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One puzzler doesn't ruin Shield's season

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  • One puzzler doesn't ruin Shield's season

    Sun-Sentinel.com

    One puzzler doesn't ruin Shield's season

    By Phoebe Flowers
    -- Rob Lowman Film Writer Los Angeles Daily News
    Posted February 27 2005

    There comes a segment near the end of the third season of The Shield that is
    immediately recognizable as the moment the show went too far. That such a
    thing is even possible in a cop drama that has in its past featured, for
    example, criminal suspects having their faces seared on stove burners may
    seem unlikely. But the final scene of the episode titled "Strays" takes a
    character to a place both inexcusable and, more important, unbelievable.

    If you look to the commentary track, featuring creator Shawn Ryan, producer
    Glen Mazzara and actors Catherine Dent (Officer Danny Sofer) and Jay Karnes
    (Detective Dutch Wagenbach), for explanation of this perplexing plot
    development, you won't find one. On the contrary, it features Ryan bragging
    that "Strays" was the favorite episode of FX, the apparently freewheeling
    network that has aired The Shield since 2002. Guest director David Mamet
    (Spartan, State and Main) may have had something to do with their blind
    enthusiasm.

    And yet, "Strays" is at odds with a season that is otherwise as smart, wild
    and enthralling as those that have preceded it. Ever since Detective Vic
    Mackey (Emmy winner Michael Chiklis) stormed into an interrogation room in
    the series premiere to assure a suspect that he was "a different kind of
    cop," The Shield has constituted the most entertaining law-enforcement show
    on television. Look at The Wire, HBO's intricate police procedural, as the
    equivalent of reading an edifying story about sequoia trees in The New
    Yorker. The Shield, on the other hand, is Britney's unauthorized honeymoon
    diary in Us Weekly. 24 wishes it were this audacious or addictive.

    Chiklis, who also pinch-hits as a producer and director, is the star of the
    show as Mackey, who with his lumpy bald head and stocky physique is easily
    the least likely sex symbol since Tony Soprano. The season picks up with
    Mackey and his colleagues on the "Strike Team," a cowboyish lot with
    gleefully unorthodox crime-fighting methods, having stolen a huge amount of
    cash from Armenian gangsters. The next 14 episodes find them discovering
    just how bad an idea that heist was.

    The journey is somewhat better than the destination, however. "Breaking
    Episode 315," an hour-plus featurette focusing on the making of the season
    finale, is a perhaps excessively detailed behind-the-scenes portrait. And it
    doesn't do anything to distract from the fact that the episode feels less
    like catharsis than it does a setup for season four. But luckily, we only
    have a few weeks until it premieres on FX.

    The Shield -- The Complete Third Season, not rated, 700 minutes, $59.98.



    Phoebe Flowers can be reached at [email protected].

    Funny but not essential

    Director Barry Sonnenfeld left out what he considers the funniest scene in
    Get Shorty, the clever 1995 adaptation of novelist Elmore Leonard's wry take
    on Hollywood. The reason? "It seems to me that if you're trying to make a
    movie to entertain people, you want to entertain people. As horrible as
    recruited audiences are, I'm one of the directors that needs them. I need to
    see which jokes are working and which aren't."

    In Get Shorty (the sequel Be Cool is out next week without Sonnenfeld), the
    director edited out a scene with Ben Stiller, John Travolta and Gene
    Hackman. Stiller is a recent film-school grad shooting a low-budget horror
    flick for Hackman's low-rent producer Harry Zimm and Travolta's hood Chili
    Palmer, who is trying to muscle into Tinseltown.

    "The scene was funny, but it didn't serve the overall movie," says
    Sonnenfeld. "So get rid of it. Don't bore your audience." Not to worry, the
    scene is included on the just-released special edition of the film.

    As for how much reality Get Shorty has in relation to the cutthroat business
    of making a Hollywood movie, Sonnenfeld's answer is simple: "Get Shorty was
    letting the film business off easily."

    Get Shorty (Special Edition), rated R, 105 minutes, $29.95.
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