fractures Kleavon’s composure; while denying his sister’s murder, he inadvertently confesses to all the others. This triumph of cunning and resolve is immediately undercut by the episode’s devastating final scene: Claudette collapsing on the stairwell, her ultimate fate hanging in the balance. CCH Pounder’s performance here is monumental, transforming what could be a standard interrogation scene into a poignant study of sacrifice, where professional victory is bought at a dire personal cost.

    Man Inside is a structurally emblematic episode of The Shield. The main Kavanaugh-Mackey thread advances the season’s arc with reliable, chess-like precision, while the meth-murder procedural feels like generic filler. The script, by Fierro and Lewis (the latter a former assistant to creator Shawn Ryan), is competent but lacks the searing originality of the series’ best. Ultimately, the episode is saved and seared into memory by the raw power of its final storyline. Pounder’s fearless portrayal of Claudette’s physical and moral struggle, capped by that brutally abrupt cliffhanger, provides the emotional heft and dramatic stakes that the other plots merely sketch. It is a reminder that even within an uneven narrative framework, a single, flawlessly executed thread can redeem the whole.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

    ==

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  28. Television Review: Rap Payback (The Shield, S5X06, 2006)@drax149d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Rap Payback (S05E06)

    Airdate: 14 February 2006

    Written by: Charles H. Eglee & Ted Griffin Directed by: Michael Chiklis

    Running Time: 50 minutes

    By its midpoint, Season 5 of The Shield had crystallised into a bitterly personal duel between two formidable, yet profoundly compromised, wills: Detective Vic Mackey and Lieutenant Jon Kavanaugh of Internal Affairs. The preceding episode, Trophy, ended with a decisive victory for Mackey, leaving Kavanaugh publicly humiliated and stripped of his leverage. Rap Payback, however, immediately establishes that such a defeat has only sharpened Kavanaugh’s resolve. Far from being discouraged, he emerges more fiercely motivated, willing to cross ethical boundaries that once might have given him pause. This episode meticulously charts his offensive, portraying a man who believes the ends—bringing down Mackey—justify increasingly ugly means, even as it sows the seeds of his own potential undoing.

    Kavanaugh’s strategy is one of psychological occupation and intimidation. His most potent symbolic move is the requisitioning of the Strike Team’s ‘Clubhouse’ within the Barn as his own IAD office. This is a territorial claim, a constant, looming presence designed to unnerve Vic and his team. The space where they once plotted their corrupt schemes is now the command centre for their destruction. Kavanaugh’s most vulnerable target, however, lies outside the Barn: Corrine Mackey. Summoning her to this intimidating environment, he subjects her to a merciless interrogation about the family’s finances. He coldly threatens to imprison her, leaving their two autistic children parentless. He twists the knife by invoking Danny Sofer’s pregnancy and her past relationship with Vic, weaponising personal history to inflict maximum distress. This calculated psychological torture works; a broken Corrine confesses that Vic provided $65,000 for tuition and expenses, money whose origins he refused to disclose. This admission is the crack in the dam Kavanaugh has been seeking—a direct, if unproven, link between Mackey’s lifestyle and illicit funds.

    Emboldened, Kavanaugh broadens his assault by openly reviving the investigation into the murder of Officer Terry Crowley. His pointed questioning of Shane Vendrell about the event serves a dual purpose: it rattles Shane and it strategically destabilises Vic’s legal defence. The mere mention of a murder investigation is enough to alarm Vic’s attorney, Rebecca Doyle. Already distrustful over being kept out of the loop regarding Kavanaugh’s listening device, this new development causes her to have serious second thoughts about continuing to represent the Strike Team. Kavanaugh’s aggressive pincer movement—cornering Corrine financially and threatening Vic with a reopened murder case—shows him on the offensive and in a seemingly strong position.

    Ironically, it is this very relentlessness that plants the first hints of Kavanaugh’s potential downfall. Convinced that Councilman David Aceveda compromised his meticulously placed listening device in the previous episode, Kavanaugh allows personal vendetta to override political sense. He publicly turns on Aceveda, initiating a corruption investigation against him. In doing so, he transforms a powerful, if duplicitous, city politician from a potential asset into a sworn enemy. This move demonstrates a critical flaw: Kavanaugh’s monomaniacal focus on Mackey blinds him to the wider web of alliances and enmities in Farmington’s political ecosystem, a mistake Vic himself would be less likely to make.

    While Kavanaugh’s crusade dominates, the episode interweaves two procedural subplots that enrich The Shield’s gritty tapestry. The first involves a gangland shooting where the victim is from the Black Bop Street gang. The key witness is Kasper (Joe Saccoda), a young white man who has deeply assimilated Black street culture through fashion, speech, and affiliation. Kasper is revealed to be a cunning entrepreneurial figure, valued by multiple gangs for his business acumen. The investigation uncovers that the hit was carried out by Latino assassins, and the police deduce that Kasper himself orchestrated the murder of a Bop Street member to earn ‘street cred’. During interrogation, the detectives cunningly turn his cultural appropriation against him by highlighting that his girlfriend, Moni (Jessa French), is white. Kasper’s dismissive retort—that he keeps Moni only to placate his white relatives and actually prefers Black women—is recorded and played back to Moni. Her furious reaction to this crude betrayal provides the leverage needed to flip her into testifying against Kasper, a neat resolution that underscores the series’ theme of manipulation.

    The second subplot continues the chilling serial killer arc involving Cleavon Gardner. His sister Fatima, now convinced of his guilt, arrives at the Barn with a blood-stained shirt as evidence. Acting on her tip, Detective Dutch Wagenbach conducts an unauthorised search of Cleavon’s home, only to flee just as Cleavon returns. When Cleavon later reports Fatima missing, Dutch and Claudette Wyms fear the worst—that he has killed his own sister to silence her. The episode’s closing moments deliver a grim twist: the body of a middle-aged Black woman, resembling Fatima, is discovered strangled. However, Claudette’s keen observation reveals that the killer has deliberately posed the victim to look like herself. This macabre gesture personalises the threat, transforming the case from an abstract manhunt into a sick, taunting game directed at the detectives themselves, promising a deeply unsettling conflict to come.

    The episode’s predominantly dark tone is deftly lightened by a darkly comic B-story. Officer Tina Hanlon encounters Alarico Trujillo (Joe Camareno) in a mortifying predicament: someone has placed a mousetrap inside a glory hole he was using for anonymous sex, resulting in a painful injury to his genitals. This is revealed to be one of several such incidents, and a highly reluctant Trujillo is persuaded to help Hanlon profile a possible suspect. This absurd, tragicomic vignette provides necessary levity while staying true to the show’s unvarnished, often grotesque, portrayal of urban life.

    Written by Charles H. Eglee and Ted Griffin, and directed by series star Michael Chiklis in his second directorial effort, Rap Payback is a tightly constructed instalment. Chiklis demonstrates a solid command of pacing and tone, adeptly interweaving the main psychological thriller with the gangland and serial killer subplots. The writing ensures each narrative thread reinforces the central themes of manipulation, moral compromise, and the corrosive nature of obsession.

    The episode is elevated tremendously by the presence of Forest Whitaker, whose performance as Kavanaugh is a great example of simmering intensity. He portrays a man in the midst of a moral descent. Kavanaugh’s mission—to root out corruption—may be noble, but his methods, particularly the psychological torture of Corrine Mackey, render him increasingly problematic. He becomes a dark mirror to Vic, each justifying his transgressions by the righteousness of his cause. This complexity is what makes the conflict so compelling. In a fascinating piece of production trivia, Whitaker’s accidental failure to remove his wedding ring during filming was later noticed by producers. This error was retroactively incorporated into the character’s backstory, adding layers about a failed marriage that would be exploited in future episodes, a testament to the show’s agile storytelling.

    Rap Payback is a pivotal, well-executed episode that drives Season 5’s core conflict into darker, more personal territory. It showcases Kavanaugh at his most dangerously effective, even as it foreshadows the pitfalls of his unwavering aggression. Alongside its compelling main narrative, the episode successfully juggles The Shield’s signature blend of street-level procedure, psychological horror, and bleak humour, all held together by powerhouse performances and assured direction.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

    ==

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  29. Television Review: Trophy (The Shield, S5X05, 2006)@drax151d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Trophy (S05E05)

    Airdate: 7 February 2006

    Written by: Kurt Sutter, Renee Palyo & Tony Soltis Directed by: Philip G. Atwell

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    By its fifth season, The Shield had long since schooled its audience to expect the unexpected, most infamously with the earth-shattering killing that closed its pilot. Yet, a curious reversal had occurred: the very mechanics of shock had become institutionalised. The show’s later seasons operated within a firmly established, almost procedural, formula where the walls closed in on Vic Mackey with metronomic regularity. The thrill was no longer in the whether, but in the how—and increasingly, the ‘how’ felt pre-ordained by the rhythms of a 10+ episode order. This created a paradoxical dynamic: the audience knew precisely what not to expect (a premature downfall), making the writers’ red herrings and misdirections feel transparent. It is this central tension between clever construction and predictable serialised television architecture that both elevates and ultimately hobbles the otherwise expertly crafted Season 5 episode, Trophy.

    The script, a collaboration between veteran Kurt Sutter and newer writers Renee Palyo and Tony Solties, demonstrates admirable narrative economy. It deftly intertwines the season’s major arc—the IAD investigation led by the obsessive Lt. Kavanaugh—with what begins as a gruesome, standalone procedural. The inciting incident, a woman savagely attacking a man in a hospital car park before dying, is traced back to tainted anti-psychotic drugs flooding Farmington’s impoverished communities. The investigation leads Vic’s Strike Team to two Iranian-American brothers, whose operation has been usurped by the Russian mob under Mikula Popovich (Pasha D. Lychnikoff). In a characteristically brazen move, Vic bypasses the legal system entirely, meeting Popovich to orchestrate a deal: a steady, safe drug supply for the neighbourhood in exchange for a bribe and a cut of the profits. This act of cynical, self-serving pragmatism is pure Mackey, but its true brilliance is as bait.

    Unbeknownst to Vic—or so we are meant to believe—this entire negotiation is conducted in the Strike Team’s ‘Clubhouse’, a room Kavanaugh has bugged with a microphone hidden inside a softball trophy. For Kavanaugh the recording is an absolute delight. It confirms his suspicions, revealing Vic’s knowledge that Lem is wired and his retention of the formidable defence attorney Rebecca Doyle. While the attorney-client discussions are inadmissible, the upcoming cash exchange with Popovich promises a prosecutorial boon: a chance to catch Vic red-handed in a spectacular arrest. The episode meticulously tightens the screw, making Vic’s culpability seem inevitable.

    When the deal transpires, Vic appears to sink deeper into depravity. He not only accepts the bribe but, as a ‘favour’ to Popovich, executes one of the Iranian brothers in cold blood. Kavanaugh, watching from surveillance, gives the arrest order—only for the ‘slain’ man to rise, the bullets revealed as blanks, the whole tableau an elaborate police sting designed to ensnare the Russian mob. The entire operation was a ruse orchestrated by Vic and Captain Billings. Vic’s calm retrieval of the bugged trophy confirms the masterstroke: he knew all along and used Kavanaugh’s own surveillance to humiliate him publicly by making him wreck a major investigation, and leaving IAD with a colossal egg on its face. This triumph, however, is immediately complicated. Doyle is furious at being used as an unwitting prop, fraying a crucial alliance. Kavanaugh, utterly defeated, retreats to his motel room and demolishes it in a rage, his crusade now transformed from professional duty into violently personal vengeance.

    Herein lies the episode’s central flaw, one born of the series’ structural constraints. The narrative logic had been impeccable: the walls were closing in, the incriminating evidence was gathered. By all rights, this should have been a climax. Yet, the audience knows it cannot be. It is merely episode five; the season’s contract demands that the central conflict endure. Therefore, the supposedly stunning twist—that Vic was playing Kavanaugh—feels less like a shock and more like a narrative necessity, a predictable feint to prolong the inevitable. The show teaches us to expect the unexpected, yet the need to sustain the season-long arc makes the actual unexpected (Vic’s arrest) impossible. This undercuts the tension, rendering Kavanaugh’s meticulous planning and subsequent meltdown as ultimately futile steps in a dance whose conclusion is pre-scheduled.

    To their credit, the writers use this manipulated turn to sow potent seeds for future drama. Kavanaugh’s humiliation renders him more unhinged and dangerous, a loose cannon. The breach of trust with Doyle creates a new vulnerability for Vic, potentially depriving him of his most capable defender. These are smart, consequential moves that prevent the twist from feeling entirely hollow.

    Unfortunately, the episode’s other subplots lack similar heft. The thread involving a Latino immigrant hired by an intimidating woman to dig a grave is resolved with dizzying speed by Claudette, who deduces a motive of sibling rivalry with almost supernatural ease. While it serves to have Claudette confide in Dutch about a new lupus flare-up and allows for Dutch’s charmingly awkward attraction to Officer Tina Hanlon, it functions as forgettable filler, a routine procedural beat in an episode otherwise throbbing with high-stakes serialised drama.

    At the end of the day, Trophy is a testament to The Shield’s mature craftsmanship—taut, intelligent, and superbly acted. It manoeuvres its pieces with the precision of a chess master. Yet, the board itself is the problem. The episode’s most clever gambit is executed not to deliver checkmate, but to ensure the game continues for several more paid rounds. It is brilliant television navigating within a formula that had, by this point, become all too expectable.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

    ==

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  30. Television Review: Tapa Boca (The Shield, S5X04, 2006)@drax152d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Tapa Boca (S05E04)

    Airdate: 31 January 2006

    Written by: Elizabeth Craft & Sarah Fein Directed by: Guy Ferland

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    By its fifth season, many devotees of The Shield could be forgiven for having lost sight of the series' gritty, real-world foundations. Its main narrative engine—the corrupt, violent, and morally labyrinthine world of the Farmington Strike Team—was famously inspired by the actual Rampart scandal of 1990s Los Angeles. However, as the show's producers, embedded in that same LA environment, continued to craft stories steeped in its local colour and lingo, a disconnect could emerge for a wider audience. Some references became almost cryptically insider, a charge that can be levelled at the title of Season 5, Episode 4: Tapa Boca. A Spanish phrase translating literally to ‘shut your mouth’, it carries connotations beyond mere silence; within certain Latino cultural contexts, it is also idiomatically associated with rituals or dark magic intended to enforce secrecy or obedience. This esoteric choice seems initially puzzling, yet proves ironically apt upon viewing the episode’s intense, farcical conclusion, framing a story where enforced silence and betrayed trust are the central currencies.

    The title’s aptness is rooted in the episode’s driving narrative: Lieutenant Jon Kavanaugh’s relentless crusade to destroy Vic Mackey by turning his former protégé, Lem, into a cooperating informant. Lem, in a moment of profound loyalty, chooses friendship over career or freedom, alerting Vic to the trap. What follows is a masterclass in strategic manoeuvring from Mackey, who operates on dual fronts. First, he pre-emptively recruits the formidably capable defence attorney, Rebecca Doyle, to represent the entire Strike Team should the case reach court. Simultaneously, he deliberately engages Councilman David Aceveda in conversation, a calculated move designed to sow paranoia and create a chasm between Aceveda and Kavanaugh. The ploy works flawlessly; Kavanaugh becomes convinced the Councilman sabotaged his wire operation, fracturing his already tenuous political support. Frustrated and increasingly desperate, Kavanaugh then turns his attention to Vic’s ex-wife, Corrine. When she confronts him about his IAD identity, his ‘nice guy’ veneer evaporates. He sheds all pretence and directly threatens her with imprisonment unless she agrees to testify against Vic—a moment of pure coercion that leaves Corrine so terrified she seeks reassurance from the relatively principled Detective Dutch Wagenbach.

    The episode’s climactic sequence justifies its title in both theme and tone. Vic deduces that Kavanaugh accessed Lem through his own trusted criminal informant, Emolia Melendez. In a confrontation charged with palpable betrayal, Vic confronts Emolia, reminding her of the countless favours he has done for her and her young son. Her breakdown is not one of remorseful confession, but of harsh revelation: her involvement with Lem was no accident. She has been a part of Kavanaugh’s investigation for six months, a professional snitch. Vic’s fury—rooted in a genuine, if paternalistic, belief that his care for a struggling single mother would foster loyalty—erupts violently. He presses a knife to her throat in a deeply unpleasant and intimate threat. The scene’s high drama, however, is abruptly undercut by the timely, almost sitcom-like arrival of Kavanaugh himself. What follows is a farcical standoff where each party performs a hollow pantomime for the others: Kavanaugh feigns shock at accidentally using Vic’s informant; Vic insists he was there on ‘regular business’; and a traumatised Emolia, under the gaze of both men, mechanically corroborates Vic’s lie. The command to ‘shut your mouth’ hangs unspoken over all three, a tense, ironic resolution where truth is violently suppressed by mutual, vested interest. This scene is the episode’s undeniable highlight, powered by exceptionally strong performances from Michael Chiklis and Onahoua Rodriguez that convey layers of rage, fear, and cynical performance.

    Regrettably, the potency of this central plot serves only to expose the surrounding subplots as weak, forgettable, and frustratingly underwhelming. They feel like narrative filler, wasting promising opportunities. The thread concerning Dutch’s growing suspicion that his partner and mentor, Detective Claudette Wyms, might be seriously ill is handled with such glancing subtlety it fails to generate the emotional weight it deserves. Similarly, Officer Tina Hanlon’s narrative purpose seems solely to reiterate her incompetence; she makes another juvenile error while managing a fight among Barn detainees, leading to a public chastisement from the more experienced Officer Julien Lowe. This cycle of mistake and reprimand has grown stale, offering no character development or meaningful insight into police academy failings.

    Other strands represent more significant missed opportunities. A subplot involving an ‘entrepreneur’ who sets up a street-side stall adorned with flags and patriotic symbols to sell faulty equipment to US soldiers deploying to Iraq touches on rich, timely themes. The ideas of war profiteering and Samuel Johnson’s adage that “patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel” are profoundly relevant. Yet, they are treated as a mere afterthought, a simplistic anchor to place the series at a specific point in US history (the Iraq War), rather than explored with the moral complexity the show typically excels at.

    Most disappointing, however, is the mishandling of the episode’s primary procedural subplot. Given proper focus, this could have yielded one of the series’ most powerfully harrowing hours. Detective Wyms investigates a truly heinous crime: a pregnant woman shot dead on the street, after which her unborn child was cut from her womb. The baby’s body is later found discarded, showing signs of physical trauma. This crime, arguably the most horrific depicted in The Shield’s entire run, is ultimately revealed to stem from shockingly banal motives. The perpetrators are Black teenagers who killed the woman on a reckless impulse during a road-rage incident. The young woman in the group (played by Sahara Ware), upon realising the victim was pregnant, cut the baby from the body in a deranged attempt to gift it to her barren cousin. Their half-baked, grotesque scheme ends in the baby’s death due to their ignorant, incompetent attempts at CPR. The confession scene has a raw, unsettling power, but its potential impact is diluted. The presence of a visibly pregnant Officer Danny Sofer as an interrogator feels gratuitous, serving no narrative purpose beyond reminding the audience of her condition—a blunt, rather than nuanced, symbol of motherhood contrasted with the crime.

    In the end, Tapa Boca stands as an episode of stark contrasts. Its core Mackey-Kavanaugh conflict is executed with the series’ trademark tactical brilliance and moral ambiguity, culminating in a scene that perfectly embodies its cryptic title’s spirit. Yet, it is burdened by underdeveloped and wasted subplots that fail to engage with their own potent material. The episode ultimately feels like a vessel for its magnificent final act, surrounded by narrative scaffolding that the show, at its best, would have integrated into a devastating whole. It captures The Shield in a transitional moment, where the intense focus on its central corruption arc begins to overshadow the rich, gritty procedural tapestry that originally defined it.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

    ==

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  31. Television Review: Jailbait (The Shield, S5X03, 2006)@drax153d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Jailbait (S05E03)

    Airdate: 24 January 2006

    Written by: Scott Rosenbaum & Glen Mazzara Directed by: Stephen Kay

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    The third episode of The Shield’s fifth season, Jailbait, continues the series’ deliberate, grinding approach to its central corruption arc. As noted in the preceding episode “Enemy of Good,” the narrative has shown a tendency to postpone the inevitable; Lem’s warning to Vic about the investigation merely tightens the noose without snapping it shut. The walls are indeed closing in on Vic Mackey and his Strike Team, but they will not fully close here. Vic survives another close shave, yet the show makes it clear that his predicament will not be resolved through a single, heroic action, but as a protracted, exhausting process of deception and survival. This episode effectively dramatises that process, showing the team forced into a performative normality while knowing any slip could be fatal.

    The core tension springs from Lem’s confession to Vic that he is wearing a wire for IAD. Vic immediately informs Shane and Ronnie, forcing all three into a sustained charade. They must act as if nothing has changed, all while knowing every casual word in front of Lem is being monitored by Lieutenant Kavanaugh. This is masterfully illustrated in a scene set in the Strike Team’s unofficial headquarters at the Barn.While Shane tells a decades-old joke to maintain a façade of camaraderie, Vic and Lem conduct a fraught conversation via a laptop, typing questions and answers to avoid the wire. The silent exchange is charged with paranoia, highlighting Vic’s controlling nature and the profound breach of trust within the team. Vic’s performance here is particularly noteworthy, with Michael Chiklis delivers a performance so convincing in its manipulation that Vic seems almost to believe his own lies.

    Meanwhile, Kavanaugh remains arrogantly unaware that his quarry has been tipped off. Confident in his invasive tactics, he discusses progress with a sceptical Councilman Aceveda. His confidence bleeds into overreach when he clumsily attempts to cultivate Corinne Mackey by falsely claiming to be the parent of an autistic child. The attempt is so transparently manipulative that even Corinne sees through it, promptly warning Vic. This moment undercuts Kavanaugh’s professional veneer, painting him as a man whose obsession with Vic is becoming personal.

    The procedural subplot that gives the episode its title begins with a morbidly comic incident: the discovery of a large, deceased nude obese man on a department store sofa, beneath whom is found a living, traumatised nude girl. This leads Vic’s team to a truck containing three dead women, revealing a sex trafficking ring.^ The surviving girl identifies an elderly Mexican woman, played by Julia Vera, as the ringleader. Once arrested, she brokers a deal, leading to an undercover operation where Officer Tina Hanlon poses as a prostitute to infiltrate a brothel. Tina proves resourceful, efficiently handling aggressive gang members who want to “try the merchandise” before Vic leads a successful raid. This plot, while functional, primarily serves to introduce defence attorney Rebecca Doyle (Laura Harring), who persuades the Mexican woman to cooperate.

    Doyle’s arrival dovetails with other subplots. She initially appears representing a teenager falsely accused in a school shooting case investigated by Claudette. Doyle’s sharp legal work quickly forces the true perpetrator to confess, impressing Vic in the process. Her skill in extracting cooperation from the sex trafficker hints at a valuable, amoral alliance that the Strike Team will exploit in future episodes.

    Another thread involves parole officer Marshall Traynor (Joe Gerety), who assists Dutch with a case involving a parolee forced to dispose of a body by feeding it to dogs. Traynor impresses Dutch with an apparent ability to detect lies, prompting a professional dinner invitation. Claudette, however, reveals Traynor is gay and likely attracted to Dutch, adding a layer of personal discomfort to Dutch’s admiration.

    Written by Scott Rosenbaum and Glen Mazzara and directed by Stephen Kay, Jailbait is not a landmark episode but a thoroughly serviceable one. Its primary strength lies in escalating the season’s overarching tension, particularly in the wordless laptop scene where Kay’s direction excels. The introduction of Rebecca Doyle provides a potent new foil and accomplice for Vic, signalling a shift towards more legally grey, long-term strategies for the team’s survival. While the crime-of-the-week is graphic and engaging, it ultimately feels secondary to the psychological siege underway within the Barn. The episode succeeds not through explosive revelations, but by meticulously tightening the screws, forcing its corrupt protagonists to dance ever faster on a wire that is both figurative and, for Lem, tragically literal.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

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  32. Television Review: Enemy of Good (The Shield, S5X02, 2006)@drax154d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Enemy of Good (S05E02)

    Airdate: 17 January 2006

    Written by: Charles H. Eglee & Adam E. Fierro Directed by: Guy Ferland

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    The writers of The Shield, led by Shawn Ryan, possessed a singular and often frustrating talent: the penchant for steering characters and plots to the very precipice of a simple, logical, and predictable conclusion, only to yank the narrative rug from beneath the viewers’ feet and continue as if the ground had never shifted. This was both the series’ greatest strength—a source of relentless, gut-wrenching tension—and its occasional weakness, leading at times to convoluted prolongations of conflict. A quintessential example of this dynamic is found in Enemy of Good, an early Season 5 episode which brings to the fore a shocking sin from the pilot, an event all but buried yet which begins, here, to cast its immense, inescapable shadow over Vic Mackey and his Strike Team. The episode wrestles with the immediate consequences of loyalty tested by institutional pressure, whilst simultaneously struggling under the weight of a cumbersome, formulaic subplot that undermines its own potent core drama.

    The episode’s primary engine is the fallout from Detective Lemansky’s predicament. Having been caught mishandling heroin, he is subjected to an interrogation by IAD Lieutenant Kavanaugh, who proves a masterful manipulator. Kavanaugh presents Lem with a brutally simple, binary choice: become an informant and wear a wire against Vic Mackey, or end the day behind bars. This manipulation is expertly aided by Councilman David Aceveda, Vic’s former superior, who joins the fray bearing his own bitter history of failed attempts to ensnare Mackey, most notably through the ill-fated federal probe and the unfortunate informant, Detective Terry Crowley. When Aceveda—whether genuinely or performatively—realises Lem was ignorant of the machinations that led to Crowley’s murder, Kavanaugh seizes the opening. He exploits Lem’s inherent decency and corroding conscience to lever him into ‘doing the right thing’. Lem, cornered and morally fatigued, agrees to wear the wire. It is a classic Shield set-piece: a character backed into an inescapable corner, forced to make a choice that promises a clean, if devastating, narrative resolution.

    Yet, true to form, the narrative refuses this simplicity. Having Lem make his binary choice so early in the season would be anathema to the series’ protracted, agonising storytelling. Instead, when he meets Vic whilst wired, Lem makes another, more instinctive choice. He provokes a brief physical altercation, disabling the microphone momentarily, and confesses everything to his friend and partner. In this moment, Lem opts for the primal bond of friendship over abstract institutional duty. However, the brilliance of the writing ensures things are not nearly that simple. Before the conversation ends, Lem poses the question that has festered for years – did Vic have anything to do with Terry's killing. Vic’s denial is immediate and forceful, yet the seed of doubt is irrevocably sown. This ‘little worm of doubt’, becomes not just a personal rift but a continuous source of simmering tension, the direct cause of catastrophic dramatic consequences that will define the remainder of the series. The episode’s main plot, penned by Charles H. Eglee and Adam E. Fierro and directed with typical gritty assurance by series veteran Guy Ferland, is thus a great example of deferred payoff and psychological corrosion.

    Sadly, Enemy of Good opts to dilute this intense focus with a weak procedural ‘villain of the week’ subplot, a formulaic endeavour that clashes tonally and thematically. This involves ‘Doomsday’, a local Latino thug (played by Lobo Sebastian) who begins violently extorting businesses in Farmington. Vic interprets this as a personal affront to his hegemony over the district’s streets and is eager to reassert dominance. His initial solution is to have Doomsday physically restrained, but when the thug escapes through negligence, he escalates his violence out of sheer spite, resulting in the murder of three Black teenagers. A witness, a middle-aged Black woman from the neighbourhood, initially identifies Doomsday, only to later recant her testimony after someone decapitates her dogs. Faced with this escalation, Vic decides Doomsday must be permanently removed. His solution, however, is uncharacteristically and problematically soft. Rather than the swift, brutal vigilante justice one expects from a man whose defining weakness is a ferocious desire to protect the young, Vic captures Doomsday and hands him over to a corrupt Mexican policeman to be imprisoned on false charges. This resolution—a contrived, ‘clever’ extra-legal deportation—feels anti-climactic and out of character. It transforms a killer of innocent youths from a visceral threat into a bureaucratic problem to be outsourced, undermining Vic’s established moral code, however warped that code may be.

    A more promising, though underdeveloped, minor subplot involves Officer Tina Hanlon, now being mentored by her partner, Officer Julien Lowe. This echoes Julien’s own mentorship under Danny Sofer and holds potential for exploring the cyclical nature of guidance and failure within the precinct. Tina makes a critical error during a routine domestic violence call, resulting in her own injury and the use of excessive force during an arrest. Julien’s subsequent chastisement of her is a brief but effective moment, highlighting the burdens of responsibility and the harsh lessons of the street, offering a glimpse of a more interesting character dynamic than the sensationalist Doomsday saga.

    At the end of the day, Enemy of Good is a mixed bag. It propels the series’ overarching plot in a clear and compelling direction, masterfully leveraging the buried sin of Terry Crowley’s murder to fracture the Strike Team’s foundation from within. The central drama involving Lem, Kavanaugh, and Vic is superbly executed, a tense psychological duel that trades in moral ambiguity and the terrible cost of loyalty. Yet, the episode is muddied by its insistence on a formulaic and oversensationalist antagonist whose storyline resolves in a manner that feels both implausible and antithetical to Vic Mackey’s established persona. It is an episode of stark contrasts: between the complex, lingering poison of past actions and the simplistic, disposable violence of a weekly threat; between the show’s strength in prolonged psychological warfare and its weakness in resorting to conventional police drama tropes.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

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  33. Television Review: Extraction (The Shield, S5X01, 2006)@drax155d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Extraction (S05E01)

    Airdate: 10 January 2006

    Written by: Kurt Sutter Directed by: D.J. Caruso

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    Season 5 of The Shield is widely regarded as the moment the series entered its definitive “endgame.” While the narrative would require two more seasons to reach its devastating conclusion, the trajectory and overarching tone were irrevocably set here. That tone was one of profound darkness, as the ultimate, unhappy fate of Vic Mackey and those ensnared in his orbit shifted from a possibility to an inevitability. With Season 5, the central question was no longer „if” the reckoning would come, but „when” and „how”. The first episode, titled Extraction, begins to provide some of those answers, setting in motion the chain of events that will ultimately unravel everything.

    The season premiere, written by series veteran Kurt Sutter and directed by action specialist D. J. Caruso, opens in a deceptively positive situation for Vic and his de facto resurrected Strike Team—at least when compared to the dire straits of previous season openers. The internal divisions that once plagued the team are temporarily mended. There is no diabolically ruthless crime lords attempting to establish hegemony over Farmington, and no politically ambitious police captain like David Aceveda is actively building a career at their expense. Following Captain Rawling’s departure, we see her temporarily replaced by the overwhelmed former detective, Billings. Billings is clearly out of his depth and, consequently, either unable or unwilling to police the chaos Vic cultivates in The Barn. This administrative vacuum creates an unusually permissive environment for Mackey’s brand of justice.

    To make circumstances even more favourable for Vic, the episode’s plot is ignited by the very sort of civic crisis that makes tough policemen with few scruples appear indispensable. A brutal fight for supremacy between Black and Latino gangs erupts onto the streets, spilling over into massive, chaotic brawls among ordinary citizens. This is best illustrated in the semi-humorous, chaotic opening scene at a funeral parlour. The white employee, Manus (Jeff Bowser), who hails from a safer neighbourhood, reacts with bewildered shock to the sudden eruption of racial tensions in Farmington, a moment that effectively underscores the pervasive and volatile nature of the conflict.

    These tensions find an even more devastating expression at a local high school, where a brawl escalates into a riot involving hundreds of students. The violence reaches a horrific crescendo with several teenagers being shot or stabbed on the premises. Vic quickly discerns that this is part of a pattern of tit-for-tat violence between the communities and identifies a young Latino teenager, Lorenzo Lavedra (Brian Burnett), as a perpetrator acting on orders from his gang-affiliated father, who is serving a prison sentence. Vic apprehends Lorenzo but fails to stop his younger brother, Cisco (Javier Mendoza). In a chilling display of programmed loyalty, Cisco murders an innocent Black man solely to fulfil his father’s command, before being wounded by one of his victims and finally captured by Vic. This plot strand starkly portrays the cyclical, generational nature of the gang violence Vic claims to control, yet ultimately merely contains and exploits.

    Unbeknownst to Vic, the walls finally begin to close around him thanks to a relentless Internal Affairs Division (IAD) investigation led by the formidable Lieutenant Jon Kavanaugh (Forest Whitaker). Leveraging an informant, Emolia Martinez—who had previously helped identify unaccounted-for heroin and continues her fraught relationship with Vic—Kavanaugh acquires dirt on what he correctly identifies as the Strike Team’s weakest link: Lem. Having learned from Councilman Aceveda that Lem possesses the most conscience of the group, Kavanaugh targets him with surgical precision. The episode’s climax is a masterclass in suspense, ending with Lem’s arrest and interrogation. In a quietly terrifying moment, Kavanaugh poses a rhetorical question that hangs over the entire season: “Who do you think we really want?” The target, of course, is Vic, and Lem is merely the chosen instrument for his destruction.

    The episode also deftly weaves in significant character subplots. Officer Danny Soffer’s pregnancy, written in due to actress Catherine Dent’s real-life condition, limits her to desk duty at The Barn. However, this relegation allows her to serve as a mentor to the new female officer, Tina Hanlon (Paula Garces). Tina’s arrival, marked by her feminine qualities, beauty, and short stature, exposes the persistently toxic, boy’s club atmosphere of The Barn, inviting all manner of inappropriate behaviour from her male colleagues. This subplot adds a layer of grounded, workplace drama amidst the high-stakes corruption.

    The arrival of Forest Whitaker, a prestigious Oscar-winning actor, is a coup for the series and an excellent replacement for Glenn Close from previous season. Whitaker imbues Kavanaugh with a chilling, quiet intensity that is immediately threatening. He is neither a cartoonish villain nor a purely bureaucratic antagonist; he is an intelligent, obsessive force of nature whose moral certainty poses the most existential threat Vic has ever faced. His mere presence elevates the entire season’s tension.

    If the episode has minor flaws, they lie in its adherence to certain television conventions of the era. The musical montage near the end, while effective in underscoring the episode’s themes, feels somewhat like a cliché of early-21st-century US television drama. Furthermore, the script occasionally strains to flush in one too many plot points, such as the looming threat of Vic’s termination due to LAPD budget cuts—a thread that feels somewhat rushed. Nevertheless, Extraction represents a exceptionally strong beginning to the endgame. It expertly re-establishes the status quo only to immediately destabilise it with the introduction of Kavanaugh, ensuring that the season’s very dark trajectory is set from the very first frame.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

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  34. Television Review: Ain't That a Shame (The Shield, S4X13, 2005)@drax161d
    (source:tmdb.org)

    Ain't That a Shame (S04E13)

    Airdate: June 14th 2005

    Written by: Shawn Ryan & Glen Mazzara Directed by: Stephen Kay

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    In the grammar of American television drama, season finales have long been codified as narrative exclamation marks. Even during the early 2000s, a period of celebrated structural innovation in serialised storytelling, the expectation remained that a season’s concluding chapter should deliver climactic revelations, seismic shifts, or explosive confrontations. The Shield, in its fourth season, dismantled this convention with a radical, almost contemptuous confidence. Judging by its finale, Ain’t That a Shame, the season broke these rules more profoundly than its contemporaries, offering a denouement that resembles a stifled sigh rather than a cathartic bang. This subdued conclusion is thrown into sharper relief by the season’s own internal architecture: its genuine crescendo arrived three episodes prior, in the visceral intensity of Back in the Hole. The penultimate episode, often a space for last-minute tumult, was itself relatively quiet, making the finale’s deliberate, grinding anticlimax a masterclass in subverting audience expectation to foster profound unease.

    With the formidable gang lord Antwon Mitchell securely incarcerated, the grand struggle for supremacy over Farmington between him and Captain Monica Rawlings appeared decisively concluded. Yet, the episode immediately undermines this stability through a brazen diplomatic manoeuvre. Councilman David Aceveda, compelled to erase certain unpleasant ghosts from his past, brokers a deal granting Antwon immunity in exchange for intelligence on his Salvadoran narcotics supplier. Simultaneously, Antwon arranges for Juan Lozano—Aceveda’s attacker and a potential blackmailer—to be murdered within prison walls. This cynical exchange of favours is so audacious that Detective Vic Mackey, though lacking the complete picture, intuitively grasps the corrupt calculus at play. The scene where Rawlings informs her team of this pragmatic betrayal by the system they serve is a powder keg of subdued fury. It falls upon the increasingly outspoken Officer Julien Lowe to vocalise the collective outrage, giving voice to every officer’s sense of moral violation.

    In response, Rawlings and Mackey secretly conspire to sabotage the deal before it can be formalised. Their strategy is characteristically direct: apprehend the top Salvadoran supplier, an elderly figure named Bonilla (played with understated menace by Al Cruz), independently. Vic’s Strike Team operates with its customary brutal efficiency, though the operation is far from seamless. A harrowing sequence sees Officer Lemansky left alone to guard three of Bonilla’s underlings, culminating in a vicious fight he barely survives, allowing one assailant to escape. Despite this hiccup, the team successfully delivers Bonilla to Rawlings. With the primary source of Antwon’s leverage removed, the DEA agreement becomes void, and Rawlings triumphantly re-arrests Mitchell for the murder of two policemen under her command. This should be an unambiguous victory.

    Yet, this triumph is irrevocably marred by a rash decision sparked by an unrelated, emotionally charged incident. A quinceañera ceremony is shattered by a horrific act of violence: the shooting of one of the girls’ fathers. The perpetrator, a drug-addled and volatile youth, obtained his narcotics from a property owned by the Walkers, foster parents notorious for neglect and abuse. This proves the final straw for Rawlings. In a moment of impassioned defiance, she orders the seizure of the house through asset forfeiture, fully aware her authority to enact such a policy is due to be revoked the following day. She proceeds despite Vic—arguably her most loyal ally at this juncture—advising her against it. This impulsive, symbolic act is her undoing.

    The defiant move is interpreted as a gross insult by Family Services and an act of blatant insubordination. Furthermore, federal authorities, furious at how she torpedoed the Antwon Mitchell deal, express their displeasure by threatening to withhold funds from the City of Los Angeles. This coalescence of institutional grievances renders her position in Farmington utterly untenable, and she is summarily fired. Assistant Chief Phillips almost immediately offers the vacant captaincy to Detective Dutch Wagenbach, who, with her characteristic integrity, refuses the temporary post.

    In an emotionally charged farewell, Vic bids Rawlings goodbye. Her parting warning to him—“be careful”—is acutely apt, for she has learned that Internal Affairs Detective Gino has uncovered damning evidence on Lemansky: a stash of heroin previously confiscated and then returned to a Salvadoran dealer in exchange for information. It is revealed that Emolia Melendez (Onohua Rodriguez), a heroin cutter for the Salvadorans and Vic’s informant, was simultaneously feeding information to IAD. This betrayal hangs ominously over the narrative’s close.

    Yet, in the finale’s closing scene, Vic remains blissfully unaware of this gathering storm. Almost the entire Barn gathers in a bar to celebrate Antwon’s re-arrest, the atmosphere one of rare, unadulterated camaraderie. Even the long-standing antagonism between Dutch and Vic is momentarily set aside, the hatchet buried. This scene of unity and triumph, however, is meticulously poisoned by the presence of Detective Gino, watching silently from the background like a spectre at the feast. His mere presence transforms the celebration into a chilling dramatic irony.

    Co-written by the show’s creator Shawn Ryan and Glen Mazzara, Ain’t That a Shame stands as a profoundly atypical season finale, not merely for its lack of pyrotechnics but for its narrative posture. Notably, Vic and his team are in a far stronger position than at the end of the previous season, where the Strike Team was nearly dissolved. Now, they are reunited, ostensibly victorious, and have, for once, engaged in minimally questionable conduct. The episode, however, functions as a calm before a cataclysm, a plateau from which the only direction is a precipitous fall.

    The departure of Rawlings was, in a sense, inevitable, adhering to the economic and star-power conventions of American broadcast television at the time. In an era when the small screen lacked its current prestige, an actress of Glenn Close’s calibre was never likely to be retained beyond a single season. Yet, Close delivered a commanding, nuanced performance, and her emotional departure—a casualty of the very systemic corruption she sought to fight—remains one of the series’ most memorable and poignant moments. Her exit underscores the show’s central thesis: in Farmington, and within the compromised institutions that govern it, ethical courage is often a fatal liability. Ain’t That a Shame is a finale that refuses to offer catharsis, instead leaving its characters—and its audience—suspended in a moment of false security, acutely aware that the true storm is yet to come.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

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  35. Television Review: Judas Priest (The Shield, S4X12, 2005)@drax162d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Judas Priest (S04E12)

    Airdate: June 7th 2005

    Written by: Kurt Sutter & Scott Rosenbaum Directed by: Daniel Von Ancken

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    By the early 2000s, a distinct narrative pattern had cemented itself in American television drama: the penultimate episode of a season often carried greater consequential weight, in terms of plot propulsion and emotional impact, than the finale that followed. This structural tendency, established by shows such as The Sopranos and The Wire, created a rhythm where the season’s true climax arrived one episode early, leaving the finale to deal with the aftermath. Judas Priest, the twelfth episode of The Shield’s fourth season, appears deliberately crafted to fit this mould. It is an episode bursting with seismic shifts for its characters, yet one that ultimately staggers under the weight of its own ambition and a cluttered narrative, saving itself from total mediocrity only through a blisteringly effective final scene.

    The most significant development is the apparent termination of Captain Monica Rawlings’ controversial asset forfeiture programme. Assistant Chief Phillips informs her that the LAPD hierarchy, weary of the political and public relations fallout, has decided to shut it down. Despite her prior threat of resignation, she is instructed to prepare a statement casting the decision in the most favourable light. This moment is pivotal, representing undoing of her defining principle—that the programme’s ends justified its ethically murky means. Rawlings, however, characteristically refuses to capitulate. In a move born of desperation, she attempts to forge an alliance with Councilman David Aceveda, seeking to leverage his influence over city and police finances. Her paramount aim is to prove that the murders of two Barn officers were unrelated to her programme, thereby salvaging its reputation. This sets in motion the episode’s primary investigative thrust.

    That thrust is led, unsurprisingly, by Detective Vic Mackey. Determined to follow the most obvious trail, Vic fixates on the Russian mobster Andrei Tretiak (Michael Khmourov), who allegedly ordered the hits after Officer Miller gave him a speeding ticket. In a typically reckless Mackey manoeuvre, Vic and his Strike Team arrest Tretiak’s men for smuggling C4 explosives. Later, they use the confiscated explosive as a coercion tool, threatening to detonate it unless Tretiak confesses. This tactic backfires with spectacular, fatal consequences: Tretiak chooses to trigger the explosion himself, obliterating both the evidence and any chance of a confession. This failure underscores a recurring theme—Vic’s brutal, direct methods often create larger problems than they solve, leaving investigative dead ends and bodies in their wake.

    A new avenue then opens with the discovery of a necklace bearing the initials “J.P.” This clue leads to Jason Porter (LeMonde Byrd), a UC Northridge student with a gift for languages. The subsequent revelation that Porter is the half-brother of imprisoned kingpin Antwon Mitchell adds a layer of tragic inevitability. Antwon had financed Jason’s education precisely to cultivate him as a translator for international criminal dealings. Jason’s arrest and interrogation in the Barn sees Rawlings attempting to implicate Antwon in the officers’ murders. A fragile immunity deal is struck, but it is built on sand, awaiting only the next shift in the political winds to collapse.

    Those winds blow in from a wholly different, yet intimately connected, quarter. Aceveda, visiting prison, is confronted by Juan Lozano, a former Byz-Lats gang member he once sent down. Lozano, who had previously sexually assaulted Aceveda, now claims to possess a recording of the incident and threatens to release it unless Aceveda recants his testimony in an appeal. Uncertain if the threat is real but unable to risk it, Aceveda makes another Faustian bargain. He approaches Antwon Mitchell in prison, offering to broker a generous immunity deal with the DEA targeting Mitchell’s former Salvadoran suppliers. In exchange, Antwon must use his prison connections to permanently silence Lozano. When news of this deal reaches the Barn, Rawlings is incensed. She considers her immunity agreement with Jason Porter null and void, likely condemning the young man to the death penalty for his role in the officers’ deaths. Aceveda’s survival instinct thus directly undermines Rawlings’ already faltering investigation.

    Where Judas Priest suffers most acutely is in its lack of narrative focus. Written by Kurt Sutter and Scott Rosenbaum, the episode is burdened by subplots that feel tangential at best. The ongoing thread of Detective Dutch Wagenbach’s frustration at being the Barn’s punchline escalates into a melodramatic and unconvincing fistfight with Billings. Similarly, his abortive romantic pursuit of Vic’s ex-wife, Corrine, and his clumsy attempt to rekindle it, feels like a narrative dead end that adds little to his character or the season’s core tensions.

    However, perhaps nothing seems as gratuitous as the subplot involving Joanna Faulks, wife of the infamous “Cuddling Rapist.” Arriving at the Barn to report threats, her case is handled by Dutch. The thread culminates in Joanna, in a state of paranoid panic, shooting Officer Danny Sofer in the shoulder, mistaking her and Julien for assailants. This incident resolves nothing, contributes nothing to the season’s arc, and ultimately goes nowhere. In playing the role, Rebecca Pidgeon unfortunately cemented her status as one of the series’ least popular guest stars, a distraction the episode could ill afford.

    Further flaws can be found in the contrivance of certain plot mechanisms. The discovery of Antwon Mitchell’s hitherto unmentioned half-brother feels like a convenient deus ex machina to inject a new suspect. Likewise, the resurrection of Aceveda’s trauma with Juan Lozano, after the series had previously suggested that storyline was resolved, risks feeling like a repetitive exploitation of the character’s darkest moment rather than organic development.

    What rescues Judas Priest from sinking into outright mediocrity is its powerful, precisely crafted final scene. Upon learning of Aceveda’s treacherous deal with Antwon Mitchell, Vic Mackey delivers a judgement that is both a personal indictment and a thematic summation of the entire series. He confronts Aceveda, not with rage, but with cold, dismissive clarity: “You’re not a cop. You never were.” In that moment, Vic—himself the ultimate corrupt cop—becomes the show’s moral arbiter. He highlights Aceveda’s complete moral descent and his severance from the life and code he once claimed to uphold. It is a devastating piece of writing and performance that encapsulates the season’s exploration of compromise, corruption, and identity.

    Judas Priest succeeds as a consequential penultimate season instalment by advancing major plotlines and delivering a masterpiece of a closing scene. Yet, it fails as a cohesive episode of television. Its impact is diluted by meandering, unnecessary subplots and reliant on narrative conveniences. It embodies the tension at the heart of The Shield: when focused on the brutal pragmatism and moral decay of its central characters, it is electrifying; when it loses that focus, it becomes merely another police procedural struggling to manage its sprawling ensemble.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

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  36. Television Review: A Thousand Deaths (The Shield, S4X11, 2005)@drax162d
    (source:tmdb.org)

    A Thousand Deaths (S04E11)

    Airdate: May 31st 2005

    Written by: Adam E. Fierro Directed by: Stephen Kay

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    Following the remarkably focused and potent Back in the Hole, which demonstrated The Shield at its narrative best and could arguably have functioned as a truncated season finale, A Thousand Deaths represents a frustrating return to formula. Where its predecessor was lean, tense, and devastatingly simple in its plot progression, this episode labours to complicate and expand, attempting to drag the sprawling narrative back towards a semblance of the status quo that defined Farmington and Vic Mackey at the season’s outset. The result is an episode that feels more like obligatory table-setting than groundbreaking drama, grinding the plot gears with conspicuous effort to position the pieces for the concluding episodes.

    The previous episode concluded with Captain Monica Rawlings’ triumphant incarceration of crime lord Antwon Mitchell, her primary rival for control of the district. Yet, the unresolved murders of Officers Miller and Scooby linger. Vic Mackey, now leading a resurrected Strike Team in all but name, remains dogmatically convinced of Antwon’s One-Niner gang’s involvement. The investigation, however, takes a sudden detour. The trail leads to two Nigerians: Ade Achebe, found executed with Scooby’s police radio nearby, and his roommate, Ididsa Okoye (Jimmy-Jean Louis). After Vic and his team violently subdue members of the Russian mob who are holding Okoye’s family hostage, Okoye confesses. He was hired by high-level Russian figure Andrei Tretiak, whose motive was shockingly petty: Officer Miller had issued him a speeding ticket, which Tretiak interpreted as a mortal insult. Despite this seemingly straightforward explanation, Vic’s paranoia and entrenched worldview compel him to insist on a connection between the Russians and Antwon’s organisation.

    Simultaneously, Rawlings’ hard-won authority faces a political assault. In a meeting with Assistant Chief Phillips, flanked by the ever-opportunistic Councilman David Aceveda, her controversial criminal asset forfeiture policy is challenged. Rawlings’ response is a great example of defiant clarity: she declares that if the policy is abandoned, she will resign. This creates a significant dilemma for her superiors, as she is one of only two female captains in the LAPD, making her departure a potential political headache. This subplot effectively illustrates the fragile nature of power within the department, where genuine attempts at reform are perpetually undermined by bureaucratic self-interest.

    A more profound blow is dealt to Vic Mackey’s reconstituted unit through what should have been a procedural formality. As part of the deal that exonerated them for their previous dealings with Antwon, Shane Vendrell and the newly recruited Army Renta are required to undergo polygraph tests. Renta grows increasingly anxious, confessing he doubts his ability to pass. After a blunt conversation with Lemansky, who suggests he may not possess the necessary mettle for the Strike Team, Renta makes a startling decision: he refuses to take the test. This act of self-preservation catastrophically jeopardises the entire deal and any future prosecution of Antwon, but Renta calculates it is the safest course for his own survival. His departure leaves the original quartet—Vic, Shane, Lem, and Ronnie—isolated once more, their circle forcibly closed. This development, while dramatic, feels like a narrative convenience to purge the temporary addition and restore the core dynamic, undercutting the potential explored in Back in the Hole

    A Thousand Deaths also serves as a case study in the series’ occasionally clumsy narrative techniques, particularly its use of new characters. Detective Steve Billings (David Marciano), introduced peripherally in the previous episodes, is suddenly thrust into a crucial role. While having his car washed, he passively witnesses a vicious street killing. Rather than intervene or call for backup, he anonymously supplies tips and descriptions of the perpetrator to the police. Detectives Dutch Wagenbach and Claudette Wyms eventually identify him as the witness and confront him about his cowardice. Billings defends his inaction by claiming he wished to avoid becoming the “butt of the joke” within the precinct. Ironically, his information proves accurate, leading to the perpetrator’s arrest and confession, rendering Billings’ continued involvement unnecessary. This subplot feels like a contrived vehicle to explore themes of cowardice but does little to integrate Billings meaningfully into the ongoing narrative fabric.

    One of Season Four’s less fortunate creative choices was the romantic entanglement between Dutch and Vic’s ex-wife, Corrine. Previously depicted as awkward and fundamentally unconvincing, this dalliance is mercifully terminated in this episode. Writer Shawn Ryan appears to cut his losses, having Corrine conveniently realise that Dutch’s motivation stemmed less from genuine attraction and more from a desire to inflict psychological damage on Vic. While its conclusion is welcome, the entire arc remains a narrative misstep that added little beyond superficial complication.

    Written by Adam E. Fierro and competently directed by Stephen Kay, the episode derives its title from the famous line in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar: “A coward dies a thousand times before his death.” This theme of cowardice is explicitly woven through the Renta and Billings subplots. However, beyond this somewhat neat conceptual packaging, “A Thousand Deaths” is ultimately unremarkable. It functions less as a compelling story in its own right and more as a mechanical attempt to regrind the complex plot machinery towards the season finale. The episode is, in essence, a narrative reset button—pressed with professional competence but lacking in inspired vision.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

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  37. Television Review: Back in the Hole (The Shield, S4X10, 2005)@drax164d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Back in the Hole (S04E10)

    Airdate: May 24tth 2005

    Written by: Sara Fain & Elizabeth Craft Directed by: Scott Brazil

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    As the fourth season of The Shield neared its conclusion, there was a palpable risk that the series’ relentless, grimy momentum might succumb to a formulaic routine of street-level chaos and internal corruption. It was at this precise juncture that Back in the Hole (S4E10) arrived, delivering another surprisingly robust and structurally audacious episode. Its distinction rests on two pillars, one poignant and one formal. First, it is the final credited work of veteran director Scott Brazil, a creative force behind many of the series’ most taut episodes, who would tragically succumb to complications from Lyme disease a year later. Second, and just as significant for the medium, was its unusual length. Running over an hour—a full third longer than the standard broadcast television format—it signalled a deliberate departure from rigid network constraints, embracing a narrative expansiveness increasingly adopted by cable pioneers like HBO.

    Brilliantly written by Sarah Fain and Elizabeth Craft, the episode’s central plot strand is deceptively simple: the tense, protracted tying-up of loose ends following the murder of two Barn officers. Captain Monica Rawling, played with ferocious intelligence by Glenn Close, has Antwon Mitchell (Anthony Anderson) in the interrogation room, convinced he ordered the hits. Her objective is a confession, and the resulting interrogation, witnessed by a silently calculating Vic Mackey, forms the episode’s devastating core. Here, Rawling reveals a surprisingly dark and ruthless side. She systematically weaponises Antwon’s personal life, excavating painful secrets from his past and leveraging his dysfunctional family, including mocking references to his gay son’s imprisonment and his “penchant for Mexican boys.” The assault is deeply personal, designed to humiliate and break. Anderson’s performance is a great example of simmering rage and wounded pride; Antwon is literally brought to tears. Yet, he retaliates with sharp intelligence of his own, reminding Rawling of her affair with the married Detective Rich Nelson, the man who—Antwon claims—framed him, leading to a thirteen-year prison sentence. Opting for maximum damage, Antwon delivers his cruellest blow: he reveals the location of Angie Stubbs’ body. This is a strategic poison pill aimed at corrupt cops Shane Vendrell and Army Renta, designed to taint Rawling’s impending public relations victory.

    This decision catastrophically narrows the options for Vic and, particularly, Shane. In a darkly comic twist, it emerges that Lem and Ronnie had been searching for the body in the wrong place, misled by an informant’s linguistic confusion—unable to distinguish “merry-go-round” from “horses.” By the time this error is corrected, the LAPD, acting on Antwon’s tip, is already processing the scene. Convinced he will be imprisoned for a murder he did not commit, Shane, in a moment of twisted nobility, volunteers to “take one for the team” by assassinating Antwon in custody. In the end, he cannot pull the trigger. It falls to Vic to pursue a more pragmatic, and in retrospect more sensible, solution. He produces a previously withheld surveillance tape implicating Antwon in ordering a hit on Vic himself, and leverages the Angie Stubbs murder. Rawling is infuriated by Vic’s prior concealment of evidence, but her pragmatism prevails. A deal is struck: Antwon confesses to a litany of crimes in exchange for evading the death penalty, while Vic and the Strike Team walk free. It is a tactical win, but a hollow one. Antwon, being led away, delivers a chilling parting shot to Vic: he confesses to having the two policemen executed, yet taunts that they will never be able to prove it. Furthermore, Rawling’s victory is tempered by deep suspicion; pleased as she is to have removed Antwon from the streets, she orders Internal Affairs Detective Gino (Jose Zuniga) to intensify surveillance on Vic and Shane.

    Elsewhere in The Barn, Dutch and Claudette pursue a less triumphant case. A woman has been strangled, and the only witnesses—a bickering couple—provide a vague description that points toward suspected serial predator Kleavon Gardner. Despite his shaky alibi, the identification is too nebulous to hold, and Gardner walks free. The scene’s power lies in its aftermath, with Gardner’s sister Fatima (a compelling J.J. Boone) being quietly but firmly convinced by the detectives of her brother’s guilt.

    What makes Back in the Hole so fascinating within the series’ canon is that, in a show built upon individual and institutional dysfunction and moral rot, it features characters who ultimately do what most regular people would recognise as the right thing. They are compelled by circumstance, backed into corners with no palatable alternatives, but they do it nevertheless. Shane attempts, however misguidedly, to take responsibility by offering his own life as a sacrifice. Vic, for once, comes (mostly) clean to authority. Rawling subverts her own thirst for a theatrical victory to accept a pragmatic plea deal that secures a greater good.

    Even the perpetually compromised Councilman Aceveda experiences a moment of painful rectitude. Following another fraught encounter with prostitute Sara Frazier—a session of rough sex that degenerates into an inverse reconstruction of his own sexual assault—Frazier recognises the trauma at the root of his behaviour and offers unexpected advice and comfort. This moment of raw humanity leaves Aceveda profoundly ashamed. He terminates their arrangement and returns to his wife, attempting, however falteringly, to rebuild some semblance of familial normalcy.

    Notably, the episode is almost devoid of physical action. Confined almost entirely to The Barn, it unfolds through a series of intense discussions and interrogations, functioning as a compelling chamber piece. This constraint serves to amplify the exceptional performances, particularly from Close and Anderson. Anderson, in particular, navigates a complex arc from humiliated vulnerability to restored, threatening pressure with remarkable skill.

    Ultimately, the episode’s most ground-breaking feature may be its timing. This “wham” development, this seismic shift in the season’s trajectory, occurs not in a season finale, but with three episodes still to go. By resolving the central Antwon conflict earlier than conventional television wisdom would dictate, The Shield reaffirmed its capacity to surprise and refresh itself.

    RATING: 8/10 (+++)

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  38. Television Review: String Theory (The Shield, S4X09, 2005)@drax164d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    String Theory (S04E09)

    Airdate: May 17th 2005

    Written by: Charles H. Eglee & Shawn Ryan Directed by: Dean White

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    If the previous episode, Cut Throat, had the foreboding, conclusive weight of a season—or even series—finale, its unexpectedly uneventful resolution was great example of narrative deception. It provided the authors with vital breathing space. This deliberate anti-climax granted the necessary leeway for the show’s myriad plot strands to be resolved in a more gradual, yet ultimately more devastating, manner across the remainder of the season. The Shield, in its fourth season, had already established that calm is merely the prelude to a storm. String Theory, an episode marking the return of series creator Shawn Ryan as co-writer alongside Charles H. Eglee, fulfils that promise with an almost apocalyptic plot development, irrevocably raising the stakes and plunging Farmington into its darkest hour.

    The episode immediately capitalises on the fragile détente forged in fire. Having chosen, in a moment of shocking mercy, to spare Shane Vendrell’s life, Vic Mackey now faces the consequences of that decision. Shane, returning to the former Strike Team fold like a prodigal son, appears sincere in his gratitude, a broken man seeking redemption. However, the welcome is far from warm, particularly from Lem, whose distrust simmers beneath a veneer of professional civility. Shane’s predicament is dire: to free himself from Antwon Mitchell’s grip, he must retrieve the buried body of Angie Stubbs—the ultimate bargaining chip. What follows is a taut, forensic sequence showcasing Vic’s brutal methodology. The search of the building site yields nothing but freshly turned earth. Undeterred, Vic descends upon a hospital room to torture Antwon’s lieutenant, Halpern White, extracting the crucial information that a Salvadoran crew has relocated the body to a park. This strand is a relentless chess game, each move escalating the personal war between Vic and Antwon, yet it is swiftly overshadowed by a far broader catastrophe.

    Concurrently, Farmington is rattled to its core by an event that tests Captain Monica Rawling’s authority to its absolute limit. The disappearance of Officers Wayne “Scoobie” Haimes and Carl Miller (Jarvis George), lured by a bogus 911 call, triggers a precinct-wide mobilisation. Rawling throws every resource—Vic’s unit, Dutch and Claudette, even the politically motivated Councilman Aceveda exploiting his reserve officer status—into the search. The discovery of their stabbed bodies in a house seized under Rawling’s own asset forfeiture programme is a symbolic, devastating blow. It is an insurgent act, a direct retaliation against the LAPD’s authority, with a disturbingly palpable sense of community approval for the slain "pigs." The investigation, led by a brilliantly focused Dutch Wagenbach, becomes a race against time to restore order. His unlikely ally is Roger Pruitt (Jeff Stober), whose calm demeanour masks a fractured mind. Once a talented physicist, now lost to the streets, Pruitt’s ramblings provide the cryptic clues that lead Dutch to the gruesome secondary crime scene in the sewers. Here, the episode makes its most pointed critique of Rawling’s leadership. Faced with a crumbling command and a bloodthirsty press corps, she forces Dutch to publicly lie, claiming a suspect is in custody. It is a moment of profound moral compromise, revealing that for Rawling, the perception of control is now as vital as its reality.

    Suspicion for the orchestrated hit naturally falls upon Antwon Mitchell, whose empire has been crippled by Rawling’s forfeiture blitz. His convenient absence from the city during the killings only fuels the theory. Upon his return, Vic orchestrates a masterful interception, offering a Faustian bargain: a cessation of hostilities and a new, pragmatic business arrangement. It is a chilling moment of potential collusion, highlighting how far Vic is willing to bend his own purported code. Yet, before this pact can be solidified, Antwon is brought to the Barn for questioning, leaving the audience on a perfectly executed cliffhanger.

    String Theory is remarkably focused, unburdened by extraneous subplots or the series’ occasional forays into lame humour. Its sole moment of levity is also its most poignant. The interactions between Dutch and Roger Pruitt are not played for cheap laughs but for layered, tragic insight. Dutch’s initial patience, giving space to Pruitt’s ramblings, gradually shifts into a sharp, empathetic probing that unearths critical truths from the man’s psychosis. This subplot serves as a metaphor for the episode itself: beneath apparent chaos, there is a desperate search for underlying order, for the one piece of evidence that might explain the madness.

    This madness manifests most viscerally in the escalating hostility towards the Barn’s officers. Verbal abuse, thrown objects, and even shots fired, a pervasive atmosphere of contempt echo the similar tensions that climaxed in Season One’s Circles. The parallel is deliberate, but the comparison reveals a terrifying evolution. The hostility here is nastier, more organised, and far more embittered. The writers seem to be drawing a direct, uncomfortable analogy to the contemporary American military experience in Iraq: the failure to establish law and order within a conquered, increasingly hostile population. The LAPD, like an occupying force, is being bled dry by a guerrilla campaign it cannot fully comprehend.

    The episode concludes with a cliffhanger that feels both natural and agonisingly adequate. By leaving Antwon’s interrogation looming, Shawn Ryan demonstrates a confident understanding of serialised storytelling. He knows this plot strand possesses too much weight, too much history, to be neatly tied up in forty minutes. Instead, String Theory succeeds magnificently as an exercise in sustained tension, a pivotal chapter that dismantles the precinct’s fragile stability and sets the stage for a season’s endgame defined by betrayal, moral collapse, and the devastating cost of Vic Mackey’s brand of justice. It is a bleak, uncompromising, and superbly crafted hour of television.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

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  39. Television Review: Cut Throat (The Shield, S4X08, 2005)@drax167d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Cut Throat (S04E08)

    Airdate: May 3rd 2005

    Written by: Jennifer R. Richmond & Glen Mazzara Directed by: Dean White

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    At the midpoint of its seven-season run, The Shield presented viewers with an intriguing paradox. Each individual episode hurtled forward at a relentless, breakneck pace, cramming scenes with overlapping dialogue, jarring edits, and dense procedural detail that could easily overwhelm the less attentive. Yet, for all this furious velocity at the micro level, the series’ overarching narrative machinery often moved with glacial deliberateness. The creators consistently engineered scenarios to prevent central conflicts from reaching the swift, conclusive resolution they might in a more conventional drama or in reality. Cut Throat, the eighth episode of the fourth season, stands as a potent exemplar of this dynamic. It is an instalment that appears, on its surface, to drive a dagger toward the heart of the series’ most defining relationship, promising cathartic finality. Instead, it demonstrates the show’s commitment to prolonged, agonising tension, offering a profound, and perhaps overly convenient, postponement.

    The episode’s engine is fuelled by a direct and deadly order. Gang lord Antwon Mitchell commands his corrupted asset, Detective Shane Vendrell, to eliminate his former mentor and Antwon's bitter enemy, Detective Vic Mackey. Crucially, Vic becomes aware of this contract, setting a timer on a confrontation between the former partners and best friends that seems to permit only one survivor. This knowledge transforms every shared glance in the Barn from a relic of camaraderie into a potential final assessment of threat. Antwon, dissatisfied with Shane’s prevarication, reiterates his command with brutal clarity: Vic must be dead by day’s end. Walton Goggins portrays Shane’s reaction to this ultimatum with spectacular, sweaty desperation. His conflict is multifaceted—there are the obvious moral and professional hazards, but more compellingly, there is a visceral, prideful reluctance. Whether stemming from residual affection for Vic or a stubborn refusal to be Antwon’s pure instrument, Shane seeks a third path.

    His convoluted solution is a regime-change operation within the One-Niners, targeting Antwon’s fiercely loyal lieutenant, Halpern White (Laurence Mason). This plan fails through direct action but succeeds via farce. During tense negotiations in a car, the skittish Army Renta accidentally shoots Halpern. Seizing the chaotic opportunity, Shane offers the wounded man a ride to hospital, but only in exchange for the location of Angie Stubbs’s body—the crucial leverage Antwon holds over Shane and Renta. This sequence is a hallmark of The Shield: a critical plot pivot emerges from a panicky accident, executed with a chilling, transactional pragmatism. Halpern talks, is dumped at Emergency, and Shane buys himself not freedom, but a temporary stay of execution. The far larger, more intimate threat remains: Vic Mackey.

    The ensuing late-night confrontation near the railroad tracks is the episode’s devastating centrepiece. Vic, the betrayed predator, lures Shane to the isolated spot and immediately points a gun to his head. What follows is not a battle of wills, but a total collapse. Shane’s defence crumbles into a raw, gulping plea for mercy and a return to grace. In a moment of immense dramatic power, Vic lowers the weapon. It is a choice that resonates with profound ambiguity—is it forgiveness, tactical calculation, or simply the inability to erase their shared, bloody history? This avoidance of the irrevocable act is the episode’s defining, and most contentious, narrative decision.

    While this personal war simmers, the precinct grapples with a more visceral crisis: two men are discovered with their throats slit. Captain Rawling suspects the One-Niners are cleansing informants, implicating a leak within her controversial asset forfeiture programme. The investigation, however, takes a grimly ironic turn. The perpetrators are not gang members but two hapless souls from the Spookstreet crew, manipulated into murdering a completely innocent teacher by a vengeful student, Tracy (Natalia Morris). This subplot serves as a darkly comic critique of systemic assumptions, while also mirroring the main theme of characters being lethally manipulated by forces they barely comprehend.

    Director Dean White expertly interweaves these strands with the series’ ongoing serialised threads. Councilman David Aceveda’s moral decay deepens as his relationship with prostitute Sara Frazier descends from transactional exploitation into a sadistic exercise in psychological control. In a lighter, though still character-revealing, beat Detective Dutch Wagenbach finally apprehends the “coffee bandit,” a thief whose method is to throwing hot coffee at waiter and robbing establishment in initial confusion. Dutch’s subsequent, almost admiring interrogation highlights his fascination with the criminal mind, even in its most benign form.

    However, the episode’s narrative architecture hinges on Shane’s dilemma being resolved through what some might deem excessive convenience. The accidental shooting of Halpern, a moment many cinephiles will recognise as a direct, darkly humorous nod to the infamous “brain in the back seat” scene from Pulp Fiction, provides Shane with an improbable escape hatch. Writers Jennifer R. Richmond and Glenn Mazara use this device to ensure the season’s eighth episode—a point at which many series might deliver a climax—instead maintains the agonising status quo.

    This leads to the episode’s most significant, if debatable, creative choice: the finale. The scene is meticulously crafted for a “wham” moment echoing the series’ pilot, where Vic executed Detective Terry Crowley. Producers have since acknowledged they actively contemplated having Vic pull the trigger on Shane here. Such an act would have catapulted the series into radically different, uncharted territory. Yet, it was not a season finale, and Walton Goggins was delivering such electrifying, nuanced work that the prospect of losing such a vital component of the show’s dynamic likely gave the writers pause. The result is a scene that is undeniably effective on an emotional level, a masterclass in performed tension between two superb actors. But it is also the moment The Shield, perhaps consciously, chose familiarity over radical narrative risk. Vic lowering the gun preserves the central duo for future battles, ensuring the series’ slow-burn paradox could continue.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

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  40. Television Review: Hurt (The Shield, S4X07, 2005)@drax167d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Hurt (S04E07)

    Airdate: April 26th 2005

    Written by: Scott Rosenbaum & Lia L. Longworthy Directed by: Nick Gomez

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    By its fourth season, The Shield had so firmly entrenched its narrative formula that any single episode required monumental effort to distinguish itself from the relentless, gritty machinery of the series. This is not inherently a criticism; the general quality of the programme had not declined in the manner typical of many dramas at this juncture, avoiding the staleness that often accompanies a prolonged run. Yet, this very routine could occasionally render even an episode designed as a ‘wham’ moment strangely subdued and down-to-earth, as if the show’s own kinetic energy had become a victim of its consistent tone. Such is the case with Hurt, an instalment that contains all the requisite components of high drama—betrayal, moral decay, and visceral police work—but which, through a combination of narrative choices and directorial execution, often feels like it is treading well-worn ground, its explosive potential curiously muffled.

    The episode’s central, and most potent, storyline concerns the now-unbridgeable rift between Shane Vendrell and his former Strike Team brethren, particularly Vic Mackey. Somewhat ironically, given its seismic implications, this plot receives relatively sparse focused attention, woven instead into the fabric of other operations. Vic, aware through his secret surveillance that Shane and his new Vice partner, Renta, are under the thumb of gangster Antwon Mitchell, makes a calculated decision to bring them informally into his Barn-based anti-gang unit. His motive is control: by keeping Shane close, he can better monitor the threat. This necessitates a exhausting charade of trust, a performance that becomes untenable when another surveillance video reveals Antwon Mitchell directly ordering Shane to eliminate Vic, whom he blames for significant losses in drug revenue. The realisation that he must now watch his back for a bullet from his former partner and best friend hangs over Vic’s every scene, a silent, corrosive dread that underpins his subsequent actions.

    This profound professional and personal betrayal arrives on the heels of another disappointment for Mackey. Captain Monica Rawlings, initially, had intended to gift him the honour of capturing Alex Kozodov (Mark Ivanir), a Russian mobster whose apprehension would finalise a long-running money laundering investigation. However, political winds shift abruptly. Thanks to the machinations of Councilman Aceveda, heavily edited footage of Vic’s controversial drug raid in a church is leaked to the media, casting the LAPD in a damning light. Under pressure from superiors, Rawlings is forced to remove Vic from the Kozodov case, handing it over to the Organized Crime Unit under John Sullivan (Sean Blakemoore). This public humiliation and professional sideliding fuel Vic’s simmering resentment and sense of injustice, priming him for reckless action.

    That action manifests in the sabotage of Shane’s own planned sting operation. Shane, aiming to prove his worth, targets members of the Byz Lats gang, specifically Hernesto (Lambardo Boyar), who runs a cigarette smuggling ring. His plan hinges on a convict, Hielo Rodriguez (Giovanni Lopses), who agrees to wear a wire in exchange for early release, offering to betray his former friend Hernesto. Vic, however, sees an opportunity. In a move of cold brilliance, he secretly warns Hernesto about Hielo’s treachery. In return, he extracts information on Kozodov’s whereabouts. Vic then abducts both Kozodov and an associated arsonist, subjects them to a terrifying mock execution by firing bullets into the wall around their blindfolded heads, and abandons them. Later, Sullivan triumphantly announces their arrest by uniformed patrol after a report of shots fired, claiming all credit. Vic’s manoeuvre is a masterstroke of cynical pragmatism: he achieves his goal (Kozodov in custody) while simultaneously undermining Shane and denying Sullivan a clean victory. It is a quintessential Mackey play, blurring the lines between justice, vengeance, and self-preservation.

    Running parallel is the episode’s primary procedural storyline, which deals with a harrowing case of child abuse. Seven-year-old Joya is brought to Mission Cross with horrific internal injuries after being forced to drink bleach. Captain Rawlings takes a personal interest, and Detective Claudette Wyms leads the investigation. The trail leads to a group foster home run by Frank (Garrett M. Brown) and Liz Walker (Cyd Strittmatter), where detectives discover a specially locked room described as a space for isolating ‘problematic’ children. The home’s oldest former charge, Darnell Gary (Matt Sprangler), a 17-year-old drug addict, confesses to possibly inappropriate behaviour with Joya. In a twist of cruel irony, the true perpetrator is revealed to be another foster child, a teenage girl named Bibi (Jordyn Barber). Her motive was not malice, but a desperate, misguided attempt to silence Joya and prevent her from disclosing abuse, fearing that any scandal would see the Walker children dispersed into potentially worse situations. This plotline is a sobering reminder of the cycle of neglect and violence that exists beyond the gang wars, and it showcases Rawlings’ and Wyms’ depth of compassion in stark contrast to the Barn’s cynical machinations.

    Penned by Scott Rosenbaum and Lia L. Logenworthy, Hurt is, on the whole, a structurally solid episode containing several very strong moments. One standout is the continued radicalisation of Officer Julien Lowe. To make a point to his partner Danny about racial injustice in Rawlings’ policing policies, he conducts a blatantly discriminatory traffic stop of a white motorist. He aggressively searches for non-existent gang tattoos and uses the pretext of a single bootleg DVD to have the man’s car confiscated. It is a powerful, uncomfortable scene that illustrates how the Barn’s corrosive ethics can infect even fundamentally decent officers, turning idealism into a distorted mirror of the corruption it opposes.

    Another exceptionally strong scene is the heated argument between Vic and Rawlings. Vic, incensed at being removed from the Kozodov case, unleashes his fury. Rawlings, in turn, delivers a blistering reminder of the immense professional risk she took in giving him a command position. The scene is elevated by superb performances from Michael Chiklis and Glenn Close, crackling with raw emotion and conflicting loyalties. Its payoff comes later, in a moment of silent, weary acknowledgement between the two as they agree to let OCU take the public credit for Kozodov’s arrest—a small, pragmatic victory for departmental peace that speaks volumes about their complicated partnership.

    A particularly memorable, and chilling, detail involves the informant Hielo. In a vulgar display of bravado, he brags to Shane and the others about taking the virginity of Hernesto’s 14-year-old sister. Vic, whose own daughter is around the same age, is visibly disgusted. Later, when Vic betrays Hielo to Hernesto, he pointedly quotes Hielo’s own words back to him all but sealing the informant’s grim fate. Chiklis’s performance and the script cleverly allow for ambiguity here: was Vic’s entire scheme an improvisation motivated primarily by visceral moral revulsion, or was it merely another calculated exploitation of an opportunity, with his disgust merely a useful emotional catalyst? This ambiguity is the lifeblood of Vic’s character.

    Where the episode falters, however, is in its execution. The direction by Nick Gomez, while competent, lacks the punch required for the material. The grand reveal of Antwon’s death order against Vic is delivered early but its consequences are underplayed. It resurfaces in a scene where Vic and Shane are stealthily moving in on Hielo and Hernesto, the editing suggesting a tense standoff where each might kill the other. Yet, this remains merely a visual suggestion—a plot detail that generates momentary suspense but ultimately goes nowhere within the episode’s confines, its resolution deferred. This choice dilutes the impact, making the mortal threat feel like a narrative afterthought rather than the driving tension it ought to be.

    Another example of occasionally clumsy narrative technique involves Detective Dutch Wagenbach and his awkward romantic pursuit of Corinne Mackey, Vic’s ex-wife. Despite the palpable awkwardness of his advance, we suddenly see him in her home, sharing dinner and even reading a bedtime story to her daughter. The episode fails to bridge this gap, neglecting to show whether Corinne experienced a change of heart or if Dutch negotiated a strictly platonic arrangement. The jump feels abrupt and unearned, leaving a character beat feeling underdeveloped.

    Conversely, one of the episode’s most striking directorial choices is also its simplest. The scene in which Julien intimidates the white motorist is one of the rare sequences in the series shot in the rain—a visual anomaly in the perpetually sunny California setting. This appears a strange but deliberate creative decision, using the gloomy weather to heighten the awkwardness and moral murkiness of Julien’s actions and to underline his point about unfair scrutiny. It also, perhaps unintentionally, serves as a refreshing visual novelty, a brief departure from the series’ established, sun-bleached aesthetic that had by this season become part of its routine.

    Hurt embodies the strengths and weaknesses of The Shield in its confident middle age. It is carried by formidable character work, a complex central plot, and moments of searing emotional and ethical clarity. Yet, it is occasionally hampered by a sense of narrative predictability and directorial choices that fail to fully ignite its most volatile elements. It is an episode that functions perfectly well as a cog in the greater machine, but one senses that with a sharper edit and a more daring visual approach, it could have been a standout rather than merely a solid, if somewhat earthbound, entry in the canon.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

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  41. Television Review: Insurgents (The Shield, S4X06, 2005)@drax168d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Insurgents (S04E06)

    Airdate: April 19th 2005

    Written by: Elizabeth Craft and Sarah Fain Directed by: Vondie Curtis-Hall

    Running Time: 44 minutes

    Following the smashing, morally cataclysmic ending of Tar Baby, The Shield’s subsequent episode, Insurgents, presents a more subdued, almost procedural entry. Yet, to mistake this for a return to regular order would be a grave error. The aftermath of the previous episode’s explosive events mandates that the narrative must now navigate previously uncharted territory, shifting from overt, explosive corruption to a more insidious, systemic examination of institutional decay and personal compromise.

    The episode opens not with the practical, bureaucratic implementation of Captain Monica Rawling’s aggressive new strategy: the eradication of crime in Farmington via criminal asset forfeiture. The scene is a public auction of confiscated automobiles, a visually mundane yet symbolically potent display of state power. Rawling later proudly informs her troops that the auction netted $900,000, with a third earmarked for the police department itself. However, this "success" is immediately undercut by the brewing backlash. The programme’s fundamental injustice lies in its circumvention of the presumption of innocence; property can be seized on suspicion alone. Furthermore, as the narrative tacitly underscores, the most devastating impact falls upon the poorest communities, where individuals lack the resources to legally contest these seizures. An unspoken but glaring racial dynamic is also evident: the attendees bidding at the auction are predominantly white, while the assets being sold are overwhelmingly seized from Black and Latino residents. This morally dubious policy becomes the catalyst for Officer Julien Lowe’s deepening crisis of conscience. His growing discomfort with what he perceives as state-sanctioned theft ultimately steers him towards an alliance with the politically astute (and perpetually scheming) City Councilor Aceveda, setting in motion a plot to undermine Rawling’s authority from within the very unit she commands.

    Meanwhile, Rawling’s draconian anti-crime campaign unwittingly converges with the ambitions of ganglord Antwon Mitchell. Fresh from a devastating drug bust, Antwon seeks to consolidate his fractured empire. His newfound leverage includes two LAPD officers, Shane Vendrell and Army Renta, now reduced to being his indentured servants within the force. Their desperate struggle to extricate themselves from this arrangement forms a key subplot. Before any escape is possible, they are compelled to serve Antwon, first by delivering intelligence on Rawling’s planned raids, and later by actively eliminating his drug-pushing competition. Shane’s precarious position is complicated exponentially by two factors. Firstly, Vic Mackey is now fully aware of precisely whom Shane is working for. Secondly, the DEA’s involvement in an operation targeting an international smuggler connected to Antwon adds a volatile, federal layer of scrutiny. This tension erupts when Verdice (Steven Taylor), one of Antwon’s underlings, is cornered by police. Shane and Renta frantically race to arrest him first, exploiting a mere thirty-second window to deliver a brutally clear warning: remain silent and do not implicate Antwon. This moment encapsulates the episode’s central tension—the police acting as both enforcers and protectors of the very criminal enterprises they are supposed to dismantle.

    Rawling’s relentless pursuit leads to one of the episode’s most morally contentious acts: authorising a raid on a neighbourhood church suspected of harbouring gang members and narcotics. For the devoutly Christian Julien, this represents an unconscionable violation of sacred space, and he refuses to participate. The raid proceeds without him, netting several gang members who had taken refuge there and, in a starkly symbolic twist, uncovering twelve kilograms of heroin concealed within liturgical candles. This visual—sacreligious objects profaned by the drug trade—perfectly mirrors the episode’s theme of institutional sanctity being corrupted from within.

    Parallel to this, Vic Mackey is consumed by a more personal vendetta. The disappearance of teenage girl Angie Stubbs and the suspicious overdose of her mother, Hoda—found with a quantity and quality of drugs far beyond her means—convince Vic that Antwon has ordered their executions as retaliation. The agonising problem is his inability to prove it. This failure fuels the righteous fury of Lema, the most conscientious former member of the Strike Team. Lem openly castigates Shane, holding him directly responsible, and expresses profound dissatisfaction with Vic for allowing Shane back into their orbit. Vic, ever the strategist, reveals his deeper game: he does not trust Shane at all. He presents Lem and Ronnie with surveillance footage capturing Shane and Renta discussing their servitude to Antwon. This evidence transforms their mission; they are now compelled to bring down their former friend and colleague, cementing the Strike Team’s irrevocable fracture.

    A secondary, yet thematically resonant, subplot explores the deteriorating partnership between Detectives Dutch Wagenbach and Claudette Wyms. Their relationship has soured following Dutch’s career-rescuing deal, negotiated behind Claudette’s back. A frosty silence hangs between them until they are assigned a new case: the brutal beating death of a female shop worker. Their investigation initially focuses on Cleavon Gardner (Ray Gardner), a man recently arrived from San Antonio, where police had unsuccessfully tried to link him to four similar murders. Gardner offers a rather unconvincing explanation that the allegations were rooted in racist persecution. Dutch, intuitively convinced he is a cold, psychopathic killer, becomes obsessed. The resolution, however, is frustratingly mundane: the real culprit is the victim’s colleague, caught stealing from the store. Dutch’s displeasure is palpable; he remains certain Gardner is a dangerous predator, but the LAPD is powerless until he strikes again. This storyline serves as a metaphor for the entire episode: the system is aware of looming threats and profound injustices but is often hamstrung by procedure, legal technicalities, and its own internal dysfunctions from acting pre-emptively.

    Insurgents was authored by the esteemed writing duo Elizabeth Craft and Sarah Fain, known for their work on numerous prominent television series and as collaborators with Joss Whedon, and directed by the highly respected actor-turned-director Vondie Curtis-Hall. Their combined expertise delivers an episode that is tightly plotted and rich in character nuance. Interesting ancillary details include a brief observation about the state of El Salvador two decades prior—a nation then vastly different from its present condition. The illegal handgun trade there was described as extremely lucrative because, following a brutal civil war, the country was flooded with AK-47s and other assault rifles, making a simple pistol a scarce and coveted luxury item. This historical aside subtly reinforces the episode’s themes of skewed economies, scarcity, and the unintended consequences of larger conflicts.

    Another notable, semi-comical, and ultimately rather unfortunate element is Dutch’s clumsy, ill-advised attempt to ask out Vic Mackey’s ex-wife, Corrine. This cringe-inducing moment serves less as comic relief and more as a reminder of the insular, incestuous nature of the Barn’s social dynamics and Dutch’s profound, often tragic, social misreading of situations.

    Insurgents may lack the raw, visceral shock of its predecessor, but it represents great example of narrative groundwork, proving that in the world of The Shield, the quiet episodes, where systems grind and morals are slowly compromised, are often the most devastating of all.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

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  42. Television Review: Tar Baby (The Shield, S4X05, 2005)@drax168d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Tar Baby (S04E05)

    Airdate: April 12th 2005

    Written by: Charles H. Eglee Directed by: Guy Ferland

    Running Time: 44 minutes

    In the dysfunctional universe of The Shield, triumphs are fleeting illusions, mere moments of precarious order before the inevitable, brutal reassertion of chaos. Tar Baby, the fourth season's fifth episode, serves as great example of this grim philosophy, presenting a narrative where every hard-won gain is instantly shadowed by a devastating, often innocent, cost. What begins as a procedural hunt concludes as a seismic event that brutally rearranges the balance of power in Farmington, leaving its characters—and the audience—reeling from the consequences of a pyrrhic win.

    The episode’s cold open is a deliberate, unsettling feint. A scene depicting Councilman David Aceveda apparently raping a woman, Sara Frazier, is immediately revealed to be well-rehearsed, controlled roleplay. The well-paid prostitute later justifies it as a healthy channel for "energy," but Aceveda brushes it aside with a politician's practised detachment. The truth, however, lies beneath the surface: for Aceveda, this is fundamentally an issue of control, a commodity he lost during his own traumatic sexual assault. His need to reclaim it now metastasises into the political sphere. He inserts himself into an escalating conflict in his former jurisdiction, now an electoral district, publicly confronting Captain Monica Rawling at a town hall meeting over her controversial asset forfeiture program. He is joined, in a moment of stark irony, by gang lord Antwon Mitchell, who leverages the same platform to accuse the program of racism. This political theatre, however, is merely a prelude to the episode's first major, and far more visceral, battle for control.

    The catalyst is the murder of Romeo Barnes, a former drug dealer who had turned his life around to become a drug counsellor. Such a target is unusual even by Farmington’s desensitised standards, which piques Vic Mackey’s professional interest. Detective Lemansky provides a crucial lead: Angie Stubbs (Bree'anna Banks), a vulnerable thirteen-year-old girl whose heroin-addicted mother, Hoda (Fylicia King), Romeo had been trying to help. Angie suggests her mother’s dealer may be responsible. To identify this dealer, Vic is forced into a reluctant alliance with Shane Vendrell and Army Renta, who in turn contact Antwon Mitchell. The drug lord swiftly deduces the killer is Freebo (Jeffrey Lorient), one of his own men, and orders his protection whilst simultaneously demanding Shane feed him intelligence on Vic’s investigation. This creates the episode’s central tension: a parallel pursuit where the Strike Team’s official investigation is shadowed by Mitchell’s clandestine counter-operations.

    Through relentless pressure and Lem’s dogged work, Vic and his team locate Hoda Stubbs and use her to find the a house used by Freebo as both a dealing spot and a primary distribution hub for Mitchell’s One-Niner gang. Vic delivers this intelligence to Rawling, who organises a massive, militaristic raid. The operation is a spectacular success, proceeding with crushing efficiency. Shane, despite his frantic efforts, fails to warn Antwon in time. A large contingent of One-Niners is arrested, and Captain Rawling basks in the glow of Farmington’s largest drug bust in ten years. Freebo himself escapes the net, but not for long, being tracked down and captured by Vic despite Shane and Renta’s continued attempts at sabotage. It appears to be an unqualified triumph for the new captain and her methods.

    Yet, this triumph extracts an immediate and unexpected price. The raid uncovers a meth lab, necessitating a hazardous materials evacuation of nearby buildings. A Black man, tending to his sick young son, refuses to leave and is forcibly, aggressively manhandled by officers. The scene makes Officer Julien Lowe profoundly uncomfortable, prompting him to mutter that something should be done. It is a small, sharp moment that pierces the celebratory mood, a precursor to the far greater moral cost to come.

    That greater price is paid with innocent blood. Antwon Mitchell is infuriated not merely by the colossal financial loss, but by the catastrophic blow to his authority—a loss that must be answered with unequivocal brutality. Shane and Renta, having failed him, are not themselves to be punished; they are to be transformed into the instruments of his demonstration. In a chillingly calculated move, Mitchell overpowers them during a meeting, produces the terrified Angie Stubbs, and executes her with Shane's own service weapon. He then presents fabricated evidence and a ready-made narrative framing the two detectives for the girl’s murder. His subsequent message to Shane is stripped of all ambiguity. From now on, he will do whatever Antwon wants. In one stroke, Mitchell reasserts total control, transforms Shane from an aspiring viceroy into a serf, and sacrifices a child’s life as mere punctuation.

    Whilst this underworld coup unfolds, Rawling moves to assert control within her own domain. She discovers that detectives Dutch Wagenbach and Claudette Wyms have become inexplicably entangled in a minor case involving Maurice Webster and the forfeiture of his house. By chance, she overhears Dutch admitting to Claudette that he cut a deal with Assistant District Attorney Beth Encardi to secure their careers. Rawling’s response is a masterstroke of bureaucratic dominance. She calls Encardi directly, warning her never to manipulate her people again, threatening to have the Barn stonewall every one of her cases if she does. The prosecutor’s reluctant acquiescence confirms Rawling’s political fortitude, establishing a stark contrast with the bloody control Mitchell exerts elsewhere.

    Tar Baby is not without flaws. A rather unnecessary filler subplot involving Donna (Lily Knight), a woman who murdered her elderly stepmother, feels like a generic procedural obligation included purely to meet a case-of-the-week quota. Furthermore, the attempt to leaven the episode’s oppressive grimness with humour—Vic and his crew watching a surveillance tape of Dutch awkwardly dating a Black woman and singing Duran Duran’s "Hungry Like the Wolf"—falls notably flat, feeling tonally disjointed from the surrounding darkness.

    These minor stumbles aside, writers Charles H. Eglee and director Guy Ferland deliver an episode that expertly subverts conventional structure. It begins with routine, deceptively familiar elements—a misleading cold open, slowly unfurling political machinations—only to detonate a "wham" ending of staggering brutality that irrevocably alters the Farmington landscape. Whilst the revelation that Antwon Mitchell is no choirboy was never in doubt, the sheer viciousness, duplicity, and strategic genius of his scheme delivers a profound shock. Most crucially, it redefines Shane Vendrell’s trajectory. Having already ventured into the moral darkness in a bid to emulate Vic and carve out his own fiefdom, he instead finds himself reduced to a drug lord’s thrall—a position made all the more galling by the racist sentiments he must now swallow whilst serving a Black kingpin.

    The episode’s conclusion stands as one of the most powerful moments in the season thus far. In the silence that follows Angie Stubbs’ murder, a new, more terrifying order is born. Rawling may have won the battle of the raid, but Mitchell’s ruthless counterstroke wins the war for psychological dominance. Shane is enslaved, an innocent is sacrificed, and the audience is left to question every assumption about where power truly resides. With this episode, the series forcefully reclaims the devastating narrative potential of its finest earlier seasons, proving that its capacity for shocking, meaningful consequence remains undimmed.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

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  43. Television Review: Doghouse (The Shield, S4X04, 2005)@drax169d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Doghouse (S04E04)

    Airdate: April 5th 2005

    Written by: Adam E. Fierro Directed by: Dean White

    Running Time: 44 minutes

    As The Shield entered its fourth season, the series had firmly established its distinctive, grimy rhythm. The show was not straying far from its established formula, nor was it producing episodes that stood out as uncharacteristically poor or exceptionally brilliant. Instead, when an episode did manage to distinguish itself, it often did so through a minor, albeit clever, detail – such as the apt choice of a title. The fourth episode, Doghouse, is a prime example of this phenomenon. Its title operates on multiple levels: it aptly describes the professional purgatory in which several major characters find themselves, while also serving as a literal descriptor for a pivotal incident where a canine is employed to deliver a brutal, extra-judicial form of justice. This layered symbolism provides the primary interest in an episode that is otherwise a competently executed, yet ultimately familiar, piece of the The Shield tapestry.

    The symbolic "doghouse" is most explicitly used to describe the LAPD equivalent of a Siberian exile, a fate endured by Detectives Dutch Wagenbach and Claudette Wyms. Their symbollic banishment is a direct consequence of Claudette's principled stance, which undermined numerous criminal convictions and trod on the toes of powerful figures. In the preceding episode, Dutch had negotiated a potential reprieve by promising "a special kind" of service to Assistant District Attorney Beth Encardi. In Doghouse," he discovers the morally dubious nature of this service: investigating Maurice Webster (Mel Winkler), a completely harmless, middle-aged marijuana dealer. Claudette, despite her misgivings, participates in a seemingly pointless sting operation, claiming the banned drug is for her ailing mother. Her performance prompts the kind-hearted Webster to offer a discount. Dutch's disgust peaks when he uncovers the operation's true, cynical purpose: not to prosecute Webster, but to destroy his credibility as a defence witness in a far more significant murder trial. The sting succeeds, and so does Dutch's arrangement with Encardi, resulting in the previously shunned detectives being assigned two high-profile murder cases—a bitter victory that leaves their integrity further compromised.

    A parallel narrative of professional confinement involves Detective Vic Mackey. Having worked to extricate himself from surveillance duties to return to proactive street work, he finds himself once again stuck in the "doghouse". His efforts are systematically sabotaged by his former protégé, Shane Vendrell, who has solidified his pact with drug lord Antwon Mitchell by leaking Vic's intelligence. Fully aware of Shane's treachery, Vic nevertheless opts to bring him and his new partner, Army Renta, into the Barn. This is a calculated move born of a desire to control and monitor a known threat, reflecting Vic's preference for having enemies in sight rather than operating in the shadows. This subplot effectively underscores the toxic, paranoid atmosphere that has come to define the Strike Team's remnants.

    Ironically, while Dutch—a top investigator specialising in profiling serial offenders—is relegated to chasing minor drug dealers, Vic is assigned the task of apprehending a genuine predator. Oscar Ruiz is a vicious rapist whose modus operandi involves forcing victims to call their partners during the assault and humiliatingly describe the ordeal. Having escaped from custody, and seemingly aware his freedom is fleeting, he embarks on a raping rampage. Vic is determined to stop him at any cost, a resolve that leads him to enlist Latino gang members for information. This tactic backfires spectacularly, resulting in an embarrassing incident where a Chinese delivery man is nearly lynched by overzealous vigilantes. Forced to seek a more professional approach, Vic turns to Dutch for a psychological profile. This collaboration proves more effective; Ruiz is cornered and barricades himself in a house. In the episode's most visceral sequence, an LAPD canine officer unleashes a dog on the rapist. Vic and his colleagues deliberately stand down, allowing the animal to maul Ruiz. The episode concludes with Emily Mischner (Katherine Kirkpatrick), a previous victim hiding in the Barn, being informed that her tormentor suffered a ruptured testicle before his recapture—a moment of dark, poetic justice that satisfies the characters' visceral need for retribution beyond the confines of the law.

    Meanwhile, the political dimensions of the Barn's operations continue to reverberate. Although former Captain David Aceveda has left for a seat on the City Council, he maintains a keen, possessive interest in his old domain. He expresses pointed displeasure with Captain Monica Rawling's aggressive asset forfeiture programme, arguing that it disproportionately targets his Latino and Black constituents. Aceveda subtly threatens to make life politically difficult for the LAPD and the Barn unless Rawling moderates her approach. This conflict highlights the show's ongoing exploration of how systemic policies can perpetuate cycles of poverty and crime, even when enacted with ostensibly good intentions.

    Simultaneously, Aceveda grapples with a deeply personal crisis. During a meeting with a fellow councilman, he notices a young woman he knows to be a prostitute. She introduces herself as Sara Frazier (played by Abby Brammell). Later, Aceveda seeks her out, soliciting services that include rough sex—a recently discovered and deeply troubling tendency for him. This storyline continues the show's unflinching examination of the corrosive effects of power and trauma on personal morality, suggesting that Aceveda's political ascent is mirrored by a disturbing personal descent.

    Written by Adam E. Fierro and directed by Dean White, Doghouse is assembled with professional competence. Its various subplots—the ethical quandaries of Dutch and Claudette, Vic's ruthless pursuit of Ruiz, Shane's betrayal, Aceveda's political and personal struggles—are seamlessly interwoven into a coherent, fifty-minute whole. The pacing is taut, the character beats are consistent, and the dialogue retains the series' signature gritty authenticity. However, by the end of the day, the episode does not markedly distinguish itself. It operates firmly within the established quality parameters of The Shield at this stage in its run: it is compelling, morally complex, and sharply executed, but it lacks the groundbreaking narrative shocks or profound character revelations that defined the series' very best episodes.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

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  44. Television Review: Bang (The Shield, S4X03, 2005)@drax171d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Bang (S04E03)

    Airdate: March 29th 2005

    Written by: Scott Rosenbaum Directed by: Guy Ferland

    Running Time: 44 minutes

    The third episode of The Shield’s fourth season, Bang, represents a significant improvement over its predecessor, Grave. This elevation stems less from a dramatic shift in writing or directing quality and more from a refined, economical approach to storytelling. Where the previous episode felt cluttered with competing narratives, Bang pares back the subplots, allowing the audience to engage more deeply with the grim, morally ambiguous streets of Farmington. The result is a tightly wound, brutal hour of television that efficiently advances the season’s central conflict: the corrosive impact of Captain Monica Rawling’s uncompromising new regime.

    The episode’s primary narrative thrust begins with Rawling (Glenn Close) formally taking command of the Farmington Precinct. In a speech to her officers, she outlines a radical departure from former Captain Aceveda’s policies, placing criminal asset forfeiture at the centre of her strategy. She argues that seizing ill-gotten gains can solve budgetary woes, fund overtime, purchase new equipment, and even return resources to the community. The rank-and-file react with enthusiasm, smelling opportunity. However, detectives Claudette Wyms and Dutch Wagenbach are less thrilled, particularly upon learning that the ethically compromised Vic Mackey will lead the new anti-gang unit. Rawling’s philosophy is immediately put to a severe test when a fatal drive-by shooting ignites a vicious gang war between the black gangs, the Spookstreet Souljahs and the One-Niners. Retaliatory killings escalate rapidly, culminating in the brazen assassination of a Souljah member in his hospital bed at Mission Cross.

    Pressed to halt the spiralling violence, Vic seeks the catalyst for the conflict. A key witness emerges in Aloicious “Choppa” Jenkins (Six Reasons), a Souljah who survived the initial attack. Vic tracks him to a house owned by his mother, Chenille (Leontine Guillard), and takes him into custody. A more concrete clue surfaces from an unexpected source: Shane Vendrell, who has obtained a rap pornography video featuring Choppa engaged in a sexual act with a woman bearing One-Niner tattoos. The video’s producer, Terence Ross (Ronnie Warner), identifies the woman as “Bounce” (Tanya Alexander). When brought in for questioning, visibly beaten, she reveals her assailant as Peter “Puppethead” (Kamil Beale), the father of her child and a One-Niner. The tragic, trivial origin of the gang war becomes clear: Puppethead’s attempt to murder Choppa over this liaison sparked the cycle of retaliation. Choppa, when interrogated by Vic, expresses a perverse delight in the carnage, seeing it as invaluable “street cred” for his rap career, and steadfastly refuses to give up Puppethead.

    Rawling, embodying her ruthless new doctrine, decides to force Choppa’s hand by striking at his family. Knowing Chenille’s home was purchased with drug money, she exercises asset forfeiture, evicting Chenille and her young children. This calculated, cruel act is rendered almost instantly pointless by the behind-the-scenes machinations of gang lord Antwan Mitchell, who brokers a brutal peace by delivering Puppethead to the Souljahs for a gruesome execution. The immediate thirst for vengeance is quenched, but Rawling’s punitive measure remains. Vic suggests returning the house to Chenille on humanitarian grounds, but Rawling refuses, coldly stating that such kindness would send the wrong message and undermine her deterrent strategy. This moment crystallises her tragic arc: in her zeal to avoid the compromised, ends-justify-the-means territory of a Vic Mackey, she adopts a different but equally dehumanising form of absolutism.

    The episode’s subplots are mercifully streamlined. Dutch and Claudette continue to suffer unofficial reprisals for Claudette’s principled stand in the case of drugged public defender. This forces Dutch to plead with Assistant District Attorney Beth Encardi (Maria Horsford) for clemency, promising “extra” favours in return—a small but telling corruption of his own integrity. Meanwhile, a visit by Vic to Shane’s home to see his newborn son and the depressed Mara hints at a potential reconciliation and Mackey’s return to the Barn, a prospect Shane considers with wary ambivalence.

    Written by Scott Rosenbaum and directed by Guy Ferland, Bang uses its outlandish central device—the gangsta rap porn video—to brilliantly illustrate the distorted values and profound distrust of authority within the community it portrays. Both Choppa and Bounce display a shocking pride in the bloodshed their actions precipitated, viewing human life as cheap currency for notoriety. The episode benefits enormously from Glenn Close’s masterful performance. In a standout scene, Rawling is confronted and scolded by the evicted Chenille. Close portrays Rawling’s visible discomfort and flicker of guilt with subtlety, yet she hardens her resolve, recognising that any concession to compassion might start her on a slippery slope toward the moral quagmire inhabited by Vic.

    However, the episode is not without flaws. A secondary subplot involving Dutch investigating a series of coffee shop robberies feels underdeveloped and tonally awkward. Dutch’s Islamophobic remark to one victim is jarring and serves little narrative purpose beyond underscoring his occasional insensitivity. Similarly, a brief scene where Vic confronts a paediatrician (Deborah Van Valkenburgh) who attempts to dissuade the Mackey family from a vaccine injury lawsuit is a wasted opportunity. It functions as mere filler, doing little to advance character or plot and offering the veteran actress a role with negligible impact.

    Despite these minor missteps, Bang succeeds as a powerful, focused instalment. It compellingly establishes the harsh new order under Monica Rawling, explores the cyclical, petty origins of gang violence, and delivers a scathing critique of policies where punitive legalism overrides basic humanity. The episode demonstrates that whilst the mean streets of Farmington are as treacherous as ever, a clearer narrative focus allows their moral complexities to resonate with far greater force.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

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  45. Television Review: Grave (The Shield, S4X02, 2005)@drax171d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Grave (S04E02)

    Airdate: March 22nd 2005

    Written by: Kurt Sutter Directed by: Paris Barclay

    Running Time: 44 minutes

    It is a commonly observed phenomenon in long-running television series—particularly those lauded for their sustained quality—that the fourth season often marks the beginning of an inevitable creative decline. The narrative engines begin to sputter, character development can feel repetitive or forced, and the sheer weight of ongoing plotlines starts to compromise individual episodes. This thesis finds compelling evidence in Grave, the second episode of The Shield’s fourth season. While by no means a failure, and possessing several moments of the series’ characteristic brutal grace, the episode represents a perceptible downgrade from the taut, focused intensity of the preceding seasons. It is an instalment where the machinery of the show’s complex world becomes distractingly visible, cramming an overabundance of plot into a restrictive timeframe and leaning on narrative devices that feel undercooked or, in one notorious case, gratuitously exploitative.

    The episode’s structure is ambitiously confined to the final day of Captain David Aceveda’s command of the Farmington Precinct. As he prepares to assume his City Council seat and hand over to the newly arrived Captain Monica Rawlings, Aceveda’s pathological need for control manifests in petty, counter-productive defiance. His rebuffing of Rawlings’ sensible, practical initiatives—such as hiring a plumber to finally repair the perpetually dysfunctional men’s bathroom—is a sharp study in corroded authority.

    This theme of compromised efficacy extends to Vic Mackey. Now shackled to a desk, Vic is revealed to be a profoundly ineffective bureaucrat. His supervision of the money-laundering sting operation targeting the financier, Roger Sperling, has been catastrophically lax. He fails to notice that the operation has stagnated, a blindness Sperling exploited to continue his business via intermediaries while warning his clients. Vic’s humiliation is palpable when this failure is exposed. The subsequent renegotiation of Sperling’s immunity deal, masterfully handled by Rawlings, forces Vic to confront his limitations outside his element of street-level coercion. Sperling’s desperate offering of a “big fish”—Alex Kozodav, the “taxi king” of the Russian mob—feels like a narrative salvage operation for a plotline that has stalled.

    Denied his usual arena, Vic’s police work is relegated to doing favours for old contacts. One such case involves Cal (Joe Renteria), a restaurant owner concerned for his crack-addicted employee, the teenage boy Cyril (Peter Pasco). This subplot is arguably the episode’s weakest element. The search for Cyril, which escalates when his addiction leads him to a deadly armed robbery, is rushed and feels peripheral. Cyril himself is barely a character, more a narrative device. The subsequent revelation—that Cal torched house of the dealer Fat Benish (Kevin Brown) and confesses to Vic that he was in love with Cyril and planned to finance his sex-change surgery—arrives with a jarring, unconvincing abruptness. It serves less as organic character development and more as a shocking post facto justification for Cal’s actions, lacking the careful groundwork typical of the series’ better writing.

    More successful is the continuation of Shane Vendrell’s tragic arc. Attempting to fill the void left by Vic’s desk-bound status, Shane seeks to establish his own extortion racket. His mentorship of the Iraq War veteran, Army Renta (Michael Peña), through the strong-arming of a One-Niner-affiliated pimp named Cromo (Marcus Brown), is a chilling mirror of Vic’s own methods. The episode’s closing shot, where Vic observes Shane meeting with high-ranking One-Niners, powerfully suggests Shane is forging a direct, and undoubtedly doomed, pact with Antwon Mitchell. This thread simmers with menace and promise for future chaos.

    The episode provides one significant closure with the return of the body of Ben Gilroy, the disgraced former Assistant Chief and Vic’s friend, who drank himself to death in Mexico. Vic’s insistence on attending the funeral, joined only by Lem, is a poignant moment of loyalty amidst moral ruin. What Gilroy’s widow, Nancy—played by Katey Sagal, wife of the episode’s writer Kurt Sutter—tells Vic after funeral lands with devastating force. Her hope that her husband suffered at the end, for throwing away decades of good career and marriage, serves as a stark, sobering mirror held up to Vic’s own future.

    Sutter’s script contains these strong, character-driven scenes—Vic’s farewell to a fallen comrade, Aceveda’s tense departure—yet the overarching plot construction feels frail. Despite solid direction from Paris Barclay, the compression of multiple subplots into a single day strains credulity. Some threads exist purely as thematic echoes. The story of Olivia Kenshaw (Donna Cooper), the HIV-positive prostitute whose rape was caught on tape, serves only to refract Aceveda’s unresolved trauma from his own sexual assault. His initial empathy curdles into a baffling, deeply unsettling conclusion where he is visibly aroused by the evidence tape and steals it from the office. While intended to illustrate the profound and twisted impact of his assault, the scene risks being characterised as exploitative, a shock for shock’s sake that offers little new psychological insight.

    Perhaps most interesting in retrospect is a minor subplot often dismissed at the time: the Mackey family’s consideration of joining a class-action lawsuit against vaccine providers, which they suspect may be linked to their children’s autism. Upon the episode’s premiere, this was heavily criticised as endorsing a groundless conspiracy theory. Viewed from today’s perspective, following the COVID-19 pandemic and heightened public scepticism towards pharmaceutical industry practices, the detail reads less as credulous and more as a bleak reflection of desperate people seeking tangible culprits for intangible tragedy—a theme entirely consistent with the show’s world.

    Grave is a solid but overstuffed hour of television that bears the marks of a series going through the difficult transition from a completed major storyline (the Money Train saga) into a new phase. It possesses moments of the show’s trademark power, particularly in its study of failure and legacy, but these are undermined by a cluttered narrative, underdeveloped subplots, and a reliance on sensationalistic character beats that feel unearned.

    RATING: 5/10 (++)

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  46. Television Review: The Cure (The Shield, S4X01, 2005)@drax172d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    The Cure (S04E01)

    Airdate: March 15th 2005

    Written by: Glen Mazzara Directed by: Scott Brazil

    Running Time: 48 minutes

    The conclusion of The Shield’s third season delivered a seismic shock to its core premise: the dissolution of the corrupt yet effective Strike Team. This mandated that the series, and its central characters, embark on something of a fresh start as it entered its fourth year. While The Cure, the season premiere, does not radically stray from the show's established narrative formula of gritty, morally ambiguous police work, it distinguishes itself through the impactful introduction of several new characters, portrayed by distinguished additions to the cast. The episode successfully manages the daunting task of resetting the chessboard, establishing new conflicts, and illustrating the profound personal fallout from the Strike Team's implosion, even if it occasionally feels more like an expository prologue than a self-contained dramatic powerhouse.

    The plot recommences six months after the events that shattered the unit. Officially disbanded by LAPD higher-ups and, more crucially, fractured from within due to departures by both Lem and Shane, Vic Mackey is a diminished figure. He is now left with only the loyal Ronnie Gardocki and finds himself consigned to the Barn, overseeing humiliating sting surveillance videos—a far cry from his former role roaming the streets as an untouchable power. This opening status quo is a stark visual representation of Vic's fall from grace, his aggressive energy now pent up and frustrated by bureaucratic mundanity. The opening scene immediately reacquaints us with the Farmington district's brutal comedy. A seemingly routine bust of a small-time robber turns eventful when the perpetrator's guard dog bites rookie Officer Wayne Haimes (Robert Wu), forcing him to shoot the animal dead. The subsequent dark humour, as Haimes' colleagues plant a gun on the corpse and claim "it reached," is supervised by Assistant Chief Phillips and the new, quietly observing Captain Monica Rawling (Glenn Close). She is the replacement for David Aceveda, who is finally ascending to his long-coveted seat on the City Council.

    Rawling's first major test, and Vic's ticket back to meaningful work, arrives with a high-profile case also involving investigators "Dutch" Wagenbach and Claudette Wyms—the latter still embittered after being passed over for promotion. Four members of the Veneza family have been drowned in a motel, with their young son missing. The establishment is a known haunt of the One-Niners, an African American gang recently taken over by Antwon Mitchell (Anthony Anderson). Anderson imbues Mitchell with a chilling, charismatic authority as a former gang member who, after thirteen years in prison, now publicly masquerades as a reformed, law-abiding community activist.Vic, leveraging his street connections, contacts Mitchell and demands assistance in finding the perpetrators. Mitchell complies, helping police find the missing boy, and subsequently Fernando Cruz (Lee Reyes) of the rival Latino gang Coronado Boys. Under interrogation, Cruz claims the killings spiralled from an accident: his partner Tito (Wellis Rosales) accidentally drowned one family member while interrogating him about a stash of money from a faux heroin deal. To eliminate witnesses, Tito then killed three more, while Cruz was tasked with murdering the boy—a task he found himself unable to perform, opting to hide instead. This case efficiently re-establishes Vic's unique, amoral proficiency and serves as his audition for Captain Rawling.

    Simultaneously, the episode sketches the altered landscapes for other characters. Claudette Wyms faces professional isolation and shunning by colleagues and the District Attorney for her prior ethical stand in reporting a public defender's drug addiction—an act that led to numerous convicted criminals walking free on appeal. Meanwhile, Aceveda's marriage to Aurora is revealed to be in crisis, strained by the unsurmounted trauma of his sexual assault—a lingering wound from the previous season's events. These threads reinforce the series' commitment to exploring the lasting personal costs of life in the Barn.

    The episode’s concluding moments are its most potent. Impressed by Vic's ruthless efficiency in the Veneza case, and sharing his background as a former street officer—unlike the politically-minded Aceveda—Rawling tentatively broaches the possibility of restarting an anti-gang unit. However, Vic, ever the schemer, has already initiated his own plan by attempting to recruit "Dead-Eye" (Marcus Harris), a drug dealer and former One-Niner leader ousted by Antwon Mitchell, as an informant. This scheme concludes on a deeply sinister note: Vic discovers Dead-Eye murdered. More ominously, he finds Shane Vendrell—now working in the Vice Unit—at the scene, rummaging through the victim's Blackberry. Shane, who reveals that his partner Mara has had their baby, claims Dead-Eye was his informant. Vic's palpable disbelief seeds a terrifying suspicion: has Shane, his former protégé and brother-in-arms, descended into becoming a cold-blooded killer, or worse, is he now making arrangements of his own with the powerful Antwon Mitchell? This chilling reunion perfectly sets the stage for the season's central conflict, suggesting Shane’s path has diverged into an even darker extreme than Vic's own.

    The Cure, written by Glen Mazzara, marked the first season premiere not authored by series creator Shawn Ryan. For some, this might account for a perceived lack of the visceral, immediate impact that characterised previous openers. A significant portion of the runtime is dedicated to "where are they now" segments, with Lem relegated to a glorified cameo showcasing his new life at the California Youth Authority—a narrative choice that underscores his departure from the LAPD as a conscious escape from corruption. Glenn Close, however, proves a superlative addition. Her Captain Rawling is an enigma, her motivations and endgame carefully guarded, promising a complex dynamic with Vic. Anthony Anderson is equally compelling as Antwon Mitchell, though some of his dialogue, including references to the 1997 NYPD brutalisation of Haitian immigrant Abner Louima, may elude a contemporary audience.

    Ultimately, the script works most effectively by illustrating how far the fragments of the Strike Team have scattered. Vic remains fundamentally unchanged: fiercely protective of children (evidenced by his violent beating against a suspect abusing his son during the surveillance sting) and ruthlessly pragmatic.Yet, his former brothers-in-arms have spiralled in opposite directions. Lem, always the unit's moral centre, has sought redemption by leaving the force entirely. Shane, however, appears to have embraced a nihilistic darkness that even Vic never dared to fully cross—a divergence that The Cure establishes as the haunting, central tension for the season to come. The premiere may function more as table-setting than a standalone masterpiece, but it sets that table with compelling new pieces and sharpens the old knives to a perilous edge.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

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  47. Television Review: Open Tilt (The Shield, S3X15, 2004)@drax187d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Open Tilt (S03E15)

    Airdate: June 15th 2004

    Written by: Shawn Ryan & Glen Mazzara Directed by: Scott Brazil

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    Season finales, particularly within the tense, serialised framework of a show like The Shield, traditionally bear a heavy burden. They are expected to be the most consequential, explosive, and memorable episodes of a run, performing the double duty of tying up sprawling multi-episode arcs while simultaneously delivering a major cliffhanger to grip the audience through the hiatus. Open Tilt, the concluding chapter of the show’s third season, succeeds in its narrative mechanics, yet it does so not with the series’ characteristic, gut-punching bang, but with something closer to a proverbial whimper. It is a competent, often very good episode, but when held against the seismic conclusions of the first two seasons, it feels more like a grim, obligatory sigh of exhaustion than a defining event. It resolves the immediate threats while meticulously arranging the dominoes for future collapse, but lacks the visceral, shocking physicality that had become the show’s finale signature.

    The entire season’s main storyline was, by design, an exercise in grim consequence. It dealt with the aftermath of the previous season’s spectacular finale: the Strike Team’s successful execution of Vic Mackey’s plan to rob the Armenian mob’s ‘money train’. Far from providing a long-term solution, however, the mountain of stolen cash has cast an ever-lengthening and darkening shadow over their careers, lives, and, most crucially, their brotherhood. Unable to spend their ill-gotten gains without attracting scrutiny, Vic, Shane, Lem, and Ronnie spent fourteen episodes in a state of paranoid tension, attempting to misdirect both vengeful Armenian mobsters and determined federal agencies. This financial paralysis, coupled with the moral weight of their actions—which resulted in the deaths of innocent civilians—proved corrosive. Their failure to maintain discipline ignited deep and seemingly irreversible fissures within the Strike Team itself, transforming allies into wary, resentful accomplices.

    These divisions erupted violently at the end of the preceding episode, All In. Lem, the team’s moral centre and the member most visibly haunted by the collateral damage, attempted a symbolic act of purgation: burning the ‘blood money’ in a furnace. Though his teammates stopped him, Open Tilt reveals that most of the stash was indeed reduced to ashes. This leaves Vic, Shane, and Ronnie with only a pittance, forcing Vic into a desperate recalculation of his entire financial future. He must also contend with an Armenian mob still thirsting for vengeance and unaware their capital is gone, and, most pressingly, with Lem, whose continued presence on the team now seems untenable. Vic’s response is pragmatic, yet stripped of any sentimental warmth. He allows Lem back, but only under the proviso that once the Armenian situation is resolved, Lem will transfer out. This calculus is immediately complicated by Captain Aceveda, who informs Vic that Chief Bankston, seeking to burnish the department’s image, has decided to phase out the Strike Team and similar units. A replacement for Lem, therefore, is unlikely, threatening the team’s very existence.

    A potential reprieve emerges from within the enemy camp. Goma Magar (Michael Benayer), a lieutenant to crime lord Margos Dezarian, approaches Vic with an offer: a truce in exchange for the Strike Team providing security for a major heroin shipment. Vic, ever the manipulator, turns the tables. Using information coerced from Magar’s subordinates and his informant, Ayla, he locates and leads a raid on a massive heroin stash. In a brilliantly cynical move, Vic then presents Magar to the Armenian crew as the informant, leaving him with no choice but to cooperate fully. Magar reveals Dezarian’s hideout. Recognising that Dezarian alive is a perpetual threat, Vic arrives first and, in a cold-blooded execution, shoots the crime lord. With Dezarian eliminated, the immediate pressure on the Strike Team momentarily dissipates, allowing a shallow breath of relief.

    Yet, the future remains bleak. At a meeting meant to chart a path forward, the simmering tensions boil over. Lem, physically ill from the psychological ordeal, is asked to stay, but the gathering quickly disintegrates. First, Lem and Shane trade vicious accusations, culminating in Lem’s furious departure. Then, the conflict turns inward, between Vic and his protégé. They blame each other for the chaos engulfing them, their argument laying bare the shattered trust. Shane storms out, leaving a tearful Vic alone, starkly aware that the edifice he built—his team, his authority, his years-long friendship—lies in ruins around him. It is a powerful, emotionally raw conclusion, but its impact is one of tragic inevitability rather than shock.

    A parallel storyline follows Detective Claudette Wyms’ dogged, ethically fraught crusade. She investigates cases handled by Lisa Kensit, a critically injured public defender revealed to have been a long-term drug addict. Claudette becomes convinced that some of Kensit’s clients were wrongly convicted due to her impaired state. The prime candidate is Walter Clifton (Ray Stonery), a career robber incarcerated based on testimony Claudette and a reluctant Dutch prove to be false. Her mission, which could potentially flood the streets with released convicts, is deeply unpopular within the Barn. When she confronts Aceveda and Assistant DA Rommi Cohen (Cari Golden) with her findings, she is met with institutional resistance and a blunt, career-limiting prophecy from Aceveda: she will never make captain. Her subplot serves as a counterpoint to the Strike Team’s chaotic corruption, presenting a different kind of struggle—one for integrity within a system often hostile to it.

    A minor, poignant side narrative involves Robert Huggins (Andre Benjamin), a comic book store owner driven to vigilante action by the prostitutes and dealers plaguing his street. His method—hosing them down and filming them—is an absurd yet understandable display of civic frustration. Officer Julien Lowe admires his spirit but is resigned to the futility of the effort, knowing that any police action would simply displace the problem to another block. This vignette reinforces the season’s overarching theme: individual actions, whether noble, criminal, or desperate, are often mere rearrangements of chaos within an immutable ecosystem of decay.

    Co-written by series creator Shawn Ryan and Glen Mazzara, and directed by the dependable Scott Brazil, Open Tilt is a well-constructed episode. However, it occasionally falls below the series’ own high standards. The lack of visceral impact is notable in the sequence following the heroin bust. As the record haul is displayed, every officer present breaks into spontaneous applause—a moment of unadulterated triumph. Vic, however, burdened by his myriad deceptions and the crumbling of his team, stands detached and unemotional. While this dissonance is intentional, highlighting his isolation, the scene’s placement in the mid-act and its execution lack the profound, ironic punch such a moment deserved. It feels procedural rather than profoundly thematic.

    Characterisation also shows some unevenness. The darkly humorous subplot involving Dutch being saddled with a stray kitten feels like a cheap, tonally jarring attempt to inject ‘quirk’ into the episode. It risks reducing the complex, nerdy, yet profoundly competent detective into a potential caricature, an unwelcome hint of a Hannibal Lecter in the making that the series never needed. Similarly problematic is the scene with Ayla. Upon learning Vic has killed Dezarian, avenging her sister, she offers him sex as gratitude. Vic initially refuses but succumbs, only for the encounter to degenerate into her sobs. While arguably realistic and decidedly un-erotic, the scene feels unnecessary, a clumsy effort to assert that Vic’s traditional masculinity and reputation as a ladies’ man remain intact amidst his personal ruin. It adds little to his character development that previous episodes had not already established with more nuance.

    Conversely, the episode introduces a subtle and intriguing ambiguity regarding Captain Aceveda. Previously portrayed as a devout family man, he is seen subtly testing the boundaries of his own morality. He removes his wedding ring before a meeting with Assistant DA Cohen, who subsequently flirts with him. Later, he picks up a street prostitute, only to tell her to move her business elsewhere—ostensibly to aid Huggins’ cause, but leaving the audience to question his initial, unspoken intentions. This faint crack in his moral armour is a masterful piece of character shading, suggesting the corrupting atmosphere of the Barn spares no one.

    At the end of the day, Open Tilt is an episode of efficient, often powerful, table-setting. It resolves the immediate Armenian threat with Vic’s characteristically ruthless efficiency and delivers the emotionally devastating, albeit predictable, dissolution of the Strike Team’s core bond. However, compared to the landmark finales that preceded it, it lacks a certain transformative electricity. Its victories feel pyrrhic and empty, its emotional blows expected rather than astonishing. It is, ultimately, very good television that nonetheless feels like a step back from the show’s own pioneering greatness.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

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  48. Television Review: All In (The Shield, S3X14, 2004)@drax188d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    All In (S03E14)

    Airdate: June 8th 2004

    Written by: Scott Rosenbaum Directed by: Stephen Kay

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    As television drama has evolved, a common structural trope has emerged: the penultimate episode often serves as the narrative detonator, saving the finale for fallout and resolution. In its third season, The Shield, under creator Shawn Ryan, had not yet fully embraced this contemporary rhythm, typically reserving its most seismic shocks for the final moments. However, with All In, the series came strikingly close. The episode masterfully demonstrates a gradual, inexorable buildup of tension, inherited from the previous instalment, which escalates into yet another devastating “wham” event. This pivotal moment ensures that, once the credits roll, nothing will ever be the same for its protagonists, cementing the episode’s place as a turning point where moral and physical survival are brutally decoupled.

    The central narrative engine is the walls closing in on Vic Mackey and his Strike Team following their audacious robbery of the Armenian mob. The episode opens with a crucial revelation from federal employee Crosby Nell, who identifies Jon Nadler (Oded Gross) as a mole who provided information to the Armenians. Nell explicitly states the mob wanted intelligence on the Strike Team. This, coupled with Detective Dutch’s recollection that Vic seemed suspiciously knowledgeable about the whereabouts of the now-vanished suspect Neil O’Brien, solidifies Captain Aceveda’s grim suspicion. He becomes convinced the Strike Team is behind the infamous “Money Train” heist and initiates a covert investigation. His strategy is twofold: he begins subtly interrogating Shane about his personal storage unit and circulates word on the street for money launderers to watch for anyone attempting to offload the substantial haul. Unbeknownst to Vic, who believes he is the hunter, he has squarely become the hunted.

    Oblivious to Aceveda’s suspicions, Vic zealously pursues Aceveda’s orders to dismantle the Armenian mob. The Strike Team raids the offices of the mobster Petrosh (Anthony Azizi). His assistant, Ayla (Stana Katić), reveals she is coerced into cooperation; her younger sister, Sosi (Amanda Sarafiyan), is held hostage by Margos Dezerian, a ruthless international assassin brought in to fortify the organisation. Vic’s pursuit of Margos leads him to a higher-ranking gangster, Kaffian (Vahe Bejan). However, a tense interrogation reveals a devastating truth: the arrest was a calculated ruse, allowing Margos to observe and assess the Strike Team firsthand. When Vic and his team subsequently attempt to apprehend Margos at his hideout, they find he has fled, but not before brutally wounding Sosi. In a harrowing sequence, the young girl bleeds to death in Lem’s arms, an innocent life sacrificed in the crossfire of the Strike Team’s war.

    This traumatic event proves to be the catalyst for a profound fracture. Vic, pragmatically concluding the stolen money is now “too hot,” decides it must be moved. For Lem, however, tasked with driving the van, the sight of Sosi dying is a moral Rubicon he cannot cross. He becomes convinced the illicit cash is the root of all their escalating misery and carnage. In a desperate act of purgation, he drives off with the van, intending to incinerate the money in the same furnace used to dispose of Neil O’Brien’s body. Before he can complete the act, the rest of the team catches up. The confrontation that ensues is one of the series’ rawest moments: Shane, in a fury, briefly draws his weapon on his own brother-in-arms. A fierce physical altercation follows, ending only when Lem is finally overpowered. The episode leaves them physically spent and emotionally shattered, standing amidst the unburned money, the unspoken rift between Lem’s awakening conscience and the others’ entrenched greed now glaring and seemingly unbridgeable.

    A parallel major storyline investigates the near-fatal shooting of public defender Lisa Kensit. Detectives Dutch and Claudette discover large quantities of Oxycontin in her system, shifting their focus to a drug addict and former client, Mary (Rene Templeton). This leads them to her boyfriend and dealer, Marlon Gault (Gichi Gamba), who confesses to shooting Kensit over a $15,000 drug debt. However, this resolution creates a profound ethical and professional crisis. If Kensit was under the influence during her trials, it could invalidate numerous convictions, allowing dangerous defendants like the notorious Bob Lindhoff to walk free. Aceveda, ever the political animal, directly orders Claudette to bury this line of inquiry, warning that the ensuing legal and media fallout would irrevocably wreck her career. This plotline masterfully contrasts the Strike Team’s blatant corruption with the more insidious, systemic corruption that Dutch and Claudette are forced to navigate and, in this instance, tacitly endorse.

    A further narrative thread attempts to resolve the lingering issue of the violent confrontation between Shane and Tavon. Tavon has recovered and regained most of his memory; his testimony would be catastrophic for Shane and the Strike Team. Lem, who was Tavon’s closest friend on the force, visits him. In a deeply conflicted performance, Lem manipulates the truth, claiming Tavon not only threatened Shane’s pregnant girlfriend, Mara, but actually struck her—a complete reversal of the facts, where Mara hit Tavon with an iron to protect Shane. Tavon, trusting Lem, is ultimately convinced and agrees to falsely attribute his injuries to a traffic accident. While this legally defuses the situation, it leaves Lem visibly troubled, adding another layer of guilt to his burden for having to deceitfully manipulate a friend.

    There are few extraneous subplots in this tightly wound episode. The most notable involves Carol, a mentally unwell woman obsessively campaigning for Aceveda’s election. When Aceveda, embarrassed by her fervour, asks her to stop, she instantly transforms into a bitter and vocal opponent.

    All In was written by Scott Rosenbaum and directed by the prolific New Zealand actor and television director Stephen Kay. Kay excels in maintaining a breakneck, propulsive pace, allowing the complex plot to unfold with relentless momentum. Although certain action sequences, such as the wounding of Sosi, are choreographed in a slightly confusing manner, he more than compensates with the episode’s powerful conclusion. The final standoff between the Strike Team members is directed with visceral intensity, laying bare the irreconcilable conflict between Lem’s shattered conscience and the others’ desperate, grim avarice.

    The episode is a demanding showcase for Kenny Johnson as Lem. Originally conceived as more of a supporting player, Lem emerges here as the team’s moral centre. Johnson delivers a powerfully understated performance, conveying a profound, quiet anguish as a man increasingly horrified by the carnage Vic’s philosophy has unleashed. His crisis is the episode’s wrenching heart.

    Astute viewers may recognise notable faces in the smaller roles of the Armenian sisters. Stana Katić, a Canadian actress of Dalmatian origin who would later achieve fame in Castle and Absentia, brings a compelling vulnerability to Ayla. Similarly, Angela Sarafyan, destined for roles like Clementine Pennyfeather in Westworld, makes a brief but memorable impact as the tragic Sosi. Their casting adds a layer of future-star texture to the episode’s already rich tapestry.

    All In is a seminal chapter in The Shield’s narrative. It masterfully escalates tension to a breaking point, forcing its characters into irreversible choices. By weaving together the consequences of the Money Train heist with acute moral dilemmas in other precinct storylines, it presents a panoramic view of a justice system buckling under the weight of its own compromises.

    RATING: 7/10 (+++)

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  49. Television Review: Fire in the Hole (The Shield, S3X13, 2004)@drax189d

    (source:tmdb.org)

    Fire in the Hole (S03E13)

    Airdate: June 1st 2004

    Written by: Kurt Sutter & Charles H. Eglee Directed by: Guy Ferland

    Running Time: 45 minutes

    As the third season of The Shield nears its conclusion, the narrative delivers a necessary, brutal reminder: actions have consequences. For viewers and the antiheroic Strike Team alike, several relatively quieter episodes have offered a false sense of security, allowing the illusion that the Armenian money train heist might yet be absorbed into the chaotic fabric of Farmington’s precinct business. Fire in the Hole shatters that illusion entirely. It meticulously stages the inevitable reckoning for Vic Mackey and his crew, forcing them—and us—to witness the grim fate of those entangled in their scheme, whether willingly or otherwise.

    The episode opens with what Vic mistakenly believes is a resolved problem. The small-time Irish criminal Neil O’Brien, having been manipulated into handling portions of the stolen, marked bills, has become the U.S. Treasury’s prime suspect, thereby diverting suspicion from the Strike Team. However, this fragile façade crumbles when Agent Crosby Nell reports to Captain Aceveda that O’Brien has vanished from his apartment. Worse, intelligence suggests the Armenian mob is aware of his status as a suspect, implicating a mole within federal agencies. Tasked with locating O’Brien before the Armenians do, Detective Dutch Wagenbach turns to Vic for assistance. Vic’s solution is characteristically cynical and self-serving: he decides that O’Brien, if still alive, must be made to disappear permanently, thereby cementing his role as the perpetual fall guy.

    To this end, Vic enlists Diagur Levya, leader of the Byz Lats gang. Diagur reveals O’Brien’s known preference for Mexican women, leading to his discovery in a motel with several prostitutes. Confronted, O’Brien tentatively agrees to flee Los Angeles but requests a brief delay to collect a substantial payout from his sports bookie, hinging on a bet placed on the Lakers. The situation deteriorates further when Diagur is found murdered, his feet severed—the Armenian mob’s signature—with clear signs of torture. Vic consoles himself with the belief that Diagur was unaware of the Strike Team’s direct involvement, but complications multiply when the Lakers win. The bookie encounters difficulties procuring the cash, and Dutch closes in on the location. Tragically, the Armenians strike first. The Strike Team arrives only to discover the brutalised corpses of both the bookie and O’Brien. Faced with this, Vic coldly determines that O’Brien must “disappear” in a more final manner and takes charge of removing the body. When Aceveda and Dutch later arrive at the scene, Aceveda orders Vic to pursue the Armenians. The episode’s haunting conclusion finds the Strike Team watching O’Brien’s body burn in an industrial furnace, with Lem quietly voicing the dread that now gnaws at them all: the Armenians may yet uncover their role.

    Parallel to this central drama, a secondary investigation unfolds. Hidden cameras, installed with the cooperation of arrested money launderer Louis Sperling, reveal an unlikely alliance between the neo-Nazi biker gang, The Horde, and Jantrell Davis of the black gang Spookstreet Souljahs, who will work as the getaway driver during the heist. Aceveda assigns the case to Claudette Wyms, who dispatches Vic and Lem to stake out Souljah territory. This operation inadvertently intersects with the Decoy Squad’s investigation into Durwin Gethers, another Souljah member involved in child pornography and a scheme with a corrupt social worker, Felicia. With both teams impeding each other, Claudette prioritises the Decoy Squad’s case and personally participates in an undercover operation—partly to atone for her previous mishandling of a situation that nearly cost Officer Trish her life. The operation succeeds, and Durwin, facing the dire prospect of being labelled a child molester in prison, attempts to broker a deal by offering up “Primo” (played by Sharif Rashed), a recently paroled convict who tried to cash a bad cheque. Desperate to avoid returning to prison, Primo exhausts all avenues before finally divulging the location of The Horde and details of their heist. Although momentarily distracted by cleaning O’Brien’s murder scene, the Strike Team arrives in time to arrest The Horde.

    Several side narratives weave through the episode. Julien Lowe and Danny Sofer uncover a large cache of Scotch whisky stolen from customs, while part-time informant Taylor Orrs offers assistance, primarily as a pretext to pursue Danny. Separately, Lem discovers that Officer Tavon has regained consciousness in hospital and is beginning to recall his violent confrontation with Shane Vendrell. Vic’s personal life continues to fray: his son Matthew’s autistic behaviours inadvertently start a minor fire in the Mackey apartment, pushing an exhausted Corrine to consider institutional care. Meanwhile, Vic’s romantic liaison with LAPD dog handler Lauren Riley falters after a failed getaway, leading to the revelation that her boyfriend, Hunter, faked an assault in a misguided attempt to keep her.

    Written by Kurt Sutter and Charles H. Eglee and deftly directed by veteran Guy Ferland, Fire in the Hole represents a tangible improvement over the two preceding episodes. That said, certain subplots—such as Danny’s persistent friction with Orrs and the ongoing turbulence of Vic’s relationship with Lauren—feel somewhat repetitive. The latter storyline was ultimately left unresolved due to the unavailability of actress Natalia Zea, who was cast in Dirty Sexy Money, resulting in her character’s abrupt and unexplained departure from the series.

    Stylistically, the episode is neatly constructed. The two primary narrative strands—the relentless pursuit by the Armenians and the investigation into The Horde—complement each other effectively, maintaining a gripping pace. The episode is bookended by imagery of fire, a subtle but potent motif that underscores the theme of destructive consequences without becoming overly literal or heavy-handed.

    Most significantly, Fire in the Hole reinforces the sobering reality that the Strike Team has overreached dramatically. The heist has forced them to confront an adversary far beyond the street-level gangs of Farmington. Losing another protected gang leader and the consequent erosion of their street reputation is now the least of their concerns. The Armenian mob is not only more vicious but also more formidable and resourceful. The episode implicitly draws a connection between Armenia’s history as part of the Soviet Union and the mobsters’ presumed access to the training, connections, and ruthless methodology of institutions like the KGB. This elevates the threat, suggesting they possess the capability to compromise even U.S. federal agencies. The Strike Team’s improvisational, brute-force tactics are suddenly pitied against a cold, professional, and globally connected machinery of vengeance.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

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